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Maitland Council seeks community feedback following comprehensive review of Development Control Plan

  • Writer: intouch Magazine
    intouch Magazine
  • Jun 17
  • 2 min read
Woman with child talks to another woman under a purple tent. Sign reads "Have your say." The setting is a sunny park.

Maitland City Council is seeking community feedback on its draft 2025 Development Control Plan.

The draft version of Maitland’s updated Development Control Plan, the first since 2011, is currently open for community comment following a review process that took in feedback from a range of stakeholders, including state government, industry bodies, and community groups.


A Development Control Plan (DCP) provides detailed planning and design guidelines to support the objectives and legislative direction of a Local Environmental Plan (LEP).


Maitland City Council Director City Planning Matt Prendergast said, “fourteen years on from the last DCP and 30,000 more residents later, a thorough review of this foundational document was high on our agenda for this financial year.”


“With Maitland growing fast and set to continue along this trajectory for the foreseeable future, there was a growing need to bring our DCP up to date,” Mr Prendergast said.


“Our review has sought to consider the relevance of current development controls against the backdrop of Maitland’s broader development and strategic priorities and propose a range of amended and new controls to address our current context.”

Aerial view of a suburban construction site with partially built houses, green fields, and a bright blue sky. Roads and signs visible.

“Our objectives were to make the document clearer, more accessible and easier to read, as well as to ensure greater consistency and alignment with other strategies and legislation, such as the NSW Government’s various State Environmental Planning Policies (SEPPs).”


One notable proposed change in the draft 2025 DCP is a move to incorporate a tiered ‘flood risk precinct’ system across Maitland, where flood-affected areas are categorised by risk – low, medium and high.


The draft 2025 DCP also proposes robust controls and guidance for medium and high-density housing, such as terraces, unit complexes and apartment buildings, something the 2011 iteration of the document didn’t cater for.


The 2025 DCP is now on public exhibition until COB Monday 4 August for the Maitland community to review and put forward feedback.


A series of face-to-face community information sessions are earmarked for dates in June and July across areas such as Rutherford, Ashtonfield, and the Maitland CBD (details overleaf).


Interested residents can also speak with Strategic Planning staff via a DCP hotline, available each Thursday from 1pm to 4pm during the public exhibition period.


Community members are encouraged to have their say by making a formal submission via the Maitland Your Say website: mait.city/DCP.

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