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NSW FARMERS’ Association and the Country Women’s Association of NSW have joined forces to progress legal action with respect to the Australian Rail Track Corporation’s (ARTC) handling of the Inland Rail Project.
NSW Farmers’ and CWA of NSW have engaged law firm Holding Redlich to approach the ARTC, and have highlighed concerns relating to ARTC’s hydrology modelling.
NSW Farmers’ Inland Rail Taskforce chair, Adrian Lyons, said this approach aims to elicit a meaningful response from the ARTC.
“Through sending legal correspondence to the ARTC, we have clearly outlined the main concerns facing landholders along the proposed rail route,” Mr Lyons said.
“We are using this opportunity to demand the ARTC engage in a productive manner with affected landholders.
“We have also stressed the need for transparency around the key documents underpinning the proposed route, particularly the hydrology modelling which to date has caused consternation in our members.
“For a long time we have recommended to NSW Farmers’ members affected by this project not to engage with ARTC and now we’re urging them to seek legal advice in regards to this matter.
CWA of NSW CEO, Danica Leys, said in taking legal action, the CWA and NSW Farmers hope to develop a collective of landholders and community members who want to progress advocacy around Inland Rail.
“We encourage affected landholders to register their interest in joining ongoing advocacy efforts,” Ms Leys said.
“Currently, our legal correspondence is focused on the Narromine-to-Narrabri stretch of the rail route, but our aim is that any positive developments would be mirrored in other parts of the infrastructure.”
The 1700-kilometre Inland Rail Project aims to provide a freight corridor linking the ports of Melbourne and Brisbane, and project approvals on the Narrabri-North Star section are now being finalised as construction moves north.
Inland Rail looks to fast trackFast-track measures announced last month by the Federal Government for priority infrastructure projects, including Inland Rail, have been designed to streamline the environmental approval process to get them under construction faster.
“This isn’t about reducing the amount of community consultation or environmental assessment; it’s about reducing the time project approvals sit with bureaucrats in both State and Federal Governments,” a spokesperson for Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development Michael McCormack said.
Operating under a bilateral model, teams will work across states and levels of government to progress the environmental approvals process for priority projects including Inland Rail.
“These measures will target a further 25 per cent reduction in Commonwealth assessments and approval times by the end of the year, without compromising regulatory requirements and community consultation processes.
“The government intends to apply this process across the Inland Rail project, not specific sections or states.
“The Senate Inquiry and the assessment of a forestry route via Cecil Plains in the Border-to-Gowrie section of Inland Rail are separate processes to the fast-tracking of environmental approvals.”
Conflicting speedsThe biggest hurdles for Inland Rail west of Toowoomba appear to be its route over the Macintyre floodplain on the NSW-Queensland border, and the Condamine floodplain on the Darling Downs near Millmerran.
A Senate Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport References Committee was last year appointed to look at the management of the Inland Rail project by the ARTC and the Federal Government.
In January, it held a public hearing at Millmerran, where concerns were voiced about the proposed Inland Rail route over both floodplains.
This article first appeared on www.graincentral.com
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