Agency Name: | Department of Planning, Lands and Heritage |
Type: | Government Department |
Formed: | 28 April 2017 |
Preceding1: | Department of Planning |
Preceding2: | Department of Lands |
Preceding3: | Heritage Council of Western Australia |
Preceding4: | Department of Aboriginal Affairs |
Jurisdiction: | Western Australia |
Headquarters: | Gordon Stephenson House, 150 William Street, Perth |
Employees: | 865 (2018) |
Budget: | $222 million (2023) |
Minister1 Name: | John Carey |
Minister2 Name: | David Templeman |
Minister3 Name: | Stephen Dawson |
Chief1 Name: | Anthony Kannis |
Chief1 Position: | Director General |
Child1 Agency: | Western Australian Planning Commission |
Child2 Agency: | Heritage Council of Western Australia |
Child3 Agency: | Aboriginal Lands Trust |
Child4 Agency: | Pastoral Lands Board |
Child5 Agency: | Office of the Government Architect |
Child6 Agency: | Fremantle Prison |
Child7 Agency: | Whiteman Park |
The Department of Planning, Lands and Heritage is the department of the Government of Western Australia responsible for planning and managing all land use and heritage considerations within the state.[1] The Department was formed on 28 April 2017 as a merger of the former departments of Planning, Lands Management, the Heritage Council and the heritage and land management functions of the former Department of Aboriginal Affairs.[2]
Political pressure for new legislation on Town Planning had been part of the post war Western Australia[3] and led to the creation of the Town Planning Department in 1954.[4]
The department operated under the same name with varying responsibilities until the establishment of the Department of Planning and Urban Development in September 1989. The department was renamed the Ministry for Planning in March 1995.[5]
On 1 July 2001 the Department was merged with the Departments of Transport and Land Administration under a single minister as the Department of Planning and Infrastructure.[6] The purpose of the amalgamation was to deliver integrated land use and transport infrastructure planning — however the experiment was short-lived.[7] On 1 July 2009 the department was superseded by the Department of Planning and the Department of Transport.
In 2017, a departmental reorganisation led to the consolidation of all state government land use and heritage responsibilities under a single Department of Planning, Lands and Heritage.[8] The department currently exercises various planning decision-making responsibilities under delegation from the Western Australian Planning Commission.
In May 2021, the department was one of eight Western Australian Government departments to receive a new Director General with Jodi Cant being appointed to the role effective from 31 May 2021 after her predecessor, Gail McGowan, had retired.[9]
The Department supports four ministerial positions:[10]