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State Significant Development

Determination

Rocky Hill Coal Mine

MidCoast

Current Status: Determination

Interact with the stages for their names

  1. SEARs
  2. Prepare EIS
  3. Exhibition
  4. Collate Submissions
  5. Response to Submissions
  6. Assessment
  7. Recommendation
  8. Determination

Rocky Hill Coal

Attachments & Resources

Request for DGRS (3)

Application (1)

DGRs (1)

EIS (55)

Submissions (7)

Agency Submissions (11)

Response to Submissions (35)

Amendments (114)

Assessment (3)

Recommendation (3)

Determination (3)

Approved Documents

There are no post approval documents available

Note: Only documents approved by the Department after November 2019 will be published above. Any documents approved before this time can be viewed on the Applicant's website.

Complaints

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Enforcements

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Inspections

There are no inspections for this project.

Note: Only enforcements and inspections undertaken by the Department from March 2020 will be shown above.

Submissions

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Showing 2881 - 2900 of 4292 submissions
Michael Bowman
Object
Forbesdale , New South Wales
Message
submission attached
Attachments
Graham Morris
Object
Forbesdale , New South Wales
Message
submission attached
Attachments
Sue Mills
Object
Wyee , New South Wales
Message
submission attached
Attachments
Timothy Robinson
Object
Gloucester , New South Wales
Message
attached is my letter of opposition.
I also fully support Gloucester Shire Council's submission and GRIP's submission.
Attachments
Carolyn Bowman
Object
Forbesdale , New South Wales
Message
submission attached
Attachments
Deborah Brooks
Object
Barrington , New South Wales
Message
I object to the Rocky Hill Coal Project. Many of the reasons why are included in the attachment. They include coal dust pollution, noise levels from blasting, doubts about economic rationale of EIS, social impacts on housing and much more.
Attachments
Manning Clean Water Action Group Inc
Object
BOBIN , New South Wales
Message
Director, Mining Projects Development Assessment Systems & Approvals Department of Planning & Infrastructure GPO Box 39 SYDNEY NSW 2001
Dear Sir
ROCKY HILL COAL PROJECT - DEVELOPMENT APPLICATION SSD-5156
Dear Sir,
We object to the Rocky Hill mine proceeding.
Manning Clean Water Action Group Inc as an organization concerned about the impacts of mining and Coal Seam gas extraction is deeply concerned about and opposes the Rocky Hill Coal Mine Project.
It is our submission that the Rocky Hill Coal Mine project fails to meet the criteria expressed in the Environment Protection Act.
The objects of this Act are: (a) to encourage:
(i) the proper management, development and conservation of natural and artificial resources, including agricultural land, natural areas, forests, minerals, water, cities, towns and villages for the purpose of promoting the social and economic welfare of the community and a better environment,
(ii) the promotion and co-ordination of the orderly and economic use and development of land,
(iii) the protection, provision and co-ordination of communication and utility services, (iv) the provision of land for public purposes, (v) the provision and co-ordination of community services and facilities, and
(vi) the protection of the environment, including the protection and conservation of native animals and plants, including threatened species, populations and ecological communities, and their habitats, and
(vii) ecologically sustainable development, and (viii) the provision and maintenance of affordable housing, and
(b) to promote the sharing of the responsibility for environmental planning between the different levels of government in the State, and
(c) to provide increased opportunity for public involvement and participation in environmental planning and assessment.
It is our submission that this mine will have negative impacts upon:
1. The surface and ground water of the Gloucester water catchment and consequent serious effects upon the Manning River.
2. Water quality generally and in particular for agriculture in this area.
3. The environment and ecology of the mine area and the Manning River catchment generally including loss of habitat, and endangering plant and animal species.
4. The health of the Gloucester community particularly children and the elderly together with psychological impacts.
5. Employment opportunities both for those seeking employment and those employers who seek to utilize local residents in their businesses.
6. Existing agricultural businesses including food production, dairying.
7. Tourism in an area noted for its pristine environment and attractive landscape.
We would seek to comment on various aspect though by no means all of the areas in which the mine proposal is seriously flawed as follows:
Water
The location of the proposed Rocky Hill mine is on the Avon River floodplain, and in the water catchment area of the Manning River which supplies drinking water to over 80,000 people. Flooding has occurred regularly in recent years and the potential for the contamination of the water for this catchment should not be placed at risk.
The mining operation will obviously irreversibly change the natural water systems in the area their quantity and quality. This is a mine of 4 open cut pits from 70 to 190 metres deep. A significant area of land will be disturbed and vegetation cleared. Various creeks and water courses will be affected. Overburden emplacements will be created and stockpile areas all of which will effect the natural systems and jeopardize the water catchment.
This in turn will adversely affect local and downstream water dependant vegetation, agriculture, fisheries, urban systems and potentially Taree Water Supply.
The following points are raised from more detailed surface and ground water assessments presented in submissions by Gloucester Council previously which in our submission apply equally to this proposal.
* The Gloucester Stroud Basin is fraught with difficulties because of the structural complexity of the geology and the relationships between the aquifers. This complexity is well known and groundwater modellers have to make huge oversimplifications about the nature and hydraulic properties of the strata.
* The degree of vertical connection between aquifers is an area of significant disagreement between groundwater consultants. Vertical connection is a critical issue in groundwater modeling. As well, no models that we are aware of have even tried to consider the effect of the extensive shearing and faulting. * Clearly open-cuts up to 200 metres deep provide direct connection between aquifers to that depth. * Streams are ephemeral. Critical conditions for say, riverine vegetation and vegetation accessing groundwater when there is no surface water, will occur during drought sequences both during a particular drought and between droughts and these are not assessed. * For cumulative impacts due to the development of the AGL gas project and the Rocky Hill coal project, no information is provided on the quantity of water abstracted. Yet there are to be CSG Stage 1 production bores across the Stratford mining lease and the Rocky Hill proposed lease area contributing to a maximum drawdown in potentiometic head of up to 1,700 metres.
Proximity - The mine boundary will be situated 900metres from Forbesdale Residential Estate of 35 families. Those families will experience unacceptable levels of noise, dust, and traffic should this mine proceed as will others with less proximity to the mine.
