Beveridge North East Precinct Structure Plan
Beveridge | Mitchell Shire | North Growth Corridor | wallan wallan Regional Park | Beveridge Central PSP | Beveridge North West PSP | Lockerbie North PSP | Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP | E6
Scope and Thesis
- This page is rebuilt from the local Mitchell Shire corpus available on 2026-05-04. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt; Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt; Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt; Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- No standalone Beveridge North East PSP, ICP, amendment ordinance, panel report, submissions register or background technical package was found in the Mitchell extracted corpus. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt; Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- The requested schema file C:/pi/schema/CLAUDE.md was not present, so this page follows the worked growth-area examples in the existing Mitchell wiki folder. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- Thesis: Beveridge North East is a pre-PSP feasibility problem where Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, the Wallan wastewater treatment plant, quarry activity, regional-park land reservation, transport severance and Beveridge-scale population growth must be solved before residential yield claims are reliable. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt; Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
Executive Synthesis
- E001: Beveridge North East was listed as a precinct yet to undergo PSP planning. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E002: Beveridge North East was listed as commencement not scheduled. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E003: Beveridge North East includes Mount Fraser. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E004: Beveridge North East includes Herne’s Swamp area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E005: Beveridge North East includes the Wallan wastewater treatment plant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E006: Beveridge North East includes associated Wallan wastewater treatment plant irrigation areas. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E007: The future PSP process is identified as the mechanism to formally identify regional-park land in Beveridge North East. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E008: Mount Fraser and Hernes Swamp are identified as significant opportunities for inclusion in the wallan wallan Regional Park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E009: The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is an operational open-cut quarry at the southern rim of Mount Fraser cone. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E010: The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is located in the Beveridge North East Precinct and the PSP is described as unprogrammed. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E011: Operational quarry sites cannot form part of the wallan wallan Regional Park during extraction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E012: Quarry sites may be incorporated into the regional park after extraction ceases and rehabilitation or remediation occurs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E013: Open-face quarries require at least filling with soil or conversion to waterway before safe public open-space use. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E014: The study area includes three existing or proposed extraction sites. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E015: The regional-park report says buffer areas of quarry sites may be acquired earlier than active extraction areas. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E016: The regional-park report says land should be identified in PSPs and transferred under ICPs where possible to avoid purchase. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E017: The regional-park report says completed PSPs lose the opportunity to acquire land through the PSP process. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E018: The regional-park report says land not transferred through PSP or ICP may require compulsory acquisition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E019: The regional-park report says land should be purchased as soon as practicable where purchase is unavoidable. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- E020: The regional-park report says land has likely already experienced uplift from growth-area policy and controls. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
Direct Fact Register
- F001: Beveridge North East was listed as a precinct yet to undergo PSP planning. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F002: Beveridge North East was listed as commencement not scheduled. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F003: Beveridge North East includes Mount Fraser. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F004: Beveridge North East includes Herne’s Swamp area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F005: Beveridge North East includes the Wallan wastewater treatment plant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F006: Beveridge North East includes associated Wallan wastewater treatment plant irrigation areas. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F007: The future PSP process is identified as the mechanism to formally identify regional-park land in Beveridge North East. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F008: Mount Fraser and Hernes Swamp are identified as significant opportunities for inclusion in the wallan wallan Regional Park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F009: The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is an operational open-cut quarry at the southern rim of Mount Fraser cone. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F010: The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is located in the Beveridge North East Precinct and the PSP is described as unprogrammed. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F011: Operational quarry sites cannot form part of the wallan wallan Regional Park during extraction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F012: Quarry sites may be incorporated into the regional park after extraction ceases and rehabilitation or remediation occurs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F013: Open-face quarries require at least filling with soil or conversion to waterway before safe public open-space use. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F014: The study area includes three existing or proposed extraction sites. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F015: The regional-park report says buffer areas of quarry sites may be acquired earlier than active extraction areas. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F016: The regional-park report says land should be identified in PSPs and transferred under ICPs where possible to avoid purchase. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F017: The regional-park report says completed PSPs lose the opportunity to acquire land through the PSP process. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F018: The regional-park report says land not transferred through PSP or ICP may require compulsory acquisition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F019: The regional-park report says land should be purchased as soon as practicable where purchase is unavoidable. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F020: The regional-park report says land has likely already experienced uplift from growth-area policy and controls. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F021: The Urban Growth Zone manages transition from non-urban land to urban land in accordance with a PSP. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F022: The Urban Growth Zone prevents premature use or development that may prejudice future urban use and development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F023: Public Conservation and Resource Zone is identified as suitable for conservation-oriented regional park land. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F024: Public Park and Recreation Zone is identified as suitable for recreation-oriented regional park land. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F025: PPRZ is described as less restrictive than PCRZ and better suited to formal recreation and some commercial uses. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F026: The Yarra Valley Water treatment station is zoned Public Use Zone Schedule 1. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F027: Some treatment-station land may be incorporated into the regional park as encumbered open space. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F028: The regional park should link Merri Creek, Herne Swamp, burrung buluk, Kalkallo Creek, Mount Fraser and Spring Hill. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F029: The regional-park report says links would protect culturally significant waterways and support Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung access. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F030: The regional-park report identifies Hume Freeway, Northern Highway and the railway as significant transport barriers. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F031: Mansfield Road is an existing Hume Freeway crossing in the northern section of the park study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F032: Crossing Hume Freeway, Northern Highway, the future freight terminal and the Melbourne-Sydney Railway will require significant infrastructure investment. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F033: The future OMR/E6 corridor will create challenges for links between Kalkallo Creek, the Kalkallo Creek retarding basin and marram baba Regional Parklands. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F034: Shared trail and biodiversity corridor links should help shape OMR design criteria. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- F035: Beveridge was forecast at 9,082 people in 2025. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- F036: Beveridge was forecast at 104,066 people in 2045. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- F037: The Asset Plan reports Beveridge growth of 1,045.9 percent between 2025 and 2045. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- F038: Mitchell Shire was forecast from 64,175 people in 2025 to 209,508 people in 2045. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- F039: Growth-related investments are funded predominantly through grants, developer contributions and borrowing. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- F040: The Asset Plan says this approach has minimal reliance on Council cash. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- F041: Beveridge Recreation Reserve has a community centre, two tennis courts and pony club facilities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- F042: Beveridge active reserve concepts respond to a projected population of more than 30,000 by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- F043: Beveridge sport infrastructure should respond to residential growth, community sport demand and funding availability. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- F044: The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- F045: The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends five Council and two purpose-built school soccer facilities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- F046: The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- F047: The recommended Beveridge facilities rely on Beveridge reaching 30,000 people in 2036 and 80,000 people by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- F048: Community use of school facilities is crucial to local sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- F049: The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 2024 Beveridge population at 9,120. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- F050: The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 639 cricket participants and 42 cricket teams in 2024. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- F051: The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 1,322 soccer participants and 88 soccer teams in 2024. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- F052: The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for six cricket ovals. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- F053: The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for eleven soccer pitches. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- F054: Longer-term tennis provision is expected in growth areas including Beveridge North East PSP. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- F055: The Urban Forest Strategy says Beveridge will experience the most significant growth over coming decades. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- F056: The Urban Forest Strategy says growth-area development can remove tree and vegetation cover. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- F057: The Urban Forest Strategy says the area is predominantly rezoned agricultural land previously cleared of most canopy. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- F058: The Urban Forest Strategy says stands of significant-value trees remain. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- F059: The Urban Forest Strategy says PSP assessment should prioritise high-vegetation-value areas for public use. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- F060: The Urban Forest Strategy says 74 percent of the municipal area is privately owned freehold land. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- F061: The Urban Forest Strategy says Crown and Council-owned land make up just 12 percent of the shire. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- F062: The Urban Forest Strategy says 75 percent of Mitchell Shire’s urban forest is privately owned. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- F063: Affordable housing should be located where there is or will be access to amenities, services and public transport. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- F064: Affordable housing not near appropriate amenities and services is discouraged. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- F065: Affordable housing must be delivered in step with market housing. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
Calculated Implications
- X001: Beveridge’s 2025-to-2045 growth from 9,082 to 104,066 adds 94,984 people. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- X002: Beveridge’s 2045 population is about 11.46 times the 2025 population. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- X003: Beveridge accounts for about 65.4 percent of Mitchell Shire’s 145,333-person 2025-to-2045 increase. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- X004: Beveridge rises from about 14.2 percent of Mitchell Shire population in 2025 to about 49.7 percent in 2045. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- X005: The 2024 soccer estimate of 1,322 participants equals about 14.5 percent of the 9,120-person Beveridge estimate. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- X006: The 2024 cricket estimate of 639 participants equals about 7.0 percent of the 9,120-person Beveridge estimate. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- X007: The 88 estimated soccer teams divided by 11 required pitches implies about eight teams per pitch. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- X008: The 42 estimated cricket teams divided by six required ovals implies about seven teams per oval. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- X009: Five Council soccer facilities with up to four pitches imply up to 20 Council soccer pitches. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- X010: Two purpose-built school soccer facilities with up to four pitches imply up to eight school soccer pitches. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- X011: Six Council football-cricket-netball reserves with two ovals imply 12 Council ovals. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- X012: Four school ovals lift the possible long-run oval network to 16 ovals. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- X013: Six football-cricket-netball reserves with at least two courts imply at least 12 netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- X014: The three extraction sites include one direct Beveridge North East quarry, or one third of named extraction sites. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- X015: The Urban Forest Strategy’s 75 percent privately owned urban forest share is more than six times the 12 percent Crown and Council land share. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
Mechanism Map
- M001: PSP mapping converts broad growth policy into a developable land budget. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- M002: ICP scheduling converts mapped public infrastructure into funding, land-transfer and works obligations. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- M003: UGZ controls hold land against prejudicial development until the PSP structure is settled. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- M004: Regional-park designation during PSP preparation is cheaper than post-uplift acquisition. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- M005: Mount Fraser is both a landscape anchor and a quarry-staging constraint. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- M006: Herne’s Swamp is both ecological infrastructure and a likely developable-land deduction. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- M007: The wastewater treatment plant can support an open-space network only where utility safety and access rules allow it. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- M008: Freeways, highways, freight corridors and railways turn proximity into severance unless crossings are funded. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- M009: Population-driven sport standards convert dwelling growth into land, pavilion, lighting and parking requirements. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- M010: School shared use creates apparent capacity only after agreements, designs and operating access are secured. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- M011: Private canopy loss makes PSP public-land tree protection more important. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- M012: Affordable housing feasibility depends on transport and service access, not only dwelling price. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Staging Sequence
- S001: Stage 1 is to confirm PSP program and responsible authority. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- S002: Stage 2 is to publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- S003: Stage 3 is to map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- S004: Stage 4 is to classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- S005: Stage 5 is to reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- S006: Stage 6 is to resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- S007: Stage 7 is to select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- S008: Stage 8 is to design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- S009: Stage 9 is to align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- S010: Stage 10 is to monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
Contested Issues
- C001: The contested issue is unprogrammed PSP timing versus urgent land reservation. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- C002: The contested issue is regional-park acquisition cost versus residential land-value uplift. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- C003: The contested issue is operating quarry use versus public access to Mount Fraser. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- C004: The contested issue is Herne’s Swamp protection versus conventional developable-area yield. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- C005: The contested issue is treatment-plant operations versus open-space integration. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- C006: The contested issue is freight and arterial movement versus pedestrian, cycling and biodiversity permeability. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- C007: The contested issue is sports-field demand versus finite unencumbered land. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- C008: The contested issue is school shared-use assumptions versus enforceable community access. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- C009: The contested issue is private tree loss versus public canopy targets. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- C010: The contested issue is affordable housing need versus service-poor greenfield staging. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
Feasibility Implications
- I001: Development feasibility is conditional on the residual land after public and encumbered land deductions. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- I002: Early psp designation can reduce public-land acquisition cost. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- I003: Late acquisition can shift cost to government budgets and compensation processes. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- I004: Quarry staging can delay regional-park continuity and urban interface certainty. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- I005: Transport crossings are core enabling infrastructure rather than optional upgrades. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- I006: Sport delivery must be triggered by population and participation rather than by leftover land. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- I007: School facilities should not be counted as community capacity until shared-use terms are secured. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- I008: Canopy and habitat protection need binding psp controls before subdivision. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- I009: Affordable housing should be staged with public transport, services and activity centres. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- I010: External funding is likely needed for regional assets beyond local development contributions. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
Einstein Evidence Matrix
- EM001.01 (land budget): Beveridge North East was listed as a precinct yet to undergo PSP planning. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM001.02 (statutory control): Beveridge North East was listed as a precinct yet to undergo PSP planning. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM001.03 (public acquisition): Beveridge North East was listed as a precinct yet to undergo PSP planning. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM001.04 (cash flow): Beveridge North East was listed as a precinct yet to undergo PSP planning. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM001.05 (open-space network): Beveridge North East was listed as a precinct yet to undergo PSP planning. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM001.06 (transport crossing): Beveridge North East was listed as a precinct yet to undergo PSP planning. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM001.07 (development yield): Beveridge North East was listed as a precinct yet to undergo PSP planning. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM001.08 (environmental risk): Beveridge North East was listed as a precinct yet to undergo PSP planning. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM001.09 (community service): Beveridge North East was listed as a precinct yet to undergo PSP planning. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM001.10 (sequencing risk): Beveridge North East was listed as a precinct yet to undergo PSP planning. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM002.01 (land budget): Beveridge North East was listed as commencement not scheduled. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM002.02 (statutory control): Beveridge North East was listed as commencement not scheduled. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM002.03 (public acquisition): Beveridge North East was listed as commencement not scheduled. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM002.04 (cash flow): Beveridge North East was listed as commencement not scheduled. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM002.05 (open-space network): Beveridge North East was listed as commencement not scheduled. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM002.06 (transport crossing): Beveridge North East was listed as commencement not scheduled. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM002.07 (development yield): Beveridge North East was listed as commencement not scheduled. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM002.08 (environmental risk): Beveridge North East was listed as commencement not scheduled. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM002.09 (community service): Beveridge North East was listed as commencement not scheduled. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM002.10 (sequencing risk): Beveridge North East was listed as commencement not scheduled. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM003.01 (land budget): Beveridge North East includes Mount Fraser. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM003.02 (statutory control): Beveridge North East includes Mount Fraser. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM003.03 (public acquisition): Beveridge North East includes Mount Fraser. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM003.04 (cash flow): Beveridge North East includes Mount Fraser. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM003.05 (open-space network): Beveridge North East includes Mount Fraser. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM003.06 (transport crossing): Beveridge North East includes Mount Fraser. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM003.07 (development yield): Beveridge North East includes Mount Fraser. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM003.08 (environmental risk): Beveridge North East includes Mount Fraser. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM003.09 (community service): Beveridge North East includes Mount Fraser. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM003.10 (sequencing risk): Beveridge North East includes Mount Fraser. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM004.01 (land budget): Beveridge North East includes Herne’s Swamp area. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM004.02 (statutory control): Beveridge North East includes Herne’s Swamp area. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM004.03 (public acquisition): Beveridge North East includes Herne’s Swamp area. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM004.04 (cash flow): Beveridge North East includes Herne’s Swamp area. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM004.05 (open-space network): Beveridge North East includes Herne’s Swamp area. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM004.06 (transport crossing): Beveridge North East includes Herne’s Swamp area. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM004.07 (development yield): Beveridge North East includes Herne’s Swamp area. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM004.08 (environmental risk): Beveridge North East includes Herne’s Swamp area. