
POWER WITHOUT ACCOUNTABILITY IS A
RECIPE FOR DISASTER AND CORRUPTION
Local investigations
Public accountability
Keeping them honest
👋 Welcome to Council Watch Australia
Shining a light on your local government.
At Council Watch Australia, we believe ratepayers deserve transparency, accountability, and value for money.
We’re a national watchdog committed to exposing waste, highlighting governance failures, and standing up for the communities that councils are meant to serve.
Whether it’s skyrocketing rates, shady deals, dodgy planning decisions, or taxpayer-funded junkets, we track it, report it, and fight back. Our mission is simple: to hold councils across the country to account — from Broome to Ballarat, Parramatta to Port Lincoln.
🔍 Investigations. 📣 Advocacy. 💬 Community Voice. 📊 Data-driven insights.
We’re not funded by government. We don’t play party politics. We’re here for you — the residents, ratepayers, and businesses who expect better from their local council.
If you think your council has forgotten who it works for, you’re not alone.
Join the growing movement for real local democracy and clean governance.
👉 Welcome to Council Watch. Eyes on every council. All across Australia.
What is a back to basics plan?
A back-to-basics plan involves the elected Councillors reviewing the services the Council provides. One of the first things the elected Council needs to do is create the 4 Year Council Plan which drives how Council will prioritise the services and their funding over the coming 4 years and beyond.
CORE Services.
Many councils offer the same set of core services.
Things like:
Rubbish Collection, Community Services, Maternal Health, Sports Facilities, Pools, Parks and Gardens, Street Cleaning, Road and Footpath repairs, etc.
Optional Services.
Some Councils offer services like Kinder, Child Care, Aged Care, In Home Aged Care Support, Tourism, etc.
These services vary by Council to Council.
A back-to-basics plan would seek to do a service review which determines:
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Which services Council currently offers
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What the cost of those services is per head of population
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What state or federal funding is available if any
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What services the wider community values in order of ranking
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What other options there are if Council exits a service
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Recommendations of any services Council should exit and where the money saved should be reallocated.