Noise - Noise is a major concern for residents who live near coal mines. There is the noise of the mine workings, blasting, loading trains and infrasound which cause sleep disturbances and can lead to major health complaints. The Rocky Hill mine will cause high levels of noise for residents close to the mine but also unacceptable levels of noise for residents in Gloucester township itself.
Health - negative health impacts, which can result in serious illnesses, from the dust from open cut coal mines are well known. Most of Gloucester township (including the hospital and schools) falls within the acknowledged 5km health impact zone of the Rocky Hill mine - thus placing a large proportion of the population at risk. Those most affected by the health impacts are children, the old, the sick and the socially disadvantaged.
This is a mine the operation of which will initially run form 7am to 10pm Monday to Saturday and later to 4 am in the morning.
This mine is far too close to Gloucester, the Forbesdale Estate and surrounding areas of farms and lifestyle properties. Noise, mine lighting and coal dust from coal train movements and loading - potentially at night - is a great concern. Very fine coal dust is a critical issue.
Children's Health. The overwhelming medical evidence indicates that higher rates of asthma and other respiratory conditions occur in communities affected by mining. Coal dust leads to increases in the number of children suffering with asthma with
associated cost to the public purse and the community. Gloucester township, schools and hospital are all within a radius of the mine that will be affected.
Heavy machinery used in the mining operation also contributes to particulate exposure in the population.
It is not only the physical impacts that result from exposure to the mining operation but the psychological impacts that these operations can cause through noise and sleep disruption. These health impacts involve damage accumulating over time.
The federal senate enquiry into air quality noted with alarm there are no emission standards for off road diesel vehicles. They recommended a buffer zone around mines to protect populated areas and 'pollution monitoring should accurately capture population exposure for communities and homes proximate to pollution point sources'.
Employment - Companies in Gloucester are already experiencing the negative impacts of having a mine nearby. Mining will not necessarily attract employees from Gloucester. There will be significant part of the work force and likely the majority thereof that will be drive in drive out employees from elsewhere.
Tourism and the Gloucester Economy. Gloucester's economy currently relies on agriculture, tourism and retiree `tree-changers', new light industry and community support services. Tourists and tree-changers are attracted to Gloucester because of its natural and agricultural beauty and peace. These industries will be damaged and jobs will be lost if the mine proceeds.
An open cut coal mine within 5km of Gloucester will have a major adverse impact on the visual amenity of the area. Tourism is currently worth over $30M to the Gloucester economy. Any loss of the tourism dollar will inevitably result in loss of jobs and money flowing into the community.
Alternative land Use Currently the area enjoys a reputation for beef production, dairying and for horticultural producers all of which have contributed to the attractiveness of the area for tourism. Ongoing opportunities continue in the food production area due to climate, water resources, soils, and location to markets. These industries are sustainable in the long term whereas mining will adversely affect air quality, and cause water pollution, loss of habitat, noise, increased heavy traffic and landscape scarring. Approval of the mining development constitutes a short term exploitation of the land without considering the long term detriment to that land and industries which will provide the long term and sustainable benefits that the community.
Rehabilitation. The mine will permanently damage the water systems and the geology of the area and catchment. The mere fact of the mining operation and the removal and relocation of the waste must result in the presence of contaminants that will not be resolved by the cosmetic return of the leftover waste to the mine pit. If remediation does occur then it will take many many years for the land to be usable again.
No explanation has been given as to how a coal-dependent Gloucester will be restarted after the mines close - and at what cost.
Neither I nor Manning Clean Water Action Group Inc have made a reportable political donation.
Yours Faithfully
Manning Clean Water Action Group Inc Per Paul Lewers
Attachments
Barbara Erpel
Object
Barrington , New South Wales
Message
I object to the Rocky Hill Project and my letter (attachment) includes reasons why.
Attachments
Shirley Oldfield
Object
Gloucester , New South Wales
Message
I object to the Rocky Hill Coal project and my letter (attachment) has details of why.
Attachments
Pat Slater
Object
Barrington , New South Wales
Message
I object to the Rocky Hill Coal Project and my letter includes details of why. I am most concerned about the impact on water - the river, groundwater and contamination as well as other issues which are outlined in my letter.
Attachments
Name Withheld
Object
Gloucester , New South Wales
Message
I object to the Rocky Hill Coal Project because there should not be any coal or coal seam gas mining on agricultural land so close to a township and residential areas. All my reasons are included in the letter attached.
Attachments
Melissa Seale
Object
Gloucester , New South Wales
Message
I wish to express my opposition to the heinous idea of the Rocky Hill mine project on the following grounds:
1. Proximity to residential areas
The mine is proposed only 900 metres from the residential area of Forbesdale which is far too close!
2. Impacts on Health
Health impacts from open cut coal mines are well known and most of the Gloucester township will be within a 5km health impact zone of the mine.
3. Impact on other industries in the Gloucester Valley
Tourism is worth over $30M to the Gloucester economy and an open cut coal mine is not what people will want to see. Additionally mining displaces agriculture and leads to the loss of food-producing land.
4. Environment
The mine will be in the Avon Fiver floodplain, and in the water catchment of the Manning River, and there is potential for contamination of the water in the catchment.
5. Cumulative Impacts
The Rocky Hill coal mine won't be operating in isolation in the Gloucester Valley, Yancoal has requested expansion of its mine at Stratford and AGL is planning on 330 CSG wells.
To approve the Rocky Hill Coal Mine Project will be an atrocious, reckless and irresponsible decision to the welfare of all Australians. There will be a cost to be born by the State and Federal health budgets due to the damage done by the emissions of the mine being so close to residents.
Attachments
Heather Seale
Object
Gilgandra , New South Wales
Message
I wish to express my concern regarding the possible approval of the Rocky Hill Mine Project - Application No. SSD-5156. Among other detrimental aspects of mining in areas close to populated areas, is the harmful affects of fine dust particles to the health of the people.
What will the cost be to the Health budgets of both the State and Federal Governments in the future when the mines are finished and the community is left with a population with a high percentage of folk with chronic and complex health problems?
Attachments
Steven Denshire
Object
Hamilton East , New South Wales
Message
I strongly object to another coal mine in Gloucester.

