FRIDAY, 3PM:
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LOCAL Government Minister Paul Toole has confirmed a proposed council mergers will not go ahead.
Mr Toole confirmed the mergers – including the union of Cabonne, Orange and Blayney councils - were in tatters after Nationals leader John Barilaro issued a strongly worded press release on Friday withdrawing his party’s support for the policy.
Mr Toole, who is unlikely to remain as local government minister following a cabinet reshuffle after a new Liberal Party leader is elected next week, said he expected regional voters to go to the polls in September to elect new councils.
FRIDAY, 1.30PM:
The future of forced council amalgamations in NSW is in doubt just one day after Mike Baird resigned as premier.
In a statement on Friday, Nationals leader and Deputy Premier John Barilaro vowed "to put an end to the local government mergers in the bush”.
The news comes as a ray of hope for anti-amalgamation groups in the Central West, especially in Cabonne and Oberon, which have been railing against their proposed unions with Orange-Blayney and Bathurst respectively.
The controversial forced amalgamations policy was driven by Mr Baird and endorsed by the cabinet, despite widespread opposition.
However, the issue was blamed, along with the aborted bid to ban greyhound racing, as a factor in the Nationals' disastrous loss in the Orange byelection last October which saw Troy Grant resign as party leader.
"The policy of local government amalgamations has impacted 20 councils, 12 of which are in regional NSW causing uncertainty and anger, and others are locked in costly legal action – that all stops today," Mr Barilaro said.
Mr Barilaro's statement makes no reference to the Sydney councils still fighting their forced mergers. Councils such as Woollahra, Mosman, Hunters Hill and Strathfield have managed to so far prevent their amalgamations by launching legal challenges.
The government, however, has continued to insist that it wants to merge them.
Merger proposals in rural areas that have not yet proceeded include: Armidale Dumaresq, Guyra, Uralla and Walcha; Bathurst and Oberon; Blayney, Cabonne and Orange; and Dungog and Maitland. The merger of Newcastle and Port Stephens councils, as well as Shellharbour and Wollongong, also remain pending.
The Minister for Local Government, Paul Toole, a Nationals MP, has been approached for comment.
Opposition leader Luke Foley dismissed Mr Barilaro's call as "a search for relevance". "What does that mean?" Mr Foley asked. "Will he do the right thing and unwind the forced mergers that have already been implemented in regional NSW? Will there be one policy for the regions and one policy for the suburbs of Sydney [and the rest of NSW]?"
Mr Foley suggested Mr Barilaro's statement was "a bit orchestrated". "He'll huff and puff and demand something and she'll give it to him so he can say he's delivering for the people in the bush they've abandoned in the past few years".