Little Dip Conservation Park Management Plan - Draft Amendments

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Consultation has concluded

Consultation Process


Now Closed

This online engagement was hosted on YourSAy from 2 December 2019 to 28 February 2020. Below is a record of the engagement.

You are invited to share your views on the proposed changes to the Little Dip Conservation Park Management Plan 1990.

The Little Dip Conservation Park Management Plan states that existing lease holders will be granted life tenure for shacks in the park and once the lease expires, the shacks will be handed back to government and the shacks will be removed.

The proposed amendments aim to support the SA Government’s commitment to create new

Consultation Process


Now Closed

This online engagement was hosted on YourSAy from 2 December 2019 to 28 February 2020. Below is a record of the engagement.

You are invited to share your views on the proposed changes to the Little Dip Conservation Park Management Plan 1990.

The Little Dip Conservation Park Management Plan states that existing lease holders will be granted life tenure for shacks in the park and once the lease expires, the shacks will be handed back to government and the shacks will be removed.

The proposed amendments aim to support the SA Government’s commitment to create new opportunities for families to retain shacks on Crown land and in national parks, as part of vibrant holiday communities.

Other management plans with proposed amendments as part of the Retaining Shacks commitment include:

  • Innes National Park Management Plan 2003
  • Coorong National Park Management Plan 1990
  • Parks of the Coffin Bay Area Management Plan 2004 (incorporates Kellidie Bay Conservation Park)

The proposed amendments to Park Management Plans relate to 85 shacks in national parks:

  • 62 in the Coorong National Park,
  • 20 in Innes National Park,
  • 2 in Kellidie Bay Conservation Park, and,
  • 1 in Little Dip Conservation Park.

More information on the delivery of the Retaining Shacks commitment can be found on the Department for Environment and Water Retaining Shacks page.

Get involved

To have your say, read the Park Management Plan Draft Amendments and:

Department for Environment and Water
National Parks and Protected Area Program
Attn: Planning and Policy Officer
GPO Box 1047
ADELAIDE SA 5000

How can your input influence the decision?

Your input will help in the development of the final amendments.

What are the next steps?

Feedback received will inform the final draft park management plan amendments that will be submitted to the Parks and Wilderness Council for consideration and advice before being submitted to the Minister for Environment and Water for adoption. This is expected to occur in April 2020.

A summary of the feedback and the adopted amendments to the Little Dip Conservation Park Management Plan will be publicly available on this and the Department for Environment and Water websites.

Contact details

For more information contact:

National Parks and Protected Area Program, Planning and Policy Officer
P: 8124 4737
E: DEWProtectedAreaManagement@sa.gov.au

Closing date: 5pm Friday 28 February 2020




Background


Now Closed

This online engagement was hosted on YourSAy from 2 December 2019 to 28 February 2020. Find out more about the consultation process. Below is a record of the engagement.

The Little Dip Conservation Park conserves a number of small lakes, each with its own unique character, ranging from the open, marshy and shallow Lake Eliza to the very salty Big Dip Lake, and the deep Fresh Water Lake. The park also contains a ruggedly beautiful coastline including a large area of coastal sand dunes.

The Boandik People have lived on the Limestone Coast for many thousands of years and they know the land intimately – its physical features, animal and plant life and water resources. Today, the Boandik People continue to maintain strong cultural links to the region.

The Little Dip Conservation Park Management Plan was adopted in 1992. These draft amendments currently proposed are in response to the South Australian Government’s commitment to creating new opportunities for families to retain shacks in the park by expanding the eligibility to maintain a lease in return for upgrading the shack to meet contemporary safety, amenity and environmental standards.