<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:syn="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/" xmlns="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/">




    



<channel rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/search_rss">
  <title>REDWatch - Redfern Eveleigh Darlington Waterloo Watch Group</title>
  <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au</link>

  <description>
    
            These are the search results for the query, showing results 1 to 15.
        
  </description>

  

  

  <image rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/logo.png"/>

  <items>
    <rdf:Seq>
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/Events/130223fcd"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/media/120831smhsm"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/RWA/xrwa/rwawebf/aboutbs"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/media/120501sshi"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/media/120207sshi"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2011/111123rwa"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/media/111105dt"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2011/110725rwa"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2010/101217rwat"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/issues/public-housing/redevelopment/statement/2010h/101118hnswa"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2010/100929rwa"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2010/100923smda"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/Events/fcd1000828"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/Events/fcd100626"/>
      
      
        <rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.redwatch.org.au/Events/fcd101127"/>
      
    </rdf:Seq>
  </items>

</channel>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/Events/130223fcd">
    <title>Family &amp; Culture Day - Saturday 23 February 2013</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/Events/130223fcd</link>
    <description>Come and join Shane Phillips Australia's Local Hero of the Year at the Family and Culture Day on Waterloo Green 12pm to 3pm. Lots of activities and entertainment for the whole family.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>Activities on the day include:</p>
<ul><li>Live Entertainment on Stage</li><li>Hosted By Shane Phillips Australia's Local Hero 2013</li><li>REDFERN ALL BLACKS Registration Information Day</li><li>RAB Merchandise Sales</li><li>Market &amp; Community Information Stalls</li><li>JUMPING CASTLE</li><li>FACE PAINTING</li><li>KIDS GAMES</li><li>
PRIZES TO BE WON</li></ul>
<p><br />BE THERE - WATERLOO GREENS 12PM TO 3PM - Saturday 23 February 2013</p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2013-02-21T05:35:35Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Event</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/media/120831smhsm">
    <title>There Goes The Neighbourhood</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/media/120831smhsm</link>
    <description>Once a byword for social decay, Redfern is now hip, thanks to gentrification and redevelopment. But while that has attracted cool cafes and the upwardly mobile, the area's many public housing residents are feeling increasingly downtrodden, as Stephanie Wood discovers in Sydney Magazine issue no 113 for September 2012.</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<div class="cT-imageLandscape">

            <img src="http://images.smh.com.au/2012/08/30/3594829/TSM_09_redfern_AW1XX-20120829173301142459-620x349.jpg" alt="Different worlds … Redfern's changing face has been good for some but not all." />
<p>Different worlds … Redfern's changing face has been a boon for some, but not all.</p>
</div>
<p>Eleanor Simpson is not a dirty person but her flat stinks. She's not 
antisocial, either, but a note taped to her front door tells people that
 if she's not expecting them, there's not a chance she'll let them in. 
Eleanor Simpson is 67 years old and lives on the 15th floor of a Redfern
 apartment block. It could be heaven. "I see Botany Bay off the balcony,
 I see Darling Harbour to my right and on a clear day sometimes the 
mountains, the sunsets and the moon."</p>
<p>And look at the phrases real-estate agents use to describe 
the area: "superb locale", "prime city-fringe location", "enviable 
lifestyle pocket". They're not phrases Simpson would use to describe her
 world. She lives in a Housing NSW tower in a development that some '60s
 bureaucrat with a lousy sense of humour named Poets Corner, and here 
life can be hell. The stench: her flat has been flooded twice in two 
years thanks to the 46-year-old block's dodgy plumbing, most recently in
 June. Touch her flat's carpet and it's still damp. Mould everywhere, 
rotting boards in her kitchen cupboards. "I open them, I could vomit; 
I've had bugs that I've never seen in me life before," says Simpson. 
Housing NSW hasn't rushed to fix things.</p>
<p>And the fear: druggies on every floor, encounters with the 
psychotic and the stoned in grim corridors and frightful lifts. Simpson,
 tiny and in terrible health, was bashed one afternoon downstairs near 
the Poets Corner shop. "They came from behind and knocked me down." 
Barbara, her elderly friend on the eighth floor, barely leaves her flat 
now. "God love her, she's so paranoid; she absolutely loathes having to 
leave her place for what she might come in contact with in the hallway 
and every five minutes she's checking her spy hole."</p>
<div class="cT-imagePortrait">
            <img src="http://images.smh.com.au/2012/08/30/3594843/TSM_09_redfern_AN2-20120827145606969189-300x0.jpg" alt="Superintendent Luke Freudenstein (at left) with Aboriginal leader Shane Phillips." />
<p>Superintendent Luke Freudenstein (at left) with Aboriginal leader Shane Phillips.</p>
</div>
<p>Once, Simpson's little one-bedroom flat with her crazy 
collection of frogs on every surface - ceramic, fur, knitted - was her 
castle. "I used to be as happy as the pig in the proverbial," she says. 
But for public-housing tenants such as Simpson, things have changed 
around here. Over the past few years, they've been hit with a double 
whammy: a severe decline in the quality of their homes as Housing NSW 
properties have aged and maintenance has been neglected, and a massive 
increase in the number of bad neighbours.</p>
<div id="adspot-300x250-pos-3" class="ad adCentred"> Advertisement</div>
<p>Simpson's is not the only world to be changing: these days, 
when she tends the plants on her little balcony, the landscape she looks
 across is one transformed. In only a few years, one of Australia's most
 infamous areas has altered at an unprecedented pace. Today, it's a 
place of fat real-estate prices, hipsters and the affluent, cafes and 
small bars, artisanal bakeries selling $7 loaves of bread, farmers' 
markets, chic apartment blocks, designer dogs and all the joys of 
gentrification, spreading from Waterloo south of Phillip Street, across 
to Redfern Station and beyond to Eveleigh and CarriageWorks.</p>
<p>But this is the story of two very different worlds. "Danks 
Street is absolutely brilliant; bloody expensive, mind, not for poor 
buggers like us," says Simpson of the strip of cafes and galleries a few
 minutes' walk from Poets Corner. Simpson didn't need any help from the 
cool vintage-furniture shops on Regent Street to achieve the retro feel 
in her kitchen. Indeed, it seems some sort of cruel dig that as the 
Redfern/Waterloo area has been prettied up, the circumstances of its 
estimated 6000 public-housing residents - about a quarter of the 
population - have become uglier.</p>
<div class="cT-imagePortrait">
            <img src="http://images.smh.com.au/2012/08/30/3594844/TSM_09_redfern_AN3-20120827145651737415-300x0.jpg" alt="Purple Goanna cafe." />
<p>Purple Goanna cafe.</p>
</div>
<p>Ugly, too, are the implied sneers from those who have moved 
into the neighbourhood: as when SBS newsreader and resident Ricardo 
Goncalves announced in April that he thought his part of Redfern - the 
eastern side of the suburb that includes the refined apartment 
development Moore Park Gardens - should be renamed South Dowling to 
remove it from the stigma still attached to Redfern. Or in the glib tags
 "Murder Mall" or "Methadone Mall", which some use to describe the 
shopping centre on the corner of Baptist and Cleveland streets. (Its 
name was changed from Redfern Mall to the more salubrious Surry Hills 
Shopping Village in the early 1990s.) Or in the comments of pub 
entrepreneur Jaime Wirth, who took over Cleveland Street's Norfolk Hotel
 in late 2010, telling a website that he wanted to transform the "derro 
pokie pub" into one "full of friendly people eating a pint of prawns or 
soft-shell tacos and drinking Pimm's jugs".</p>
<p>It's all a lot to stomach for the old-timers but the change 
has barely started. The population has leapt since 2006 (in Waterloo 
it's up by 25 per cent) and it's estimated it will almost double again 
over the next two decades. The once-wretched Block is now an expanse of 
lawn that will become the Pemulwuy development, including a planned 62 
apartments for Aboriginal families, accommodation for 154 students, and 
commercial and retail space. But Pemulwuy is a minnow: it's the state 
government's renewal plans for its Redfern/Waterloo property portfolio -
 estimated to be about a third of the area - that will drastically alter
 the two suburbs' physical shape and the fabric of their communities 
over the next 25 years.</p>
<p>In Macquarie Street offices, ministers and bureaucrats are 
poring over blueprints that will add 3500 new units of housing - a 60:40
 mix of private and public (now called "social" housing) - to Housing 
NSW estates in Redfern, Waterloo and Eveleigh. The government says the 
plans will result in a more balanced mix of social, private and 
affordable housing and a more sustainable community. Some, though, 
predict that the area's diversity and character will be replaced by a 
panorama of cookie-cutter apartment complexes for yuppies. Others fear 
the plans will widen the already stark division between the new and the 
old worlds, the haves and the have-nots.</p>
<div class="cT-imagePortrait">
            <img src="http://images.smh.com.au/2012/08/30/3594847/TSM_09_redfern_AN5-20120827145941989104-300x0.jpg" alt="Some of the suburb's graffiti art." />
<p>Some of the suburb's graffiti art.</p>
</div>
<p>"It's an absolute disaster," says local resident Ross Smith, 
68, who has lived in a low-rise Waterloo walk-up since he could get a 
beer at his local for ninepence. "[It will be] an entirely different 
landscape. You'll see high-density residential property in which the 
existing [public housing] community will have a very diminished or 
non-existent role. It's the end of the community of this area."</p>
<p><strong>Millie Ingram remembers seeing</strong> Elvis Presley in <em>Loving You</em>
 at the Lawson Theatre in Botany Road. She also remembers the nearby 
Palms milk bar, which was run by a lovely old Greek bloke and had a 
jukebox. "We weren't allowed in hotels," says Ingram, a feisty Wiradjuri
 woman who heads Wyanga Aboriginal Community Aged Care Program.</p>
<p>In the late '50s, Ingram came from Cowra to the city for 
work. In an area full of factories, including the massive Eveleigh 
locomotive and carriage workshop, she found that easily enough - at a 
local chocolate factory. As an Aborigine, though, finding somewhere to 
live was harder. "We finally got a squalid little attic room, my sister 
and I, just opposite Redfern Park." With the factories had come the 
tenements housing thousands: the unemployed and the alcoholic, labourers
 and factory workers. Violence and crime, ragged, neglected children.</p>
<div class="cT-imagePortrait">
            <img src="http://images.smh.com.au/2012/08/30/3594864/TSM_09_redfern_AN8-20120827150046679230-300x0.jpg" alt="Traditional presence … the area's history as a national focal point for the Aboriginal struggle is well known." />
<p>Traditional presence … the area's history as a national focal point for the Aboriginal struggle is well known.</p>
</div>
<p>A decade or so before Ingram arrived in Redfern, the local 
council had declared its intentions to turn its "blighted drabness" into
 a "model suburb". It would be "the Mayfair of Sydney", boasted a <em>Sydney Morning Herald</em>
 article in August 1949, which was accompanied by an illustration 
pointing out where the suburb's opera house and national theatre would 
go.</p>
<p>The first bulldozers moved into slums off Cleveland Street 
late in 1947; two years later, work started on the first of the Housing 
Commission's new walk-up apartments. The area's first tower block, the 
McKell building, started to go up in 1963.</p>
<p>When the Housing Commission announced in 1972 that it would 
resume Waterloo homes in a new round of slum clearances, the area's era 
as a battleground started. Locals reacted with fury. They wanted 
rehabilitation, not demolition and displacement of their community. 
There were protests and picket lines, green bans, forced evictions and 
arrests.</p>
<div class="cT-imagePortrait">
            <img src="http://images.smh.com.au/2012/08/30/3594868/TSM_09_redfern_AN9-20120827150100456006-300x0.jpg" alt="Mick Mundine, head of the Aboriginal Housing Company." />
<p>Mick Mundine, head of the Aboriginal Housing Company.</p>
</div>
<p>Battles in Redfern and Waterloo have not always been so 
overt. Resident Geoff Turnbull, who for years has been a key member of 
the REDWatch community group, tells the story of a long-standing 
community centre that owns several properties in one street. As the area
 gentrified, some residents of the street started to fret about the 
effect the centre and the Aboriginal children who used it were having on
 their property prices. "They basically infiltrated and took control of 
the organisation and, in 2004, tried to sell it off," says Turnbull, who
 paid $26,920 for his Lawson Street terrace in 1978.</p>
<p>Ingram describes Redfern as "our Anzac Cove". "We lost a lot 
of warriors there," she says. To ill-health, stress-related conditions 
resulting from "the struggle", alcohol and drugs. It's "the blackfellas'
 graveyard", says Mick Mundine, the head of the Aboriginal Housing 
Company. The area's history as a national focal point for the Aboriginal
 struggle is well known: the "sad affair" of the Block. The night of 
rioting in 2004 after the death of Thomas "TJ" Hickey, who died when he 
came off his bike and was impaled on a fence; the youth was, some 
believe, pedalling to escape police. Mundine's own tour of duty has 
lasted 30 years; he's seen off countless foes, including some within the
 Aboriginal community who opposed the demolition of the Block. (It might
 be appropriate that the Pemulwuy development is named for an Aboriginal
 warrior but Mundine's campaign for $70 million in funds and planning 
approval still has a way to run.)</p>
<p>But perhaps the most vicious battles in the area now are 
those the drug-affected and addicted wage on themselves and their 
community. Since the Block's demise, the drug problem, increasingly ice,
 has slithered into the public-housing areas. Eleanor Simpson encounters
 the screaming, the raging, the tormented every time she leaves her 
tower flat. "The druggies all stick together and there's not one floor 
that's exempt," she says. "Nobody'll come and visit me any more because 
they hate getting into the lifts and being accosted."</p>
<div class="cT-imagePortrait">
            <img src="http://images.smh.com.au/2012/08/30/3594870/TSM_09_redfern_AN10-20120827150114631934-300x0.jpg" alt="Millie Ingram of the Wyanga Community Aged Care Program." />
<p>Millie Ingram of the Wyanga Community Aged Care Program.</p>
</div>
<p><strong>Dry Land Bar in Redfern Street</strong> does a 
cheeseburger with a whole pickle at the side and house-made pork 
scratchings. In Regent Street, where retro furniture shops sell $5500 
mid-century modern chairs, the new Milk Bar by Cafe Ish has a lolly 
counter, a jukebox and serves "Ai's freaking awesome chicken wings". At 
the Norfolk Hotel in Cleveland Street, old tin cans serve as cutlery 
holders, tacos take top billing on the menu and there's a portrait of 
the Virgin Mary in the bathroom. Redfern the hipster playground delights
 in its irreverent, ironic sense of humour; the eccentric, the 
whimsical.</p>
<p>In Redfern Park, where Paul Keating delivered his famous 1992
 speech ("We simply cannot sweep injustice aside"), there's often a pet 
pig on a leash. His name is James. His owner, local student Anna 
Furlong, walks him or her dad, Patrick, does. "He's like a politician - 
he doesn't do much and grunts a lot," says Patrick Furlong.</p>
<p>On Redfern Street, there's a giraffe. The giraffe came from 
Melbourne Zoo (after apparently dying of natural causes) and has a price
 tag of $35,000. "Every day, ad nauseam," says Ken Wallis of the 
questions customers ask about the taxidermied torso, which sits on the 
counter of Seasonal Concepts, his florist/vintage store. (Look for 
Wallis's taxidermy props in Baz Luhrmann's <em>The Great Gatsby</em>.) 
"Divine, stunning, divine," says a customer as she strolls around the 
crammed-to-the-rafters shop one Saturday morning. She chooses some 
flowers, then remembers, "I want something little for the powder room as
 well."</p>
<p>In 2006, attracted by the "virgin ground", Wallis spent 
$570,000 on 122 Redfern Street. He knew it was a risk. Dozens of Redfern
 shops were empty and, after hours, the steel shutters banged down. But 
his investment soon started to look like a smart move: the Eveleigh 
Farmers' Market started at CarriageWorks, the Roll-Up Redfern campaign 
was launched to persuade shop owners to ditch the shutters, the last 
terrible houses on the Block were demolished, and Redfern Park got a 
$32-million makeover. In 2011, film producers moved in, turning the 
Block into Darlinghurst circa 1927 for scenes in <em>Underbelly: Razor</em>. (This year, film crews for <em>Redfern Now</em>, Blackfella Films' television series for the ABC about urban indigenous life, and the feature film <em>Around the Block</em>, starring Hollywood actor Christina Ricci, have rubbed elbows in the area.)</p>
<p>Then there are the property prices. Australian Property 
Monitors statistics show the median price for a house in Redfern is 
$830,000 with a long-term annual growth rate of about 6.55 per cent 
compared to 5.54 per cent for the region. But David Servi, director of 
Crown Street agent Spencer &amp; Servi, says the statistics don't tell 
the full story as large homes in Redfern rarely go on the market. People
 simply don't want to leave. "People just love the sense of community." 
Servi, who in August sold a four-bedroom terrace at 101 Great Buckingham
 Street for $1.2 million, is blunt when clients say they don't want 
Redfern. "I say, 'Well, you obviously haven't been there then.' "</p>
<p>In 2010, <em>Today</em> show presenter Ben Fordham spent $1 
million-plus on a contemporary terrace in Wells Street with timber 
floors recycled from a bowling alley and a built-in garden bed on his 
balcony where he grows beetroot, carrots and rocket. "I've completely 
fallen in love with Redfern," says Fordham. "My wife isn't convinced but
 I've said to her, 'Look, I think we're here for life now.' I just love 
its attitude; I reckon you can walk 500 metres to Surry Hills and notice
 the difference - people actually say 'hello' to you in Redfern."</p>
<p>For those with income or a property foothold in the suburb, 
the area's gentrification is something to celebrate. With her architect 
husband, Peter, Lord Mayor Clover Moore moved into "the dearest little 
house" at 817 Bourke Street in 1976 and later bought a property across 
the back lane in Kepos Street. Since her days as a young mother pushing a
 pram around the "bleak" streets of Redfern and collecting signatures 
for a petition about speeding traffic, Moore has been a cheerleader for 
the area. "The Redfern story is a very joyful story," she says. "Cafe 
life, street life, is terrific. It makes it much safer and builds 
community."</p>
<p>Some might also use the word "joyful" to describe the strides
 the local Aboriginal community has taken, especially since the opening 
of the gleaming National Centre of Indigenous Excellence in George 
Street.</p>
<p>Three mornings a week at 6am up to 70 people pull on boxing 
gloves for a training session in the centre's gym. Among them, 
Superintendent Luke Freudenstein, commander of the Redfern Local Area 
Command, Aboriginal leader Shane Phillips, police officers, Caucasian 
locals and Aboriginal kids who have been in trouble or are at risk of 
it. For an hour they're hard at it: boxing combinations, push-ups, 
sprints. Afterwards, some of the kids might go to chat with Freudenstein
 in his office at Redfern station. "They're my guests," says the 
superintendent, who talks to them about footy, boxing, what's happening 
at home. "I want the police to see they're welcome."</p>
<p>It's all part of a court-recognised program designed to bring
 discipline and routine to the lives of the kids. Since it started in 
2009, robbery rates in the area are down and optimism is up. 
Freudenstein has become an unlikely local hero. Jacob Saunders, a 
19-year-old Aboriginal man who has seen some trouble in his life and who
 now mentors his younger brothers, adores him. "His generosity to us is 
unbelievable," says Saunders, who was born in Taree and came to the 
Block with his mum when he was six weeks old.</p>
<p>It hasn't been an easy life for the young man, seeing things 
that kids shouldn't see, the hardship, the violence. "We all have our 
battle scars," Saunders says. But things are different in Redfern now. 
No one treats him as though they're too good for him, he can walk into 
shops without feeling shopkeepers are watching him, and he wants 
everyone to feel welcome, to know that Redfern's not the place they 
might think it is. "I can walk through Redfern with my head high because
 that's where I'm from, that's my dirt, that's my land, that's a part of
 my heart."</p>
<p><strong>Eleanor Simpson moved into public housing</strong> 
after her health collapsed. She'd been a nanny, worked in Double Bay and
 Darling Point. Then, in 1986, she was diagnosed with breast cancer. 
Doctors told her she might not make it. Two years later they told her 
she had uterine cancer. "I couldn't afford to pay rent, health 
insurance, I had to hock my jewellery; oh, what I had to do," says 
Simpson, who now gets a pension of about $375 a week, about $85 of which
 goes on rent.</p>
<p>She's a diabetic and has diverticulitis - "I've been fighting
 for three years to keep my colon." Since the floods in her flat she's 
had chest infections and, in 2011, spent two days in hospital after what
 she describes as a "total stress attack". "In three years, five people 
have jumped off balconies here," she says.</p>
<p>A Housing NSW spokesperson told <em>the(sydney)magazine</em> 
that, after both floods, water had been extracted from the flat and work
 to replace her kitchen bench-top and cupboards is scheduled for 
September.</p>
<p>"Increasingly, disadvantage in Redfern-Waterloo is confined 
to what happens in the public-housing estates," says REDWatch's Geoff 
Turnbull. It's the result, he says, of the NSW government's lack of 
investment in property and maintenance over a long period of time and of
 a shortage in public housing.</p>
<p>Public-housing tenant and canny observer Ross Smith recalls 
when people were proud to live in the public housing. "It was socially 
mixed, civilised, a functioning community; it wasn't a leper colony," 
says Smith, who was a travelling carnival worker when he moved into 
Waterloo in the early 1960s. He says that, since 2005, the only new 
tenants to move into the area's public housing have been those with high
 needs - the unstable mentally ill straight out of psychiatric 
institutions who forget to take their pills, troublemakers out of jail -
 and they're not getting the support they need to be functional 
residents. "It's gone past the tipping point; now the tenant body is 
predominantly high needs."</p>
<p>According to a Housing NSW spokesperson, a number of 
measures, including block concierges and organised social activities for
 the over 50s, have been put in place to deal with the increasing number
 of tenants with complex needs.</p>
<p>For activist residents such as Ross Smith, even as they 
grapple with such pressing issues, it's impossible not to see the future
 through the prism of the government's urban-renewal plans for the area.
 For a month in early 2011, locals got a glimpse of the Draft 
Redfern-Waterloo Built Environment Plan Stage 2 (BEP2) and were able to 
comment. It's likely that before the end of the year the new "planning 
controls" will be finalised and exhibited before being formally 
gazetted.</p>
<p>For residents, many of whom are elderly and vulnerable, 
there'll be enormous disruption and displacement - under the plans, 700 
units of public housing will be lost from the area and relocated to 
other parts of the City of Sydney. Submissions from organisations such 
as Shelter NSW have raised concerns including whether the relocation of 
so many tenancies is even possible given the scarcity of public land in 
the inner city.</p>
<p><strong>BEP2 also proposes that buildings</strong> of up to 
12 storeys could replace the current public-housing walk-ups dotted 
around the suburbs. Some, including Geoff Turnbull, believe the walk-ups
 will be demolished to make way for developers to build apartments for 
the private housing market. He speculates that, in the worst-case 
scenario, all the area's public housing could be confined to the 
existing towers, which will be retained, and in proposed "infill" 
developments around their bases - where there is open space and car 
parking - exacerbating the ghetto effect.</p>
<p>Many have suspicions about the NSW government's underlying 
agenda. "It's about the government trying to get the best return that it
 can from its landholding," says Turnbull. Clover Moore, whose council 
has no remit over the renewal, says social problems and drug dealing 
were the original reason the Carr Labor government created the place 
management authority, the Redfern-Waterloo Authority (subsumed into the 
Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority [SMDA] in 2010). "What 
happened ... they then looked at the area and thought ... 'Ooo, we own 
quite a lot of property here, perhaps this is potential development.' I 
feel very disillusioned about it because it was really meant to be about
 addressing the social issues."</p>
<p>Moore's concerns will not be allayed by the SMDA's response to two direct questions from <em>the(sydney)magazine</em>
 about the future of the walk-ups and the government's agenda for the 
area: "One of the SMDA's priorities [is] working with all stakeholders 
to deal with a range of issues and facilitating improvement. Significant
 progress has been made ... in dealing with a number of social and 
development issues in the area," an SMDA spokesperson said.</p>
<p>And it seems some would like to sweep the public-housing 
community under the carpet. When the Roll Up Redfern group commissioned 
"ideas studio" Frost Design to develop a Redfern brand, its 61-page 
presentation document directly mentioned the area's public-housing 
presence only once - as one of the negative perceptions of the area.</p>
<p>Others, though, are keen to emphasise that public-housing 
residents are part of the broader community. "People in public housing 
can use all the same facilities that people in private housing use," 
says Clover Moore. Seasonal Concepts' Ken Wallis objects to what he 
thinks is an artificial division in the area; the perception of welfare 
and non-welfare. "I don't like the imposition of the 'us and them'; it 
implies this sense of conflict. On the street I don't get any sense of 
that at all. It's almost like it's applied from outside." Wallis, who 
walks his Great Danes in the park twice a day, says the way locals mix 
is exemplified by dog owners in the park. "They're out of the towers, 
they're out of various degrees of wealth ... They're all utilising the 
facility and getting on."</p>
<p>Rosa Meza doesn't have a dog and can't afford to go to cafes.
 Since 1989 she has lived in a three-storey walk-up on Elizabeth Street.
 "There is a little bit of a divide, I think, because I'm only engaged 
with people who live in the housing," says Meza, an elegant 50-year-old 
who applied for housing after she split with her partner and spent four 
years moving with her little girl between rented rooms and friends' 
couches. She's nervous about the future - she thinks she's in denial 
about what the renewal might mean for her - and shakes her head at how 
her community has changed. "Sometimes you see young people wearing, 
like, cool clothes [like street people] ... It's a bit bizarre ... You 
have one lot of people spending hundreds of dollars to get a particular 
look and they're living among people who have that look anyway." A visit
 to a cafe is a luxury for Meza, who earns about $500 a week teaching 
English to migrants; $145 of that goes to Housing NSW for rent. At Baffi
 &amp; Mo cafe in Redfern Street, she looks at the menu and remarks, 
"It's a bit expensive."</p>
<p>Cafe society gone mad: "Salon and cafe coming soon," says a 
sign on the window of an old barbershop on Cleveland Street, a couple of
 old barbers' chairs inside amid building rubble; the Bourke Street 
corner store, where a kindly Egyptian woman once served, now a cafe; 
another barbershop on Redfern Street, a cafe; the Lebanese pastry shop 
on Cooper Street that sold semolina cakes and date-filled pastries, 
empty, a-cafe-in-waiting.</p>
<p>"One of the fears of public tenants is that there'll be lots 
of places to buy $7 cups of coffee but there won't be places to be able 
to get your cheap services," says Geoff Turnbull. "Look at Roger the 
shoe-repair guy. He basically charges people what he thinks that they 
can afford. He owns the place and when he goes, no one else is going to 
be able to do that. It's going to become another cafe."</p>
<p>And what about the people? The real people who live here. 
Like Russ, an old guy who's the only one drinking in the public bar of 
the Norfolk one afternoon as hipsters charge past to the beer garden. 
He's boring the barmaid to tears. "Same conversation as yesterday, 
exactly the same," she moans to a co-worker after he leaves. Or Norrie, 
the androgynous anarchist who lives in a run-down terrace near the Block
 with the word "Love" on the balcony and rides a push bike with a 
machine on the back that blows out bubbles. Or Mary, the intellectually 
disabled woman who has a chocolate milkshake every day at Redfern 
Street's Purple Goanna cafe where there's roo, croc, emu and barra on 
the menu and everybody feels welcome.</p>
<p>And what about housing tenants like Eleanor Simpson, who is 
shrinking in on herself, into her damp, smelly flat. Sometimes she'll 
venture out for a walk. "I'll leave here and I'll walk all the way down 
to Danks and further ... and the developments ... oh my godfather, and 
we're just left out of it. You know, we are really left out of it."</p>
<p>For her birthday last year, Eleanor Simpson and six of her 
friends went to the Norfolk Hotel for lunch. "I mean it was okay," she 
says, "but it's lost its character."</p>
<p>Photography
/ Stephanie Wood</p>
<p>Source: <em>the(sydney)magazine Issue no. 113 September 2012 pub 31 August 2012 - <a class="external-link" href="http://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/there-goes-the-neighbourhood-20120827-24vnk.html">http://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/there-goes-the-neighbourhood-20120827-24vnk.html </a>- for scanned copy of the printed article which has some additional photos see -</em>&nbsp; <span class="summary"><a class="contenttype-file state-published url" href="../redw/aboutredw/120831smhsmp/view">There Goes The Neighbourhood - Sydney Magazine pdf</a></span></p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2012-08-31T00:35:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>News Item</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/RWA/xrwa/rwawebf/aboutbs">
    <title>About RWA - Board and Staff</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/RWA/xrwa/rwawebf/aboutbs</link>
    <description>RWA Website 21 Dec 2011 - About Us - Board and Staff - 154KB PDF</description>
    
