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City of Brimbank

City of Brimbank

FieldValue
typelga
nameCity of Brimbank
statevic
imageMelbLGA-Brimbank.gif
captionMap of Melbourne showing City of Brimbank
pop196046
pop_year2023
pop_footnotes
poprank25th
area123
area_footnotes
est1994
seatSunshine
mayorRanka Rasic (Labor)
regionGreater Melbourne
logo[[File:City of Brimbank logo.svg160x220px]]
urlhttp://www.brimbank.vic.gov.au/
stategov*Kororoit
fedgovFraser
fedgov2Gorton
fedgov3Hawke
fedgov4Maribyrnong
near-nwHume
near-nHume
near-neMerri-bek
near-wMelton
near-eMoonee Valley, Maribyrnong
near-swWyndham
near-sWyndham
near-seHobsons Bay
  • Laverton
  • Niddrie
  • St Albans
  • Sunbury
  • Sydenham | near-nw = Hume | near-n = Hume | near-ne = Merri-bek | near-w = Melton | near-e = Moonee Valley, Maribyrnong | near-sw = Wyndham | near-s = Wyndham | near-se = Hobsons Bay

The City of Brimbank is a local government area located within the metropolitan area of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It is located 10 kilometres west of the Melbourne city centre and is the gateway to Melbourne’s western suburbs.

The city has an area of 123 km² and in 2021, Brimbank had a population of 194,618.

With more than half of its residents born overseas and more than 160 languages spoken, Brimbank is one of Australia’s most multiculturally diverse municipalities.

History

The Wurundjeri people have been the custodians of the land in the Port Phillip Bay region, including the current City of Brimbank, for over 40,000 years before European settlement. Brimbank lies within the area occupied by the Kurung-Jang-Balluk and Marin-Balluk clans of the Wurundjeri people (also known as the Woiwurrung language group) who form part of the larger Kulin Nation. Other groups who occupied land in the area include the Yalukit-Willam and Marpeang-Bulluk clans.

Brimbank was founded on 15 December 1994 during the amalgamations of local councils by the state government. It was formed from the merger of the western portions of the former Cities of Keilor and Sunshine. It was named after Brimbank Park in Keilor, which itself was named for the practice of local farmers driving livestock "around the brim of the bank" of the Maribyrnong River.

The City of Brimbank's predecessor LGAs (green) as they were in 1994

The municipality has thirteen places listed on the Victorian Heritage Register.

Misconduct investigations and dismissal

In 2008 and 2009, the Brimbank City Council was the subject of several investigations into alleged misconduct by councillors.

On 30 July 2008, the state MP for Keilor, George Seitz, invoked parliamentary privilege in the Legislative Assembly to accuse former Brimbank mayor Cr Natalie Suleyman of branch stacking, describing her as the "Robert Mugabe of Brimbank". Seitz alleged that Suleyman had 'retaliated' by directing Council to block funding for capital works projects after she was defeated in Labor Party preselection for the 2008 Kororoit state by-election. Following disclosures made under the Whistleblowers Protection Act 2001, the Victorian Ombudsman, George Brouwer, commenced an investigation into the Council in September.

Brouwer's report was presented to Parliament on 7 May 2009, and found councillors were "generally dysfunctional", "lacked awareness of their role", and were "influenced" by unelected third parties. The report asserted that between 2005 and 2008, decisions were reached by a majority (or 'ruling') faction of councillors who would vote on decisions as a bloc. Of the 6 members of the 'ruling faction', only two were re-elected to council in 2008.

The report concluded that:

  • External parties, including state MPs George Seitz and Theo Theophanous, and former federal MP Andrew Theophanous, had unduly influenced council business,
  • The 'ruling faction' "did not exercise reasonable care" in directing Brimbank CEO Marilyn Duncan to remove funding for the Keilor Lodge Reserve project,
  • The 'ruling faction' intended to "worry" Seitz by calling for expressions of interest on the Keilor Lodge Reserve site,
  • Cr Suleyman acted "with inappropriate partiality" in prioritising works at Cairnlea Park in the Council's 2008–09 budget,
  • Cr Eriksson contravened the Council's Code of Governance by releasing confidential information to the Sunshine Advocate, Brimbank Leader and Brimbank Star newspapers,
  • The Labor Party had appeared to breach the Electoral Act by distributing prohibited material to Cr Capar,
  • Councillors had misused council-owned laptops and BlackBerry devices,
  • Council had failed to handle the severance package of outgoing CEO Marilyn Duncan "in an open and transparent manner",
  • The 'ruling faction' had determined the election of mayor until 2013, and
  • Local Government Victoria had failed to adequately deal with complaints from residents about Council decision-making.

