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Lockdown hurts Macedon Ranges

By Steph McNicol

MACEDON residents are experiencing ‘déjà vu’ after the announcement of a snap lockdown by Premier Daniel Andrews on Friday.
As of Sunday, Victoria had 21 active cases across the state.

Several expsoure sites listed late last week in Sunbury – resulted in pop-up testing sites in Gisborne. 

The Premier said Victorians had to do ‘everything [they] could to keep this virus at bay’, as he announced the five-day lockdown expected to end 11.59pm Wednesday.

The lockdown meant Victorians re-entered restrictions comparable to stage four of 2020 lockdown laws, including only four reasons to leave home – shopping for necessities, care and care giving, work if essential, and exercise.

Learning from home for school students resumed, no visitors are allowed in homes and masks are now mandatory in all settings.

Funerals may go ahead with a limit of 10 people, while weddings must be postponed, and no other public gatherings can go ahead.

“By limiting our movement, we limit the potential spread of the virus, and by going hard and going early, we’re giving ourselves every opportunity to get in front of this,” Mr Andrews said.

“[N]o one else in the world – anywhere – has achieved what we have, and just as we had the courage and conviction to win this war before – we can do it again.”

Wedding, conference and function venue Glen Erin, Lancefield, director Kim Scales said all aspects of her business suffered after the lockdown announcement. 

“We had this whole week booked out, but the number of conferences we’ve had to postpone is phenomenal,” Ms Scales said. 

“We had a wedding booked for February 27, which was already postponed from last year, which has now been cancelled.

“We also had another one booked for March 16, which has been postponed but it might be cancelled too. 

“People can’t afford to come to Victoria for a wedding and then go back to Queensland to quarantine for two weeks.

“No company in their right mind would send people here for a conference – people are too scared to book.

“We’re in the middle of nowhere, so delivery isn’t really viable, and the risk of having staff on the road, we just chose not to do that.”

Lancefield Neighbourhood House coordinator Vivien Philpotts said there was ample support available for people who needed it. 

“[After the announcement] we immediately put something out to say our community support project was still running,” Ms Philpotts said. 

“We’ve got meals and food parcels to help people, and they can ring us to have a chat. 

“We know how to do this, if people want someone to talk to we encourage them to call us and have a chat, and there are lots of things available on Facebook – the Lancefield Romsey Community Support Facebook page. 

“People can also call us on 0491 243 996, 0409 386 875 or 5429 6724.”

Macedon Ranges Shire Council closed its facilities Friday, which will remain closed until at least 11.59pm Wednesday.

Services and facilities closed during this time include customer service centres, libraries, aquatic and leisure centres, Hanging Rock, and event and facility booking and face-to-face consultation will be unavailable. 

Facilities to remain open include kindergartens, maternal and child health services, school crossing staff will continue to work, and community care will continue to be made available. 

Council’s scheduled meeting will be held virtually this week. 

For more information, visit mrsc.vic.gov.au/covidsupport or the Department of Health website. 

Works start on New Gisborne Primary School

STUDENTS in New Gisborne will soon have access to first-rate classrooms and facilities with work under way upgrading New Gisborne Primary School.

Member for Macedon Mary-Anne Thomas turned the first sod on New Gisborne Primary’s $3.1 million upgrade, which she said would help it deliver a 21st century education.

The upgrade will include: two new music pods for instrumental music, choir and additional meeting space; the redevelopment of landscaping on Station Road and Ferrier Road; new seating and waiting areas; the conversion of lights around the school to LED; and the modernisation of storm water drainage around the school.

The first phase of works – the installation of a new astro-turf oval, complete with drainage and line-markings – was completed over the summer break.

The project is expected to be finished by early 2022.

Ms Thomas said the government was committed to schools in the region, with Willowbank Primary opening in 2022 and upgrades also taking place at Gisborne Primary School, Sunbury and Macedon Ranges Specialist School in Bullengarook, and St Brigid’s Catholic Primary School.

“The exciting works at New Gisborne Primary School are going to modernise this much-loved school and give every student the opportunity to succeed,” she said.

“These local upgrades are part of the school building boom that is happening right here in Gisborne and across Victoria.”

Mitchell Shire councillors refuse planning permit for quarry south of Wallan

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MITCHELL Shire councillors voted unanimously to deny a planning permit application for a quarry south of Wallan at tonight’s ordinary council meeting.

An officers’ report presented to councillors recommended the planning permit for the North Central Quarry, by operator Conundrum Holdings, be refused.