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2012-05-07T01:30:56Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>File</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/media/120501sshi">
    <title>Positive relations between police and community</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/media/120501sshi</link>
    <description>REDFERN: This month marks a special milestone for the life work of community member, Lesley Townsend – 15 years as the Aboriginal Community Liaison Officer with Redfern Police. On April 19, Lesley Townsend spoke with the SSH and reflected on the ground gained in developing a stronger community in the Redfern/ Waterloo area reports Kate Williamson in the May 2012 edition of The South Sydney Herald.
</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>“When I came to the role 15 years ago the drug and alcohol incidences,
especially around The Block area, were very significant. It was out of control,
really. But over the last five to six years things have improved out of sight,”
Ms Townsend said.</p>
<p>“There was a history of mistrust and hatred between the Aboriginal
community and the police that needed to be reconciled. This stemmed from the
Aboriginal Protection Board era when kids were taken from their families and it
was up to the local sergeant and constable in the area to do that.</p>
<p>“Back in the mid ’80s the Aboriginal community and the police decided
they wanted a better relationship so they put together Aboriginal units within
the police service and from these units employed Aboriginal Community Liaison
Officers.</p>
<p>“A key role of an ACLO is to intervene when an Aboriginal or Torres
Strait Islander person is in custody. They make sure that their legal rights
are met, that they are fine, and not at risk of harm or hurt in any way. We
also contact legal services and family friends.</p>
<p>“When I started we really saw the need to build on this liaison work
and work more closely with the community, especially young people.</p>
<p>“In the late ’90s it seemed like we were fighting a losing battle with the
drug use and associated crime in the area. It was distressing for many of us
who have lived in the area for years to see our own people selling drugs to
kids.</p>
<p>“Then the police started programs in partnerships with the community.
For example, about six years ago we organised camps with the kids. This proved
to be very successful. I started to hear of kids that would come to the police station and ask for a certain constable or sergeant who they had met on
the camp. If the kids saw an officer on the street they would stop and talk to
them. They wouldn’t run away if they saw a police vehicle on The Block. That’s
one of the things we don’t want anymore. We don’t want the kids to be scared of
police. We want to build up a really good rapport.</p>
<p>“And about four years ago the current Local Area Commander,
Superintendent Luke Freudenstein, launched the Clean Slate Without Prejudice
program which is a program that worked with the kids who were getting into
trouble, trying to clean up their act. They would participate in a variety of
programs such as boxing, touch football, OzTag or anything like that. Tribal
Warrior, a community organisation led by Shane Phillips and managed by the
elders, worked very hard to make these programs a success by running mentoring
programs.</p>
<p>“Our crime rate with youth in the area has dropped dramatically over
the years. It really has, and it is all thanks to people like Shane Phillips,
Superintendent Luke Freudenstein, our youth liaison officers and many others.</p>
<p>“Holding the Family and Culture Day every month on The Block for the
last four years has also brought positive change. Shane Phillips and others
involved would get out days before these events, walk around The Block,
knocking on doors and handing out brochures, spreading the message that these
days were for our community, to bring the community back together and that
there will be no dealers, no drugs and no alcohol. The police were keen to come
along to the events to show their support.</p>
<p>“Now that The Block is under development, the event has moved to
Waterloo Green. The first was held in February and was a great success. There
was face painting, jumping castles, live entertainment, and with a variety of
cultures such as Chinese dancers and international singers. We see it as an opportunity
for elders and children to feel comfortable and safe in their community.”</p>
<p>The next Family and Culture Day will be on Saturday May 26, from 12
midday to 3pm at Waterloo Green.</p>
Source: The South Sydney Herald May 2012 – <a href="http://www.southsydneyherald.com.au">www.southsydneyherald.com.au</a>]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2012-05-01T06:11:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>News Item</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/media/120207sshi">
    <title>Shane Phillips in top 100</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/media/120207sshi</link>
    <description>REDFERN: According to the Sydney Morning Herald’s (Sydney) magazine, Shane Phillips of the Tribal Warrior Association is one of Sydney’s 100 most influential people writes Liesa Clague in the February 2012 edition of the South Sydney Herald. </description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>It was an immense pleasure speaking to Shane about growing
up in Redfern – what has inspired him with regards to his work now, and
recalling, when he was young, the key events and people who have made him the
leader he is today.</p>
<p>Shane (a Bundjalung, Wonnarua and Eora man) was born in
Redfern, and grew up surrounded by role models such as Mum Shirl, Charlie
Perkins, Joyce Clague, and other Aboriginal men and women who have contributed
to the fight for equal opportunity, the right to be counted as part of the
wider community and to help support Aboriginal people. Shane talked about the
environment of Redfern in the ’70s and ’80s, which were “good times”.</p>
<p>Much has changed since then. Shane looks forward to new life
for “working families” on The Block, better relationships with the police and
among all people of good will in the community.</p>
<p>What inspires Shane is supporting his family and being true
to them as well as doing the best he can for his community.</p>
<p>He believes that you need good work ethics and to follow
through by doing the best job you can.</p>
<p>Shane started work at the age of 14, after being told by his
Dad he had to work. The work experience for Shane was “tough but fair”, and he
learnt a lot from the people he worked with and for. He learned there was value
and pride in contributing to the greater good.</p>
<p>Shane recalls, when he was 14 years old, assisting another
lad to break into a car. The other lad ran away but Shane was caught by police.
He recalls that the police officer “kicked me up the bum” and “told me he
didn’t want me being involved in any stealing again”. This event shaped Shane
to realise that he did not want to do anything to get himself into trouble. “I
respected that he gave me that chance – that he showed me that respect,” Shane
said.</p>
<p>Being there for his family, maintaining humility and
integrity, and developing programs that support young people in the community
to achieve their goals are very important to Shane – more important than any
accolades or awards.&nbsp;</p>
<p>Source: South
Sydney Herald February 2012 <a href="http://www.southsydneyherald.com.au/">www.southsydneyherald.com.au</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2012-02-06T11:30:33Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>News Item</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2011/111123rwa">
    <title>RWA Email Update – 23 November 2011</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2011/111123rwa</link>
    <description>In this Update: NEWS - RWA Repeal Bill Update / Draft BEP 2 and Urban Renewal Study / Redfern Photo Competition / Redfern Ambassadors / Pemulwuy Project Community Information Event / Housing NSW Community Design Workshops / Vote for your favourite Christmas banner / RWA newsletter out now! - DEVELOPMENT APPLICATIONS - Enlargement of Smokers' Balcony in Railz on Regent, 56 Regent Street, Redfern / 
Redfern RSL Club fit out on Level 2, 157 Redfern Street, Redfern / Clothing and bicycle retail shop at 116 Lawson Street, Redfern - WHAT’S ON - 23 and 24 November 2011 – Housing NSW Community Design Workshops / 15 December 2011 – RWA Seniors Christmas Party / Eveleigh Farmers’ Market – every Saturday 8am to 1pm / Eveleigh Artisans’ Market –first Sunday of the month, 10am to 3pm / Alexandria Community Garden – 1st and 3rd Saturday of the month</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[In this Update:
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920640">NEWS</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920641">RWA Repeal Bill
Update</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920642">Draft BEP 2 and Urban Renewal Study</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920643">Redfern Photo Competition</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920644">Redfern Ambassadors</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920645">Pemulwuy Project Community Information
Event</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920646">Housing NSW Community Design Workshops</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920647">Vote for your favourite Christmas
banner</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920648">RWA newsletter out now!</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920649">DEVELOPMENT&nbsp;APPLICATIONS</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920650">Enlargement of Smokers' Balcony&nbsp;in
Railz on Regent, 56 Regent Street, Redfern</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920651">Redfern RSL Club fit out on&nbsp;Level
2, 157 Redfern Street, Redfern</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920652">Clothing and bicycle retail shop
at&nbsp;116 Lawson Street, Redfern</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920653">WHAT’S ON</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920654">23 and 24 November 2011 – Housing NSW
Community Design Workshops</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920655">15 December 2011 – RWA Seniors
Christmas Party</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920656">Eveleigh Farmers’ Market – every
Saturday 8am to 1pm</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920657">Eveleigh Artisans’ Market –first Sunday
of the month, 10am to 3pm</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc309920658">Alexandria Community Garden – 1st and
3rd Saturday of the month</a></span></p>
<h1><a name="new_homes"></a><a name="_Toc309920640">NEWS</a></h1>
<h2><a name="_Toc309920641"><span class="Heading1Char">RWA Repeal Bill Update</span></a></h2>
<p><strong>
</strong>The NSW Government introduced the Redfern-Waterloo Authority Repeal
Bill 2011 on Tuesday, 18 October 2011, which has received unanimous support
from both the lower and upper houses of Parliament.&nbsp;The Bill will, subject
to Parliamentary process, be finalised and proclaimed shortly.&nbsp;</p>
<p>The&nbsp;Repeal Bill will see the transfer of
many of Redfern-Waterloo Authority’s functions to the Sydney Metropolitan
Development Authority (SMDA)&nbsp;and other Government agencies as appropriate
to ensure the ongoing support and sustainable renewal of the Redfern-Waterloo
area.&nbsp;This process has commenced and we will continue to provide further
advice on this as key&nbsp;transfer details&nbsp;are finalised.</p>
<p>For information on the transfer of
Development Applications to the City of Sydney, the transfer of the Aboriginal
Employment Program, and the transfer of Draft Built Environment Plan 2 (BEP 2),
to the SMDA please visit <a href="http://www.redfernwaterloo.nsw.gov.au/">www.redfernwaterloo.nsw.gov.au</a>.<br />
<br />
Full details of the RWA Repeal&nbsp;Bill can be viewed <a href="http://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/prod/parlment/nswbills.nsf/0/04EFF5FAFFB35C92CA25792D001F86D9?Open&shownotes">here.</a></p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920642">Draft BEP 2 and Urban Renewal Study</a></h1>
<p>The Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority
is currently considering the submissions received regarding the non-statutory
exhibition of Draft BEP 2 which occurred earlier this year. The SMDA will also
be carrying out further studies and analysis to support the appropriate future
controls for the Draft BEP 2 sites. This forms part of an urban renewal study
for the&nbsp;entire Redfern-Waterloo Precinct.</p>
<p>When complete, these studies and draft
planning controls will be exhibited.</p>
<p>The key studies that will inform the future
controls for Draft BEP 2 are:</p>
<ul><li>A Communications Strategy (to guide the consultation process and
engagement with key stakeholders);</li><li>An Urban Design and Public Domain Study (reviewing the previous Draft
BEP 2 and associated analysis and all submissions received, together with the
study requirements from the NSW Department of Planning and Infrastructure);</li><li>Transport, Traffic and Accessibility (reviewing previous preliminary
work, augmented with more detailed analysis of the wider area and appropriate
modelling, in close consultation with Transport for NSW);</li><li>A Social Impact Assessment (building upon previous review work on
community facilities, and appropriate scoping for social impact assessment);</li><li>Economic analysis (including the economic/industry profile of the area
and retail needs, availability, and impact on centres); and</li><li>Infrastructure and environmental capacity (including utility capacity,
natural and man-made processes and sustainability measures).</li></ul>
<p>To date the following consultants have been
appointed:</p>
<ul><li>Straight Talk will undertake the Consultation Strategy;</li><li>Aecom will undertake the Sustainable Servicing and Supporting
Infrastructure Capacity Study;</li><li>Parsons
Brinckerhoff will undertake the Transport, Traffic and Accessibility Study; and</li><li>Hill PDA
will undertake the Economic Analysis.</li></ul>
<p>The SMDA will progressively advise on its
website of the appointment of consultants and&nbsp;welcomes feedback
from&nbsp;individuals, organisations&nbsp;and other&nbsp;stakeholders on&nbsp;key
issues which they would like considered in the relevant study&nbsp;by the
SMDA.&nbsp; This will ensure the SMDA can consider key issues appropriately and
in a timely manner.&nbsp;</p>
<p>If you have any questions, please contact the
SMDA Urban Renewal Team on 9202 9100 or email <a href="mailto:contactus@smda.nsw.gov.au">contactus@smda.nsw.gov.au</a>.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920643">Redfern Photo Competition</a></h1>
<p>The ‘Smile, You’re in Redfern’ photo competition has been launched with
$1600 worth of prizes up for grabs. Photographic entries should capture the
‘welcoming spirit’ of Redfern and demonstrate to the wider public the thriving
community that exists here.&nbsp;</p>
<p>The prizes on offer are:</p>
<p><strong>1<sup>st</sup>
prize:</strong> $500 Eveleigh Market voucher</p>
<p><strong>2<sup>nd</sup>
prize:</strong> $400 Breville prize including a matching toaster and kettle valued at
over $200 plus a voucher for $200</p>
<p><strong>3<sup>rd</sup>
prize:</strong> $290 South Sydney Rabbitohs membership package including a polo tshirt
and cap</p>
<p><strong>4<sup>th</sup>
prize:</strong> $250 Woolworths voucher</p>
<p><strong>5<sup>th</sup>
prize:</strong> $200 Pitt St Diner dinner voucher</p>
<p>The photographic competition is part of the Redfern brand promotion to
encourage more visitors and business to the area and is an initiative of the
Roll Up Redfern Group comprising Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority,
City of Sydney, South Sydney Business Chamber, South Sydney Rabbitohs and REDWatch.</p>
<p>The community can get involved by voting for their favourite Redfern
photo at <a href="http://www.facebook.com/redfernwaterloo">www.facebook.com/redfernwaterloo</a>. The winners will then be put towards a judging panel of Redfern
Ambassadors.</p>
<p>Entries close on Monday, 27 February 2012 with the winners announced at
Eveleigh Market on Saturday, 3 March 2012. To enter, please read the Terms
&amp; Conditions <a href="http://www.redfernwaterloo.nsw.gov.au/other/media_releases/2011_photo_terms_conditions.pdf">here</a> and follow the application guidelines.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920644">Redfern Ambassadors</a></h1>
<p>The new Redfern Ambassadors to help promote Redfern were announced at
the<strong> </strong>Roll Up Redfern business and
community briefing on Wednesday 16 November 2011. The Redfern Ambassadors are
passionate about the local area and will be spreading the word about the
business, cultural and creative opportunities on offer here.</p>
<p>The Redfern Ambassadors are:</p>
<ul><li>Nathan
Merritt – South Sydney Rabbitohs player</li><li>Mary Lynne
Pidcock – President of South Sydney Business Chamber</li><li>Sol Bellear
– Director of NCIE</li><li>Ben Fordham
– The Today Show reporter and 2GB radio announcer</li><li>Nick Fordham
– Managing Director. The Fordham Company</li><li>Aunty Beryl
– Trainer and mentor at Yaama Dhiyaan</li><li>Shane
Phillips – CEO of Tribal Warrior</li></ul>
<p>So look out for your favourite Redfern Ambassador at up and coming
events in the Redfern area!</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920645">Pemulwuy Project Community Information
Event</a></h1>
<p>The Aboriginal Housing Company (AHC) has prepared a
development application for the Pemulwuy Project and invited comment from
residents and stakeholders on the proposed redevelopment of The Block on
Wednesday, 22 November 2011.</p>
<p>The development comprises of affordable housing, gymnasium,
public car park (with 150 spaces), commercial, childcare, student
accommodation, gallery, and modification of Caroline Lane.</p>
<p>The event provided the community with the opportunity to comment on the
proposed redevelopment and addressed the transfer of City-owned Eveleigh Lane,
part of Caroline Lane and 91-99 Eveleigh St and 119-121 Eveleigh St to the AHC
with the City of Sydney presenting about the land transfer and the
reconfiguration of Caroline Lane.</p>
<p>The event was held at the Redfern Community Centre.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920646">Housing NSW Community Design Workshops</a></h1>
<p>Housing NSW will be running Community Design Workshops for the Redfern
and Waterloo Preliminary Master Plans on Wednesday, 23 and Thursday, 24
November 2011.</p>
<p>The workshops will provide the opportunity for residents and other
stakeholders to work together with urban designers on some of the key aspects
of urban design including: shops and facilities, streets, parks and other open
spaces. The workshops will also ask people for their ideas about how the areas
can better connect to the surrounding neighbourhoods.</p>
<p>The workshops follow Housing NSW’s previous community consultation for
the preliminary Master Plan for Redfern-Waterloo including bus trips to see
other redeveloped areas, workshops and street corner sessions on topics related
to the Master Plan and community meetings and the Planning Expo at the RedWater
Market in August 2011.</p>
