They say spending $217 million to facilitate a once-yearly motor race is a gross over-expenditure and what was originally mooted as a ‘multi-use motor sports complex’ with permanent infrastructure is now proposed as temporary, but without any cost reduction.
They also say the government has not outlined recurrent costs or any economic benefits.
“From Newcastle to Canberra, Adelaide to Townsville, the legacy of these events is not one of prosperity but of disruption, disillusionment, and economic disappointment,” they write.
“These events shift economic activity rather than create it, drain public funds, and leave communities worse off – and angry.”
They foreshadowed the imminent release of their own cost-benefit analysis showing negative economic impact of more than a billion dollars over the next 20 years.
They also claimed the Whadjuk Aboriginal Corporation, responsible for the Indigenous Land Use agreement that includes the peninsula, does not support the project, did not give permission when requested for exploratory drilling, and was not formally and directly notified of the government’s intentions.
“No one living here ever expected such a poorly considered event would be inflicted on them,” they wrote.
“The $217 million should be better spent – particularly on hospitals.
“Governments, even those with large majorities, ignore popular opinion at their peril.”
The WA government was contacted for comment.