The report found the planned quarry site unsuitable for a number of reasons, including: negative impact on the Northern Growth Corridor; negative impact on the orderly planning of the area; negative impact on the future residential use of the land; negative impacts on the landscape character, values and visual appearance of the surrounding area; and negative future social impacts in the immediate and wider area surrounding the subject site.

Cr Bob Cornish said he shared the concerns of Wallan residents who presented to council at last week’s community questions and hearings meeting.

“Residents have been greatly concerned about the noise, dust and amenity of the area,” he said.

“I have seen growing traffic in Wallan in recent years, and this will make it worse.”

Cr Christine Banks echoed Cr Cornish’s concerns about the heavy traffic a quarry would bring.

“The traffic issues would be a very big problem. We already have a problem with traffic and it’s only going to worsen,” she said.

“People move out here for peace and quiet and fresh air, and I don’t think [the quarry application is] in any way compatible with that way of life.”

Deputy Mayor Nathan Clark said the number of jobs projected to be created by the quarry – a maximum of 27 – was not enough to justify building it.

Cr Annie Goble labelled the quarry ‘a planning obscenity’, while Cr Fiona Stevens suggested people ‘speak up, speak loudly’ to the State Government to oppose the quarry.

In a statement, a Conundrum Holdings spokesperson said the group was ‘concerned’ by council’s decision.

“Mitchell Shire Council has again chosen to turn its back on this significant rock resource and the diverse job opportunities which underpin this essential industry,” the statement said.

“The resource was drilled in 2004 and has been identified in government reports since 2009. The quarry was shown in a draft Beveridge North West Precinct Structure Plan (PSP) in 2014 however the mapped reference in the precinct plan was removed in September 2018.

“Notwithstanding this, and independent planning panel (made up of planning professionals appointed by the Minister for Planning) last year spent four weeks reviewing and testing the existing Beveridge North West PSP. They made the recommendation in chief ‘to revise [the amendment] to explicitly include precinct level planning for resource extraction from Work Authority 1473’.

“Support of the proposal was neither fairly nor accurately recognised in the council report. There were in excess of 291 submitters, all of whom articulated the necessity and significance of this application and represent many thousands of individuals working in the Victorian economy.

“By forming the position to not support this application, council has chosen to disregard the independent planning panel, long-term planning of the region with respect to extractive industry interest areas, and those businesses and individuals who are dependent upon our industry for their livelihood.

“Conundrum strongly believes we need to meet our social responsibilities with respect to minimising carbon footprint and containing costs of quarry products for future generations. The success of this application will continue Melbourne’s long history of utilising those basalt resources as close as practical to the end user.

“Updated information always has been and remains available on our website conholdings.com.au/north-central-quarry

Conundrum Holdings will have an opportunity to apply for a review of the permit application with the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT).

  • The landowner of the proposed quarry location is Wally Mott. Mr Mott is also an owner of the North Central Review.

Victoria goes into hard 5-day lockdown

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Victorian Premier Dan Andrews has announced the entire state will be placed into stage four lockdown, starting midnight tonight until Wednesday.

Mr Andrews said the outbreak of the UK strain of COVID-19 was spreading faster than previous types of coronavirus.

Victorians will only be allowed to leave their homes for four reasons: shopping for essential items; care and caregiving reasons; exercise for two hours; and essential work.

Exercise and shopping will be limited to five kilometres from people’s home. If there is no shops in the five-kilometre radius of residence, people will be able to travel to the closest ones.

Masks will be compulsory both indoors and outdoors, and there will be no gatherings, both in public and at homes.

“I won’t waste words: today hurts. Victorians know, better than anyone, just how deeply,” Mr Andrews said.

“But as we’ve seen – here in Australia and around the world – we are facing a new kind of enemy.

“A virus that is smarter, and faster, and more infectious. And until we have a vaccine, we need to do everything we can to keep this virus at bay.”

Mr Andrews said five new cases have been identified in the past 24 hours.

“Right now, we are reaching close contacts well within the 48-hour benchmark. But the time between exposure, incubation, symptoms and testing positive is rapidly shortening. So much so, that even secondary close contacts are potentially infectious within that 48-hour window,” he said.

“In short: this hyper-infectious variant is moving at hyper-speed.”

Other restrictions include:

For school students, that means learning from home, unless they need onsite supervision as the children of essential workers. Unis and TAFEs will close or move to remote learning. Childcare and kinders will remain open.

Gyms, pools, community centres, entertainment venues and libraries will all need to close.

