“Sod the wine, I want to suck on the writing. This man White is an instinctive writer, bloody rare to find one who actually pulls it off, as in still gets a meaning across with concision. Sharp arbitrage of speed and risk, closest thing I can think of to Cicero’s ‘motus continuum animi.’

Probably takes a drink or two to connect like that: he literally paints his senses on the page.”


DBC Pierre (Vernon God Little, Ludmila’s Broken English, Lights Out In Wonderland ... Winner: Booker prize; Whitbread prize; Bollinger Wodehouse Everyman prize; James Joyce Award from the Literary & Historical Society of University College Dublin)


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15 March 2018

SOME VERY BIG VICTORIES PROMISED


Seaford Heights ... the gateway to McLaren Vale

McLaren Vale candidates agree despite three-way election fractals
by PHILIP WHITE


We had a meeting of interested residents of McLaren Vale in the BoccĂ© Club. The big hall quickly filled. Folks came from McLaren Flat, Blewett Spings (below), Willunga and their surrounds and the suburbs along the coast. 

The three major candidates for the Seat of Mawson  - Sitting ALP Member Leon Bignell, Liberal candidate Andy Gilfillan, and the SA Best/Xenophon candidate Hazel Wainwright - had agreed to sit onstage with the Onkaparinga Mayor, Lorraine Rosenberg. I led them through a brisk agenda of planning issues for an hour, then they took questions from the floor for another hour. 

There was no biffo. Rarely have I seen a public meeting where people came so early, in spite of vintage getting its throttle to the floor. Many of the longstanding sage identities and Vales venerable were prominent. 

Considering the fractal nature of this election, with three gangs loose in the yard instead of the old duopoly, it was encouraging to see how the candidates agreed on several critical issues. 

Glenthorne Farm (above), the 200 hectare nuclear radiation and health research station on O'Halloran Hill is neither within the seat of Mawson or the official boundary of McLaren Vale as delineated in the McLaren Vale Character Preservation (McLaren Vale) Act 2012. But it does lie within the official, internationally-gazetted Geographical Indications boundary of the region, and as such, is seen by many in the south as their last bastion of fresh green country in a relentless onslaught of suburbia. 

In 2001 this former defence and CSIRO property was gifted by a Liberal state government   to the University of Adelaide which agreed to preserve and  conserve it and use it for agriculture, horticulture, oenology, viticulture, buffer zones and for community recreation while University project research, education and winemaking continued there. Contrary to the highly specific deed, the University has long sought to subdivide the land for quick cash. It has never really attempted to conform to the Deed, which repeatedly states that urban development is not only forbidden but even thinking about or planning it is a breach of the Deed.  

All three candidates were adamant that there be no housing subdivision on Glenthorne should they take power. Both Labor and Liberal have discussion briefs on the internet, in the hope of reaching some community agreement about possible uses for the site. The Libs plan includes a shooting range and gun club; Labor wants a mini farm so local kids can learn those older, gentler  agricultural crafts. 

Neither lot will say what's wrong with the conditions of the current deed other than to suggest the University is the wrong owner: Bignell made no bones about taking the farm back from the University and getting straight on with establishing the country's primary collection of vine cultivars for starters. 

Another issue which had locals concerned was the 150 suite five-star resort Richard Hamilton plans to instal on his Hut Block Vineyard (above) between The Salopian Inn and Wirra Wirra. An hotel with two restaurants, a cafĂ©, an indoor swimming pool, a gymnasium, a day spa, conference facilities and a two-story carpark would make a huge impact on the aspect of that agricultural precinct well outside the surveyed town boundary. 

All three candidates agreed that the Hut Block is the wrong site; the Mayor explained the developer has been advised to re-apply as the initial application did not conform to the restrictions in the protective legislation. Ultimately the decision could be hand-balled to the Planning Minister John Rau, who's also the attorney-general and deputy Premier. 

Bignell claimed he would have little trouble convincing his colleague the development was needed but should conform to the Preservation legislation and therefore be constructed within the town boundary instead of being imposed on prime agricultural land. 

Which led to some intense discussion about the look of the towns as they fill. If the government's exemplar development, the droll, hyperintense housing now covering Seaford Heights (above) is any guide to what we can expect, lord have mercy on our poor souls. (See that row of little windows? That's the back of a row of bargain rental huts. Two-high; no yards. Facing nor'west.)

This in turn led to repeated discussion about forming a regional residents' association as many folk agreed there was a communications gap between governments and citizens, and planners extant could sure use some more forceful guidance about their ratepayers' preferences for the look and feel of their townships. 