The valley is already over industrialized, coal is reaping havoc on the local environment and the community. CSG and gold mines are wanting to also have a peace of the valley. This needs to stop before we lose another one of Australia's most valuable piece of land to another foreign owned mining company.

I look forward to the government of today standing up for the people that occupiey this country instead of falling week to international corporate pressure.

Here's hoping
Steve Denshire
Attachments
Miranda Sutton
Support
Bracken Ridge , Queensland
Message
I support this mine as it will open more job in the community and help the town. It will be a good opportunity that will open the community up.
Attachments
Rodney Maggs
Object
Tugrabakh , New South Wales
Message
See attached PDF
Attachments
Cameron Laurie
Object
Rawdon Vale , New South Wales
Message
Dear Sir/ Madam,
I am writing a submission against the open cut coal mine proposed immediately adjacent to my local town of Gloucester. It is known as Rocky Hill, though I am unsure why as it will more likely be a rocky hole, right on the town's doorstep. The health implications alone should prevent this mine going ahead and I would urge the minister to prevent it doing so. Surely clean air and water is an inalienable right and the government should prepare for legal action if it allows this mine to proceed. I am vehemently against such an outcome.
Yours Sincerely,
Cameron Laurie
Attachments
Chris Russell
Object
Gloucester , New South Wales
Message
SUBMISSION OPPOSING GRL'S ROCKY HILL COAL MINE PROPOSAL

INTRODUCTION

I am writing to strongly oppose the proposed GRL Rocky Hill Coal mine in Gloucester Shire.

Before deciding to live in Gloucester Shire, I visited on several occasions, stayed in B&B accommodation, the Country Club Motel or I camped. I listed other places along the coast but decided on Gloucester due to its friendly atmosphere, its great beauty of a mix of agricultural pursuits and its natural environment. It was a peaceful change and a way of life that the Hunter and places closer to large centres could not offer.

I chose to farm in Gloucester because of its unspoiled beauty and country charm and the great promise of being able to get away from it all. This is the place I `retired' to. This is where I now spend nearly all my discretionary income and where I contribute to the community. I take great pride in my farm and try to bring about a practical balance with the environment has included fencing off a rainforest for permanent protection.

My family and guests love coming to Gloucester for the same reasons that I chose to live here.


THE GLOUCESTER SHIRE MAJOR DEVELOPMENT PROJECT (GSMD)

There already exists a major significant self-sustaining project known as the Gloucester Shire. By its diversity, it has attracted or produced a population 5,000 people living in more than 2,000 dwellings and has generated all the essential businesses to support and grow a vibrant self-sustaining Gloucester township and Shire.

The cornerstone of the Gloucester Shire Major Development project (GSMD) has been organic growth. That growth is based on exploiting, valuing and nurturing the environment. A model of success, today businesses are attracted to the Shire for its beauty and healthy lifestyle.

Community concern regarding GRL's activities is entirely justified - GRL continues to be an untrustworthy secretive adversary that intends to mine coal in the Gloucester Valley despite clear and continued community and council opposition. The nature of opposition is not about `not in my backyard'. The community is generally aware of the immense damage to be inflicted, and the potential for GRL to permanently disfigure the GSMD - its economy, environment, roads and traffic, health and community amenity.

GRL's `spin' continues to pussy-foot around its true intent. GRL is not an organisation intent on helping GSMD - despite its delusional goal. Indeed, in an earlier life many of the same managers and backers were promising to `help' Margaret River.

By any economic comparison of the two projects, GRL's Rocky Hill Coal Mine proposal is insignificant. But it carries enormous adverse and permanent impacts for the GSMD because of its:
contaminating production,
processes that ensure permanent soil, water, and aquifer damage,
constant need to expand and damage more land until its has taken all,
secretive deceptive ways,
continued contamination of all that the GSMD project, its people, and businesses rely on,
potential to create economic and employment shockwaves with its responses to the coal price,
lack of long term loyalty to the community, and
eventual exit which should be expected to be unplanned and under-resourced - particularly as exit is likely to coincide with poor profitability.