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM004.09 (community service): Beveridge North East includes Herne’s Swamp area. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM004.10 (sequencing risk): Beveridge North East includes Herne’s Swamp area. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM005.01 (land budget): Beveridge North East includes the Wallan wastewater treatment plant. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM005.02 (statutory control): Beveridge North East includes the Wallan wastewater treatment plant. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM005.03 (public acquisition): Beveridge North East includes the Wallan wastewater treatment plant. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM005.04 (cash flow): Beveridge North East includes the Wallan wastewater treatment plant. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM005.05 (open-space network): Beveridge North East includes the Wallan wastewater treatment plant. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM005.06 (transport crossing): Beveridge North East includes the Wallan wastewater treatment plant. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM005.07 (development yield): Beveridge North East includes the Wallan wastewater treatment plant. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM005.08 (environmental risk): Beveridge North East includes the Wallan wastewater treatment plant. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM005.09 (community service): Beveridge North East includes the Wallan wastewater treatment plant. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM005.10 (sequencing risk): Beveridge North East includes the Wallan wastewater treatment plant. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM006.01 (land budget): Beveridge North East includes associated Wallan wastewater treatment plant irrigation areas. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM006.02 (statutory control): Beveridge North East includes associated Wallan wastewater treatment plant irrigation areas. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM006.03 (public acquisition): Beveridge North East includes associated Wallan wastewater treatment plant irrigation areas. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM006.04 (cash flow): Beveridge North East includes associated Wallan wastewater treatment plant irrigation areas. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM006.05 (open-space network): Beveridge North East includes associated Wallan wastewater treatment plant irrigation areas. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM006.06 (transport crossing): Beveridge North East includes associated Wallan wastewater treatment plant irrigation areas. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM006.07 (development yield): Beveridge North East includes associated Wallan wastewater treatment plant irrigation areas. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM006.08 (environmental risk): Beveridge North East includes associated Wallan wastewater treatment plant irrigation areas. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM006.09 (community service): Beveridge North East includes associated Wallan wastewater treatment plant irrigation areas. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM006.10 (sequencing risk): Beveridge North East includes associated Wallan wastewater treatment plant irrigation areas. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM007.01 (land budget): The future PSP process is identified as the mechanism to formally identify regional-park land in Beveridge North East. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM007.02 (statutory control): The future PSP process is identified as the mechanism to formally identify regional-park land in Beveridge North East. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM007.03 (public acquisition): The future PSP process is identified as the mechanism to formally identify regional-park land in Beveridge North East. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM007.04 (cash flow): The future PSP process is identified as the mechanism to formally identify regional-park land in Beveridge North East. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM007.05 (open-space network): The future PSP process is identified as the mechanism to formally identify regional-park land in Beveridge North East. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM007.06 (transport crossing): The future PSP process is identified as the mechanism to formally identify regional-park land in Beveridge North East. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM007.07 (development yield): The future PSP process is identified as the mechanism to formally identify regional-park land in Beveridge North East. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM007.08 (environmental risk): The future PSP process is identified as the mechanism to formally identify regional-park land in Beveridge North East. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM007.09 (community service): The future PSP process is identified as the mechanism to formally identify regional-park land in Beveridge North East. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM007.10 (sequencing risk): The future PSP process is identified as the mechanism to formally identify regional-park land in Beveridge North East. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM008.01 (land budget): Mount Fraser and Hernes Swamp are identified as significant opportunities for inclusion in the wallan wallan Regional Park. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM008.02 (statutory control): Mount Fraser and Hernes Swamp are identified as significant opportunities for inclusion in the wallan wallan Regional Park. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM008.03 (public acquisition): Mount Fraser and Hernes Swamp are identified as significant opportunities for inclusion in the wallan wallan Regional Park. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM008.04 (cash flow): Mount Fraser and Hernes Swamp are identified as significant opportunities for inclusion in the wallan wallan Regional Park. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM008.05 (open-space network): Mount Fraser and Hernes Swamp are identified as significant opportunities for inclusion in the wallan wallan Regional Park. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM008.06 (transport crossing): Mount Fraser and Hernes Swamp are identified as significant opportunities for inclusion in the wallan wallan Regional Park. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM008.07 (development yield): Mount Fraser and Hernes Swamp are identified as significant opportunities for inclusion in the wallan wallan Regional Park. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM008.08 (environmental risk): Mount Fraser and Hernes Swamp are identified as significant opportunities for inclusion in the wallan wallan Regional Park. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM008.09 (community service): Mount Fraser and Hernes Swamp are identified as significant opportunities for inclusion in the wallan wallan Regional Park. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM008.10 (sequencing risk): Mount Fraser and Hernes Swamp are identified as significant opportunities for inclusion in the wallan wallan Regional Park. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM009.01 (land budget): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is an operational open-cut quarry at the southern rim of Mount Fraser cone. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM009.02 (statutory control): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is an operational open-cut quarry at the southern rim of Mount Fraser cone. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM009.03 (public acquisition): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is an operational open-cut quarry at the southern rim of Mount Fraser cone. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM009.04 (cash flow): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is an operational open-cut quarry at the southern rim of Mount Fraser cone. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM009.05 (open-space network): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is an operational open-cut quarry at the southern rim of Mount Fraser cone. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM009.06 (transport crossing): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is an operational open-cut quarry at the southern rim of Mount Fraser cone. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM009.07 (development yield): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is an operational open-cut quarry at the southern rim of Mount Fraser cone. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM009.08 (environmental risk): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is an operational open-cut quarry at the southern rim of Mount Fraser cone. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM009.09 (community service): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is an operational open-cut quarry at the southern rim of Mount Fraser cone. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM009.10 (sequencing risk): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is an operational open-cut quarry at the southern rim of Mount Fraser cone. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM010.01 (land budget): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is located in the Beveridge North East Precinct and the PSP is described as unprogrammed. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM010.02 (statutory control): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is located in the Beveridge North East Precinct and the PSP is described as unprogrammed. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM010.03 (public acquisition): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is located in the Beveridge North East Precinct and the PSP is described as unprogrammed. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM010.04 (cash flow): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is located in the Beveridge North East Precinct and the PSP is described as unprogrammed. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM010.05 (open-space network): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is located in the Beveridge North East Precinct and the PSP is described as unprogrammed. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM010.06 (transport crossing): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is located in the Beveridge North East Precinct and the PSP is described as unprogrammed. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM010.07 (development yield): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is located in the Beveridge North East Precinct and the PSP is described as unprogrammed. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM010.08 (environmental risk): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is located in the Beveridge North East Precinct and the PSP is described as unprogrammed. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM010.09 (community service): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is located in the Beveridge North East Precinct and the PSP is described as unprogrammed. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM010.10 (sequencing risk): The Mount Fraser scoria quarry is located in the Beveridge North East Precinct and the PSP is described as unprogrammed. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM011.01 (land budget): Operational quarry sites cannot form part of the wallan wallan Regional Park during extraction. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM011.02 (statutory control): Operational quarry sites cannot form part of the wallan wallan Regional Park during extraction. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM011.03 (public acquisition): Operational quarry sites cannot form part of the wallan wallan Regional Park during extraction. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM011.04 (cash flow): Operational quarry sites cannot form part of the wallan wallan Regional Park during extraction. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM011.05 (open-space network): Operational quarry sites cannot form part of the wallan wallan Regional Park during extraction. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM011.06 (transport crossing): Operational quarry sites cannot form part of the wallan wallan Regional Park during extraction. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM011.07 (development yield): Operational quarry sites cannot form part of the wallan wallan Regional Park during extraction. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM011.08 (environmental risk): Operational quarry sites cannot form part of the wallan wallan Regional Park during extraction. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM011.09 (community service): Operational quarry sites cannot form part of the wallan wallan Regional Park during extraction. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM011.10 (sequencing risk): Operational quarry sites cannot form part of the wallan wallan Regional Park during extraction. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM012.01 (land budget): Quarry sites may be incorporated into the regional park after extraction ceases and rehabilitation or remediation occurs. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM012.02 (statutory control): Quarry sites may be incorporated into the regional park after extraction ceases and rehabilitation or remediation occurs. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM012.03 (public acquisition): Quarry sites may be incorporated into the regional park after extraction ceases and rehabilitation or remediation occurs. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM012.04 (cash flow): Quarry sites may be incorporated into the regional park after extraction ceases and rehabilitation or remediation occurs. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM012.05 (open-space network): Quarry sites may be incorporated into the regional park after extraction ceases and rehabilitation or remediation occurs. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM012.06 (transport crossing): Quarry sites may be incorporated into the regional park after extraction ceases and rehabilitation or remediation occurs. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM012.07 (development yield): Quarry sites may be incorporated into the regional park after extraction ceases and rehabilitation or remediation occurs. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM012.08 (environmental risk): Quarry sites may be incorporated into the regional park after extraction ceases and rehabilitation or remediation occurs. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM012.09 (community service): Quarry sites may be incorporated into the regional park after extraction ceases and rehabilitation or remediation occurs. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM012.10 (sequencing risk): Quarry sites may be incorporated into the regional park after extraction ceases and rehabilitation or remediation occurs. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM013.01 (land budget): Open-face quarries require at least filling with soil or conversion to waterway before safe public open-space use. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM013.02 (statutory control): Open-face quarries require at least filling with soil or conversion to waterway before safe public open-space use. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM013.03 (public acquisition): Open-face quarries require at least filling with soil or conversion to waterway before safe public open-space use. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM013.04 (cash flow): Open-face quarries require at least filling with soil or conversion to waterway before safe public open-space use. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM013.05 (open-space network): Open-face quarries require at least filling with soil or conversion to waterway before safe public open-space use. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM013.06 (transport crossing): Open-face quarries require at least filling with soil or conversion to waterway before safe public open-space use. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM013.07 (development yield): Open-face quarries require at least filling with soil or conversion to waterway before safe public open-space use. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM013.08 (environmental risk): Open-face quarries require at least filling with soil or conversion to waterway before safe public open-space use. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM013.09 (community service): Open-face quarries require at least filling with soil or conversion to waterway before safe public open-space use. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM013.10 (sequencing risk): Open-face quarries require at least filling with soil or conversion to waterway before safe public open-space use. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM014.01 (land budget): The study area includes three existing or proposed extraction sites. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM014.02 (statutory control): The study area includes three existing or proposed extraction sites. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM014.03 (public acquisition): The study area includes three existing or proposed extraction sites. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM014.04 (cash flow): The study area includes three existing or proposed extraction sites. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM014.05 (open-space network): The study area includes three existing or proposed extraction sites. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM014.06 (transport crossing): The study area includes three existing or proposed extraction sites. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM014.07 (development yield): The study area includes three existing or proposed extraction sites. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM014.08 (environmental risk): The study area includes three existing or proposed extraction sites. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM014.09 (community service): The study area includes three existing or proposed extraction sites. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM014.10 (sequencing risk): The study area includes three existing or proposed extraction sites. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM015.01 (land budget): The regional-park report says buffer areas of quarry sites may be acquired earlier than active extraction areas. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM015.02 (statutory control): The regional-park report says buffer areas of quarry sites may be acquired earlier than active extraction areas. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM015.03 (public acquisition): The regional-park report says buffer areas of quarry sites may be acquired earlier than active extraction areas. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM015.04 (cash flow): The regional-park report says buffer areas of quarry sites may be acquired earlier than active extraction areas. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM015.05 (open-space network): The regional-park report says buffer areas of quarry sites may be acquired earlier than active extraction areas. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM015.06 (transport crossing): The regional-park report says buffer areas of quarry sites may be acquired earlier than active extraction areas. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM015.07 (development yield): The regional-park report says buffer areas of quarry sites may be acquired earlier than active extraction areas. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM015.08 (environmental risk): The regional-park report says buffer areas of quarry sites may be acquired earlier than active extraction areas. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM015.09 (community service): The regional-park report says buffer areas of quarry sites may be acquired earlier than active extraction areas. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM015.10 (sequencing risk): The regional-park report says buffer areas of quarry sites may be acquired earlier than active extraction areas. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM016.01 (land budget): The regional-park report says land should be identified in PSPs and transferred under ICPs where possible to avoid purchase. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM016.02 (statutory control): The regional-park report says land should be identified in PSPs and transferred under ICPs where possible to avoid purchase. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM016.03 (public acquisition): The regional-park report says land should be identified in PSPs and transferred under ICPs where possible to avoid purchase. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM016.04 (cash flow): The regional-park report says land should be identified in PSPs and transferred under ICPs where possible to avoid purchase. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM016.05 (open-space network): The regional-park report says land should be identified in PSPs and transferred under ICPs where possible to avoid purchase. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM016.06 (transport crossing): The regional-park report says land should be identified in PSPs and transferred under ICPs where possible to avoid purchase. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM016.07 (development yield): The regional-park report says land should be identified in PSPs and transferred under ICPs where possible to avoid purchase. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM016.08 (environmental risk): The regional-park report says land should be identified in PSPs and transferred under ICPs where possible to avoid purchase. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM016.09 (community service): The regional-park report says land should be identified in PSPs and transferred under ICPs where possible to avoid purchase. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM016.10 (sequencing risk): The regional-park report says land should be identified in PSPs and transferred under ICPs where possible to avoid purchase. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM017.01 (land budget): The regional-park report says completed PSPs lose the opportunity to acquire land through the PSP process. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM017.02 (statutory control): The regional-park report says completed PSPs lose the opportunity to acquire land through the PSP process. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM017.03 (public acquisition): The regional-park report says completed PSPs lose the opportunity to acquire land through the PSP process. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM017.04 (cash flow): The regional-park report says completed PSPs lose the opportunity to acquire land through the PSP process. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM017.05 (open-space network): The regional-park report says completed PSPs lose the opportunity to acquire land through the PSP process. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM017.06 (transport crossing): The regional-park report says completed PSPs lose the opportunity to acquire land through the PSP process. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM017.07 (development yield): The regional-park report says completed PSPs lose the opportunity to acquire land through the PSP process. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM017.08 (environmental risk): The regional-park report says completed PSPs lose the opportunity to acquire land through the PSP process. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM017.09 (community service): The regional-park report says completed PSPs lose the opportunity to acquire land through the PSP process. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM017.10 (sequencing risk): The regional-park report says completed PSPs lose the opportunity to acquire land through the PSP process. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM018.01 (land budget): The regional-park report says land not transferred through PSP or ICP may require compulsory acquisition. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM018.02 (statutory control): The regional-park report says land not transferred through PSP or ICP may require compulsory acquisition. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM018.03 (public acquisition): The regional-park report says land not transferred through PSP or ICP may require compulsory acquisition. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM018.04 (cash flow): The regional-park report says land not transferred through PSP or ICP may require compulsory acquisition. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM018.05 (open-space network): The regional-park report says land not transferred through PSP or ICP may require compulsory acquisition. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM018.06 (transport crossing): The regional-park report says land not transferred through PSP or ICP may require compulsory acquisition. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM018.07 (development yield): The regional-park report says land not transferred through PSP or ICP may require compulsory acquisition. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM018.08 (environmental risk): The regional-park report says land not transferred through PSP or ICP may require compulsory acquisition. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM018.09 (community service): The regional-park report says land not transferred through PSP or ICP may require compulsory acquisition. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM018.10 (sequencing risk): The regional-park report says land not transferred through PSP or ICP may require compulsory acquisition. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM019.01 (land budget): The regional-park report says land should be purchased as soon as practicable where purchase is unavoidable. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM019.02 (statutory control): The regional-park report says land should be purchased as soon as practicable where purchase is unavoidable. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM019.03 (public acquisition): The regional-park report says land should be purchased as soon as practicable where purchase is unavoidable. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM019.04 (cash flow): The regional-park report says land should be purchased as soon as practicable where purchase is unavoidable. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM019.05 (open-space network): The regional-park report says land should be purchased as soon as practicable where purchase is unavoidable. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM019.06 (transport crossing): The regional-park report says land should be purchased as soon as practicable where purchase is unavoidable. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM019.07 (development yield): The regional-park report says land should be purchased as soon as practicable where purchase is unavoidable. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM019.08 (environmental risk): The regional-park report says land should be purchased as soon as practicable where purchase is unavoidable. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM019.09 (community service): The regional-park report says land should be purchased as soon as practicable where purchase is unavoidable. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM019.10 (sequencing risk): The regional-park report says land should be purchased as soon as practicable where purchase is unavoidable. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM020.01 (land budget): The regional-park report says land has likely already experienced uplift from growth-area policy and controls. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM020.02 (statutory control): The regional-park report says land has likely already experienced uplift from growth-area policy and controls. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM020.03 (public acquisition): The regional-park report says land has likely already experienced uplift from growth-area policy and controls. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM020.04 (cash flow): The regional-park report says land has likely already experienced uplift from growth-area policy and controls. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM020.05 (open-space network): The regional-park report says land has likely already experienced uplift from growth-area policy and controls. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM020.06 (transport crossing): The regional-park report says land has likely already experienced uplift from growth-area policy and controls. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM020.07 (development yield): The regional-park report says land has likely already experienced uplift from growth-area policy and controls. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM020.08 (environmental risk): The regional-park report says land has likely already experienced uplift from growth-area policy and controls. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM020.09 (community service): The regional-park report says land has likely already experienced uplift from growth-area policy and controls. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM020.10 (sequencing risk): The regional-park report says land has likely already experienced uplift from growth-area policy and controls. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM021.01 (land budget): The Urban Growth Zone manages transition from non-urban land to urban land in accordance with a PSP. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM021.02 (statutory control): The Urban Growth Zone manages transition from non-urban land to urban land in accordance with a PSP. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM021.03 (public acquisition): The Urban Growth Zone manages transition from non-urban land to urban land in accordance with a PSP. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM021.04 (cash flow): The Urban Growth Zone manages transition from non-urban land to urban land in accordance with a PSP. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM021.05 (open-space network): The Urban Growth Zone manages transition from non-urban land to urban land in accordance with a PSP. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM021.06 (transport crossing): The Urban Growth Zone manages transition from non-urban land to urban land in accordance with a PSP. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM021.07 (development yield): The Urban Growth Zone manages transition from non-urban land to urban land in accordance with a PSP. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM021.08 (environmental risk): The Urban Growth Zone manages transition from non-urban land to urban land in accordance with a PSP. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM021.09 (community service): The Urban Growth Zone manages transition from non-urban land to urban land in accordance with a PSP. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM021.10 (sequencing risk): The Urban Growth Zone manages transition from non-urban land to urban land in accordance with a PSP. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM022.01 (land budget): The Urban Growth Zone prevents premature use or development that may prejudice future urban use and development. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM022.02 (statutory control): The Urban Growth Zone prevents premature use or development that may prejudice future urban use and development. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM022.03 (public acquisition): The Urban Growth Zone prevents premature use or development that may prejudice future urban use and development. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM022.04 (cash flow): The Urban Growth Zone prevents premature use or development that may prejudice future urban use and development. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM022.05 (open-space network): The Urban Growth Zone prevents premature use or development that may prejudice future urban use and development. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM022.06 (transport crossing): The Urban Growth Zone prevents premature use or development that may prejudice future urban use and development. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM022.07 (development yield): The Urban Growth Zone prevents premature use or development that may prejudice future urban use and development. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM022.08 (environmental risk): The Urban Growth Zone prevents premature use or development that may prejudice future urban use and development. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM022.09 (community service): The Urban Growth Zone prevents premature use or development that may prejudice future urban use and development. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM022.10 (sequencing risk): The Urban Growth Zone prevents premature use or development that may prejudice future urban use and development. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM023.01 (land budget): Public Conservation and Resource Zone is identified as suitable for conservation-oriented regional park land. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM023.02 (statutory control): Public Conservation and Resource Zone is identified as suitable for conservation-oriented regional park land. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM023.03 (public acquisition): Public Conservation and Resource Zone is identified as suitable for conservation-oriented regional park land. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM023.04 (cash flow): Public Conservation and Resource Zone is identified as suitable for conservation-oriented regional park land. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM023.05 (open-space network): Public Conservation and Resource Zone is identified as suitable for conservation-oriented regional park land. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM023.06 (transport crossing): Public Conservation and Resource Zone is identified as suitable for conservation-oriented regional park land. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM023.07 (development yield): Public Conservation and Resource Zone is identified as suitable for conservation-oriented regional park land. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM023.08 (environmental risk): Public Conservation and Resource Zone is identified as suitable for conservation-oriented regional park land. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM023.09 (community service): Public Conservation and Resource Zone is identified as suitable for conservation-oriented regional park land. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM023.10 (sequencing risk): Public Conservation and Resource Zone is identified as suitable for conservation-oriented regional park land. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM024.01 (land budget): Public Park and Recreation Zone is identified as suitable for recreation-oriented regional park land. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM024.02 (statutory control): Public Park and Recreation Zone is identified as suitable for recreation-oriented regional park land. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM024.03 (public acquisition): Public Park and Recreation Zone is identified as suitable for recreation-oriented regional park land. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM024.04 (cash flow): Public Park and Recreation Zone is identified as suitable for recreation-oriented regional park land. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM024.05 (open-space network): Public Park and Recreation Zone is identified as suitable for recreation-oriented regional park land. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM024.06 (transport crossing): Public Park and Recreation Zone is identified as suitable for recreation-oriented regional park land. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM024.07 (development yield): Public Park and Recreation Zone is identified as suitable for recreation-oriented regional park land. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM024.08 (environmental risk): Public Park and Recreation Zone is identified as suitable for recreation-oriented regional park land. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM024.09 (community service): Public Park and Recreation Zone is identified as suitable for recreation-oriented regional park land. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM024.10 (sequencing risk): Public Park and Recreation Zone is identified as suitable for recreation-oriented regional park land. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM025.01 (land budget): PPRZ is described as less restrictive than PCRZ and better suited to formal recreation and some commercial uses. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM025.02 (statutory control): PPRZ is described as less restrictive than PCRZ and better suited to formal recreation and some commercial uses. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM025.03 (public acquisition): PPRZ is described as less restrictive than PCRZ and better suited to formal recreation and some commercial uses. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM025.04 (cash flow): PPRZ is described as less restrictive than PCRZ and better suited to formal recreation and some commercial uses. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM025.05 (open-space network): PPRZ is described as less restrictive than PCRZ and better suited to formal recreation and some commercial uses. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM025.06 (transport crossing): PPRZ is described as less restrictive than PCRZ and better suited to formal recreation and some commercial uses. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM025.07 (development yield): PPRZ is described as less restrictive than PCRZ and better suited to formal recreation and some commercial uses. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM025.08 (environmental risk): PPRZ is described as less restrictive than PCRZ and better suited to formal recreation and some commercial uses. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM025.09 (community service): PPRZ is described as less restrictive than PCRZ and better suited to formal recreation and some commercial uses. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM025.10 (sequencing risk): PPRZ is described as less restrictive than PCRZ and better suited to formal recreation and some commercial uses. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM026.01 (land budget): The Yarra Valley Water treatment station is zoned Public Use Zone Schedule 1. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM026.02 (statutory control): The Yarra Valley Water treatment station is zoned Public Use Zone Schedule 1. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM026.03 (public acquisition): The Yarra Valley Water treatment station is zoned Public Use Zone Schedule 1. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM026.04 (cash flow): The Yarra Valley Water treatment station is zoned Public Use Zone Schedule 1. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM026.05 (open-space network): The Yarra Valley Water treatment station is zoned Public Use Zone Schedule 1. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM026.06 (transport crossing): The Yarra Valley Water treatment station is zoned Public Use Zone Schedule 1. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM026.07 (development yield): The Yarra Valley Water treatment station is zoned Public Use Zone Schedule 1. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM026.08 (environmental risk): The Yarra Valley Water treatment station is zoned Public Use Zone Schedule 1. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM026.09 (community service): The Yarra Valley Water treatment station is zoned Public Use Zone Schedule 1. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM026.10 (sequencing risk): The Yarra Valley Water treatment station is zoned Public Use Zone Schedule 1. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM027.01 (land budget): Some treatment-station land may be incorporated into the regional park as encumbered open space. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM027.02 (statutory control): Some treatment-station land may be incorporated into the regional park as encumbered open space. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM027.03 (public acquisition): Some treatment-station land may be incorporated into the regional park as encumbered open space. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM027.04 (cash flow): Some treatment-station land may be incorporated into the regional park as encumbered open space. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM027.05 (open-space network): Some treatment-station land may be incorporated into the regional park as encumbered open space. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM027.06 (transport crossing): Some treatment-station land may be incorporated into the regional park as encumbered open space. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM027.07 (development yield): Some treatment-station land may be incorporated into the regional park as encumbered open space. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM027.08 (environmental risk): Some treatment-station land may be incorporated into the regional park as encumbered open space. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM027.09 (community service): Some treatment-station land may be incorporated into the regional park as encumbered open space. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM027.10 (sequencing risk): Some treatment-station land may be incorporated into the regional park as encumbered open space. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM028.01 (land budget): The regional park should link Merri Creek, Herne Swamp, burrung buluk, Kalkallo Creek, Mount Fraser and Spring Hill. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM028.02 (statutory control): The regional park should link Merri Creek, Herne Swamp, burrung buluk, Kalkallo Creek, Mount Fraser and Spring Hill. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM028.03 (public acquisition): The regional park should link Merri Creek, Herne Swamp, burrung buluk, Kalkallo Creek, Mount Fraser and Spring Hill. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM028.04 (cash flow): The regional park should link Merri Creek, Herne Swamp, burrung buluk, Kalkallo Creek, Mount Fraser and Spring Hill. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM028.05 (open-space network): The regional park should link Merri Creek, Herne Swamp, burrung buluk, Kalkallo Creek, Mount Fraser and Spring Hill. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM028.06 (transport crossing): The regional park should link Merri Creek, Herne Swamp, burrung buluk, Kalkallo Creek, Mount Fraser and Spring Hill. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM028.07 (development yield): The regional park should link Merri Creek, Herne Swamp, burrung buluk, Kalkallo Creek, Mount Fraser and Spring Hill. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM028.08 (environmental risk): The regional park should link Merri Creek, Herne Swamp, burrung buluk, Kalkallo Creek, Mount Fraser and Spring Hill. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM028.09 (community service): The regional park should link Merri Creek, Herne Swamp, burrung buluk, Kalkallo Creek, Mount Fraser and Spring Hill. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM028.10 (sequencing risk): The regional park should link Merri Creek, Herne Swamp, burrung buluk, Kalkallo Creek, Mount Fraser and Spring Hill. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM029.01 (land budget): The regional-park report says links would protect culturally significant waterways and support Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung access. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM029.02 (statutory control): The regional-park report says links would protect culturally significant waterways and support Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung access. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM029.03 (public acquisition): The regional-park report says links would protect culturally significant waterways and support Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung access. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM029.04 (cash flow): The regional-park report says links would protect culturally significant waterways and support Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung access. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM029.05 (open-space network): The regional-park report says links would protect culturally significant waterways and support Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung access. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM029.06 (transport crossing): The regional-park report says links would protect culturally significant waterways and support Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung access. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM029.07 (development yield): The regional-park report says links would protect culturally significant waterways and support Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung access. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM029.08 (environmental risk): The regional-park report says links would protect culturally significant waterways and support Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung access. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM029.09 (community service): The regional-park report says links would protect culturally significant waterways and support Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung access. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM029.10 (sequencing risk): The regional-park report says links would protect culturally significant waterways and support Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung access. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM030.01 (land budget): The regional-park report identifies Hume Freeway, Northern Highway and the railway as significant transport barriers. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM030.02 (statutory control): The regional-park report identifies Hume Freeway, Northern Highway and the railway as significant transport barriers. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM030.03 (public acquisition): The regional-park report identifies Hume Freeway, Northern Highway and the railway as significant transport barriers. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM030.04 (cash flow): The regional-park report identifies Hume Freeway, Northern Highway and the railway as significant transport barriers. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM030.05 (open-space network): The regional-park report identifies Hume Freeway, Northern Highway and the railway as significant transport barriers. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM030.06 (transport crossing): The regional-park report identifies Hume Freeway, Northern Highway and the railway as significant transport barriers. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM030.07 (development yield): The regional-park report identifies Hume Freeway, Northern Highway and the railway as significant transport barriers. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM030.08 (environmental risk): The regional-park report identifies Hume Freeway, Northern Highway and the railway as significant transport barriers. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM030.09 (community service): The regional-park report identifies Hume Freeway, Northern Highway and the railway as significant transport barriers. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM030.10 (sequencing risk): The regional-park report identifies Hume Freeway, Northern Highway and the railway as significant transport barriers. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM031.01 (land budget): Mansfield Road is an existing Hume Freeway crossing in the northern section of the park study area. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM031.02 (statutory control): Mansfield Road is an existing Hume Freeway crossing in the northern section of the park study area. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM031.03 (public acquisition): Mansfield Road is an existing Hume Freeway crossing in the northern section of the park study area. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM031.04 (cash flow): Mansfield Road is an existing Hume Freeway crossing in the northern section of the park study area. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM031.05 (open-space network): Mansfield Road is an existing Hume Freeway crossing in the northern section of the park study area. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM031.06 (transport crossing): Mansfield Road is an existing Hume Freeway crossing in the northern section of the park study area. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM031.07 (development yield): Mansfield Road is an existing Hume Freeway crossing in the northern section of the park study area. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM031.08 (environmental risk): Mansfield Road is an existing Hume Freeway crossing in the northern section of the park study area. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM031.09 (community service): Mansfield Road is an existing Hume Freeway crossing in the northern section of the park study area. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM031.10 (sequencing risk): Mansfield Road is an existing Hume Freeway crossing in the northern section of the park study area. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM032.01 (land budget): Crossing Hume Freeway, Northern Highway, the future freight terminal and the Melbourne-Sydney Railway will require significant infrastructure investment. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM032.02 (statutory control): Crossing Hume Freeway, Northern Highway, the future freight terminal and the Melbourne-Sydney Railway will require significant infrastructure investment. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM032.03 (public acquisition): Crossing Hume Freeway, Northern Highway, the future freight terminal and the Melbourne-Sydney Railway will require significant infrastructure investment. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM032.04 (cash flow): Crossing Hume Freeway, Northern Highway, the future freight terminal and the Melbourne-Sydney Railway will require significant infrastructure investment. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM032.05 (open-space network): Crossing Hume Freeway, Northern Highway, the future freight terminal and the Melbourne-Sydney Railway will require significant infrastructure investment. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM032.06 (transport crossing): Crossing Hume Freeway, Northern Highway, the future freight terminal and the Melbourne-Sydney Railway will require significant infrastructure investment. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM032.07 (development yield): Crossing Hume Freeway, Northern Highway, the future freight terminal and the Melbourne-Sydney Railway will require significant infrastructure investment. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM032.08 (environmental risk): Crossing Hume Freeway, Northern Highway, the future freight terminal and the Melbourne-Sydney Railway will require significant infrastructure investment. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM032.09 (community service): Crossing Hume Freeway, Northern Highway, the future freight terminal and the Melbourne-Sydney Railway will require significant infrastructure investment. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM032.10 (sequencing risk): Crossing Hume Freeway, Northern Highway, the future freight terminal and the Melbourne-Sydney Railway will require significant infrastructure investment. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM033.01 (land budget): The future OMR/E6 corridor will create challenges for links between Kalkallo Creek, the Kalkallo Creek retarding basin and marram baba Regional Parklands. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM033.02 (statutory control): The future OMR/E6 corridor will create challenges for links between Kalkallo Creek, the Kalkallo Creek retarding basin and marram baba Regional Parklands. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM033.03 (public acquisition): The future OMR/E6 corridor will create challenges for links between Kalkallo Creek, the Kalkallo Creek retarding basin and marram baba Regional Parklands. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM033.04 (cash flow): The future OMR/E6 corridor will create challenges for links between Kalkallo Creek, the Kalkallo Creek retarding basin and marram baba Regional Parklands. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM033.05 (open-space network): The future OMR/E6 corridor will create challenges for links between Kalkallo Creek, the Kalkallo Creek retarding basin and marram baba Regional Parklands. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM033.06 (transport crossing): The future OMR/E6 corridor will create challenges for links between Kalkallo Creek, the Kalkallo Creek retarding basin and marram baba Regional Parklands. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM033.07 (development yield): The future OMR/E6 corridor will create challenges for links between Kalkallo Creek, the Kalkallo Creek retarding basin and marram baba Regional Parklands. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM033.08 (environmental risk): The future OMR/E6 corridor will create challenges for links between Kalkallo Creek, the Kalkallo Creek retarding basin and marram baba Regional Parklands. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM033.09 (community service): The future OMR/E6 corridor will create challenges for links between Kalkallo Creek, the Kalkallo Creek retarding basin and marram baba Regional Parklands. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM033.10 (sequencing risk): The future OMR/E6 corridor will create challenges for links between Kalkallo Creek, the Kalkallo Creek retarding basin and marram baba Regional Parklands. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM034.01 (land budget): Shared trail and biodiversity corridor links should help shape OMR design criteria. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM034.02 (statutory control): Shared trail and biodiversity corridor links should help shape OMR design criteria. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM034.03 (public acquisition): Shared trail and biodiversity corridor links should help shape OMR design criteria. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM034.04 (cash flow): Shared trail and biodiversity corridor links should help shape OMR design criteria. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM034.05 (open-space network): Shared trail and biodiversity corridor links should help shape OMR design criteria. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM034.06 (transport crossing): Shared trail and biodiversity corridor links should help shape OMR design criteria. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM034.07 (development yield): Shared trail and biodiversity corridor links should help shape OMR design criteria. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM034.08 (environmental risk): Shared trail and biodiversity corridor links should help shape OMR design criteria. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM034.09 (community service): Shared trail and biodiversity corridor links should help shape OMR design criteria. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM034.10 (sequencing risk): Shared trail and biodiversity corridor links should help shape OMR design criteria. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- EM035.01 (land budget): Beveridge was forecast at 9,082 people in 2025. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM035.02 (statutory control): Beveridge was forecast at 9,082 people in 2025. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM035.03 (public acquisition): Beveridge was forecast at 9,082 people in 2025. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM035.04 (cash flow): Beveridge was forecast at 9,082 people in 2025. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM035.05 (open-space network): Beveridge was forecast at 9,082 people in 2025. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM035.06 (transport crossing): Beveridge was forecast at 9,082 people in 2025. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM035.07 (development yield): Beveridge was forecast at 9,082 people in 2025. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM035.08 (environmental risk): Beveridge was forecast at 9,082 people in 2025. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM035.09 (community service): Beveridge was forecast at 9,082 people in 2025. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM035.10 (sequencing risk): Beveridge was forecast at 9,082 people in 2025. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM036.01 (land budget): Beveridge was forecast at 104,066 people in 2045. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM036.02 (statutory control): Beveridge was forecast at 104,066 people in 2045. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM036.03 (public acquisition): Beveridge was forecast at 104,066 people in 2045. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM036.04 (cash flow): Beveridge was forecast at 104,066 people in 2045. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM036.05 (open-space network): Beveridge was forecast at 104,066 people in 2045. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM036.06 (transport crossing): Beveridge was forecast at 104,066 people in 2045. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM036.07 (development yield): Beveridge was forecast at 104,066 people in 2045. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM036.08 (environmental risk): Beveridge was forecast at 104,066 people in 2045. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM036.09 (community service): Beveridge was forecast at 104,066 people in 2045. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM036.10 (sequencing risk): Beveridge was forecast at 104,066 people in 2045. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM037.01 (land budget): The Asset Plan reports Beveridge growth of 1,045.9 percent between 2025 and 2045. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM037.02 (statutory control): The Asset Plan reports Beveridge growth of 1,045.9 percent between 2025 and 2045. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM037.03 (public acquisition): The Asset Plan reports Beveridge growth of 1,045.9 percent between 2025 and 2045. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM037.04 (cash flow): The Asset Plan reports Beveridge growth of 1,045.9 percent between 2025 and 2045. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM037.05 (open-space network): The Asset Plan reports Beveridge growth of 1,045.9 percent between 2025 and 2045. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM037.06 (transport crossing): The Asset Plan reports Beveridge growth of 1,045.9 percent between 2025 and 2045. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM037.07 (development yield): The Asset Plan reports Beveridge growth of 1,045.9 percent between 2025 and 2045. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM037.08 (environmental risk): The Asset Plan reports Beveridge growth of 1,045.9 percent between 2025 and 2045. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM037.09 (community service): The Asset Plan reports Beveridge growth of 1,045.9 percent between 2025 and 2045. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM037.10 (sequencing risk): The Asset Plan reports Beveridge growth of 1,045.9 percent between 2025 and 2045. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM038.01 (land budget): Mitchell Shire was forecast from 64,175 people in 2025 to 209,508 people in 2045. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM038.02 (statutory control): Mitchell Shire was forecast from 64,175 people in 2025 to 209,508 people in 2045. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM038.03 (public acquisition): Mitchell Shire was forecast from 64,175 people in 2025 to 209,508 people in 2045. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM038.04 (cash flow): Mitchell Shire was forecast from 64,175 people in 2025 to 209,508 people in 2045. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM038.05 (open-space network): Mitchell Shire was forecast from 64,175 people in 2025 to 209,508 people in 2045. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM038.06 (transport crossing): Mitchell Shire was forecast from 64,175 people in 2025 to 209,508 people in 2045. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM038.07 (development yield): Mitchell Shire was forecast from 64,175 people in 2025 to 209,508 people in 2045. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM038.08 (environmental risk): Mitchell Shire was forecast from 64,175 people in 2025 to 209,508 people in 2045. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM038.09 (community service): Mitchell Shire was forecast from 64,175 people in 2025 to 209,508 people in 2045. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM038.10 (sequencing risk): Mitchell Shire was forecast from 64,175 people in 2025 to 209,508 people in 2045. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM039.01 (land budget): Growth-related investments are funded predominantly through grants, developer contributions and borrowing. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM039.02 (statutory control): Growth-related investments are funded predominantly through grants, developer contributions and borrowing. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM039.03 (public acquisition): Growth-related investments are funded predominantly through grants, developer contributions and borrowing. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM039.04 (cash flow): Growth-related investments are funded predominantly through grants, developer contributions and borrowing. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM039.05 (open-space network): Growth-related investments are funded predominantly through grants, developer contributions and borrowing. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM039.06 (transport crossing): Growth-related investments are funded predominantly through grants, developer contributions and borrowing. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM039.07 (development yield): Growth-related investments are funded predominantly through grants, developer contributions and borrowing. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM039.08 (environmental risk): Growth-related investments are funded predominantly through grants, developer contributions and borrowing. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM039.09 (community service): Growth-related investments are funded predominantly through grants, developer contributions and borrowing. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM039.10 (sequencing risk): Growth-related investments are funded predominantly through grants, developer contributions and borrowing. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM040.01 (land budget): The Asset Plan says this approach has minimal reliance on Council cash. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM040.02 (statutory control): The Asset Plan says this approach has minimal reliance on Council cash. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM040.03 (public acquisition): The Asset Plan says this approach has minimal reliance on Council cash. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM040.04 (cash flow): The Asset Plan says this approach has minimal reliance on Council cash. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM040.05 (open-space network): The Asset Plan says this approach has minimal reliance on Council cash. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM040.06 (transport crossing): The Asset Plan says this approach has minimal reliance on Council cash. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM040.07 (development yield): The Asset Plan says this approach has minimal reliance on Council cash. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM040.08 (environmental risk): The Asset Plan says this approach has minimal reliance on Council cash. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM040.09 (community service): The Asset Plan says this approach has minimal reliance on Council cash. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM040.10 (sequencing risk): The Asset Plan says this approach has minimal reliance on Council cash. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- EM041.01 (land budget): Beveridge Recreation Reserve has a community centre, two tennis courts and pony club facilities. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM041.02 (statutory control): Beveridge Recreation Reserve has a community centre, two tennis courts and pony club facilities. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM041.03 (public acquisition): Beveridge Recreation Reserve has a community centre, two tennis courts and pony club facilities. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM041.04 (cash flow): Beveridge Recreation Reserve has a community centre, two tennis courts and pony club facilities. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM041.05 (open-space network): Beveridge Recreation Reserve has a community centre, two tennis courts and pony club facilities. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM041.06 (transport crossing): Beveridge Recreation Reserve has a community centre, two tennis courts and pony club facilities. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM041.07 (development yield): Beveridge Recreation Reserve has a community centre, two tennis courts and pony club facilities. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM041.08 (environmental risk): Beveridge Recreation Reserve has a community centre, two tennis courts and pony club facilities. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM041.09 (community service): Beveridge Recreation Reserve has a community centre, two tennis courts and pony club facilities. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM041.10 (sequencing risk): Beveridge Recreation Reserve has a community centre, two tennis courts and pony club facilities. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM042.01 (land budget): Beveridge active reserve concepts respond to a projected population of more than 30,000 by 2036. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM042.02 (statutory control): Beveridge active reserve concepts respond to a projected population of more than 30,000 by 2036. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM042.03 (public acquisition): Beveridge active reserve concepts respond to a projected population of more than 30,000 by 2036. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM042.04 (cash flow): Beveridge active reserve concepts respond to a projected population of more than 30,000 by 2036. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM042.05 (open-space network): Beveridge active reserve concepts respond to a projected population of more than 30,000 by 2036. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM042.06 (transport crossing): Beveridge active reserve concepts respond to a projected population of more than 30,000 by 2036. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM042.07 (development yield): Beveridge active reserve concepts respond to a projected population of more than 30,000 by 2036. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM042.08 (environmental risk): Beveridge active reserve concepts respond to a projected population of more than 30,000 by 2036. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM042.09 (community service): Beveridge active reserve concepts respond to a projected population of more than 30,000 by 2036. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM042.10 (sequencing risk): Beveridge active reserve concepts respond to a projected population of more than 30,000 by 2036. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM043.01 (land budget): Beveridge sport infrastructure should respond to residential growth, community sport demand and funding availability. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM043.02 (statutory control): Beveridge sport infrastructure should respond to residential growth, community sport demand and funding availability. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM043.03 (public acquisition): Beveridge sport infrastructure should respond to residential growth, community sport demand and funding availability. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM043.04 (cash flow): Beveridge sport infrastructure should respond to residential growth, community sport demand and funding availability. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM043.05 (open-space network): Beveridge sport infrastructure should respond to residential growth, community sport demand and funding availability. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM043.06 (transport crossing): Beveridge sport infrastructure should respond to residential growth, community sport demand and funding availability. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM043.07 (development yield): Beveridge sport infrastructure should respond to residential growth, community sport demand and funding availability. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM043.08 (environmental risk): Beveridge sport infrastructure should respond to residential growth, community sport demand and funding availability. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM043.09 (community service): Beveridge sport infrastructure should respond to residential growth, community sport demand and funding availability. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM043.10 (sequencing risk): Beveridge sport infrastructure should respond to residential growth, community sport demand and funding availability. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM044.01 (land budget): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket and netball. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM044.02 (statutory control): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket and netball. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM044.03 (public acquisition): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket and netball. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM044.04 (cash flow): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket and netball. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM044.05 (open-space network): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket and netball. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM044.06 (transport crossing): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket and netball. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM044.07 (development yield): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket and netball. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM044.08 (environmental risk): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket and netball. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM044.09 (community service): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket and netball. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM044.10 (sequencing risk): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket and netball. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM045.01 (land budget): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends five Council and two purpose-built school soccer facilities. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM045.02 (statutory control): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends five Council and two purpose-built school soccer facilities. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM045.03 (public acquisition): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends five Council and two purpose-built school soccer facilities. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM045.04 (cash flow): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends five Council and two purpose-built school soccer facilities. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM045.05 (open-space network): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends five Council and two purpose-built school soccer facilities. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM045.06 (transport crossing): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends five Council and two purpose-built school soccer facilities. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM045.07 (development yield): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends five Council and two purpose-built school soccer facilities. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM045.08 (environmental risk): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends five Council and two purpose-built school soccer facilities. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM045.09 (community service): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends five Council and two purpose-built school soccer facilities. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM045.10 (sequencing risk): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends five Council and two purpose-built school soccer facilities. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM046.01 (land budget): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends one eight-court tennis facility. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM046.02 (statutory control): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends one eight-court tennis facility. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM046.03 (public acquisition): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends one eight-court tennis facility. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM046.04 (cash flow): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends one eight-court tennis facility. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM046.05 (open-space network): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends one eight-court tennis facility. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM046.06 (transport crossing): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends one eight-court tennis facility. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM046.07 (development yield): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends one eight-court tennis facility. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM046.08 (environmental risk): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends one eight-court tennis facility. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM046.09 (community service): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends one eight-court tennis facility. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM046.10 (sequencing risk): The Sports Field Feasibility Study recommends one eight-court tennis facility. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM047.01 (land budget): The recommended Beveridge facilities rely on Beveridge reaching 30,000 people in 2036 and 80,000 people by 2054. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM047.02 (statutory control): The recommended Beveridge facilities rely on Beveridge reaching 30,000 people in 2036 and 80,000 people by 2054. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM047.03 (public acquisition): The recommended Beveridge facilities rely on Beveridge reaching 30,000 people in 2036 and 80,000 people by 2054. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM047.04 (cash flow): The recommended Beveridge facilities rely on Beveridge reaching 30,000 people in 2036 and 80,000 people by 2054. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM047.05 (open-space network): The recommended Beveridge facilities rely on Beveridge reaching 30,000 people in 2036 and 80,000 people by 2054. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM047.06 (transport crossing): The recommended Beveridge facilities rely on Beveridge reaching 30,000 people in 2036 and 80,000 people by 2054. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM047.07 (development yield): The recommended Beveridge facilities rely on Beveridge reaching 30,000 people in 2036 and 80,000 people by 2054. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM047.08 (environmental risk): The recommended Beveridge facilities rely on Beveridge reaching 30,000 people in 2036 and 80,000 people by 2054. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM047.09 (community service): The recommended Beveridge facilities rely on Beveridge reaching 30,000 people in 2036 and 80,000 people by 2054. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM047.10 (sequencing risk): The recommended Beveridge facilities rely on Beveridge reaching 30,000 people in 2036 and 80,000 people by 2054. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM048.01 (land budget): Community use of school facilities is crucial to local sporting competition and training needs. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM048.02 (statutory control): Community use of school facilities is crucial to local sporting competition and training needs. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM048.03 (public acquisition): Community use of school facilities is crucial to local sporting competition and training needs. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM048.04 (cash flow): Community use of school facilities is crucial to local sporting competition and training needs. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM048.05 (open-space network): Community use of school facilities is crucial to local sporting competition and training needs. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM048.06 (transport crossing): Community use of school facilities is crucial to local sporting competition and training needs. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM048.07 (development yield): Community use of school facilities is crucial to local sporting competition and training needs. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM048.08 (environmental risk): Community use of school facilities is crucial to local sporting competition and training needs. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM048.09 (community service): Community use of school facilities is crucial to local sporting competition and training needs. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM048.10 (sequencing risk): Community use of school facilities is crucial to local sporting competition and training needs. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- EM049.01 (land budget): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 2024 Beveridge population at 9,120. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM049.02 (statutory control): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 2024 Beveridge population at 9,120. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM049.03 (public acquisition): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 2024 Beveridge population at 9,120. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM049.04 (cash flow): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 2024 Beveridge population at 9,120. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM049.05 (open-space network): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 2024 Beveridge population at 9,120. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM049.06 (transport crossing): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 2024 Beveridge population at 9,120. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM049.07 (development yield): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 2024 Beveridge population at 9,120. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM049.08 (environmental risk): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 2024 Beveridge population at 9,120. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM049.09 (community service): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 2024 Beveridge population at 9,120. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM049.10 (sequencing risk): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 2024 Beveridge population at 9,120. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM050.01 (land budget): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 639 cricket participants and 42 cricket teams in 2024. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM050.02 (statutory control): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 639 cricket participants and 42 cricket teams in 2024. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM050.03 (public acquisition): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 639 cricket participants and 42 cricket teams in 2024. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM050.04 (cash flow): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 639 cricket participants and 42 cricket teams in 2024. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM050.05 (open-space network): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 639 cricket participants and 42 cricket teams in 2024. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM050.06 (transport crossing): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 639 cricket participants and 42 cricket teams in 2024. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM050.07 (development yield): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 639 cricket participants and 42 cricket teams in 2024. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM050.08 (environmental risk): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 639 cricket participants and 42 cricket teams in 2024. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM050.09 (community service): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 639 cricket participants and 42 cricket teams in 2024. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM050.10 (sequencing risk): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 639 cricket participants and 42 cricket teams in 2024. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM051.01 (land budget): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 1,322 soccer participants and 88 soccer teams in 2024. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM051.02 (statutory control): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 1,322 soccer participants and 88 soccer teams in 2024. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM051.03 (public acquisition): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 1,322 soccer participants and 88 soccer teams in 2024. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM051.04 (cash flow): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 1,322 soccer participants and 88 soccer teams in 2024. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM051.05 (open-space network): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 1,322 soccer participants and 88 soccer teams in 2024. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM051.06 (transport crossing): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 1,322 soccer participants and 88 soccer teams in 2024. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM051.07 (development yield): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 1,322 soccer participants and 88 soccer teams in 2024. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM051.08 (environmental risk): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 1,322 soccer participants and 88 soccer teams in 2024. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM051.09 (community service): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 1,322 soccer participants and 88 soccer teams in 2024. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM051.10 (sequencing risk): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated 1,322 soccer participants and 88 soccer teams in 2024. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM052.01 (land budget): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for six cricket ovals. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM052.02 (statutory control): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for six cricket ovals. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM052.03 (public acquisition): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for six cricket ovals. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM052.04 (cash flow): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for six cricket ovals. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM052.05 (open-space network): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for six cricket ovals. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM052.06 (transport crossing): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for six cricket ovals. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM052.07 (development yield): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for six cricket ovals. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM052.08 (environmental risk): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for six cricket ovals. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM052.09 (community service): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for six cricket ovals. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM052.10 (sequencing risk): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for six cricket ovals. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM053.01 (land budget): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for eleven soccer pitches. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM053.02 (statutory control): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for eleven soccer pitches. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM053.03 (public acquisition): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for eleven soccer pitches. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM053.04 (cash flow): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for eleven soccer pitches. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM053.05 (open-space network): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for eleven soccer pitches. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM053.06 (transport crossing): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for eleven soccer pitches. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM053.07 (development yield): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for eleven soccer pitches. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM053.08 (environmental risk): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for eleven soccer pitches. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM053.09 (community service): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for eleven soccer pitches. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM053.10 (sequencing risk): The Beveridge Central active open space plan estimated a 2024 requirement for eleven soccer pitches. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM054.01 (land budget): Longer-term tennis provision is expected in growth areas including Beveridge North East PSP. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM054.02 (statutory control): Longer-term tennis provision is expected in growth areas including Beveridge North East PSP. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM054.03 (public acquisition): Longer-term tennis provision is expected in growth areas including Beveridge North East PSP. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM054.04 (cash flow): Longer-term tennis provision is expected in growth areas including Beveridge North East PSP. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM054.05 (open-space network): Longer-term tennis provision is expected in growth areas including Beveridge North East PSP. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM054.06 (transport crossing): Longer-term tennis provision is expected in growth areas including Beveridge North East PSP. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM054.07 (development yield): Longer-term tennis provision is expected in growth areas including Beveridge North East PSP. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM054.08 (environmental risk): Longer-term tennis provision is expected in growth areas including Beveridge North East PSP. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM054.09 (community service): Longer-term tennis provision is expected in growth areas including Beveridge North East PSP. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM054.10 (sequencing risk): Longer-term tennis provision is expected in growth areas including Beveridge North East PSP. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)
- EM055.01 (land budget): The Urban Forest Strategy says Beveridge will experience the most significant growth over coming decades. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM055.02 (statutory control): The Urban Forest Strategy says Beveridge will experience the most significant growth over coming decades. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM055.03 (public acquisition): The Urban Forest Strategy says Beveridge will experience the most significant growth over coming decades. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM055.04 (cash flow): The Urban Forest Strategy says Beveridge will experience the most significant growth over coming decades. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM055.05 (open-space network): The Urban Forest Strategy says Beveridge will experience the most significant growth over coming decades. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM055.06 (transport crossing): The Urban Forest Strategy says Beveridge will experience the most significant growth over coming decades. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM055.07 (development yield): The Urban Forest Strategy says Beveridge will experience the most significant growth over coming decades. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM055.08 (environmental risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says Beveridge will experience the most significant growth over coming decades. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM055.09 (community service): The Urban Forest Strategy says Beveridge will experience the most significant growth over coming decades. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM055.10 (sequencing risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says Beveridge will experience the most significant growth over coming decades. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM056.01 (land budget): The Urban Forest Strategy says growth-area development can remove tree and vegetation cover. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM056.02 (statutory control): The Urban Forest Strategy says growth-area development can remove tree and vegetation cover. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM056.03 (public acquisition): The Urban Forest Strategy says growth-area development can remove tree and vegetation cover. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM056.04 (cash flow): The Urban Forest Strategy says growth-area development can remove tree and vegetation cover. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM056.05 (open-space network): The Urban Forest Strategy says growth-area development can remove tree and vegetation cover. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM056.06 (transport crossing): The Urban Forest Strategy says growth-area development can remove tree and vegetation cover. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM056.07 (development yield): The Urban Forest Strategy says growth-area development can remove tree and vegetation cover. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM056.08 (environmental risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says growth-area development can remove tree and vegetation cover. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM056.09 (community service): The Urban Forest Strategy says growth-area development can remove tree and vegetation cover. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM056.10 (sequencing risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says growth-area development can remove tree and vegetation cover. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM057.01 (land budget): The Urban Forest Strategy says the area is predominantly rezoned agricultural land previously cleared of most canopy. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM057.02 (statutory control): The Urban Forest Strategy says the area is predominantly rezoned agricultural land previously cleared of most canopy. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM057.03 (public acquisition): The Urban Forest Strategy says the area is predominantly rezoned agricultural land previously cleared of most canopy. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM057.04 (cash flow): The Urban Forest Strategy says the area is predominantly rezoned agricultural land previously cleared of most canopy. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM057.05 (open-space network): The Urban Forest Strategy says the area is predominantly rezoned agricultural land previously cleared of most canopy. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM057.06 (transport crossing): The Urban Forest Strategy says the area is predominantly rezoned agricultural land previously cleared of most canopy. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM057.07 (development yield): The Urban Forest Strategy says the area is predominantly rezoned agricultural land previously cleared of most canopy. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM057.08 (environmental risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says the area is predominantly rezoned agricultural land previously cleared of most canopy. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM057.09 (community service): The Urban Forest Strategy says the area is predominantly rezoned agricultural land previously cleared of most canopy. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM057.10 (sequencing risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says the area is predominantly rezoned agricultural land previously cleared of most canopy. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM058.01 (land budget): The Urban Forest Strategy says stands of significant-value trees remain. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM058.02 (statutory control): The Urban Forest Strategy says stands of significant-value trees remain. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM058.03 (public acquisition): The Urban Forest Strategy says stands of significant-value trees remain. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM058.04 (cash flow): The Urban Forest Strategy says stands of significant-value trees remain. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM058.05 (open-space network): The Urban Forest Strategy says stands of significant-value trees remain. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM058.06 (transport crossing): The Urban Forest Strategy says stands of significant-value trees remain. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM058.07 (development yield): The Urban Forest Strategy says stands of significant-value trees remain. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM058.08 (environmental risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says stands of significant-value trees remain. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM058.09 (community service): The Urban Forest Strategy says stands of significant-value trees remain. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM058.10 (sequencing risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says stands of significant-value trees remain. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM059.01 (land budget): The Urban Forest Strategy says PSP assessment should prioritise high-vegetation-value areas for public use. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM059.02 (statutory control): The Urban Forest Strategy says PSP assessment should prioritise high-vegetation-value areas for public use. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM059.03 (public acquisition): The Urban Forest Strategy says PSP assessment should prioritise high-vegetation-value areas for public use. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM059.04 (cash flow): The Urban Forest Strategy says PSP assessment should prioritise high-vegetation-value areas for public use. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM059.05 (open-space network): The Urban Forest Strategy says PSP assessment should prioritise high-vegetation-value areas for public use. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM059.06 (transport crossing): The Urban Forest Strategy says PSP assessment should prioritise high-vegetation-value areas for public use. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM059.07 (development yield): The Urban Forest Strategy says PSP assessment should prioritise high-vegetation-value areas for public use. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM059.08 (environmental risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says PSP assessment should prioritise high-vegetation-value areas for public use. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM059.09 (community service): The Urban Forest Strategy says PSP assessment should prioritise high-vegetation-value areas for public use. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM059.10 (sequencing risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says PSP assessment should prioritise high-vegetation-value areas for public use. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM060.01 (land budget): The Urban Forest Strategy says 74 percent of the municipal area is privately owned freehold land. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM060.02 (statutory control): The Urban Forest Strategy says 74 percent of the municipal area is privately owned freehold land. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM060.03 (public acquisition): The Urban Forest Strategy says 74 percent of the municipal area is privately owned freehold land. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM060.04 (cash flow): The Urban Forest Strategy says 74 percent of the municipal area is privately owned freehold land. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM060.05 (open-space network): The Urban Forest Strategy says 74 percent of the municipal area is privately owned freehold land. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM060.06 (transport crossing): The Urban Forest Strategy says 74 percent of the municipal area is privately owned freehold land. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM060.07 (development yield): The Urban Forest Strategy says 74 percent of the municipal area is privately owned freehold land. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM060.08 (environmental risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says 74 percent of the municipal area is privately owned freehold land. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM060.09 (community service): The Urban Forest Strategy says 74 percent of the municipal area is privately owned freehold land. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM060.10 (sequencing risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says 74 percent of the municipal area is privately owned freehold land. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM061.01 (land budget): The Urban Forest Strategy says Crown and Council-owned land make up just 12 percent of the shire. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM061.02 (statutory control): The Urban Forest Strategy says Crown and Council-owned land make up just 12 percent of the shire. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM061.03 (public acquisition): The Urban Forest Strategy says Crown and Council-owned land make up just 12 percent of the shire. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM061.04 (cash flow): The Urban Forest Strategy says Crown and Council-owned land make up just 12 percent of the shire. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM061.05 (open-space network): The Urban Forest Strategy says Crown and Council-owned land make up just 12 percent of the shire. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM061.06 (transport crossing): The Urban Forest Strategy says Crown and Council-owned land make up just 12 percent of the shire. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM061.07 (development yield): The Urban Forest Strategy says Crown and Council-owned land make up just 12 percent of the shire. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM061.08 (environmental risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says Crown and Council-owned land make up just 12 percent of the shire. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM061.09 (community service): The Urban Forest Strategy says Crown and Council-owned land make up just 12 percent of the shire. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM061.10 (sequencing risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says Crown and Council-owned land make up just 12 percent of the shire. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM062.01 (land budget): The Urban Forest Strategy says 75 percent of Mitchell Shire’s urban forest is privately owned. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM062.02 (statutory control): The Urban Forest Strategy says 75 percent of Mitchell Shire’s urban forest is privately owned. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM062.03 (public acquisition): The Urban Forest Strategy says 75 percent of Mitchell Shire’s urban forest is privately owned. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM062.04 (cash flow): The Urban Forest Strategy says 75 percent of Mitchell Shire’s urban forest is privately owned. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM062.05 (open-space network): The Urban Forest Strategy says 75 percent of Mitchell Shire’s urban forest is privately owned. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM062.06 (transport crossing): The Urban Forest Strategy says 75 percent of Mitchell Shire’s urban forest is privately owned. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM062.07 (development yield): The Urban Forest Strategy says 75 percent of Mitchell Shire’s urban forest is privately owned. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM062.08 (environmental risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says 75 percent of Mitchell Shire’s urban forest is privately owned. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM062.09 (community service): The Urban Forest Strategy says 75 percent of Mitchell Shire’s urban forest is privately owned. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM062.10 (sequencing risk): The Urban Forest Strategy says 75 percent of Mitchell Shire’s urban forest is privately owned. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- EM063.01 (land budget): Affordable housing should be located where there is or will be access to amenities, services and public transport. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM063.02 (statutory control): Affordable housing should be located where there is or will be access to amenities, services and public transport. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM063.03 (public acquisition): Affordable housing should be located where there is or will be access to amenities, services and public transport. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM063.04 (cash flow): Affordable housing should be located where there is or will be access to amenities, services and public transport. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM063.05 (open-space network): Affordable housing should be located where there is or will be access to amenities, services and public transport. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM063.06 (transport crossing): Affordable housing should be located where there is or will be access to amenities, services and public transport. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM063.07 (development yield): Affordable housing should be located where there is or will be access to amenities, services and public transport. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM063.08 (environmental risk): Affordable housing should be located where there is or will be access to amenities, services and public transport. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM063.09 (community service): Affordable housing should be located where there is or will be access to amenities, services and public transport. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM063.10 (sequencing risk): Affordable housing should be located where there is or will be access to amenities, services and public transport. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM064.01 (land budget): Affordable housing not near appropriate amenities and services is discouraged. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM064.02 (statutory control): Affordable housing not near appropriate amenities and services is discouraged. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM064.03 (public acquisition): Affordable housing not near appropriate amenities and services is discouraged. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM064.04 (cash flow): Affordable housing not near appropriate amenities and services is discouraged. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM064.05 (open-space network): Affordable housing not near appropriate amenities and services is discouraged. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM064.06 (transport crossing): Affordable housing not near appropriate amenities and services is discouraged. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM064.07 (development yield): Affordable housing not near appropriate amenities and services is discouraged. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM064.08 (environmental risk): Affordable housing not near appropriate amenities and services is discouraged. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM064.09 (community service): Affordable housing not near appropriate amenities and services is discouraged. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM064.10 (sequencing risk): Affordable housing not near appropriate amenities and services is discouraged. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM065.01 (land budget): Affordable housing must be delivered in step with market housing. The land-budget consequence is that gross precinct area cannot be read as developable yield until this item is spatially deducted or protected. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM065.02 (statutory control): Affordable housing must be delivered in step with market housing. The statutory consequence is that the item needs a zone, overlay, incorporated-plan requirement, referral trigger or permit condition. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM065.03 (public acquisition): Affordable housing must be delivered in step with market housing. The acquisition consequence is that land should be secured before subdivision or policy uplift increases public cost. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM065.04 (cash flow): Affordable housing must be delivered in step with market housing. The cash-flow consequence is that grants, borrowing, developer contributions and works-in-kind need to match the year of demand. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM065.05 (open-space network): Affordable housing must be delivered in step with market housing. The network consequence is that local open space, regional parkland, waterways, schools and sports reserves must connect rather than sit as isolated fragments. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM065.06 (transport crossing): Affordable housing must be delivered in step with market housing. The crossing consequence is that road, rail and orbital barriers need funded links before the surrounding neighbourhoods can function as connected places. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM065.07 (development yield): Affordable housing must be delivered in step with market housing. The yield consequence is that residential feasibility is the remainder after public land, encumbrances and infrastructure are accounted for. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM065.08 (environmental risk): Affordable housing must be delivered in step with market housing. The environmental consequence is that swamp, quarry, waterway and canopy decisions must be made before urban edges harden. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM065.09 (community service): Affordable housing must be delivered in step with market housing. The service consequence is that population growth must be paired with schools, sport, transport, parks, community facilities and affordable housing. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- EM065.10 (sequencing risk): Affordable housing must be delivered in step with market housing. The sequencing consequence is that early PSP decisions are cheaper than late retrofits after gazettal, subdivision or construction. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
