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Council makes statement on ESVF

THE Mitchell Shire Council (MSC) has sent another strong message to the State Government at its October meeting, moving a Notice of Motion to repeal the Emergency Services and Volunteer Levy in its entirety.

The latest move continues MSCโ€™s offensive against the fund, stressing that while there is a need to fund emergency services, it isnโ€™t feasible to put more cost-of-living pressures against farmers, businesses, families, households and properties.

Council has consistently raised concerns about the levy since its announcement in May 2025, highlighting the disproportionate burden it places on rural and farming communities. Under the current model, residential ratepayers are expected to see a 35 per cent increase, commercial properties a 70 per cent increase, and primary producers up to 150per cent, based on capital improved value.

Although the State Government announced a one-year pause on levy increases for primary producers, Council believes this does not go far enough.

Speaking at Monday nightโ€™s Council meeting, Councillor Andrea Pace spoke about the importance of fighting back for the community.

โ€œEver since itโ€™s inception, our Council has been dead against this fund. Some of us have gone down and walked the streets in protest, weโ€™ve written letters, we have not been silent,โ€ she said.

โ€œWe are out there fighting for our community, for an unjust fund.

โ€œThis is just the next step. Itโ€™s not the final step, just the next step in trying to get this fund overthrown.โ€

Councillor Bob Cornish also spoke in support of moving the motion.

โ€œI think the motion speaks to itself. It does mention the cost being placed upon families and businesses and the like. On top of all this, we are the highest taxed state in Australia with no transparency. So, the sooner this thing is removed, the better it is for one and all,โ€ he said.

The vote was carried unanimously.

Mitchell Shire Mayor John Dougall said more needs to be done to protect ratepayers from unfair cost increases.

โ€œThis is a tax our community cannot afford,โ€ Cr Dougall said.

โ€œWhile we support our emergency services, the funding model must be fair. The current levy punishes the very people who are already struggling โ€“ particularly our farmers and rural families who are facing drought, inflation and increasing input costs.

โ€œCouncil should not be used as a tax collector for the State. Weโ€™re calling for this levy to be removed from households and farmers altogether.โ€

Council will now write to the Treasurer formally requesting the removal of the levy from primary producers and residential ratepayers. It will also continue to support the Municipal Association of Victoria and the Hume Regional Local Government Network in their advocacy on this matter.

Hero in the room

THE Whittlesea Library Author Talk heard author Robyn Howarth revisit one of Australiaโ€™s most haunting crimes, the Faraday school kidnapping of 1972, and the long journey toward healing that followed.

Among those attending the talk was Whittlesea resident, Tricia Hayward, whose actions more than 50 years ago helped bring the ordeal to an end.

Ms Hayward, her husband and two friends were out rabbit hunting near Lancefield in the early morning of October 7, 1972 when they came across the terrified young teacher, Mary Gibbs, and six schoolgirls who had escaped their captors.

โ€œWe packed the group into our Holden Monaro and drove them to the Lancefield Police Station. We managed to pack five adults and six children into that car,โ€ Ms Hayward said.

โ€œAt first the police thought we were the kidnappers but it did not take long to clarify the situation,โ€ she added.

โ€œItโ€™s surreal to see them together again after all these years,โ€ one attendee said as Tricia Hayward and Robyn Howarth shared a quiet moment before the crowd.

Robyn Howarth, who was ten years old at the time, spoke with grace and composure about the traumatic events that shaped her childhood.

Her book, Faraday โ€“ A Community Rediscovered, tells the story not only of that fateful day, but also of the resilient community nestled beneath Mount Alexander that was forever changed by it.

โ€œFaraday was such a beautiful part of the world,โ€ she reflected.

โ€œBut after that day, it became a word people whispered about, a place known for what happened, not for who we were.โ€

On October 6, 1972, two masked men stormed Faraday State School 797, taking teacher Mary Gibbs and six students, including Robyn and her sisters Denise and Sue, hostage at gunpoint. The captives were locked overnight in a van while the kidnappers left to collect a ransom.

Displaying extraordinary courage, Ms Gibbs kicked out a panel of the vanโ€™s rear door and led the children through the darkness to safety. Their rescue by Tricia Haward and her companions ended the ordeal and made headlines around the nation.

Ms Howarthโ€™s book, written more than five decades later, explores life before and after the kidnapping, the community spirit of rural Victoria, the trauma that followed, and the slow reclaiming of identity.

โ€œItโ€™s taken me 62 years to say with pride that I came from Faraday,โ€ she said.

โ€œThis story isnโ€™t just about what was taken, itโ€™s about what weโ€™ve found again: our community, our identity, and our strength.โ€

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