Rockhampton Region Explained

Type:lga
Rockhampton Region
State:qld
Image Upright:0.81
Mayor:Tony Williams (Labor)[1]
Pop:81968
Area:6570
Area Footnotes:[2]
Est:2008
Postcode:4700, 4701, 4702, 4703, 4704, 4705, 4706, 4707
Seat:Rockhampton
Region:Central Queensland
Logo Upright:1.2
Url:http://www.rockhamptonregion.qld.gov.au/
Stategov:Rockhampton
Stategov2:Keppel
Stategov3:Mirani
Fedgov:Capricornia
Fedgov2:Flynn
Near-Nw:Isaac
Near-N:Livingstone
Near-Ne:Coral Sea
Near-W:Central Highlands
Near-E:Coral Sea
Near-Sw:Woorabinda
Near-S:Banana
Near-Se:Gladstone

The Rockhampton Region is a local government area (LGA) in Central Queensland, Australia, located on the Tropic of Capricorn about north of Brisbane. Rockhampton is the region's major city; the region also includes the Fitzroy River, Mount Archer National Park and Berserker Range.

In the, the Rockhampton Region had a population of 81,968 people.

History

Established in 2008, it was preceded by four previous local government areas extending to almost the beginning of local government in Queensland. On 1 January 2014, one of those local government areas, the Shire of Livingstone was restored as an independent council.

Prior to the 2008 amalgamation, the Rockhampton Region existed as four distinct local government areas:

Rockhampton was proclaimed as Queensland's fourth municipality (after Brisbane, Ipswich and Toowoomba) on 13 December 1860 under the Municipalities Act 1858,[3] a piece of New South Wales legislation inherited by Queensland when it became a separate colony in 1859. It held its first election on 26 February 1861 and its inaugural meeting on 1 March 1861. The municipality had an area of 131NaN1 located on the south bank of the Fitzroy River and had a population of about 600. In 1864, the council was divided into three wards—Fitzroy, Archer and Leichhardt. A proposal to greatly expand its area southwards to include Gracemere and Bouldercombe was rejected in part due to opposition from influential squatters in the area.[4] It achieved a measure of autonomy in 1878 with the enactment of the Local Government Act.

On 11 November 1879, the Gogango Divisional Board was established as one of 74 divisions around Queensland under the Divisional Boards Act 1879. It covered an area of 16239km2 surrounding the municipality—an area significantly greater than the modern Rockhampton Region covers. Capital and people came to the area in greater numbers after the discovery of gold in 1882 at Mount Morgan, about 20km (10miles) south of Rockhampton. A Municipal Borough was proclaimed there on 22 May 1890.

A bridge was built spanning the Fitzroy River in 1882, and a year later in September 1883, the North Rockhampton Borough was proclaimed. North Rockhampton had a somewhat unhappy 36-year existence—its small population and location opposite the stronger and wealthier Rockhampton borough made comparisons inevitable and development of its own identity almost impossible. In 1919, it was described as a "small and straggling hamlet". Nevertheless, it was able to get a loan to construct a Municipal Chambers in 1885, which was completed in December of that year. The town clerk's arrest for embezzlement in 1890 marked the beginning of a period of difficulties characterised by disputes with the surrounding Gogango Divisional Board over road construction, and internal conflict between members of council, in which the Queensland Government was often requested to intervene. It did not have a reliable water supply and at the time of its amalgamation was still trying to raise funds for a dam.[5]

The Fitzroy Division was proclaimed on 6 April 1899 out of the southern part of Gogango. With the passage of the Local Authorities Act 1902, Rockhampton became one of three former municipalities, alongside Brisbane and Townsville, to become a City on 31 March 1903, while North Rockhampton and Mount Morgan became Towns and the divisions of Gogango and Fitzroy became Shires. Gogango was renamed Livingstone on 8 August 1903.

The State Government became concerned in 1918 after both the City of Rockhampton and Town of North Rockhampton councils proposed separate water infrastructure projects. On Saturday 25 January 1919, an amalgamation referendum held in North Rockhampton passed with 884 of the 1,029 votes cast in favour. On 15 March 1919, elections for the new four-ward council with 11 councillors took place, with their first meeting being held five days later. North Rockhampton's chambers, located in Stapleton Park, North Rockhampton, became a Main Roads office for about four decades, and eventually was restored and, since 1985, has been the home of Rockhampton and District Historical Society.

