Evidence
40Each party to the present debate objected to many elements of the other's evidence, but, as the court must apply an " interests of justice " test to the arguments, I determined to admit it all subject to relevance. Having now concluded my consideration of the questions and materials before the court, I have found all the evidence relevant, even though some is defective, and has been given little weight.
41Ashton filed an affidavit by Jeffrey Peck , its mine surveyor-in-charge at the relevant underground mining project since April 2008. Mr Peck annexed four " drawings " (A-9588/1 to 4), all dated 23 June 2011 , which he says depict the location of relevant features of the subject site, and their relationship with one another. In his oral evidence he told the court he marked the drawings as instructed by his superiors. In his affidavit, he deposes to the sources he searched for his mapping work (including the 2002 archaeological survey prepared by Dan Witter, and cadastral information at Land & Property Information NSW), and to making use of a hand-held GPS unit. It must be noted that Mr Peck's drawings were all prepared and provided after the Commissioners had reserved their decision.
42The respondent filed an affidavit by Gary Davey , its Director - North East Branch (of what is now the Office of Environment and Heritage - 'OEH'), the senior departmental officer relevant to this project, and a master of science in Zoology. It was Davey who determined on 23 May to relieve Paddington of her duties regarding this matter, and to replace her with a fellow OEH Officer, Roger Mehr, rather than with a consultant, Maria Cotter. Davey deposed to Mehr's relevant experience, and dealings with the site. Davey remained unshaken in his view that the AHIP should be granted on the quite specific conditions proposed (notably Nos. 8-12, 14 and 16).
43Mr Franks required both Peck and Davey for cross-examination before me, and filed an affidavit in reply, which he affirmed and filed on 30 June, after I had fixed the NOM for hearing on that day and given directions about evidence and submissions.
44Mr Oshlack also tendered to the court in support of Mr Franks's application:
As Exhibit F1 : Two " archaeological assessment " documents, one of 46 pages ( Exhibit F1B ) and one of 58 ( Exhibit F1A ), both authored by Insite Heritage Pty Ltd, both dealing on their face with the proposed diversion of Bowmans Creek, and both bearing the date " October 2009 ". It emerged during submissions that Exhibit F1A was sent to Mr Franks and/or other Aboriginal " parties ", and that Exhibit F1B ("Appendix 11") became Appendix 1 to the Aboriginal CHAR and AHIP application submitted by Ashton to the Department in January 2011 (see Exhibit A3 before me, at fols 34ff).
As Exhibit F2 : " Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Consultation Requirements for Proponents 2010 " (under Part 6 of the NPW Act ). The " Guidelines " document says that the Department requires proponents to have " effective consultation with Aboriginal people as a fundamental component of the AHIP assessment process ", and that those people are to be " the primary determinants of the cultural significance of their heritage ", and " should have the right to directly participate in matters that may affect " it. The consultation process has four main phases - (1) notify identified Aboriginal people (including registered native title claimants or holders), who become RAPs, of the nature and scope of the proposal; (2) gather information so as to understand what might be present in the landscape, and its cultural significance; (3) determine potential impacts and identify strategies proposed to deal with them; and (4) provide to RAPs the draft CHAR for their review and comment. Franks asserts that this process was not followed in this instance.
As Exhibit F3 An Ashton Coal " drawing " dated 16 June 2011, said on its face to depict " Mine Lease 1533, Mine Lease Application 351, and western AHIP boundary " of the " Western Panels AHIP Area ". Mr Oshlack was in some doubt as to whether the document was placed in evidence before the Commissioners, or simply given to him or Franks at the substantive hearing.
45Ashton tendered before me:
As Exhibit A1: A further Ashton Coal " drawing " dated 25 May 2010, said on its face to depict " Ashton Coal Project South east Open Cut Mine Lease Application ".
As Exhibit A2 : A 19-page AHIP document plus two attachments, one of which was a drawing of the AHIP area dated 31 May 2011, and the other a statement of " methodology for the salvage of aboriginal objects ". This document was said to have been Exhibit 4 before the Commissioners, but Mr Oshlack expressed some doubt, and I asked the Commissioners to provide me with their Exhibit 4 (which became Exhibit A4 before me - see below).
As Exhibit A3 : Documents at tab 2 of a large binder of documents tendered to the Commissioners as Exhibit A , or one volume of it. The index to the binder describes the very lengthy document at tab 2 (being fols 8-350 in the binder) as the " Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Assessment Report and AHIP application ". The index to the binder notes that some confidential material has been " extracted and will be provided separately to the Court ". The document itself notes (at fol 8) that it was prepared by Insite Heritage Pty Ltd, A Besant and E Wyatt. It is dated January 2011 and addressed to what was then 'DECCW'. Mr Howard submits that this documentation fulfilled the requirements of s 90A of the NPW Act , subject to further information provided on request. Mr Oshlack submits that it does not meet the requirements of the section.