In essence, two 'significant' projects are in conflict. GRL seeks to intrude.

GSMD is major, pre-exists, and has a vibrant healthy future upon which the people of Gloucester - its stakeholders - rely.

GRL's Rocky Hill is insignificant. Demonstrably, it brings no economic benefit to the Shire or the State. But the nature of its business makes it extremely significant to this Shire - because its intent and processes are precisely opposite the GSMD's.

These undermine GSMD's cornerstone principles and for this reason the proposed small Rocky Hill and its various cancerous forms have the potential to cripple the major project. Already this has started. Already there are negative business and employment impacts. Already productive agricultural land and investment lies idle. Already homes on the Forbesdale estate are unsalable. These impacts for the GSMD will deepen.

The choice for government is simple. Choose for protecting Gloucester and its community and reject an inefficient, damaging and misrepresented project.


MY OBJECTIONS
Gloucester will be forever changed for the worse if this mine is approved. It will be a mining town with damaged landscape, poor air quality and lost rural character. It will lose its friendliness as drive-in-drive-out workers become the norm. They are only interested in Gloucester as a mining centre - and a place to damage for their pay. I know that most are not proud of what they do. But they do it.
The Shire character will change because of mining. But is will also change and lose important diverse businesses and people whose businesses and interests will have been undermined by unsustainable coal mining and its many impacts on peaceful self-sustaining activity. So Gloucester is set to gain features that detract and lose features that are beneficial. It may take 20 years but it will happen if GRL is allowed this foothold.

