Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Newcastle Herald
Newcastle Herald
National
Matthew Kelly

Macca's back - Bruce MacKenzie weighing up tilt at mayoral title

Bruce MacKenzie working out. Picture Simone DePeak

When Bruce MacKenzie walked away from Port Stephens Council in 2017 after 42 years in local government he promised he wouldn't stay quiet.

True to his word, the past eight years have been eventful.

Now the area's longest-serving councillor, who turns 86 next month, says he's at a point where he is "seriously considering" returning to what he knows best.

"People aren't happy with the place," he said.

"I'm getting pestered everywhere I go. When I go to the shopping centre people come up to me and say 'get back in there'."

If he does run for mayor and wins a council majority, he says there won't be any rate rises for four years.

Roadworks across the local government area will increase and the council's overall productivity will come under close scrutiny.

Mr MacKenzie is also no fan of the Hunter Offshore Wind project, which has driven a wedge through parts of the Port Stephens community.

"At the present time the place could do with someone like me," he said.

"A lot of people are complaining about DA approvals. I've had my own experience in the past six months with DA approvals. They're not what they were like when I was there."

First elected to Port Stephens Council in 1968, Mr MacKenzie served as Shire President and became the first popularly elected mayor in 2012.

He's still up early every morning to work out on his punching bag, bike and treadmill.

"I'm outside at 6am and back for breakfast before I do some more," he said.

"I'm off to weigh cattle today."

He recently acquired a scrapbook of 790 newspaper clippings that chronicle his local government career.

Bruce MacKenzie in his early days in local government.

"It's got the good, the bad and ugly," he said.

In 2016 the council, which Mr MacKenzie led, he was forced to back away from naming a domestic violence shelter after him.

The council initially resolved to establish a centre in Raymond Terrace and to name it the "Bruce MacKenzie Centre for Victims of Domestic Violence".

But the decision sparked a backlash after it was revealed Mr MacKenzie had been involved in a domestic incident almost 20 years earlier.

Mr MacKenzie was charged over the 1997 incident involving his former partner, but no conviction was recorded. An Apprehended Violence Order (AVO) was issued.

Mr MacKenzie agreed to disassociate his name from the refuge saying that he did not want anything to overshadow its establishment. He said it would be more appropriate to name the refuge after an individual who had made a significant contribution to women's issues in Port Stephens.

Incumbent Port Stephens mayor Ryan Palmer, who has led the council for the past eight years, does not plan to recontest the council election.

Also, former Paterson MP Bob Baldwin, has confirmed he will not contest the mayoral race.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.