Police investigating after Central Coast beachfront erosion fight turns violent
A police spokesman said that small injuries were reported, but the participants refused medical treatment.
Corinne Lamont said Forerunner He rejected the allegations that he has never been so petrified in my life and that her husband was aggressive. Her husband said that the ordeal was “really scary ve and left with injuries on her neck and back.
Hughes said he’s taking an insecure step out of his house.
No accusation was made.
A Council spokesman refused to comment on the police, given the investigation of the police.
The pro -sea landlords, who do not directly participate in the debate, say that the ugly event is the result of fusion in the community. Chris Rogers, President of the Wamberal Protection Association, said that the landlords have become desperate as they get more and more homes of their homes into the sand without real protection.
Ray Awadallah, a pro -Seawall host, said that instead of protecting peace, Central Coast Council was facilitating more coastal protection, and “fueled fire”.
“You pay all these rates and half of your land is at sea and you cannot do anything about it,” he said.
Awadallah said that the behavior of the people at the council meetings has become “disgusting ile with anti -blasphemy and shouting campaignists. Lamont said he felt threatened by some of the sea coast members in the public gallery at the council meetings.
The debate was played on social media where those seen as inappropriate work on the beach were immediately filmed and their actions were shared in seafood groups. Hughes is the subject of two stop operations by Central Coast Council, after detecting heavy machines to carry the large rocks to the beach in front of the property.
A Council spokesman said that if the work continues, a precautionary measure will be requested in court.
The Wamberal and North entrance were beaten with many harmful weather events, including a large swelling of large swelling and the land falling into the sea.
The foundations of the houses appeared and the backyard fell into the sand.
A bid for a 1.4 -kilometer marine wall along the beach was supported by many hosts who came together to apply for a development to the Council. It remains under this assessment, but after the Premier Chris Minns says he doesn’t think a wall is a good idea, the plan looks dead in water.
He told the community that sand feeding would be his choice. Minns met with the mayor and CEO of the council on Friday, but it did not provide any financing for a particular project in Wamberal.
A Council spokesman said that they demanded a “reaction of the entire government ve to erosion and that they wanted to work with the Premier that they wanted to work with the government, but now they want to find a long -term solution to the critical situation.
“This is not something you can just click and correct your fingers. There is a reason that no one has done anything about it for ten years, and this street and this community have long been threatened with coastal erosion.”