<p>The sessions will be held at Redfern Town Hall, 73 Pitt St, Redfern at
the following times:</p>
<p><u>Redfern</u> - 23 November 2011</p>
<p>9:30am- 3:30pm, lunch provided</p>
<p>6pm- 8:30pm, light supper provided</p>
<p><u>Waterloo </u>- 24
November&nbsp;2011&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>9:30am- 3:30pm, lunch provided</p>
<p>6pm- 8:30pm, light supper provided</p>
<p>To RSVP, please contact Martin Clark on 9268 3443 or email <a href="mailto:redfernwaterloo@facs.nsw.gov.au">redfernwaterloo@facs.nsw.gov.au</a>.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920647">Vote for your favourite Christmas
banner</a></h1>
<p>Local schools and youth groups have been utilising their creative skills
by decorating banners for the Eveleigh Market Christmas Banner competition.
Alexandria Park Community School has won the main prize for the last two years
– who will it be this year?</p>
<p>The banners will be on display from 19 November 2011 and the community
is encouraged to vote for the People’s Choice Award until Saturday, 4 December
2011.</p>
<p>The winners will be announced at Eveleigh Farmers’ Market on Saturday,
10 December 2011. The winner and People’s Choice Award winner will each receive
$1,000 with the runners up winners each receiving $500.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920648">RWA newsletter out now!</a></h1>
<p>The November 2011 issue of the Redfern-Waterloo Authority newsletter has
been produced and is currently being distributed to local residents. The
newsletter is also viewable online <a href="http://www.redfernwaterloo.nsw.gov.au/other/newsletters/2011_november_newsletter.pdf">here</a>.</p>
<p>If you are not on the mailing list and wish to receive a hard copy,
please contact Natalie Kikken on 9202 9112 or email <a href="mailto:natalie.kikken@rwa.nsw.gov.au">natalie.kikken@rwa.nsw.gov.au</a>.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920649">DEVELOPMENT&nbsp;APPLICATIONS</a></h1>
<p>Although consent authority functions for Development Applications and
Modification Applications is now delegated to the City of Sydney, the
Redfern-Waterloo Authority remains the consent authority for Development
Applications received prior to 1 October 2011. The current Development
Applications being considered by the RWA are:</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920650">Enlargement of Smokers' Balcony&nbsp;in
Railz on Regent, 56 Regent Street, Redfern</a></h1>
<p>The application&nbsp;to enlarge the existing balcony located on the
eastern ground floor of the existing pub was approved on&nbsp;22 October
2011.&nbsp;The application includes internal and external facade works to the
building.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920651">Redfern RSL Club fit out on&nbsp;Level
2, 157 Redfern Street, Redfern</a></h1>
<p>The application for the fit out and operation of the Redfern RSL Club on
Level 2 was approved on 7 November 2011.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920652">Clothing and bicycle retail shop
at&nbsp;116 Lawson Street, Redfern</a></h1>
<p>The application&nbsp;for the internal fit out of the ground floor of the
existing building for use as a clothing and bicycle retail shop, including the
installation of associated signage, was approved on 8 November 2011.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920653">WHAT’S ON</a></h1>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920654">23 and 24 November 2011 – Housing NSW
Community Design Workshops</a></h1>
<p>Housing NSW will be running Community Design Workshops for the Redfern
and Waterloo Preliminary Master Plans on Wednesday, 23 and Thursday, 24
November 2011. The workshops will provide the opportunity for residents and
other stakeholders to work together with urban designers on some of the key
aspects of urban design, including: shops and facilities, streets, parks and
other open spaces.&nbsp; The workshops will
also ask people for their ideas about how the areas can better connect to the
surrounding neighbourhoods. Redfern Town Hall, 73 Pitt St Redfern. Redfern
sessions will be held on 23 November 2011. Times: 9:30am- 3:30pm, lunch
provided and 6pm- 8:30pm, light supper provided. Waterloo sessions will be held
on 24 November 2011. Times: 9:30am- 3:30pm, lunch provided and 6pm- 8:30pm,
light supper provided.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920655">15 December 2011 – RWA Seniors
Christmas Party</a></h1>
<p>RWA will be holding its Seniors Christmas Party on Thursday, 15 December
2011 from 12pm-2pm at Australian Technology Park, Bay 4, 2 Locomotive Workshop,
Eveleigh NSW 2015. The lunch provides a great opportunity for local residents
to get together during the festive season and enjoy a tasty Christmas lunch and
some live entertainment. Bookings are essential. Please call 9202 9100 to
secure your place.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920656">Eveleigh Farmers’ Market – every
Saturday 8am to 1pm</a></h1>
<p>Stock up on fresh produce straight from the farm at Eveleigh Farmers’
Market, an undercover, and traditional weekly Farmers’ Market held in the
historic Blacksmith Workshop on Wilson Street in Darlington. Selling unique
produce from fresh fruit and vegetables, meats, flowers and gourmet treats,
Eveleigh Farmers Market is Sydney’s only ‘rain, hail, shine’ venue with an
inspiring heritage backdrop. Eveleigh Farmers’ Market is held every Saturday
from 8am to 1pm. For more information, please visit <a href="http://www.eveleighmarket.com.au/">www.eveleighmarket.com.au</a></p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920657">Eveleigh Artisans’ Market –first Sunday
of the month, 10am to 3pm</a></h1>
<p>Showcasing the best in Australian independent design, art and crafts,
Eveleigh Artisans’ Market takes place on the first Sunday of the month from
10am-3pm under the heritage listed Blacksmith Workshop.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc309920658">Alexandria Community Garden – 1st and
3rd Saturday of the month</a></h1>
<p>Interested in learning how to grow fruit and vegetables? Join other
garden enthusiasts (both novices and experienced) at the Alexandria Community
Garden. Working bees take place on the 1<sup>st</sup> and 3<sup>rd</sup>
Saturday of each month at Connect Redfern, Park St, Alexandria.</p>
<p><strong><em>To be added to the RWA Email
Update distribution list, to make comments, or to suggest a news item, please
contact RWA’s A/Communications Manager Natalie Kikken on 9202 9112 or email </em></strong><a href="mailto:natalie.kikken@rwa.nsw.gov.au"><strong>natalie.kikken@rwa.nsw.gov.au</strong></a><a name="_GoBack"></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2011-11-24T07:04:31Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>News Item</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/media/111105dt">
    <title>From boys to men - putting troubled youths back on the right road</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/media/111105dt</link>
    <description>THERE were young men in Redfern on Wednesday, boys, really, and by the time they were finished they had enough to think about for any young man. For boys, too writes Paul Kent in The Daily Telegraph of 5 November 2011. </description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div class="story-body lead-media-large js-ready">
<div class="article-media article-media-large media-count-1 first-image-650w366h">
<div>
<div class="image">
<div class="image-frame image-650w366h">
										<img src="http://resources0.news.com.au/images/2011/11/04/1226186/282724-ezekiel-phillips.jpg" alt="Ezekiel Phillips" height="366" width="650" /></div>
<p class="caption">
												<span class="caption-text">Hard lessons ... jamal Daniels, Ezekiel Phillips and Trae Campbell / Pic: Cameron Richardson </span>
												<span class="image-source"><em>Source:</em> The Daily Telegraph</span></p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<p>A man put in a wheelchair by a car crash 20 
years ago told them of the weight of losing his independence. The head 
of St Vincent's Hospital's accident and emergency department, Professor 
Gordian Fulde, spoke of brain injury and the trauma of car accidents, 
and the young lives that come into his ward and never leave the same 
again.</p>
<div class="story-body lead-media-large js-ready">
<p>They came together, at the invitation of police, because 
children as young as 12 are stealing cars in the inner city, and rates 
are soaring.</p>
<p>Worse, officers are talking of an increasing number 
of stolen cars pulling up alongside them, close enough to see the whites
 of the eyes of underaged drivers behind the wheel, who then 
deliberately engage them in police pursuits.</p>
<div class="story-promo story-promo-middle">&nbsp;</div>
<p>It is not just the police who see the danger.</p>
<p>"I reckon it's a pretty big problem," says Jamal Daniel, 16.</p>
<p>"They're trying to show off in front of friends," says Trae Campbell, another 16-year-old.</p>
<p>"I think the key is everyone is trying to have a big name, then someone else does it,"says Jamal.</p>
<p>"They're
 just trying to make their name bigger," says Trae. "Trying to give 
themselves a big name, but not for the right things."</p>
<p>Police are so concerned <a id="suburbinfo2" class="lightbox-suburb-info" href="http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/sydney-nsw/from-boys-to-men-putting-troubled-youths-back-on-the-right-road/story-e6freuzi-1226186285503#suburbinfo_popup" rel="800x700">Redfern</a>
 local area commander Superintendent Luke Freudenstein sent police out 
in their squad cars on Wednesday morning to pick up troubled youths from
 the Redfern, <a id="suburbinfo0" class="lightbox-suburb-info" href="http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/sydney-nsw/from-boys-to-men-putting-troubled-youths-back-on-the-right-road/story-e6freuzi-1226186285503#suburbinfo_popup" rel="800x700">Leichhardt</a>, <a id="suburbinfo1" class="lightbox-suburb-info" href="http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/sydney-nsw/from-boys-to-men-putting-troubled-youths-back-on-the-right-road/story-e6freuzi-1226186285503#suburbinfo_popup" rel="800x700">Newtown</a> and Eastern Beaches commands to taxi them to his forum.</p>
<p>Supt Freudenstein is one of the silent heroes of this city.</p>
<p>He
 sees the wisdom in the old line, the one that goes that, if you do what
 you've always done you'll get what you've always got, and so he is no 
longer prepared to stick with stubborn policing.</p>
<p>Instead, he 
has reached into the community. Australia was built on people who 
ignored the popular wisdom and went out on their own to solve a problem.</p>
<p>Detective Inspector Leanne McCusker runs the forum.</p>
<p>"In
 the past couple of months we have seen an increase in the number of 
stolen motor vehicles, knowing primarily it's our juveniles that have 
been stealing the cars," she says.</p>
<p>"For the kids, it's about acknowledging the risk.</p>
<p>"The consequences not only to themselves but to the police and to the general community."</p>
<p>Insp McCusker introduces Roy Smith, who is 22-years-old and has done it all.</p>
<p>"At the end of the day only the weak get in the car," he says.</p>
<p>"Everyone wants to be a gangster and Americanised. But that shit's where you are wrong.</p>
<p>"It's
 not what our family is about. I look at the men who were role models in
 my life and they weren't men - they were little boys.</p>
<p>"Real men stay out of jail. Our kids are missing out on a dad.</p>
<p>"I've been locked up, been in some brutal fights, and every action I've had has a consequence.</p>
<p>"I
 own my mistakes, I own them all. I don't blame anybody else for the way
 I grew up because, at the end of the day, you've got to make your own 
decisions.</p>
<p>"At the end of the day you've got to ask yourself what sort of man you want to be."</p>
<p>What many of these kids don't realise is that the first offence of almost every juvenile reads " ... in company".</p>
<p>It spirals from there, which is why many of them are here today.</p>
<p>It's
 why Aborigines, who make up about 2 per cent of the Australian 
population, also make up 15 per cent of the prison population.</p>
<p>Shane Phillips, head of the Tribal Warrior Organisation, draws a pie graph of these figures to highlight the disparity.</p>
<p>Then
 he draws another pie graph representing the community, a sliver of pie 
representing those within the community who steal cars.</p>
<p>"The rest," he says, sweeping his hand over the graph, "they don't think you're cool. They think you're dickheads."</p>
<p>Then he orders those boys with baseball caps to take them off.</p>
<p>"That's American," he says. "That's not us. We have to help each other. Your job is to look after each other.</p>
<p>"So today - we're starting today - let's make the first step. Every long journey starts with the first step."</p>
<p>Source: <a class="external-link" href="http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/sydney-nsw/from-boys-to-men-putting-troubled-youths-back-on-the-right-road/story-e6freuzi-1226186285503">http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/sydney-nsw/from-boys-to-men-putting-troubled-youths-back-on-the-right-road/story-e6freuzi-1226186285503</a></p>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2011-11-21T10:36:56Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>News Item</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2011/110725rwa">
    <title>RWA Email Update 25 July 2011</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2011/110725rwa</link>
    <description>In this Update: NEWS : Built Environment Plan Stage 2 (BEP 2) Update - Stakeholder Engagement Report - Community Facilities Report - Future community engagement / Barani Book launch – City of Sydney / Media attention for The Block / NAIDOC Week success / Redfern brand continues to gain momentum / DEVELOPMENT APPLICATIONS: Modification to temporary car parking in the Australian Technology Park WHAT’S ON: 1 August – Koori Job Ready Course 3 begins / 3 August - Redfern and Waterloo Community Learning and Research Group / 4 August –REDWatch meeting with Tanya Plibersek MP / 20 August – Saturday in Design / 20 August - Redfern Waterloo Urban Renewal Study and Housing NSW Master Plan EXPO / Eveleigh Farmers’ Market – every Saturday 8am to 1pm / Eveleigh Artisans’ Market – first Sunday of the month, 10am to 3pm / Alexandria Community Garden – 1st and 3rd Saturday of the month</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[In this Update:
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378226">NEWS</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378227">Built Environment
Plan Stage 2 (BEP 2) Update</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378228">-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Stakeholder Engagement Report</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378229">-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Community Facilities Report</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378230">-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Future community engagement</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378231">Barani Book launch
– City of Sydney</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378232">Media attention
for The Block</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378233">NAIDOC Week
success</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378234">Redfern brand
continues to gain momentum</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378235">DEVELOPMENT&nbsp;APPLICATIONS</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378236">Modification to
temporary car parking in the Australian Technology Park</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378237">WHAT’S ON</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378238">1 August – Koori
Job Ready Course 3 begins</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378239">3 August - Redfern
and Waterloo Community Learning and Research Group</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378240">4 August –REDWatch
meeting with Tanya Plibersek MP</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378241">20 August –
Saturday in Design</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378242">20 August -
Redfern Waterloo&nbsp;Urban Renewal Study and Housing NSW Master Plan EXPO</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378243">Eveleigh Farmers’
Market – every Saturday 8am to 1pm</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378244">Eveleigh Artisans’
Market – first Sunday of the month, 10am to 3pm</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc299378245">Alexandria
Community Garden – 1st and 3rd Saturday of the month</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">&nbsp;</p>
<h1><a name="new_homes"></a><a name="_Toc299378226">NEWS</a></h1>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378227">Built
Environment Plan Stage 2 (BEP 2) Update</a></h1>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378228">-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
Stakeholder Engagement Report</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">The Redfern-Waterloo
Authority (RWA) has released the Stakeholder Engagement Report for the Built
Environment Plan 2 (BEP 2). Undertaken by an independent consultant, Mediate
Today, the report outlines the community feedback on the draft BEP 2, a
planning framework for the renewal of social housing sites in Redfern-Waterloo
and South Eveleigh over a 20-25 year timeframe.</p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">The report concludes
that a large number of respondents (across all stakeholder groups) generally
support the potential changes that BEP 2 outlines. Key findings from
the feedback forms are: residents want a safe environment; development caters
for the needs of specific groups; and open space encompasses areas for
vegetation and recreational facilities.</p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">The Stakeholder Engagement Report will be used
in preparation for further studies of the Redfern-Waterloo area and will
consider the issues raised in the BEP 2 submissions about providing more detail
on the design and allocation of open space and the social impacts of the
changes and how these will be supported in the future. The RWA recognises the
need to have a far reaching consultative process during this process.</p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">The Stakeholder
Engagement Report is available online at <a href="http://www.redfernwaterloo.nsw.gov.au/">www.redfernwaterloo.nsw.gov.au</a></p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378229">-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
Community Facilities Report</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">The Sydney
Metropolitan Development Authority (SMDA) and Housing NSW have appointed Cred
Community Planning to prepare a report considering future community facility
needs in the Redfern-Waterloo area. To date, Cred Community Planning has
discussed community facility needs&nbsp;with a number of residents at three of
RWA's BEP 2 Community Information Sessions and at&nbsp;two community barbeques.
Workshops with non-government and government agencies have also been held.
Additional consultation regarding community facilities will continue.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378230">-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
