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ozwinner
1st October 2005, 07:54 PM
Hi dudes ( also incorperates all dudesess ).

"The nature strip".

That stretch of land between your fence and the road.
Who owns it?
Who is responseable for it?
Is it mine?
Is it the councils?
Can I charge council for mowing it.
Can they charge me if they mow it?

Al :confused:

echnidna
1st October 2005, 07:58 PM
Who owns it? .... Council
Who is responseable for it? ..... You are
Is it mine? .... No its Crown Land
Is it the councils? ...... Council or Vicroads or Goverment etc
Can I charge council for mowing it...... No
Can they charge me if they mow it?.... Yes under their relevant local laws

However if they didn't tell you that it needed mowing before they did it you have a good argument to use on your councillors.

It may have changed but councils used to only be able to require grass to be cut if it represents a fire hazard and then only once a year.

But they have the power to make local laws and some councils are four letter words.

Pester (Lobby sounds nicer) your local councillor. (they get nervous in the lead up to Council elections and try to placate people who might stand against them)

Yer can't win Oz, mow it and improve the appearance of your property

ozwinner
1st October 2005, 08:05 PM
Im not bothered about who mows it, we get a very nice local bloke to do it.

Its just this question has always bugged me, and well, it quiet in here tonight.

Al :D

Groggy
1st October 2005, 08:44 PM
We have a footy ground over the road and when it rains the buggers drive up on the nature strip and park, leaving big furrows which make it hard to mow (and just plain ugly). Somehow their tyres always go flat (in pairs) when they do this, it's a strange phenomenon.

Auld Bassoon
1st October 2005, 09:10 PM
Strange that, Groggy, and even stranger that you should have noticed this phenomenonhttp://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com.au/images/icons/icon10.gifhttp://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com.au/images/icons/icon10.gif - One supposes that no matchsticks were involed in any of these incidents, eh?http://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com.au/images/icons/icon12.gif

craigb
1st October 2005, 10:45 PM
Im not bothered about who mows it, we get a very nice local bloke to do it.

Its just this question has always bugged me, and well, it quiet in here tonight.

Al :D

It's something that's always bugged me too. It's not my land but I have to maintain it???

Oh well, I guess if the Council looked after it they'd only up my rates to pay for mowing it. :(

Like Echnidna said, you can't win.

Groggy
1st October 2005, 11:09 PM
Strange that, Groggy, and even stranger that you should have noticed this phenomenonhttp://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com.au/images/icons/icon10.gifhttp://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com.au/images/icons/icon10.gif - One supposes that no matchsticks were involed in any of these incidents, eh?http://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com.au/images/icons/icon12.gifI've heard, from a friend of a friend's relative's mate, that if you were to chew a bit of paper, and sit it in the little black cap, the tyre slowly deflates. Especially if the cap is only screwed back on two and a half turns. Sometimes, after refilling the tyre, they might even put the cap back on without checking it!;)

DavidG
1st October 2005, 11:31 PM
...you were to chew a bit of paper... ... and leave DNA behind so incase of an accident you can be traced.

boban
2nd October 2005, 12:32 AM
We own a development site in the Parramatta Council area and we let the yard go a bit while waiting for the DA. We got a letter threatening to issue an order if we didn't clean up the properties.

I also got a phone call from a pleasant young lady who said: "We cant force you to do it, but can you please mow the nature strip, we have had some complaints about it".

So while I dont know the answer, it doesn't make sense that she would ask me to do after sending me a letter saying I must clean up the property, that is the part on our side of the boundary.

It doesn't make any sense to me from a legal standpoint. That is attaching responsibilities to property you dont own. But I could be wrong.

boban
2nd October 2005, 12:43 AM
Found this link at Randwick CC which seems to suggest that Council cant force you to mow their lawn

http://www.randwick.nsw.gov.au/council_services/streets_&_roads/natureStrips.php

Robert WA
2nd October 2005, 01:15 AM
In WA it is generally part of the road reserve and, technically, part of the road.
Driving on the verge, footpath, nature strip, whatever constitutes driving on a road and can trigger an offence under our Road Traffic Act.

DanP
2nd October 2005, 12:05 PM
In all states and territories you will find that the nature strip is part of the Highway which is a Road or Road Related Area A Road Related Area Includes a nature strip. Therefore driving on a nature strip constitutes driving on a highway and most traffic related offences occur on a highway, as opposed to a road. So you can get done for .05 if you shift your car on the nature strip. ;)

Dan

BTW Al, a farmer up here recently got fined a shyteload for not doing anything about Pattersons curse growing on the road side, outside his property.

ozwinner
2nd October 2005, 06:35 PM
BTW Al, a farmer up here recently got fined a shyteload for not doing anything about Pattersons curse growing on the road side, outside his property.

Arrhh, thats because he didnt tell em its really Riverian Bluebell. :p

Al ;)

kiwigeo
2nd October 2005, 07:41 PM
BTW Al, a farmer up here recently got fined a shyteload for not doing anything about Pattersons curse growing on the road side, outside his property.

I got a nasty letter from the Council about the blackberry on my council strip.....I told them Id get rid of the blackberry if they got rid of the Pinus Crapiatas on the same strip.....a couple of Council blokes arrived 2 days later to remove the blackberry.

ozwinner
2nd October 2005, 07:51 PM
I think the council is haveing us all on.

Making us responseable for their land?? :confused:
I dont mind haveing the NS mowed, but if I owned a long road frontage I would.

Al :(

JDarvall
2nd October 2005, 08:05 PM
who owns it ?

yeh, I think the council does, when they want to do something with it.
and we do the rest of the time, because we like the front of house looking good.

but really, the dogs do...... them and their flamming landmines,,,, and their stupid owners they take for walks, that seem to be always looking the other way when the bloody mutt takes a crap on my nature strip !!

mitsuk0
15th January 2009, 02:56 PM
ok, i made an account here to bump this old old thread and ask...... if i am doing something on somebodies nature strip (gymnastics cause it has really good grass).... is the owner of the house next to the nature strip aloud to say.. "dont do that, its disrupting and my kids want to imitate you"???

echnidna
15th January 2009, 03:06 PM
probably not, but ignoring such suggestion can lead to a bop on the nose

mitsuk0
15th January 2009, 03:15 PM
probably not, but ignoring such suggestion can lead to a bop on the nose
lol ^^.. its some little indian dude, no problems there.

echnidna
15th January 2009, 03:17 PM
they often own bbbiiiiiiigggggggg knives

mic-d
15th January 2009, 04:41 PM
The grass is always greener on the other side. You might be within your rights, but if he's worried about a broken kid, wouldn't it just be easier to find another patch of grass?

Cheers
Michael