Kimberly Grabham
14 November 2024, 4:00 AM
Twenty-three loyal volunteers from across the Far West region of NSW have been awarded Crown Lands Service Recognition Awards for over 10 years or more service on land manager boards, taking care of public land on behalf of their communities.
Crown land is public land set aside for public benefit and plays a vital role in supporting thriving communities across NSW.
There are over 2,500 volunteers involved in Crown reserve management across the state, freely giving their time, skills and energy for the good of their local communities.
The award recipients are all volunteers who manage reserves from all corners of the Far West region, including Broken Hill, Walgett, Ivanhoe, Lightning Ridge and Wanaaring.
Recipients include stalwarts like Broken Hill’s Christine Adams, who received a Crown Lands Service Recognition Award for 14 years longstanding service managing and helping drive the success of the Sulphide Street Railway and Historical Museum.
Ms Adams’ colleague Dennis Turley was also recognised earlier this year for over 30 years of volunteer service on the museum’s board.
Several land managers of the Broken Hill Regional Events Centre Reserve, which is the city’s main racecourse, received awards for over 10 and 20 years of service, including the Chairperson Cheryl Krutli and Kevin Taylor who have both been acknowledged for over 20 years of service on the board.
Further north, Barbara Moritz received recognition for 31 years on the board of the Lightning Ridge Historical Society.
Ms Moritz, alongside her fellow volunteers, has been instrumental in creating and maintaining this unique museum in the heart of NSW’s opal mining capital. Graeme Anderson was also acknowledged for 14 years’ service on the board.
The historical society building was formerly a 1930s opal miners hut and has an interior furnished with items from that era.
The hut offers tourist information about the region’s opal mining industry and a tantalising glimpse into the area’s past.
On the same lot is a relocated and restored 1915 nurses’ cottage honouring the essential outback medical support of nurses in the Lightning Ridge region.
More long-term Crown land volunteers will receive award certificates for their service over coming months.
There are over 700 Crown reserves managed by volunteers whose efforts ensure public assets are taken care of and can be accessed by everyone.
Crown Lands Service Recognition Award certificate recipients in the Far West region
Over 30 years
Over 20 years
Over 10 years