City of Rockingham explained

Type:lga
City of Rockingham
State:wa
Image Upright:0.81
Image2 Upright:0.81
Local Map:yes
Zoom:9
Density:526.9
Area:257.5
Est:1897
Seat:Rockingham
Mayor:Deb Hamblin
Region:South Metropolitan Perth
Url:http://www.rockingham.wa.gov.au
Stategov:Rockingham, Warnbro, Kwinana, Darling Range
Fedgov:Brand
Near-N:Kwinana
Near-Ne:Serpentine-Jarrahdale
Near-E:Serpentine-Jarrahdale
Near-S:Mandurah

The City of Rockingham is a council and local government area, comprising the south coastal suburbs of the Western Australian capital city of Perth.

History

Rockingham is located in the southern part of the traditional tribal territory of the Whadjuk, who form part of the Noongar language group.

Rockingham was named after the British ship Rockingham.[1]

In 1896, residents of Rockingham petitioned to establish a road board, which they proposed be called "Clarence" which was the name of the failed settlement of Thomas Peel at Woodman Point. The area at the time fell within the responsibility of the Fremantle District Road Board. The name "Clarence" was declined by the Department of Lands and Surveys,[2] and the Rockingham Road District was gazetted on 4 February 1897.

The agricultural hall on the corner of Flinders Lane and Kent Street in Rockingham was used for the Roads Board's administration until an office was constructed for the Roads Board on the corner of Office Road and Mandurah Road in East Rockingham in 1905. In 1929 the Board resolved to relocate the administration to Rockingham Beach and the various buildings, including the Agricultural Hall and the vacated Rockingham Beach Primary School building on Kent Street, were used as the Board's offices.[2]

A new office was constructed for the Roads Board in 1946 on the corner of Flinders Lane and Kent Street.[2]

In February 1954 the Kwinana Road District was formed from the northern portion of the Rockingham Road District.

On 1 July 1961, the Road District became the Shire of Rockingham following enactment of the Local Government Act 1960.[3] In 1971, the Shire relocated to new offices on Council Avenue on land donated by developers Rockingham Park Pty Ltd 2 km southeast of the traditional centre of Rockingham Beach, which was to become the new major centre of Rockingham and Kwinana. The Rockingham City Shopping Centre opened in the new centre in 1971. Despite the move to the new "city centre," the community apparently considered Rockingham Beach to be the rightful civic heart of Rockingham, as evidenced by the Shire's decision to construct Flinders Hall on Flinders Lane, despite the new Council offices being constructed in the same year.[2]

On 12 November 1988 the Council attained City status.[3] In 1994, the City relocated to new Council chambers and civic centre on Civic Boulevard.[4]

In 2008, the Council adopted a plan for the Rockingham Strategic Regional (or Primary) Centre which incorporated both the traditional centre at Rockingham Beach and the "City Centre" of the 1970s into a larger, encompassing centre. The plan seeks to increase the residential population within this new city centre envelope from 12,000 to 36,000 through the provision of transit-oriented development, which would in turn support the operation of light rail between the Rockingham Train Station and Rockingham Beach.[5]

Wards and mayor

See main article: List of mayors of Rockingham. The city has been divided into four wards.

Historically, the mayor was elected from among the councillors. The election system was changed for the 2021 council election, with the mayor directly elected. Deb Hamblin succeeded retiring Barry Sammels as mayor of the City of Rockingham, becoming the first female to hold this position.[6] Hamblin was officially sworn in on 19 October 2021 for a four-year term.[7]

At the time of the announcement of his retirement in August 2021, Barry Sammels had been the longest-serving active mayor in Western Australia, having first been elected mayor of Rockingham in 2003. Previous to this, he had been elected as a councillor in 1997 and as the deputy mayor in 2001.[8] [9]

Of the current councillors, Leigh Liley is the longest-serving, having first been elected to the council in 1999, while the current mayor, Deb Hamblin, served on the council from 2005 until her election to mayor.[10]

Current council composition:

PositionNameTerm
MayorDeb Hamblin2021–25
Deputy mayorLorna Buchan2023–25
Rockingham/Safety Bay WardPeter Hudson2023–27
Craig Buchanan2023–27
Mark Jones2023–27
Caroline Hume2021–25
Leigh Liley2021–25
Dawn Jecks2021–25
Baldivis WardMike Crichton2023–27
Kelly Middlecoat2023–27
Brett Wormall2021–25
Comet Bay WardLorna Buchan2023–27
Robert Schmidt2021–25

Election results

2023

Suburbs

The suburbs of the City of Rockingham with population and size figures based on the most recent Australian census:[11] [12]

