Electoral structure and ward boundaries
The Victorian Government has changed how local councils are elected. This means that starting from October 2024, Greater Shepparton is divided into new areas called wards.
What are wards?
Wards are smaller areas within the municipality. Each ward will have one councillor who represents the people who live there.
Victoria’s Local Government Act 2020 (the Act) requires electoral structures to provide fair and equitable representation and facilitate good governance.
Each ward must have an approximately equal number of voters per councillor (within +/-10% of the average).
Why did we change to wards?
An independent electoral structure review panel appointed by the Victorian Minister for Local Government has reviewed the electoral structure of Greater Shepparton City Council.
Under the Act, Greater Shepparton City Council must now have a single-councillor ward electoral structure. The panel looked at:
- the appropriate number of councillors and wards for the council;
- the location of ward boundaries; and
- appropriate ward names.
How do the new wards work?
The electoral representation advisory panel recommended that Greater Shepparton City Council adopt a nine single-councillor ward structure – nine wards with one councillor per ward. This proposal was accepted by the Minister for Local Government, and will take effect from the 2024 General Election.
The names for the nine wards under the new electoral structure are:
- Balaclava Ward
- Goulburn River Ward
- Kialla Ward
- Lower Goulburn Ward
- McEwen Ward
- Midland Ward
- Pine Lodge Ward
- Poplar Ward
- Yanha Gurtji Ward
Find out which ward you live in by looking at the ward map below.
Click the map thumbnails below to view an enlargement or see below to download detailed PDF maps of the individual ward boundaries.
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Download the above maps of Greater Shepparton towns and wards in PDF format to zoom in for a close look.
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Residents are only able to vote for candidates who have nominated for the ward their voting entitlement relates to. For most voters, this is the ward they live in.
Candidates are also only able to nominate for a councillor position in one specific ward.
If no candidates nominate for a ward by the closing date, a special by-election will be held later to fill the position.
Learn more
To find out more about this change, visit the following websites:
- Local Government Victoria - Council Elections 2024
- Local Government Victoria - Electoral structure and ward boundary reviews
- Victorian Electoral Commission - Local Council Elections
or contact Council's Governance Department on 03 5832 9700.