Member for Upper Hunter Michael Johnsen has announced new projects to facilitate the flow of money through local economies, generate jobs and support local businesses will soon start rolling out across the Liverpool Plains Shire with the NSW Nationals in the state government confirming $900,000 in funding to be allocated to three local projects.
Mr Johnsen said funding from the Drought Stimulus Package will allow Liverpool Plains Shire to start work on projects that will generate work for local trades and suppliers and deliver other benefits to the community.
The three projects being funded are:
• Local Community Infrastructure Stimulus – $ 225,000
• Quirindi Sporting Fields Redevelopment – $ 550,000
• Royal Theatre Accessibility – $ 125,000
“Despite an easing of conditions in some areas, the effects of the drought are still being felt, and the NSW Nationals in the state government are determined to continue to ensure that our Liverpool Plains communities receive the assistance they need,” Mr Johnsen said.
“The government has worked side-by-side with our local councils to ensure that funding is allocated to projects that will benefit the community, support jobs and stimulate the local economy.
“We are funding big projects to help our regional towns move towards recovery, measures that relieve financial stress for farmers and water infrastructure to boost drought resilience, but it is just as important to support local businesses and communities.”
The Drought Stimulus Package has funded shovel-ready infrastructure projects and emergency water security projects, putting cash into the economies of the state’s hardest-hit drought areas as well as towns doing it tough.
More than $2 billion has been made available through the NSW Nationals in the state government’s Emergency Drought Relief Package, while regional water security is a focus of the $1 billion Safe and Secure Water program and the $4.2 billion Snowy Hydro Legacy Fund.