Digital Data Administrator - State Planning Policy 2.4: Extraction Sites (DMIRS-072)
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This dataset comprises mapping associated with the State Planning Policy 2.4 Basic Raw Materials (BRM). Extraction Sites comprise all commercial extraction areas for BRM and those BRM quarries used by government for infrastructure. Extraction Sites include operating, approved and proposed commercial (extractive) industries under the Planning and Development Act 2005, the Local Government Act 1995, the Mining Act 1978 or a combination of these legislations. They may occur wholly or partly within or outside of Significant Geological Supplies areas. Where they occur outside of Significant Geological Supplies they provide important local supplies and in some cases provide for a specific market niche over the short to medium term. Currently, this dataset only shows those Extraction Sites that lie within the Perth and Peel Regions and that were identified by an extensive interagency BRM planning process, which included public consultation in 2015 and 2016. Within the Perth and Peel Regions, Extraction Sites include those that have Prior State Environment Minister approval. For practical reasons, it is not intended for this mapping to include all Extraction Sites, as these are administered by different agencies and in some cases can change within a short timeframe. However, the intent is for the State Planning Policy 2.4 to be applied to all Extraction Sites irrespective of whether they are shown in this mapping.
Spatial Data - Perth and Peel Urban Land Development Outlook 2020/21 - Industrial (DPLH-085)
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The Perth and Peel urban land development outlook forms a major part of the Urban Development Program’s role in monitoring urban growth for the purpose of effectively coordinating land supply and infrastructure provision within the Perth and Peel metropolitan area. The Urban Land Development Outlook 2020/21 spatially displays the future land and dwelling development over the short, medium and longer terms within the Perth metropolitan and Peel region, drawing on input from State and local government and the private sector. The 2020/21 release of the ULDO includes residential, special residential, retirement villages and aged care facilities, special rural, industrial, commercial and tourism land uses. Within the residential land uses, the ULDO captures future fringe and infill development of five dwellings or more across both single and multiple dwelling developments.
Digital Data Administrator - State Planning Policy 2.4: Significant Geological Supplies (DMIRS-074)
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This dataset comprises mapping associated with the State Planning Policy 2.4 Basic Raw Materials (BRM). Significant Geological Supplies (SGS) are those BRM areas identified by the DMIRS as having State significance due to the size of the resource, relative scarcity, demand and/or location near growth areas and transport routes. Most SGS areas are derived from, and therefore are a subset of, DMIRS published Regionally Significant Basic Raw Material mapping. Where this is not the case, they are derived using the same rule set as for the Regionally Significant Basic Raw Material mapping. Within the Perth and Peel Region, the SGS areas were further refined by an extensive interagency BRM planning process, which included public consultation in 2015. In the Perth and Peel Region, the SGS areas took into account environmental values, current and future land uses, including sequential land use opportunities, current and future infrastructure and BRM supply and demand considerations. BRM types shown are the dominant surface materials, but the application of the policy is not restricted to those materials. For example, a SGS area designated as ‘Sand’ may include limestone and gravel and the policy applies to all BRM derived from within those areas. The designation of an SGS area does not obligate a private landowner or State agency to extract these resources, nor does it presume that extraction would be environmentally acceptable or that subsequent approvals for extraction or environmental approvals are guaranteed. Planning policy associated with this mapping is documented in the State Planning Policy 2.4.
Spatial Data - Perth and Peel Urban Land Development Outlook 2020/21 - Residential (DPLH-084)
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The Perth and Peel urban land development outlook forms a major part of the Urban Development Program’s role in monitoring urban growth for the purpose of effectively coordinating land supply and infrastructure provision within the Perth and Peel metropolitan area. The Urban Land Development Outlook 2020/21 spatially displays the future land and dwelling development over the short, medium and longer terms within the Perth metropolitan and Peel region, drawing on input from State and local government and the private sector. The 2020/21 release of the ULDO includes residential, special residential, retirement villages and aged care facilities, special rural, industrial, commercial and tourism land uses. Within the residential land uses, the ULDO captures future fringe and infill development of five dwellings or more across both single and multiple dwelling developments.
Spatial Data - State Planning Policy 2.8 Bushland Policy for the Perth Metropolitan Region (Line) (DPLH-053)
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The policy applies to the Perth Metropolitan Region, and deals with two distinct subjects, being Bush Forever areas and local bushland. The aim of the policy is to provide a policy and implementation framework that will ensure bushland protection and management issues in the Perth Metropolitan Region are appropriately addressed and integrated with broader land use planning and decision-making. This will secure long-term protection of biodiversity and associated environmental values. The policy recognises the protection and management of significant bushland areas as a fundamental consideration in the planning process, while also seeking to integrate and balance wider environmental, social and economic considerations. In general terms, the policy does not prevent development where it consistent with the policy measures in this policy and other planning and environmental considerations. The three key objectives of this policy are: to establish a conservation system at the regional level (through Bush Forever areas and to operate with the clearing controls under the Environmental Protection Act 1986) that is, as far as is achievable, comprehensive, adequate and representative of the ecological communities of the Swan Coastal Plain portion of the Perth Metropolitan Region; to seek to protect and manage significant bushland recommended for protection and management for conservation purposes through a range of implementation mechanisms and as a collective and shared responsibility and general duty of care on the part of government, landowners and the community; and to provide a policy and implementation framework for significant bushland areas recommended for protection and management to assist conservation planning, planning assessment and decision-making processes.