Mayors head in the sand

The foreshore is unstable and severely scarped at Main Beach but Mayor Tom Tate believes the beaches are ready for storm season. Source: Supplied

SOME of the Gold Coasts foreshores are dangerous, unstable and impossible to access despite Mayor Tom Tate giving the citys beaches a clean bill of health.

Resident groups, surf lifesavers and veteran surfers in the area have reacted angrily to a city council promotion yesterday which announced that Gold Coast beaches were fit for the summer.

MASS BLACKOUTS ACROSS THE GOLD COAST

HAILSTORM CAPTURED ON SOCIAL MEDIA

Photographs taken in the past 18 months by surfers of erosion hot spots from Main Beach to The Spit show wooden viewing platforms have been lost to the sea and chunks of concrete from foreshore paths remain exposed.

Kirra Surf Life Saving Club president Andrew McAuliffe revealed the southern beach was confronted with major erosion issues, particularly around their clubhouse.

GOLD COAST BEACHFRONT OWNERS COULD BE FORCED TO PAY UP BIG

Erosion at Main Beach. Pic: Phil Hoile Source: Supplied

Its challenging. Weve been struggling to run an adequate nipper program over the last month, Mr McAuliffe said. At high tide, there is very little beach.

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Mayors head in the sand

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Tonga embraces low cost methods for beach restoration

Talihau community in Tonga embraces natural, low cost methods for beach restoration

An innovative set of techniques developed specifically for the strengthening and rehabilitation of beaches in the Pacific island region have been put to the test in Vava'u, Tonga.

This approach to coastal erosion has been developed over the past two years as part of the coastal Ecosystem-based Adaptation project which is implemented by the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP) and funded by the Australian Government under its International Climate Change Adaptation Initiative (ICCAI).

The beach rehabilitation guidelines and practical interventions - developed over the past two years and tested in Samoa, Vanuatu and Kiribati - are designed to limit and, where possible, stop continued erosion on affected beaches in the region and put in place strategies to try to reverse damage that has already taken place. Such rehabilitation can strengthen coastal resilience to the impacts associated with sea level rise.

Crucially, the techniques are designed to be cheap, achievable and easily managed by local communities in both the short and long term. Dr Joanna Ellison, an expert on coastal geomorphology from the University of Tasmania and a long-term collaborator with SPREP on coastal issues, helped to devise the techniques following extensive research and testing in North Tarawa, Kiribati. She explains:

"Everybody knows that erosion is a problem on a lot of Pacific island beaches, but what many people don't know is that there are many low cost, natural ways to make beaches stronger. Often, people put a lot of pressure on beaches without realising. By recognising and reducing this pressure we can work together to get sediment to come back to the beach and stay there."

The value and importance of community support was aptly demonstrated during the recent application of these tactics at Talihau Paradise Beach in Vava'u. Representatives from all levels of government joined forces with members of the community to protect the quite seriously degraded Talihau Paradise Beach from further erosion.

Town Officer, Siaosi, observed that in the 33 years he has lived at Talihau he has witnessed a large number of changes to the beach:

"Just ten years ago there were a lot of trees and the sea level was far away from the shoreline. Now you can see that things are very different. It is not only the natural activities that cause this erosion, but the human activities too."

SPREP's Environmental Monitoring and Reporting Officer, Mr Paul Anderson, said that an assessment of the beach confirmed Siaosi's suspicion that human impacts were having a grave effect on the condition of the beach. In the 100 metres long stretch of beach, Mr Anderson observed only six mature trees and no evidence of new growth - a classic sign of degradation caused by trampling from humans and animals. He explains:

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Tonga embraces low cost methods for beach restoration

193 rare sea turtles catch a flight to Florida

ORLANDO, Fla. -- A Coast Guard plane touched down in Orlando at dusk Tuesday, hauling a cargo of the world's rarest sea turtles, rescued by volunteers from the lethally chilly waters and beaches of Cape Cod Bay. Weighing from 2 to 10 pounds, the young Kemp's Ridley sea turtles are among the first of an astounding wave of the reptiles to succumb to hypothermia in the "bucket" of the Massachusetts bay.

"They're so small," said Alyssa Hancock, a SeaWorld Orlando aquarium worker, peering into one of 101 banana boxes holding 193 turtles.

Turtle rescues happen every year in late fall in the Northeast, but for reasons not yet known what's happening this year is "epic," said one of the nearly two dozen volunteers passing boxes of turtles like a bucket brigade.

"Statistically, I feel like we are out on Pluto," said Tony LaCasse, spokesman for the New England Aquarium's marine-animal hospital in Quincy, Mass., who fears the number of cold-stunned turtles could quadruple.

"We've been rescuing sea turtles for 25 years, and we are just absolutely shocked," LaCasse said.

Among possible explanation for the huge spike in turtle rescues -- the record of 242 in 2012 has been eclipsed already this year by more than 400 rescues -- is that the number of highly endangered Kemp's ridleys has been increasing slightly in recent years.

