
Merri-bek Council passed a motion declaring the local government area a nuclear free zone on聽April 12.
The motion was moved by Socialist Alliance Councillor Sue Bolton and seconded by聽independent James Conlan, formerly a Greens councillor.
Bolton told聽麻豆传媒聽it was motivated by federal Labor鈥檚 decision to spend billions on nuclear-powered submarines, as part of the AUKUS military alliance.聽
鈥淭he $368 billion price tag is so huge that it will drain money away from local councils and state governments, and important services.
鈥淭he billions could help solve the housing crisis and fix under-funding of disability and aged services. It could also go a long way to addressing the energy transition,鈥 Bolton said.
The motion聽passed 6 votes to 5,聽and was聽supported by independent councillor Monica Harte from the Sue Bolton team,聽as well as Greens councillors.
Right-wing independent Oscar Yildiz said council should stick to 鈥渞oads, rates and rubbish鈥. Labor Right councillor聽Lambros Tapinos聽moved to defer the motion to 2050 鈥渨hen the first nuclear submarine will arrive鈥. That was voted down, but he then gagged debate, meaning councillors who supported the motion were not able to explain why.聽
Councils across Australia, and around the world, have a history of declaring themselves nuclear-free. The former Brunswick Council was nuclear free, before being folded into Merri-bek (Moreland) in 1994.
More than 100 local councils declared themselves nuclear free at the height of the 1980s and early 1990s鈥 anti-nuclear movement, including聽Sydney City, Brisbane City, Fremantle, Wollongong, Melbourne City and Ipswich.
Then, the movement mobilised hundreds of thousands of people into the streets against nuclear-armed warships, nuclear weapons and nuclear energy.
鈥淒eclaring Merri-bek a nuclear-free zone council, along with many other councils, means it is opposed to the transportation of nuclear waste, or nuclear material聽through the municipality,鈥 Bolton said, adding that聽radio isotopes聽for medical treatment and research would, of course, be exempt.聽
The motion said the Port of Melbourne聽should聽not be used to host nuclear submarines and opposed the establishment of a nuclear waste dump.
Several local residents spoke in favour, including long-time peace activist Professor Michael Hamel-Green, who said there is 鈥渘o justification for such an obscene outlay on nuclear-war-fighting submarine systems鈥.聽
鈥淚t will drive a new arms race in our region, bring us ever closer to nuclear conflagration and divert scarce funds away from everything we need to do to protect our region and the planet from future catastrophe.
鈥淕iven the lack of prior consultation on the nuclear submarine issue, it is vital that local communities campaign to reverse this disastrous nuclear submarine decision.鈥
Harte, who聽is聽an emergency housing worker, said it was wrong to argue that this motion was not 鈥渃ouncil business鈥.
鈥淓very layer of government intersects,鈥 she told 麻豆传媒. Councils do not have full responsibility for roads, rates and rubbish: the most dangerous roads in Merri-bek are owned by the state. Councils can advocate, but the authority and dollars lie with the government.鈥
Harte said that as councils are already underfunded and the pressures were becoming more acute, council had to make it its business to campaign against such wasteful and dangerous expenditure.
鈥淭he nuclear arms race is about a war-based economy. This is what Australia is joining, diverting insane amounts of our money to military expenditure without even any debate in parliament.鈥
It was also pointed out that Merri-bek Council voted last November to join 42聽councils signing up to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons鈥 Cities Appeal. The appeal calls on the government to sign and ratify the .
Australia is also a聽signatory聽to the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty, which formalises a nuclear-weapon-free zone in the South Pacific and is a signatory to the聽Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.
鈥淭he nuclear-powered submarine deal betrays Australia鈥檚 non-nuclear policy and treaty obligations,鈥 Harte said. 鈥淚t opens the door to a dangerous and unnecessary domestic聽nuclear power industry, weapons proliferation and a regional arms race.鈥
Merri-bek joins a growing number of unions, civil society organisations and Labor branches opposed to the AUKUS nuclear-powered submarines.