Ratepayers foot shed bill

A new shelter shed at the Swanfels Pioneer Memorial Park is complete.

By Jeremy Sollars

A new shelter shed for the Swanfels Pioneer Memorial Park east of Warwick has ended up costing ratepayers nearly $40,000 after apprentice provider All Trades Queensland pulled out of the project.
The original shelter sheds in the park were demolished in January this year by the Southern Downs Regional Council, which deemed them unsafe due to termite damage and an “eyesore”.
The timber and iron-roofed sheds had formerly been a tennis shelter and a play shed at the old Swanfels State School. Theyt were moved to the district’s Pioneer Park in the early 1980s.
Apprentices or trainees from All Trades Queensland (ATQ) were to have been engaged to construct the replacement shelter as a one-off project to give them work experience at no cost to the council, and $25,000 was set aside in the 2017/’18 council budget for materials.
But ATQ was unable to locate a locally based registered training supervisor for the project, and the council was forced to engage a ‘local contractor’ to complete the construction, at an additional cost to the council of “approximately $13,000”, a council spokeswoman confirmed.
The spokeswoman did say that ATQ undertook “preliminary site grubbing work at the beginning of the project”.
The council has not made public the identity of the contractor who finished the job.
Current and former local residents and former students of Swanfels State School were furious when the council razed the shelter sheds to the ground on Friday 20 January, less than 72 hours after announcing the sheds were to go.
The park itself is hallowed ground in the Swanfels district, with plaques and trees commemorating early settlers and later families alike, and in some cases marking the site of their ashes, and is also popular among passing tourists such as ‘grey nomads’.
After the demolition, the council released a community survey asking residents if they want the sheds replaced, and if so with either a “simple structure” or “reconstruction of a structure similar to the previous building”.
The overwhelming resolution of a public meeting in the park back in March was for council to construct a timber-and-iron structure as close as possible in size and design to the original sheds.
The meeting was told a council report – of which the Free Times obtained a copy – made it clear that the termite damage to the sheds was not insurmountable, leaving many to question why the demolition was ever carried out.’
The report by Osborn Consulting said that while “the building does not meet the current regulatory standards framework … it is generally in good structural condition (and) damaged and missing elements … could be remediated and/or replaced which may increase the life expectancy of the structure”.
The Free Times also revealed at the time that the last council budget set aside $20,000 for the works referred to in the Osborn Consulting report.