The Borough of Queenscliffe is an Australian local government area in the Barwon South West region of Victoria, located in the southern part of the state. It is the smallest local government area in Victoria, covering an area of

History

The Borough of Queenscliffe was established on 12 May 1863. Queenscliff was first and foremost built for government purposes, providing postal, customs, health and telegraph services, lighthouse and signal services, military and defence establishments and the sea pilots service.

Survival of the local council restructure

Queenscliffe is the last borough remaining in both Victoria and all of Australia and was the only LGA not to have been subject to changes to its boundaries and/or name in the Victorian local government restructure which took place between 1993 and 1995. Had the same restructuring principles, which had been applied to other municipalities in the state, also been applied to Queenscliffe, the Borough would have been absorbed into the new City of Greater Geelong.<!-- - Citation not needed as the City of Greater Geelong is the only LGA next to this LGA. It can only make sense that it would be absorbed by its only neighboring LGA-->

Queenscliffe's exclusion from the restructure was debated in the Victorian Parliament at the time.

Liberal Premier Jeff Kennett, in explaining his reasons, stated:

The Labor member for Melbourne, Neil Cole, suggested that his reasons were based on internal Liberal Party considerations:

Kennett explicitly denied that this was the case:

Labor member George Seitz suggested a more innocent reason:

Overall, the reasons for Queenscliffe being excluded remain unclear, and the range of opinions may perhaps best be summarised by Peter Loney's quip:

Reduction in number of councillors

At the 2008 elections the number of councillors was reduced from seven to the current five.

Council

Current composition

The council is composed of five councillors elected to represent an unsubdivided municipality. The current council was elected in November 2024 for a four-year term. Councillors are elected on a proportional representation basis.

{| class="wikitable"

|-

!Ward!!colspan="2"|Councillor!!Notes

|-

| rowspan="7"|Unsubdivided

|-

| |&nbsp;|| Donnie Grigau ||

|-

| |&nbsp;|| Isabelle Tolhurst ||

|-

| |&nbsp;||Brendan Monahan||Deputy Mayor

|-

| |&nbsp;||Di Rule||Mayor

|-

| |&nbsp;|| Hélène Cameron ||

|}

Mayors

  • Pat Semmens (2006–2008)
  • Bob Merriman (2008–2012; 2018–19)
  • Hélène Cameron (2012–2016)
  • Tony Francis (2016–2017)
  • Susan Salter (2017–2018)
  • Ross Ebbels (2019–2022)
  • Isabelle Tolhurst (2022–2024)
  • Ross Ebbels (2024)
  • Di Rule (2024–present)

Administration and governance

The council meets in the council chambers at the council headquarters in the Queenscliffe Municipal Offices, which is also the location of the council's administrative activities. It also provides customer services at its administrative centre in Queenscliff.

Election results

2024

2020

Townships and localities

The 2021 census, the borough had a population of 3,276 up from 2,853 in the 2016 census

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center;"

|-

! colspan="3" | Population

|-

! Locality !! 2016 !! 2021

|-

| ^ || 2,684 || 3,788

|-

| || 1,315 || 1,516

|-

| || 0 || 0

|}

^ - Territory divided with another LGA

See also

  • List of places on the Victorian Heritage Register in the Borough of Queenscliffe

References

  • Official website
  • Metlink local public transport map
  • Link to Land Victoria interactive maps