Stage Dependency Matrix
- SD01.01: To confirm PSP program and responsible authority, apply mechanism: PSP mapping converts broad growth policy into a developable land budget. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD01.02: To confirm PSP program and responsible authority, apply mechanism: ICP scheduling converts mapped public infrastructure into funding, land-transfer and works obligations. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD01.03: To confirm PSP program and responsible authority, apply mechanism: UGZ controls hold land against prejudicial development until the PSP structure is settled. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD01.04: To confirm PSP program and responsible authority, apply mechanism: Regional-park designation during PSP preparation is cheaper than post-uplift acquisition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD01.05: To confirm PSP program and responsible authority, apply mechanism: Mount Fraser is both a landscape anchor and a quarry-staging constraint. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD01.06: To confirm PSP program and responsible authority, apply mechanism: Herne’s Swamp is both ecological infrastructure and a likely developable-land deduction. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD01.07: To confirm PSP program and responsible authority, apply mechanism: The wastewater treatment plant can support an open-space network only where utility safety and access rules allow it. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD01.08: To confirm PSP program and responsible authority, apply mechanism: Freeways, highways, freight corridors and railways turn proximity into severance unless crossings are funded. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD01.09: To confirm PSP program and responsible authority, apply mechanism: Population-driven sport standards convert dwelling growth into land, pavilion, lighting and parking requirements. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD01.10: To confirm PSP program and responsible authority, apply mechanism: School shared use creates apparent capacity only after agreements, designs and operating access are secured. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD01.11: To confirm PSP program and responsible authority, apply mechanism: Private canopy loss makes PSP public-land tree protection more important. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD01.12: To confirm PSP program and responsible authority, apply mechanism: Affordable housing feasibility depends on transport and service access, not only dwelling price. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD02.01: To publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base, apply mechanism: PSP mapping converts broad growth policy into a developable land budget. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD02.02: To publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base, apply mechanism: ICP scheduling converts mapped public infrastructure into funding, land-transfer and works obligations. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD02.03: To publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base, apply mechanism: UGZ controls hold land against prejudicial development until the PSP structure is settled. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD02.04: To publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base, apply mechanism: Regional-park designation during PSP preparation is cheaper than post-uplift acquisition. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD02.05: To publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base, apply mechanism: Mount Fraser is both a landscape anchor and a quarry-staging constraint. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD02.06: To publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base, apply mechanism: Herne’s Swamp is both ecological infrastructure and a likely developable-land deduction. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD02.07: To publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base, apply mechanism: The wastewater treatment plant can support an open-space network only where utility safety and access rules allow it. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD02.08: To publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base, apply mechanism: Freeways, highways, freight corridors and railways turn proximity into severance unless crossings are funded. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD02.09: To publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base, apply mechanism: Population-driven sport standards convert dwelling growth into land, pavilion, lighting and parking requirements. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD02.10: To publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base, apply mechanism: School shared use creates apparent capacity only after agreements, designs and operating access are secured. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD02.11: To publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base, apply mechanism: Private canopy loss makes PSP public-land tree protection more important. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD02.12: To publish the precinct boundary and cadastral base, apply mechanism: Affordable housing feasibility depends on transport and service access, not only dwelling price. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD03.01: To map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers, apply mechanism: PSP mapping converts broad growth policy into a developable land budget. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD03.02: To map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers, apply mechanism: ICP scheduling converts mapped public infrastructure into funding, land-transfer and works obligations. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD03.03: To map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers, apply mechanism: UGZ controls hold land against prejudicial development until the PSP structure is settled. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD03.04: To map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers, apply mechanism: Regional-park designation during PSP preparation is cheaper than post-uplift acquisition. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD03.05: To map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers, apply mechanism: Mount Fraser is both a landscape anchor and a quarry-staging constraint. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD03.06: To map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers, apply mechanism: Herne’s Swamp is both ecological infrastructure and a likely developable-land deduction. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD03.07: To map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers, apply mechanism: The wastewater treatment plant can support an open-space network only where utility safety and access rules allow it. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD03.08: To map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers, apply mechanism: Freeways, highways, freight corridors and railways turn proximity into severance unless crossings are funded. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD03.09: To map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers, apply mechanism: Population-driven sport standards convert dwelling growth into land, pavilion, lighting and parking requirements. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD03.10: To map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers, apply mechanism: School shared use creates apparent capacity only after agreements, designs and operating access are secured. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD03.11: To map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers, apply mechanism: Private canopy loss makes PSP public-land tree protection more important. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD03.12: To map Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp, treatment plant, irrigation areas, quarry land and quarry buffers, apply mechanism: Affordable housing feasibility depends on transport and service access, not only dwelling price. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD04.01: To classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space, apply mechanism: PSP mapping converts broad growth policy into a developable land budget. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD04.02: To classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space, apply mechanism: ICP scheduling converts mapped public infrastructure into funding, land-transfer and works obligations. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD04.03: To classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space, apply mechanism: UGZ controls hold land against prejudicial development until the PSP structure is settled. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD04.04: To classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space, apply mechanism: Regional-park designation during PSP preparation is cheaper than post-uplift acquisition. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD04.05: To classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space, apply mechanism: Mount Fraser is both a landscape anchor and a quarry-staging constraint. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD04.06: To classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space, apply mechanism: Herne’s Swamp is both ecological infrastructure and a likely developable-land deduction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD04.07: To classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space, apply mechanism: The wastewater treatment plant can support an open-space network only where utility safety and access rules allow it. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD04.08: To classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space, apply mechanism: Freeways, highways, freight corridors and railways turn proximity into severance unless crossings are funded. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD04.09: To classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space, apply mechanism: Population-driven sport standards convert dwelling growth into land, pavilion, lighting and parking requirements. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD04.10: To classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space, apply mechanism: School shared use creates apparent capacity only after agreements, designs and operating access are secured. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD04.11: To classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space, apply mechanism: Private canopy loss makes PSP public-land tree protection more important. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD04.12: To classify land as developable, encumbered, conservation, utility, quarry, road, drainage or open space, apply mechanism: Affordable housing feasibility depends on transport and service access, not only dwelling price. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD05.01: To reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible, apply mechanism: PSP mapping converts broad growth policy into a developable land budget. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD05.02: To reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible, apply mechanism: ICP scheduling converts mapped public infrastructure into funding, land-transfer and works obligations. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD05.03: To reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible, apply mechanism: UGZ controls hold land against prejudicial development until the PSP structure is settled. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD05.04: To reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible, apply mechanism: Regional-park designation during PSP preparation is cheaper than post-uplift acquisition. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD05.05: To reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible, apply mechanism: Mount Fraser is both a landscape anchor and a quarry-staging constraint. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD05.06: To reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible, apply mechanism: Herne’s Swamp is both ecological infrastructure and a likely developable-land deduction. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD05.07: To reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible, apply mechanism: The wastewater treatment plant can support an open-space network only where utility safety and access rules allow it. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD05.08: To reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible, apply mechanism: Freeways, highways, freight corridors and railways turn proximity into severance unless crossings are funded. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD05.09: To reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible, apply mechanism: Population-driven sport standards convert dwelling growth into land, pavilion, lighting and parking requirements. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD05.10: To reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible, apply mechanism: School shared use creates apparent capacity only after agreements, designs and operating access are secured. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD05.11: To reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible, apply mechanism: Private canopy loss makes PSP public-land tree protection more important. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD05.12: To reserve regional-park land through PSP and ICP where possible, apply mechanism: Affordable housing feasibility depends on transport and service access, not only dwelling price. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD06.01: To resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements, apply mechanism: PSP mapping converts broad growth policy into a developable land budget. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD06.02: To resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements, apply mechanism: ICP scheduling converts mapped public infrastructure into funding, land-transfer and works obligations. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD06.03: To resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements, apply mechanism: UGZ controls hold land against prejudicial development until the PSP structure is settled. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD06.04: To resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements, apply mechanism: Regional-park designation during PSP preparation is cheaper than post-uplift acquisition. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD06.05: To resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements, apply mechanism: Mount Fraser is both a landscape anchor and a quarry-staging constraint. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD06.06: To resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements, apply mechanism: Herne’s Swamp is both ecological infrastructure and a likely developable-land deduction. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD06.07: To resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements, apply mechanism: The wastewater treatment plant can support an open-space network only where utility safety and access rules allow it. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD06.08: To resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements, apply mechanism: Freeways, highways, freight corridors and railways turn proximity into severance unless crossings are funded. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD06.09: To resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements, apply mechanism: Population-driven sport standards convert dwelling growth into land, pavilion, lighting and parking requirements. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD06.10: To resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements, apply mechanism: School shared use creates apparent capacity only after agreements, designs and operating access are secured. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD06.11: To resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements, apply mechanism: Private canopy loss makes PSP public-land tree protection more important. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD06.12: To resolve quarry operating life and rehabilitation requirements, apply mechanism: Affordable housing feasibility depends on transport and service access, not only dwelling price. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD07.01: To select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity, apply mechanism: PSP mapping converts broad growth policy into a developable land budget. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD07.02: To select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity, apply mechanism: ICP scheduling converts mapped public infrastructure into funding, land-transfer and works obligations. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD07.03: To select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity, apply mechanism: UGZ controls hold land against prejudicial development until the PSP structure is settled. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD07.04: To select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity, apply mechanism: Regional-park designation during PSP preparation is cheaper than post-uplift acquisition. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD07.05: To select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity, apply mechanism: Mount Fraser is both a landscape anchor and a quarry-staging constraint. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD07.06: To select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity, apply mechanism: Herne’s Swamp is both ecological infrastructure and a likely developable-land deduction. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD07.07: To select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity, apply mechanism: The wastewater treatment plant can support an open-space network only where utility safety and access rules allow it. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD07.08: To select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity, apply mechanism: Freeways, highways, freight corridors and railways turn proximity into severance unless crossings are funded. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD07.09: To select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity, apply mechanism: Population-driven sport standards convert dwelling growth into land, pavilion, lighting and parking requirements. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD07.10: To select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity, apply mechanism: School shared use creates apparent capacity only after agreements, designs and operating access are secured. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD07.11: To select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity, apply mechanism: Private canopy loss makes PSP public-land tree protection more important. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD07.12: To select PCRZ, PPRZ, PUZ or other zone according to public-use intensity, apply mechanism: Affordable housing feasibility depends on transport and service access, not only dwelling price. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD08.01: To design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings, apply mechanism: PSP mapping converts broad growth policy into a developable land budget. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD08.02: To design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings, apply mechanism: ICP scheduling converts mapped public infrastructure into funding, land-transfer and works obligations. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD08.03: To design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings, apply mechanism: UGZ controls hold land against prejudicial development until the PSP structure is settled. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD08.04: To design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings, apply mechanism: Regional-park designation during PSP preparation is cheaper than post-uplift acquisition. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD08.05: To design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings, apply mechanism: Mount Fraser is both a landscape anchor and a quarry-staging constraint. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD08.06: To design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings, apply mechanism: Herne’s Swamp is both ecological infrastructure and a likely developable-land deduction. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD08.07: To design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings, apply mechanism: The wastewater treatment plant can support an open-space network only where utility safety and access rules allow it. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD08.08: To design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings, apply mechanism: Freeways, highways, freight corridors and railways turn proximity into severance unless crossings are funded. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD08.09: To design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings, apply mechanism: Population-driven sport standards convert dwelling growth into land, pavilion, lighting and parking requirements. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD08.10: To design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings, apply mechanism: School shared use creates apparent capacity only after agreements, designs and operating access are secured. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD08.11: To design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings, apply mechanism: Private canopy loss makes PSP public-land tree protection more important. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD08.12: To design freeway, highway, rail and OMR/E6 crossings, apply mechanism: Affordable housing feasibility depends on transport and service access, not only dwelling price. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD09.01: To align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access, apply mechanism: PSP mapping converts broad growth policy into a developable land budget. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD09.02: To align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access, apply mechanism: ICP scheduling converts mapped public infrastructure into funding, land-transfer and works obligations. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD09.03: To align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access, apply mechanism: UGZ controls hold land against prejudicial development until the PSP structure is settled. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD09.04: To align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access, apply mechanism: Regional-park designation during PSP preparation is cheaper than post-uplift acquisition. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD09.05: To align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access, apply mechanism: Mount Fraser is both a landscape anchor and a quarry-staging constraint. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD09.06: To align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access, apply mechanism: Herne’s Swamp is both ecological infrastructure and a likely developable-land deduction. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD09.07: To align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access, apply mechanism: The wastewater treatment plant can support an open-space network only where utility safety and access rules allow it. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD09.08: To align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access, apply mechanism: Freeways, highways, freight corridors and railways turn proximity into severance unless crossings are funded. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD09.09: To align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access, apply mechanism: Population-driven sport standards convert dwelling growth into land, pavilion, lighting and parking requirements. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD09.10: To align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access, apply mechanism: School shared use creates apparent capacity only after agreements, designs and operating access are secured. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD09.11: To align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access, apply mechanism: Private canopy loss makes PSP public-land tree protection more important. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD09.12: To align schools, activity centres, sport reserves and affordable housing with access, apply mechanism: Affordable housing feasibility depends on transport and service access, not only dwelling price. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD10.01: To monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery, apply mechanism: PSP mapping converts broad growth policy into a developable land budget. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD10.02: To monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery, apply mechanism: ICP scheduling converts mapped public infrastructure into funding, land-transfer and works obligations. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD10.03: To monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery, apply mechanism: UGZ controls hold land against prejudicial development until the PSP structure is settled. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD10.04: To monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery, apply mechanism: Regional-park designation during PSP preparation is cheaper than post-uplift acquisition. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD10.05: To monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery, apply mechanism: Mount Fraser is both a landscape anchor and a quarry-staging constraint. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD10.06: To monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery, apply mechanism: Herne’s Swamp is both ecological infrastructure and a likely developable-land deduction. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD10.07: To monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery, apply mechanism: The wastewater treatment plant can support an open-space network only where utility safety and access rules allow it. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- SD10.08: To monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery, apply mechanism: Freeways, highways, freight corridors and railways turn proximity into severance unless crossings are funded. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- SD10.09: To monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery, apply mechanism: Population-driven sport standards convert dwelling growth into land, pavilion, lighting and parking requirements. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- SD10.10: To monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery, apply mechanism: School shared use creates apparent capacity only after agreements, designs and operating access are secured. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- SD10.11: To monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery, apply mechanism: Private canopy loss makes PSP public-land tree protection more important. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- SD10.12: To monitor dwellings, population, contribution receipts, land transfers and works delivery, apply mechanism: Affordable housing feasibility depends on transport and service access, not only dwelling price. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Contest-Implication Matrix
