The 11 projects set to alter power balance between state and councils
The Crisafulli government is reviewing State Facilitated Development projects under the LNP's pledge to restore power to councils.
The former Labor government used the SFD process to fast-track almost a dozen projects, ostensibly to provide more housing in areas where development applications might otherwise have been caught up in council.
But Deputy Premier Jarrod Bleijie has accused Labor of undermining local government by 'riding roughshod' over councils, sometimes in cases where there was local opposition to developments.
While the government has reviewed and approved four of the projects – at Toowoomba, Wakerley, Woolloongabba and Indooroopilly – it last week used new powers to block a project for the first time.
The project, a 42-unit development at Tewantin, and one of two given SFD status in Noosa Shire, will not go ahead in its current form. Bleijie had earlier called on the developer, who had incorporated affordable housing into the plans, to 'take the community with them,' while the mayor said it needed to comply with 'Noosa values'.
'We've been working with council to try to resolve some of the issues, but it's clear that's not possible with this development,' Bleijie said last week.
'Fast-tracking housing approvals shouldn't come at the expense of council and community buy-in and consultation.'
Noosa Mayor Frank Wilkie welcomed the decision, saying the project should have been required to comply with the local plan and 'Noosa values'.

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