2011 Shellharbour and Wollongong local elections
The 2011 Shellharbour and Wollongong local elections were held on 3 September 2011 to elect the councils of the City of Shellharbour and the City of Wollongong in New South Wales.
Wollongong City Council was sacked in March 2008 amid a corruption inquiry, and the same happened to Shellharbour City Council in July 2008 because of continual failures with the council's code of conduct committee.[1][2] This meant electors in both councils did not vote at the 2008 local elections.
Both councils also faced a proposed merger, which was later abandoned.
Shellharbour has single ward with seven councillors, while Wollongong has a popularly-elected mayor, along with three wards that have four councillors each.
Results
[edit]Wollongong
[edit]Party | Votes | % | Seats | Change | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | 4 | |||||
Labor | 4 | |||||
Independent | 2 | |||||
Greens | 2 |
Aftermath
[edit]Under the Local Government (Shellharbour and Wollongong Elections) Bill 2011, which passed the New South Wales Parliament on 9 May 2011, councillors were elected to hold office until the 2016 local elections, meaning they skipped the 2012 local elections.[3][4] However, as a result of delays caused by amalgamation proposals, both councils went to the polls in 2017 instead.
In 2014, Shellharbour councillors began to investigate the costs of a referendum that would allow voters to directly elect their mayor (as was the case before 2008) and increase the number of councillors from seven to nine.[5] Both proposals later passed at a 2017 referendum, with four wards created with two councillors each, plus the mayor.
References
[edit]- ^ "Shellharbour is latest to join the ranks of sacked councils". Sydney Morning Herald.
- ^ "Enough evidence to sack Shellharbour Council: inquiry". ABC News.
- ^ "Local Government (Shellharbour and Wollongong Elections) Bill 2011". Parliament of New South Wales.
- ^ "Wollongong City Council". New South Wales Electoral Commission.
- ^ "Shellharbour council takes first steps towards resurrecting pre-2008 representation". ABC News.