All non-essential retail will close, but essential stores like supermarkets, bottle shops and pharmacies will remain open. Cafes and restaurants will only be able to offer take-away.

Hotel and accommodation providers will be able to stay open to support guests already staying onsite. No new bookings can be made.

Funerals will be able to go ahead with up to 10 people. Weddings will need to be postponed.

Mr Andrews addressed the fact that there are no cases in regional Victoria.

“If the rules are softer in regional Victoria, people from Melbourne will travel to regional Victoria,” he said.

“The ring of steel cannot be set up in one day.”

Gisborne District Cricket Association cancels this weekend’s round due to COVID-19

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Gisborne District Cricket Association has cancelled all cricket games this weekend due to the COVID-19 exposure sites in Sunbury.

In consultation with the Department of Health and Cricket Victoria, the association board made the decision to abandon all cricket scheduled for this weekend.

In a Facebook post yesterday, the association indicated there was no intention to replay the round.

In a statement to media last night, association president Rob McIntyre said the outbreak was not just a Sunbury issue.

“Many people from Kyneton, Woodend, Gisborne, Riddell, Romsey and the wider area work, shop or go to school in Sunbury,” he said.

“We don’t know how many of these people have visited the exposure sites and we certainly don’t know how many have been tested and have self-isolated waiting for their results.”

Mr McIntyre said pop-up testing sites had been established at Sunbury’s Clarke Oval and McMahon Reserve and the association had been told the site would probably be there until the weekend. 

“There are many Sunbury residents who play for cricket clubs outside of Sunbury including Riddell, Romsey, Lancefield, Macedon, Gisborne, Woodend, Kyneton and Malmsbury,” he said.

“The potential is there to shut the whole area down for weeks again should the virus spread into these communities.

“We’ve taken the approach that it is better to lose one week of cricket than risk losing the rest of the season. DHS and Cricket Victoria have supported the decision as the right thing to do.

“We are not prepared to put the health and safety of our cricket participants and members of the wider community at risk. We will review the advice from health authorities after this weekend to consider if we can resume cricket matches the following weekend.”

COVID-19 testing sites set up after exposure sites in Sunbury

A COVID-19 testing site has opened in Gisborne following several exposure sites declared in Sunbury.

Loddon Mallee Rapid Response Testing Team will provide COVID-19 testing at Gisborne Senior Citizens Centre in response to the recently declared Sunbury COVID-19 exposure.

The testing site is a walk-in clinic and no appointment is necessary.

The clinic will provide testing facilities for all members of the community, including those who may find it difficult to travel to the Kyneton, or other existing testing clinics.

The clinic, at 8 Hamilton Street, will be open from 3pm to 8pm today, and 9am to 5.30pm tomorrow.

Organisers advise people to bring a bottle of water and wear a hat and sunscreen in preparation for hot weather.

There may be queues while waiting to be tested. People need to wear a mask and maintain appropriate social distance.

The Sunbury exposure sites are linked to a hotel quarantine worker who tested positive. She is a food and beverage attendant at the Holiday Inn at Melbourne Airport.

She last worked on February 4, and tested negative at the end of her shift. She developed symptoms on February 6.

After being advised she was a primary close contact related to the previously identified exposure at the Holiday Inn, she was required to isolate and be tested on February 8.

She tested positive on February 9 and during the time she was infectious, she visited a number of sites in the Sunbury area.

Exposure sites at Sunbury include the following:

Cellarbrations; Sunny Life Massage, Aldente Deli, Sushi Sushi and Asian Star at Sunbury Square Shopping Centre; PJ’s Pet Warehouse; and Bakers Delight; where a case attended at various times on February 5, 6 and 7.

Anyone who has visited the exposure sites during the times listed on the Department of Health website must immediately isolate, be tested, and remain isolated for 14 days.

For a complete list of testing locations and updates about COVID-19, visit the Department of Health website at dhhs.vic.gov.au/coronavirus.

Objectors to Wallan south quarry voice concerns to Mitchell Shire Council

By Colin MacGillivray

Lower property values, traffic problems, damage to the environment and noise and air pollution were key points raised by objectors to quarry south of Wallan, at a Mitchell Shire meeting on Monday night.

Mitchell Shire councillors heard directly from objectors and the quarry operator Conundrum Holdings at its community questions and hearings meeting at the Broadford office.

The meeting comes ahead of the council making a decision on a proposed planning permit for the quarry at its ordinary council meeting on Monday night.

Council has previously rejected a planning permit for the quarry in 2016.

