|
Landcare groups - the community response
In Western Australia, priority is given to achieving land
conservation through organised groups of landholders who share
responsibility and combine their resources on a community
scale. This we call 'community landcare'; and it is based
on several important principles:
- Land holders will change more quickly and effectively
to sustainable land use if they do so voluntarily rather
than by regulation;
- Landholders will be more committed to these changes if
they have the major say in what is to be done, rather than
'being told' by the Government;
- Landholders learn more and are influenced to change by
others in the same industry or in the same community;
- Because land degradation problems are most often on a
catchment scale, all land users in the area must cooperate
in a common solution; and
- The 'pooling' of effort and resources will lead to a better
solution than individual landholders 'doing their own thing'.
In this State, we have two levels of organised groups. They
are Land Conservation District Committees and Catchment Groups.
What is a Land Conservation District?
A Land Conservation District is basically a group of people,
mostly farmers (usually a whole shire), who want to do something
about the land degradation in their area. They are a community
group; often other members are local council representatives,
Government officials, other landholders and persons with community
and land conservation interests.
Each group, or District as it is known, has a committee that
meets to plan and organise the land conservation programme.
The Districts, and their committees, are formally gazetted
under the Soil and Land Conservation Act 1982. The Commissioner
of Soil and Land Conservation has a representative on each
committee.
It makes sense that they be called 'Districts', since each
is concerned with a certain area (for example, a shire or
catchment). Being Australian, 'Land Conservation District'
was quickly abbreviated to 'LCD'.
What is a Catchment Group?
Catchment groups normally consist of between ten and forty
neighbouring farmers who share a single catchment, cooperating
in a planned approach to tackling salinity, water erosion
or other problems associated with land degradation. Some smaller
Land Conservation Districts are an entire catchment group.
Other Land Conservation Districts are much larger and have
one or more catchment groups within their boundary.
Over 150 Districts have an active catchment group. Growth
in the number of Land Conservation Districts is expected to
continue until all of the State is covered.
The first Districts started in 1982, but more of them have
been formed. Their size ranges from a few thousand hectares
(for example, Carnarvon or Mogumber) to tens of millions of
hectares in the pastoral region (Kalgoorlie or Wiluna).
Some 90 per cent of pastoral landholders and 70 per cent
of agricultural landholders are within Land Conservation Districts,
but not all would recognise this nor be involved. Some Districts
have the support of every farmer.
What do they do?
Land Conservation Districts are made up of people who do
what they can to improve the management of land in their area
and combat land degradation. This generally means they coordinate
the efforts of all landholders in a catchment or local area
to prepare whole catchment and farm planning; to do research;
to demonstrate sound land management practices, to monitor
their progress; to promote high water using farming systems;
and to promote awareness of land degradation problems in their
area.
Foremost is the belief that farming must remain viable in
the long term, without causing degradation of the land on
which it depends.
Typically, Districts might purchase and then hire out to
local farmers, equipment such as a tree planter or Mallen
Niche Seeder. This brings members into greater contact with
farmers in their District.
In every catchment
Where a District has the support of most or all of the farmers
within its boundary, there is the potential for tackling the
really big problems in land degradation, such as developing
overall catchment plans for new farming systems, high water
using systems, controlling run-off and water conservation.
There are a growing number of Districts with such support.
A catchment plan coordinates the individual efforts of farmers
and the works on their farms, for the benefit of the whole
catchment. It takes time and persistent effort. The momentum
for this work must come from a majority of landholders in
a catchment if the plan is to be effective. The attitudes
of landholders may change dramatically along the way, and
it is not all 'plain sailing'. Many Districts around the State
are now helping catchment groups to develop long-term plans
for new farming systems in their catchments, with the support
of all the farmers involved.
Everyone can join
Land Conservation Districts need the support of the whole
community. Land degradation is not only a farming problem.
Urban dwellers, too, change the land and waters in many ways,
by clearing precious natural bush, using fertilisers that
leach from gardens, or, by their holiday activities, affecting
fragile coastal dunes.
Land degradation is Western Australia's largest environmental
problem. It cannot be fixed in a year, but by working together,
the community and Land Conservation Districts will make some
real achievements in this decade.
Next »
| « Back to Index |