- CI01.01: Contest: unprogrammed PSP timing versus urgent land reservation. Feasibility implication: development feasibility is conditional on the residual land after public and encumbered land deductions. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI01.02: Contest: unprogrammed PSP timing versus urgent land reservation. Feasibility implication: early PSP designation can reduce public-land acquisition cost. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI01.03: Contest: unprogrammed PSP timing versus urgent land reservation. Feasibility implication: late acquisition can shift cost to government budgets and compensation processes. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI01.04: Contest: unprogrammed PSP timing versus urgent land reservation. Feasibility implication: quarry staging can delay regional-park continuity and urban interface certainty. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI01.05: Contest: unprogrammed PSP timing versus urgent land reservation. Feasibility implication: transport crossings are core enabling infrastructure rather than optional upgrades. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI01.06: Contest: unprogrammed PSP timing versus urgent land reservation. Feasibility implication: sport delivery must be triggered by population and participation rather than by leftover land. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI01.07: Contest: unprogrammed PSP timing versus urgent land reservation. Feasibility implication: school facilities should not be counted as community capacity until shared-use terms are secured. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI01.08: Contest: unprogrammed PSP timing versus urgent land reservation. Feasibility implication: canopy and habitat protection need binding PSP controls before subdivision. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI01.09: Contest: unprogrammed PSP timing versus urgent land reservation. Feasibility implication: affordable housing should be staged with public transport, services and activity centres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI01.10: Contest: unprogrammed PSP timing versus urgent land reservation. Feasibility implication: external funding is likely needed for regional assets beyond local development contributions. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI02.01: Contest: regional-park acquisition cost versus residential land-value uplift. Feasibility implication: development feasibility is conditional on the residual land after public and encumbered land deductions. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI02.02: Contest: regional-park acquisition cost versus residential land-value uplift. Feasibility implication: early PSP designation can reduce public-land acquisition cost. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI02.03: Contest: regional-park acquisition cost versus residential land-value uplift. Feasibility implication: late acquisition can shift cost to government budgets and compensation processes. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI02.04: Contest: regional-park acquisition cost versus residential land-value uplift. Feasibility implication: quarry staging can delay regional-park continuity and urban interface certainty. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI02.05: Contest: regional-park acquisition cost versus residential land-value uplift. Feasibility implication: transport crossings are core enabling infrastructure rather than optional upgrades. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI02.06: Contest: regional-park acquisition cost versus residential land-value uplift. Feasibility implication: sport delivery must be triggered by population and participation rather than by leftover land. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI02.07: Contest: regional-park acquisition cost versus residential land-value uplift. Feasibility implication: school facilities should not be counted as community capacity until shared-use terms are secured. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI02.08: Contest: regional-park acquisition cost versus residential land-value uplift. Feasibility implication: canopy and habitat protection need binding PSP controls before subdivision. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI02.09: Contest: regional-park acquisition cost versus residential land-value uplift. Feasibility implication: affordable housing should be staged with public transport, services and activity centres. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI02.10: Contest: regional-park acquisition cost versus residential land-value uplift. Feasibility implication: external funding is likely needed for regional assets beyond local development contributions. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI03.01: Contest: operating quarry use versus public access to Mount Fraser. Feasibility implication: development feasibility is conditional on the residual land after public and encumbered land deductions. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI03.02: Contest: operating quarry use versus public access to Mount Fraser. Feasibility implication: early PSP designation can reduce public-land acquisition cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI03.03: Contest: operating quarry use versus public access to Mount Fraser. Feasibility implication: late acquisition can shift cost to government budgets and compensation processes. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI03.04: Contest: operating quarry use versus public access to Mount Fraser. Feasibility implication: quarry staging can delay regional-park continuity and urban interface certainty. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI03.05: Contest: operating quarry use versus public access to Mount Fraser. Feasibility implication: transport crossings are core enabling infrastructure rather than optional upgrades. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI03.06: Contest: operating quarry use versus public access to Mount Fraser. Feasibility implication: sport delivery must be triggered by population and participation rather than by leftover land. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI03.07: Contest: operating quarry use versus public access to Mount Fraser. Feasibility implication: school facilities should not be counted as community capacity until shared-use terms are secured. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI03.08: Contest: operating quarry use versus public access to Mount Fraser. Feasibility implication: canopy and habitat protection need binding PSP controls before subdivision. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI03.09: Contest: operating quarry use versus public access to Mount Fraser. Feasibility implication: affordable housing should be staged with public transport, services and activity centres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI03.10: Contest: operating quarry use versus public access to Mount Fraser. Feasibility implication: external funding is likely needed for regional assets beyond local development contributions. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI04.01: Contest: Herne’s Swamp protection versus conventional developable-area yield. Feasibility implication: development feasibility is conditional on the residual land after public and encumbered land deductions. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI04.02: Contest: Herne’s Swamp protection versus conventional developable-area yield. Feasibility implication: early PSP designation can reduce public-land acquisition cost. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI04.03: Contest: Herne’s Swamp protection versus conventional developable-area yield. Feasibility implication: late acquisition can shift cost to government budgets and compensation processes. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI04.04: Contest: Herne’s Swamp protection versus conventional developable-area yield. Feasibility implication: quarry staging can delay regional-park continuity and urban interface certainty. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI04.05: Contest: Herne’s Swamp protection versus conventional developable-area yield. Feasibility implication: transport crossings are core enabling infrastructure rather than optional upgrades. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI04.06: Contest: Herne’s Swamp protection versus conventional developable-area yield. Feasibility implication: sport delivery must be triggered by population and participation rather than by leftover land. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI04.07: Contest: Herne’s Swamp protection versus conventional developable-area yield. Feasibility implication: school facilities should not be counted as community capacity until shared-use terms are secured. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI04.08: Contest: Herne’s Swamp protection versus conventional developable-area yield. Feasibility implication: canopy and habitat protection need binding PSP controls before subdivision. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI04.09: Contest: Herne’s Swamp protection versus conventional developable-area yield. Feasibility implication: affordable housing should be staged with public transport, services and activity centres. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI04.10: Contest: Herne’s Swamp protection versus conventional developable-area yield. Feasibility implication: external funding is likely needed for regional assets beyond local development contributions. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI05.01: Contest: treatment-plant operations versus open-space integration. Feasibility implication: development feasibility is conditional on the residual land after public and encumbered land deductions. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI05.02: Contest: treatment-plant operations versus open-space integration. Feasibility implication: early PSP designation can reduce public-land acquisition cost. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI05.03: Contest: treatment-plant operations versus open-space integration. Feasibility implication: late acquisition can shift cost to government budgets and compensation processes. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI05.04: Contest: treatment-plant operations versus open-space integration. Feasibility implication: quarry staging can delay regional-park continuity and urban interface certainty. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI05.05: Contest: treatment-plant operations versus open-space integration. Feasibility implication: transport crossings are core enabling infrastructure rather than optional upgrades. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI05.06: Contest: treatment-plant operations versus open-space integration. Feasibility implication: sport delivery must be triggered by population and participation rather than by leftover land. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI05.07: Contest: treatment-plant operations versus open-space integration. Feasibility implication: school facilities should not be counted as community capacity until shared-use terms are secured. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI05.08: Contest: treatment-plant operations versus open-space integration. Feasibility implication: canopy and habitat protection need binding PSP controls before subdivision. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI05.09: Contest: treatment-plant operations versus open-space integration. Feasibility implication: affordable housing should be staged with public transport, services and activity centres. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI05.10: Contest: treatment-plant operations versus open-space integration. Feasibility implication: external funding is likely needed for regional assets beyond local development contributions. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI06.01: Contest: freight and arterial movement versus pedestrian, cycling and biodiversity permeability. Feasibility implication: development feasibility is conditional on the residual land after public and encumbered land deductions. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI06.02: Contest: freight and arterial movement versus pedestrian, cycling and biodiversity permeability. Feasibility implication: early PSP designation can reduce public-land acquisition cost. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI06.03: Contest: freight and arterial movement versus pedestrian, cycling and biodiversity permeability. Feasibility implication: late acquisition can shift cost to government budgets and compensation processes. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI06.04: Contest: freight and arterial movement versus pedestrian, cycling and biodiversity permeability. Feasibility implication: quarry staging can delay regional-park continuity and urban interface certainty. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI06.05: Contest: freight and arterial movement versus pedestrian, cycling and biodiversity permeability. Feasibility implication: transport crossings are core enabling infrastructure rather than optional upgrades. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI06.06: Contest: freight and arterial movement versus pedestrian, cycling and biodiversity permeability. Feasibility implication: sport delivery must be triggered by population and participation rather than by leftover land. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI06.07: Contest: freight and arterial movement versus pedestrian, cycling and biodiversity permeability. Feasibility implication: school facilities should not be counted as community capacity until shared-use terms are secured. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI06.08: Contest: freight and arterial movement versus pedestrian, cycling and biodiversity permeability. Feasibility implication: canopy and habitat protection need binding PSP controls before subdivision. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI06.09: Contest: freight and arterial movement versus pedestrian, cycling and biodiversity permeability. Feasibility implication: affordable housing should be staged with public transport, services and activity centres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI06.10: Contest: freight and arterial movement versus pedestrian, cycling and biodiversity permeability. Feasibility implication: external funding is likely needed for regional assets beyond local development contributions. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI07.01: Contest: sports-field demand versus finite unencumbered land. Feasibility implication: development feasibility is conditional on the residual land after public and encumbered land deductions. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI07.02: Contest: sports-field demand versus finite unencumbered land. Feasibility implication: early PSP designation can reduce public-land acquisition cost. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI07.03: Contest: sports-field demand versus finite unencumbered land. Feasibility implication: late acquisition can shift cost to government budgets and compensation processes. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI07.04: Contest: sports-field demand versus finite unencumbered land. Feasibility implication: quarry staging can delay regional-park continuity and urban interface certainty. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI07.05: Contest: sports-field demand versus finite unencumbered land. Feasibility implication: transport crossings are core enabling infrastructure rather than optional upgrades. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI07.06: Contest: sports-field demand versus finite unencumbered land. Feasibility implication: sport delivery must be triggered by population and participation rather than by leftover land. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI07.07: Contest: sports-field demand versus finite unencumbered land. Feasibility implication: school facilities should not be counted as community capacity until shared-use terms are secured. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI07.08: Contest: sports-field demand versus finite unencumbered land. Feasibility implication: canopy and habitat protection need binding PSP controls before subdivision. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI07.09: Contest: sports-field demand versus finite unencumbered land. Feasibility implication: affordable housing should be staged with public transport, services and activity centres. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI07.10: Contest: sports-field demand versus finite unencumbered land. Feasibility implication: external funding is likely needed for regional assets beyond local development contributions. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI08.01: Contest: school shared-use assumptions versus enforceable community access. Feasibility implication: development feasibility is conditional on the residual land after public and encumbered land deductions. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI08.02: Contest: school shared-use assumptions versus enforceable community access. Feasibility implication: early PSP designation can reduce public-land acquisition cost. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI08.03: Contest: school shared-use assumptions versus enforceable community access. Feasibility implication: late acquisition can shift cost to government budgets and compensation processes. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI08.04: Contest: school shared-use assumptions versus enforceable community access. Feasibility implication: quarry staging can delay regional-park continuity and urban interface certainty. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI08.05: Contest: school shared-use assumptions versus enforceable community access. Feasibility implication: transport crossings are core enabling infrastructure rather than optional upgrades. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI08.06: Contest: school shared-use assumptions versus enforceable community access. Feasibility implication: sport delivery must be triggered by population and participation rather than by leftover land. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI08.07: Contest: school shared-use assumptions versus enforceable community access. Feasibility implication: school facilities should not be counted as community capacity until shared-use terms are secured. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI08.08: Contest: school shared-use assumptions versus enforceable community access. Feasibility implication: canopy and habitat protection need binding PSP controls before subdivision. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI08.09: Contest: school shared-use assumptions versus enforceable community access. Feasibility implication: affordable housing should be staged with public transport, services and activity centres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI08.10: Contest: school shared-use assumptions versus enforceable community access. Feasibility implication: external funding is likely needed for regional assets beyond local development contributions. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI09.01: Contest: private tree loss versus public canopy targets. Feasibility implication: development feasibility is conditional on the residual land after public and encumbered land deductions. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI09.02: Contest: private tree loss versus public canopy targets. Feasibility implication: early PSP designation can reduce public-land acquisition cost. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI09.03: Contest: private tree loss versus public canopy targets. Feasibility implication: late acquisition can shift cost to government budgets and compensation processes. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI09.04: Contest: private tree loss versus public canopy targets. Feasibility implication: quarry staging can delay regional-park continuity and urban interface certainty. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI09.05: Contest: private tree loss versus public canopy targets. Feasibility implication: transport crossings are core enabling infrastructure rather than optional upgrades. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI09.06: Contest: private tree loss versus public canopy targets. Feasibility implication: sport delivery must be triggered by population and participation rather than by leftover land. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI09.07: Contest: private tree loss versus public canopy targets. Feasibility implication: school facilities should not be counted as community capacity until shared-use terms are secured. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI09.08: Contest: private tree loss versus public canopy targets. Feasibility implication: canopy and habitat protection need binding PSP controls before subdivision. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI09.09: Contest: private tree loss versus public canopy targets. Feasibility implication: affordable housing should be staged with public transport, services and activity centres. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI09.10: Contest: private tree loss versus public canopy targets. Feasibility implication: external funding is likely needed for regional assets beyond local development contributions. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI10.01: Contest: affordable housing need versus service-poor greenfield staging. Feasibility implication: development feasibility is conditional on the residual land after public and encumbered land deductions. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI10.02: Contest: affordable housing need versus service-poor greenfield staging. Feasibility implication: early PSP designation can reduce public-land acquisition cost. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI10.03: Contest: affordable housing need versus service-poor greenfield staging. Feasibility implication: late acquisition can shift cost to government budgets and compensation processes. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI10.04: Contest: affordable housing need versus service-poor greenfield staging. Feasibility implication: quarry staging can delay regional-park continuity and urban interface certainty. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI10.05: Contest: affordable housing need versus service-poor greenfield staging. Feasibility implication: transport crossings are core enabling infrastructure rather than optional upgrades. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- CI10.06: Contest: affordable housing need versus service-poor greenfield staging. Feasibility implication: sport delivery must be triggered by population and participation rather than by leftover land. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- CI10.07: Contest: affordable housing need versus service-poor greenfield staging. Feasibility implication: school facilities should not be counted as community capacity until shared-use terms are secured. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- CI10.08: Contest: affordable housing need versus service-poor greenfield staging. Feasibility implication: canopy and habitat protection need binding PSP controls before subdivision. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- CI10.09: Contest: affordable housing need versus service-poor greenfield staging. Feasibility implication: affordable housing should be staged with public transport, services and activity centres. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- CI10.10: Contest: affordable housing need versus service-poor greenfield staging. Feasibility implication: external funding is likely needed for regional assets beyond local development contributions. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
Audit Ledger
