• After fierce negotiation and expensive supreme court action, Stirling council will rejoin the Mindarie regional council.

    The decision will save Vincent ratepayers $300,000 in rubbish fees over this financial year.

    The MRC is the organisation that takes rubbish from member councils. The more councils involved, the cheaper it is to drop off a tonne of rubbish.

    Stirling got fed up with the MRC’s fees, especially given its rubbish was pre-treated and easier to process, and threatened to pull out. Two-years of negotiation and hand-wringing followed as Vincent’s fees shot skywards.

    Outgoing Vincent mayor Alannah MacTiernan made it her mission to keep Stirling on board saying, “it is completely unacceptable that a council like Stirling would be allowed to bail out and then our ratepayers have to pick up the increased cost”.

    At her final meeting Ms MacTiernan announced the negotiations had been successful and Stirling would stick around.

    Stirling mayor David Boothman says the council decided to stay in because it was offered a discounted rate.

    “They said ‘we want you to come back in because it will reduce everyone’s fees; As an enticement we’ll give you a discount” that’ll last four or five years.

    by DAVID BELL

  • Bruce Campbell is a man of his word: Last year he said he’d run against Perth city councillor Judy McEvoy for not supporting the Racism: It stops with me campaign and now he’s doing it.

    The health and safety professional lives in Perth but on the Vincent council side, so he’s rented an office in the city to make him eligible.

    “I thought: If someone was going to be openly opposed to a federal anti-racism strategy, that’s really not what you want to have in a Perth city council, being the hub of the state.”

    His anti-racism stance was forged while growing up around the outer south-eastern suburb of Thornlie: “I’ve always been aware of racism in the community: Growing up in a multicultural suburb, you’ve got mates you’re hanging around with and someone will come along and call them something out of the blue, you’ve got to respond to that and stand up for your mate. I saw friends shaken, upset, and angry.”

    But he says he’s not a single-issue candidate, and reckons his background in health and safety can help make Perth a safer place and reduce crime, with opportunities for improved lighting, working with police and implementing “designing out crime” principles.

    “I have got a very strong, practical skill I can offer the residents rather than just representing a certain business group.”

    The 38-year old is also keen to support multicultural events in the city: “It’s important to send a clear and strong tone of welcome towards people from other nations, whether they are holidaying here, visiting relatives or even considering relocating and setting up a business. They need to feel welcome.”

    by DAVID BELL

  • Even more cash is to be splashed out on the $59,800 sculpture Games by Chinese artist Chen Wen Ling.

    An extra $6000 is required to install and light up the pricy purchase which Vincent city council picked up from the Sculpture on the Sea exhibition.

    The council had originally planned to pay local artist Matt McVeigh $30,000 for his abstract sculpture: The backtracking caused no end of grief and wrangling.

    Cr Dudley Maier—the only councillor to support McVeigh’s sculpture—voted against the extra outlay.

    He said he’d since found online that Games was one of a series of eight identical pieces.

    “It was disappointing to find out this wasn’t unique,” he said.

    The location for the sculpture is still up in the air. A few ideas have been suggested like parks on the corner of Bulwer and Vincent, or further up Vincent on Charles Street.

    Cr Matt Buckels described the latter location as a “pokey little corner on the most inhospitable park in Vincent”. Councillors will take extra time to wander through possible spots to pick the best.

    by DAVID BELL

     

  • 13. 797NEWS• The Beaufort Street sign is in the midst of being erected by local company Bremick (pictured is Ken Sealey, the creator of Vincent’s Big Blue Head, who was contracted to do some work on it). At $38,000 over budget, there were murmurs this week from some councillors displeased with how it’s looking, and whispers about withholding payment until it’s polished up to look more like its promise in the brief. However as it’s unfinished they’re waiting before offering an official critique. Photo by Jeremy Dixon

     

  • “The slums of the future” may be rolled out in Vincent courtesy of the WA planning commission says Alannah MacTiernan.

    Vincent city council’s new town planning scheme was sent to the WAPC for approval (with WA planning minister John Day having rubber-stamped it), but when the council got the document back 19 months later, important clauses to prevent “cheap and nasty developments” had been scrubbed out by WAPC bureaucrats.

