Home » What’s at risk?Emergency Risk Management Project at Serpentine-Jarrahdale

What’s at risk?
Emergency Risk Management Project at Serpentine-Jarrahdale

Emergency Risk Management Project at Serpentine-Jarrahdale

The Shire of Serpentine-Jarrahdale in Western Australia covers some 920 square kilometres. It is located 50 kilometres south of Perth and has a population of approximately 10,500 residents.

The Shire is currently undertaking the first Local Authority case study in Emergency Risk Management in Australia, the outcome and results of this project will be available to all Local Authorities to pursue their own Emergency Risk Management programs.

A Local Emergency Management Advisory Committee was formed from local police, local Emergency Services, Parents and Citizens Associations, landcare groups, Scouts and the Fire and Emergency Management Services (FESA), Conservation and Land Management (CALM), and Emergency Management Australia (EMA).

The Project is currently coordinated from the Shire office in Mundijong, with the facilitator and teams operating from area Fire Brigade Stations.

Risks, hazards and threats to the communities of the Shire are being documented and mapped to provide a strategy for each risk/threat, to form a Risk Register. This in turn will form the basis for a brochure to distribute to the general community.

After a tentative start with community education sessions there was a successful Emergency Risk Management Course for targeted groups.

This led to a Risk Management Group being formed, with six locality based sub groups, to carry out personal and property risk management strategies and education.

Field supervision comes from the leaders/managers from the State departments involved. There are three externally measured outcomes during the process.

  • Completed and prioritised list of all known or perceived risks and threats to the community.
  • All known and perceived risks and threats are mapped and documented, in addition, public submissions are sought, mapped and documented.
  • Completed public information reference in the form of a detailed calendar and the completion of an Emergency Risk Register for the Shire of Serpentine-Jarrahdale, leading to the presentation to Council of an Emergency Management Risk Report and Strategy for the Shire of Serpentine- Jarrahdale

The Risk Management Group will then review the process, assess outcomes and implement the changes required. There will remain an ongoing need for the Local Emergency Management Advisory Committee to maintain the register and the education process.

It is hoped that by educating and enabling each landholder to reduce their risk, a flow on effect may be created where each action taken would reduce the general risk to the greater community.

Digital Editions


  • 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…

More News

  • Dandycon set to return

    Dandycon set to return

    Dandy Con, Greater Dandenong’s much loved comic and pop culture festival, returns on Saturday 11 April 2026 between 11am–4pm, bigger than ever. This free, all ages event fills Dandenong Library,…

  • A creative future for Kingston

    A creative future for Kingston

    The community has been invited to help shape Kingston’s creative and cultural future. Kingston residents are being invited to help finalise the city’s cultural roadmap, with the Draft Creative and…

  • Tweed residents gunking up wastewater

    Tweed residents gunking up wastewater

    Tweed Shire Council is urging residents to rethink what they flush down the toilet and pour down the drain, after revealing that crews remove around 156 tonnes of rubbish and…

  • In memory of Chris Quilkey

    In memory of Chris Quilkey

    It was with great sadness that we learned that former Blacktown City Deputy Mayor and Councillor Chris Quilkey has passed away. First and foremost, our thoughts are with Chris’s family,…

  • Unit demolished as Ipswich flood recovery continues

    Unit demolished as Ipswich flood recovery continues

    Ipswich Mayor Teresa Harding has welcomed the demolition of Mihi Grove, a flood-hit 42-unit complex in Brassall purchased as part of the Queensland and Australian Government’s Resilient Homes Fund Voluntary…

  • Fraser adopts tree

    Fraser adopts tree

    The Fraser Coast now has an official tree, with Council today adopting the Kauri Pine as a symbol of the region’s culture, history and natural environment. Fraser Coast Mayor George…

  • Council take on much-loved garden

    Council take on much-loved garden

    Glenorchy City Council will take on the administration of the Chigwell Community Garden, securing the future of the much-loved community space and supporting continued shared use by local groups. Glenorchy…

  • Fuel prices hurt country LGAs

    Fuel prices hurt country LGAs

    The fuel crisis is hitting remote, rural and regional communities hard, with farmers, freight carriers, tourism operators and local government all expressing concerns about the lack of supply and the…

  • Navigating grants

    Navigating grants

    How Administrative Complexity Is Eroding One of Local Government’s Most Powerful Tools Local government grants exist to create impact in communities. Yet across the sector, that purpose is increasingly being…

  • Looking to the future

    Looking to the future

    Flinders Lane will be abuzz for two days this month with Townsville Youth Council – supported by Townsville City Council – set to deliver a free festival focused on the…