Planning and Environment Amendment (VICSMART planning assessment) Bill 2012 – Second Reading Speech delivered in Parliament 12 September 2012
Mr PALLAS (Tarneit) — In rising to speak on this bill, I feel challenged by the contribution of the member for Essendon, which opened with a quote from Albert Einstein. I too would like to draw on a quote from Albert Einstein. He said, ‘If you can’t explain it to a six-year-old, you don’t understand it yourself’.
We have heard many contributions to the second-reading debate today that have strayed far from the reality of what the bill seeks to do. We have heard speaker after speaker on the government side talk to us about the simplicity that the bill will bring to the planning permit process. People should be wary of governments offering simplicity to the community at the same time as they take away rights, because it means that the community’s rights — the rights of the people — to preserve what they value or believe to be theirs are ultimately put at risk.
What is at stake is our built history — our heritage — and the look, livability and feel of our suburbs. Simply taking away rights, however this is expressed and even if the objective is claimed to be simplification, will come at a cost to the community. To put it another way, every solution to every problem is simple; it is the distance between the two where the mystery lies.
It is that distance, that circumvention of common sense, that this bill stands accused of. What we are looking at here is a bill which provides that planning permits are required for everything from modest renovations or extensions, whether it be fences or other smaller structures, to what could ultimately be major renovations and multistorey developments.
We know and have heard from a number of speakers on this side of the chamber that there are something like 55 000 permit applications approved each year. That number should cause some level of concern if they are not dealt with fairly and effectively, and it is the transparency of the system that matters most because you cannot preserve what you cannot keep track of. The bill effectively provides for classes of permits that can be created via a planning scheme amendment.
A planning scheme amendment can originate from a council or from a minister, and we know from the terms of the bill that there is no limit to or of a class of permit anywhere in the legislation; it could be limited to a 20-storey building in a residential street. As speaker after speaker on this side have said, the silence of the legislation on giving an appreciation of what constitutes a class of permit is a matter of grave concern.
It has been said that all politics is local, and this is an issue that will create confusion and concern, all at the altar of simplicity. When people say, ‘We are trying to simplify things by taking away your rights’, we know exactly what that means; it means they are saying, ‘We are trying to steamroll you as we proceed to implement our own agenda’. We are effectively seeing a
department that is charged with responsibility of overseeing the performance of local government and the planning system more generally — the Department of Planning and Community Development — having its budget cut by $29.6 million. You cannot get scrutiny if you do not have scrutineers. Essentially we have a vague piece of legislation with a vague explanation of what constitutes a class of permit, and we have no capacity to adequately oversee and protect the community in this regard.
Whilst Albert Einstein might have thought it is not simple if you cannot explain it to a six-year-old, I prefer to see this legislation as something Groucho Marx would have seen much more value in. He would say, ‘A child of five could understand this legislation; go fetch a child of five’.
That is what is wrong with it: the simplicity is so simplistic that it has lost the basic virtue and value of its objective, and that is the protection of individual rights and the protection of communities concerned about their amenity and ultimately where that amenity will best be protected.
In my local government area, Wyndham, unlike in that of the member for Mornington, we do not have over 3000 planning applications on average a year. However, we have a community that is growing at an enormous rate; we have a community that is growing by the population of Benalla every year. Believe me, when you have that sort of concentration of people moving in people get concerned about their amenity. They get concerned about their rights and their right to express a view in the full knowledge of what is happening in and around their households. These rights are being taken away.
In taking them away what we are effectively doing is sacrificing at the altar of efficiency the right to transparency — the right for people to know, to be concerned and to express their concerns.
When we silence that sort of criticism all we do is create an undercurrent of concern, opposition and frustration, and ultimately we undermine the very thing we are trying to facilitate, which is an open and inclusive community — one that is supportive of development in and around its area. While it might be irritating — and I can understand the frustration of developers about the fact that there are people who take exception to developments that developers see as being relatively simple — that is why we have tribunals. Their job is to assess those matters. Their job is to make a judgement call.
In my area, while we have 12 500 people moving into the community every year, there are only 1100 planning applications lodged — effectively about a third of the number lodged in the member for Mornington’s community. What we are seeing, therefore, is a greater bulking up of those applications. We are talking about broadacre development, and we are ultimately talking about the nature of the community that we are creating. These are not little planning applications; these are planning applications commensurate with what a suburb or a community or a block would look like. People should have the right to express their concerns, because if they do not have those rights, ultimately our communities will be the poorer for it. They will be poorer not just because these people feel frustrated about their right to express a view about what is happening in and around their households and what is impacting upon their quiet enjoyment of their asset but because these people have a right to express their view because we live in a democracy. Possession of rights should not be simply extinguished at the altar of efficiency.
Sometimes democracy is not the most efficient system — I think it was Winston Churchill who said that — but of course it is the price we pay for our liberty. That is why small communities effectively have the right to band together to express their views and concerns. As the minister at the table has said, ‘You have a right to express a concern about a garage. If that garage builds over a right of way and your access to your facility, you should have that right’. However, we do not know what the entire content of the problem might be, and therein lies the problem. Because the minister has silenced people in a job lot, he has effectively done a job on the lot of them. That is essentially where this falls down, because in a community where people have rights they also have the right to express their concerns, and that is not what this bill does. It alters at the altar of efficiency what is more important to people, and that is their right to stand up for themselves and be heard.