In response to the Brouwer report, the Minister for Local Government, Richard Wynne, appointed William Scales to closely monitor the council over a three-month period. In his second report Scales found that, despite being closely monitored, there remained widespread misconduct amongst councillors, and recommended that councillors should be suspended or dismissed from their positions. David Walker, a former police detective, was also appointed to investigate possible breaches of the Local Government Act.

On 15 September, Wynne announced that Council would be dismissed, with administrators appointed until November 2012. On 17 November, the Victorian Government appointed Peter Lewinsky, Joanne Anderson and Meredith Sussex as administrators for a three-year period. Investigations into the conduct of Seitz, along with councillors Suleyman, Kathryn Eriksson and Troy Atanasovski, concluded in December with the Local Government Inspectorate informing those involved that it would take no further action.

In May 2012, the Victorian Government announced it would extend the tenure of administrators for a further three years, with Lewinsky reappointed alongside John Watson and former Brimbank commissioner Jane Nathan.

In October 2016, council elections were held in Brimbank for the first time in eight years. Two former councillors were re-elected: Sam David and Margaret Giudice, the latter having rescinded her Labor Party membership in 2014.

Wards and councillors

Independent (4) Greens (1) Ind. Liberal (1)

PartyCouncillors
Independent Labor
Independent
Greens
Independent Liberal
Total11

The councillors following the October 2024 local elections are:

WardPartyCouncillorNotes
AlbanvaleIndependentVictoria Borg
Cherry CreekIndependent LaborKim Thien Truong
CopernicusIndependent LiberalMaria Kerr
DelaheyIndependent LaborKatharine Nikolic
GrasslandsIndependent LaborThuy Dang
HarvesterIndependent LaborDaniel Kruk
Horseshoe BendIndependentVirginia Tachos
Kororoit CreekGreensLucy Nguyen
Mount DerrimutIndependentJoh Bauch
Organ PipesIndependent LaborRanka Rasic
St Albans EastIndependentDuyen Anh Pham

Mayors

Mayors (1998– 2009)

No.MayorPartyTerm123456(2)(5)7(2)8
Ciro LombardiLabor1998
Sam DavidLabor1998–1999
Brooke GujinovicLabor1999–2000
Charlie ApapLabor2000–2001
Natalie SuleymanLabor2001–2002
Andres PuigLabor2002–2003
Sam DavidLabor2003–2004
Natalie SuleymanLabor2004–2006
Margaret GiudiceLabor2006–2007
Sam DavidLabor2007–2008
Troy AtanasovskiLabor2008–2009

Administrators (2009–2016)

AdministratorsTerm
Peter Lewinsky (chair)
Joanne Anderson
Meredith Sussex2009–2012
John Watson (chair)
Peter Lewinsky
Jane Nathan2012–2014
John Watson (chair)
Jane Nathan
John Tanner2014–2016

Mayors (2016–present)

No.MayorPartyTerm9(7)1011121314(12)15
John HedditchIndependent2016–2017
Margaret GiudiceIndependent2017–2018
Lucinda CongreveIndependent2018–2019
Georgina PapafotiouIndependent2019–2020
Ranka RasicLabor2020–2021
Jasmine NguyenLabor2021-2022
Bruce LancashireIndependent2022-2023
Ranka RasicLabor2023-2024
Thuy DangLabor2024-2025