    The WAPC deleted all mention of the council’s “design advisory committee”, a body composed of architects and designers that casts an eye over applications and recommends ways to make them look better and have less impact on neighbours.

    Ms MacTiernan, the former Vincent mayor and now federal Perth Labor MP, says the WAPC removed references to the committee to “dumb down” the planning scheme and make it easier for developers to get any old “rubbish” project approved.

    It effectively strait-jackets the council into being forced to approve any application that meets the basic parameters of height and bulk, regardless of how they look.

    “It will severely compromise the quality of planning in Vincent,” Ms MacTiernan says.

    “The design advisory committee process… is absolutely essential to stop rubbish outcomes.”

    She says Vincent has been onboard with rolling out medium density, but only if projects are high quality.

    “We’ve been a council that has embraced multi-residential, and part of what we have to do to keep supporting multi-residential is it has to be of decent quality.

    “We can’t be creating the slums of the future.”

    Ms MacTiernan says the DAC can still exist but without being engraved in the town planning scheme its recommendations will be given no weight in the event of an appeal to the state administrative tribunal.

    The mayor says the WAPC also inserted “bizarre provisions” that could allow the East Perth concrete batching plants to remain well into the future.

    The council wants the unpopular plants gone and the land converted for residential use, but the WA government last year gave them five-year extensions to their operations. 

    The WAPC has inserted provisions into the planning scheme that prevents new residential development in the area.

    by DAVID BELL

  • A TASSIE victor
    for the Perth haiku contest
    local poets snubbed

    WA didn’t rate in the top three winners of the Perth city library’s haiku competition, nor in the top three “special mentions”. Ron C Moss from Tasmania took the top gong, and third and second place went to NSW poets. The three special mentions went to a Queenslander, another NSWer, and Tassie’s Ron Moss got another thumbs up. Hardcore haiku composer David Cohen (a journo at the Subiaco Post) entered five poems in the contest and says the result is “a savage kick in the guts for local haiku writers”.

    “I was so sickened that I wrote a haiku after I saw the news of who’d won,” he said:

    “Eyes stinging, hurting
    Little poems have less worth
    Sick as a sick koi.”

    by DAVID BELL

  • 16. 797CHAMBERPerth city council
    Tuesday September 17, 2013

    A HERITAGE staircase on King Street is here to stay after Perth city councillors refused to let it be pulled out for a big refurbishment. The old King Street cafe closed down at the end of 2012, and now clothing retailer Miu Miu  is moving in. Miu Miu wanted to rip out the staircase as part of the spruce up, but Perth councillors stood firm. “The bottom line is the subject property is listed on the city’s register of cultural heritage significant,” Cr Rob Butler said, concerned that if one bit of heritage was abandoned it’d be a slippery slope for the rest. He said the upgrade could still go ahead with the staircase there. The two-storey federation free classical style building was constructed in 1904, and occupied by clothing manufacturers before the King Street Cafe moved in.

    THE WA music industry festival will get $50,000 from the PCC, with newer Cr Jim Adamos talking veteran Judy McEvoy into supporting the spend. Cr McEvoy, often a lone voice on council against big spends, said she’s happy to prop up events for the first couple of years but after that they should secure their own sponsors. Cr Adamos, elected in 2011, pointed out 10,000 people are expected to visit the city for the festival and spending $5 per visitor was a good investment. Cr McEvoy chuckled he’d talked her around, and backed the funding.

    OKTOBERFEST will return to the supreme court gardens this year after a “low number of complaints” about last year’s event. The 2012 Bavarian booze-up saw just five complaints lodged, two for noise. Cr Rob Butler said organiser Nokturnl Events was addressing those issues. “Where would we be without an Oktoberfest in October?” Cr Butler asked. In Germany the event starts in late September and runs through to the first weekend in Oktober.

