Catharine Munro Urban Affairs Editor March 29, 2007
TAYLOR SQUARE, Sydney's meeting point for drunks, drag queens and office workers, is in town planners' sights for yet another makeover.
The City of Sydney has the Oxford Street nightclub hub on its list for refurbishment as part of its substantial $350 million program that started three years ago and will continue for the next four years.
Planners are yet to decide how they will do it, but they want to combat public fears about safety on the square, which is presided over by the historic Supreme Court building but ruled by nightclubs and pubs.
They are considering it as a new spot for jazz performances and offering busking licences, as well as installing more public art. They also want to build a cafe above a disused toilet outside the Supreme Court to encourage people to enjoy the open space.
"It's been dead space for some time ... It's meant to be a community meeting place, a place to gather," the council's general manager of special projects, Steve O'Brien, told the Herald.
But that is easier said than done, says Cr Tony Pooley, who presided over a major renovation of Taylor Square as mayor of South Sydney Council before it joined the City of Sydney three years ago. He spent $5.25 million for a water feature and terraced grass on the so-called Gilligan's Island side of the square, which opened in 2003. He believes the plan failed because Taylor Square is just too busy.
"We had this idea that people ... might break out the paper and have a bit of coffee," Cr Pooley said. The high-speed traffic on Oxford Street and the number of pedestrians made it impossible for people to take in the atmosphere, he said.
The $350 million budget will be spent on sites across the City of Sydney, which runs from Redfern to Rushcutters Bay and up to Glebe, following the amalgamation with South Sydney and parts of Leichhardt.
Following a 12-month community survey, the council plans to start spending what the Lord Mayor, Clover Moore, argues were excessive cash reserves accumulated through past underspending on facilities and infrastructure.
"These are concept plans at this stage," said Cr Moore.
But a Liberal councillor, Shayne Mallard, said the spending should be spread over a longer period of time."It has a sniff of pork to it," Cr Mallard said.
Thursday, March 29, 2007
"It has a sniff of pork to it,"
The SMH reports on Clover's $350 million spending spree. She can't spend it fast enough rewarding her loyal village voters. Meanwhile the CBD where ALL the wealth was created does not get its share reinvested. Cracked and uneven bitumen paths still represent the majority of CBD footpaths. Roads continue to show signs of advanced wear and tear. Key pedestrian and commuter links wait for yet another study as do the retailers as they beg for more marketing resources. Most CBD parks are in desperate need of some TLC. The state of the Pitt Street Mall with cracked and damaged paving is an embarrassment. And finally the homeless and not so homeless lie in doorways and block footpaths begging for cash as if we are in the 3rd world.
Wednesday, March 28, 2007
Another election is over - but who really won?
Finally another election has come and gone (well nearly gone). The new seat of Sydney has rewarded its big spending Lord Mayor by electing her MP. The Liberals have come second in the contest for the first time since losing the old Bligh in 1988. Councillors celebrated various personal triumphs with champagne after Monday night's committee meetings. I raised a glass to the second Rabbitohs victory.
Thursday, March 15, 2007
Edward Mandla on the inner city campaign trail
Electorate of Sydney candidate Edward Mandla may be a heterosexual father of three, but he's also a man for the gay community, he tells Sam Butler.
"Gays don't care about gay and lesbian issues - they care about land tax."
The NSW Liberals did their homework when selecting Edward Mandla as their candidate for the State seat of Sydney: powerfully built, with exfoliated and moisturised skin, distinguished grey hairs and a handsome smile, he's an ideal 'Daddy' fantasy for the otherwise politically-ambivalent 'twinks' residing in and around Stonewall.
Stonewall, in fact, is where Mandla recently launched a fundraiser, without actually addressing any gay and lesbian issues in his speech! He points out, in his defence, that he was there as part of Shadow Mental Health Minister Judy Hopwood's launch of the Opposition's $396 million mental health policy.
