The Catho Chronicle (Formerly the CHBPA Newsletter) is the regular newsletter of Catherine Hill Bay.
It is emailed to all members and friends. Additionally copies are uploaded here for everyone.
To sign up for this to be sent to your inbox, please contact us via the links on the contact page.
Catherine Hill Bay Progress Association acts to protect and improve the environment and culture of the historic precinct of Catherine Hill Bay. Residents of the heritage precinct of Catherine Hill Bay can join the PA as association Members; people in the new estates are very welcome to join the PA as Friends, to attend any meetings and to receive Newsletters.
For more information about the CHBPA, or to reach out with any of your questions please contact us by email at [email protected].
To apply to be a member of the CHBPA, please complete and submit the latest membership form.
The Progress Association runs regular heritage walks in Catherine Hill Bay and Mine Camp.
The Association together with LMCC developed a brochure Heritage Walking Trail Catherine Hill Bay so that visitors can take a self - guided tour of the township.
During a tour conducted in 2005 some images were taken of the environment
Correspondence of the CHB PA is available for viewing here
The CBPA periodically runs surveys of all of the current members of the Association.
The Catherine Hill Bay Community Survey has been conducted every four years since 1994 and provides an informed and comprehensive record of community attitudes over almost 15 years.
The latest set of community surveys that have been run can be downloaded below
Year | Survey Form Download link | Results Download link |
---|---|---|
2006 | Word File | Word File |
2010 | PDF File | Word File |
2013 | Word File | Word File |
2015 | PDF File | PDF File |
2019 | Not available | Not available |
2023 | PDF File | PDF File |
For preservation the historical membership forms are achived below. Please do not use these for new sign ups.
Year | Membership Form Download link |
---|---|
2020 | Word File |
Community Landcare activities at Catherine Hill Bay were launched impressively on “Clean up Australia Day” 1991 – about 100 residents filled a semi-trailer with rubbish collected from a local beach.
The clean-up was part of a concerted effort by the local community, the largest landowner in the area (Coal and Allied Operations Ltd), National Parks and Wildlife Service, local councils and police to clean-up Moonee Beach, close it to 4WDs and incorporate it into Munmorah State Conservation Area.
Coal and Allied initially invited residents to join a Dune Care group which had a common membership with the Catherine Hill Bay Progress Association.
The two groups formally became one body in 1998 and were incorporated as one body in 2002, coinciding with the anniversary of the Progress Association’s foundation a century earlier.
With strong support from Coal and Allied the Dune Care group fenced the frontal dunes at the southern end of Catherine Hill Bay beach, the work being performed by volunteers on Sunday mornings.Later in 1991 Coal and Allied Operations Ltd won the NSW Landcare Business Award for its activities at Catherine Hill Bay.
During 1995-97 three LEAP Training Programs each with a supervisor and 10 trainees completed the re-shaping of high dunes at the northern end of the Beach, between the heritage cemetery and the popular surfing spot known as “Graveyard”.
The project was particularly sensitive because of the re-discovery there in 1992 on the top of one dune of three historic family graves, dating in one case from 1897. The Dune Care activities cleared the site and removed sand 2m deep to expose the tombstones. In addition the LEAP teams restored vegetation, defined paths with fencing and marked walkways.
Two Green Corps programs in the late 1990s and early 2000s grassed Moonee Beach and completed improvements at the cemetery and southern beach car park.
Underground coal mining at Catherine Hill Bay declined sharply from about 2000 and mining ceased in 2002, and part of the area was sold to a developer.
The Progress Association turned its environmental attention to preparing a case for the former coal mining lease (known as the Wallarah Peninsula) to become a national park. The submission took about two years to complete and resulted in an Environmental Assessment of the area in 2005. The Department of Environment and Conservation confirmed the high ecological value of the area, which contains a number of threatened species and fauna and flora.
Through the period Dune Car has promoted Clean Up Australia Day as a significant community activity.
Activities at Catherine Hill Bay were re-invigorated in 2005 when a group of volunteers approached the Progress Association to re-establish on-ground activities. They developed a work program and priorities and Catherine Hill Bay Progress Association and Dune Care Inc is a proud participant in the Landcare organization.
Catherine Hill Bay faced massive development threats from two large developers, Rose group (who became Coastal Hamlets) and Coal & Allied (a subsidiary of Rio Tinto, who later sold the land to Wallalong Land Holdings) from the early 2000’s.
The story of these two developments is detailed in their own pages.
Catherine Hill Bay is a heritage village of about 100 mainly small miners’ cottages, whose scale, character and appearance is much as it was in the 1890s and early 1900s. soon after coal mining was established.
The development proposals considered in 2006 by the State Minister for Planning, Mr Sartor:
The heritage village would be hemmed in between two new developments which would increase the size by 10 times. These new developments would be totally car dependent as there is a lack of public transport options.
Despite their combined impact on the community, the Government treated these as separate projects, with about eight months between publication of the two concept plans.
