ID :
144962
Wed, 10/06/2010 - 00:01
Auther :

State`s national parks `at risk`: report

More than three quarters of Queensland's protected parks are at risk but the
government says it won't waste taxpayers' money on bureaucratic red tape.
The Sustainable Management of National Parks and Protected Areas Auditor-General
report, tabled to state parliament on Tuesday, found there was no consistent system
in place to conserve the state's natural heritage in its protected parks.
It found 83 per cent of parks are at risk due to not having compulsory management
plans.
Auditor-General Glenn Poole found that out of the state's 576 protected park areas,
the Department of Environment and Resource Management (DERM) had developed
management plans for only 98 of them.
"The (Nature Conservation Act 1992) requires the plans to identify the key natural
and cultural values, and strategies for day-to-day and long-term management to
protect these values," he wrote.
"The Act also states that plans should be prepared as soon as practicable after the
dedication of a protected area."
He said without park management plans, conservation activities undertaken may be
insufficient, or inconsistently applied over the long term.
"In my view, the absence of park management plans for most national parks and
protected areas creates a risk," he wrote.
In the report, Mr Poole recommended that DERM implement a coordinated, integrated
and long-term planning framework across the state.
He also advised the department to develop performance indicators that were capable
of fairly representing the agency's achievements in managing national parks.
However Minister for Climate Change and Sustainability Kate Jones told state
parliament on Tuesday that the DERM director-general had advised Mr Poole that to
implement a formal plan for every national park would cost up to $60 million and
take more than 30 years.
"I do not believe that this is the best use of taxpayers' money or the expertise and
resources of the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service," she said.
"There are more efficient ways to achieve good park management outcomes without
undue bureaucracy.
"We want our rangers on the ground, not sitting behind desks doing paperwork."

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