Future community engagement</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">SMDA and Housing NSW
recognise that community engagement and capacity building are integral to
future planning. As part of its commitment, Housing NSW has initiated a Master
Plan Expo to inform the community regarding the Preliminary Master Plan for
Redfern and Waterloo social housing sites. In addition to the Expo, which is
being held on Saturday, 20 August 2011 at REDWater Markets, other activities
and workshops will be held in the near future on connecting shops and community
services, streets, parks and building design.&nbsp;
<br />
<br />
<span class="Heading1Char">Aboriginal Employment
Program joins ATP</span></p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">The Aboriginal Employment Program that
mentors and trains young Aboriginal people in construction and hospitality is
now based at Australian Technology Park.</p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">Proudly supported by Australian Technology
Park Sydney Ltd (ATPSL), the Aboriginal Employment Program manages the Koori
Job Ready Program and the Yaama Dhiyaan Hospitality Training School that both
run eight-week training courses for students and assists them in finding
employment in the construction and hospitality industries.</p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">The program was an initiative of the
Redfern-Waterloo Authority but now sits under the ATPSL umbrella. Since the
program began in 2006, more than 850 employment opportunities have been created
for Aboriginal men and women with this number set to increase with the
recent development of 80 positions for Aboriginal employees at the Central Park
development on Broadway.</p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">The Aboriginal Employment Program is
continuing to achieve excellent outcomes with benefits for both the
community and the construction
and catering industries as graduates are equipped with the immediate skills
they need to work after
completing their training.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378231">Barani Book
launch – City of Sydney</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">Barani/Barrabugu
(Yesterday/Tomorrow) is a new guide that showcases the history and culture of
Aboriginal Sydney, from first contact to today’s living culture. Produced by
City of Sydney, the booklet features 60 sites across Sydney that have played a
role in the culture of Aboriginal people. The guide describes important sites
that reveal these histories, cultures and associations, features several walks
as well as suggestions for cultural institutions and organisations to visit. Download
your copy from the City of Sydney website at: <a href="http://www.cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au/AboutSydney/VisitorGuidesInformation/HistoricalWalkingTours.asp">http://www.cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au/AboutSydney/VisitorGuidesInformation/HistoricalWalkingTours.asp</a></p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378232">Media
attention for The Block</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">A story on the
revitalisation on The Block appeared on National Nine News on 21 June, 2011
with reporter Peter Overton interviewing Redfern community members including Mick
Mundine from the Aboriginal Housing Company and Shane Phillips from Tribal
Warrior on the positive developments happening in the area. The video can be
viewed at <a href="http://www.redfernwaterloo.nsw.gov.au/news/index.html">www.redfernwaterloo.nsw.gov.au/news/index.html</a></p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378233">NAIDOC Week
success</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">NAIDOC Week, which
ran from 3-10 July 2011, was a big success with lots of activity in the Redfern
area to celebrate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture. A flag
ceremony at the Redfern Community Centre marked the start of the week with the
National Centre of Indigenous Excellence holding a Family and Sports Day on
Friday, 8 July with over 2,500 people attending.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378234">Redfern brand
continues to gain momentum</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">The Redfern brand to
promote the area as a welcoming place for both business and visitors continues
to gain momentum with more community engagement activities planned for the
coming year. You may have already spotted someone wearing a Redfern-branded
t-shirt or the Redfern street banners that are currently on display at Redfern
St, Lawson St, Regent St, Cleveland St and Chalmers St. You can help promote
the Redfern brand through <a href="http://www.facebook.com/redfernwaterloo">www.facebook.com/redfernwaterloo</a>
or at <a href="http://www.twitter.com/redfern">www.twitter.com/redfern</a>. Watch this space for more details about
exciting activities taking place in Redfern and the surrounding area.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378235">DEVELOPMENT&nbsp;APPLICATIONS</a></h1>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378236">Modification to temporary car parking in the
Australian Technology Park</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">An application was received to modify the development
consent to temporary car parking in the Australian Technology Park, which
proposes to extend&nbsp;the temporary car parking arrangements within the
lower, middle and upper car parks until the sites are required for development.
The application is on exhibition from&nbsp;13 July to&nbsp;3 August, 2011.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378237">WHAT’S ON</a></h1>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378238">1 August – Koori Job Ready Course 3 begins</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">The Koori Job Ready Course 3 begins covering OH&amp;S
(Induction Card), senior First Aid, carpentry, formwork, plastering, concreting,
bricklaying, scaffolding and forklift operations. Only a few spots are
available so if you are interested in securing a place, please contact Rohan
Tobler on 0414 137 816 or email <a href="mailto:r.tobler@koorijobready.com.au">r.tobler@koorijobready.com.au</a><u>.</u></p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378239">3 August - Redfern and Waterloo Community Learning
and Research Group</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">Join the local Redfern-Waterloo research program to
identify and progress priorities following on from a workshop held in October
2010 to discuss what a local Research Committee might look like and its core
role. Held from 10am-12pm&nbsp;at The Factory Community Centre, 67 Raglan St,
Waterloo. Call 9268 3517 for more information.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378240">4 August –REDWatch meeting with Tanya Plibersek MP</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">The local Federal MP Tanya Plibersek, Minister for Social
Services and Social Inclusion, will attend the REDWatch Monthly Meeting to talk
about her roles in Government in relation to the local area. From 6pm-8pm at
The Factory Community Centre, 67 Raglan St, Waterloo. Contact Geoff Turnbull on
8004 1490 for more information.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378241">20 August – Saturday in Design</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">Visit furniture store Great Dane on Saturday, 20 August
for Saturday in Design, an annual trade event for the design community
involving Australia’s premier designer furniture, finishes, fixtures and
lighting showrooms. Attracting architects, designers, students and design-savvy
members of the public, Eveleigh Farmers Market will be there too providing
local food for purchase. 613 Elizabeth St, Redfern from 9am-6pm.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378242">20 August - Redfern Waterloo&nbsp;Urban Renewal
Study and Housing NSW Master Plan EXPO</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">Visit RedWater Markets on 20 August to find out more about
the Built Environment Plan Stage 2 (BEP 2), the Redfern Waterloo Urban Renewal
Study and the Housing NSW Masterplan. There will be staff available to speak
about these activities in more detail and to answer any questions you may have.
Redfern Park, Corner of Chalmers St and Redfern St from 8am-4pm.</p>
<p class="MsoBodyText"><a name="_Toc299378243"><span class="Heading1Char">Eveleigh Farmers’ Market –
every Saturday 8am to 1pm</span></a><strong><br />
</strong>Stock up on fresh produce straight from the farm at Eveleigh Farmers’
Market, an undercover, and traditional weekly Farmers’ Market held in the
historic Blacksmith Workshop on Wilson Street in Darlington. Selling unique
produce from fresh fruit and vegetables, meats, flowers and gourmet treats,
Eveleigh Farmers Market is Sydney’s only ‘rain, hail, shine’ venue with an
inspiring heritage backdrop. Eveleigh Farmers’ Market is held every Saturday
from 8am to 1pm. For more information, please visit <a href="http://www.eveleighmarket.com.au/">www.eveleighmarket.com.au</a><u>.</u></p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378244">Eveleigh Artisans’ Market – first Sunday of the
month, 10am to 3pm</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">Showcasing the best in Australian independent design, art
and crafts, Eveleigh Artisans’ Market takes place on the first Sunday of the month from 10am-3pm under the
heritage listed Blacksmith Workshop.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc299378245">Alexandria Community Garden – 1st and 3rd Saturday
of the month</a></h1>
<p class="MsoBodyText">Interested in learning how to grow fruit and vegetables?
Join other garden enthusiasts (both novices and experienced) at the Alexandria
Community Garden. Working bees take place on the 1<sup>st</sup> and 3<sup>rd</sup>
Saturday of each month at Connect Redfern, Park St, Alexandria.</p>
<p class="MsoBodyText"><strong><em>To be
added to the RWA Email Update distribution list, to make comments, or to
suggest a news item, please contact RWA’s A/Communications Manager Natalie
Kikken on 9202 9112 or email <a href="mailto:natalie.kikken@rwa.nsw.gov.au">natalie.kikken@rwa.nsw.gov.au</a>.</em></strong></p>
<p class="MsoBodyText">Source: RWA 25 July <a href="http://www.redfernwaterloo.nsw.gov.au/other/rwa_update/july_update_2011.pdf" target="_blank">Issue 17</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2011-07-25T07:40:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>News Item</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2010/101217rwat">
    <title>December 2010 - RWA Redfern Waterloo Update - Text Version</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2010/101217rwat</link>
    <description>In this RWA Update: Driving housing and employment / A message from our CEO / Training in bloom / Indigenous food in Italy / NCIE receives $500,000 boost / Better business opportunities / REDFERN WATERLOO Business Advice Service / Revitalising The Block / Family Violence Taskforce Forum / Redfern East Development / Q &amp; A with Rabbitohs’ Dave Tyrrell / Souths Cares continues to shine / Supporting local elders / End of an era / A new home for SSYS / Heritage showcase at ATP / Capturing the past / Eveleigh Farmers’ Market / Koori graduate makes his mark / Yaama students have recipe for success / More than just a market /Community Groups Supported by Eveleigh Markets in 2010 / The Cupcake Princess of Eveleigh Market / Fun day out for the whole family/ New local community gardens / Supporting victims of domestic violence / Flying high at Book Week / Asian Moon Festival / Knockout footy performance / Playground in the Park / Find out the latest from the Redfern Waterloo Authority: / Season’s Greetings
</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p class="MsoBodyText">RWA REDFERN WATERLOO UPDATE DECEMBER 2010</p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629775">Driving housing and employment</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629776">A message from our
CEO</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629777">Training in bloom</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629778">Indigenous food in
Italy</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629779">NCIE receives
$500,000 boost</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629780">Better business
opportunities</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629781">REDFERN WATERLOO
Business Advice Service</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629782">Revitalising The
Block</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629783">Family Violence
Taskforce Forum</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629784">Redfern East
Development</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629785">Q &amp; A with
Rabbitohs’ Dave Tyrrell</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629786">Souths Cares
continues to shine</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629787">Supporting local
elders</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629788">End of an era</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629789">A new home for
SSYS</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629790">Heritage showcase
at ATP</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629791">Capturing the past</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629792">Eveleigh Farmers’
Market</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629793">Koori graduate
makes his mark</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629794">Yaama students
have recipe for success</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629795">More than just a
market</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629796">Community Groups
Supported by Eveleigh Markets in 2010</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629797">The Cupcake
Princess of Eveleigh Market</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629798">Fun day out for
the whole family</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629799">New local
community gardens</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629800">Supporting victims
of domestic violence</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629801">Flying high at
Book Week</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629802">Asian Moon Festival</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629803">Knockout footy
performance</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629804">Playground in the
Park</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629805">Find out the
latest from the Redfern Waterloo Authority:</a></span></p>
<p class="MsoToc1"><span class="MsoHyperlink"><a href="#_Toc280629806">Season’s Greetings</a></span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629775">Driving housing and employment</a></h1>
<p><em><strong>The NSW
Government has announced the establishment of the Sydney Metropolitan
Development Authority (SMDA)</strong> to
drive housing and employment opportunities in specific area serviced by public
transport and infrastructure, and to build economies of urban centres.</em></p>
<p><strong>The SMDA
will assume RWA’s functions and use it as a model to benefit all of Sydney. As
a priority, SMDA will focus on areas currently administered by RWA including
North Eveleigh and Australian Technology Park.</strong></p>
<p>CEO of the RWA, Roy Wakelin-King, will perform the
role of Acting CEO of the SMDA and will sit on the interim Board.</p>
<p>Mr Wakelin-King has advised that the work of the
RWA will continue as per the current plans, saying, “There have been many
exciting developments in the Redfern-Waterloo community through urban renewal
and the delivery of important human services and these will not stop.</p>
<p>“These include the upgrade to Redfern Station, the
development of North Eveleigh, the implementation of the Built Environment Plan
2, the Aboriginal Employment Program and Human Services Reform.”</p>
<p>Minister for Planning Tony Kelly who announced the
changes said: “It [SMDA] will undertake work much like the RWA has done in
relation to the redevelopment of Redfern RSL where 84 units are being built
right now, next to Redfern Station.</p>
<p>“Sydney will need 770,000 more homes and 760,000
jobs by 2036. These will need to be near transport and services. The SMDA will
help plan and deliver that.”</p>
<p>The plans for the SMDA to better integrate land-use
and transport planning, creating a more sustainable, affordable and liveable
city are currently being developed.</p>
<p>The work on important initiatives in the
Redfern-Waterloo area will continue.</p>
<p>Photo: Redfern-Waterloo will be a priority for the
SMDA</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629776">A message from our CEO</a></h1>
<p><strong>2010 has
been a year of significant development in the Redfern-Waterloo area. The
opening of the National Centre of Indigenous Excellence, the new media facility
at the Australian Technology Park and the Community Health Centre on Redfern
Street all represent the realisation of the fantastic opportunities that are
occurring in this area. These events demonstrate the capacity and vibrancy of
the Redfern-Waterloo area and its community.</strong></p>
<p>However, the work in Redfern-Waterloo continues in
bringing about positive and lasting urban renewal. There remains much to be
done and I am looking forward to continuing this work with the community in
2011.</p>
<p>As was announced by the NSW Government in September
2010, the Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority (SMDA) will soon be
established. The purpose of the SMDA is to drive housing and employment
opportunities in specific area serviced by public transport and infrastructure,
and to build economies of urban centres.</p>
<p>As advised by the Government, the Redfern-Waterloo
area will be one the first precincts of the SMDA. The work of the RWA will
therefore continue in this important area of Sydney and the SMDA will look to
build on the great work done by the RWA accordingly.</p>
<p>Key priorities will continue to be the
implementation of the Built Environment Plan Stage 2, North Eveleigh and
Redfern Station. The ongoing work for Human Services will continue with a focus
being on creating sustainable pathways for human service delivery.</p>
<p>Training and education also continues to be a
priority with Yaama Dhiyaan and Koori Job Ready courses equipping young
Indigenous people with the skills they need to work in the hospitality and
construction industries. Over 50 graduates have completed a course through
RWA’s Education and Training Program this year.</p>
<p>The Pemulwuy Project for the revitalisation of The
Block is being managed by the Aboriginal Housing Company (AHC) with a focus on
Indigenous tradition and culture. The redevelopment of The Block represents a
wonderful opportunity for the Aboriginal community, not only here in
Redfern-Waterloo, but more broadly in NSW and Australia. It as an important
symbol for the Aboriginal Community and we wish the AHC the very best for the
successful implementation of this project.</p>
<p>I would like to take this opportunity to wish you
and your families all the very best for the Christmas and the New Year and I
look forward to continuing the important work in the Redfern-Waterloo area in
2011.</p>
<p>Roy Wakelin-King</p>
