Critical Spotlight: Victor Harbor’s Flagship Sports Precinct Briefing – SGL Prudential Report Raises More Questions than Answers
The article below by Council Watch Fleurieu Inc. is based entirely on the official transcript of the City of Victor Harbor’s public briefing held on 12 May 2025. It reflects our analysis of the Prudential Report presented by SGL and the broader implications for ratepayers, sporting groups, and community planning.
We believe in open, accountable government—and that means asking the tough questions when public money, land, and trust are at stake.
What you’ll read here is honest opinion, drawn from public information, and shared in the public interest.
Overview
On 12 May 2025, the City of Victor Harbor held a public briefing session on the proposed Flagship Sport and Recreation Precinct. The meeting, though open to observers, was not a formal Council meeting—meaning no votes were taken, no binding decisions made, and no transparency obligations applied beyond public attendance.
The presentation, delivered by SGL Consulting Group, outlined the findings of their Prudential Report, commissioned under Section 48 of the Local Government Act 1999 (SA). What followed was less a rigorous financial assessment and more a promotional roadmap for a project that increasingly appears to be driven by administrative ambition over community feasibility.
Key Observations from the Briefing
Public, but Not Accountable
While open to the public, the session operated as a non-decision-making forum, a common feature of Victor Harbor Council’s evolving governance strategy—keeping ratepayers and councillors technically “informed” while limiting real-time scrutiny or dissent.
The Quiet Erasure of the Most Affordable Option
Conspicuously absent from the discussion was Option 3, the $16 million GSBA-led proposal—the most affordable, locally grounded option for expanding basketball infrastructure. The Great Southern Basketball Association (GSBA) was informed their option was disqualified because they had not submitted an Expression of Interest (EOI), despite being one of the very groups the Council now deems a “key tenant” for future viability.
This decision raises a fundamental question:
Why was the most cost-effective and community-led option excluded on procedural grounds, while the same stakeholder group is now pivotal to the success of a project nearly twice the cost?
This suggests not a merit-based process, but a strategically engineered outcome, one designed to favour a high-cost legacy project over practical, community-focused solutions.
Overstated Benefits, Unchallenged Assumptions
The SGL presentation acknowledged:
- The original population catchment was too large to be realistic for a regional setting;
- Court utilisation levels are too low to justify the planned expansion;
- Revenue modelling in prior reports assumed full-year usage, which is unrealistic given seasonality and school holiday gaps;
- Gymnasiums already exist nearby, raising the risk of market cannibalisation if Council enters that space without unmet demand.
No Assured Funding – Yet Commitments Mount
Two government grant applications have already been rejected. A third remains in limbo, with no deadline or guarantee of approval. Yet the project’s capital cost stands at $28.6 million (Stage 1 alone), with unclear pathways for financing and operation.
Even under Model 2 (Council as operator), there is no indication that long-term tenancy agreements have been secured, meaning financial sustainability remains speculative at best.
A Project Looking for a Justification
Instead of considering staged upgrades or cooperative investment in existing facilities, Council is pursuing an all-or-nothing build that:
- Competes with existing clubs and private providers;
- Requires ongoing ratepayer subsidy;
- Risks under-utilisation and financial strain if primary user groups cannot meet expected hire fees.
Council Watch’s Position
Council’s handling of this project illustrates an emerging governance pattern where community-driven, affordable options are rejected, and the public is presented with a singular high-cost vision as a fait accompli.
The sidelining of the GSBA proposal—while that same association is relied on to underpin revenue modelling—exposes a strategic inconsistency that undermines the credibility of the project assessment process.
The community deserves to know:
- Why was Option 3 dismissed so readily?
- Why are stakeholders who were excluded now being called on to financially justify a model they didn’t endorse?
- And most importantly: Why is Council pursuing a $28 million facility when the need, the funding, and the long-term usage are not assured?
Next Steps
We strongly urge residents to:
- Demand public access to the full report;
- Press Councillors to explain the exclusion of Option 3;
- Attend future Council meetings to hold decision-makers accountable.
Authorised by Terry Andrews, Chairperson – Council Watch Fleurieu Inc.
Victor Harbor | South Coast | May 2025 Edition