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Community participation

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General participation in natural resource management includes activities such as volunteering to work on environmental projects, investing in ethical investments, adopting environmentally responsible habits, and choosing to purchase goods and services with smaller ecological footprints.

Environmental projects in or adjacent to urban areas of the ACT include water quality and riparian assessment, stream bank stabilisation, riparian ecosystem rehabilitation, surveys of flora and fauna, and tree planting. Rural land managers are actively involved in maintaining native grasslands and woodlands. Groups are also removing weeds; revegetating denuded areas; educating and raising awareness; restoring riparian areas and wetlands; surveying, monitoring and researching natural resource management issues; subcatchment planning; and providing advice to government.

A number of community groups collaborate and/or complement each other in conserving and restoring the natural resources of the ACT – the main community natural resource management groups are urban and rural Landcare, Park Care, Horse Paddock Carers and Waterwatch.

ACT Landcare and Waterwatch groups (ACT and local region)

Addressing weeds, revegetation and water quality in urban, rural and bush environments

57 Landcare groups and 100 Waterwatch groups

Membership: more than 2500 people in total, ranging from smaller groups to one group of nearly 200 people

Representing all parts of the community: men and women, younger and older, including indigenous people and people from non-English–speaking backgrounds

Individual community groups are supported by umbrella catchment groups – the Ginninderra, Molonglo and Southern ACT catchment groups – who assist with funding, communication, promotion and logistical support. Greening Australia and Conservation Volunteers Australia provide valuable support by coordinating casual and regular volunteers, and providing technical and other support and advice.

Individual volunteers and landholders are also an important part of community-based natural resource management.

Diversifying the range of participation opportunities to reflect the current and future demographic profile of the ACT will promote greater participation. Opportunities also need to reflect the ACT’s diverse cultural identity.

This target aims to achieve higher levels of participation by increasing the range of opportunities available.

Doubling the current (5%) participation rate to 10% by 2030 means that at least 1100 more people need to become permanently involved every year. The rate is likely to grow faster at first as new opportunities pay off, then slow as the proportion reaches 10%. The calculation does not allow for people ageing or withdrawing. The target would be better expressed as person-days participation but no data are as yet available to support this.

TARGET 4. Community participation
Intermediate
  • Community participation in natural resource management has grown by 11 000 people (2008 to 2015)
  • Long-term
  • Community participation in natural resource management has grown by 23 000 people (2008 to 2030)
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    Molonglo Catchment Group

    Molonglo Catchment Group
    The Molonglo Catchment Group works largely in NSW and covers the catchments of the Molonglo and Queanbeyan Rivers, Jerrabomberra Creek and the urban areas of inner Canberra and Queanbeyan.

    Ginninderra Catchment Group

    The Ginninderra Catchment Group works in the urban areas of Belconnen, West Belconnen, Hall, Gunghalin, and the rural areas and nature reserves of the Ginninderra Creek catchment.

    Ginninderra Catchment Group

    Southern ACT Catchment Group

    Southern ACT Catchment Group
    The Southern ACT Catchment Group operates in the southern areas of the ACT covering Woden, Weston Creek, Tuggeranong, Tharwa, Tidbinbilla and Namadgi national parks, and the rural leases.