So when more of them turned up to feast on crabs in Cape Cod Bay, more were trapped there when water temperatures began to drop in September.

The bay is shaped like a bucket, and turtles have to swim 25 miles to the north to get over the lip of the bucket and escape to warmer waters.

"They slowly get hypothermic over six to eight weeks," LaCasse said. "Their body temperature goes from about 70 at Labor Day to 60 Oct. 1 and near 50 by mid-November. What happens in November is we get big north winds and wave activity that washes them up on beaches of Outer Cape Cod."

Many of the rescues have been done by volunteers with the Massachusetts Audubon Sanctuary at Wellfleet Bay.

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193 rare sea turtles catch a flight to Florida

Wollongong council votes to keep current off-leash beaches

Nov. 24, 2014, 8 p.m.

Several Wollongong beaches will remain playgrounds for pooches after the citys councillors voted to retain the current off-leash beach zonings.

Several Wollongong beaches will remain playgrounds for pooches after the citys councillors voted to retain the current off-leash beach zonings.

The proposal put to councillors at Monday nights meeting for there to be no change to off-leash beach zonings throughout the city came after nearly four months of heated protests and social media campaigning, mostly from the pro-dogs-on-beaches lobby group Unleash Our Beaches.

Supporters of the current system, which allows dogs to continue to roam free on Sharkeys, McCauleys, Little Austinmer and Stanwell Park beaches, say the beaches should be shared equally between dogs and people, however those calling for a more restrictive system say priority should be given to humans.

At Monday nights meeting, councillors voted 11-2 to back the staff recommendation that the policy remain unchanged, following a mammoth two hours of debate.

Three public addresses opened the meeting, with Illawarra Dog Community Group spokesperson Diana Messum and Austinmer vet Dr Warwick Prowse in favour of retaining the status quo, while resident Ron McMaster called for a greater restriction of dogs on beaches.

Ms Messum said the results of the survey overwhelmingly supported no change to the current policy.

Dr Prowse, a former RSPCA director, said the vast majority of dog owners displayed responsible dog ownership practices.

To me its madness to control the few problems that may occur by shutting out all the dogs [from the beach], he said.

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Wollongong council votes to keep current off-leash beaches

Off-leash beach zonings to stay

Nov. 24, 2014, 8 p.m.

Several Wollongong beaches will remain playgrounds for pooches after the citys councillors voted to retain the current off-leash beach zonings.

Several Wollongong beaches will remain playgrounds for pooches after the citys councillors voted to retain the current off-leash beach zonings.

The proposal put to councillors at Monday nights meeting for there to be no change to off-leash beach zonings throughout the city came after nearly four months of heated protests and social media campaigning, mostly from the pro-dogs-on-beaches lobby group Unleash Our Beaches.

Supporters of the current system, which allows dogs to continue to roam free on Sharkeys, McCauleys, Little Austinmer and Stanwell Park beaches, say the beaches should be shared equally between dogs and people, however those calling for a more restrictive system say priority should be given to humans.

At Monday nights meeting, councillors voted 11-2 to back the staff recommendation that the policy remain unchanged, following a mammoth two hours of debate.

Three public addresses opened the meeting, with Illawarra Dog Community Group spokesperson Diana Messum and Austinmer vet Dr Warwick Prowse in favour of retaining the status quo, while resident Ron McMaster called for a greater restriction of dogs on beaches.

Ms Messum said the results of the survey overwhelmingly supported no change to the current policy.

Dr Prowse, a former RSPCA director, said the vast majority of dog owners displayed responsible dog ownership practices.

To me its madness to control the few problems that may occur by shutting out all the dogs [from the beach], he said.

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Off-leash beach zonings to stay

Disappointment at off-leash beaches proposal

Nov. 24, 2014, 10 a.m.

An Austinmer resident has expressed her disappointment at a report recommending off-leash beach zonings stay the same.

Picture: ROBYN GLYNN

Dog owners flout rules at Little Austinmer Beach

Staff recommend no change to off-leash beach zonings

AnAustinmer resident who photographed dog owners flouting bans on Little Austinmer beach has expressed her disappointment at a report recommending off-leash beach zonings stay the same.

Robyn Glynn was one of the few people to publicly support controversial changes to Wollongong City Councils Dogs on Beaches and Parks Policy, urging council to restrict the times dogs would be allowed to roam at northern suburbs off-leash beaches.

On Sunday, the lifelong dog owner and lover said it was a shame council had been influenced by the pro-dogs-on-beaches lobby.

I am shocked that the council have just been so swayed by such an aggressive and well-organised lobby group, she said.

After I sent my photos [of dogs misbehaving on Little Austinmer beach to the Mercury] last time people from the area were continually coming up to me and thanking me for helping the cause of the average everyday community member.

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Disappointment at off-leash beaches proposal

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