I have been asked to prepare a Plan of Management… What do I do now?
🗓 Date: Tuesday, 11 March 2025
🕚 Time: 11:00 AM AEDT
📍 Online Webinar
Whether you’re new to preparing Plans of Management (PoMs) or have years of experience, this webinar will provide valuable insights to streamline the process.
Join Sandy Hoy, a leading expert with over 30 years of experience in PoMs, as she walks through the key aspects of preparing, updating, and implementing effective Plans of Management.
Who Should Attend?
This session is designed for local government executives, managers, consultants, and team members including:
✔ Parks and recreation
✔ Property
✔ Strategic and statutory planning
✔ Community services
✔ Natural environment
✔ Asset management
✔ Engineering
✔ Project management
✔ Landscape architecture
What Will Be Covered?
🔹 The purpose of PoMs and who they are for
🔹 Relevant legislation and compliance requirements
🔹 The step-by-step process of preparing a PoM
🔹 Different types of PoMs and their contents
🔹 Practical insights from real-world examples
Interactive Q&A
📢 Have questions? Submit them during registration or via email, and Sandy will answer them during the session. Live questions will also be welcomed!
Why Attend?
✔ Gain practical knowledge from a leading expert
✔ Get your questions answered in real time
✔ Connect with peers in the parks and leisure sector
✔ Help shape future training opportunities
Sandy Hoy has over 30 years’ experience preparing Plans of Management for public land, beginning in 1993-94 with training local government staff throughout NSW about the requirements for Plans of Management for community land under the Local Government Act 1993.
Sandy has written, updated, reviewed and contributed to close to 100 Plans of Management for community land, Crown land, and land owned by the NSW government ranging from a laneway in western Sydney to the Parklands at Sydney Olympic Park. Those Plans of Management have included significant area, generic and geographic plans for parks and gardens, sporting facilities, beaches, bushland, wetlands, community facilities, and State Heritage Register-listed cultural areas. Most Plans of Management have involved community and stakeholder engagement. Sandy has also chaired and reported on some 75 public hearings for categorisation/recategorisation of community land.
In her spare time Sandy enjoys visiting public open spaces to swim at the beach, walk along the coast and in the bush, and compete in Masters athletics.