  • 17. 797LETTERSA place in our community
    THANK you to Patti Ferber of the Nulsen Association for writing that beautiful letter about community inclusion for severely disabled folk through Perth City Farm (Voice Mail, September 7, 2013).
    We must never forget the fight for inclusion and welcoming disabled citizens into our communities. A past battlefield was the “Tresillian” affair some 37 years ago in 1976, when 18 severely and intellectually disabled “children” were evicted from their home in Nedlands.
    “We don’t want them in our community, as their presence devalues our homes,” was one complaint from neighbours. I attended a protest meeting on July 12 which attracted some 250 family and friends, but to no avail.
    A week later, on orders from premier Sir Charles Court, described as “a man with a heart of iron ore” the residents and staff were evicted, with police presence, to Forrestfield some 30km away. A lot of people were distressed, including the premier’s cabinet secretary, Ray Young, who immediately resigned and became a hero and an advocate for people living with a disability.
    As it turned out, this eviction was a blessing in disguise, as it led to today’s community inclusion of people living with a disability.
    William Booth
    Queen St, Bentley

    What did Perth ever do for Leederville?
    IT has to be stated loud and clear—the current proposal for splitting up Vincent is absurd.
    It completely ignores the WA government’s own Robson Report and to be honest is a kick in the guts for a community that appeared to be open to change.
    Why would you split Leederville in half, why split Beaufort Street in half, why split what is a bustling, happy and tangible Vincent community in half?
    Take Leederville as an example: The old City of Perth ignored Leederville for half a century. It doesn’t deserve to cherry-pick Leederville now, and god knows Leederville doesn’t deserve to be shafted back to a City of Perth that would be completely unaccountable to the Leederville community that actually loves and lives in Leederville.
    And Beaufort Street—whichever genius decided Beaufort Street would benefit from having not one, not two, but three local governments in charge, well, they deserve an “idiot of the year” medal and to be put on paper clip-sorting duty for a month, if that’s not beyond them.
    Are these people completely insane? Let’s get real… Vincent One In All In makes sense, we’ve got 6000 signatures to say Vincent folks want it, and if not for self-preservation of self-interested City of Perth Councillors it would happen.
    If the City of Perth wants to be a real “capital city” then it needs to step up and embrace a significant residential community.  The metropolitan area is heading to two million, and yet you need just 2500 votes to be Lord Mayor? Lunacy.  I’m not really sure why the whole population sits back and lets our CBD be governed by the equivalent of the body corporate of Dog Swamp Shopping Centre.
    To me it is simple: Earth to City of Perth… get with the program—real cities need real people! My message to Perth ratepayers—vote for councillors who want to lead a real city and not just enjoy the gravy train. My message to Vincent ratepayers—keep up the good fight!
    Matt Buckels
    Vincent city councillor
    Leederville

    On the Macca bandwagon
    THE article “Macca lifts Labor’s misery” (Voice, September 14, 2013) was a misleading piece of MacTiernan propaganda that misrepresented the election outcome and continued the MacTiernan mythology.
    Despite the massive pro-MacTiernan media promotion through local papers and our daily and Sunday paper, as well as talkback radio, the fact is Alannah MacTiernan had the worst result of the three Labor-held seats in WA.
    The swing against MacTiernan of 1.06 per cent was larger than the swing against Labor in the other two Labor seats of Fremantle and Brand, and it has left the Labor vote in Perth at its lowest in 30 years.
    Perth is now a marginal rather than a safe Labor seat thanks to a solid campaign by Darryl Moore and the local Liberal Party members in a seat that had long been taken for granted as a Labor seat.
    Maureen Meixner
    First Ave, Mount Lawley
    The Ed says: Maureen, Alannah MacTiernan received a lot of media in large part because she made herself available, was happy to answer questions and had a lot to say. Mr Moore on the other hand all-but hid from the media—including the Voice, which made many attempts to speak with him on the record—till the campaign was over. You can’t have it both ways.

  • GIARDINI’S, Leederville:

    Hipster bars and restaurant are opening up left, right and centre. And hipster bars and restaurants are closing down left, right and centre.

    When fashions are changing quicker than you can say “in vogue” it is nice to know that some things stay the same. And staying true.

    Leederville’s iconic Giardini’s is one of them.

