View Single Post
  #24   Report Post  
Old 17-07-2007, 07:08 AM posted to aus.environment.misc,aus.gardens,aus.general,aus.legal
FarmI FarmI is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Feb 2007
Posts: 2,358
Default water tank rebates

"0tterbot" wrote in message
"len garden" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 23:08:00 GMT, "0tterbot" wrote:
"George W. Frost" wrote in message
...
snipped

will they indeed?

yes they will!!


Councils cannot "legislate" to do anything. George got it wrong.

that is their plan. the falt rate charge will be for
ahving a water tank as i see it not for how much the tank holds but
there again they could go that way depending on the greed factor.


why will they?


But more to the point, where is his and George's proof to support their
claims?

It would make more sense for all Councils Australia-wide to levy water rates
at a high rate on anyone with land of more than an eighth of an acre, and at
the same time fast-track applications to approve the installation of water
tanks for use as domestic water.

Supplying and maintaining water storage and delivery is an expensive
business. Given the move over the last 10 years for all forms of authorities
to get out of the business of doing anything for anyone that they possibly
can, it surprises me that thias hasn't happened already.

i wonder why it is then that nobody would be able to collate how many
litres
people are storing in dams, etc; and nobody wants to, and nobody is
trying
to. a few poxy town water tanks wouldn't be worth the bother, compared to
charging for people's stored dam water.

and yes they are already gathering info on dam capacitites and they
already have rules that stipulate how much water you can trap for your
needs, all this can be done from high quality sattelite pictures,
they'll work on averages after all at the end of the day for them it
is all about control and profits.

you try and put a dam in without paying the license and see what
happens, from experiences of others you'll get a knock on the door
pretty quickly.


well, that's just not what happens around here :-) getting a dam in is
rather, ah, informal.


And Len has been too general in his comments about putting in dams. What he
could perhaps apply all over Qld but not in NSW. There are many situations
in NSW where there in no need to get any approval for installing a dam (and
you may be interested in the following given your location).
http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:...lnk&cd=1&gl=au