This whole application should never have happened. A caring government has more than enough reasons to refuse this application - and any other anywhere in closely settled Gloucester Shire.
The EIS is biased for a GRL outcome - it cannot satisfy the Planning Department's needs.
The EIS should be either refused outright (preferred) or rejected to include the full scale and impacts of mining associated with stage2.
The mine clearly is intended to grow to stage 2 - which will make the mine bigger, closer to residents, last longer and probably become full 24 hour operations - but GRL has restricted itself to only presenting impacts of stage 1. We must see the real definition of `Rocky Hill' project. Not just the unviable-foot-in-the-door stage1.
Current and past MDs have all indicated they will mine closer to Gloucester if viable.
GRL has two adjoining exploration areas that will be mined if this application is successful.
Rocky Hill will reduce the quality of life of most people in the community.
Up to 500,000 litres of diesel will be burnt in this enclosed Gloucester Valley to dig up coal that NSW does not need - for a few greedy men.
Coal dust and diesel emissions are proven carcinogens for which there is now no safe minimum level. GRL will introduce these major quantities.
It borders on insanity for GRL to seriously suggest in any forum that an overburden dump in plain eyesight to all visitors is a `visibility barrier'.
Climate change is real. GRL states that it will consume massive fossil fuels at the current `stage 1' unviable production rate.
GRL will also release more methane for which there is no capturing solution. In a press statement for the failed Vasse Coal project in the Margaret River the same people now promoting or backing Rocky Hill acknowledged that these fields are methane rich.
Coal mining permanently damages the soils and aquifers important to fellow farmers near the mine area.
GRL have no viable way of `rehabilitating' the mining lands. The `void' cannot be filled with rubble and then miraculously become aquifers.
30% of run of mine coal is waste that will be returned to the pit or dumped with the overburden. This coal, its dusts and toxins, become part of the new geology for leaching and ultimately will enter the water system
The people who live close to the mine, and the residents of Gloucester, are permanently exposed to all of the adverse impacts of coal as part of their daily lives.
GRL cannot give any assurance regarding train loading times - which may well be in the middle of the night. GRL makes no suggestion of a curfew.
GRL's employment numbers are inflated. Yancoal has been unable to achieve GRL's claim. In their recently published career choices, no Gloucester school leaver chose coal mining or support.
GRL is clearly wrong to state that its employees will spend the greatest part of their income in Gloucester. According to the ABS most disposable income is committed to non local services and government payments.
GRL have not costed the current or prospective losses in existing businesses.
Unoccupied properties on Gloucester's residential estates near the mine area are specifically excluded from GRL's impacts. The unoccupied properties are rendered unsalable. The potential new residents and their continuous contribution to the economy through building and furnishing businesses and their daily living expenditure are not taken into account - as a loss to the community.
Lifestyle retirements are net importers of income and prosperity that have not been acknowledged in GRL's EIS.
House values for nearby residents have already dropped - making it impossible for them to leave to the same level of accommodation and amenity. Some of them with mortgages, fixed income and no government representation, are trapped.
Gloucester has a bright future without the `help' of GRL. That bright future will be damaged by GRL and potentially it will suffer very long term impairment as businesses that leave are unlikely to return to a Gloucester whose `brand' has changed.
I know of one company employing a significant number of staff that is already considering whether it should stay.
GRL will create more visibility barriers along the Bucketts Way if they are not stopped now.
How do GRL and AGL settle their differences - should GRL blast within 1km of AGL's wells? Do they decide what's best - or does government have a role to play?
GRL has falsely claimed that its mine will rescue Gloucester from declining population and declining employment when these factors are clearly not tends or problematic.
There is no provision for GRL to stop water consumption in drought.
When the coal price drops GRL's employment figures become unemployment figures.
GRL's ex Director and Geologist Dr Vic Tadros may have had conflicted interests as he was Minerals and Energy's Acting Principal Geologist and studied this basin with Julie Maloney before, or when, taking up his role with GRL.
The Planning Department overlooked background checks on Tadros' Managing Director Brian Wingett.
How is that GRL has successfully renewed its exploration licences again - enabling exploration for a period of 9 years - against the Gloucester community's interests (and certainly not fulfilling the state's desire for early production)?