Wards were abolished at some point and were not reintroduced until 1982, when the council was restructured with 10 divisions each electing one councillor, plus a mayor elected by the entire City. On 1 July 1984, the City grew northwards by annexing Parkhurst, where its water treatment facility was being constructed, from the Shire of Livingstone. The council tried on several occasions to expand further into the Livingstone and Fitzroy areas, but a referendum in Fitzroy on 9 February 1991 was opposed by 83% of valid votes cast.

In July 2007, the Local Government Reform Commission released a report making recommendations for statewide reform of local government boundaries, and recommended that the four areas of Rockhampton, Fitzroy, Livingstone and Mount Morgan amalgamate, due to a community of interest centred upon Rockhampton. The very weak sustainability rating given to the Shire of Mount Morgan was of particular concern.[6] On 15 March 2008, the City and Shires formally ceased to exist, and elections were held on the same day to elect councillors and a mayor to the Regional Council.

In 2012, a proposal was made to de-amalgamate the Shire of Livingstone from the Rockhampton Region.[7] On 9 March 2013, the citizens of the former Livingstone shire voted in a referendum to de-amalgamate. The Shire of Livingstone was re-established on 1 January 2014.[8] [9]

2019 proposal to transfer three localities from the Shire of Livingstone

Divisions and elections

The Council consists of a Mayor and seven Councillors. The Mayor is elected by the public, and the Councillors are elected from seven single-member divisions using an optional preferential voting system. Elections are held every four years.

Mayors

Resignation of Margaret Strelow

See main article: 2021 Rockhampton mayoral by-election. Margaret Strelow resigned the mayoralty on Monday 9 November 2020, following an adverse finding at the Councillor Conduct Tribunal.[14] The misconduct finding related to non-disclosure, or incorrect disclosure, of corporate hospitality received by mining company Adani during a trip to India as part of a delegation of Mayors from Regional Queensland. Strelow publicly stated that she refuted the findings, and that her refusal to agree to having been personally compromised was a matter of personal integrity, but that she had resigned her position in light of the findings.[15]

Following an amendment made to the Local Government Act 2009 (Qld) only a few months prior, Strelow's resignation less than 12 months after being elected meant that the position of Mayor would immediately pass to the runner-up from the Mayoral election of March 2020.[16] The only other candidate in that election had been local environmental activist, Chris "Pineapple" Hooper, who had received less than a third of votes cast in the election. Following uproar over Hooper's "accidental" elevation to the Mayoralty, Local Government Minister Stirling Hinchliffe announced the following day that the Queensland Government would amend the Act to roll back the changes and force a by-election for the role of Mayor as soon as the newly-elected Queensland Parliament had been sworn in.[17]

Following Strelow's resignation as Mayor, it was announced that Deputy Mayor Neil Fisher would fill the role of Acting Mayor until a replacement had been elected. [18]

On 4 February 2021, Tony Williams was elected as mayor.[19]

In 2024, Strelow was exonerated as a review by QCAT found that the official hospitality was not required to have been listed on the particular register in question. It also commented that it was "clearly highly regrettable that this matter has taken so long to be dealt with".[20]

Suburbs, towns and localities

The Rockhampton Region includes the following settlements:

Rockhampton area

Mount Morgan area

Fitzroy area

Demographics

The populations given relate to the component entities prior to 2008. The census in 2011 was the first for the new Region, while the census in 2016 reflects the deamalgamation of the Shire of Livingstone.

YearTotal RegionRockhamptonLivingstoneFitzroyMt Morgan
1933 44,501 29,369 6,472 4,256 4,404
1947 50,167 34,988 6,452 3,773 4,954
1954 56,315 40,670 7,031 3,554 5,060
1961 59,895 44,128 7,320 3,576 4,871
1966 61,874 46,083 7,780 3,590 4,421
1971 66,160 49,164 9,595 3,434 3,967
1976 69,675 51,133 11,634 3,441 3,467
1981 75,875 52,383 15,711 4,645 3,136
1986 82,142 56,742 15,886 6,406 3,108
1991 89,868 59,394 19,334 8,047 3,093
1996 96,885 59,732 24,796 9,499 2,858
2001 97,728 58,382 27,017 9,553 2,776
2006 102,048 59,943 28,870 10,310 2,925
2011 109,336
2016 79,726
2021 81,968

Council facilities

Rockhampton Regional Council operates a headquarters public library at 230 Bolsover Street, Rockhampton ("Southside"). Branch libraries are located in Berserker ("Rockhampton North"), Gracemere, Mount Morgan and West Rockhampton ("Anytime" at Rockhampton Airport).[21]

The council owns six business units which are city-owned enterprises managed on commercial lines:

References

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Notes and References

  1. News: Cox. Timothy. All you need to know about the by-election in one place. The Courier Mail. 19 January 2021. 19 November 2023.
  2. Web site: 3218.0 – Regional Population Growth, Australia, 2017-18: Population Estimates by Local Government Area (ASGS 2018), 2017 to 2018. Australian Bureau of Statistics. 27 March 2019. 25 October 2019. 27 March 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190327110730/http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/DetailsPage/3218.02017-18. live. Estimated resident population, 30 June 2018.
  3. 22 Vic No. 13 (Imp), assented 27 October 1858
  4. Book: McDonald, Lorna. Rockhampton : a history of city and district. Rockhampton City Council. 1995. 0-9599897-3-0. 108–109.
  5. 20 April 2008.
  6. Book: Report of the Local Government Reform Commission. Queensland Local Government Reform Commission. 2. 273–278. 978-1-921057-11-3. July 2007. Local government Reform Commission . 3 June 2010. 17 March 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110317010752/http://www.dlgp.qld.gov.au/resources/map/reform/rockhampton-rationale.pdf. live.
  7. Web site: Capricorn Coast Regional Council & Rockhampton Regional Council: a Partnership Approach for Sound Regional Governance: Unity and strength with community of interest representation: De-amalgamation Submission to the Queensland Boundary Commissioner August 2012. 14 August 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130428114202/http://www.dlg.qld.gov.au/resources/report/local-government/bc/livingstone-proposal.pdf. 28 April 2013. dmy-all.
  8. Web site: De-amalgamation. Queensland Government. 14 August 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130826155025/http://www.dsdip.qld.gov.au/bc. 26 August 2013. dmy-all.
  9. Web site: Local Government (De-amalgamation Implementation) Regulation 2013. Local Government Act 2009. Queensland Government. 14 August 2013. 26 May 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130526200010/http://www.legislation.qld.gov.au/LEGISLTN/CURRENT/L/LocalGovDeamallmpR13.pdf. live.
  10. Web site: 2008 Rockhampton Regional Council - Mayoral Election - Election Summary. 4 December 2017. 2 October 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201002002224/http://results.ecq.qld.gov.au/elections/local/LG2008/RockhamptonRegionalCouncil/results/mayoral/summary.html. live.
  11. Web site: 2012 Rockhampton Regional Council - Mayoral Election - Election Summary. 4 December 2017. 2 October 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201002002231/http://results.ecq.qld.gov.au/elections/local/LG2012/RockhamptonRegionalCouncil/results/mayoral/summary.html. live.
  12. Web site: 2016 Rockhampton Regional Council - Mayoral Election - Election Summary. 4 December 2017. 2 October 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201002002147/http://results.ecq.qld.gov.au/elections/local/LG2016/RockhamptonRegionalCouncil/results/mayoral/summary.html. live.
  13. Web site: 2020. 2020 Local Government Elections: Saturday, 28 March 2020. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20201223051226/https://prodresults.elections.qld.gov.au/lga2020. 23 December 2020. 16 June 2020. Electoral Commission of Queensland.
  14. Web site: 2020. Rockhampton Mayor Margaret Strelow in shock resignation after misconduct findings. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20200616100501/https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-11-10/rockhampton-mayor-margaret-strelow-resigns/12866190. 16 June 2020. 13 November 2020. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  15. Web site: 2020. Statement on resignation as Mayor of Rockhampton - Margaret Strelow. 13 November 2020. Margaret Strelow.
  16. Web site: 2020. Shock resignation of Rockhampton's Mayor leaves would-be next in line Chris Hooper shocked.. 13 November 2020. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  17. Web site: Statement from Local Government Minister Stirling Hinchliffe .
  18. Web site: Resignation of Margaret Strelow .
  19. https://www.rockhamptonregion.qld.gov.au/AboutCouncil/News-and-announcements/Latest-News/Tony-Williams-elected-as-Mayor-of-the-Rockhampton-Region Tony Williams elected as Mayor of the Rockhampton Region
  20. Web site: 30 April 2024 . Strelow v Councillor Conduct Tribunal [2024] QCAT 175 - Caselaw ]. 2024-06-12 . Queensland Judgments: Authorised Reports & Unreported Judgments . en-AU.
  21. Web site: 1 September 2014 . Rockhampton Regional Library, Public Libraries Connect . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20180201192849/http://plconnect.slq.qld.gov.au/networking/directory-of-public-libraries/branches/rockhampton/rockhampton_south_library . 1 February 2018 . 1 February 2018 . Public Libraries Connect.