Home » Canterbury improves access for all

Canterbury improves access for all

Canterbury City Council has introduced a new Development Control Plan (DCP) to improve access and mobility for residents with a disability.

Located southwest of Sydney’s CBD, Cantebury has over 130,000 residents.

Mayor Robert Furolo said that through the plan Council is committed to improving and promoting access and mobility for residents with a disability.

“The plan will also help to raise public awareness and understanding of access and mobility issues faced by people with a disability,” he said.

Mayor Furolo hopes the plan will add to programs already in place to help with accessibility around the area.

“We’ve been improving disability access to Council facilities like our childcare centres and we’re also conducting an audit of public transport infrastructure like bus shelters to ensure they are suitable,” he said.

Just under 20 per cent of the residents in Canterbury have a disability and 12 per cent of the population have a mobility restriction.

The plan applies to new developments as well as changes to existing developments, including business premises, health consulting rooms, recreational areas, bus stops and interchanges and places of shared accommodation.

The new DCP aims to:

  • provide appropriate levels
    of access and mobility for
    new developments, upgrades
    to existing buildings,
    common space areas
    linking buildings within
    the built environment,
    internal fitout and public
    open space areas
  • provide an appropriate
    supply of car parking spaces
    for the use of people with
    disabilities
  • increase awareness of the
    requirements and
    responsibilities of the
    Disability Discrimination
    Act 1992
  • raise public awareness and
    understanding of access and
    mobility issues.

The plan came into effect in March 2010.

For further information contact Council’s Disability Worker, Roy Gaskin, on
(02) 9789 9432.

 

Digital Editions


  • Python Jetter clears fast

    Python Jetter clears fast

    Aussie Pumps are building the most advanced drain cleaners in the world. They supply them for clearing blocked domestic drains, but also for municipal sewer…

More News

  • Urgent action needed on childcare

    Urgent action needed on childcare

    NSW councils are demanding urgent action to expand and properly fund council-run childcare services in response to a parliamentary inquiry into the early childhood education and care sector, finding that…

  • Paving the way sustainably

    Paving the way sustainably

    City of Moreton Bay is paving the way for more sustainable roads, partnering with infrastructure company Fulton Hogan in 2024/25 to facilitate a Queensland first research and development project aimed…

  • Taking a hard-line on soft plastics

    Taking a hard-line on soft plastics

    Giving soft plastics a second, third, fourth life – and counting. “Nice work Surf Coast, your soft plastic recycling efforts are paying off, with the first shipment from Anglesea now…

  • Greater Geraldton bridge lauded

    Greater Geraldton bridge lauded

    City of Greater Geraldton bridge replacement project wins prestigious engineering award Inovative engineering has earned the recently completed Nangetty-Walkaway Road Bridge Replacement Project top honours at the 2026 Institute of…

  • New paint technology at Alexandrina

    New paint technology at Alexandrina

    A paint trial is taking the heat out of Alexandrina’s council infrastructure. Alexandrina Council’s Alexandrina Wastewater division is trialing new paint technology to cool down the temperatures inside cabinetry housing…

  • Rotary honours library employee

    Rotary honours library employee

    Whyalla Public Library’s Chris Barsby has been recognised for her outstanding contribution to youth learning, receiving a Special Community Award from the Rotary Club of Whyalla. The award celebrates her…

  • Surfcoast Ecotourism champs

    Surfcoast Ecotourism champs

    Ecotourism Australia is proud to announce that the Surf Coast Shire has officially earned ECO Destination Certification, formally recognising the region’s adherence to global best practice sustainable tourism and environmental…

  • Special transformative project for Bayside

    Special transformative project for Bayside

    In the northwest pocket of Bayside City Council’s municipal boundary, something very special is happening. Yalukit Willam Nature Reserve is a transformative project. The former golf course-to-nature reserve conversion is…

  • Big attraction for tiny town

    Big attraction for tiny town

    Dozens of tourists have created history as the first passengers in decades to arrive in the tiny southern Queensland town of Thallon by rail. Excited passengers travelled for hours on…

  • Together Butchulla Talk

    Together Butchulla Talk

    A new Indigenous book celebrating the Butchulla language and local animals was launched at Hervey Bay Library earlier this month with storytime, language, dance and art activities for families to…