POLICY POSITION – Catherine Hill Bay Progress Association ( 24 September 2006 ; amended 24 th February 2008 ).
In early September Minister Sartor chaired a briefing at Catherine Hill Bay during which two large owners, Coal and Allied (a subsidiary of Rio Tinto) and RoseCorp, made over view presentations of their intentions (with no detail).
The briefing was attended by representatives of Lake Macquarie and Wyong councils, and representatives of the Catherine Hill Bay , Nords Wharf and Gwandalan communities.
On 24 September the Catherine Hill Bay community met to consider the issues and carried a resolution setting out the community’s views on what was reasonable development at the Bay, and how to go about it.
Neither the community nor Progress Association were opposed to appropriate development.
The resolution was conveyed to Government three weeks before the announcement of the Lower Hunter Regional Strategy.
Attached is the full article
“…the Planning Minister and Premier’s office appears to have misled the community about their intentions, indicating support for heritage protections but not delivering in the face of developer demands for development rights where none currently exist.
Not a pretty picture and not good news for public policy, or for good government or for fair dealing with the community. ”
In the following documents, obtained under FOI legislation, the Department of Planning ranked 91 possible sites in the Hunter in terms of suitability for development. Catherine Hill Bay was ranked the second least desirable location for development. In approving development in the Bay, Mr Sartor has ignored his own department’s advice, and pushed it to the top. (Click here to download all files)
(We gratefully acknowledge the Hunter Community Environment Centre as the organisation which lodged the FOI and provided this material)
Department of Planning Multi Criteria Analysis (MCA) for assessing potential development areas in the Hunter.
Department of Planning tables for each of the 91 areas. Note that Catherine Hill Bay is area RS253, and this area came in second last.
Department of Planning map showing the area numbers Map
A document summerising the chronology of planning protection from 1969 until 2010 was prepared for The Wallarah Peninsula Alliance, the Catherine Hill Bay Progress Association and Dune Care Inc.
This chronology is available for download as a PDF.
A white paper called “A new planning system for NSW” was released (26/6/2013), and the Progress Association has responded.
The response that was submitted can be viewed here.
Rose group’s latest attempt to modify the development approval.
The developer Rose group has attempted to change the development approval:
Keep in mind that the months of work between the government departments is being paid for by taxpayer money, just so Rose can make even more money in his grand design to exploit the land as much as possible.
On the 12th July 2012, members of the Planning Assessment Commission, Garry Payne AM, Richard Thorp and Jan Murrell granted Concept Plan approval for the proposed residential development by Coal & Allied of the northern end of Catherine Hill Bay.
This approval will increase proposed new housing by a further 222 housing lots. Last year 550 new lots were approved for the Rose group development at the southern end of Catherine Hill Bay. Now housing at Catherine Hill Bay which currently consists of 100 houses has increased by 772. The small town of Catherine Hill Bay will increase from 100 houses to 872. The impacts will be enormous.
Well researched arguments, presented to the Panel, showed that the land on which new housing was proposed is environmentally sensitive and of great ecological significance. (Read for yourself in this presentation of the impacts of residential development in this area).
It was acknowledged by the panel that there are constraints on the building of new homes. Catherine Hill Bay, a former coal mining town, has been continuously mined for well over 100 years. Mine subsidence and pothole subsidence will add to the difficulty of building new houses in the Bay with underground grouting needing to be carried out in some areas.
A booklet titled “Protecting the Wallarah peninsula” was produced and is available to download.
Save Catho Rally
Death of Democracy Rally
Residents Against Inappropriate Development Rally
Help Save Catherine Hill Bay Rally
Protest Rally to State Parliament House
Gallery
NSW Coastal Conference 2006 Presentation
All coastal communities face potentially dire consequences as the State Government changes established planning policies and processes to give development rights to coastal lands where no such rights exist under “the rules”.
The Wallarah Peninsula Alliance put the case for the coastal communities at the NSW Coastal Conference at Coffs Harbour on 7 November 2006.
Read the speech, and view the powerpoint presentation
The WPA protest letter is attached
Attached is the nomination for the Heritage listing of the Catho jetty, put forward by Lake Macquarie City Council.
Attached is an objection letter to the proposal by Lake Coal to demolish the jetty at Catherine Hill Bay. You have until the end of January 2011 if you wish to lodge an objection.
Attached …The demise of the Catherine Hill Bay jetty has moved a step closer, with a plan lodged with authorities to demolish it.
Article on CHB Jetty Chris Tola April 2009 NH
Catherine Hill Bay Progress Association acts to protect and improve the environment and culture of the historic precinct of Catherine Hill Bay. Residents of the heritage precinct of Catherine Hill Bay can join the PA as association Members; people in the new estates are very welcome to join the PA as Friends, to attend any meetings and to receive Newsletters.
Anyone is welcome to sign up to the newsletters for CHB.
The Progress Association meets quarterly, usually in the CHB Surf Club.
The Catherine Hill Bay Progress Association is reachable by email at [email protected].