Late on Tuesday, Mornington Peninsula Shire Mayor Anthony Marsh accused Allan of making “misleading statements”.
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He said the council had met with senior SES representatives on January 24 with the intention of taking over responsibility for the landslide site.
“We have since made several attempts to reach agreement with the SES and will continue to reach out in the hope we can complete the transfer soon,” he said.
“It’s important to note that the transfer of responsibility for the landslide site will have no material impact on the recovery process for residents. Everything that needs to happen is already happening.”
The January 14 landslide destroyed a $2.1 million three-storey house on Penny Lane and injured a council worker who was inspecting the property at the time.
Nineteen homes near Point Nepean Road have since been evacuated because the cliff has been deemed unsafe and likely to move again.
Allan said too many people had been let down and too many questions had been left unanswered.
“This is about getting to the bottom of the cause of this landslide and support further measures around mitigation and remediation,” she said of the inquiry.
Marsh said the council had carried out extensive investigations and had engaged experts to try to understand what had happened. He said the council was keeping residents informed via community meetings, daily communications and updates on its website.
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Residents of the evacuated properties have been meeting twice a week since being issued with evacuation notices from the council, and are seeking legal advice about the council orders barring them from their homes.
The evacuation notices, seen by The Age, require residents to show cause as to “why entry, use, or occupation of any building or land should not be prohibited until such time the landslip-affected land has been made safe to the satisfaction of the municipal building surveyor”.
McCrae resident Josh Heath, who is yet to return to his home after being forcibly evacuated in November 2022, said “a lot of people have been technically made homeless”, so any action to help people return home was welcome.
Another McCrae resident, Paul Willigenberg, also welcomed the state government’s intervention.
“We need to understand what the cause of the landslip is, and when we will be able to go home,” he said.
Willigenberg and his wife, Denise, have been evacuated from two homes in the landslip area: firstly from the house they own after it was affected by the landslide in November 2022; then last month from a rental property they were living in at the base of the cliff.
He said they had been unable to enter the rental house since being evacuated.
“I’m anxious at this stage because we have been evacuated twice. We want a little window of opportunity to get in and get some key documents like our passports, and some clothes. At this stage, we’re being told it’s not possible.”
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Local Government Minister Nick Staikos said residents were angered by a lack of information and faced legal roadblocks in trying to find out when they could return home.
Staikos will oversee the inquiry’s terms of reference and appoint a chair, with a final report expected this year.
Marsh said the council supported the inquiry and was ready to engage.
“I would welcome a conversation with the state government on what technical and financial resources it can offer to help us support our community,” he said.
Several geotechnical reports have investigated the cause of the first landslide in 2022.
The cause of last month’s landslide has not yet been determined. Some residents fear they may never be able to safely return home.
The council undertook major drainage works in the area following the 2022 landslide, including installing a large drainpipe under the road.
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