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Wingecarribee Shire

Wingecarribee Shire

FieldValue
nameWingecarribee Shire
statensw
coordinates
imageWingecarribee LGA NSW.png
captionLocation in New South Wales
pop47882
pop_year
pop_footnotes
pop250493
pop2_year2018 est.
pop2_footnotes
area2689
est
seatMoss Vale
mayorJesse Fitzpatrick
mayortitleMayor
regionSouthern Highlands, Capital Country
logoWingecarribeeLOGO.jpg
logo_upright1.2
urlhttp://www.wsc.nsw.gov.au
stategovGoulburn
stategov2Wollondilly
fedgovWhitlam
near-nwUpper Lachlan
near-nWollondilly
near-neWollongong
near-wGoulburn
near-eShellharbour
near-swGoulburn
near-sShoalhaven
near-seKiama & Shoalhaven

| near-nw = Upper Lachlan | near-n = Wollondilly | near-ne = Wollongong | near-w = Goulburn | near-e = Shellharbour | near-sw = Goulburn | near-s = Shoalhaven | near-se = Kiama & Shoalhaven

Wingecarribee Shire is the local government area of the Southern Highlands in the state of New South Wales, Australia. The Wingecarribee Shire is around 110 km southwest of Sydney and is part of regional Capital Country and to some extent can be considered part of the Southern Tablelands.

Wingecarribee Shire covers an area of 2700 km2 that is typically referred to as the Southern Highlands. Wingecarribee Shire is an important catchment area for water supply to Sydney, Wollongong and the Northern Shoalhaven.

The Council seat and Chambers is in Moss Vale. However, the centre of commerce of the Shire is in Bowral.

The Shire came into existence on 1 January 1981 as an amalgamation of the three previous local government areas that made up the Southern Highlands; Mittagong Shire (itself an amalgamation of Nattai Shire and Mittagong Municipality), Bowral Municipality and the former Wingecarribee Shire (based in Moss Vale).

In 2012, the Wingecarribee Shire Council won a landmark class action against Lehman Brothers Australia in the Federal Court after it was found that Lehman Brothers failed to give sound financial advice to the Wingecarribee Shire and other councils through exposure to high-risk investments known as collateralised debt obligations. Wingecarribee Council suffered A$1.5 million of losses on its investments. The Federal Court found that the council was entitled to an initial award of A$9 million. In 2016 Council announced they had recovered $9.5 million of the $11 million in total losses, recovering 85.6% of all losses. Council's total legal costs of $724,894 were also recovered.

Before the council was suspended in 2021 and an administrator was appointed, the mayor of Wingecarribee Shire was Cr. Duncan Gair. On 20 May 2021, Lisa Miscamble was appointed General Manager.

Major towns and villages

The major towns in the Shire are Mittagong, Bowral, Moss Vale, Robertson and Bundanoon.

Villages include: , Balmoral Village, , , , , , , , , Willow Vale, and Yerrinbool.

Etymology

The current shire retains the name of the former Wingecarribee Shire because the Wingecarribee River is one of the most significant geographical features that is found in all the three previous local government areas that made up the Highlands prior to amalgamation.

The word Wingecarribee is from the Dharawal language (an Indigenous Australian language) which loosely translates into "a flight of birds", or "waters to rest beside". Moreover, the term "Wingecarribee" was used as the name of the area by the first settlers of the area, the Oxley Family (See, History of Bowral) and Governor Macquarie in 1816 recorded it as "Winge Karribee". In 1838, the contemporary spelling was adapted by Surveyor Mitchell.

Geology and geography

The Shire is crossed by the Hume Highway and the Southern Highlands railway line.

The pattern of development is one of small towns and villages. The eastern parts of the Shire are bounded by the Illawarra escarpment and Morton National Park, with some remnant rainforest and heathland. The north of the Shire is characterised by rugged eucalypt bushland, with gullies, gorges and sandy soils. This area forms part of the catchment for Sydney's water supply and two major storage dams (Avon and Nepean Dams) are in this area. The dams cannot be accessed by any roads within the Wingecarribee Shire but by roads leading off south-east of the Wollondilly Shire. The Wollondilly and Wingecarribee Rivers flow through the west of the Shire, through deep sandstone valleys and much of this area forms part of the catchment for Warragamba Dam. The south of the Shire is bounded by Uringalla Creek and is a sandstone plateaux dissected by deep gorges.

Wingecarribee Swamp is home to the remaining population of the endangered Giant dragonfly and Wingecarribee Leek Orchid.

Demographics

Population

At the , the Wingecarribee Shire had an estimated population of 47,882 and has grown from 40,636 at the , a growth rate 1.1% per annum.

The population density is 17.8 person/km2. The Shire is relatively homogenous with an Australian-born population making up 77.1% of the population. Indigenous Australians make up 2.0% of the population. 88.4% of the population speak English at home.

