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City of Casey
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| type | lga |
| name | City of Casey |
| state | vic |
| image | MelbLGA-Casey.gif |
| caption | Map of Melbourne showing City of Casey |
| local_map | yes |
| zoom | 9 |
| pop | 365239 |
| pop_year | 2021 |
| pop_footnotes | |
| poprank | 8th |
| area | 409 |
| area_footnotes | |
| seat | Narre Warren |
| region | Greater Melbourne |
| stategov | * Bass |
| fedgov | * Bruce |
| logo | Casey_logo.svg |
| url | http://www.casey.vic.gov.au/ |
| near-n | Yarra Ranges |
| near-ne | Cardinia |
| near-e | Cardinia |
| near-se | Western Port |
| near-s | Western Port |
| near-sw | Mornington Peninsula |
| near-w | Greater Dandenong |
| Frankston | |
| near-nw | Knox |
| est | 1994 |
| logo_upright | 0.81 |
the city in Victoria, Australia
- Berwick
- Carrum
- Cranbourne
- Dandenong
- Narre Warren North
- Narre Warren South
- Holt
- La Trobe | near-n = Yarra Ranges | near-ne = Cardinia | near-e = Cardinia | near-se = Western Port | near-s = Western Port | near-sw = Mornington Peninsula | near-w = Greater Dandenong Frankston | near-nw = Knox
The City of Casey is a local government area in Victoria, Australia in the outer south-eastern suburbs of Melbourne. Casey is Victoria's most populous municipality, with a 2021 population of 365,239. It has an area of 409 km2.
The city is named after Lord Casey, the 16th Governor-General of Australia, and was formed in 1994 by the merger of most of the City of Berwick with parts of the Shire of Cranbourne (including Cranbourne itself), and the Churchill Park Drive estate within the City of Knox.

Geography
Casey spreads from the base of the Dandenong Ranges in the north to the shoreline of Western Port in the south. It features a wide variety of geographical features, due to its outer metropolitan location.
The north, in the foothills of the Dandenongs, is primarily made up of large blocks of land used for grazing, with some small vineyards in operation. An Urban Growth Boundary has been in place since 2005 to protect this area from future residential subdivision.
South of Cranbourne is mainly farmland, used for market gardening and grazing. A small number of flower farms exist around Junction Village, along with a large chicken processing plant in Clyde. This green area has now been opened up for housing development, in the areas of Cranbourne East, Clyde and Clyde North.
The southern boundary of the municipality is the Western Port shoreline including the fishing villages of Tooradin, Blind Bight, Warneet and Cannons Creek. Protected marine reserves exist along this coastline and extend into the Mornington Peninsula at Pearcedale.
The Cardinia border of the city is formed for some of the boundary by the Cardinia Creek, which is drained through channels into Western Port at its southern end. The popular Riding of the Bounds event takes place along this border, in recognition of Berwick's sister city status with Berwick-upon-Tweed in Northumberland, England.
Council
Until 2024, the City of Casey was divided into six wards – Balla Balla, Edrington, Four Oaks, Mayfield, River Gum and Springfield. Voters in Balla Balla Ward elected one councillor and all other wards electing two councillors per ward. The eleven councillors voted each year to elect a mayor.
In February 2020, the Victorian Minister for Local Government, Adem Somyurek, dismissed all Casey councillors following a report from municipal monitor Laurinda Gardner that found significant governance failures at the council. Somyurek then appointed Noelene Duff as interim administrator.
In May 2020 Somyurek appointed Noelene Duff PSM, Cameron Boardman and Miguel Belmar as Council administrator panel, to remain until October 2024.
