logo
Man starts petition after proposal to jack up campsite rates in one Aussie state

Man starts petition after proposal to jack up campsite rates in one Aussie state

West Australian03-06-2025

A proposal to increase camping fees in NSW national parks would make camping more expensive than renting a house.
The NSW government has proposed introducing a six tier system that would make the rate fro some campgrounds as much as $97 a night or $679 a week, compared to a three bedroom home that can be rented for $600 a week.
Filmmaker Michael Atkinson made the point in a social media video he shared from the Woody Head Camping Area in the Bundjalung National Park on the NSW North Coast.
'You can rent a three-bedroom house (down the road) with garage for $600, so it's almost $100 cheaper to rent a three-bedroom house with garage outside the park, as opposed to a small patch of grass here in the park,' Mr Atkinson said in the video
'I counted 89 campsites on this map, that is revenue raising of $55,000 a week just for this campground, excluding the money that they make from cabins.'
In 2023-24, about 1.8 million people stayed overnight at 365 campgrounds located in national parks across NSW.
The NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service developed a proposal 'to make camping fairer' for visitors and address issues when people did not show up, known as 'ghost bookings.'
A tiered camping fee system was developed with pricing based on services, facilities and seasonal demand.
A NPWS spokesman said more than 23,000 submissions were received during the consultation period.
'The NPWS invited feedback on a proposed model to introduce a more consistent and simplified statewide camping fee and booking system for the 365 campgrounds across NSW national parks,' a spokesman said.
'No decisions have been made on the proposal.
'NPWS will advise the public on the next steps once feedback has been considered.'
Mr Atkinson told NewsWire that before Covid booking systems were used for high use campgrounds, and about 70 per cent of campgrounds in NSW national parks were free.
He said a booking system was introduced to manage the infectious disease and it only cost $6, but because bookings were so cheap campsites would be booked out months in advance, then people would not show up.
Mr Atkinson said the government's solution to prevent 'ghost bookings' was to jack up the prices, but the proposed hike would stop low income earners from being able to afford camping and discourage young people from heading out.
'For people like me, you feel ripped off that you're going to a public space in a park that we own, and paying what I think is a significant amount of money just to camp on our own land effectively,' he said.
Mr Atkinson said a better solution would be to increase the number of campgrounds that were available at the sites which would increase grass space and remove undergrowth that clogged national parks.
Mr Atkinson started an
epetition
to let the NSW government know how many people were against the proposal.
The petition titled Keep camping affordable for all Australians in NSW National Parks has already received support from more than 7600 people.
He also has support from the Nationals and people living outside of NSW who have been contacting the NSW environment minister directly.
Opposition tourism spokesman Kevin Anderson said in a statement the decision would put some of NSW's most-treasured natural assets behind a paywall in the middle of a cost-of-living crisis.
'When I asked the Minister for Tourism about this in Question Time last month, he refused to acknowledge the issue, despite the heavy impact it will have on the tourism sector by deterring people from wanting to camp in our National Parks,' he said.
'The Minns Labor government needs to go back to the drawing board and find better ways to save money than hitting hardworking families who are just looking to get out and enjoy nature.'
Scott Barrett MLC said National Parks should be more accessible for everyone.
'This proposal will put camping out of reach for many families and that's why I believe it's important to support Outback Mike with this petition,' he said.
'Some of my favourite moments have been spent with my family in our state's iconic national parks and limiting those experiences for other families based on cost is extremely frustrating.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US bombs Iran: Fears for Aussies stranded in Middle East
US bombs Iran: Fears for Aussies stranded in Middle East