Mandla cites Labor's failures in mental health as a prime reason for his decision to throw his hat into the political arena; and becoming Member for Sydney would be a commendable addition to an already impressive resume, including Immediate Past President of the Australian Computer Society (ASC) and current director of Smartforce Solutions.
The father-of-three identifies as a strong family man, but his concept of family is vastly different from that of the Liberal Party's 'family values' proponents. Unlike former Prime Minister Paul Keating, Mandla believes "a man and his dog" does constitute a family, and says the current definition of 'family' pushed by most of his counterparts is in need of a shake-up. To this end, he claims he is the "crusader" needed to challenge homophobic attitudes in a party not renowned for being queer-friendly. In Mandla's view, the Liberal Party is not so much the "broad church" that John Howard describes, but "a high-rise building in the CBD in which every part of society resides" - including, apparently, gay-friendly IT gurus.
So just how gay-friendly is Edward Mandla? "[My] entire campaign team is gay", he says, including his campaign director. He identifies "hundreds" of gay and lesbian friends, including "lonely older gay men" whom he speculates might not be so lonely now if they had the opportunity to commit to one another via civil unions years ago. Consequently, he's strongly in favour of such unions and guarantees to be vocal in his support should he pull off the minor miracle of knocking Clover Moore out of the seat she's held for nearly 20 years.
He claims, however, that his many queer friends aren't talking to him about such issues - "they're talking to me about land tax!" Perhaps this explains why the words 'gay' and 'lesbian' don't appear anywhere in the Liberals' 2007 State election policy platform. Despite this absence, Mandla believes that equality will be achieved for gays and lesbians - in fact, he maintains that it's a done deal, and offers an optimistic time-frame of 'five to ten years' (even under Howard and/or Debnam governments) by which time equality will be achieved. There's even a bold assertion that civil unions will happen under a Liberal government sooner than a Labor government, due to resistance in the latter from old-school Catholic unionists.
Which brings us to the Iemma government. After 12 years of an administration that, even by its own admission, "has more work to do" (a euphemism, perhaps, for wasted opportunities, economic mismanagement and prolonged incompetence) why aren't the Liberals streets ahead in opinion polls? Mandla is actually encouraged by the Liberals' underdog position: "I just love those polls - we're exactly where I want us to be. People are becoming more and more angry that the government could be returned, and increasingly I see people who have never voted Liberal, who may secretly do that for the first time. I love it."
As for his main opponent, Clover Moore, Mandla admits that although he once held this "folk hero" in high esteem as a social champion, he argues that as both the Member for Sydney (formerly Bligh) and the city's Lord Mayor, she simply doesn't have time to "chain herself to trees in Rushcutters Bay"; to represent her constituents as she used to. He believes that Moore has lost hitherto-held respect since taking on two jobs, and claims to be tapping into a well of disgruntled voters who supported her at the last election but now seek a "full-time" member.
Does he believe he can beat Clover? "I'm narrowing the gap. But I have a $50,000 budget - money I raised personally - and I'm up against her 90k-a-month public relations budget. You saw what happened in Mardi Gras, that's what I'm up against. It's hard."
Still, Mandla exudes the confidence one would expect from a successful, self-made businessman, and it's difficult to doubt his conviction that the only way the Liberal Party will improve its generally appalling history on GLBTI rights is for 'new blood' to join up and, over time, chip away at entrenched homophobic policy.
"These things don't happen overnight", he says, which is certainly true. (They also shouldn't take 11 years, which is how long queers have had to wait for their government to address discriminatory Commonwealth legislation.)
With accusations from his staff that the queer media give the Liberal Party 'a rough time', what's the one key, unedited message Edward Mandla wants to get across to SX readers? "Call me!"
It's an open invitation, as the man is keen to consult with his prospective electorate - so go nuts, everyone.
And as a final suggestion: "Don't be afraid to put a 1 in the Liberal box, even if you've never done so before. You don't even have to tell anyone - just make sure you do it."
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