Playing chicken with trucks

MY HUSBAND and I were visiting elderly friends in Toodyay recently when a huge semi-trailer truck roared past our cafe table, seemingly only inches from my elbow though in fact it was a couple of metres away – still way too close for comfort.

The noise was deafening, and heaven help anyone who may have stepped into its path to cross the road from behind the umbrellas and parked cars.

What’s going on?

My friend said she read in The Toodyay Herald that land has already been bought for a new truck bypass behind the school but the plan was scrapped because people in another part of the shire didn’t want it.

Where does that leave elderly Butterly Cottages residents who have to risk their lives to go shopping in gophers, not to mention children walking to school?

Surely road safety must be the priority.

It is upsetting to think that old folk, children and mums pushing prams have to play chicken with huge trucks every day, right in the centre of your lovely town.

Chris Wilson
Armadale

Disgusting mess

WHAT a wonderful entry statement for visitors coming into town on the Bindi Bindi Toodyay Road.

There were 13 potholes on a 10km section.

Large trees were either reduced to long stumps or destroyed completely and the remains left there.

Drains were placed too close to the road with one higher than the surface, two together and the road was patched up in one spot.

Why was this disgusting mess considered necessary?

I suppose contractors were paid without the job being checked.

And guess who’s going to pay for this environmental disaster?

Bob Kermode
Coondle

Space invader

I WAS hanging out a load of washing in my backyard recently when I heard what sounded like a large swarm of bees.

I looked up and was surprised instead to see a small drone with a camera hovering directly overhead.

I live on a 5-acre (2ha) bush block where the nearest house is about 70 metres away.

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Name and address withheld

Dramatic near-miss in wet and wild Avon Descent river race

Super Chute near miss – Photo: Clive Millett.

A WEEK of torrential rain and surging rapids resulted in a dramatic near-miss (above) at a popular spectator point on Day Two of last month’s annual Avon Descent river race through Toodyay.

A powerboat came speeding around a tight bend toward the aptly-named ‘Super Chute’ rapids just past the Cobbler Pool overnight campsite a few minutes after noon when the driver lost control of the two-man craft.

Its metal hull appeared to leap out of the water onto rocks covered with spectators, narrowly missing a child who was snatched to safety from the airborne boat as others  backed away to avoid being hit.

The boat then slid sideways back into the river, tipping out the lead crew member into the fast-flowing torrent.

He was able to scramble back on board a short distance downstream without further mishap to resume the race.

Nobody appeared to be hurt in the incident and no injuries were reported at the scene.

 

Shire fights to save doctors

By Michael Sinclair-Jones

HIGH-LEVEL talks to attract new doctors to Toodyay are underway after last month’s shock revelation that the town’s medical centre will close by the end of November.

GP service provider Wheatbelt Health Network announced at the end of last month that it would cease operating in Toodyay “no later than November 30”.

Toodyay’s medical crisis was due to be raised with Federal National Party leaders at a state party conference in Perth last month and at a WA Local Government Association State Council meeting on September 8-9.

The Northam-based Wheatbelt Health Network provides Toodyay with two part-time GPs and one part-time nurse practitioner who operate as independent contractors.

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Shire rubbish charges, rates and fees to rise

 

By Michael Sinclair-Jones

TOODYAY residents will pay higher fees and charges, and most rates will increase by an average of 3.05 per cent in a new Shire of Toodyay budget adopted last month.

Councillors have voted themselves a 17.4 per cent pay rise overall, and administration staff salaries will rise by 15 per cent.

The cost of household rubbish collections will rise from $241 to $259 a year, along with price increases for a range of other shire fees and community services.

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Toodyay Club reopens

THE beleagured Toodyay Club will hold a ‘grand reopening’ under new management at 3pm on Friday September 2 after rising debt forced the premises to close in mid-July.

The club will host a new bowling tournament which starts on Saturday September 3.

Storms bring down tree, flood roads but farmers happy

AN UNUSUALY wet and stormy August caused local flooding and a big tree to crash into a children’s playground at Duidgee Park last month.

Nobody was injured.

It was the only serious storm damage reported to Shire of Toodyay emergency staff but police were called to rescue a large dog stranded in an abandoned car near flooded Katrine Bridge.

Local farmers say the rain, interspersed with sunny days, has helped to boost crop and pasture growth without the waterlogging that hampered access to paddocks during last year’s growing season.

Last-minute bid to save community resource centre from closure

Manager Nicole Coleman at Toodyay Community Resource Centre.

By Michael Sinclair-Jones

TOODYAY councillors were holding an emergency meeting at the start of this month in a last-minute bid to prevent the permanent closure of the town’s cash-strapped community resource centre.

The centre shut its doors for a week at the end of last month, warning that it may not have enough money to re-open.

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Put down the pitchforks

THE DAY started out normal and then I received a phone text message with a screen shot of a media release about the closure of Toodyay’s Alma Beard Medical Centre.

When I got home, the first thing my partner Simon said to me was “don’t reply to all the Facebook comments” because he was worried that it might be too upsetting for me.

I read all the comments, replied to one and noticed one thing in common about the Shire of Toodyay.

This may be the only time in history that I will stand up and say that this time “it is not the shire’s fault”.

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Sean Byron
Toodyay

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