Herald Sun

time9 minutes ago

  • Herald Sun

US bombs Iran: Fears for Aussies stranded in Middle East

Don't miss out on the headlines from Middle East. Followed categories will be added to My News. While many businesses, schools and kindergartens are shut across Israel and residents are staying at home, more than 3800 Australians are unable to leave both Israel and Iran and they have no idea when they will be able to return home. Israel's air space remains closed following the US strike on Iran's nuclear facilities on Sunday which has left many people stranded in the Middle East for the foreseeable future. DFAT had buses and Royal Australian Air Force flights organised to get Australians out of the war zone, but these have now been put on hold as Israel's airspace remains closed and buses services cancelled. A group of Australians travelling together had their return flights booked on June 13 to return from a four-week holiday back to Australia but their plans were derailed when the latest conflict between Israel and Iran broke out. Liz Sveticic, 63, from Epping, who works as a personal carer, said she was all 'packed and ready to go on June 13' until 'all hell broke loose' between the two warring countries. 'We contacted all the authorities, the consular, the travel agents, everything possible and from my understanding we've been told to keep safe and keep where we are,' she told News Corp while on holiday in Tel Aviv. 'It's our risk if we want to go to Jordan, which is a very high risk which I'm not prepared to do. 'We have to sit and wait'. Ms Sveticic said she's being inundated by calls and messages from family and friends in Australia concerned for her safety but said many people at home are more stressed than she is while being stuck in the middle of a war zone. 'They (Australians) don't understand because of course everyone is ringing in panic and they are panicking more than we are panicking, they don't get it,' she said. 'Realistically I would love to go home, my granddaughter turned one yesterday, it's heartbreaking'. Sam Federici, 72, from Caulfield South, is also on holiday in Israel with his wife Liora, 74, and said they arrived in Israel on May 22 but are now trapped in Israel for the foreseeable future. Sitting in a cafe in Dizengoff Street – one of Tel Aviv's most popular food and fashion hubs – he said his family has been moving hotels as their stay keeps getting extended. Just hours after learning that America had destroyed three of Iran's nuclear plants he said hearing the news was 'unbelievable'. 'I think he's achieved in one fell blow what nobody could do for the last 20 years or 30 years,' Mr Federici said. 'Hopefully it's a chance for peace'. But Mr Federici said he was 'very disappointed' with the Australian government and its treatment of the Jewish community. 'I'm disappointed with Albanese, I'm disappointed with Penny Wong, I hate to say her name, I'm just disappointed with the way the ALP have treated Jewish people in Australia, as if they don't exist,' he said. 'What 120,000 Jews in Australia have achieved, no-one can come anywhere near it and the government is treating them as if they don't matter and as if they don't exist'. Originally published as US bombs Iran: Fears for Aussies stranded in Middle East

Indonesia's answer to the Maldives is one of the best-kept island secrets
Indonesia's answer to the Maldives is one of the best-kept island secrets

Sydney Morning Herald

time8 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Indonesia's answer to the Maldives is one of the best-kept island secrets