<p>Community News</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629777">Training in bloom</a></h1>
<p><strong>Indigenous
women are being given the opportunity to learn floristry skills as part of a
free training course held at Flowers by Mercedes in Redfern.</strong></p>
<p>Providing a fun and supportive learning
environment, mentor Mercedes Sarmini has been teaching participants a wide
range of floristry skills such as how to make bouquets and wreaths with a focus
on native flowers.</p>
<p>“This course runs two days a week over 12 weeks,”
explains Ms Sarmini. “All of the flowers and work experience is provided free
of charge through Job Services Australia and it is Centrelink, AusStudy and
ABStudy approved.”</p>
<p>Loretta, a Redfern local, recently completed the
course. She said: “I heard about the course through my case worker. I have
really enjoyed learning the different ways to create flowers and the
arrangements.”</p>
<p>Natasha, another recent graduate, came from the
hospitality industry but was looking for a new and rewarding challenge.
“Floristry is so much more enjoyable and relaxing,” she explains.</p>
<p>Ms Sarmini has been overwhelmed by how quickly the
students have picked up their floristry skills. “The girls are very talented
and particularly love working with native flowers. I hope the course will give
them the confidence to take on employment.”</p>
<p>To enrol or sponsor the program, please call 0414
986 490 or email <a href="mailto:workshops@flowersbymercedes.com.au">workshops@flowersbymercedes.com.au</a> .</p>
<p>Photo: Loretta (left) and Natasha (right) learn
floristry skills from Teacher Mercedes Sarmini</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629778">Indigenous food in Italy</a></h1>
<p><strong>Indigenous
produce and cooking tips were showcased by Aunty Beryl, trainer at Yaama
Dhiyaan, at the Terra Madre Slow Food Festival in Turin, Italy.</strong></p>
<p>Aunty Beryl and her team of young hospitality
trainees were excited about sharing the diversity of Indigenous food with a
world-wide audience. There were 5000 other delegates from 130 countries
discussing the principle of food that is good, clean and fair.</p>
<p>During her visit, Aunty Beryl was also given the
special opportunity to visit the Vatican in Rome for the declaration of Mary MacKillop
as a saint.</p>
<p>Photo: Aunty Beryl at the canonisation of Mary
MacKillop in Rome</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629779">NCIE receives $500,000 boost</a></h1>
<p><em><strong>Redfern’s
National Centre of Indigenous Excellence (NCIE)</strong> has received a substantial financial boost to
support young Aboriginal people.</em></p>
<p><strong>Through a
strong partnership with the Redfern-Waterloo Authority, Premier and Minister
for Redfern-Waterloo Kristina Keneally visited the centre to hand over the
$500,000 cheque which will go towards supporting Indigenous sporting and
artistic talent through social and cultural activities, workshops and support
groups.</strong></p>
<p>During her visit, Premier Keneally met with the
Flying Boomerangs, 30 of Australia’s most promising Indigenous youth football
players selected through the QANTAS AFL KickStart Camps who were based at the
National Centre of Indigenous Excellence for a week. She also met with NCIE’s
CEO Jason Glanville and Chair Sol Bellear.</p>
<p>“The agreement between the National Centre of
Indigenous Excellence and Redfern-Waterloo Authority is a critical part of the
ongoing urban renewal program in the local area,” said Mr Glanville.</p>
<p>&nbsp;“The
$500,000 contribution from the Redfern-Waterloo Authority will assist in
increasing services for all young people, in particular by providing career
pathways for Aboriginal people across all levels of the Centre’s operations.”</p>
<p>For more information on NCIE please visit
www.ncie.org.au.</p>
<p>Photo: From left: Jason Glanville, CEO, and Sol
Bellear, Board Director, for National Centre of Indigenous Excellence, Kristina
Keneally, NSW Premier and Minister for Redfern-Waterloo, AFL’s Michael
O’Loughlin and the AFL Qantas KickStart team</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629780">Better business opportunities</a></h1>
<p>The Redfern-Waterloo Chamber of Commerce is setting
the groundwork for future growth with a new constitution and a new name – the
South Sydney Business Chamber (SSBC) – to accurately describe its extended
constituency.</p>
<p>The Chamber has been extended and now covers the
geographical area defined: to the north by Cleveland Street to City Road; to
the south by Gardeners Road; to the west by City Road and the boundary defined
by Newtown Business Precinct Association (including Golden Grove, Wilson and
Burren Streets); and to the east by South Dowling Street.</p>
<p>The Chamber aims to build a more broadly based and
larger organisation offering a wide range of benefits to members and to
represent the needs of business in the area. This includes an Alliance
Partnership with NSW Business Chamber to provide SSBC members with access to
support services, advice and networking benefits at no extra cost to the
business.</p>
<p>“The purpose of the Chamber is to provide a forum
to enable businesses in the area to connect and to exchange and develop views,
perspectives and ideas,” says President Mary-Lynne Pidcock.</p>
<p>“We now have a good executive team but for
continued growth we need sponsorship and funding to meet the objectives of the
strategic plan. We are hoping to employ an Indigenous Executive Assistant in
the near future.”</p>
<p>For more information please visit <a href="http://www.ssbusinesschamber.com.au/">www.ssbusinesschamber.com.au</a> .</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629781">REDFERN WATERLOO Business Advice Service</a></h1>
<p>Are you starting a new business or growing an
existing business? Free&nbsp; Business Advice
- Confidential professional advice. Bookings: Redfern-Waterloo Authority
Ph:&nbsp; 02 9202 9100</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629782">Revitalising The Block</a></h1>
<p><strong>The
development application for the Pemulwuy Project to redevelop The Block with an
emphasis on Indigenous tradition cultural values and spirituality includes a
proposal for affordable housing and community facilities.</strong></p>
<p>The Aboriginal Housing Company (AHC) is delivering
the $65 million project and is working with residents and local government
agencies throughout the development process.</p>
<p>Mick Mundine, CEO of the AHC, said this state
significant project will create a brighter future for Redfern and a much
brighter future for the children.</p>
<p>“Our vision is to create a safe and secure
environment which will strengthen the community in the long term and combat the
social disadvantage currently present in The Block.”</p>
<p>Photo: Building better opportunities and facilities
at The Block</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629783">Family Violence Taskforce Forum</a></h1>
<p><em>Improving service access for culturally and
linguistically diverse (CALD) women who are victims of domestic violence was
the focus of a forum run by RWA in October 2010.</em></p>
<p><strong>Jenny
Huxley, RWA’s Senior Project Manager, organised the forum for Redfern-Waterloo
agencies and service providers around reducing the incidence of family
violence, improving service quality for migrant communities, improving support
for vulnerable people and building community capacity.</strong></p>
<p>Key note speakers included Rukhshana Sarwar and
Stephanie Phan from Migrant Women’s Speak Out and Chris Yuen, Principal
Solicitor from the Immigration Advice and Rights Centre.</p>
<p>A panel discussion involved: Bill Yan from South
Sydney Community Aid; Sian Popp, Redfern Police Domestic Violence Liaison
Officer; Donna Polletti from Redfern Legal Centre’s Yellow Card Program; Tatiya
Hardie from Sydney Women’s Domestic Violence Court Assistance Scheme; Susan
Fowler from The Shop Women and Girls Centre; Aggie Hatata from Elsie Women’s
Refuge; Maureen Hill from the Cleveland Centre; and Marie Mooney from Sydney
City Family Relationship Centre.</p>
<p>Photo:&nbsp;
Speakers at the RWA forum to improve services for CALD women who are
victims of domestic violence.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629784">Redfern East Development</a></h1>
<p><em>A new Housing NSW development in Walker Street,
Redfern is now ready and has been awarded a 5 Star Green Star Rating.</em></p>
<p><strong>The new 106
dwellings comprise a mixture of one and two bedroom apartments and townhouses.
The project is designed to reduce energy consumption with 45 per cent of water
demand met by non-potable water.</strong></p>
<p>Some of the design features include maximising
natural light and ventilation, use of native plants, rainwater tanks and grey
water recycling systems, and energy efficient building materials.</p>
<p>The local community was invited to attend a tour of
the new development in November to see the top design features for themselves.
Tenants have now moved in.</p>
<p>Photo: The sustainable redevelopment of Walker
Street, Redfern</p>
<p>SOUTHS CARES</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629785">Q &amp; A with Rabbitohs’ Dave Tyrrell</a></h1>
<p><strong>Rabbitohs
player Dave Tyrrell isn’t only a star on the football pitch – he is also
helping to mentor local children through the South Cares Program. We talk to
Dave about how his community work is making a difference – and how eating
lollies helps him prepare for a game.</strong></p>
<p><strong>When did you
get involved with the South Cares Program?</strong></p>
<p>I got involved in 2009 through the Teachers’ Aide
program. We started going out to La Perouse Public School to work with the
teachers and the kids and it’s been a rewarding experience every since.</p>
<p><strong>Can you tell
us more about the Teacher’s Aide Program?</strong></p>
<p>We sit in the classroom with the students and help
them answer the questions the teacher sets for their work. We try and keep the
schoolwork away from football to help the kids concentrate on the work rather
than footy.</p>
<p><strong>What
benefits does the program have for local children?</strong></p>
<p>The kids get to work with us on their school work
and they get to know us away from the footy field or their TV. A lot of kids
see footballers as role models so they look up to us and use us to help them
study and to become better students. We always try to set a good example for
them to follow.</p>
<p><strong>What has
been the highlight of taking part in South Cares?</strong></p>
<p>The highlight is definitely working with the kids.
The children enjoy having the players there and we have the opportunity to
encourage them to do their work and to explain to them why doing their school
is important. It’s also good to give back to the community. They put so much
passion and support into us on the field so it’s good to give them something
back. It’s also fun. It keeps your feet on the ground.</p>
<p><strong>What
inspires you both on and off the field?</strong></p>
<p>On the field I try my best to not let anyone down.
We’re all working towards the same goal so we all play for each other. We all
want to play and secure a position in the NRL side. Off the field my
inspiration is the kids we work with and seeing them learn.</p>
<p><strong>How do you
settle your nerves before a game?</strong></p>
<p>I eat jellybeans. I don’t know why it works, but it
does. I love my lollies.</p>
<p><strong>What do you
like doing in your spare time to relax?</strong></p>
<p>I like watching TV and playing on my Xbox. I also
like to get out and have a hit of golf. I find it very relaxing.</p>
<p><strong>What has
been your football highlight so far this year?</strong></p>
<p>The Tigers game at ANZ Stadium was awesome. It went
to golden point extra time and we won after the final siren when Dylan Farrell
scored his third try on debut. It was such a good team performance and it was
great to be a part of it.</p>
<p><strong>What makes
the Redfern-Waterloo area special to you?</strong></p>
<p>It is the home of the Rabbitohs, and at the
Rabbitohs, I feel at home. We are all part of the Rabbitohs family. Our Club is
located there including our training facilities so it is very much home for me
in Sydney.</p>
<p><strong>Where do you
see yourself in 10 years time?</strong></p>
<p>Hopefully I’ll still be playing for the Rabbitohs!
I’m only 22 years of age so hopefully I’ll still be running around in the red
and green in ten years time.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629786">Souths Cares continues to shine</a></h1>
<p><em><strong>Congratulations
to the whole Rabbitohs squad</strong>
who has been awarded the Souths Cares Award for 2010.</em></p>
<p><strong>Contributing
over 1,200 hours to the community as part of the Souths Cares and NRL one
Community programs throughout 2010, the entire squad won the award this year as
all players contribute to Souths Cares’ programs throughout the year and it was
impossible to single out one or two players for their efforts.</strong></p>
<p>The team was presented with the award at the Red
and Green Ball, the Rabbitohs annual fundraising event for South Cares, held at
the Australian Technology Park in October 2010. Player Issac Luke took out the
prestigious George Piggins Medal for the Club’s best and fairest player in
2010. Luke had a stellar season for the Rabbitohs, leading from the front
throughout the entire season to win the Club’s top gong.</p>
<p>Photo: The annual Red and Green Ball raises funds
for the South Cares Program</p>
<p>PROFILES</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629787">Supporting local elders</a></h1>
<p><em><strong>Wyanga
Aboriginal Aged Care provides low level care for Aboriginal elders in the local
community. </strong>CEO Millie Ingram explains more
about its services and its vision to set up an aged care nursing home
specifically for Aboriginal people.</em></p>
<p><strong>Millie has
been involved with Wyanga Aged Care for many years, starting on the Board of
Directors, becoming Chair in 2003, and appointed CEO in 2005.</strong></p>
<p>“We provide what is classified as low level care in
our clients own home under Community Aged Care Packages (CACP),” explains
Millie. “This includes such things as arranging home visits, transport,
cleaning, excursions and activities. We also act as advocates if a client has
an issue with telephone and utility companies and Centrelink.”</p>
<p>Wyanga’s vital care is provided to Aboriginal
elders in the inner city area and La Perouse. Wyanga will also assist those
within the metropolitan Aboriginal Land Council boundary on a needs basis.</p>
<p>“Since I started at Wyanga I have seen our client
base increase from 10 to 50. We also have 23 people on home visiting and 10
people on a waiting list for services,” Millie says.</p>
<p>Offering three areas of care – CACP, home visiting
and respite care – Millie has been working hard for the past three years on
obtaining a much-needed culturally appropriate aged care residential facility
for Aboriginal elders in need of high level care.</p>
<p>“There is no aged care facility offering high level
care that caters for the needs of Aboriginal people. Families do not feel
comfortable sending their elders in to mainstream nursing homes because of
their feeling of isolation so they either stay at home or in a hospital unit.</p>
<p>“My vision is to provide a multi-purpose nursing
home and palliative care that is culturally appropriate. We are currently
investigating a suitable site for this and are putting together a management
plan.”</p>
<p>Originally operating out of a poor-quality rented
premises in Redfern, the Indigenous Land Corporation supplied funds for an
administration centre, purchasing and renovating 35 Cope St in Redfern where
the organisation continues to be based. Wyanga receives its funding from the
Commonwealth Department of Health &amp; Ageing and the State government through
Ageing Disability and Home Care</p>
<p>“At Wyanga, many of our clients live in high rise
buildings so the services we provide mean they are not socially isolated,”
Millie says.</p>
<p>“It is really rewarding seeing the clients becoming
involved in Wyanga itself and get so involved with the activities that we run.
I hope to see the program increase.”</p>
<p>Photo: Millie Ingram, CEO of Wyanga Aboriginal Aged
Care</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629788">End of an era</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</h1>
<p><strong><em>RWA would
like to congratulate Patrick Russell, The Factory Community Coordinator, who
has retired after 10 years of service.</em><br /></strong></p>
<p>A get together was held in October 2010 at the
Tudor Hotel in Redfern to recognise Patrick’s valued contribution to the
Redfern and Waterloo community.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
<p>PROFILES</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629789">A new home for SSYS</a></h1>
<p><em><strong>Celebrating
27 years with South Sydney Youth Services (SSYS)</strong>, Director Shane Brown tells us how the
organisation continues to help local young people and the exciting plans ahead
including a new premises and arts centre.</em></p>
<p><strong>“ I was the
sole youth worker for five years when I started at SSYS,” says Shane Brown, now
Director. “My role was hanging around the streets at night to assist young
people.”</strong></p>
<p>Shane has been instrumental in providing a
much-needed support network for young people, children and families over the
last 27 years. Shane’s commitment was recently recognised at a surprise party
where over 130 members of the community attended to celebrate his achievements.</p>
<p>SSYS values working so closely with what Shane
describes as a ‘generous and welcoming community’ and has enjoyed working
closely with other community organisations such as The Factory Youth Service
and The Settlement. Shane is also grateful for the funding SSYS receives from
the federal, state and local government.</p>
<p>“The City of Sydney is funding the building of our
new premises near Waterloo Oval and RWA is leasing a new space to us at North
Eveleigh to run an arts social enterprise which we are really excited about,”
says Shane.</p>
<p>The new SSYS headquarters will have high
environmental standards and will include a roof top garden where young people
can grow their own herbs and vegetables. The arts space will enable the mental
health team to provide therapeutic art classes with the opportunity for local
community artists to exhibit and sell their work.</p>
<p>There is 30 SSYS staff who provide a variety of
services including mental health, Aboriginal counselling, juvenile justice
programs and education programs. SSYS also has a partnership with South Sydney
Community Transport that has generously donated the use of one of its vans for
the street beat program.</p>
<p>“The van runs from 10pm to 3am and can pick up
around 60 young people per night across the South Sydney area including
Redfern, Marrickville and Canterbury,” explains Shane. “This reduces young
people being perpetrators of crime or being victims.”</p>
<p>SSYS started operation in 1975 by a group of local
Aboriginal mothers who were concerned about the welfare of teenagers in the
local area. Since joining, one of Shane’s career highlights is working with 25
young people to get funding and approval from the Council for a new skate park.
It took six years to get the go ahead but over 150 young people now use the
