DOZENS OF FAMILIES CREATE ARTWORKS TO PROTEST WESTCONNEX DRILLING

DOZENS of Inner West families converged on the drilling site for the planned WestCONnex tunnel at St Peters.

Mums, Dads and children spent an afternoon creating art works at the planned drill site on Roberts St, St Peters. 

“This secretive project is very disturbing and the community will continue to rally support against the tunnel because it has no place in a densely populated area around schools, daycare centres and churches,” said Emma Pierce of WestCONnex Action Group. 

“The drilling which will take place on the children’s art works mirrors the destruction that this community could face if the Westconnex tunnel comes through this residential area,” said Ms Pierce. 

Residents from St Peters, Sydenham and Tempe quickly banded together to form the WestCONnex Action Group when surveyors turned up unannounced to say they’ll start drilling immediately.

“We are getting no information about this, and we do not want this WestCONnex tunnel underneath our homes when there are other viable industrial options that won’t tear apart a local community of young families,” Ms Pierce said.

The final route has yet to be decided on by WestCONnex, but the drill sites are a concerning indication of where the tunnel could go. The drill sites are located under residential housing across the three suburbs and include next to Sydney Park as well as schools & pre-schools.

Residents are concerned that we will be impacted in the following ways:

  • Air pollution from smoke stacks and on/off ramps
  • Constant ground vibrations from living on top of a heavily trafficked tunnel
  • Property acquisitions by the government in certain locations
  • Infrastructure impact around schools, pre-schools and child-care centres
  • Reduced property values

NSW Health has identified health concerns related to similar tunnel construction which are heightened for young children. 

“There are alternative routes under industrial land that WestConnex could use that would have minimal impacts to the community, but we have major concerns about the viability of the entire project being located in the Inner West,” Ms Pierce said.


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