Skip to content
Government NSW

“More participation and better decision making”: Willoughby City Council announces changes to Public and Open Forums

Willoughby City Council < 1 mins read

Willoughby City Council is trialling changes to its Public and Open Forums, in a bid to encourage higher rates of community participation and to enhance transparency and governance. 

Now set to take place one week prior to Council Meetings, the forums will allow the Mayor and Councillors more time to adequately consider public feedback and sentiment before the decision-making process occurs. 

Residents can register to speak on a matter up to two business days prior to a scheduled Public and Open Forum, with attendees able to join the meeting in person or online. 

Designed to align with current best practices for public participation in Local Government, the new format will be introduced as a six-month trial, from March to August 2025. 

Mayor Tanya Taylor welcomed the change, highlighting its benefits for residents and Council’s commitment to fostering participation and better governance: 

"We want our community to be heard, and this new approach gives residents more opportunity to have their voices considered before important decisions are made.
 
"By moving our Public and Open Forums to a week before Council meetings, we are creating a more considered process that ensures feedback shapes the decisions we make. I’m hopeful that these changes will see more participation and better decision making."
 
The first Public and Open Forum to take place in the new format will be held on Monday, 17 March, 6pm – 7pm at Willoughby City Council Chambers, 31 Victor Street, Chatswood. Registrations to speak at this forum will close at noon on Friday, 14 March 2025.  

For more information, visit: https://www.willoughby.nsw.gov.au/publicforums 

 

Ends


Contact details:

For media enquiries, please contact:

Media at Willoughby City Council

E: [email protected]

M: 0459 915 293

Media

More from this category

  • Government NSW, Legal
  • 23/12/2025
  • 16:24
PSA

State’s highest court rules for common sense

The NSW Court of Appeal’s recent ruling that NSW parliamentary inquiries have no valid power to compel witnesses to appear before them to give evidence is a victory for common sense, says the Public Service Association. The court ruling means outdated 124-year-old laws recently relied upon in an attempt to compel some of the Premier’s staff to appear before a parliamentary committee have now been struck down. The laws are unusual in that they can’t be used to compel members of parliament, and therefore Ministers, to appear but they can be used to compel their staff. The case was brought…

  • Government NSW
  • 22/12/2025
  • 13:16
EPA

CADIA TO PAY MORE THAN $300,000 FOR RURAL DUST MONITORING NETWORK

The NSW Environment Protection Authority has entered into a legally binding Enforceable Undertaking (EU) with Cadia Holdings Pty Ltd, owners and operators of the Cadia Gold Mine, worth over $320,000. The EU will see Cadia provide $307,500 to support the construction of five new permanent dust monitoring stations to boost the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water’s Rural Dust Monitoring Network. NSW EPA Executive Director of Operations Steve Beaman said this is a significant contribution which will improve dust monitoring coverage for the Central West of NSW. “Enforceable Undertakings hold companies legally accountable for addressing environmental issues…

  • Contains:
  • Government NSW
  • 22/12/2025
  • 12:00
EPA

COFFS HARBOUR COMPLIANCE BLITZ FINDS NO EVIDENCE OF BANNED PESTICIDES USE

A recent compliance blitz focusing on intensive horticulture operations in the Coffs Harbour and Nambucca regions has found no evidence of banned or off-label pesticide use. The unannounced blitz, conducted by the NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) in early November, saw officers visit 19 blueberry, raspberry and blackberry farms to check on compliance with a range of pesticide regulations. Officers checked for appropriate storage, record-keeping, training, and application practices and took berry samples from five farms for independent testing. NSW EPA Director of Operations John Forcier said that results from the berry samples showed pesticide application compliance was good, but…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.