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This article covers a Mayoral Minute where George Greiss addresses a long-running governance and financial dispute between NSW councils and the state government over the ownership and accounting treatment of Rural Fire Service assets (often referred to as the “red fleet”). Greiss explains that councils are being directed to record RFS assets in their financial statements as council “property,” including absorbing depreciation costs and financial risk — despite councils having no real control over acquiring, deploying, or disposing of the assets. The article also links the issue to the Auditor-General’s 2021 Report on Local Government, which increased compliance pressure on councils.
Greiss’ position is framed as both pragmatic and principled: Campbelltown Council will comply in the short term to avoid audit findings and disruption, but will continue to advocate for reform through LGNSW and direct correspondence with government ministers and shadow ministers. The piece highlights a wider issue relevant to planning and governance: the way state policy decisions can shift costs and risk onto local government, affecting councils’ capacity to invest in community infrastructure and city-shaping priorities.
Read more → Bizarre dispute over ownership of Rural Fire Service equipment