Current composition
The most recent elections were held on 26 October 2024 and elected the following councillors:
| Ward | Named after | Councillor | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akoonah | Akoonah Park, Berwick | Scott Dowling | ||
| Casuarina | Casuarina (she-oak) trees | Kim Ross | ||
| Correa | Correa plants | Gary Rowe | ||
| Cranbourne Gardens | Royal Botanic Gardens, Cranbourne | Michelle Crowther | ||
| Dillwynia | Dillwynia plants | Anthony Walter | ||
| Grevillea | Grevillea plants | Dave Perry | ||
| Kalora | Kalora Park, Narre Warren North | Melinda Ambros | ||
| Kowan | Kowan Recreation Reserve, Cranbourne North | Shane Taylor | ||
| Quarters | Quarters Primary School, Cranbourne West | Carolyn Eaves | ||
| River Gum | River Gum Creek Reserve, Hampton Park | Lynette Pereira | ||
| Tooradin | The locality of Tooradin | Jennifer Dizon | ||
| Waratah | Waratah Reserve, Eumemmerring | Stefan Koomen |
Election results
2024
Places of interest
- Akoonah Park
- Casey Insight Education Centre for the Blind and Vision Impaired
- Casey RACE – Recreation & Aquatic Centre
- Casey Aquatic and Recreation Centre (ARC)
- Casey Cardinia Libraries
- Cranbourne Community Theatre
- Casey Fields
- Westfield Fountain Gate
- Lysterfield Lake Park
- Federation University, Berwick Campus
- Moonlit Sanctuary Wildlife Conservation Park
- Myuna Farm
- Royal Botanic Gardens, Cranbourne
- The Factory – Rehearsal Centre for the Arts (Cranbourne)
- The Shed (indoor skate park)
- Wilson Botanic Park
Townships and localities
The 2021 census, the city had a population of 365,239 up from 299,301 in the 2016 census
| Population | Locality | 2016 | 2021 |
|---|---|---|---|
| ^ | 6,714 | 7,267 | |
| 47,674 | 50,298 | ||
| 1,251 | 1,290 | ||
| 3,919 | 6,739 | ||
| 647 | 650 | ||
| 2,117 | 11,177 | ||
| 8,156 | 31,681 | ||
| 20,094 | 21,281 | ||
| 16,195 | 24,679 | ||
| 20,110 | 24,683 | ||
| 1,674 | 3,241 | ||
| 15,035 | 19,969 | ||
| 1,548 | 1,551 | ||
| 9,358 | 9,603 | ||
| 24,294 | 24,455 | ||
| 1,948 | 2,285 | ||
| 10,852 | 11,355 | ||
| 25,530 | 26,082 | ||
| 849 | 1,011 | ||
| 1,017 | 1,051 | ||
| 8,519 | 9,121 | ||
| ^ | 6,725 | 8,926 | |
| 957 | 994 | ||
| 26,621 | 27,689 | ||
| 7,674 | 8,033 | ||
| 30,319 | 30,909 | ||
| ^ | 3,821 | 3,867 | |
| ^ | 1,568 | 1,722 | |
| 536 | 565 |
^ - Territory divided with another LGA
Sport
The Melbourne City Football Club is based in the City of Casey.
The Casey Demons (formerly Scorpions), an Australian rules football club represents Casey in the Victorian Football League. Their home ground is at the Casey Fields Complex in Cranbourne. The team was founded in around 1903 in Springvale. The club relocated to Casey Fields and later developed a relationship with the Melbourne Football Club has developed a partnership with the City of Casey, with training sessions and other events held at Casey Fields.
The Casey-South Melbourne Cricket Club also have their home ground at Casey Fields.
The Casey Warriors play rugby league in NRL Victoria.
The Casey Cavaliers are the representative basketball club of the City of Casey. They compete in the NBL1, Big V and VJBL competitions. The Casey Basketball Association oversees all affiliated basketball within the City of Casey and has over 8,000 weekly participants.
Media
Community Radio – 97.7 FM 3SER
Friendship and sister city relationships
The City of Casey is twinned with{{cite web | access-date = 6 August 2018}} :
In 1998 the City of Casey established a friendship link (also known as a twin town) with GRE Ioannina, Greece, which lapsed in 2008.
Notes
References
References
- (2021). "2021 Casey, Census All Persons QuickStats". [[Australian Bureau of Statistics]].
- (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]].
- Australian Bureau of Statistics. (1 August 1995). "Victorian local government amalgamations 1994–1995: Changes to the Australian Standard Geographical Classification". Commonwealth of Australia.
- (3 March 2014). "New development set to provide 21,000 homes in Clyde North.".
- "Sister Cities". City of Casey.
- Victorian Electoral Commission. (2014). "Casey City Council profile".
- "History of our ward name".
- Rollason, Bridget. (18 Feb 2020). "City of Casey could be without elected council until 2024 after damning report prompts sacking". ABC News.
- (18 February 2020). "Casey council sacked for four years as watchdog finds bullying, 'unacceptable behaviour'". The Age.
- (18 February 2020). "Dismissal Of The Casey City Council". Premier of Victoria.
- (14 May 2020). "Three Administrators appointed to Casey". City of Casey.
- (2024-01-19). "Local council electoral structure review – Final report – Casey City Council".
- (3 October 2024). "Meet the Casey Council candidates – Correa Ward". Cranbourne Star News.
- "Name City of Casey's new recreation reserve (Tulliallan Estate)".
- (11 January 2023). "Census {{!}} Australian Bureau of Statistics".
- "Melbourne City FC to move into Casey Fields {{!}} City of Casey".
- "Melbourne Football Club - Casey Partnership".
- "City of Casey | Home".
- "City of Casey | Home".
- "City of Casey | Home".
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