As Exhibit A4 : The actual Exhibit 4 before the Commissioners, being the AHIP. This exhibit was the document in Exhibit A2 , minus the two attachments. The two 19-page documents would certainly appear identical in text, but the version in Exhibit 4 ( A4 before me) has each page over-stamped " DRAFT ". The particular elements to which I was taken were identified in the two documents. The AHIP document in Exhibits A2 and A4 applies to land located in Part Lot 3 DP 1114623 and Part Lot 2 DP 1089848 in Mining Lease ML 1533, all of which land is depicted in the map attached to Exhibit A2 , but referred to and not attached to the ' draft ' in Exhibit A4 . Both exhibits acknowledge, on p 2 of 19 in item A(iv), that there has already been coal extraction in the subject site and more is planned. " Full extraction of all 4 seams may result in up to 8m subsidence". Proposed "Operational" condition 16 (on p 9 of 19) provides as follows: "The AHIP holder will invite all RAPs to provide any information on the traditional cultural values and/or associations of Aboriginal people with the AHIP area. Detailed recordings, such as maps, photographs and descriptions of local landscape and topography should be collected, collated and reported with the information provided by the RAPs. The information collected and recording during this stage will need to be managed through a culturally appropriate protocol which the AHIP holder is to develop with the RAPs. At the completion of the works permitted under this AHIP, or earlier if appropriate, interpretative material, as endorsed by the RAPs, should be installed to inform the community of the cultural values of the AHIP area ". Mr Oshlack complains that this should have occurred before any works were carried out.
46Mr Davey conceded in cross-examination that there had been subsidence in the proposed AHIP area, where there are objects of Aboriginal significance, but he is not familiar with all the terms of the development consent which Ashton must obey, and was not aware of any harm caused to any items of Aboriginal interest by Ashton's operations so far. He conceded that Ms Paddington, who reports to him, had expressed some misgivings to him about the proposed AHIP, and that she was a thorough investigator, very familiar with the site, having more experience of the subject site than her colleague, Mr Mehr, whom he assigned to this case in her place. He flatly denied Mr Franks's allegation that he misled the court regarding Ms Paddington's ability to give evidence and that he exerted any pressure on her regarding the matter. In his affidavit, Mr Davey gave evidence about her leave arrangements and her possible availability to represent the Department's views at the hearing.
47Mr Franks relied upon his affidavits of 22 and 30 June and gave oral evidence before me. He satisfied the court of his relevant expertise and experience, he having done CHARs for 15 years, especially in the Hunter's Bowmans Creek area, with which he has strong cultural ties. He was extremely critical of the comprehensiveness and accuracy of the mapping work done by Peck and others, and of Mr Peck's evidence before me. After he had given his evidence before the Commissioners, Mr Franks obtained a Department of Planning map, and he based his complaints before me on that Department's representation of what the development consent actually does, says, and requires.
48A major focus of Mr Franks's second affidavit is a NT claim, lodged by him and Robert Lester on 5 October 2010 , mainly for land known as the Camberwell Common, relevantly part of tribal lands extending to about 2,000 square kilometres. Exhibit A1 is an enlarged copy of the map/diagram attached to the NT claim (as Attachment One). Again Franks argued that Peck's representations of the site and proposal were wrong - the area claimed (and the extra land " earmarked" for possible later NT claim) is understated, MLA 351 and lot 7004 are not identical, and MLA 351 is not completely depicted.
49Mr Franks rejected much of what Davey said about Paddington, and claimed to have " direct personal knowledge " to refute it. His professional relationship with Paddington covered more lands than those involved in the present AHIP. He urged the court not to accept, without challenge, the evidence of three " European archaeologists ". He told the court that Exhibit F3 had been " handed to the Commissioners ".
50After Mr Franks concluded his evidence before me, Mr Howard (for Ashton) tendered Exhibits A3 and A4 (described in [45] above), and Mr Oshlack observed to the Court that Exhibit A3 had not been shown to Mr Franks before (at least not in its entirety), as required by the consultation requirements in Exhibit F2 . He re-called Mr Franks, who responded to cross-examination by Mr Howard by acknowledging that a CD (which he could not open) had been forwarded to him, and a list of its alleged contents faxed to him, presumably including the CHAR and the AHIP application, now in Exhibit A3 . The CD was accompanied by a letter from Besant. Mr Franks had asked Paddington to get him the contents of the CD, but he could not say what they were.