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Metcalf was first elected to Greater Bendigo City Council in the 2016 Victorian local elections, where she received 13.21% of the primary vote in Whipstick Ward. [2] She retained her seat at the 2020 Victorian local elections with 19.43% of the primary vote. [3] In 2020, Metcalf was elected as Deputy Mayor of Bendigo, serving under Mayor ...
The city is governed and administered by the Greater Bendigo City Council; its seat of local government and administrative centre is located at the council headquarters in Bendigo, it also has service centres located in Heathcote, Huntly, Marong and a couple of other locations within Bendigo. The city is named after the main urban settlement ...
Greater Bendigo City Council is composed of nine single-member wards. Prior to the 2024 election, it was composed of three multi-member wards with three members each, but the electoral structure has changed as a result of the Local Government Act 2020. [12] Epsom Ward was uncontested.
The council comprised nine members, including the mayor. [22] In 1984, the council purchased "Caradon", an historic two-story house located in Victoria Street, Eaglehawk, which served as the council's municipal office. The property was sold in 1997 by the City of Greater Bendigo. [22] #
Eaglehawk was first incorporated as a borough on 29 July 1862. It had nine councillors, who represented the entire borough. [2]On 7 April 1994, the Borough of Eaglehawk was abolished and, along with the City of Bendigo, the Rural City of Marong and the shires of Huntly and Strathfieldsaye, was merged into the newly created City of Greater Bendigo.
Bendigo is the fourth-largest inland city in Australia and the fourth-most populous city in Victoria. Bendigo is administered by the City of Greater Bendigo, formerly the City of Bendigo. The council area encompasses roughly 3,000 square kilometres, [6] the city is surrounded by smaller towns such as Castlemaine, Heathcote, Kyneton, Maryborough ...
Pages in category "City of Greater Bendigo" ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The original Bendigo Town Hall was designed in 1859 by Bendigo's town clerk, George Avery Fletcher. A council chamber was added in 1866 and a hall for the trading of grain, known as the Corn Exchange, was added in 1871-72.