Suburbdata-sort-type=numberPopulationdata-sort-type=numberAreaMap
Id:Q4850442
Zoom:10
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q5167527
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q5329302
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
11km2
Id:Q3095431
Zoom:11
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q5579184
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q14935810
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q6372995
Zoom:11
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Keralup *
Id:Q6393534
Zoom:11
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q7169431
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q7230738
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q705385
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q7398600
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q7444011
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q7499749
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q7524092
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q7960019
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes
Id:Q7969670
Zoom:12
Mapframe:yes
Wikidata:yes

* Indicates locality is only partially located within the City of Rockingham

Population

In 1954, Kwinana was excised from Rockingham.

Media

Rockingham is serviced by one local newspaper: the Sound Telegraph[13] is delivered every Wednesday.

Conservation

Rockingham Lakes Regional Park, at 4,270 hectares, occupies approximately 16 percent of the area of the City of Rockingham. The park, established in 1997, consists of areas of land that have been identified as having outstanding conservation,landscape and recreation values.[14]

Heritage-listed places

See main article: List of State Register of Heritage Places in the City of Rockingham., 115 places are heritage-listed in the City of Rockingham,[15] of which seven are on the State Register of Heritage Places, among them Cape Peron K Battery Complex, the Bell Cottage ruin and Lake Richmond.[16]

Sport and recreation

Rockingham is home to the Rockingham Rams[17] in the Peel Football League; Rockingham Flames in NBL1 West; Rockingham City FC[18] in the National Premier Leagues WA; Rockingham Rams in the Harcher State Baseball League; Rockingham Rugby Union club in the RugbyWA competition; and the Rockingham Coastal Sharks in the Western Australia Rugby League.

Sister cities

The City of Rockingham has two active affiliations to which it is a signatory, being:

Notes and References

  1. http://www.rockinghammuseum.org.au/index.php/78-museum/35-history-of-rockingham Rockingham District Historical Society - History of Rockingham
  2. Draper, Richard Rockingham – The Visions Unfold. City of Rockingham. 1997.
  3. WA Electoral Commission, Municipality Boundary Amendments Register (release 3.0), 31 May 2007.
  4. Rockingham Municipal Heritage Inventory Palassis Architects, April 2008 p.22
  5. http://www.rockingham.wa.gov.au/Business-and-development/Land-and-property/Rockingham-City-Centre/Rockingham-Strategic-Centre---Centre-Plan-Review.aspx Rockingham Strategic Regional Centre
  6. News: Welhan . Monique . 17 October 2021 . City of Mandurah, Rockingham 2021 election results . 97.3 Coast FM . Mandurah . 19 October 2021.
  7. News: Cooper . Daniela . 19 October 2021 . Deb Hamblin voted in as first-ever female mayor for Rockingham. Mandurah Mail . Mandurah . 21 October 2021.
  8. News: Thompson . Holly . 3 August 2021 . Sunset on Sammels' City reign. Sound Telegraph . Mandurah . 19 October 2021.
  9. News: Welhan . Monique . 2 August 2021 . End of an era for Rockingham Mayor Barry Sammels . 97.3 Coast FM . Mandurah . 19 October 2021.
  10. City of Rockingham 1988. 2006 . Honour board . City of Rockingham . City of Rockingham council chambers. 29 October 2021 .
  11. Web site: SLIP Map . . maps.slip.wa.gov.au . . 24 December 2022 .
  12. Web site: NationalMap . . nationalmap.gov.au . . 24 December 2022 .
  13. https://www.soundtelegraph.com.au/
  14. 2010 . Rockingham Lakes Regional Park Management Plan 2010 . Conservation Commission of Western Australia, Department of Environment and Conservation & City of Rockingham . 22 November 2019 .
  15. Web site: City of Rockingham Heritage Places. . inherit.stateheritage.wa.gov.au . Heritage Council of Western Australia . 25 February 2024 .
  16. Web site: City of Rockingham State Register of Heritage Places. . inherit.stateheritage.wa.gov.au . Heritage Council of Western Australia . 25 February 2024 .
  17. Web site: Welcome to Rockingham Rams . 2011-04-06 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110715193759/http://www.rockinghamrams.com/ . 15 July 2011 . dmy-all .
  18. http://www.rockinghamcity.com.au/ Rockingham City FC
  19. Web site: WA-Japan Sister City Relationships ::: GOVERNMENT OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA . 2022-12-15 . Ember Media Japan . ja.
  20. http://rockingham.wa.gov.au/Council-(1)/Minutes/2010/Minutes/9councilminutes.aspx