What happens when GRL fails due to coal price and cannot fully rehabilitate? (Coal price may easily fall over the next 20 years due to renewables take-up, new technology and Mongolia's coal fields due for production by 2015.)
There are no specific safeguards are in place to insulate Gloucester from the effects of a quite predictable coal downturn.
There is no provision to re-establish the Gloucester Brand. What funds are set aside for this? What financial provision is GRL expected to make for this?
There is no specifically identified provision for health impacts from the permanent exposure of a community for 20 years. This should be clearly identified now - given the latest medical research that coal mining and its diesel consumption produce carcinogens that have safe minimum level. (This issue may well arise to parallel the Wittenoom asbestos problem. Medical advice was to control the dust. It was throughout the town when actions slowly gathered pace and finally due to poor financial performance and health issue it closed. The town closed later due to the dust.) The evidence is already available to decision makers.
GRL has chosen to seek approval to mine in a closely-settled-area (CSA) and beside a peaceful tourist township and floodplain. This was a high risk strategy well known to its executives and backers. Its backers and executives were personally involved in the failed Margaret River Vasse Coal project. That project which was further from town, underground, and had a smaller footprint, was rejected outright.
GRL separated stage 2 from the project, demonstrating their knowledge that they are doing wrong to this community.
A very few men stand to profit while inflicting the heavy and enduring costs of an open-cut coal mine on Gloucester Shire's residents. These men have no loyalty to Gloucester - nor any interest in the long term outcomes they precipitate.
Deception is a key feature of GRL's strategy. That deception is essential to its success for one reason: GRL has chosen to build a mine in a Closely Settled Area, on floodplain, beside Gloucester. These are just some of the dimensions of their deception:
secret land deals under a variety names with `non-disclosure' clauses
choosing Rocky Hill as the name for a floodplain mine;
dividing its mining operation into stage one and stage two to defer dealing with the true scale of impacts until a foothold has been achieved;
using `averaging' and inapt data to avoid identifying the real impacts;
denial of its desires to mine all economic coal in all its exploration leases;
asserting there will be no void in the rehabilitated site despite the evidence;
omitting a key issue from the Executive Brief - the strength of long term community and Shire Council opposition - despite Key Insights report of greater than 80% opposition and just 10% `supportive';
not reporting the net economic benefit/cost despite this being a DG requirement;
introducing into the EIS the potential for tacit approval to expand (ie the EIS contains: provision for stage 2 but no detail; provision for 24 hour operations but no detail; provision for 21 years duration but limiting its scope to 14 years);
using language that suggests that GRL's prime interest is in helping the community (despite community opposition). The same names Polwarth, Ross, Ross Family Trust, AMCI were involved in the unsuccessful Vasse Coal proposal to open Margaret River to underground coal mining. (Vasse Coal used the same goal there - to help the community - despite community opposition.)
surprising nonsense - public statements to the effect that without GRL Gloucester population leakage would be problematic. Two other reports in the past decade indicate sustained growth without GRL.
public statements that simply refuse to deal with community concerns and push a very thin line of argument which is plainly wrong: there will be no net benefit to the community; there will be enduring job losses.
The EIS is unprofessional and misleading - a document of advocacy rather than objective assessment.
A disingenuous argument pervades the EIS. The defined mine cannot sustain itself.
It is clear from all GRL's actions and its EIS that its application has been tailored to understate and omit costs/impacts and risks, and massively overstate so called benefits:
Despite the Director-General's requirement to show the net economic benefits, GRL fails to note any downside.
Regardless of what size makes the mine viable, the lie is that the project will not deliver net benefit to the state economy, local economy or local employment. For every increase in scale, every expansion, every additional train or truck or hours of operation in a closely settled area - and floodplains - and enclosed valley - carries impacts beyond the scope of GRL's open-cut coal mining economics. GRIP's quite forensic study of the EIS proves that. GRIP has presented all their evidence and calculations - with industry advice/information.
There is no Australian need for GRL's coal. No net benefit will accrue to the State. The proposal is opposed by more than 80% of the Gloucester community. There is no Gloucester Shire need for GRL's highly destructive coal mining in this closely-settled area: not economic; not employment; not new business. By any measure, it is against the `greater good'.
The EIS is at best a sham. At worst it is a fraudulent attempt to do the unconscionable.


