DANDENONG STAR JOURNAL
Home » No hand out in hokey pokey bout

No hand out in hokey pokey bout

By CAM LUCADOU-WELLS

STRETCHED to live within their $150 million annual budget, Greater Dandenong councillors have been bickering over giving an extra $100 to an elderly citizens club’s Mother’s Day lunch.
And while they also knocked back $30 extra for a fund-raising sausage sizzle, they agreed to spend $460 on a judge for a record attempt at the hokey pokey.
At their meeting on 29 March, councillors voted down the extra funds for Italian Elderly Citizens Club Noble Park’s free three-course lunch for up to 80 members.
The group had asked for $440 and received $340 under the council’s community response grants program.
President Rita Giaquinta said the club volunteers would make cuts “elsewhere” to stage the $2000 lunch, which includes a door prize for the oldest attending mum.
“It means a lot. It’s something they look forward to.
“It’s an outing for them.”
In the same motion, the council refused to splurge an extra $30 for fund-raising sausages for Cyrene Centre, a free alcohol and drug counselling service run largely by volunteers.
The centre had applied for $550 to help it raise at least $1000 towards its rent and utility costs. The council granted it $320.
Councillor Maria Sampey had pushed for the extra funding after a successful applicant withdrew their submission, freeing up $150.
She took issue with how “sport seemed to take priority over the elderly” in the allocations.
At the meeting, the council shared $7070 among 13 applicants at the meeting, including $460 for an adjudicator at a school’s Australian record attempt at dancing the hokey pokey.
There was also up to $750 each for individual sportspeople.
“This (elderly citizens) group barely survived last year,” Cr Sampey said.
“What I’d like to know is what criteria is relied upon to assess various applicants. There seems to be such a large difference between some getting a large amount and some getting a pittance.
Cr Sean O’Reilly said the grants process shouldn’t be beholden to “Cr Sampey’s magic wand”, and ratepayers’ money wasn’t a “magic pudding”.
“We’re robbing from groups in the future.”
Cr Sampey interjected: “It’s 100 bucks!”
Cr O’Reilly said the council had a set process and shouldn’t hand funds out like “Monopoly money”.
“Every single dollar of ratepayers’ money should be put through a stringent process before it’s spent.
“If we follow these sorts of last minute adjustments… we are effectively doing the hokey pokey with ratepayers’ money.”
In opposing the motion, Cr Matthew Kirwan said he believed councillors shouldn’t interfere in the officers’ grants decisions.
He said the council should re-look at the grants criteria once a year, which he believed should favour groups like Cyrene and the senior citizens rather than individuals.
Cr Roz Blades said awarding the extra funds was a “common sense” solution.
“It’s about assisting people in the community who are volunteers. These policies aren’t inviolate. They’re moveable feasts.
“There comes a time when common sense has to prevail and this is such a time.
“If we can’t find the money … then we’ve gone too far.”
Mayor Heang Tak, in casting the deciding vote, said he supported elderly groups but that the council had a policy in place.

Digital Editions


More News

  • No appetite for South-East ‘super council’: Tan

    No appetite for South-East ‘super council’: Tan

    Discussion has emerged around amalgamating local government into “super councils”, with proponents citing financial strain and economies of scale, while a former local mayor argues that “local government should stay…

  • VIEW hits 40 in style

    VIEW hits 40 in style

    Dandenong VIEW Club members got “all shook up” with an Elvis tribute performance and dinner as they marked their club’s 40th anniversary. More than 50 members and guests celebrated with…

  • Weekend crime crackdown leads to multiple arrests

    Weekend crime crackdown leads to multiple arrests

    Five people across Melbourne were arrested as part of Operation Advance last weekend — including two men from Cranbourne. The two men, both aged 36 were first sighted by the…

  • Calls to relieve ATO’s ‘unaffordable’ interest charges

    Calls to relieve ATO’s ‘unaffordable’ interest charges

    A South East community-support agency has welcomed a call for the Australian Taxation Office to relieve the steep interest charged on tax debts. South East Community Links has supported clients…

  • Season draws to a close in disappointing fashion for Dandy

    Season draws to a close in disappointing fashion for Dandy

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 537215 The summer came to a close on a sour note for Dandenong (239) as the Panthers went down at home to Carlton (8/317d)…

  • Hope is enough for Bucks

    Hope is enough for Bucks

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 527654 Much like the Dandenong District Cricket Association’s (DDCA) Turf 1 competition, Springvale South and Buckley Ridges will battle it out this weekend at…

  • Bandits fall as Roos hop

    Bandits fall as Roos hop

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 537219 Parkfield has been on top of the DDCA Turf 2 ladder for a long time but Coomoora will now head into finals in…

  • Colours fly at Holi Festival

    Colours fly at Holi Festival

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 535616 Lynbrook Residents Association (LRA) hosted its annual Holi Festival at Banjo Paterson Park on Saturday 28 February. A spokesperson of LRA said it…

  • New Casey Local Law now in place

    New Casey Local Law now in place

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 429633 A refreshed Casey Local Law came into effect on 2 March. Casey Council undertook a review and community consultation on the Local Law…

  • Home batteries boom in the outer Melbourne suburbs

    Home batteries boom in the outer Melbourne suburbs

    More than 250,000 households, small businesses and community organisations have installed home batteries — with the majority of them subsiding in the outer suburbs of Victoria. The top postcodes for…