park every day.</p>
<p>It was fantastic to see the young people directly
involved in this project and its design – it was a monumental achievement,
reflects Shane.</p>
<p>Moving forward, Shane’s vision for SSYS is to have
at least half or more Aboriginal members on the SSYS Board. He would also like
to expand on community projects that involve the local community.</p>
<p>But Shane recognises the challenges ahead.</p>
<p>With rising property prices, housing the homeless
and poverty will be a significant hurdle,” he says. “It is a constant challenge
identifying what services are needed and where the money is coming from.</p>
<p>However, with the new premises ready in March 2011
and with the new arts venture, Shane and his team are looking forward to
providing extended services for young people, children and families in the
Redfern-Waterloo community and beyond.</p>
<p>Photo: Director of SSYS Shane Brown at the site of
the new SSYS premises that is currently being built</p>
<p>HERITAGE UPDATE</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629790">Heritage showcase at ATP</a></h1>
<p>A 26-tonne heritage pivot crane along with a
locomotive steam crane is on permanent display at Australian Technology Park to
showcase the unique heritage of the Park and to beautify the space for tenants
and visitors to enjoy.</p>
<p>The installation of the pivot crane at Innovation
Plaza involved erecting the crane on to a plinth and was assembled as an
interpretative reconstruction. The heritage steam crane was installed using the
existing rail tracks at the old Eveleigh Rail yards site.</p>
<p>Heritage consultant Dr MacLaren North believes the
pivot crane was installed in the Wheel Shop around 1917 and operated
continuously from that time until its decommissioning in the 1980s. The steam
crane is a rare example of a steam powered locomotive crane. Put into service
in 1950 immediately prior to the demise of steam power on the New South Wales
rail system, it was one of the last two locomotive cranes imported into New
South Wales. The other identical steam crane is on display at the Powerhouse
Museum.</p>
<p>To compliment the heritage pieces, the Innovation
Plaza upgrade also includes the installation of seating made out of heritage
beams, lighting and planter boxes.</p>
<p>Photo: The Heritage pivot crane at Innovation Plaza</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629791">Capturing the past</a></h1>
<p><em>The unique heritage of the old Eveleigh Rail Yards
was captured at a special field day to share and record the history of the site
and to shape RWA’s Eveleigh Heritage Interpretation Plan.</em></p>
<p><strong>Taking place
at Australian Technology Park on 30 october 2010, members of the rail yard
community generously shared their memories as part of the community
consultation.</strong></p>
<p>Juliet Suich, RWA’s Heritage Coordinator, said: “It
was a really memorable and important day with lots of tales about the history
of the yards being professionally recorded.</p>
<p>“This information will be used for the Heritage
Interpretation Plan to ensure that the history of this unique space is captured
and shared with the community.”</p>
<p>Some of the tales told on the day included working
as apprentices and providing buckets for the workers to clean themselves. The
attendees also reflected on how hot it was working at the site during summer
and the old rail songs that used to be sung.</p>
<p>Dave Matthews, who works as a heritage restorer,
recognises the importance of the day saying, “These workers have some amazing
skills and we need to learn about working on the site before all of this
information is lost.”</p>
<p>Photo: Heritage Field Day participants share their
memories</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629792">Eveleigh Farmers’ Market</a></h1>
<p>Every Saturday 8am-1pm. Come Celebrate Summer. An
Undercover Marketplace Visit <a href="http://www.eveleighmarket.com.au/">www.eveleighmarket.com.au</a> for all
details 243 Wilson St Darlingtoin</p>
<p>EDUCATION AND TRAINING</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629793">Koori graduate makes his mark</a></h1>
<p><em>When Chevy Phillips enrolled in the Koori Job Ready
Course, he wouldn’t have predicted that a couple of years later he would be
employed as an apprentice carpenter and nominated as a finalist for Indigenous
Apprentice of the Year.</em></p>
<p><strong>“It was
always my dream to become a carpenter,” says Chevy. “After completing the Koori
Job Ready Course in 2008, RWA put me forward for an apprenticeship with Cubic
Interiors and I am now in my second year of my carpentry apprenticeship. I have
worked on several building sites such as the Media City building at Australian
Technology Park and the University of NSW.</strong></p>
<p>“I feel pretty proud that I was a finalist for the
Indigenous Apprentice of the Year through the Group Training Association (GTA)
NSW Awards. The event was held at the Four Seasons Hotel in the City in October
and although I didn’t win, it was still good to be nominated.”</p>
<p>Chevy is currently working six days a week in the
CBD on the construction of a new office block with 400 people on site.</p>
<p>“It is really busy but I am learning a lot,”
explains Chevy. “The hardest thing is learning how to set up - the building is
curved so there is a lot of work with lasers and we need to work to very
specific guidelines.”</p>
<p>“My long term goal is to complete a builders degree
and to become a fully trained foreman.”</p>
<p>By the way things are going, Chevy is well on his
way to achieving his dream.</p>
<p>Through the Koori Job Ready Course, 113 of students
have completed their certificate in construction since 2008, equipping them
with the confidence and skills they need to work on a building site.</p>
<p>Photo: Koori Job Ready graduate Chevy Phillips was
nominated for Indigenous Apprentice of the Year</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629794">Yaama students have recipe for success</a></h1>
<p><strong>Waterloo
resident Brendan Carr is giving MasterChef a run for its money, showing off his
cooking talents as an apprentice at the Sheraton Hotel, Darling Harbour.</strong></p>
<p>Brendan recently completed a hospitality training
course through Yaama Dhiyaan in Darlington, joining many other graduates who
have found hospitality employment through the course.</p>
<p>“The first day I was pretty nervous but I am now
feeling more confident,” Brendan said on his apprenticeship. “Everyone is
really friendly and it’s a good team environment.</p>
<p>“In my first week I prepared a whole buffet by
myself and have started preparing meals for room service. It has been pretty
stressful but I just kept remembering the chef’s instructions.</p>
<p>“My ambition is to become a fully qualified chef
and to travel the world.”</p>
<p>Brendan finished the Yaama Dhiyaan course in July
2010, starting his traineeship in October 2010.</p>
<p>Matt Pletersky, another recent graduate, has also
found success, undertaking a traineeship at GG’s Café at CarriageWorks. He
started his traineeship in April 2010 and is really enjoying it while also
learning a lot.</p>
<p>Over 140 graduates have completed the Yaama Dhiyaan
training course since 2006.</p>
<p>Photo: Brendan (left) and Matt (right): recent
Yaama Dhiyaan graduates, now apprentice chefs</p>
<p>EVERLEIGH MARKET</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629795">More than just a market</a></h1>
<p><em>Eveleigh Farmers’ Market not only brings fresh local
produce to your doorstep – <strong>it’s also
been helping many local communities throughout the year through fundraising and
special events.</strong></em></p>
<p><strong>The annual
Christmas Banner Competition this year has seen 12 local schools and youth
organisations get into the festive spirit by designing Christmas banners to be
displayedc at Eveleigh Market. The winners are announced on Saturday, 18
December 2010. The winner and people’s choice award winner each receive $1000
with the runner-up receiving $500.</strong></p>
<p>Eveleigh Market has thrown its support behind other
community events too including the Feed Sydney Campaign for OZ Harvest to help
feed the homeless. Over $1,200 was raised. Oz Harvest will be running the
Eveleigh Farmers’ Christmas Market Hamper raffle on Saturday 18 December 2010.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629796">Community Groups Supported by Eveleigh Markets in
2010</a></h1>
<ul type="disc"><li class="MsoNormalCxSpFirst">Darlington
     Primary School and St Mary’s Primary School held a cake stall to raise
     funds for their respective schools.</li><li class="MsoNormalCxSpMiddle">Sydney
     City Farm raised awareness of their proposal for a community farm in the
     city.</li><li class="MsoNormalCxSpMiddle">Inner
     City Casket Ball Club raised funds to assist their players with uniforms
     and registration fees.</li><li class="MsoNormalCxSpMiddle">The
     Watershed Bike Library offered a one-off membership for people to promote
     the use of bicycles in the area.</li><li class="MsoNormalCxSpMiddle">Start
     to Life held a stall in November 2010 to raise awareness of their program
     to give young Australians a brighter future.</li><li class="MsoNormalCxSpMiddle">Crown
     Street Primary sold their cookbook to raise funds for the school. The book
     combines recipes from the school community and local celebrated chefs.</li><li class="MsoNormalCxSpMiddle">WIPE
     Kids organisation will be raising funds in December 2010 for a group of
     Aboriginal people and children to attend the World Indigenous Peoples
     Conference on Education in Peru 2011.</li></ul>
<p>Photo: The Christmas banners from 2009 on display</p>
<p>Photo: Sydney City Farm holds a stall at Eveleigh
Market</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629797">The Cupcake Princess of Eveleigh Market</a></h1>
<p>Being made redundant in finance eight years ago saw
Carissa Lake, the Cupcake Princess, find her calling in the kitchen. As one of
the first serious cupcake bakers in Sydney, the Cupcake Princess continues to
delight kids and adults with her all natural cupcakes sold at Eveleigh Farmers’
Market every Saturday.</p>
<p>“I worked in finance and managed the testing of
computerised trading systems here and internationally but I was made
redundant,” explains Carissa. “It was when looking through a cookbook that the
idea for The Cupcake Princess was born.”</p>
<p>Following a secret recipe that Carissa says she
“won’t even share with my Grandmother”, Cupcake Princess caters to the demands
of customers’ tastes using natural food colouring and offering gluten, egg and
nut free options.</p>
<p>“It’s a real joy to see the children’s faces light
up at the market when they see the cupcakes – they get so excited. It makes it
really rewarding.”</p>
<p>Carissa runs The Cupcake Princess with her partner
Andre who helps in the kitchen, is the face behind the Eveleigh Market stall,
and is building their cupcake shop on Mitchell Road in Alexandria which is due
to open next year.</p>
<p>Carissa can bake up to 4,000-5,000 cupcakes per
week depending on the time of year and what events are taking place. It’s not
uncommon for Carissa to bake throughout the night.</p>
<p>“I am proud that our cupcakes are not mass produced
– they are all made from scratch, we use free range eggs, and our ingredients
are all sourced in Australia so I know exactly what goes in to them. And I’m
still not sick of eating them!”</p>
<p>Photo: The Cupcake Princess: Alexandria resident
Carissa Lake</p>
<p>EVENTS ROUND-UP</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629798">Fun day out for the whole family</a></h1>
<p><em>If you haven’t been to the <strong>Family and Culture Day at The Block, Redfern</strong>, you don’t know what
you are missing!</em></p>
<p><strong>Family and
Culture Day is a grassroots community oriented event that takes on the last
Saturday of each month. The aim is to bring families back to The Block and to
show off the incredible talent within the Redfern Indigenous community.</strong></p>
<p>For the children there is a jumping castle, face
painting and other entertainment. The Family and Culture Day is held on the
last Saturday of each month so come along and enjoy a fun day out. For more
details, please contact Shane Phillips at Tribal Warrior on 9699 3491.Photo:
Family and Culture Day provides an opportunity for the whole community to get
together for a fun day out</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629799">New local community gardens</a></h1>
<p><strong>The
community garden in James Street, Redfern and the revitalised Charles Kernan
Reserve Streets in Darlington were officially opened on 30 October 2010.</strong></p>
<p>James Street Reserve Community Garden is one of the
City of Sydney’s network of 15 community gardens where local residents, many
who don’t have gardens, work together, grow plants and meet their neighbours.
The James Street Reserve community garden was initiated by a local group who
continue to manage it, providing new garden beds for growing flowers, fruit and
nut trees. Other community gardens are located in Alexandria, Newtown,
Waterloo, Glebe, Pyrmont, Annandale and Woolloomooloo.</p>
<p>The revitalised Charles Kernan Reserve at the
corner of Abercrombie and Shepherd Streets in Darlington has a community
garden, new grass, seating and a drinking fountain with a dog bowl, new
playground equipment, a nature play area for toddlers, and a basketball and
netball hoop.</p>
<p>Photo: The gardener’s children plant a fruit tree
to mark the official opening of the James Street Community Garden in Redfern</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629800">Supporting victims of domestic violence</a></h1>
<p><strong>The Staying
Home Leaving violence (SHLv) project has been announced with the Minister of
Community Services Linda Burney invited to a morning tea in September 2010 to
mark the launch at The Shop for Women and Girls in Waterloo.</strong></p>
<p>Staying Home Leaving Violence (SHLV) is a
specialised domestic violence program aimed at preventing women (and their
children) from becoming homeless.</p>
<p>Susan Fowler from The Shop said: “SHLV will enable
women affected by domestic violence to access stable accommodation, maintain support
networks, and secure employment.</p>
<p>“Available to women in the Redfern area and
integrated through key agencies, SHLV also includes risk assessment, safety
planning and upgrading security in the victim’s home, court support, liaison
with police and other services, referrals to legal advice and counselling and
casework to address financial and other issues.”</p>
<p>ABOVE: From left: Minister of Community Services
Linda Burney receives an artwork from The Shop’s Jodie Bromley and Susan Fowler
to mark the launch of SHLV</p>
<p>GRANTS AND SPONSORSHIPS</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629801">Flying high at Book Week</a></h1>
<p><strong>An Augusta
helicopter from the 723 Squadron landed at the National Centre of Indigenous
Excellence to the delight of 400 school children as part of National Children’s
Book Week.</strong></p>
<p>‘The event’s focus was to encourage literacy and to
make books accessible to everyone”, explains Sarah Garnett, founder of The
Benjamin Andrew Footpath Library, who instigated the event with Captain Stefan
King, HMAS Albatross Commanding Officer. With the theme “Connecting Communities”,
the Book Week barbeque was held for children in the Redfern-Waterloo and
Alexandria community.</p>
<p>RWA contributed $2,000 to the event.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629802">Asian Moon Festival</a></h1>
<p>Local residents were treated to a special lunch to
celebrate the Asian Moon Festival in September 2010. Volunteer Mabel Chang
cooked up some Asian fare with lots of plates being returned empty – a good
sign that everyone enjoyed it!</p>
<p>The lunch was held at Waterloo Neighbourhood Centre
with RWA sponsoring the event along with The Factory, City of Sydney Council,
the Community Relations Commission, and the University of New South Wales
Community Development Project.</p>
<p>Photo: <strong>Volunteer
Mabel Chang prepares food for the Asian Moon Festival </strong></p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629803">Knockout footy performance</a></h1>
<p><strong>The Redfern
All Black’s Women’s team took out the Koori Knockout competition, beating off
some fierce competition from eight other teams.</strong></p>
<p>The Redfern All Black’s gave it their all,
demonstrating true sportsmanship and dedication. The team, made up of 17
Indigenous women aged 16-27 years, received $4,000 in prize money. RWA
contributed $1,350 for their uniforms. RWA’s Rohan Tobler and Wayne Gargan took
part in the men’s Koori Knockout competition and were then selected to play in
the Cairns All Black’s Carnival where they came in the top eight teams.</p>
<p>Photo: Success on the footy pitch: The Redfern All
Black’s Women’s team</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629804">Playground in the Park</a></h1>
<p><strong>Local
families were treated to a day of fun at Playground in the Park run by South
Sydney Community Aid.</strong></p>
<p>RWA contributed $5000 to the event held at Redfern
Park in September where children under the age of five and their families
participated in a variety of fun activities including pony rides, face
painting, clowns, a jumping castle, a puppet show and more! Local resident
Breda who attended with her daughter Sarah said: “We have been to a few now –
they are really great.”</p>
<p>Playground in the Park is hoping to run more of
these events in 2011.</p>
<p>Basketball competition at NCIE</p>
<p>RWA staff joined local basketball talent in the 3
on 3 basketball tournament held at the NCIE.</p>
<p>RWA’s Rohan Tobler, Wayne Dargan, Julie Dodd, Ryan
Jackson and Anthony Constantinidis, plus Sarah Sheedy from My Gateway, made up
the All Stars team to show their support. The competition was a great success
with 16 teams taking part with prizes and a barbeque.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629805">Find out the latest from the Redfern Waterloo
Authority:</a></h1>
<p>The monthly RWA Email Update informs you of the
latest news, development news and events from around the vibrant
Redfern-Waterloo area. To subscribe, email <a href="mailto:Natalie.kikken@rwa.nsw.gov.au">Natalie.kikken@rwa.nsw.gov.au</a>&nbsp; with the word ‘Subscribe’ in the subject
line.</p>
<h1><a name="_Toc280629806">Season’s Greetings</a></h1>
<p>RWA would like to wish you a safe and happy festive
season and a prosperous New Year.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2010-12-20T06:42:45Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>News Item</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/issues/public-housing/redevelopment/statement/2010h/101118hnswa">
    <title>HNSW - What the Community told us during 2009-10 in Redfern &amp; Waterloo</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/issues/public-housing/redevelopment/statement/2010h/101118hnswa</link>
    <description>During 2009 and 2010, Bernie Coates (HNSW) and Bruce Judd (UNSW) lead consultations with 45 key stakeholders in the Redfern and Waterloo areas to find out what people think about renewal and regeneration and how the community can best be engaged in the renewal process. Below is the  Report on Key Stakeholders Consultation compiled by HNSW and supplied on 18 November 2010.