ICAC, PROBITY AND NEED TO STOP GRL
ICAC recently uncovered systemic issues in government process and probity. Gloucester did not figure in that inquiry. But the main figure, Minister MacDonald, directly presided over the delivery of Gloucester to GRL. He did so without explanation - and it is entirely possible that he did so to fit with or cover his `small mining company' decisions elsewhere.

Disgraced Minister MacDonald, senior officials, and a government bereft of dignity and principle gave GRL its foothold. A seriously compromised system approved and then defended GRL, dismissed community representations, and renewed exploration licences that principle and sanity would have denied.

At a different time with an honourable government, exploration within or near closely settled areas would not have been entertained - regardless of the existence or otherwise of `ring-fencing'.
GRL has no self-regulating conscience. Successive MD statements make it clear that GRL will not stop of its own accord. It will not stop because the people of Gloucester don't want it and it will not stop because of its adverse impacts. It does not recognise health impacts. It will not pay for the roads which are already badly damaged and below heavy vehicle design standards. Only government can stop GRL. It should be stopped while Gloucester is still Gloucester.

GRL will not create jobs. It has already eliminated employment for those people it has displaced on the farms it coercively bought. Instead it will create an alternative place to work for people who are already employed. Because it will offer more money, it will draw people from valued community service businesses. The much vaunted `additional employees' argument used to try to win support in the community will come at the expense of Gloucester services and businesses. Coastal populations will also supply workers which GRL will describe as `locals' as does Yancoal.

At this point, Government under its duty of care, can seek full disclosure of GRL's expansion aspirations and define distinct constraints that protect Gloucester Valley's feel, amenity, scenic qualities and community health.

Of course GRL should not be allowed to mine here. But if approval were given, it should be for GRL's current design as it stands - with no prospect of future expansions or modifications and revocation of its other ELs which in turn must be zoned clearly to exclude mining.


