Council-Specific

Statement of Environmental Effects for a Moree Plains DA

Council-SpecificNSW PlanningDevelopment Application
Alex PAlex P7 min read

Key takeaways

  • Every Moree Plains DA requiring consent needs a Statement of Environmental Effects
  • Your SEE must address the Moree Plains LEP 2011 and the DCP
  • Moree is one of the most flood-prone towns in NSW
  • Rural DAs must protect irrigated cotton and grain country
  • Most Moree Plains DAs are decided by a council officer

A Statement of Environmental Effects for a Moree Plains Shire Council Development Application must show how your proposal sits with the Moree Plains Local Environmental Plan 2011 and Moree Plains Development Control Plan and the applicable State policies, and how it manages its impacts on neighbours and the surrounding area. Every DA lodged with Moree Plains Shire Council that needs consent must include one, and it is the document the council reads to understand your project.

Moree Plains is a north-west shire built on irrigated cotton and grain on the black-soil plains, centred on Moree with Mungindi and Boggabilla near the Queensland border. The Mehi and Gwydir rivers make Moree one of the more flood-prone towns in the state, and the district's artesian hot springs and Aboriginal heritage are part of its identity. Get the wrong controls and your SEE argues the wrong planning case.

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In this guide, you will learn:

  • What a Moree Plains SEE must address under section 4.15 of the EP&A Act
  • The council's common zones and the overlays that commonly bite here
  • The common DA types locally and what each SEE focuses on
  • How to lodge your DA through the NSW Planning Portal step by step
  • Who determines your application — officer, panel, or State body

What Moree Plains Shire Council Requires in a SEE

Your SEE must address five matters that map directly onto the section 4.15 assessment the council runs — LEP compliance, control-plan compliance, site constraints, neighbour impacts, and the public interest.

Your Statement of Environmental Effects for a Moree Plains DA must address five things: how your proposal complies with the Moree Plains Local Environmental Plan 2011, how it meets the Moree Plains Development Control Plan, the constraints on your specific site, the impacts on your neighbours, and the public interest. These map directly onto the matters a council must weigh under section 4.15 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.

Assessment framework
Section 4.15, EP&A Act 1979: five mandatory matters

The council's principal planning instrument is the Moree Plains Local Environmental Plan 2011, supported by the Moree Plains Development Control Plan. The LEP sets your land's zone and the development standards that come with it, such as height and minimum lot size. The DCP then sets the design detail: setbacks, landscaping, private open space, parking and privacy, along with hazard controls where they apply. Your SEE needs to walk through each control that applies and either show you comply or justify the variation.

Planning instruments
Moree Plains LEP 2011 + Moree Plains DCP

Common Zones and Overlays in Moree Plains

Your zone sets what you can build, but the constraint that shapes a Moree Plains SEE is usually one of the mapped overlays over the top of it.

What a Moree Plains SEE must address: the common zones and the overlays that most often shape a Statement of Environmental Effects

Figure 1: The zones and mapped constraints a Moree Plains SEE most often has to address.

Under the Moree Plains LEP 2011 most land is zoned RU1 Primary Production over the irrigated plains, with R1 General Residential in Moree, Mungindi and Boggabilla and E1 and IN1 land in Moree. The constraints mapped over the top are where a Moree Plains SEE really lives. Flooding is the defining constraint — the Mehi and Gwydir rivers make Moree one of the most flood-prone towns in NSW, so a SEE for an affected lot must address flood planning levels and flood-compatible construction. Protecting irrigated cotton and grain land shapes rural dwellings and new lots, Aboriginal cultural heritage across the plains can call for assessment, and town heritage and the artesian hot springs are part of the local character. A SEE that names the specific constraint on your lot — above all flooding — is far stronger than one that speaks in generalities.

Common DA Types in Moree Plains and What Your SEE Must Address

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The focus of your SEE shifts with the project type, so the same five section 4.15 matters get different weight depending on what you are building.

For alterations and additions in Moree, the SEE concentrates on flood controls, height, setbacks, privacy and heritage. For a new dwelling or shed on rural land, it focuses on siting, agricultural land, flooding, effluent and access. For a secondary dwelling, the focus is floor area, private open space and servicing. For an industrial or agricultural-processing use, it addresses buffers, amenity, traffic and flooding. A DA lodgement checklist for NSW helps you gather the right supporting documents for each.

SEE requirement
Schedule 1, Part 1 of the EP&A Regulation 2021

How to Lodge a DA with Moree Plains Shire Council

You lodge every Moree Plains DA through the NSW Planning Portal — upload your plans, SEE, owner's consent, and pay the fee; the council registers it and notifies neighbours before assessment begins.

You lodge a Moree Plains DA through the NSW Planning Portal at planningportal.nsw.gov.au, the system every NSW council uses. You upload your plans, owner's consent, supporting documents and your SEE, then pay the fee. Our step-by-step guide to lodging a DA in NSW covers the portal mechanics.

Once lodged, the council registers your DA, notifies adjoining owners where required, and assesses it against section 4.15. Moree Plains Shire Council is the consent authority for most local development. It does not run a standing local planning panel, so most DAs are decided by a council officer under delegated authority or by the elected council, while regionally significant development is determined by the Northern Regional Planning Panel. For a typical extension, granny flat or shed, expect a council officer to determine it. The biggest cause of delay is an incomplete application or a SEE that does not address the controls, which triggers a request for more information. The general DA requirements across NSW councils follow the same legislative base, so a complete Moree Plains lodgement looks much like any other.

Do You Need a Town Planner for a Moree Plains DA?

For a straightforward residential DA you can prepare the SEE yourself or use a service; a planner earns its keep on the harder, constrained sites.

Not always. For a straightforward residential DA in Moree Plains — a single-storey addition, a granny flat, a shed — you can prepare the SEE yourself or use a service rather than engaging a town planner. You are more likely to want a planner where the project is complex: a flood-affected or otherwise constrained lot, a heritage-listed property, or one that seeks to vary a development standard. For the common residential cases, a well-structured SEE that addresses the Moree Plains LEP 2011 and the council's controls is what you need.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a Statement of Environmental Effects for a Moree Plains DA?
Yes. Every Development Application lodged with Moree Plains Shire Council that requires consent must include a Statement of Environmental Effects. It shows how your proposal complies with the applicable local plan and controls and how it manages its impacts. The only exception is work that qualifies as exempt or complying development, which does not need a DA.
Which LEP applies to a Moree Plains development application?
The council's principal planning instrument is the Moree Plains Local Environmental Plan 2011, supported by the Moree Plains Development Control Plan. Check the NSW Planning Portal spatial viewer for your property to confirm the zone and the development standards that apply to your site before you design.
Do I need to address flooding for a Moree Plains DA?
Very often, yes. The Mehi and Gwydir rivers make Moree one of the most flood-prone towns in NSW. If your property is flood-affected, your SEE must address the flood planning level, flood-compatible construction and the effect of the development on flood behaviour, in line with the council's floodplain risk management planning. Check the NSW Planning Portal and the council's flood mapping for your site.
Who decides my Moree Plains DA?
Moree Plains Shire Council is the consent authority for most local development. It does not run a standing local planning panel, so most DAs are decided by a council officer under delegated authority or by the elected council, while regionally significant development is determined by the Northern Regional Planning Panel. For a typical house addition, granny flat or shed, expect a council officer to determine it.

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