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The Byron Shire Echo Issue 40.03 – June 25, 2025

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Vo lum e 8 ~ 20

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Your free guid e to the flourish ing health and wel lbeing industr y of Byron and the Northern Rivers

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ANOTHER SUPER TERRIFIC HAPPY EDITION OF RAINBOW PROPAGANDA The Byron Shire Echo • Volume 40 #03 • June 25, 2025 • www.echo.net.au

.com.au

Bonus magazine with this issue!

Solstice marked by Cape Byron students

Cape Byron Rudolf Steiner School students, parents and teachers gathered on the eve of the winter solstice on Friday to shine a light into the darkest night of the year. The theme for this year’s Winter Festival, held at the Bangalow A&I Hall and showgrounds, was the song, ‘I Can See The Lighthouse’. The event featured a choir, dancing, a lantern parade and a fire dance. Top right: Ruby, Phoebe and River during rehearsals. Bottom right: Avelie and Goldie, both in class 6. Photos Kurt Petersen & Jeff Dawson

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ullumbimby Residents Association (MRA) and Mullumbimby’s Community Resilience Group, ‘Our Neighbourhood’, congratulated Byron Shire Council for this week releasing much-needed 2022 flood data. They say that following months of community advocacy, the new survey layer gives residents direct access to property-level data collected after the devastating 2022 floods. The home of Bec Talbot, from Our Neighbourhood, was flooded in 2022. She told The Echo, ‘Residents

It’s a new community piano! ▶ p3

can now visit Council’s online mapping tool to see exactly how high floodwaters rose at surveyed properties across the Shire in 2022’.

Decision-making tool ‘This is a real-life decisionmaking tool. ‘Flood-affected Mullumbimby residents have consistently raised the need for access to flood data. Mullumbimby’s Community Resilience Group met with Council staff to stress that families deciding whether to go into more debt to raise their homes deserve every available fact.

‘After 2022, many homeowners were left rebuilding and weighing up their future risk. ‘With the new map layer, people can see past flood marks on their own streets and weigh the cost and benefit of raising homes. ‘Raising homes helps avoid damage, but can create accessibility challenges, especially for older residents. Council’s newly-released data supports conversations about weighing risks with lifestyle choices such as remaining in your community. ‘This is about lives, homes and community resilience.

Best development ever? Not according to the residents ▶ p5

Love Lennox! But do we love Airbnb? ▶ p8

‘One-in-500 floods no longer feel “out of my lifetime”. With sea-level rises and intensified storms on the way, maps like this on Council’s website help people like me to decide their level of risk tolerance.’

While the newly released data is a welcome tool, the way in which it is presented is not easy to navigate for the layperson. Go to www.byron.nsw.gov. au, then search ‘Online Map’. The ‘Online Map & Zoning Tools’ page will appear. Then click the ‘Byron Shire Council web map’ link.

From here, the Byron Shire map appears. Click on ‘Layers’ in the left column. In that list will be ‘flood information’. Expand the ‘flood information’ link which will show more options. Click on ‘Flood Height Surveys 2022 Public Works NSW’. This can be compared to another link, ‘Flood Level Survey 2016 2019’. Individual properties can be selected, and while not every property has a flood level, it can be compared to neighbouring properties that are marked with flood level.

The creative business folk of the Byron A&I ▶ p16

Helpful hints on home improvements for you ▶ p18

How it works

Not a member? Join BBSC for just $5! Simply use your ‘Byron Rewards’ points to enter the promo.

Use them lose them

THIS SATURDAY!

All members point balances under $25 will be zeroed on 01/07/25. *Must be present to claim.

Jonson Street, Byron Bay • 02 6685 6878 • www.byronbayservicesclub.com.au


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The Byron Shire Echo Issue 40.03 – June 25, 2025 by Echo Publications - Issuu