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News - Cranbourne Star News - 12th September 2024

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Thursday, 12 September, 2024

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Wildlife shelter damaged by gum tree

Ex-councillor to run for Casey

Students all booked out

O’Brien leaves a lasting legacy

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SPORT

Seeking change By Violet Li Tom Kapitany, the owner of the Crystal World Exhibition Centre in Devon Meadows, will run for Cranbourne Gardens Ward in the coming Casey Council elections. Mr Kapitany said the decision was made after years of problems with Casey Council. “I’ve just found the council difficult to work with. Every time you work with the council, they’re very aggressive,” he said. “I really had no interest in coming on the council, but I had dinners with some local people, and I just told them my problems, and they told me their problems. They said you should go on the council. “This is like two years ago.” Despite an initial lack of interest in a council position, Mr Kapitany believes changes must happen after an IBAC anti-corruption inquiry. He also took aim at the administrators and what he said was poor maintenance of nature strips, parks and roads. “They (the administrators) subcontracted everything up from healthcare to landscaping to road maintenance,” he said. “They (the administrators) are working for the ratepayers, but they don’t see that.” As a rural landowner, Mr Kapitany’s top priority is to overhaul the Casey town planning division, a long-cherished wish highlighted by his well-known planning battle to display Rosie the Shark at his exhibition centre. Mr Kapitany rescued Rosie, a two-tonne preserved great white shark, from the closed Wildlife Wonderland in Bass in 2019, and wished to build a permanent exhibition on his premises for educational purposes, which drew considerable opposition from the town planning officers. He then brought the planning dispute to VCAT and won in 2022, after three years of negotiations and a total of $60,000 in legal bills. According to Mr Kapitany, the conflicts continued after the VCAT. “The council was not happy, so they put in a regulation. I had to get all my permits within two months. This was just after Covid. It was impossible to do it,” he recalled. “I’ve been doing extension after extension, and every time I ask for an extension, it is $1500 to $2,000. They’re raking me financially.” Mr Kapitany also cited that when he tried to build a granny flat for his parents, the council wouldn’t let him put kitchens inside, which later took him nearly 12 months to negotiate.

Cranbourne Gardens Ward candidate Tom Kapitany. (Supplied) He said he went through numerous planning challenges, decision-making delays, and wrangling over bylaws. “Everything just shows how inflexible the council is, how council officers use their own personal opinions to make judgments, rather than be practical and say what’s good for the community, what’s not good for the community,” he said.

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“Everything in council is bureaucracy. There is no logic. There is no simple way of doing things. “They put blocks in my way. I’ve had to find ways around the blocks that they create. It shouldn’t be so difficult. “The council lacks decision-making. They won’t make decisions because they’re afraid to take risks or afraid to do things.” Therefore, Mr Kapitany said if he was elected,

he would strive to ensure the town planning division uses “common sense“ and makes decisions in the best interests of the residents of Cranbourne Gardens Ward, rather than blindly following bylaws. He would work hard towards eliminating the waste of time and ratepayers’ money on “frivolous“ legal actions and VCAT fees. Continued page 3

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