City of Dubbo explained

Type:lga
City of Dubbo
State:nsw
Pop:41,211
Area:3425
Est:1872
Coordinates:-32.25°N 184°W
Seat:Dubbo
Region:Orana
Url:www.dubbo.nsw.gov.au
Fedgov:Parkes
Stategov:Dubbo
Near-Nw:Narromine
Near-N:Gilgandra
Near-Ne:Warrumbungle
Near-W:Narromine
Near-E:Wellington
Near-Sw:Parkes
Near-S:Parkes
Near-Se:Wellington

The City of Dubbo was a local government area in the Orana region of New South Wales, Australia. The former area is located adjacent to the Mitchell, Newell, and the Golden highways, the Main Western railway line, and the Macquarie River.

A 2015 review of local government boundaries recommended that the City of Dubbo merge with the Wellington Council to form a new council with an area of and support a population of approximately .[1] Following an independent review, on 12 May 2016 the Minister for Local Government announced the dissolution of the Dubbo City Council and the Wellington Council, together with the establishment of the Western Plains Regional Council with immediate effect.[2]

The last mayor of the City of Dubbo was Clr. Mathew Dickerson, an independent politician.

The last deputy mayor of the City of Dubbo was Clr. Ben Shields, an unaligned politician. Clr. Ben Shields was elected in 1st position at the 2012 and 2008 Dubbo City Council elections.

The largest population centre in the former area is the regional city of Dubbo. The local government area also included the villages of Eumungerie, Mogriguy, Brocklehurst, Wongarbon, Toongi, and Rawsonville.[3]

History

The Dubbo local government area came into being on 19 February 1872, when the Municipal District of Dubbo was approved by the Colonial Secretary. The first six aldermen were elected into office on 22 April 1872 with 82 votes being cast for a wide field of candidates.[4] James Samuels was elected mayor at the first council meeting and remained mayor for 3 years.[5]

Talbragar Shire was amalgamated with the Dubbo City Council on 1 April 1980. At that time the area of the city was ; and with a population estimated at 29,000.[4]

Council

Current composition and election method

Prior to its dissolution, the Dubbo City Council was composed of eleven councillors elected proportionally as a single ward. All Councillors were elected for a fixed four-year term of office. The mayor was elected by the councillors at the first meeting of the council. The most recent election was held on 8 September 2012, and the makeup of the former council was as follows:[6]

PartyCouncillors
 Independents and Unalignedalign=right 11
Totalalign=right 11

The last Council, elected in 2012 and dissolved in 2016, in order of election, was:[6]

CouncillorPartyNotes
 Ben ShieldsUnalignedDeputy Mayor
 Mathew DickersonIndependentMayor[7]
 John WalkomUnaligned
 Bill KellyIndependent
 Greg MohrUnalignedElected on Ben Shields ticket
 Allan SmithIndependent
 Kevin ParkerUnaligned
 Tina ReynoldsIndependent
 Greg MathewsUnaligned
 Lyn GriffithsIndependent
 Rod TowneyIndependent

The former Dubbo City Council staffed around 350 permanent employees, and was responsible for the city and surrounding areas. The Civic Administration Building of the former council is located on the corner of Darling and Church Streets and now has a "One Stop Shop" for all customers of the former council.

Industry

As a regional centre, the City of Dubbo provided services far beyond its own population base. It served 130,000 people, and one third of the geographic area of New South Wales.[3] The main industry sectors represented in the City of Dubbo were retail, health, manufacturing, transport, tourism, education, construction, business services, agriculture, and government services.[3]

Sister cities

The City of Dubbo had four sister cities:[8]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Merger proposal: Dubbo City Council, Wellington Council . . January 2016 . 4 March 2016 . 7 . 10 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160310041814/https://dpc-olg-ss.s3.amazonaws.com/6f398ac7e0ccf4f6e8e49ba46ba85b26/Dubbo-Wellington.pdf . dead .
  2. Web site: Western Plains Regional Council . Stronger Councils . . 12 May 2016 . 17 May 2016 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160611123318/https://www.strongercouncils.nsw.gov.au/new-councils/western-plains-regional-council/ . 11 June 2016 . dmy-all .
  3. Web site: Annual report: 2004–2005 . PDF . Dubbo City Council . 11 November 2006 . 2005 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928203459/http://www.dubbo.nsw.gov.au/repositories/files/2006062610194237/DCC%20Annual%20Report.pdf . 28 September 2007 . dead .
  4. Web site: History of Dubbo City Council . Dubbo City Council . 11 November 2006 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060819050547/http://www.dubbo.nsw.gov.au/public/content/default.asp?xcid=726 . 19 August 2006 . dead .
  5. News: 1920 . The Old Brigade . Dubbo Dispatch and Wellington Independent.
  6. Web site: Dubbo City Council: Summary of First Preference Votes for each Candidate . Local Government Elections 2012 . Electoral Commission of New South Wales . 16 September 2012 . 24 October 2012.
  7. News: Check your new council details . van de Wetering, Jodie . ABC Western Plains . Australia . 25 September 2012 . 24 October 2012.
  8. Dubbo Sister Cities