RECOMMENDATIONS
Demand GRL disclose its full development scale or aspirations - and apply full life-cycle cost benefit analysis.
Require that analysis to include provision for contamination, rehabilitation failure, dust pollution, risks from enduring water catchment pollution flumes, heavy metals and BTEX releases, voids filled with salts and contaminated washery sludge, government's social/industry adjustment costs for Gloucester post Rocky Hill, enduring health budget impact, and health, social and qualitative impacts.
`Ring fence' Gloucester community, including established estates, from GRL or any other damaging development.
Declare the Bucketts Way and the scenic and heritage values of Gloucester protected from GRL and all future damaging development.
Protect the health amenity and peace of Gloucester Shire communities from GRL and all future damaging developments.
Introduce mandatory biennial performance improvement targets for all consent conditions.
Examine the full circumstances under which GRL's initial exploration applications and their renewals were approved.
Cancel all three of GRL's Exploration licences.
Refuse unconditionally GRL's application.
Attachments
Name Withheld
Object
Rookhurst , New South Wales
Message
Even though I believe the NSW Government will support this development for the financial benefit, the NSW Government is not protecting the very people that vote it in and are key stakeholders.
*The easy solution is to not have this mine close to towns such as ours. The difficult solution is to insist GRL to purchase the citizens of NSW homes who are within 2-3 Kilometres of the Open Cut mine as their homes are now unsaleable. These are all people encouraged to build new homes here by NSW Government to relocate from the cities. All their assets are in their homes, and they were unaware at the time there would be a mine so close.
* Health concerns are a major issue, it is well documented in Hunter Valley towns the affects on Asthma on children.
* It is easy to say the mine will employ 300 people but in reality that will not happen. We know that Gloucester Coal have just laid of 60, so they will just move work places. So no new real jobs. We will have mostly drive in drive out workers as miners traditionally don't want their families living close to the mine. No win for Gloucester here.
* Two surveys done by Gloucester Shire Council which everyone had the chance to comment by choice have shown 80% of residents do not want a mine this close. Doesn't that tell you something?
*I personally had to leave my dream home due to this company, we were harassed to the point of a nervous breakdown by the owners of this mine company. [sitting in my driveway, stopping us from driving on our road, threats from their Real Estate Agent] This was from continual stress not knowing if we would be surrounded by a mine and never able to sell.

* This is not a short term worry for residents close to the mine, as GRL have already leased the land for the Coal Loading Facility for a minimum of 3 years, so imagine the stress all these families will be under for that amount of time till the mine goes ahead. It is unbearable and un Australian

Some extra thoughts to share

Some family homes are only 900 metres from the proposed pits and most of the Forbesdale homes are within 1 to 1.5 kilometres from the proposed mine site. Many homes will not only overlook the mine site and pits, they will also have overwhelming views of the coal conveyor and rail loop. Even now, residents are feeling the stress of the proposal: anxiety, depression, anger, frustration. Not only have property prices plunged in anticipation of the project, some residents have been unable to sell their homes despite them being on the market for over 4 years. Others would like to sell, but feel the situation is hopeless.

Unfortunately for those residents who want to move, but can't because of the inability to sell their home, the mining will probably last their lifetime or outlive them. GRL documents show Stage 2 exploration directly north of the proposed Rocky Hill mine. Now that they have purchased all the properties in the Stage 2 area there is nothing to slow them down.


Silent Intimidation

We dreamt of a better life away from the city

Then took the plunge

Found the perfect land and built a house to live out our dream

Checked with authorities for permits over our land

Little did we know others wanted to take it away?

The government approves to get a big cut

Of the dollars that will come from the black gold underneath

Can it really help a small community so close to town

Why does no one care when lives are ruined and dreams are shattered

They buy up land all around the area in dribs and drabs

They drive up and down your roads just to show they can

The real estate agent tells neighbours we will buy them all here

Intimidation, I'm told not, Silent Intimidation I believe

Will workers come from our town, very few I believe?

Emotional blackmail so bad

Will it be this year or next that we are bought out

Unable to move on as nothing is signed, they drag out the sale, as no one

else will buy you

I cannot deal with it any more

Depression, sickness, shame

It is not our choice anymore to move

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Philip Greenwood
Object
Gloucester , New South Wales
Message
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Project Details

Application Number
SSD-5156
Assessment Type
State Significant Development
Development Type
Coal Mining
Local Government Areas
MidCoast
Decision
Refused
Determination Date
Decider
IPC-N

Contact Planner

Name
Colin Phillips