Demographics

Selected historical census data for City of Brimbank local government areaCensus yearid=LGA21180name=City of Brimbank (C)accessdate=3 May 2018quick=on}}id=LGA21180name=City of Brimbank (C)accessdate=3 May 2018quick=on}}id=LGA21180name=City of Brimbank (C)accessdate=3 May 2018quick=on}}id=LGA21180name=City of Brimbank (C)accessdate=5 July 2017quick=on}}id=LGA21180name=City of Brimbank (C)accessdate=3 September 2024quick=on}}Cultural and language diversityReligious affiliationMedian weekly incomesDwelling structure
PopulationEstimated residents on census night
LGA rank in terms of size within Victoria3rd3rd6th5th
% of Victoria population3.53%3.41%3.41%3.28%2.99%
% of Australian population0.87%0.85%0.85%0.83%0.77%
Ancestry,
top responsesVietnamese9.1%10.7%12.8%16.0%16.9%
Australian15.1%15.1%12.9%12.4%12.6%
English12.0%11.8%11.8%11.7%11.6%
Chinese4.5%5.1%5.9%6.5%6.8%
Italian8.3%7.8%7.0%6.5%6.2%
Maltese9.4%8.1%6.7%5.7%5.2%
Language,
top responses
(other than English)Vietnamese10.4%12.6%14.2%16.2%18.5%
Tagalog/Filipino2.7%2.7%2.5%
Greek4.2%3.7%3.2%2.7%2.4%
Punjabi2.3%2.9%2.2%
Arabic2.3%2.2%2.2%
Macedonian4.1%3.5%2.9%2.4%2.2%
Maltese5.2%4.0%3.3%2.7%2.1%
Italian4.6%3.8%3.2%2.5%2.0%
Religious affiliation,
top responsesCatholic42.9%40.1%36.1%31.3%29.6%
No religion7.9%9.3%11.0%16.8%21.0%
Buddhism9.1%10.8%11.8%10.8%11.1%
Islam5.6%5.8%6.7%
Orthodox11.6%10.5%9.2%6.4%6.0%
Anglican5.9%5.3%4.5%3.1%2.4%
Personal incomeMedian weekly personal income358429487
% of Australian median income76.8%74.4%73.6%
Family incomeMedian weekly family income102911951358
% of Australian median income87.8%80.7%78.3%
Household incomeMedian weekly household income92111061263
% of Australian median income98.2%89.6%87.8%
Dwelling typeSeparate house88.7%82.4%76.9%73.2%
Semi-detached, terrace or townhouse4.0%10.3%5.0%13.1%
Flat or apartment6.3%7.0%7.5%4.5%

Townships and localities

The 2021 census, the city had a population of 194,618 up from 194,319 in the 2016 census

PopulationLocality20162021
5,4915,641
4,7314,334
3,1033,170
^810
9,65710,038
00
18,12618,145
8,3398,077
8,2698,651
^1,1741,156
3,1943,226
^5,8535,906
9,9959,857
^00
1,7521,668
6767
2,7192,684
8,1988,203
37,30938,042
9,7689,445
11,70012,047
18,58018,552
10,83810,578
15,51915,174
^119

^ - Territory divided with another LGA

Environmental issues

In 2021, Brimbank was recognised as Melbourne's smelliest local government area with more than 640 complaints from residents mainly due to the large amount of industries in the area. This includes the Kealba Sunshine Landfill which produced a smell described as "rotting carcasses" for three years. EPA Victoria suspended and then cancelled the license to operate the landfill by Barro Group.

References

https://dbr.abs.gov.au/region.html?lyr=lga&rgn=21180

Bibliography

  • {{Citation | author-link = George Brouwer | publication-place = Melbourne | access-date = 24 June 2020 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200418060120/https://www.parliament.vic.gov.au/papers/govpub/VPARL2006-10No188A.pdf | archive-date = 18 April 2020
  • {{Citation | publication-place = Melbourne | access-date = 24 June 2020

References

  1. (27 March 2019). "3218.0 – Regional Population Growth, Australia, 2017-18: Population Estimates by Local Government Area (ASGS 2018), 2017 to 2018". [[Australian Bureau of Statistics]].
  2. "Parks Victoria: Brimbank Park page".
  3. "Brimbank". Heritage Council of Victoria.
  4. (1 August 2008). "Vic Labor MP takes party feud public". ABC News.
  5. (19 May 2009). "Two charged with breach of municipal regulations". The Age.
  6. (15 September 2009). "Brimbank Council sacked by State Government after further findings of misconduct". Herald Sun.
  7. (17 November 2009). "Administrators to run Brimbank council". The Age.
  8. (13 December 2009). "Brimbank probe decides on no action". The Age.
  9. (17 May 2012). "Brimbank to remain in hands of administrators". ABC News.
  10. "Brimbank council troika complete". Fairfax Media.
  11. (24 November 2014). "State election: Margaret Giudice seeks a marginal Kororoit". Melton & Moorabool Star Weekly.
  12. (16 December 2024). "Your Councillors".
  13. {{Census 2001 AUS
  14. {{Census 2006 AUS
  15. {{Census 2011 AUS
  16. {{Census 2016 AUS
  17. {{Census 2021 AUS
  18. (11 January 2023). "Census {{!}} Australian Bureau of Statistics".
  19. Geraets, Nell. (2022-06-03). "Is your suburb on the nose? We sniff out Melbourne’s stinkiest parts".
  20. Victoria, Environment Protection Authority. "Kealba landfill hotspots {{!}} Environment Protection Authority Victoria".
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