</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<h2>What the community told us</h2>
<p class="MsoListParagraphCxSpFirst">During 2009 and 2010, Bernie Coates (HNSW) and Bruce Judd (UNSW) lead consultations with 45 key stakeholders in the Redfern and Waterloo areas to find out what people think about renewal and regeneration and how the community can best be engaged in the renewal process.&nbsp;</p>
<p class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle">A list of those who were consulted is at Appendix 1 at the bottom of this page.</p>
<p>The key themes and issues emerging from the stakeholder consultations were:</p>
<strong>Concern about residents’ safety and the impacts of anti social behaviour on residents’ amenity and community life. Stakeholders want better security, and coordinated agency action to improve safety. In particular, we were told:</strong>
<ul type="disc">
<ul type="circle"><li>People want agencies to work together to solve problems, not ‘pass the buck’.</li><li>Better solutions are needed for the public drinking. Many fear leaving their home after dark. </li></ul>
</ul>
<strong>Stakeholders say that a small number of residents cause most of the problems and many want improved security, tougher action on breaches of tenancy agreements, more careful allocations and agencies to work more closely with each other to ensure better support for high need clients. In particular, we were told:</strong>
<ul type="disc">
<ul type="circle"><li>Housing needs to tackle sub letting and unauthorised occupants.</li><li>People want the maintenance response to be improved and contractors better monitored.</li><li>Many liked the old ‘live-in’ managers in the high rise buildings. Most welcomed the new Neighbourhood Link (concierge) project in the 6 Waterloo high rises and believed it could make a big difference. &nbsp;</li><li>Some clients just need a bit of support with daily living. Others, need solid support from a lead agency at the start of a tenancy and then from time to time.</li></ul>
</ul>
<strong>Most residents however love their area and value their diverse, tolerant community.&nbsp; They do not want this community spirit lost as the area undergoes renewal. In particular, we were told:</strong>
<ul type="disc">
<ul type="circle"><li>Some fear that renewal may result in public housing residents losing valued connections and neighbourly assistance.</li><li>Some private owners can be less understanding or tolerant, but may be more likely to put pressure on to get local problems fixed.&nbsp; </li><li>There was concern that disadvantaged and high need tenants will no longer feel welcome in their area, if it is dominated by private people and home owners. </li></ul>
</ul>
<strong>Many, though not all, believe a more socially mixed community could be safer and provide better amenity for residents. Some residents were concerned however that public housing residents would lose out if poorly conceived social mix policies were applied. In particular, we were told:</strong>
<ul type="disc">
<ul type="circle"><li>People favour a mix of public and private housing in every street block and some people thought there should be a mix within buildings.</li><li>People do not want a mix of the very rich and the very poor. Many agreed affordable housing needed to be an important part of the mix.</li><li>More specialisation in buildings should be considered – seniors only buildings for example or places like ‘common ground’ with services onsite.</li><li>Local businesses would welcome more people and a more mixed community, so they can expand the range of goods and services they can offer.&nbsp; &nbsp;&nbsp;</li></ul>
</ul>
<strong>Many accepted that the walk up flats were ageing and agreed that their replacement over time with new apartments with modern facilities, lift access, balconies and internal laundries would be welcomed by many tenants.&nbsp; Stakeholders wanted sensitive relocation practice that supported people, particularly the vulnerable, to cope with change. In particular, we were told:</strong>
<ul type="disc">
<ul type="circle"><li>People wanted good quality new development.</li><li>People did not favour more high rise, and pointed out that buildings like Purcell (up to 7 storeys) could be better managed and create more of a sense of community.</li><li>Many tenants, especially the aged, feared being moved to another area without friends, family or supports. Valued communities and networks need to be maintained when people move. Some felt the very old would not cope with moving. </li><li>Some people wanted to grow their own food – in community gardens or rooftop gardens, or on balconies that are big enough for pots. </li><li>New construction provides an opportunity for tenant employment.</li><li>The walk ups need some improvements while they wait for redevelopment.</li></ul>
</ul>
<strong>There was concern that increased housing densities may result in parking and traffic problems, a loss of open space and pressure on community facilities. But many valued their existing high rise living and the shopping and services denser living gave access to. In particular, we were told:</strong>
<ul type="disc">
<ul type="circle"><li>New public domain needs to be well managed. </li><li>&nbsp;People wanted high environmental standards for new buildings and adequate green spaces for all age groups. The design of the parks and public spaces can assist social interactions.</li><li>People want adequate services for the population mix. </li></ul>
</ul>
<strong>Stakeholders provided a wealth of advice about how to engage the communities. They sought a genuine and transparent approach, adoption of a set of guiding principles for engagement and strategies that encouraged and supported all groups in the community to participate. In particular, we were told:</strong>
<ul type="disc">
<ul type="circle"><li>Tenants need to be regularly consulted about proposed improvements to make sure they are going to work. </li><li>People will participate, if the engagement process is genuine. Give regular feedback on what changed as a result of residents input.</li><li>It is a challenge to get people to focus on the future, when the day to day issues are not resolved. </li><li>Tenants won’t come to meetings if it is the same old issues and the same people dominating.</li><li>Use existing trusted agencies and familiar venues for consultation. Use language workers, ethnic radio, a website and provide transport for the less mobile. Use plain English and provide food. </li><li>Take people on site visits to see good examples of new development and teach people about urban design.&nbsp;&nbsp;<strong>&nbsp;</strong></li></ul>
</ul>
<p><strong>&nbsp;</strong><strong>For more information:</strong> Contact Bernie Coates at Housing NSW on 92683487&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; October 2010</p>
<h2>APPENDIX 1</h2>
<p>Participants:</p>
<table class="listing nosort">
<thead>
<tr>
<td><strong>Organisation</strong></td>
<td><strong>Name</strong></td>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>Aboriginal Housing Company</td>
<td>Mick Mundine Lani Tuitavake Richard Green</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Chamber of Commerce</td>
<td>Mary-Lynne Pidcock</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>City of Sydney</td>
<td>Dominic Grenot John Maynard</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>City Councillor &amp; tenant</td>
<td>Irene Doutney</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Connect Redfern</td>
<td>Jo Fletcher</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>The Factory Community Centre</td>
<td>Patrick Russell Michael Shreenan Jose Perez</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>ICRCSD</td>
<td>David White Charmaine Jones Pam Marsh</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Inner Sydney Tenants Advice and Advocacy Service</td>
<td>Phoenix van Dyke Jacqui Swinburne</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>National Centre of Indigenous Excellence</td>
<td>Jason Glanville</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Mudgin-Gal</td>
<td>Dixie Link-Gordon</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Ogden Lane Services</td>
<td>Jane Rogers – Community Transport John Geerligs&nbsp; - Food Distribution Rosemary Perkov - RICHES</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>REDWatch</td>
<td>Geoff Turnbull</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Redfern Community Centre</td>
<td>Scott Elphinstone</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Redfern NAB</td>
<td>Lindsay Dale Randall Johns Barbara Rhall Brian Parker Denny Powell Rita Maddren Darryl Dartnell</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>South Sydney Community Aide</td>
<td>Jhan Leach Helen Campbell</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>South Sydney Youth Services</td>
<td>Shane Brown</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>The Shop Women and Girls Centre</td>
<td>Susan Fowler Julie Packer Colleen Bradshaw</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Tribal Warrior</td>
<td>Shane Phillips</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Waterloo Tenants</td>
<td>Norah McGuire Ross Smith Simon Shabshay Marlene Newton Di Whitworth Lynne Stewart (former tenant)Mabel Chang</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Wyanga Aboriginal Aged Care</td>
<td>Millie Ingram</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Yarn’n Aboriginal Employment Services</td>
<td>Deb Nelson</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2010-12-07T06:08:22Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>News Item</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2010/100929rwa">
    <title>RWA Statement on Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2010/100929rwa</link>
    <description>The CEO of the RWA advised that the work of the RWA will continue as per the current plans and that the Australian Technology Park will remain part of the RWA and will ultimately be transferred to the SMDA in this statement on 29 September 2010 regarding the RWA and the Sydney Metropolitan Development Aiuthority (SMDA). </description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<h2>Redfern-Waterloo Authority Statement: Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority</h2>
<p>On 23 September 2010, the NSW Government announced its intention to establish to the Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority (SMDA). The purpose of the SMDA is to drive housing and employment opportunities in specific areas serviced by public transport and infrastructure, and build economies of urban centres.</p>
<p>As a priority, the SMDA will focus on areas currently administered by the Redfern-Waterloo Authority (RWA), including North Eveleigh and Australian Technology Park.</p>
<p>CEO of the RWA, Mr RoyWakelin-King, will perform the role of Acting CEO of the new SMDA and he will sit on the interim Board, comprising:</p>
<ul><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpFirst">Chair – Dr Col Gellatly (Chair of RWA)</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle">Lucy Turnbull – former Lord Mayor of Sydney, and Deputy Chair of the Commonwealth Expert Panel for the review of capital city strategic planning systems;</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle">Shane Phillips – a prominent community leader representing Aboriginal interests;</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle">The Directors-General (or their nominees) of Planning, Transport NSW, the Department of Premier and Cabinet and NSW Treasury; and</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpLast">A nominee of the Federal Minister of Infrastructure and Transport</div>
</li></ul>
<p>The CEO of the RWA advised that the work of the RWA will continue as per the current plans. This includes:</p>
<ul><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpFirst">Redfern Station</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle">North Eveleigh</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle">ATP</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle">Built Environment Plan 2</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle">The Aboriginal Employment Program</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpLast">Human Service Reform</div>
</li></ul>
<p>The urban renewal process that the RWA has undertaken in the Redfern Waterloo area has resulted in lasting benefits for this key area of Sydney and it also serves as a model for the work that will be undertaken by the SMDA.</p>
<p>Mr Wakelin-King further advised that the plans for the SMDA and how it will continue the above activities are currently being developed, but the work on these important initiatives will not stop.</p>
<p>Mr Wakelin-King also advised that the Australian Technology Park will remain part of the RWA and will ultimately be transferred to the SMDA.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2010-09-29T05:33:51Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>News Item</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2010/100923smda">
    <title>RWA subsumed by new Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/rwahist/govtstatements/2010/100923smda</link>
    <description>As a priority, the authority will focus on areas currently administered by the Redfern Waterloo Authority, including North Eveleigh and the Australian Technology Park. It is anticipated Redfern and Granville will be the two priority areas for the SMDA over the next 12 months. A new interim board has been appointed and the RWA CEO becomes the interim CEO of the new Authority reports this media release of 23 September 2010 from Planning Minister Tony Kelly.