    They know classic. They know what people love. They’re not trying to invent a new fad in the hope that it’ll stick. They’re just doing what they’ve always done, and what they’re good at. They’re going with what’s working; with the tried, tested
    and true.

    Now in its 13th year running, Giardini’s is going from strength to strength and dishing up classic favourites, or variations thereof, with time proven recipes.

    On one hand Italian and on the other a fusion of classic Australian they have many signature dishes on their impressive menu. For instance, there’s the Butterflied Garlic Tarragon Prawns perfect for a delicious start to any dining experience, and the Gnocchi with smoky Paprika Beef and Capsicum cooked with button mushrooms topped with shaved Parmesan. Or how about the Chicken and Mushroom Pappardelle with sautéed onions in a white cream sauce seasoned with garlic and paprika. Dishes worthy of Roman Gods.

    Agnes Gould, owner-operator, has been in the game a long time. “A good, mouth-watering recipe never goes out of fashion” says Agnes. Fads come and go, one day it’s burgers the next day it’s sausages, but our recipes have stood the test of time and we know they’re working because people come back for more” she continues.

    Giardini’s also the perfect spot for functions with an impressive set menu on offer for large parties and an extensive wine menu to please even the most critical of wine aficionado’s including wines from Margaret River, New Zealand and France.

    Book now for your next dining night out, if you snooze you lose.

    SEE THE MENU HERE

    MAKE A BOOKING HERE

    Giardini’s
    135 Oxford Street, Leederville
    Phone 9242 2602

  • A smooth white leg sticks up in the air, a red wheel attached. Next to it a walking stick wears a single shoe.

    Theo Koning’s latest exhibition is full of quirky pieces sure to make viewers laugh, and ponder.

    As I spoke to Koning it struck me that a lack of academic success seemed to be a common thread amongst artists.

    Koning told me he suffers a form of dyslexia, and left school aged 15. He was the third artist to have told a similar tale in as many months.

    “My father said you are not doing that well at school, but you are good at woodwork,” the Fremantle sculptor, painter and art teacher tells the Voice.

    An apprenticeship with a furniture-making firm put him on his future path, although at the time he didn’t realise it.

    “I thought I would go further [in furniture making], but I was always fascinated by design.”

    Enrolment in a night school sculpture course at the then-Claremont Technical College was Koning’s light-bulb moment.

    “My world opened to me. Everything else fell into place,” he says, adding reading also became a pleasure for the first time as he boned up on art history.

    His first exhibition was at the Fremantle Arts Centre in 1974 with a couple of artist mates: “My part was the hot chook slot” a sort of Kentucky Fried Chicken/meets old-style deli, Koning recalls.

    A skull in a cage from the installation is still on show in his studio, a bustling, crowded space that is a treasure trove of timber and metal in a variety of shapes and sizes, and an eclectic mix of “stuff” collected over the years.

    “[Bits] from op-shops, fetes or street throw outs. I gather as I drive along and see something that is interesting.”

    Built of recycled bricks, “when you could pick them up for nothing”, his studio is a pristine space where thousands of objects are more art than clutter.

    Koning puts his almost obsessive neatness down to his apprentice days, where as “floor boy”, he had to ensure there was no sawdust, nor anything else, under foot.

    Training films showing what could happen if there was debris left in a place filled with buzz saws and cutting tools terrified the youngster: “[People] slipping on a piece of wood—you don’t want to know what happens.”

    In his latest exhibition There Be It, Koning departs from his usual style of  a variety of raw and weathered timbers, mixed with contrasting “found objects”.

    “I wanted it to look like one form, a unit not made of many bits.”

    Renaissance art learned at college was dredged from his memories to achieve the finish he wanted, a gesso mixture from a recipe dating back hundreds of years.

    “[Made] with rabbit skin glue and calcium carbonate.”

    Gesso was used by Renaissance artists to prepare and preserve a canvas. Koning uses it to give his sculptures a smooth, almost “fake plaster” look.

    Long one of Perth’s most senior and respected artists, Koning has works in galleries around the country, including the National Gallery in Canberra.

    There Be It is on until October 5, at Turner Galleries, 470 William Street, Northbridge.

    by JENNY D’ANGER