A group of mayors say they are “disappointed and angered that the 1.5 million residents of south-east Melbourne have been overlooked again”.Credit:Joe Armao
City Deals are mostly funded by the Commonwealth,in partnerships with state and local governments,and have pumped hundreds of millions of dollars into jobs and infrastructure.
Last month,federal Cities Minister Paul Fletcher wrote to the mayors of Kingston,Cardinia,Knox,Dandenong,Monash,Mornington Peninsula and Frankston,as well as the administrator of Casey Council,to tell them the deal would have to wait until a separate project for Melbourne’s north-west is finalised.
The city’s north-west is among the fastest-growing regions in the country and was the worst-affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Mr Fletcher’s letter came months after he was asked for an update,and three years after then-minister Alan Tudge made the announcement.
The greater south-east,which has a large migrant and refugee population,is expected to grow to 2 million people by 2036 and the mayors argued strategic investment was needed to create jobs and minimise congestion.
The group of mayors said they were “disappointed and angered that the 1.5 million residents of south-east Melbourne have been overlooked again.