![The not-for-profit Landcare looks after bush care management for close to two-thirds of NSW. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS) The not-for-profit Landcare looks after bush care management for close to two-thirds of NSW. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS)](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/silverstone-feed-data/25dc40ea-ae67-49e5-b2e1-5108043d89bb.jpg/r0_0_800_600_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Nature restoration charity Landcare will have its funding doubled under a future NSW Labor government to address what the party says is more than a decade of decline.
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The opposition has committed to more than doubling funding for Landcare to $59 million across the next four years, allowing the organisation to expand and continue its work rehabilitating the state's natural environment.
Following unprecedented flooding and bushfires and escalating land clearing, ecosystems in NSW are suffering, Labor environment spokeswoman Penny Sharpe told AAP.
"Landcare is one of the best ways to restore nature that we desperately need in NSW after more than a decade of environmental decline," she said.
"Local Landcare groups are the backbone of their communities. This funding will ensure these groups can grow and thrive into the future while making sure local environments are supported too."
Landcare's previous funding round of $24 million, granted by the Berejiklian government in 2019, is due to expire at the end of June, Landcare CEO Turlough Guerin told AAP.
Established 34 years ago, the not-for-profit body looks after bush care management for nearly two-thirds of NSW.
"The NSW government relies on Landcare to deliver many of its natural resource management services," Mr Guerin said.
"We're a trusted partner."
The funds will allow the organisation to support 84 full-time coordinators, mostly in regional areas, to work with Landcare's 60,000 volunteers and 3000 local groups, including Landcare, Bushcare, Rivercare and Dunecare.
The funding, which only comes into effect if Labor wins the March 25 state election, will also allow Landcare to employ 13 full-time Indigenous Landcare officers.
Labor believes the investment will generate a return of $218 million, creating $3.70 for every dollar spent.
"We're thrilled with their model," Labor Leader Chris Minns told reporters on Friday.
"(Landcare) really leverage local community groups and are able to do what perhaps government can't, and that is - inspire, engage and have a disciplined volunteer workforce that does major work in the local community."
The Labor leader faced questions over reports the party's candidate for the marginal Liberal-held seat of Penrith, Karen McKeown, used her position as Penrith mayor to vote in favour of a Mirvac development in Glenmore park.
Her vote was cast while she served as director of a superannuation fund with a financial interest in Mirvac, according to The Daily Telegraph.
Mr Minns rejected assertions of a conflict of interest, saying it was nothing like former finance and employee relations minister Damien Tudehope, who resigned his portfolios last month after it was revealed he had not disclosed his family's superannuation fund-owned shares in Sydney toll road company Transurban.
"Most people would accept as local councillors, it's not a full time job," Mr Minns said.
"It's not like being a member of parliament."
Mr Minns was in the safe Labor seat of Mount Druitt on Friday when he also announced a $6.5 million partnership with soccer club Western Sydney Wanderers to boost after-school care access in Sydney's west.
Elsewhere, the NSW Greens on Friday announced a plan to regulate online gambling at a state and federal level to reduce the social harm caused by gambling.
It involves banning all gambling advertising including TV, radio and online advertising, banning political donations from the gambling industry and establishing a national independent gambling regulator.
"This plan will prohibit gambling advertising anywhere, anytime, in the same way as tobacco advertising was banned years ago," NSW upper house Greens MP Cate Faehrmann said.
Australian Associated Press