DANDENONG STAR JOURNAL
Home » MPs query Kingston monitoring

MPs query Kingston monitoring

Opposition MPs have demanded answers on why the State Government has installed municipal monitors to oversee Kingston Council.

The Government appointed John Tanner AM and a second monitor until the end of 2025 to provide “good governance and support for council’s decision-making procedures”.

Liberal MP Ann-Marie Hermans told Parliament on 28 August she wanted assurance that the move wasn’t a “political tool” used to “silence great councillors and steamroll contentious planning issues”.

“Monitors interventions like this are supposed to be justified.

“They must be transparent and grounded in evidence.

“But I have not seen any explanation of why these newly created positions are justified, because I am pretty certain it is not to support the local community.”

The monitors’ announcement came days after a large public gathering against development at Rossdale golf course – a development opposed by Kingston Council.

Similarly Kingston and residents have opposed a 941-dwelling proposal on the former Kingswood golf course, Hermans noted.

In Parliament, Liberal Bev McArthur accused Local Government Minister Nick Staikos of “covertly weaponizing” his portfolio to “seize control of councils that refuse to toe the Labor Party line”.

She said Kingston, which overlapped Staikos’s Bentleigh electorate, appeared “well run” and “to not require the minister’s so-called assistance”.

“Their crime is: opposing cost shifting and opposing inappropriate development and what constitutes insufficient infrastructure.”

On 22 August, Local Government Minister Nick Staikos said “Victorians expect their councils to maintain a high standard of processes and practices, and these monitors will help the council best serve the Kingston community.”

The monitors would address issues such as conflicts-of-interest, health-and-safety practices, the relationship between councillors and between councillors and council officers, and decision-making processes, according to the Government.

Digital Editions


  • What’s On

    What’s On

    Mini Sustainability Festival Activities such as recycled collage art, refills of natural cleaning products, mending and patching, pre-loved book giveaway, clothes swap and urban harvest…

More News

  • Hit to helmet proves costly

    Hit to helmet proves costly

    **Just when you thought the Premier relegation battle between DEVON MEADOWS and UPPER BEACONSFIELD couldn’t get any closer, there was an odd moment towards the end that may have helped…

  • Maskiell, Munro and Midge

    Maskiell, Munro and Midge

    DAVE: Good morning boys, welcome back to another edition of LTS. It’s always great when I get to wear my Collingwood polo on a Monday morning after a big win…

  • Bittersweet celebrations of IWD

    Bittersweet celebrations of IWD

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 362841 Wellspring for Women opt for a delayed celebration of International Women’s Day to combine Eid ul Fitr and Holi celebrations at the end…

  • Bestselling Author Candice Fox, J P Pomare to visit Connected Libraries

    Bestselling Author Candice Fox, J P Pomare to visit Connected Libraries

    Book lovers will have the chance to meet some of Australia’s most acclaimed writers when two author events come to Bunjil Place Library in the coming weeks. Connected Libraries has…

  • Noble Park woman arrested, Dora the pup recovered

    Noble Park woman arrested, Dora the pup recovered

    A woman has been arrested and an allegedly stolen puppy has been recovered by police in Noble Park this morning (11 March). Dora, a 10-month-old black cavoodle, was allegedly untied…