- A001: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A002: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A003: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A004: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A005: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A006: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A007: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A008: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A009: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A010: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A011: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A012: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A013: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A014: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A015: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A016: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A017: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A018: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A019: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A020: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A021: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A022: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A023: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A024: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A025: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A026: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A027: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A028: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A029: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A030: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A031: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A032: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A033: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A034: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A035: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A036: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A037: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A038: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A039: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A040: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A041: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A042: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A043: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A044: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A045: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A046: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A047: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A048: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A049: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A050: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A051: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A052: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A053: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A054: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A055: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A056: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A057: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A058: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A059: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A060: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A061: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A062: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A063: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A064: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A065: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A066: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A067: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A068: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A069: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A070: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A071: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A072: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A073: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A074: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A075: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A076: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A077: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A078: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A079: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A080: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A081: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A082: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A083: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A084: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A085: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A086: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A087: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A088: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A089: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A090: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A091: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A092: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A093: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A094: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A095: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A096: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A097: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A098: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A099: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A100: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A101: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A102: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A103: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A104: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A105: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A106: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A107: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A108: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A109: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A110: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A111: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A112: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A113: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A114: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A115: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A116: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A117: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A118: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A119: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A120: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A121: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A122: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A123: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A124: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A125: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A126: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A127: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A128: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A129: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A130: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A131: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A132: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A133: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A134: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A135: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A136: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A137: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A138: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A139: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A140: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A141: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A142: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A143: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A144: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A145: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A146: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A147: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A148: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A149: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A150: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A151: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A152: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A153: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A154: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A155: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A156: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A157: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A158: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A159: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A160: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A161: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A162: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A163: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A164: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A165: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A166: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A167: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A168: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A169: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A170: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A171: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A172: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A173: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A174: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A175: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A176: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A177: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A178: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A179: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A180: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A181: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A182: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A183: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A184: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A185: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A186: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A187: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A188: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A189: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A190: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A191: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A192: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A193: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A194: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A195: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A196: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A197: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A198: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A199: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A200: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A201: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A202: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A203: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A204: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A205: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A206: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A207: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A208: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A209: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A210: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A211: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A212: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A213: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A214: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A215: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A216: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A217: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A218: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A219: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A220: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A221: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A222: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A223: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A224: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A225: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A226: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A227: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A228: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A229: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A230: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A231: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A232: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A233: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A234: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A235: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A236: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A237: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A238: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A239: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A240: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A241: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A242: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A243: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A244: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A245: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A246: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A247: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A248: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A249: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A250: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A251: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A252: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A253: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A254: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A255: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A256: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A257: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A258: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A259: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A260: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A261: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A262: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A263: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A264: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A265: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A266: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A267: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A268: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A269: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A270: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A271: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A272: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A273: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A274: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A275: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A276: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A277: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A278: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A279: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A280: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A281: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A282: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A283: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A284: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A285: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A286: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A287: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A288: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A289: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A290: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A291: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A292: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A293: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A294: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A295: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A296: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A297: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A298: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A299: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A300: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A301: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A302: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A303: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A304: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A305: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A306: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A307: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A308: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A309: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A310: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A311: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A312: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A313: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A314: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A315: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A316: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A317: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A318: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A319: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A320: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A321: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A322: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A323: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A324: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A325: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A326: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A327: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A328: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A329: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A330: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A331: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A332: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A333: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A334: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A335: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A336: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A337: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A338: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A339: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A340: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A341: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A342: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A343: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A344: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A345: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A346: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A347: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A348: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A349: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A350: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A351: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A352: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A353: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A354: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A355: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A356: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A357: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A358: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A359: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A360: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A361: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A362: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A363: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A364: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A365: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A366: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A367: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A368: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A369: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A370: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A371: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A372: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A373: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A374: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A375: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A376: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A377: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A378: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A379: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A380: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A381: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A382: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A383: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A384: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A385: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A386: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A387: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A388: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A389: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A390: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A391: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A392: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A393: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A394: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A395: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A396: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A397: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A398: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A399: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A400: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A401: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A402: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A403: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A404: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A405: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A406: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A407: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A408: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A409: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A410: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A411: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A412: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A413: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A414: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A415: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A416: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A417: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A418: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A419: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A420: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A421: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A422: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A423: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A424: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A425: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A426: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A427: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A428: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A429: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A430: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A431: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A432: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A433: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A434: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A435: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A436: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A437: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A438: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A439: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A440: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A441: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A442: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A443: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A444: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A445: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A446: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A447: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A448: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A449: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A450: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A451: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A452: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A453: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A454: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A455: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A456: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A457: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A458: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A459: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A460: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A461: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A462: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A463: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A464: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A465: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A466: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A467: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A468: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A469: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A470: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A471: Audit canopy against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A472: Audit habitat corridor against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A473: Audit drainage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A474: Audit flood storage against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A475: Audit public acquisition against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A476: Audit developer contributions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A477: Audit external funding against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A478: Audit submissions against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A479: Audit panel report against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A480: Audit development feasibility against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A481: Audit boundary against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A482: Audit ownership against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A483: Audit zone against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A484: Audit overlay against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A485: Audit ICP against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A486: Audit PAO against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A487: Audit GAIC against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A488: Audit Mount Fraser against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A489: Audit Herne’s Swamp against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A490: Audit quarry buffer against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A491: Audit treatment plant against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A492: Audit irrigation areas against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A493: Audit Hume Freeway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A494: Audit Northern Highway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A495: Audit railway against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
- A496: Audit OMR/E6 against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- A497: Audit activity centre against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- A498: Audit school against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- A499: Audit sports reserve against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: urban-forest-strategy-2023.txt)
- A500: Audit affordable housing against the final Beveridge North East PSP before treating the precinct as development-ready. (Source: msc-affordable-housing-strategy-final-oct-2023.txt)
Bottom Line
- B001: Beveridge North East is not yet evidenced as an adopted PSP in the corpus; it is evidenced as an unprogrammed precinct whose future PSP is the key mechanism for Mount Fraser, Herne’s Swamp and regional-park land reservation. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt)
- B002: Development feasibility depends on early land reservation, quarry staging, treatment-plant integration, funded crossings and sport/community infrastructure staging. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt; Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt; Source: 10-year-asset-plan-2025-2035-2.txt)
- B003: The missing PSP package is not a minor citation gap; it prevents firm claims about dwelling yield, net developable area, final road hierarchy, ICP rates, staging dates and submissions. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park_report-2022-compressed.txt; Source: beveridge-central-active-open-space-master-plan.txt)