Kevin Byrne (mayor)


Kevin Michael Byrne was Mayor of the City of Cairns in Queensland, Australia, from 1992 to 1995, and then from 2000 to 2008.

Early life

He was born in Lae, Papua New Guinea 1949. His family had first arrived in Papua New Guinea in 1906 when his grandfather was appointed Chief Collector of Customs in Port Moresby. His primary education was on Manus Island, Papua New Guinea. Attended Nudgee College, Brisbane 1963-67.

Military career

He graduated in 1969 from Officer Cadet School, Portsea, Victoria with an Australian Army commission. He was awarded the Sword of Honour for Leadership in that year. His 17-year military career included Australian and overseas postings to Malaysia, Singapore, Papua New Guinea, Rhodesia and South Vietnam. His final military assignment was as a Senior Instructor at the Royal Military College, Duntroon, 1987.

Working life

Regional Manager Office of Northern and Regional Development, Cairns 1987-90.
In 1990 became regional manager of the Queensland Confederation of Industry.
Elected Mayor of Cairns 1992; re-elected 1994. Defeated by Tom Pyne 1995.
Administrative Director for an oil spill cleanup operation, funded by the World Bank and European Bank of Reconstruction and Development, in the Kolva Basin, in the Komi Republic, part of the Russian Federation. The Pechora River tributaries were remediated and 146,000 tonnes of oil were recovered.
Chief Executive of the Papua New Guinea Tourism Promotion Authority December 1995. Member of the national negotiating team for bilateral air service agreements; Acting Chairman of the National Airline Commission for two years; Deputy Chairman of AIR NIUGINI for eighteen months; National Delegate to the APEC Working Groups on Tourism and Trade.
Returned to Cairns December 1999; re-elected as Mayor of Cairns on 25 March 2000 and again in March 2004.
In 2008 he was defeated by Val Schier for the position of mayor of the Cairns Regional Council.

Controversy

He was the subject of media attention and controversy for involvement with property developers, attitudes towards racial issues and his approach to government and the electorate. Examples include:-
  1. Allegations of racism. An aborted attempt by the Byrne Council to secretly bus indigenous people from the Cairns region to the remote Lockhart River region.
  2. Allegations by a local ratepayers group that he contravened electoral and ethical policies by maintaining an undeclared involvement in other primary businesses during his mayoralty.
  3. A self-acknowledged perception that he was 'in the developers pockets', ultimately attributed by him as the reason for his defeat in 2008. Three months later he accepted employment as a senior director with a Cairns property developer. Tragically, the managing director of the company was later murdered and the company went into receivership.
  4. An investigation of Lady Mayoress Amanda Byrne for ethical misconduct under the terms of the Property Agents and Motor Dealers Act 2000. She was ultimately found guilty of charges by the office of fair trading and, in a move unprecedented in Queensland, she was banned for life from practising as an accommodation manager.
  5. That advice from peak industry environmental body Geoscience Australia that warned of a serious disaster risk in approving new development on the Cairns slopes and some low-lying areas was set-aside in favour of more favourable reports from the Councils own engineers.

    Higher education

He claims formal qualifications from Kensington University.
Kensington University was a Glendale, California, unaccredited distance education provider that was shut down by state authorities there after the state Council for Private Postsecondary and Vocational Education found that "little or no rigor or credible academic standards are necessary in order to be awarded an advanced degree at Kensington University."
The attributed qualification is a Master of Arts with GPA 4, granted in 1993 by Kensington University.

Awards

The Papua New Guinea Independence Medal for services to Aviation and Tourism, 2000; the Australian Centenary Medal for services to Local Government, 2001.