Posted: 2024-05-16 02:17:54

The Clarence City Council could conduct an elector poll to decide the fate of the Tasmania Devils' proposed AFL high-performance centre at Rosny, but mayor Brendan Blomeley has warned that could come at a cost of up to $200,000, and the results of a poll may not be binding.

It comes after more than 400 people attended a community meeting last night, which was triggered by a petition against the facility from the Save Rosny's Parks community group.

The petition garnered 1,000 signatures from people opposed to an in-principal plan to build the AFL high-performance centre across two sites at the former Rosny golf course and at Charles Hand Memorial Park, which currently hosts an international-standard competition skate park.

A map of parklands that places two big ovals and numerous other buildings nearby.

The Rosny parklands AFL high-performance centre site plan.(Supplied)

The meeting passed six motions that were put forward by the petitioners, including a call for the council to rescind its vote on the project and for no site works on any high-performance centre to commence until a Hobart AFL stadium is formally approved.

Those motions are non-binding but will be considered by the council at a meeting later this month.

If the Save Rosny's Parks group is not satisfied with the outcome of that meeting, it could submit another petition requesting an elector poll that would see all Clarence residents given the opportunity to respond.

But Clarence mayor Brendan Blomeley warned that while that is a possibility, it would come at substantial cost to Clarence ratepayers, and the results of the poll could be non-binding.

"Ratepayers need to understand that it would be up to $200,000 to conduct that elector poll, and it's obviously not compulsory for people to participate in that," Cr Blomeley told ABC Mornings.

"That money can be expended, but then what elected members choose to do with the results is another thing altogether."

In 2022, an elector poll requested by the Hobart City Council regarding the University of Tasmania's move into the CBD garnered a 'no' vote of almost 75 per cent, but the university chose to continue with its move regardless.

Council split on centre's location

The head of the Save Rosny's Parks group, Terry Polglase, said his group was not against the facility being built in Clarence, but strongly opposed the proposed location in the city's parklands.

He said he would support the result of an elector poll if one was to proceed.

"If council wanted to run an elector poll, we will certainly [support it] and we are considering it ourselves," he told ABC Mornings.

Mr Polglase said councillors themselves were split on the location of the facility.

"There's no more than three councillors that are on any side. There are three that want them [the ovals] on Charles Hand park side, three that want them on the golf course, we've got another three that want them on both parks, and another three that don't want them at all," he said.

"Council don't even know what they want."

Current plans for the high-performance facility have one MCG-sized oval at Charles Hand Memorial Park, and a second MCG-sized oval on the site of the former Rosny golf course.

The main administration facility and buildings would sit on the golf course portion of the site, but an oval on Charles Hand Park would require the felling of about 80 trees and the potential removal of a recently built skate park.

No formal designs for the facility have been completed.

Brendan Blomeley looks at the camera.

Brendan Blomeley says council does not know whether the skate park would have to relocate.(Facebook: Alderman Brendan Blomeley)

Site selection in disagreement

A range of options were considered including having the entire facility on the former golf course site, which is an option that Cr Blomeley says he personally prefers.

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