Organisation

AGY-5300 | Central West Catchment Management Authority

NSW State Archives Collection
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Full description

Catchment Management Authorities (CMAs) were established across the state in January 2004 under the Catchment Management Authorities Act 2003 as part of broad Natural Resources Management reforms. (1)

Each Catchment Management Authority board consisted of a chairperson and up to six board members, who together provided a range of experience, skills and knowledge in areas such as primary production, cultural heritage, biodiversity conservation, business administration and governance. Each Catchment Management Authority also had a general manager and a small team of professional staff. (2)

The functions of each Catchment Management Authority were:

to develop catchment action plans and to give effect to any such approved plans through annual implementation programs
to provide loans, grants, subsidies or other financial assistance for the purposes of the catchment activities it is authortised to fund
to enter contracts or do any work for the purposes of the catchment activities it is authorised to carry out
to assist landholders to further the objectives of its catchment action plan (including providing information about native vegetation)
to provide educational and training courses and materials in connection with Natural Resource Management, and
to exercise any other function relating to Natural Resource Management as it is prescribed by the regulations. (3)

Central West Catchment Management Authority
The Central West catchment included the Castlereagh, Bogan and Macquarie River valleys and covered an area of approximately 92,000 square kilometres. The Central West Catchment was located in central western New South Wales, flanked by the Barwon and Darling catchments to the north and west, Lachlan to the south and the Sydney / Shoalhaven Basin to the east. Major townships included Orange, Bathurst, Dubbo, Mudgee and Nyngan. (4)

In 2007 the Head Office of the Central West CMA was located at Wellington. It also had offices at Bathurst, Dubbo, Nyngan, Gilgandra, Mudgee, Orange and Trangie Agricultural Research Centre. (5)

The Central West Catchment Management Authority was abolished on 1 January 2014 by the Local Land Services Act 2013 which replaced it with Central West Local Land Services. (6)

Endnotes
1. Combined Catchment Management Authorities Annual Report, 2003-2004, p.1; Catchment Management Authorities Act 2003 (Act No.104), s.6.
2. Catchment Management Authorites website http://www.cma.nsw.gov.au/index.html (cited 25 May 2007).
3. Ibid., p.3; Catchment Management Authorities Act 2003, s.15.
4. Central West Catchment Management Authority website http://cw.cma.nsw.gov.au/catchment.html (cited 25 May 2007).
5. Catchment Management Authorities website http://www.cma.nsw.gov.au/contact_cma.html (cited 25 May 2007).
6. Local Land Services Act 2013 (Act No.51, 2013) Schedule 6, cl.4 (1) (a).

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