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Celebrate Water Week 2004

Wellington Shire Council is encouraging all residents to follow its lead and participate in sustainable water practices as Australia celebrates National Water Week from 17-23 October.

By Wellington Shire Council - 18th October 2004 - Back to News

The council’s Open Space Unit is introducing a Sustainability Framework as part of its business plan, incorporating a whole range of sustainable water practices. This includes designing and constructing landscapes in the shire’s parks, gardens, street scapes and urban centres with species that require less water to survive.

It has also recently become a member of Sustainable Gardening Australia, an organisation committed to promoting water awareness in the community, and it will apply for accreditation with this group next year.

In addition, Wellington’s pools contribute by recycling any escaped water, by treating and returning it to the pools. Waste water from the Sale indoor pool is held in a retention dam and later used to irrigate the pool’s grounds.

National Water Week is an initiative of the Victorian Government, designed to encourage communities to take action to protect and conserve our water resources.

The council welcomes the opportunity for the community to become more water-aware and contribute to what the council is already doing to ensure there is enough for our environment, farms, households and industries around the shire.


There are many ways that residents can work together with the council to help look after the many water resources we have within our shire including reporting leaks in public places like dripping taps and running toilets, and keeping our waterways and wetlands clean.

Said Wellington’s Mayor Jeff Amos: "Wellington Shire is one of the most water-orientated areas in the nation. We have snow in our high country to the north, oceans along the 90 Mile Beach to the south, and some of Victoria’s greatest rivers; the MacAlister, the Thomson and the Latrobe, threaded through our municipality.

"It’s home to the MacAlister Irrigation District, one of Australia’s most productive irrigation areas, and RAMSAR internationally listed wetlands that are part of the Gippsland Lakes system; one of the largest inland navigable waterways in the country.

"Rural and urban communities are both hit hard by water shortages, and at a local level we have most certainly felt the effects. However, with management tools like The Victorian White Paper policy we can begin to attack the issue at a state-wide level and protect the limited water we have available in Gippsland rivers."

For more information about ways you can be involved with protecting and conserving Wellington water please telephone Wellington Shire Council’s Environmental Planner Colleen Murphy on 1300 366 244, or by visiting the National Water Week website at www.savewater.com.au/waterweek .

Source: www.gippsland.com

Published by: news@gippsland.com



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