19 In summary, this history includes:
o On 24 May 2004 Bathurst City Council and the majority of Evans Shire Council amalgamated to form Bathurst Regional Council…
o The subject land was located within the former Evans Shire area and subject to its IDO 1(gazetted on 22 August 1980), under which it was zoned 1(a) Rural. The relevant objectives for this 1(a) zone included:
a) to preserve land within a Land Capability Class of Class I, II, III, IV or V;
b) to protect the economic viability of rural and agricultural enterprises;
c) to ensure that subdivisions are compatible in size with the surrounding holdings;
o Clause 15(4) of IDO No. 1 allowed subdivision subject to the criteria in Schedule 7 on the following basis:
a) an area of not less than 1or more than 20 hectares, if
i. the allotment consists of land that is not of Land Capability Class I, II, III, IV or V; or
ii. the allotment consists of land of any Capability that is adjacent to an existing village area; or
b) an area of not less than 100 hectares.
o Clause 15 (10) of IDO No 1 limited the number of allotments that could be created under cl. 15(4) to 35. As this caused difficulties in distributing the 35 allotments within the amalgamated areas, approval was sought from the Director General to reduce the lot yield to 0 pending the preparation of a Rural Strategy and new comprehensive LEP.
o The interim LEP was largely administrative in nature and did not seek to alter the minimum area for subdivision within the rural zones that existed within the preceding planning instruments. The result being that the minimum area contained in the former planning instruments were carried forward to the BLEP 2005.
o The need to address the minimum area for subdivision and dwelling houses was however foreshadowed by the Department of Primary Industries as part of the Section 62 consultation process. The Departments advice in relation to the draft Interim LEP was as follows:
"It is expected that Council will use the impending comprehensive strategic planning to identify a framework of policies and development control provision supportive of sustainable agriculture. Provisions that would set realistic minimum subdivision areas for dwellings should be based on commercial and sustainable progress and support agriculture. Consequently, dwellings in rural areas should only be permitted if they are ancillary to genuine agriculture. Dwellings the lifestyle purposes should occur in locations that are planned and appropriate.
+ The BLEP 2005 did however rationalise the objectives of the zone and sought to provide greater emphasis on the need to provide for sustainability of subdivisions within the rural areas. This process was however undermined to a degree by Council's desire to retain, as much as possible, the preceding planning provisions. This is illustrated in that the zone objectives within the 1(a) and 1(e) zones are the same save for an objective within the 1(a) relating to a range of compatible land uses which is absent in the 1(e) zone. It is noted however that general minimum areas in the 1(a) Inner Rural Zone (200 ha) and the 1(e) Outer Rural Zones (100 ha) differ. There is no underlying reason for this difference in the minimum areas provided for in the rural areas other than that they have been historically been at that level through the respective preceding planning instruments.
+ The 100 hectares development standard has therefore been in existence since 1980 without having been reviewed. Its appropriateness as a minimum area for subdivision for agricultural purposes is therefore doubtful given the changes that have occurred within the rural sector since adoption.