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Gold Coast bigwigs to Brisbane — start taking this surging city seriously

SOME of the city’s biggest players including Billy Cross, Bec Frizelle, Tony Cochrane and Mayor Tom Tate are all lining up to urge powerbrokers in Brisbane to take the surging Gold Coast more seriously.

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GOLD Coast leaders are calling on the Brisbane-based State Government to give the surging city a fairer shake — but the Premier has turned a cold shoulder to their collective plea.

A wide range of Gold Coast power players — Suns chairman Tony Cochrane, respected car dealership bigwig Bec Frizelle and entertainment entrepreneur Billy Cross — joined Mayor Tom Tate and veteran LNP MP John-Paul Langbroek urging a better deal yesterday.

Gold Coast entertainment and hospitality entrepreneur Billy Cross is joining city powerbrokers to call on Brisbane bigwigs to give the city its dues. Photographer: Liam Kidston.
Gold Coast entertainment and hospitality entrepreneur Billy Cross is joining city powerbrokers to call on Brisbane bigwigs to give the city its dues. Photographer: Liam Kidston.

Among key frustrations to emerge when canvassed by the Bulletin are:

* The lack of government departments, even satellite offices, on the Gold Coast;

* No Supreme Court;

* The Spit masterplan process taking too long;

* Concern about $12m funding for a Brisbane studio base for film and TV production;

* Gold Coast police struggling with crime loads;

Suns chairman Mr Cochrane said Victoria had decentralised departments to regional hubs Shepparton, Ballarat and Geelong to boost employment and he could not understand why

it wasn’t happening here.

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“To the best of my knowledge we don’t have any government departments here and yet we are Australia’s sixth largest city. We don’t have a Supreme Court.

Gold Coast Suns chairman Tony Cochrane: “To the best of my knowledge we don’t have any government departments here and yet we are Australia’s sixth city. We don’t have a Supreme Court for Power 50 list.” Picture: Jerad Williams
Gold Coast Suns chairman Tony Cochrane: “To the best of my knowledge we don’t have any government departments here and yet we are Australia’s sixth city. We don’t have a Supreme Court for Power 50 list.” Picture: Jerad Williams

“On the cruise ship terminal, I smell a rat. They don’t want to know about our cruise terminal plans, they only want to have theirs to support their shitty town and their shitty weather,” Mr Cochrane fumed.

“I completely agree we are being taken for a ride by Brisbane. But we also have to have a crack at all those LNP members. Why aren’t they doing more to agitate and get problems fixed?

“You can’t just blame the Government in office. There are 10 LNP members on the Coast.

There should be a government department headquartered on the Gold Coast. Tourism is logical, I’m not wedded to that one but it is the logical one,” Mr Cochrane said.

In a hard-hitting opinion piece today, Mayor Tate says the jury is out on whether powerbrokers in Brisbane see the Gold Coast as a “serious voice” and he urges State Government to take the place “seriously” on health, police and education services.

Mayor Tom Tate. Photo by Richard Gosling
Mayor Tom Tate. Photo by Richard Gosling

Ms Frizelle, also the Gold Coast Titans owner, said she also couldn’t understand why the Gold Coast had no government departments.

“It is hard to say we haven’t been looked after when we have Gold Coast University Hospital, the convention centre, light rail and its extensions, the stadiums.

“There has definitely been a lot of positive stuff but the view we are not being listened to enough I totally agree with,” she said.

Both Mr Cochrane and Ms Frizelle — echoing recent criticism by Mayor Tate — questioned why The Spit Masterplan process had been set down for 18 months through to July next year.

Mr Cochrane said it felt to him like Brisbane was trying to “purposefully engineer us out of a cruise ship terminal”.

Gold Coast Titans owner Rebecca Frizelle: “The Spit masterplan does seem to be taking too long. It is critical to know the outcome, we need to know what the masterplan is going to look like so we can start attracting appropriate businesses.” Picture Glenn Hampson
Gold Coast Titans owner Rebecca Frizelle: “The Spit masterplan does seem to be taking too long. It is critical to know the outcome, we need to know what the masterplan is going to look like so we can start attracting appropriate businesses.” Picture Glenn Hampson

The Bulletin yesterday revealed State Government’s Priority Planning Projects had rejected the Breakwater Group’s push for its $4.4 billion cruise terminal plan to be evaluated as part of the Spit masterplan. Cr Tate has been told his pet oceanside terminal proposal won’t be considered until after the masterplan process.

Ms Frizelle added yesterday: “The Spit masterplan does seem to be taking too long. It is critical to know the outcome, we need to know what the masterplan is going to look like so we can start attracting appropriate businesses.

“It’s been on the agenda for such a long time. This type of delay would not be tolerated in the private enterprise. It should not be tolerated by a government.

“It’s a critical piece of real estate and no one knows what’s happening with it,” she said.

Gold Coast Skyline Picture by Catherine Wiggins
Gold Coast Skyline Picture by Catherine Wiggins

Lawyers have previously argued a Supreme Court in Southport for murder trials and drug busts would speed up justice and cut costs.

Meanwhile, on a policing front, the Bulletin is aware of growing frustration among beat police, with local cops claiming they are drowning under a pile of never-ending jobs.

Stretched thin in the outer suburbs of the Coast, resources are being pushed to their limits by either a lack of numbers or foresight to where officers should be tasked, sources claim.

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There are calls for a dedicated drug squad on the Coast, with many cops feeling a lot of break and enters, theft, assaults and other lower-end crime stems from drug abuse.

Police sources agree it isn’t too often they go to a job where there is no history of drug abuse.

The Bulletin summarised the concerns outlined by the Gold Coast leaders and asked both Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk and Tourism Minister Kate Jones for responses — and their take.

A spokesman for Ms Jones advised going with the Premier’s responses. A spokesman for the Premier replied late yesterday afternoon: “We won’t be able to reply today.”

COAST’S CHIEF GRIPES

— No State Government departments, lack of satellite offices on the Gold Coast

— No Supreme Court

— Struggling police force

— Spit Masterplan go-slow

— Fears Spit Masterplan go-slow is costing city a cruise terminal, investment

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Original URL: https://www.goldcoastbulletin.com.au/news/council/gold-coast-bigwigs-to-brisbane-start-taking-this-surging-city-seriously/news-story/0945ae65e4d3a90612b81f5f5100abea