Victorian Exodus to Queensland Continues, page-66

  1. 12,370 Posts.
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    You are an absolute flog Lappy.

    My sources are an interview by the ABC with local MP Richard Riordan and a report in the left leaning rag The Age, see below.

    My comments are factual, truthful and again you suggest I lie. Your motive is full of malice. You should be banned by HC.

    The only liar is you and you have referenced a very different development at the month of the Gellibrand River a few kilometres away from the compulsory acquisition by Andrews. DO YOUR RESEARCH PROPERLY.

    Lappy stop commenting on things you know nothing about. This has been my recreational patch for the last 25 years.

    Flog flog flog.

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    Government to spend stacks buying land for Twelve Apostles tourism development

    ByBenjamin Preiss

    September 23, 2022 — 5.38pm

    The state government is preparing to compulsorily acquire farmland opposite the Twelve Apostles to make way for a $108 million tourism development that will include a new visitor centre, car park and walking trails.
    The owner of the Princetown property is using the site as the base for a helicopter tours business and grazing sheep, but was recently informed by the state government of its plans to acquire the site.

    The government refused to disclose how much it intends to spend on buying the 32-hectare property.
    The Nesseler family has owned the land since the 1990s and owner Richard Nesseler had plans for a private tourism development on the land.

    Nesseler declined to comment on the compulsory acquisition.
    The government’s plans for the tourism redevelopment includes a new “Twelve Apostles visitor experience centre”, but the project will also include a temporary events space, landscaping and gardens, visitor shuttle and new access roads.

    Liberal MP Richard Riordan, whose electorate takes in the land, took aim at the compulsory acquisition in a speech to the Victorian parliament, arguing the state’s west was desperate for investment.
    “We are neglected in our healthcare. Our roads are universally considered the worst roads in the state of Victoria,” he said.

    Riordan said the Nesseler family had tried for 10 years to build a visitor centre at the site.
    “They currently run a very successful tourist business in the Port Campbell helicopter business. They live and breathe that community.”
    Corangamite Shire Mayor Ruth Gstrein said the community needed a new visitor centre to encourage tourists to stay longer in the area.
 
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