11 October 2024

Chris Hanna elected mayor of Snowy Monaro in chaotic council meeting

| Albert McKnight
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Chris Hanna and Tricia Hopkins

Chris Hanna has been re-elected as mayor of the Snowy Monaro Regional Council, while Tricia Hopkins has been elected as deputy mayor. Photos: SMRC Facebook and Tricia Hopkins Facebook.

Chris Hanna was re-elected as mayor of the Snowy Monaro Regional Council amid cries of “point of order” and interruptions during a frequently chaotic first meeting for the new councillors.

Three new councillors and eight former councillors were elected in September’s local government election, followed by the resignation of CEO David Hogan earlier this week.

Chief strategy officer David Rawlings filled in as acting CEO when councillors held their first meeting on Thursday (10 October) and to elect the new mayor and deputy.

Newly elected Councillor Andrew Thaler started by calling a point of order and saying he didn’t accept Mr Rawlings’ authority to conduct the proceedings.

“We are not in a council meeting and you are not conducting this meeting,” Mr Rawlings said during the exchange.

The 11 councillors were sworn in and the meeting was opened before a chair was appointed. But Cr Thaler’s further interjections saw Mr Rawlings again respond: “You’re not running this meeting.”

“You’re not running it either, Mr Rawlings,” Cr Thaler said.

Another councillor added: “Show respect to the process, please.”

A member of the council gallery later called out: “You can’t have a meeting without a chair”.

Mr Rawlings again quieted the disruption.

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A successful motion installed Councillor Bob Stewart, a former Bombala mayor, as chair to conduct the mayoral election. But newly elected Councillor Reuben Rose moved a motion to delay this election so councillors could learn more about each other.

“Councillor, you’ve got to follow procedure a little bit better than that,” Cr Stewart told Cr Thaler when the latter tried to second Cr Rose’s motion too early.

Councillor Narelle Davis said it was normal practice to elect a mayor as the first order of business in a council meeting.

Cr Rose claimed there was “tension” in the meeting room because “there was an attempt by council to unlawfully exclude an elected councillor”. But during the following exchange, several points of order were called and Cr Rose was told to stick to speaking about his motion, which was lost.

Bob Stewart

Cr Bob Stewart became chair of the first council meeting. Photo: Gail Eastaway.

Cr Hanna was ultimately re-elected mayor and Tricia Hopkins, who ran with Cr Hanna in Group C during the election, was elected deputy mayor.

Cr Thaler later attempted to delay voting to set the dates and times of council meetings because he wanted the community to have its say.

“If we keep deferring everything, it’s going to be a long four years and we won’t be helping the community at all,” Cr Stewart said.

He said the dates and times could be changed later if needed.

Cr Thaler’s motion to delay the vote was lost and meetings were set for the third Thursday of each month, starting from 1 pm.

Meetings will be held in Cooma in the even months and rotate between Jindabyne and Bombala on the odd months.

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The final blow-up during the meeting came from a motion that aimed to note Mr Hogan’s resignation and find an interim CEO while the recruitment process was undertaken.

Cr Thaler raised a point of order and said many councillors hadn’t received Mr Hogan’s resignation letter, then called for it to be handed over to them “before we move any further” to understand the context of his resignation.

Crs Rose and Luke Williamson also raised concerns about proceeding without seeing the letter before Cr Thaler’s further comments raised several cries of “point of order”.

Cr Hanna told Cr Thaler he had been informed “a number of times” that the letter was “personal” and warned Cr Rose: “I will stop you if you mention anything that is not on the motion.”

Andrew Thaler

Andrew Thaler has been elected as a first-time councillor in the Snowy Monaro. Photo: Claire Fenwicke.

Labor’s Councillor Tanya Higgins said the contents of the letter were “none of our business” and because Mr Hogan had left, councillors had to fill his position.

The motion to note his resignation and begin the process to recruit a new CEO was carried. Crs Thaler, Williamson and Rose voting against the motion.

The meeting came to an end after almost two-and-a-half hours. The next meeting will be held in November.

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patricia gardiner7:03 pm 15 Oct 24

Who is Mr Rawlings who accepted councillor affirmations?
The oath or affirmation of office may be taken before an Australian legal practitioner or a Justice of the Peace if the GM is not available.
And why did Mr Rawlings actually begin the meeting by acknowledging the traditional owners etc prior to the selection of the Chair to run the meeting?

And how did acknowledging the traditional owners etc prior to the selection of the Chair affect you in anyway.
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patricia gardiner9:37 am 17 Oct 24

The acknowledgement of the traditional owners etc at the beginning of a council meeting is the responsibility of the Chair, not Mr Rawlings.

I hope other Councillors can hold a sensible line in the face of deliberate disruption and pontification. My fear is that other good staff will leave in droves. Why would you want to work in that environment when civilisation is 100km up the road?

Trish Hellier9:46 pm 12 Oct 24

In watching the Live Streaming of this lengthy meeting I would expect that the OLG will receive emails in relation to certain aspects of this meeting. Some Councillors quoted from the Local Government Act and at stages it appeared that these quotes were ignored. Clr Rose appeared to be extremely “switched on to the Local Government Act” whilst other Councillors appeared to dismiss the quotes.

Richard McLeod2:38 pm 12 Oct 24

This mess will be in administration within 6 months. Good luck finding a new CEO willing to take on this awful debacle. Where is the OLG and the State Government?

Well, well, well!! Who would have guested this would happen? In certain situations disrupters serve a purpose to make things better when things are not quite right. In other situations, disrupters who are objectionable, have no clear role or purpose or objectives intelligently elucidated, things can only go backwards. I’m thinking a lot of energy is going to be wasted dealing with a few councilors in this current SMRC and they will achieve nothing because of their attitude.

Indeed, and anybody with half a brain knew that these particular disruptors were going to be ceaselessly agitating and grandstanding without any actual plan as to effecting positive change. Nothing but belligerence for the sake of it.

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