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Bushy Park, Derwent Valley · Community Campaign

Save Our Pool.
The Valley Deserves Better.

The Bushy Park War Memorial Swimming Pool has served our community for generations. The council's backflip must not stand. Sign the petition and demand a real solution.

900+
signatures and counting
Add yours below ↓
900 signedGoal: 1,500

A Community Betrayed

The Bushy Park War Memorial Swimming Pool is more than infrastructure. For the families, kids, farm workers, and elderly residents of the upper Derwent Valley, it is the only major recreational asset within reach. The nearest alternative is a 20-minute drive to New Norfolk — effectively inaccessible for those without reliable transport.

In October 2025, councillors voted unanimously to restore the pool and target a Summer 2026 reopening. Less than a year later, in May 2026, they reversed that decision — claiming compliance issues that proper due diligence should have identified before the original promise was made.

2023

Pool closes due to Styx River Bridge construction. Community reassured it is temporary.

September 2025

Community mobilises. Petition reaches 900+ signatures. Council workshops held at Glenora District School.

October 2025

Derwent Valley Council votes unanimously to restore the pool. Mayor speaks with Deputy Premier Guy Barnett about State funding. RSL Tasmania formally backs restoration.

May 2026

Council backflip. Administration declares there is "no way forward." Council issues an apology — admitting earlier promises were made "without having sought professional advice." Community responds with fury.

"Council wishes to unreservedly apologise for past public statements that our officers made guaranteeing that the pool would reopen. Those statements were made without having sought professional advice, nor a full understanding of the associated issues." — Derwent Valley Council statement, May 2026

An apology is not a pool. The compliance issues cited — car parking, wastewater, EPA discharge permit — are engineering and planning problems, not a death sentence. They are solvable with the will and the funding to solve them. We are demanding both.

The Numbers

This decision wasn't made in the absence of data. It was made in the absence of community voice. Here's what the council's own figures tell us.

Reported background: New Norfolk News, Tasmanian Country, and the Australian War Memorial Places of Pride register. Campaign organisers should separately attach the lease record and current petition tally.

$150k
Estimated cost to repair and restore the pool to operational standard
$70k
Annual operating cost — less than the cost of one mid-level council officer
20 min
Drive to the nearest alternative pool — in New Norfolk. Inaccessible without a car
900+
Signatures already gathered in a community of just a few thousand people
3 yrs
Summers already lost. A generation of children growing up without safe, local swimming
99 yr
Lease — land reportedly donated by the Shoebridge family for community use. That intent must be honoured.

The Hop Industry Must Step Up

Bushy Park is the hop-growing capital of the Southern Hemisphere. The land, the water, and the workforce of this valley have made fortunes for the hop industry. The Shoebridge family — whose legacy is embedded in this very site — understood the obligation that prosperity carries to the community that sustains it.

That tradition of reciprocity has not died. But it must be demanded.

Why the hop and agriculture sector should fund pool restoration

  • Seasonal agricultural workers and their families rely on local recreational infrastructure — a pool improves worker welfare and retention in a labour-tight sector
  • The hop industry draws from Bushy Park's public goods — roads, community services, local schools — without commensurate contribution to local amenity
  • A community-facing sponsorship of $50,000–$75,000 from major producers is a rounding error against annual crop revenues; it is transformative against a $150,000 restoration target
  • The Shoebridge family's original donation of land for public use set a precedent. The businesses that have benefited from that land should honour it
  • Corporate social responsibility investment protects the social licence to operate in a valley that is watching how industry behaves in a moment of community crisis
  • A named sponsorship — the "Bushy Park Pool Restoration Fund," supported by local producers — is good branding, good ethics, and good business

We are calling on Hop Products Australia and the major hop-growing operations of the upper Derwent Valley to commit a meaningful contribution to pool restoration and ongoing operational support. The community gave this valley its character. It's time industry gave something back.

What We're Demanding

We are not asking for the impossible. We are asking for leadership, creativity, and a genuine commitment to rural community infrastructure. Here is our platform:

01

Council-commissioned independent engineering assessment

The compliance issues must be assessed by an independent engineer — not the same administration that made promises without advice. Solutions exist. Find them.

02

State Government infrastructure grant

The Mayor has already spoken with Deputy Premier Guy Barnett. That conversation must be formalised into a grant application. $150,000 is not beyond the State's capacity to support a war memorial recreational asset.

03

Hop industry community partnership

A formal approach to Hop Products Australia and major growers for a named restoration contribution and ongoing operational co-sponsorship.

04

Transparent public accounting of all costs

The community is owed a full, publicly accessible breakdown of all compliance costs, estimated solutions, and funding gaps — before any final decision is made.

05

Honour the Shoebridge legacy

If the land was donated for community benefit, that intent is legally and morally binding. The council must act in accordance with the spirit of the original gift.

06

No redevelopment without a community vote

The council must not proceed with alternative site uses — splash pads, picnic areas — without a formal community consultation and vote on whether residents accept the pool's permanent closure.

Sign the Petition

Add your name and your voice. Submitting this form opens a pre-filled email to the campaign team so your signature can be recorded and included in the petition presented to council and elected representatives.

We, the undersigned, call on Derwent Valley Council to:

  • Commission an independent engineering review of all compliance barriers to pool reopening
  • Pursue State Government infrastructure funding through the Deputy Premier's office as previously discussed
  • Formally approach the hop and agricultural industry for community partnership funding
  • Publish a full transparent cost and options analysis before making any permanent decision
  • Hold no alternative site developments without a formal community ballot
  • Honour the Shoebridge family's bequest and the community's trust in this land

Collected signatures will be presented to Derwent Valley Council at a public meeting, with copies forwarded to State and Federal representatives for the Derwent Valley.

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Your email app will open with your details addressed to contact@bushyparkpool.com.au. The email includes an Excel-ready tab-separated row so the campaign team can add your signature to the petition register. The campaign will use your details only for this petition, updates you request, and submission to council or elected representatives.

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Please send the email that just opened so the campaign team can record your signature. Then share this page so others can add their voice.

Spread the Word

The more voices, the harder it is for council to ignore. Share this campaign on social media, print a flyer for the pub, the shop, the school gate. Every conversation counts.

Contact the Decision-Makers Directly

Derwent Valley Council: (03) 6261 8522 · mayor@derwentvalley.tas.gov.au

Your State Members (Lyons): Contact via parliament.tas.gov.au

Federal Member for Lyons: Hon Rebecca White MP · Rebecca.White.MP@aph.gov.au · (03) 6263 3721

A polite, personal email or phone call from a constituent carries far more weight than any social media post. Tell them why this pool matters to you.

Electorate and federal member details: Australian Electoral Commission and Parliament of Australia.