B2B with a Twist Publication - Work • Stay • Play October Edition Work Stay Play Autumn 2018 Edition | Page 9

B2B - Keeping you in the know David Harris -Member for Wyong In early February the NSW Parliament resumed sitting for this year, I was determined to raise the Wallarah issue again as soon as possible. can establish how the proponents arrived at that figure because there is no baseline data. The residents of the Central Coast are not going to wear this. A public meeting was held on the Australia Day long weekend. Suddenly it dawned on people right across the Central Coast, including coast residents people from the electorates of Terrigal and 300 megalitres a Gosford that this will impact them, and they year of recycled mine are not happy. Indeed, at that meeting they discharge waste water said that they are prepared to raise whatever amount of money is needed to fight it. put into their water On the 7th of February I raised a Notice of Motion calling on the Government to hold a public referendum on whether residents want Do treated mine waste water discharged into want their drinking water catchment. “ The Wallarah 2 Coal Project has always been questionable because of its potential impact on the Central Coast water catchment. The catchment proponents of the mine have used some strange magical formula to determine that 300 megalitres of water will be lost from the system. They originally wanted water licences to compensate for that loss. However, the Government refused and instead told the proponents that they would be required to return water to the catchment. No-one, including water experts, ” each year? I have huge doubts about the figures that have been used to make this determination. But regardless, the question remains. Do coast residents want 300 megalitres a year of recycled mine discharge waste water put into their water catchment each year? I think not. Regards, David Harris MP, Member for Wyong 9