21/05/2026
This week we confront the latest scandals in football in Canberra.
Capital Football referees are deeming grounds to be unsafe for play. This happened for Tuggeranong FC and to Brindabella FC albeit after vandals damaged the Calwell ground.
Many local grounds are in shocking condition if the truth be told, full of weeds, bare patches, divots and holes. There is an emerging issue of player safety with ankle and knee injuries a particular concern, but also an occupational health and safety issue for referees.
Referees are paid employees of Capital Football and are entitled to a safe working environment. It is as possible for a referee to step in a divot as it is for a player to fall in a divot.
Community clubs in the ACT play a significant amount of money (significant for volunteer run community organisations) to the ACT Government for ground hire fees and should expect safe facilities.
Due to the sheer numbers of people playing football in Canberra, football grounds are exposed to significant use if not overuse. Grounds allocated to the other codes are not exposed to the same thrashing as football grounds, particularly the major playing hubs at Dickson, Mawson, Tuggeranong, Kaleen, Harrison and O'Connor.
While other codes may also need better playing surfaces, football requires better playing surfaces that League, Union and AFL. In football “the ball does the work” and the grounds need to be free of bumps, lumps, and hacks to allow skilled play.
Let's not forget that the largest part of the debt that drove Gungahlin United into bankruptcy was the $184,451 owed to the ACT Government for ground hire fees.
Let’s also not forget the $7.5 million Netball ACT received from the government two years ago to remediate five underutilised district playing courts. If this money had been directed to football, both Gungahlin United and Canberra United would have survived, and the grounds would be in tip-top shape.
In this context, the scale of the subsidy from community clubs to the ACT Government in the form of ground hire fees is simply unacceptable.
Which brings us around to the issue of the parking fines.
The grounds targeted by Access Canberra are Kaleen, Harrison, O'Connor, and Dickson, all of them football grounds. There are not sufficient places to park legally at these grounds, and yet the ACT Government is issuing parking fines to parents and players on the claimed basis of "safety".
That’s ok, maybe (but not really), but share the love around, and fine cricket, AFL and League and Union families to the same extent. Do not single out the football community for unfair treatment again disguised as neutral policy.
At some point, we as the football community must stand up to Minister Yvette Berry, the ACT Government, and the ACT Labor Party, and say that enough is enough.
The football community has had a gutful of this kind of treatment. We want to be treated with the respect that our numbers merit and we want change and the immediate injection of significant investment into football infrastructure.
What we want
Fund Football Fairly engaged in a careful open process of consultation with Capital Football and football ACT Club Presidents in 2024 to determine a commonly agreed upon set of infrastructure and funding proposals.
These proposals are backed by the entire football community in Canberra. These include:
1. The construction of a synthetic playing field at all major football hubs to take the pressure off the grass fields.
2. A moratorium on club ground hire fees until the grounds are up to standard.
3. Investment in better lights and better playing surfaces.
4. The construction of adequate ground-side club houses with administration, social and function rooms, and adequate change rooms.
5. The construction of two major shared football complexes, one northside and one southside, with ground capacity of at least 6,000 people, to give local football clubs a venue for major games and take the pressure of local grounds.
6. A voucher system to assist families with the cost of participation
The proposal to build synthetic pitches at every major playing hub will take the pressure off overused grass fields and allow for games and training to continue all year round.
The construction of two major shared football complexes will give local football a home for major games and the opportunity to build the football community across all seasons regardless of ground condition.
It is time for the ACT Government to listen to the community and fund football fairly.