Home » popular » Lake plans concerns

Lake plans concerns

A GROUP of Lake Meran farming district residents are concerned about the management of their lake.

They are calling for a public forum to discuss the management of the Lake Meran community complex.

Local farmer, Stephen English said locals have grown concerned over plans which have already been signed off by the North Central Catchment Management Authority, and said there has not been enough community consultation on the matter. 

“Lake Meran to date has gone through a process that has been closed to the broader public, particularly the recreational users,” he said.

Group member John Pike said that there was a wealth of local knowledge that was not being utilised in the CMA’s plan.

“There are families who have been here longer than the Millennium droughts, who know what has worked for the lake, but have not been involved in it [the management plan],” he said.

Mr English said that the plan does not allow for sufficiently high lake levels and said that they raise concerns over leisure, irrigation, and environmental issues for the lakes.

The current plan lays out the lake levels at depths which would leave the southern basin of Lake Meran exposed three years in five, as well as render the diving tower on the north side of the lake unusable for four years out of five.

Mr English described the southern basin as an area with huge environmental potential, describing it as a miniature Kakadu.

Other concerns include the impact of lowered water levels on irrigation viability, and salinity, especially with the increased vegetation that grows in the lake bed, which can contribute of black-water events.

Lake Meran experienced a black-water event in January of this year when thousands of fish died when rotting vegetation diminished the oxygen levels in the water. 

The group has laid out a five-point agenda for a proposed forum, including the need for a transparent consultation process, the need for higher lake levels, the need for a renewed focus on the southern basin, the potential for better environmental outcomes than the current plan allows for, and the potential for better recreational outcomes. 

The group has requested that Gannawarra Shire Council facilitate the forum.

Shire infrastructure services director, Geoff Rollinson said that council has been trying to work with the community and the responsible authorities over a number of years.

“Tourism and economic development is important to the Gannawarra Shire and beautiful lakes like Lake Meran add to the appeal of the district”, he said.

Mr Rollinson said that he had suggested that the Lake Meran could give councillors a presentation at a briefing to give them a better understanding of their concerns.

Mr English said yesterday that the group was agreeable to providing a presentation and hoped that council would then be agreeable to facilitate a public forum to allow the broader community to express their views.

Digital Editions


  • School spirit shines through storm

    School spirit shines through storm

    DOZENS of trees at Cohuna Secondary School were snapped, torn down and wrecked during last week’s microburst storm event, including one eucalyptus tree which was…

More News

  • Council opposes glass bin mandate

    Council opposes glass bin mandate

    COUNCIL has moved a motion to join a group of nearly 40 other local government organisations, calling for a review of “metro-centric”, “one-size-fits-all” legislation which mandates kerbside collection of glass-only…

  • Clean up Kerang carries on

    Clean up Kerang carries on

    INCLEMENT weather did not deter a dedicated group of volunteers who spent Sunday morning cleaning up rubbish on the side of the Kerang-Koondrook road. As part of Clean Up Australia…

  • Cultures to collide in Kerang

    Cultures to collide in Kerang

    KERANG’S annual Lunar New Year Festival is set to return with a resplendent bang this Saturday at Atkinson Park. The festival’s first iteration last year drew a crowd of around…

  • Council finances in stable position

    Council finances in stable position

    THE Gannawarra Shire Council is in a “relatively stable” financial position, according to councillors’ assessment of the quarterly budget report at their February meeting. Council remains debt free, and as…

  • Help shape the future of Kerang District Health

    Help shape the future of Kerang District Health

    A COMPREHENSIVE strategic planning process to guide Kerang District Health for the next three years has begun, and the health service wants to know what is most important to you.…

  • Need help with life admin? The big blue van is coming.

    Need help with life admin? The big blue van is coming.

    A MOBILE Service Centre from Services Australia will visit a number of locations across the Gannawarra and Buloke Shires this week. The big blue van is available to assist residents…

  • Celebrating the Gannawarra’s new Welcome to Country video

    Celebrating the Gannawarra’s new Welcome to Country video

    FESTIVITIES will be held next month to mark the launch of the Gannawarra’s new Welcome to Country video. Gannawarra Shire Council, Mallee District Aboriginal Services and Northern District Community Health…

  • V/Line service on track

    V/Line service on track

    THE future of the Swan Hill passenger train line is secured despite passengers being told by V/Line staff they could be ushered onto buses in the next 12 months. Passenger…

  • Mayors briefed on basin plan

    Mayors briefed on basin plan

    NORTHERN Victoria’s council chiefs have fired a warning shot over the future of the Murray-Darling Basin Plan, declaring their communities cannot afford another hit. The Murray River Group of Councils…

  • Fire, heat blamed for late arrival times

    Fire, heat blamed for late arrival times

    SWAN Hill passenger train services recorded their lowest punctuality ever in January, V/Line figures show. Reliability on the line was 85.1 per cent, while punctuality dropped to 63.5 per cent,…