Caldera Environment Centre

Caldera Environment Centre During the late 1980s an estimated $2000 million of development proposals were proposed for the Tweed Shire. no post modernism).

The Caldera Environment Centre Inc (CEC) is a registered Voluntary Conservation Organisation and an Incorporated Association under the umbrella of the North Coast Environmental Council and the Nature Conservation Council of NSW. One of the more prominent of these was the Ocean Blue proposal for Fingal, which was officially investigated in one of the first ever NSW ICAC inquiries in 1989 examining

council and state government corruption. The inquiry never formally charged anyone, but it ruined the reputations of some councillors and senior staff, in particular Tom Hogan, the Shire Deputy President. While all this was happening, another developer, Doug Moran made a proposal for a major Tourist/health resort on top of Mt Nullum near Murwillumbah (c. 1986-7). The resort proposal contained: helipad, golf course, artificial lake, an artist’s colony, sanatorium and spa, workers cottages, hotel, walking tracks, viewing platforms and an escalator to the summit (Mitchell, McCotter and Associates 1988a and 1988b). Doug Moran had just completed the Doug Moran Hospital of Excellence in Tugun (now John Flynn Private Hospital) and the Moran retirement village (1989 and later renamed Mountain View village) in Murwillumbah. He had also just initiated and sponsored to great praise the initiation of the Moran Portrait Prize in 1988 which placed the Tweed Shire “on the map” (one entry criteria for the competition was that the subject of the artwork must be “recognisable” i.e. Doug Moran died in 2011 at the age of 86. After the ICAC inquiry, most of the controversial coastal developments proposals were withdrawn, some smaller estates were constructed, but others (which were empty blocks and concept plans) changed hands through real estate agents who speculated on the value. During this period the reputation of the Mt. Nullum project was never brought into question and so now became the premier project for the Council. The community became polarised over the development proposals, with some people forming groups to support the projects and others forming groups to oppose them. In 1990 there were many community and volunteer groups already well-established and thriving in the Tweed Shire. There were the typical residents and ratepayers groups for every town and village, as well as business chambers and commerce groups. Landcare and other more familiar conservation groups like the wildlife carers had not yet been established. Anti-development groups were motivated by the threat of environmental destruction and the impact on their current lifestyle, these groups took the stance that they wanted the Tweed Coast/Shire to be distinct from the neighbouring heavily urbanised Gold Coast. Other people in the community formed pro-development/free enterprise groups to promote the benefits of development which included jobs, infrastructure and overall community prosperity (the media record of these groups’ rhetoric define them as anti-communist). During this period (1987-1991) the Caldera Environment Centre developed out of another community group that was active at the time, the Tweed Valley Conservation Trust. The Caldera Environment Centre initiated, through the Legal Aid process, a Commission of Inquiry into the Mt Nullum proposal. The legal basis of this inquiry was a concern with the proposed rezoning of the land from scenic escarpment to habitat and vice versa and a proposed relocation of the wildlife corridor along with a substantive change in the definition of what developments were permissible in these zones. The Commission of Inquiry found the project unfeasible due to reasons additional to those put forward by the Caldera Environment Centre. The commission of inquiry found that the council had acted improperly by facilitating the developer to gain approval. Doug Moran shelved the project a week before the Commission of Inquiry delivered its adverse findings. The Caldera Environment Centre survives to this day, 25 years later, while most other community groups from that time are no longer active. (Other surviving groups dating from that period include resident and ratepayers groups from the various towns and villages in the Tweed Valley).

Film Night: Eating Our Way To ExtinctionFilm night and discussion with experts Gerard Wedderburn-Bisshop (who wrote the ...
19/03/2026

Film Night: Eating Our Way To Extinction

Film night and discussion with experts Gerard Wedderburn-Bisshop (who wrote the book accompanying the documentary) and Veet Karen, who is Australia’s 1st professional plant based chef and nutrition instructor. Film night and discussion with experts Gerard Wedderburn-Bisshop (who wrote the book accompanying the documentary) and Veet Karen, who is Australia’s 1st professional plant based chef and nutrition instructor.

https://events.humanitix.com/eating-our-way-to-extinction-tl7lrxxc

08/03/2026

Takayna/Tarkine rainforest
While a mining company’s scrapping of plans for a tailings dam in Tasmania’s Takayna rainforest is welcome, its revised site reflects how little the environment minister cares. By Bob Brown.

MMG was flagging the withdrawal of its contentious plan to dump its acid wastes in the Takayna/Tarkine rainforest at McKimmie Creek. That project involved constructing a pipeline from Rosebery, north over the Pieman River into Takayna – discounting the values of the rainforest and its wildlife to zero.

https://www.thesaturdaypaper.com.au/share/22750/VkQBExYS

March in March for Forestshttps://marchforforests.org

We are thrilled that the Fingal Head mining exploration licence application has been withdrawn! 🥳This was advertised on ...
05/03/2026

We are thrilled that the Fingal Head mining exploration licence application has been withdrawn! 🥳
This was advertised on the 19th Feb and withdrawn probably before many even realised such an unbelievable proposal had been applied for.
Thanks to all the fabulous Fingal defenders who jumped on this immediately to let the proponents know not to mess with Fingal.
People power is awesome! 🐸🐠🦋🐢🐝🦀🐬🪼🦈🦐🐳

What a great and timeless book…….and we happen to have it for sale in our shop at 43 Wollumbin St, Murwillumbah.Happy Bi...
03/03/2026

What a great and timeless book…….and we happen to have it for sale in our shop at 43 Wollumbin St, Murwillumbah.
Happy Birthday Dr Seuss 🎂

Today we celebrate the birthday of a storyteller who believed small people could make big changes.

Let’s care a whole awful lot; about each other, about our communities, and about the world we’re shaping together. ❤️

The Clean Up of Murwillumbah riverbank was a shocker today 😫Someone had spread and an entire bean bag full of polystyren...
01/03/2026

The Clean Up of Murwillumbah riverbank was a shocker today 😫
Someone had spread and an entire bean bag full of polystyrene balls far and wide, right at the entrance to Murwillumbah in the park.
It was everywhere - all in the seating area, along the River Walk path, down the riverbank, in all the mulch, on the footpath, in the gutter of the roundabout,…. and in every crevice!
We swept up 11 full bags of it but couldn’t take the larger areas of polystyrened mulch. There will probably be bits flying around for years being consumed by our wildlife and marine life 😢😢😢
Will be calling on Council or the EPA to get the rest.
The rest of the riverbank wasn’t too bad though which was very pleasing 😊
We missed you - there was only 6 of us 🤗
Clean Up Australia
Tweed Shire Council

Address

43a Wollumbin Street
Murwillumbah, NSW
2484

Opening Hours

Tuesday 10am - 5pm
Wednesday 10am - 5pm
Thursday 10am - 5pm
Friday 10am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 12pm

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Caldera Environment Centre posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share