Belitung is located on the east coast of Sumatra in the Gaspar Strait where the South China and Java seas meet. Its north-west corner, where I'm staying, has been dubbed the 'Seychelles of Indonesia' and 'Indonesia's Maldives'. I liken this heavenly beach paradise to a mini-Raja Ampat, a white sandy wonderland of gentle translucent waters with tropical fish darting in the shallows, and blooms of staghorn and brain coral sitting quietly in the cooler depths. The coastline's scattering of tiny islands – rocky outcrops sprouting picture-perfect coconut trees – are part of a UNESCO Global Geopark. It is scenery worthy of a fairytale, or a pirate movie. That a shipwreck and its treasure were discovered out on the horizon, just 1.6 kilometres away, is entirely in keeping. Known for its lucrative deposits of tin, Belitung has a mining history and was once a base for BHP Billiton, Billiton being another name for Belitung. Its population of about 320,000 has traditionally worked in mining, but the depletion of tin in the 1990s has since seen the emphasis on fishing, agriculture and, incrementally, tourism. My invitation to the island has come from Tanjung Kelayang Reserve, a 350-hectare privately owned nature reserve that fronts Belitung's stunner north-west coastline. Of this land, 200 hectares have been dedicated to rewilding and conservation, with a promise of protecting the island's endemic fauna and flora while supporting local communities. I arrived earlier this morning on the 45-minute flight (400 kilometres) north of Jakarta. At the one-shed International airport, my host Yuni Kusama points out that I am the only bule, or foreigner, at the airport. She explains that the reserve's Perth-based Indonesian owner (who requests anonymity) wants Australians and Europeans to visit Belitung 'because they're eco-travellers. They'll understand that we are trying to create a truly sustainable destination'. From what I'm seeing, the assessment is bang-on. Aussies keen on a low-impact intrepid island adventure will fall for this place. So will those seeking a laid-back beach holiday or an eco-luxury escape. For the first two nights, I stay at Sheraton Belitung, at the centre of the reserve. It's a lovely, newish, 123-room resort thoughtfully constructed from hand-pressed local kaolin clay bricks, with native renggadai wood ceilings and finishes. The colour palette blends seamlessly with the white sands, dark green tropical garden and expansive natural lagoons, which are connected to the resort's zero-emissions water treatment plant. The resort is luxurious, but casually so, with a peaked-roof, wall-less lobby where my bare feet don't get a second glance, and clean and spacious rooms with comforts including balconies with standalone bathtubs. On the beachfront, the indoor-outdoor Island Restaurant, serving traditional Bangka Belitung cuisine, ensures long leisurely dining interspersed with kayaking, snorkelling, laps of the Olympic-sized pool, and volleyball jousts over a net whimsically strung between two coconut trees. Island hopping, in the reserve's characteristic wooden fishing boat, is part of the fun too. Over two days we zigzag around the Geopark to snorkel in the depths around bird-shaped Garuda Island and walk knee-deep in the echoing sea caves of Kelayang Island. We stop by a tiny floating fish market where grouper and napoleon fish are bred in cages sunken into the cobalt blue sea. We motor into a light headwind to Lengkuas Island and are greeted by a vision from a children's book, a 55-metre Dutch colonial lighthouse, built in 1882, with seven porthole windows ascending 12 floors to a domed lamp top. There's talk of turning it into a museum showcasing Belitung's long maritime trade-route history. On day three, I swap sand and sea for the reserve's Whistle Trail nature walk with guide Akbar Alfarisyi, a former biology teacher who joined the reserve in 2022. 'Now the biology teaches me,' he says as we walk through the cool forest, the island's biodiversity hotspot with more than 150 species of native flora and fauna. Along the path, Alfarisyi points out the reserve's rewilding successes – exquisite native orchids (of which there are 67 species on Belitung), termite nests (food for the reserve's four protected Sunda pangolin), cinnamon (a relatively rare species with a mint scent), and a strong-flavoured white pepper (once the island's chief agricultural export and now critically endangered). We visit the reserve's trigona beehives, which are cared for by the villagers of Komunitas Pelabo Sijuk, who receive an income from the bottles they sell. Unlike regular hexagonal hives, stingless beehives are a mesh of smallish sacks. I dip a reed straw into one to taste the delicious honey – it has a woody fermented flavour, both sweet and sour, like the aroma of wine barrels. On night three, I stay at the reserve's Billiton Ekobeach Retreat, accessible via a sandy shoreline walk or a short putt-putt by fishing boat. It has five rustically charming, stilted beach huts spaced along their own stretch of sand. The structures and bespoke furniture are made from beach-sourced driftwood and other natural waste items for a Robinson Crusoe vibe, but they're also comfortably appointed with air-conditioning, ceiling fans and hot showers. The final day might well be the finest. Once again, I meet Wakhyu Brata, this time to join a Bluemind Experience private island adventure. We skip over the waves to Kera Island, an idyllic oasis covered in a tropical garden with a hidden sandy cove where a picnic lunch is served. Afterwards, Brata, having snorkelled around the shallows with his net, waves me over. He has caught four fresh sea urchins, round, spiky and glistening black, with silver and blue spots that shimmer like crystals. Loading We stand knee-deep in water as he cuts the spikes off, then cracks the top off, the shell to reveal slivers of buttery yellow flesh, a delicacy known as uni in the Japanese culinary world. After swishing it clean in the salty water, I scoop the soft, briny, umami-loaded sea-shimi straight into my mouth. It's a taste sensation, yet another of Belitung Island's remarkable underwater treasures. THE DETAILS VISIT Belitung and Tanjung Kelayang Reserve are open year-round, with the dry season (April to October) typically offering the best time to visit. See Bluemind Experience organises the reserve's island-hopping activities. See FLY Qantas and Garuda Indonesia have direct flights from Sydney and Melbourne to Jakarta, where it's a one-hour flight to Belitung on domestic airlines, including Citilink and Batik Air. See

Indonesia's answer to the Maldives is one of the best-kept island secrets
Indonesia's answer to the Maldives is one of the best-kept island secrets

