Mayor Len Brown and his senior planners are asking us to sit back and let them fast-track a radical new plan for the region. Trust us, they say, we'll consult widely and get it right. Our side of the bargain is to agree to abandon our appeal rights to the proposal they come up with.
On Friday a report came out of the planners' office which demonstrated just why we trust them at our peril. It's the report from lead senior planner Jennifer Valentine to the independent commissioners considering the Chow brothers' application to replace the demolished Aurora/Palace Hotel with a 15-storey brothel. Ms Valentine dismisses the effect such a high-rise building will have on the adjacent character precinct, to say nothing of the controversy surrounding the old building's demise, and says the new building should go ahead.
For a mayor and council which expressed such outrage when they had to order the demolition of the 124-year-old hotel after it started to collapse during renovations, this gutless report makes any commitment to heritage seem little more than hot air.
It's a clear signal to other owners of scheduled buildings that, far from being disciplined by the council for losing a protected building, the chances are you could be handsomely rewarded.
On the night of the emergency demolition two years ago, council chief executive Doug McKay talked of the "tragedy" of having to knock down this "iconic heritage" building. Hotel owner Michael Chow showed no remorse, launching several attacks over the following weeks against the council, in one email saying he and his brother John "are Chinese immigrant from Hong Kong but [that] does not mean people can push us around".