Council chief executive Brett Luxford had previously raised concerns about the quarry after a Victorian Panning Authority independent panel recommended its inclusion in the Beveridge North West Precinct Structure Plan.

The quarry, proposed by Kilmore operator Conundrum Holdings, was only added the PSP after it had gone through a community consultation process that did not include a quarry.

Wallan couple James and Skye Forster, who live less than three kilometres from the proposed quarry site, said they had moved to Wallan to avoid the type of heavy-vehicle traffic the quarry would bring.

“One of the major problems we had where we lived was … trucks that were waking us up at 2am, 3am, 4.30am, 5.15am multiple times a week. We basically have PTSD from six years of torture of having our sleep disrupted,” Ms Forster said.

“I’d like council to consider some curfews or limits on when engine brakes can be used and when trucks can sit there idling.”

Mr Forster said the onus to prove industrial sites were breaking permit conditions was often placed on residents.

“If they’re disturbing the neighbours, it’s up to the neighbours to prove that,” he said.

“How do you police the blasts [at the quarry]? Are we all going to be running recorders in our living rooms? Should I be flying drones? How do we monitor that?”

Objector Teena Lee said her husband Bruce McIntyre suffered from a serious respiratory condition that was likely to be affected by airborne dust particles from the quarry.

Mr McIntyre said he saw no positive aspects to the quarry proposal.

“We came here for the amenity of the Wallan area – you’ve got clean air and it’s semi-rural,” he said.

“[This is] about health and wealth. We’ll lose our health, and we’ll lose our bloody wealth. There can’t be one good thing said about the quarry as far as I’m concerned.”

Other residents raised concerns about traffic banking onto the Hume Freeway during peak hours and the impact of the quarry on the local environment.

Andrew Harvey, a civil engineer representing the proprietors of an 11-hectare wedge of land between the Hume Freeway and Northern Highway south of Wallan, said the proposed quarry access road was out of step with other strategic planning in the area.

“The 11-hectare section we are talking about is a gateway site for entry to the Wallan township from the Hume Freeway coming from both the north and the south,” he said.

“Without due consideration of the effects that this proposed access point is going to take on both the Wallan South and Beveridge North East PSPs, we believe that the proposal has the potential to stymie the adjacent development, including our 11 hectares, through the imposition of buffers, the prevention of vital arterial road networks coming from the south and the inappropriate siting of the access location.

“This access location is inconsistent and conflicts with the Northern Highway duplication, which is being advertised concurrently.”

Mr Harvey said the proposed quarry access road had potential to disrupt a link between the planned Beveridge Intermodal Freight Terminal and the Northern Highway and Hume Freeway.

But Conundrum Holdings quarry project manager Sarah Andrew said it was precisely because of projects like the Northern Highway duplication and the building of the freight terminal that a quarry was necessary.

“You can’t build infrastructure like an interchange, an intermodal or a bypass without material from quarries,” she said.

“I strongly believe as a community we need to meet our social responsibilities with respect to climate and minimising costs for future generations.

“This site will assist by using those basalt resources as close as possible to the end user.

“The quarry can be established and operate in conjunction with the council’s strategic planning aspirations as the [VPA] independent planning panel found.”

Conundrum Holdings managing director Ron Kerr said the group had done all it could to minimise the impact of the quarry on the Wallan community. He said the project would support jobs in the growing region for decades to come.

“North Central Quarry is part of a four-site commitment to our shire, consisting of a quarry, a concrete plant, a transport depot in Wallan and a head office complex in Kilmore. All are interconnected,” he said.

“Underpinning growth, quarrying creates diverse direct and indirect employment opportunities.

“A quarry must be where the rock is. This site has been identified as a potential supply for commercial basalt for many decades.

“Many here have been pursuing a direct transition to residential [land use], but this entails giving up a high-value, well-located significant resource.”

  • The landowner of the proposed quarry location is Wally Mott. Mr Mott is also an owner of the North Central Review.

Final clock-off after a memorable Victoria Police career

By Steph McNicol

NOT many people will be awarded a George Cross Medal by the Queen of England in their lifetimes, but this was only one of many highlights of Michael Pratt’s Victoria Police career until his retirement last month.

The George Cross is the highest award bestowed by British Government for gallantry, and in the UK honours system it is equal to the Victoria Cross – the highest military gallantry award.

When Mr Pratt was awarded the medal for his bravery in 1978, after he was shot while intervening in a bank robbery, he had no idea of the importance of the medal.

“When the medal was announced, I didn’t know, and the chief’s office rang me one Saturday and said, ‘Monday morning nine o’clock you have to be at government house,” Mr Pratt said.