The Age

time8 hours ago

  • The Age

Indonesia's answer to the Maldives is one of the best-kept island secrets

Belitung is located on the east coast of Sumatra in the Gaspar Strait where the South China and Java seas meet. Its north-west corner, where I'm staying, has been dubbed the 'Seychelles of Indonesia' and 'Indonesia's Maldives'. I liken this heavenly beach paradise to a mini-Raja Ampat, a white sandy wonderland of gentle translucent waters with tropical fish darting in the shallows, and blooms of staghorn and brain coral sitting quietly in the cooler depths. The coastline's scattering of tiny islands – rocky outcrops sprouting picture-perfect coconut trees – are part of a UNESCO Global Geopark. It is scenery worthy of a fairytale, or a pirate movie. That a shipwreck and its treasure were discovered out on the horizon, just 1.6 kilometres away, is entirely in keeping. Known for its lucrative deposits of tin, Belitung has a mining history and was once a base for BHP Billiton, Billiton being another name for Belitung. Its population of about 320,000 has traditionally worked in mining, but the depletion of tin in the 1990s has since seen the emphasis on fishing, agriculture and, incrementally, tourism. My invitation to the island has come from Tanjung Kelayang Reserve, a 350-hectare privately owned nature reserve that fronts Belitung's stunner north-west coastline. Of this land, 200 hectares have been dedicated to rewilding and conservation, with a promise of protecting the island's endemic fauna and flora while supporting local communities. I arrived earlier this morning on the 45-minute flight (400 kilometres) north of Jakarta. At the one-shed International airport, my host Yuni Kusama points out that I am the only bule, or foreigner, at the airport. She explains that the reserve's Perth-based Indonesian owner (who requests anonymity) wants Australians and Europeans to visit Belitung 'because they're eco-travellers. They'll understand that we are trying to create a truly sustainable destination'. From what I'm seeing, the assessment is bang-on. Aussies keen on a low-impact intrepid island adventure will fall for this place. So will those seeking a laid-back beach holiday or an eco-luxury escape. For the first two nights, I stay at Sheraton Belitung, at the centre of the reserve. It's a lovely, newish, 123-room resort thoughtfully constructed from hand-pressed local kaolin clay bricks, with native renggadai wood ceilings and finishes. The colour palette blends seamlessly with the white sands, dark green tropical garden and expansive natural lagoons, which are connected to the resort's zero-emissions water treatment plant. The resort is luxurious, but casually so, with a peaked-roof, wall-less lobby where my bare feet don't get a second glance, and clean and spacious rooms with comforts including balconies with standalone bathtubs. On the beachfront, the indoor-outdoor Island Restaurant, serving traditional Bangka Belitung cuisine, ensures long leisurely dining interspersed with kayaking, snorkelling, laps of the Olympic-sized pool, and volleyball jousts over a net whimsically strung between two coconut trees. Island hopping, in the reserve's characteristic wooden fishing boat, is part of the fun too. Over two days we zigzag around the Geopark to snorkel in the depths around bird-shaped Garuda Island and walk knee-deep in the echoing sea caves of Kelayang Island. We stop by a tiny floating fish market where grouper and napoleon fish are bred in cages sunken into the cobalt blue sea. We motor into a light headwind to Lengkuas Island and are greeted by a vision from a children's book, a 55-metre Dutch colonial lighthouse, built in 1882, with seven porthole windows ascending 12 floors to a domed lamp top. There's talk of turning it into a museum showcasing Belitung's long maritime trade-route history. On day three, I swap sand and sea for the reserve's Whistle Trail nature walk with guide Akbar Alfarisyi, a former biology teacher who joined the reserve in 2022. 'Now the biology teaches me,' he says as we walk through the cool forest, the island's biodiversity hotspot with more than 150 species of native flora and fauna. Along the path, Alfarisyi points out the reserve's rewilding successes – exquisite native orchids (of which there are 67 species on Belitung), termite nests (food for the reserve's four protected Sunda pangolin), cinnamon (a relatively rare species with a mint scent), and a strong-flavoured white pepper (once the island's chief agricultural export and now critically endangered). We visit the reserve's trigona beehives, which are cared for by the villagers of Komunitas Pelabo Sijuk, who receive an income from the bottles they sell. Unlike regular hexagonal hives, stingless beehives are a mesh of smallish sacks. I dip a reed straw into one to taste the delicious honey – it has a woody fermented flavour, both sweet and sour, like the aroma of wine barrels. On night three, I stay at the reserve's Billiton Ekobeach Retreat, accessible via a sandy shoreline walk or a short putt-putt by fishing boat. It has five rustically charming, stilted beach huts spaced along their own stretch of sand. The structures and bespoke furniture are made from beach-sourced driftwood and other natural waste items for a Robinson Crusoe vibe, but they're also comfortably appointed with air-conditioning, ceiling fans and hot showers. The final day might well be the finest. Once again, I meet Wakhyu Brata, this time to join a Bluemind Experience private island adventure. We skip over the waves to Kera Island, an idyllic oasis covered in a tropical garden with a hidden sandy cove where a picnic lunch is served. Afterwards, Brata, having snorkelled around the shallows with his net, waves me over. He has caught four fresh sea urchins, round, spiky and glistening black, with silver and blue spots that shimmer like crystals. Loading We stand knee-deep in water as he cuts the spikes off, then cracks the top off, the shell to reveal slivers of buttery yellow flesh, a delicacy known as uni in the Japanese culinary world. After swishing it clean in the salty water, I scoop the soft, briny, umami-loaded sea-shimi straight into my mouth. It's a taste sensation, yet another of Belitung Island's remarkable underwater treasures. THE DETAILS VISIT Belitung and Tanjung Kelayang Reserve are open year-round, with the dry season (April to October) typically offering the best time to visit. See Bluemind Experience organises the reserve's island-hopping activities. See FLY Qantas and Garuda Indonesia have direct flights from Sydney and Melbourne to Jakarta, where it's a one-hour flight to Belitung on domestic airlines, including Citilink and Batik Air. See

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store