Description
Attend and earn 1 CPD hour in Professional Skills
This program is based on NSW legislation
Chair
Simon Molesworth AO KC, Dever's List
Professional Skills
Subdivision from the Ground Up: A Surveyor’s Perspective on Best Practices
- Common errors in plans and boundaries that lead to disputes or roadblocks
- How surveyor findings impact property rights, easements, and title disputes
- What lawyers should look for in subdivision plans to ensure accuracy and compliance
- How to critically analyse evidence in boundary disputes or subdivision claims
- Tips on fostering clear communication between lawyers and surveyors to ensure seamless subdivision approvals
Presented by Chris Hill, Registered Surveyor, C&A Surveyors Pty Ltd
Presenters
Chris Hill, Registered Surveyor, C & A Surveyors
Chris Hill is a Registered Surveyor at C&A Surveyors with over 30 years of experience in the land development industry. He has a vast experience from Mine sites to Building sites, Subdivision stages to positioning theatre stages. He has been the Chair of the Sydney North Group of the Institution of Surveyors since 2008. Chris Graduated from Newcastle University in 1997 and was registered with the Board of Surveyors in 2007. Chris is happily married with two teenage children and has been living in Sydney since 2001.
Simon Molesworth AO KC, Dever's List
Simon Molesworth delivered his final judgment in the Land and Environment Court of New South Wales in May 2019. He was first commissioned to be a Judge of the LEC from January 2017. The Land and Environment Court of NSW was the first specialist environmental superior court in the world, when established in 1980. The judges of the Court have the same rank, title, status and precedence as the Judges of the Supreme Court of NSW. The Court’s jurisdiction includes merit review, judicial review, civil enforcement, criminal prosecution, criminal appeals and civil claims about planning, environmental, land, mining, water, heritage, valuation, compensation, Aboriginal land, tree disputes and related matters. Molesworth, who in 2020 marks twenty-five years as a QC, had remained in active practice until his judicial appointment, regularly appearing before the Victorian Civil & Administrative Tribunal and in the Supreme Court in Victoria in cases within his specialty. He is recognized nationally and internationally as a leader in the fields of environmental law, heritage law, natural resources law and the law and policy relating to climate change. After initially practicing as a solicitor (from 1978) with Blake & Riggall (now Ashursts), Molesworth became a barrister in Victoria in 1984 and was appointed a Queen's Counsel in 1995. Molesworth, qualified and experienced as a Fellow of the Australian Institute of Company Directors, the Australian Institute of Managers and Leaders and the Environment Institute of Australia and New Zealand, has led delegations to successive United Nations COP conferences. His advisory work increasingly focuses on climate change strategies, corporate governance, risk management and corporate social responsibility. Molesworth is uniquely positioned to advise corporate Australia and public sector entities on the development of strategies and policies, together with related risk and compliance issues, in a world required to adapt to and mitigate climate change. With experience chairing commissions of inquiry and a wealth of experience chairing and participating in consultative committees, Molesworth is well-skilled to be a mediator. Amongst his previous legal appointments Molesworth, in the 1980s, was a Senior Legal Member of the Planning Division of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal of Victoria and a Senior Legal Member of the previous Victorian Planning Appeals Board. He was also in 1994 the Victorian State Mining Warden, a statutory appointment under the then Mineral Resources Development Act. He has chaired commissions of inquiry and advised successive governments and their authorities on legislative reform.