“I thought ‘oh what’s this about?’ I had no idea. I get to government house … we go into the drawing room, and Governor Henry Winneke was in there, we shake hands and I’m still none the wiser why I’m there.

“Sir Henry said ‘this is one of the best days I’ve had as Governor, I’ve had a message from the Queen, she in her wisdom has decided to grant you the George Cross for your gallantry in the bank hold-up.

“I just said ‘yeah’ … but I didn’t know what it was. He said, ‘you don’t know what it is do you?’ He explained to me what the George Cross Medal was, and said it was the highest bravery award you can get.”

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Mr Pratt and his wife Dianne flew to London to receive the medal in 1981.

“We met the Queen at Buckingham Palace, it was a bit scary the first time – it’s the Queen giving you the medal and now you get to meet her,” Mr Pratt said.

Mr Pratt started his police career in 1973 as a cadet, and the retired police officer remembers the morning of June 4, 1976 all too well.

On his day off, Constable Pratt, stationed at Heidelberg at the time, was on his way to get a hair cut in Clifton Hill, blissfully unaware of the events that would shortly follow.

“As I came down Heidelberg Road … you give way to the right, and in my vision when I looked back, I saw three men enter the bank with balaclavas and handguns, and it was obvious they were going to rob the bank,” he said.

“A lot of things go through your mind, but banks are all alarmed, so I figured all the alarms would go off, and I placed myself in a position where I could slow their escape up, which is really the first thing I thought of.

“I drove the car across that busy intersection, I put the headlights on and was sounding my horn. I was in my private car, and amazingly the traffic stopped, and trams gave way to me and I drove over the gutters and catapulted the car into the front door.

Michael Pratt

Mr Pratt watched as the burglars became aware of his presence and panicked.

“I got out of the car and saw them in the bank, ones at the door, one on the counter and one at the teller’s cages scooping money up,” he said.

“There was a bystander coming up from my left-hand side and I just said ‘Quick, there’s an armed robbery here, ring for the police’ just in case there were no alarms.

“The guy inside the door, he was motioning with a 32-silver pistol, for me to move the car, then the guy in the teller’s cages was yelling over to him, ‘shoot him, shoot him, get him out of the way’, so I can hear that going on.

“Because my car put pressure on the door, they weren’t able to open the door. Next thing a foot comes through the door and the pressure was gone so he pulled the door open and came across the bonnet of my car.”

In a matter of seconds, and after a short struggle, Mr Pratt had grabbed one of the burglars hoping it would deter the shooter from firing.

“He was only three metres away and the guy I put down was starting to get up and I thought I’ll grab him in a bear hug, because he’s not going to shoot his mate, but in doing that he got round behind me and shot me in the back from a couple metres away,” he said.

“The impact was significant, he shot me through the shoulder-blade and the bullet went through my left lung, and bounced and did an elliptical in my chest cavity – I don’t know how but it didn’t hit anything [in my chest].

“It continued on and entered the right lung, and by then the bullet was slowed down enough to drop down to the bottom of my right lung. If it had’ve kept going it would’ve cleaned my liver up. I’m very lucky.”

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Ms Pratt recalls the moment she was told her husband, of three months at the time, had been shot on his day off.

“I said to them, it wasn’t him because he wasn’t working today. They said they think its him and they were sending a police car to pick me up,” she said.

“They were asking me a few questions and I said, ‘It wasn’t him anyway’, because I’d spoken to him in the morning, I said ‘he was going to get his hair cut, he wasn’t even at work’.”

Mr Pratt was forced to retire from Victoria Police, much to his disappointment, and spent about five years recovering at home.
The retired officer worked many jobs during his time off, including TAB security, at a pizza shop, and doing deliveries.

“I was always trying to get back into the police force as a public servant, a good friend of mine helped me greatly to get back in December of 1996,” Mr Pratt said.

“I was in Moonee Ponds for a while, I was up at Broadmeadows, then I was asked to go up to Seymour, the superintendent rang me one day and said come up and see me, work with me.

“That was in 2004, and I spent six years up there until 2010 when they built a new station here in Wallan.”

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After putting in an expression of interest to be stationed at Wallan police, Mr Pratt was employed as a public servant at the station in October, 2010.

For about 10 years, Mr Pratt spent countless hours continuing his service to Victoria Police until his retirement last month, on January 29.

The retired officer remains the only recipient of a George Cross Medal in Australia, and still regularly visits London to gather with other recipients worldwide.