The politics of water in the McLaren Vale region aren't quite equal to the treacherous scandals unfolding in the Murray-Darling Basin, but they nevertheless maintain their own provincial air. As the irrigating vignerons of the vignoble use recycled water from the intensive housing along the coast, there are contentious issues to address about storing more of this water in a major dam, so more growers have ready access to it. Not to mention those who'd like to make some money out of it. 

Local wine businessmen wanted to build this on Bowering Hill, the last place along the coast where the vines can actually grow down to the sea. Those friends of the Willunga Basin who spent years fighting to save those Bowering coastal slopes from development are adamant it should be anywhere but there. 

There's talk of waterproofing old sand quarries elsewhere for this storage; even putting the water into the aquifers for pumping during the summer. Watch this space. Bignell insisted the best site is near the current storage, on the inferior black  clay west of the Aldinga airport. 

There was some discussion about the local roadways and whether or not the newly-widened Main South Road needed an overpass at Tatachilla Road - maybe - and then popular calls to have the railways extended further into the vignoble. Back where they used to be. 

Gotta take the old bus out for a bit of a run every two or three years ... must remember to change that flag

Another unresolved mess is the region's burgeoning mountains of plastic waste: builders and winemakers create hectares of it. Since China no longer accepts the world's junk it seems we're just stacking plastic into old quarries that bleed straight into the aquifer and then the sea. Another one for the new Residents' Association to address once this election's done and vintage is in the tank. 

As convenor and moderator of this gathering, I was probably too busy on the night to best evaluate the participants' performances, but I gotta say Kangaroo Islander Andy Gilfillan is a good honest soul, successful organic farmer, and ernestly well-intentioned. Good bloke. 

Hazel Wainwright, graphic designer and Onkaparinga councillor seems a little unsure of how she fits across two tiers of government but she's certainly not the only one in the rookie Xenophon cabal to face that learning curve. Her self-assuredness and sheer energy might get her there. 

These folks sat in contrast to Bignell, who was polished and practised in comparison, and took the agenda quite forcefully, dealing deftly with issues, as he does. He knows how to make the most of his huge advantages as Minister, Cabinet Member and long-term holder of the seat with deep local knowledge. 

I can't comment on whether as a resident of McLaren Vale, former dairy farmer's kid Bignell looks more at home campaigning on Kangaroo Island than Andy, son of Island sheep farmer and former Democrat politician Ian Gilfillan appears when he faces such a roomful of eager souls in this northern extreme of what has become a most intriguing electorate.

Similarly, I can't imagine how Hazel Wainwright would frame her will to the rugged determination of the Islanders. I have my suspicions.

There were six Islanders there, mind you. Andy and Ian, and then Shadow Attorney General Vicki Chapman and her friends. Obviously a valuable property, the seat of Mawson. Dam on the rocks, darling? 

 

3 comments:

BRILLO said...

Whats the winemakers association line on all this Whitey?

DRINKSTER said...

I have no idea BRILLO. I have little to do with that outfit, presuming you mean the McLaren Vale Grape Wine and Tourism Association. That's far from a democratic citizen's representative body, mind you. It seems to me to do its job acting in the interests of its paying members which is a sort of cartel marketer of the region in a way. That's the role of these big budget regional associations.

I suppose if it follows precedent, the board would say it doesn't interfere in the business matters of its members, as Dudley Brown did when he was chair in February 2010 and I was attempting to save the original John Reynell vineyard - the source of the famous Reynell Selection strain of Cabernet - from trash Boganvilla Rash.

In response to a letter from New Zealand journalist, Sally Marden, urging the retention of the Reynell vineyard, Dudley Brown, Chairman of the McLaren Vale Grape Wine And Tourism Association, and a grapegrower who had depended on Constellation’s contract for his fruit, wrote “as our Association represents the interests of multiple industries, we have long had a policy of not commenting on commercial matters of members or disputes between industry groups except to the extent that they violate the law.

“Constellation’s forerunner company, Hardy’s, has been a member of our association in good standing since the inception of our forerunner bodies.

“We have and continue to actively lobby on matters of urban encroachment in our region (including the recent Glenthorne Farm matter) where and when we can.”

In that instance, the developers won.

via collins said...

Was very interested to see Leon Bignell being a very gracious cap on the telly Sat'dee night.

Not sure if we will ultimately re-take seat or not, but happy to discuss sitting with one of his opponent's at campaign's end and sharing a beer.

We could do with more of that attitude in Australia.

A SHITLOAD more!