HEADNOTE
[This headnote is not to be read as part of the judgment]
On 22 March 2021 the appellant, North Parramatta Residents' Action Group Inc (NPRAG), commenced proceedings in the Land and Environment Court seeking a declaration that the consent granted by the Minister for Planning and Public Spaces to a development application for the construction of a new building to house the Powerhouse Museum at Parramatta was invalid. It submitted that the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) which accompanied the development application failed to consider feasible alternative sites and designs and thus failed to comply with Sch 2, cl 7(1)(c) of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Regulation 1980 (NSW) (Planning Regulation). The key concern was that the proposal included the removal of "Willow Grove", an 1870s Italianate sandstock house with local heritage value, located on the proposed site. On 16 June 2021 the Land and Environment Court dismissed the proceedings.
On 22 June 2021 NPRAG appealed from that judgment. The appeal was heard on 2 July 2021. The appellant challenged the findings that the EIS had complied with the statutory requirements, contending that the consent to the development application should have been viewed as invalid.
The principal issues before this Court were whether:
(1) the Planning Regulation required that feasible alternatives be identified by having regard to the objectives of the development as stated by the proponent in its EIS;
(2) a valid EIS should have included an analysis of feasible alternative sites;
(3) a valid EIS should have included an analysis of feasible alternative designs; and
(4) the development consent was invalid.
Held by Basten JA (Bathurst CJ and Leeming JA agreeing) in dismissing the appeal:
As to issue (1):
(1) The words "having regard to its objectives" in Sch 2, cl 7(1)(c) to the Planning Regulation refer to "the development activity or infrastructure", the objectives of which must be stated by the EIS. Whether an alternative is feasible will be assessed having regard to the objectives of the proposal. The submission that the objectives can only inform the analysis and not the identification of feasible alternatives should not be accepted: [23]-[24].
Environmental Planning and Assessment Regulation 1980 (NSW), Sch 2, cl 7(1)(c).
(2) In circumstances where the Planning Secretary's environmental assessment requirements were specific and addressed the same issues as cl 7(1)(c), they took precedence, limiting the practical significance of cl 7(1)(c): [28]
Environmental Planning and Assessment Regulation, Sch 2, cl 7(2)
As to issue (2):
(3) The proponent sought planning approval for a proposed development on particular land, and therefore the location was not subject to review by the consent authority. There was no basis for finding that there was a requirement for the EIS to identify and address alternative sites: [29]-[31]; [34].
As to issue (3):
(4) The only permissible design was the one selected as the winner of the competitive process under the Parramatta Local Environmental Plan 2011, cl 7.10, which required that consent could only be granted if the development "exhibited design excellence", as the winner of the competitive process: [38]-[40].
(5) Where a variation to the winning design was not possible, the only options available to the consent authority were to grant consent, accepting the loss of Willow Grove, or to refuse consent, thereby allowing a process for the identification of a reasonable alternative to the removal of Willow Grove: [41].
(6) The inclusion of a pedestrian thoroughfare running through the current Willow Grove site did not preclude the possibility that alternative designs could exist, as the competition brief allowed for a 'civic link' that did not require the destruction of Willow Grove: [47]-[49].
As to issue (4):
(7) The primary judge was in error in failing to consider whether the EIS complied with the Secretary's requirements - these requirements were particular and explicit; however, a failure to comply in some particular respect did not necessarily entail the invalidity of the EIS: [50]-[51]; [61]. An EIS will not be invalid if there has been substantial compliance with the statutory requirements. Unless there was a material failure of disclosure in the EIS the consent should not be declared invalid: [70]-[72].
Prineas v Forestry Commission of NSW (1984) 53 LGRA 160 considered.