Greens call for Disability Inclusion Advisory Committee
Greens Candidate for Ward 2 Kit Docker will work to establish a Disability Inclusion Advisory reference group on Wollongong City Council if elected in the September elections.
Read moreLet’s have cooler villages – Greens plan to bring nature back into the city
Greens Candidate for Ward 2 Kit Docker will work to embrace more ambitious urban greening initiatives in our villages across Wollongong.
Read moreGreens outline plan to tackle housing crisis
Greens Candidate for Ward 2 Kit Docker is calling for a fairer deal on affordable housing from developers who capitalise from increased development throughout Wollongong.
Read moreGreater support needed for Wollongong Homeless Hubs
Greens candidate for Ward 2 Kit Docker is calling on Wollongong City Council to provide greater support to services on the frontline of the worsening housing and cost of living crises.
Read morePedestrians run over at Mount Ousley Road Interchange
In a major blow for walkers and cyclists, Transport for NSW has quietly removed the pedestrian overpass from the Mount Ousley Road Interchange in their March 2024 project update.
Read moreGreens call for removal of Wollongong shark nets
Wollongong Greens candidate for Lord Mayor Jess Whittaker is calling for shark nets to be removed from Wollongong City Beaches following the fatal entanglement of a bottlenose dolphin at Thirroul last week.
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We need greater investment in pathways, safe crossings & safer roads
Greens lead candidate for Ward 2 Kit Docker is calling on Wollongong City Council to address the significant accessibility issues faced by residents across Figtree.
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Your new Greens Councillors
The new Greens Councillors for Wollongong City Council are:
For Ward 1, it's Cr Jess Whittaker.
For Ward 2, it's Cr Kit Docker.
For Ward 3, it's Cr Deidre Stuart.
Councillor Kit Docker Ward 2
Kit Docker, candidate for Ward 2
I’m proud to be elected the Greens Councillor for Ward 2.
As a Councillor I will talk with and listen to the community so together we can meet some big challenges coming our way–such as protecting our unique city from changes in our climate, making sure our villages are resilient, expanding the Green Bus and ensuring that our Councils housing policy is affordable and driven by community needs.
The potential of our city is endless, and the Greens have a plan to realise this potential and make our community a better place to live for all of us.
The Greens are not powered by donations from large businesses or industry. We’re powered by people like you and me. These are people who care about their community, their neighbourhood and want to see thriving communities and plenty of fun stuff, such as art galleries, music venues and sporting events.
We also want to see a council which is ambitious when it comes to social and affordable housing throughout our city. More of our communities are shaded by great street trees.
I look forward to talking with you and listening to your ideas and thoughts during the term of Council.
A little bit about Kit
Hi, I'm Kit, and I’ve lived in Wollongong for the past 10 years. I’ve worked in the finance industry and now love working in the disability sector. Wollongong is my home and I hope to call it home for the foreseeable future.
I attended Kiama High School and graduated from the University of Wollongong with a major in International Economics in 2016. After leaving University, I secured a position with the IMB Bank where I worked in leadership positions including as a branch manager. Since leaving finance, I have dedicated much of my time to working with people living with disability, charity work with local organisations and grassroots democracy.
I have the privilege of following in the footsteps of Councillor Cath Blakey who has consistently shown that a Greens councillor can deliver significant positive results for the community, such as FOGO and Verge Gardens.
It’s disappointing that the majority of our Council seem more concerned about the interests of developers who are interested in building apartments as quickly as they can and without the interests of the community in mind. This is making shelter more unaffordable for everyday people, and especially vulnerable communities. I know that, I’m a renter.
Our two Greens Councillors have a proven track record of making decisions for the community, working for sustainable villages as well as ensuring that we create places that our families and friends can enjoy.
As a new Greens Councillor I will work for and support:
- Community led sustainable development and affordable housing.
- Protecting our unique environment from the coast to the escarpment.
- Climate proofing our neighbourhoods by creating a green leafy and cool city
- A city with world class active and public transport solutions.
- A city with world class artists and great local venues.
If elected, I will work for more environmentally friendly and liveable villages in our city.
Follow Kit on Facebook, or send an email.
Councillor Deidre Stuart Ward 3
Deidre Stuart, candidate for Ward 3
I’m proud to be elected as a Greens Councillor for Ward 3 in the Wollongong City Council elections.
I want to bring citizens together to work on ways to improve our villages, and bring more meaning, joy and connection into our lives.
As a Greens councillor I would endeavour to bring Greens core principles of ecological sustainability, grassroots participatory democracy, social justice and peace and non-violence, to Wollongong City Council decision-making.
Our community faces some urgent problems, including climate change, a lack of affordable housing and a cost of living crisis.
As a city, we need to urgently transition from using fossil-fuel energy and fossil-fuel energy technologies to generating renewable energy and using renewable energy technologies.
Wollongong also has a role to play in transitioning Australia’s economy from a linear materials flow to a circular materials flow economy.
There are opportunities that come with these transitions towards sustainability. Our city could benefit from the shift to new energy systems, and could also contribute new materials, manufacturing and refurbishing industries over the coming decades. Wollongong has been an incredible mining and industrial city for many years. But we cannot keep mining coal and shipping it to other nations, and contributing to climate destruction that threatens us all.
Now is the time for us all to work together and design, plan and implement systems, processes and services that benefit both humans and our wonderful natural environment.
We need to invest in people and support reskilling to support our transition.
Wollongong has already signed the Global Covenant of Mayors for Climate and Energy. Across the world 12,500 cities in total have signed, so Wollongong is not alone. Rather, we can learn and contribute alongside other cities who also want to be part of the solution to our climate and wider environmental crisis.
We also need to adapt to our changing climate and to develop support systems that will be useful to our citizens under challenging weather conditions. We need to ensure that our most disadvantaged citizens are not further disadvantaged.
These are significant challenges that we need to face as a city. Yet, even with these great challenges on the horizon, we also need to celebrate this wonderful city, Wollongong / Woolyungah and our people. And remember that we can solve these challenges and be creative and productive, together.
I look forward to talking to you and listening to your ideas. Contact me if you have any questions and I look forward to talking and listening to our community over the next months.
A little bit about Deidre
I came to live in Wollongong/ Woolyungah in 2011 with my partner and two children.
I work part-time and casually at Western Sydney University, providing mathematics/statistics support to students or doing research project work. By training, I’m a scientist, but I am now also a part-time TAFE visual-arts student, and I’m thoroughly loving trying to make art.
As someone who moved with young children several times before arriving here, I understand the difference that footpaths, libraries, parks, and good public transport can make to city living.
Life has been difficult and uncertain over recent times with COVID, extreme weather events, lack of affordable housing and rising living costs. It seems like many of us feel exhausted, as if we have lost time, health or work, and maybe worse, family or friends, through the COVID pandemic.
Over the past few years, extreme weather events (Black Summer 2019/2020 bushfires, numerous floods, heatwaves) have battered Australia. Now with inflation, many Wollongong citizens are struggling with housing affordability and the cost of living crisis.
Right now I believe we can continue to work to limit the heating of our city from climate change, and at the same time we can develop resilience and our ability to keep our villages safer, shadier, and easier to access.
I look forward to hearing from you and talking with you over the next seven months.
If you want to chat with Deidre, send an email.