</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<h2>SYDNEY METROPOLITAN DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY</h2>
<p>NSW Cabinet has approved plans to establish the <strong><em>Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority </em></strong>(SMDA) which will create new sustainable urban centres with additional housing and commercial projects.</p>
<p>Minister for Planning, Tony Kelly announced the authority as part of the NSW Government’s commitment to link planning for new housing and jobs together with existing and planned transport.</p>
<p>“The SMDA will drive housing and employment opportunities in specific areas serviced by public transport and infrastructure, and build economies of urban centres,” Mr Kelly said.</p>
<p><strong>“Sydney will need 770,000 more homes and 760,000 jobs by 2036. These will need to be near transport and services, and the authority will help plan and deliver that.</strong></p>
<p><strong>“It will undertake planning work, much like the Redfern Waterloo Authority has done in relation to the redevelopment of Redfern RSL - where 84 units are being built right now, next to Redfern Station.</strong></p>
<p>Specifically the role of the Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority will include:</p>
<ul><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpFirst"><strong>Working with transport and planning departments to identify precincts for renewal;</strong></div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle"><strong>Undertaking land use planning investigations and feasibility analyses;</strong></div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle"><strong>Delivering an overarching precinct plan;</strong></div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle"><strong>Coordinating transport and infrastructure planning;</strong></div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle"><strong>Planning for open space in identified precincts;</strong></div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle"><strong>Levying infrastructure contributions and entering into planning agreements;</strong></div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle"><strong>Deal with land;</strong></div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle"><strong>Borrowing and managing funds; and</strong></div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpLast"><strong>Partnering with public agencies and private entities when necessary.</strong></div>
</li></ul>
<p>The SMDA will use existing provisions of the <em>Growth Centres (Development Corporations) Act </em>and will assume the functions of the Redfern-Waterloo Authority (RWA).</p>
<p>As a priority, the authority will focus on areas currently administered by the Redfern Waterloo Authority, including North Eveleigh and the Australian Technology Park.</p>
<p>The Government has identified Granville Town Centre and Auto Alley as the next area for Cabinet consideration. It is anticipated Redfern and Granville will be the two priority areas for the SMDA over the next 12 months.</p>
<p>The authority builds on the <em>Metropolitan Transport Plan, </em>released in February 2010, and the updated <em>Metropolitan Plan</em>, to be released later this year.</p>
<p>“This Authority will be essential to our plans to better integrate land-use and transport planning, creating a more sustainable, affordable and liveable city,” Mr Kelly said.</p>
<p>“Its role will be to help prepare and implement plans for urban renewal precincts for commercial or housing development within Sydney’s existing borders, as well as in targeted Greenfield sites.</p>
<p><strong>“It will have an important role boosting the amount, mix and choice of housing and commercial development within walking distance of key public transport hubs.</strong></p>
<p><strong>“This is a key way that the NSW Government will help plan for the extra homes and more jobs that we will need in Sydney by the year 2036.</strong></p>
<p>“We will do this in partnership with the local councils and the Federal Government which, through the Federal Infrastructure Minister, will hold a position on the authority’s board.”</p>
<p>Mr Kelly said that this is about applying a model which works for the benefit of all of Sydney.</p>
<p>“The SMDA will operate under existing legislation in place for more than three decades, but will bring a new focus to strategic planning and urban rejuvenation in Sydney,” Mr Kelly said.</p>
<p><strong>“This is about taking the model and powers we know work, and applying them in suitable precincts across Sydney so that the city grows in a more sustainable way.</strong></p>
<p><strong>“Of course public consultation will be central to the role of the SMDA, which will publicly exhibit any plans to revitalize these key precincts.”</strong></p>
<p>Minister for Transport, John Robertson, welcomed the new Authority, and said it will help make Sydney a more sustainable city.</p>
<p><strong>“We’re investing $50.2 billion in transport over the next ten years, and the Authority will ensure that contributes to a more sustainable city,” Mr Robertson said.</strong></p>
<p><strong>“It will help link the infrastructure we have, and the projects we are delivering, with where people will live and work.</strong></p>
<p>“That’s good for public transport planning, urban planning, and easing congestion, and will help reduce commuting times by creating homes and jobs near public transport.”</p>
<p>CEO of the Redfern Waterloo Authority, Mr Roy Wakelin-King, will perform the role of Acting CEO of the new SMDA and he will sit on the interim Board, comprising:</p>
<ul><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpFirst">Chair – Dr Col Gellatly (chair of RWA)</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle">Lucy Turnbull – former Lord Mayor of Sydney, and Deputy Chair of the Commonwealth Expert Panel for the review of capital city strategic planning systems;</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle">Shane Phillips – a prominent community leader representing Aboriginal interests;</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpMiddle">The Directors-General (or their nominees) of Planning, Transport NSW, the Department of Premier and Cabinet and NSW Treasury; and</div>
</li><li>
<div class="MsoListParagraphCxSpLast">A nominee of the Federal Minister of Infrastructure and Transport</div>
</li></ul>
<p>&nbsp;Source:&nbsp;<a title="View Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority" href="http://www.planning.nsw.gov.au/DesktopModules/MediaCentre/getdocument.aspx?mid=470"><u>Sydney Metropolitan Development Authority</u></a> (PDF 170Kb) at <a href="http://www.planning.nsw.gov.au/default.aspx?tabid=381"><u>www.planning.nsw.gov.au/default.aspx?tabid=381</u></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2010-09-23T20:41:36Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>News Item</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/Events/fcd1000828">
    <title>Family and Culture Day 2nd Anniversary</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/Events/fcd1000828</link>
    <description>Family and Culture Day, a grassroots community oriented event, is at The Block in Redfern. The aim of this event, which takes place on the last Saturday of each month, is to bring families back to The Block and to show off the incredible talent within the Redfern Indigenous community. For the children there is a jumping castle, face painting and other entertainment. 
</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p class="text_white">Tel: 02 9699 3491<br />
                      Fax: 02 9699 3441</p>
<p class="text_white">Website: <a href="http://tribalwarrior.org/">tribalwarrior.org</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>Social Event</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2010-06-20T03:45:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Event</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/Events/fcd100626">
    <title>Family and Culture Day- Reonciliation through Social Justice</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/Events/fcd100626</link>
    <description>Family and Culture Day, a grassroots community oriented drug and alcohol free event, is at The Block in Redfern. The aim of this event, which takes place on the last Saturday of each month, is to bring families back to The Block and to show off the incredible talent within the Redfern Indigenous community. This month Janawi, UDC Crew, Nellie Dargan, comedian Sonny and magician Anthony. with Allara, YungNooky, Howlin Funk, Black Turtles and Michael Donovan.
</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p class="text_white">Tel: 02 9699 3491<br />
                      Fax: 02 9699 3441</p>
<p class="text_white">Website: <a href="http://tribalwarrior.org/">tribalwarrior.org</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>Social Event</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2010-06-20T03:45:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Event</dc:type>
  </item>


  <item rdf:about="http://www.redwatch.org.au/Events/fcd101127">
    <title>Family and Culture Day</title>
    <link>http://www.redwatch.org.au/Events/fcd101127</link>
    <description>Family and Culture Day, a grassroots community oriented event, is at The Block in Redfern. The aim of this event, which takes place on the last Saturday of each month, is to bring families back to The Block and to show off the incredible talent within the Redfern Indigenous community. For the children there is a jumping castle, face painting and other entertainment. 
</description>
    <content:encoded xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"><![CDATA[
<p class="text_white">Tel: 02 9699 3491<br />
                      Fax: 02 9699 3441</p>
<p class="text_white">Website: <a href="http://tribalwarrior.org/">tribalwarrior.org</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
    <dc:publisher>No publisher</dc:publisher>
    <dc:creator>REDWatch</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights></dc:rights>
    
      <dc:subject>Social Event</dc:subject>
    
    <dc:date>2010-06-20T03:45:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:type>Event</dc:type>
  </item>




</rdf:RDF>
