❓ WA Parliamentary Question on Notice regarding the sale of government-owned assets over $500,000 by departments under the Minister's control since June 2008. The answer reveals the National Trust sold Yarraweyah Falls with a conservation covenant.
AnsweredQoN 1773Legislative Assembly
Asked
20 October 2009
Member
Portfolio
Local Government; Heritage; Citizenship and Multicultural Interests
QuestionView source ↗
With respect to the departments and agencies under the Minister’s control, will the Minister please provide the following details for all Government-owned assets sold since 30 June 2008 which had a sale value of $500,000 or more:
(a) name and nature of the asset;
(b) date sold;
(c) nature of sale and name of buyer;
(d) proceeds received from the asset;
(e) associated revenue from the sale, such as stamp duty;
(f) the application of the funds received; and
(g) any associated costs incurred in the sale process?
(a) name and nature of the asset;
(b) date sold;
(c) nature of sale and name of buyer;
(d) proceeds received from the asset;
(e) associated revenue from the sale, such as stamp duty;
(f) the application of the funds received; and
(g) any associated costs incurred in the sale process?
AnswerView source ↗
Answered
19 November 2009
Responded by
Minister for Local Government; Heritage; Citizenship and Multicultural Interests
Response time
30 days
LOCAL GOVERNMENT, METROPOLITAN CEMETERIES BOARD, HERITAGE COUNCIL OF WA and OFFICE OF MULTICULTURAL INTERESTS
(a)-(g) Not applicable.
NATIONAL TRUST OF AUSTRALIA(WA)
(a) The name of the asset is Yarraweyah Falls, which is a 449.27ha property purchased for its high conservation values.
(b) Asset was sold on 2 September 2008.
(c) Rural property sale with conservation covenant on land title, in perpetuity (registered to protect 695.81ha of bushland). Purchased by Peter William Ruland & Peter Charles Hassell.
(d) Proceeds received from the asset totaled $700,000.
(e) The National Trust did not receive any revenue of this nature.
(f) The funds were returned to the National Trust BushBank revolving fund account.
(g) Associated costs incurred in the sale process totaled $15,924.55 for legal/settlement fees and sale commission.
Notice: This document is created or edited using unregistered or evaluation copy of rtLib valid for testing or development purposes only. To use it for productive or any other purposes please register it. You may purchase the license on
http://www.rtlib.com
(a)-(g) Not applicable.
NATIONAL TRUST OF AUSTRALIA(WA)
(a) The name of the asset is Yarraweyah Falls, which is a 449.27ha property purchased for its high conservation values.
(b) Asset was sold on 2 September 2008.
(c) Rural property sale with conservation covenant on land title, in perpetuity (registered to protect 695.81ha of bushland). Purchased by Peter William Ruland & Peter Charles Hassell.
(d) Proceeds received from the asset totaled $700,000.
(e) The National Trust did not receive any revenue of this nature.
(f) The funds were returned to the National Trust BushBank revolving fund account.
(g) Associated costs incurred in the sale process totaled $15,924.55 for legal/settlement fees and sale commission.
Notice: This document is created or edited using unregistered or evaluation copy of rtLib valid for testing or development purposes only. To use it for productive or any other purposes please register it. You may purchase the license on
http://www.rtlib.com
Explore WA Government Data
Search the full archive in the free dashboard, or query programmatically via API.
Explore more
Government Gazette
Appointments, regulatory notices, planning changes.
Hansard
Debates, questions, speeches and sentiment.
Tabled Papers
Reports and documents tabled in Parliament.
Committees
Committee profiles and recent reports.
Regulations
Subsidiary legislation with filters and summaries.
Bills
Proposed laws and parliamentary progress.
Acts
Current WA legislation and summaries.
Explanatory Memoranda
Bills with EMs (text/PDF) available.
Members
MP profiles, party breakdown and rankings.
Pollie Rankings
Data-driven rankings across 19 categories.
Amendment Chains
Track how schemes and regulations evolve over time.