Workforce

The Shire's workforce is at a current estimate of 18,919 residents, around 40% of Shire's entire population. The Shire's workforce are 14.7% managers, 19.3% professionals, 16.2% technicians and trades workers, 9.2% community and personal service workers, 12.5% clerical and administrative workers, 9.5% sales workers, 6.3 machinery operators and drivers, and 10.7% labourers. At the 2006 census, the average median income for the workforce of the Shire was $43,052. The workforce are primarily employed in four main industries: 16% in retail trading, 12% in manufacturing, 11% in health and community services, and 9% in construction. The workforce predominately works within the Shire, with 77% of the workforce working within the Shire. Moreover, 3% travel to nearby Wollongong for employment and 20% work in Sydney. Educationally, 40% of residents of the Shire are qualified with post High School certification in which 11% hold a University Degree and 28% qualified with a Diploma or Certificate.

At the 2006 census the Shire had an unemployment rate of 4.3%.

Housing and residential

Separate and detached housing make up the majority of the housing in the Shire at 90.7%. The rest is semi-detached/townhouse at 5.9% and apartments and units at 1.8%.

Council

General Map of the Wingecarribee Shire & Southern Highlands.

Composition and election method

Wingecarribee Shire is composed of nine councillors elected proportionally. All councillors are elected for a fixed four-year term of office. The mayor is elected by the councillors at the first meeting of the council. The most recent election was held on 10 September 2016. The council was suspended by the Minister for Local Government and gazetted on 12 March 2021 at 12:35pm.

The composition of the council prior to it being suspended by the Minister for Local Government on 12 March 2021 was as follows:

PartyCouncillors
Independents
Labor
Total

The council elected in 2016 and suspended in 2021, in order of election, was:

CouncillorPartyNotes
Duncan GairIndependent
Graham McLaughlinLabor
Grahame AndrewsIndependent
Larry WhipperIndependent
Garry TurlandIndependent
Ken HalsteadIndependent
Ian ScandrettIndependent
Peter NelsonIndependent
Gordon MarkwartGreens

Past mayors

In 1981, the first shire president was David Wood and the shire clerk was Harold Jopling.

  • Duncan Gair
  • Gordon Lewis 2004
  • Dr Sara Murray 2012
  • Philip Yeo
  • Juliet Arkwright

Election results

2024

Local media

Weekly paid local newspapers, Southern Highland News and Southern Highlands Express, closed down in early 2025. The Southern Wire covers regional news including in the Southern Highlands, Wollondilly and Southern Tablelands. Local news is published online through The Bowral News. Commercial radio station is broadcast via stations 2ST 102.9 and Highland FM 107.1.

Local attractions

Main article: Southern_Highlands,_New_South_Wales#Local_Attractions

References

References

  1. {{Census 2016 AUS
  2. (27 March 2019). "3218.0 – Regional Population Growth, Australia, 2017–18". Australian Bureau of Statistics.
  3. "Wingecarribee Shire". [[New South Wales Department of Local Government.
  4. "History Prior to 1981". Wingecarribee Shire Council.
  5. Johnston, Eric. (22 September 2012). "Councils owed millions after Lehman Brothers 'bet', court finds". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  6. O'Brien, Justin. (24 September 2012). "Explaining Lehman's devastation Down Under". Business Spectator.
  7. Hoerr, Karl. (21 September 2012). "Lehman Brothers clients win compensation". ABC TV.
  8. "COUNCIL RECOVERS $9.5 MILLION IN CDO INVESTMENTS". Wingecarribee Shire Council.
  9. "Wingecarribee Shire Council suspended". Office of Local Government.
  10. (17 September 2014). "Larry Whipper new Wingecarribee Mayor". Wingecarribee Shire Council.
  11. "Councils new general manager announced". Wingecarribee Shire Council.
  12. "DEC | NSW threatened species - Wingecarribee Leek Orchid".
  13. {{Census 2001 AUS
  14. "Population". Australian Bureau of Statistics.
  15. "Employment types". Australian Bureau of Statistics.
  16. "SOUTHERN HIGHLANDS BUSINESS | the Southern Highlands Region, Wingecarribee".
  17. "Unemployment rate". Australian Bureau of Statistics.
  18. (19 September 2016). "Wingecarribee Shire: Summary of First Preference and Group Votes for each Candidate". Electoral Commission of New South Wales.
  19. "Mayor announces Councillor Markwart's resignation {{!}} Wingecarribee Shire Council Media Centre".
  20. "Bowral news, sport and weather".
  21. "The Southern Wire".
  22. [http://thebowralnews.com.au/ The Bowral News]
  23. [http://www.2st.com.au/ Home 2ST]
  24. [https://www.highlandfm.org.au/ Homepage Highland FM]
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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