11 September 2019

Batemans Bay flying foxes on the agenda again - meetings start Friday

| Ian Campbell
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Council is asking for the community's input in the Shire's Flying Fox Management Plan. Photo: Eurobodalla Shire Council.

Council is asking for the community’s input in the Shire’s Flying Fox Management Plan. Photo: Eurobodalla Shire Council.

Eurobodalla residents are being asked to outline their concerns, experiences, and values when it comes to the shire’s troublesome population of visiting flying foxes.

A shire-wide flying fox management plan is being drafted that will set out how Council makes decisions about managing the impacts this threatened species has on residents.

Eurobodalla Shire Council’s Director of Planning and Sustainability, Lindsay Usher says the plan will allow Council to more readily respond in the future while meeting the legal requirements to conserve the species and their local habitats.

“We know flying foxes have historically visited Eurobodalla and will keep returning seasonally,” Mr Usher says.

“We can’t predict how many will return each season as it is likely to change from year to year based on where food resources are.

“While we don’t expect to see a repeat of the 2016 numbers in Batemans Bay in the near future, it is possible new camps could establish throughout Eurobodalla due to our favourable habitat and food resources,” he says.

Batemans Bay was brought to its knees in 2016 when 100,000 flying foxes set up a camp in the Batemans Bay Water Gardens, right in the heart of town.

At the time it was estimated that 20% of Australia’s total flying fox population was in Batemans Bay, drawn to the region by a flush of Spotted Gum flowering in the forests that surround the Eurobodalla.

The noise, the smell, the intensity of the situation was described as a natural disaster and prompted a $2.5 million dispersal plan, which included smoke, loud noise, flashing lights, and vegetation clearing.

In 2016 20% of Australias' flying fox population "camped out" in Batemans Bay. Photo: Eurobodalla Shire Council.

In 2016 20% of Australias’ flying fox population “camped out” in Batemans Bay. Photo: Eurobodalla Shire Council.

Mr Usher is urging all residents, whether they were impacted by flying foxes in the past or not to complete a survey, outlining their thoughts.

“The survey will help us identify what management actions the community believe are most appropriate for our area and at what point we should carry them out,” he says.

The survey takes about 15 minutes to complete, and aside from taking part in local policymaking, there is an added carrot for getting involved. Everyone who completes the survey will go in the draw to win one of three gift vouchers valued up to $500.

During April Council will also be hosting drop-in sessions throughout the Eurobodalla, where locals can complete the survey and speak to Council’s Flying Foxes Natural Resources Officer.

Drop-in session details:

  • Apex Park, Narooma – Friday 6 April, 8-10 am
  • Dalmeny Meet the Makers Markets – Sunday 8 April, 8 am-1 pm
  • Village Centre Batemans Bay – Tuesday 10 April, 10 am-2 pm
  • The Mossy Café, Mossy Point – Friday 13 April, 9-11.30 am
  • Evans Park, Tuross Head – Friday 13 April, 12.30-2.30 pm
  • Art on the Path, Broulee – Sunday 15 April, 7.30 am-12.30 pm
  • SAGE Farmers’ Market, Moruya – Tuesday 17 April, 2.30-4.30 pm
  • Corrigans Reserve, Batehaven – Tuesday 17 April, 10 am-12 pm
  • Benny’s Nelligen Store, Nelligen – Wed 18 April, 9-11 am
  • Maloneys Beach Café, Maloneys Beach – Wed 18 April, 12-2 pm
  • NATA Oval, Narooma – Saturday 21 April, 2-4 pm
  • Moruya Country Markets – Saturday 28 April, 7 am-1 pm

Meanwhile, Mr Usher says Council will continue to monitor flying fox numbers across the shire.

“Although Eurobodalla’s flying fox population has fluctuated over the past few months, numbers across the Eurobodalla remain relatively low, with small camps at Batemans Bay Water Gardens, Catalina Country Club and Tuross Head,” he says.

“The vegetation buffer zones created in 2016 have helped keep a greater distance between homes and the roosting sites, minimising the impact on properties.”

For more information visit the Flying Fox Management Plan page on Council’s website. Hard copies of the survey are also available at Eurobodalla libraries, Council depots and at Council’s administration building in Moruya.

*This article first appeared on RiotACT

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Another cynical attempt to con the local residents into believing they are doing something. Just using the vast funds up with surveys and “plans” with ultimately no benefit to those living with this scourge.

Batemans Bay was not ‘brought to its knees’ by flying fox, except maybe us praying for their lives! The only ‘natural disaster’ came in the form of council deforesting the ‘nature reserve’, setting it on fire and getting the angry lynch mob to excercise their fear by going to war against pollinators. We missed such a huge tourism opportunity I am still reeling from the idiocy! Go figure. I find this article as slanted as the residents who ordered the action. And what happened to those millions of bucks? I would like to see a break-down of where that money was spent …

Ian Campbell8:18 pm 05 Apr 18

Thanks Sarah, appreciate your point of view, you raise some good questions about the $2.5 million dispersal plan. I facilitated two public meetings on the issue at the time and stand by my descriptions. Sorry to hear of your hurt and upset. Ian

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