“…The history of State politics in Australia suggests that governance arrangements and funding mechanisms for differential State size and degrees of remoteness can assist in equalising the capacity of local governments for hazards planning (Vardon, 2007). However, notions of efficiency are often applied to rationalise local government structural settings, leading to amalgamations or policy standardisations that in hindsight have proven unpopular with local communities (Farid Uddin, 2018), reduced council independence (Costar & Economou, 1999) or were detrimental to service delivery capacity, including in planning (Boyle, 2001;Drew et al, 2013;McQuestin et al, 2017). Addressing the varied geography of council capacity for planning policy provision should focus on strengthening local council factors such as internal resources, professional planning skills and balancing compliance with State mandates with appropriate emphasis on localised, place-oriented activities such as community engagement, risk identification and plan-making (Frazier et al, 2013;Berke et al, 2014).…”