Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeIndyToledo should get Geelong a Jeep: Sister city campaigner

Toledo should get Geelong a Jeep: Sister city campaigner

By NOEL MURPHY

GEELONG should strike an auto industry deal with Jeep, utilising retrenched Ford staff and former manufacturing facilities, according to a sister city spokesman for US city Toledo.
Lindsay Smith, a Geelong-born former diplomat and Toledo’s mayoral nominee to an International Sister Cities body, told the Independent industry similarities between the Ohio city and Geelong could become a springboard for exports to Asia.
Both cities could benefit from Toledo perhaps helping Geelong secure a Jeep plant to replace Ford, he said.
“What immediately comes to mind is the skilled workforce in Geelong which, with the imminent closure of Ford, means that same workforce and the factory facilities could be tempting for Jeep, which has its production centred in Toledo,” Mr Smith told the Independent.
“It could be a great stepping-off point for the southeast Asia markets for Jeep/Chrysler.”
Mr Smith said Geelong and Toledo should forge a sister city relationship, citing port, airport, auto, educational and historical enterprises common to both cities.
Australian Pacific Travel’s chief since 2004, he has also worked with Australia’s consulate in New York and the Federal Government’s Australian Overseas Information Service. The former journalist was born and bred in Geelong.
His sister city idea has the support of Thomas Watson, former editor and vice-president of Toledo newspaper The Blade.
Mr Watson wrote in The Blade that formal ties with Geelong “would almost be worth it just to get a visit from Geelong’s mayor, Darryn Lyons, a true political character who thumbs his nose at convention”.
“He occasionally paints his hair in multiple colours. He went with a spiked blue-and-white mohawk for his campaign poster.
“He lines the walls of his bathroom, floor to ceiling, with photos from his career years ago as a paparazzi. I’m not making this up.
“More showman and promoter than politician, Mayor Lyons is all about enhancing Geelong’s economic footprint. Having lived abroad for many years, he is now Geelong’s number one cheerleader.”
Cr Lyons extended guarded support for the Toledo overtures, welcoming the idea but telling the Independent he could not commit to visiting the city without “guarantees (of) business ties and commitments”.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Saeid Nahavandi AO

Distinguished Professor Saeid Nahavandi contributes his knowledge and skills to tertiary education, engineering, robotics, and haptics research and innovation, as well as defence capability...

All for Geelong

More News

Buttered Loaf bring the funk

For a quarter of a century groove-based jam band Buttered Loaf have been entertaining music lovers across Melbourne. Throughout the early 2000s, Wednesday night was...

Dr Gillian Miles (AM)

For Dr Gillian Miles, the transport and infrastructure sectors present a range of puzzles that she loves to try and solve. The...

Creatives develop Surf Coast

Artists across the Surf Coast Shire can transform ideas into realities and explore new boundaries within their work through the latest Creative Development Grants...

Revitalising Geelong

Revitalising central Geelong has been a key focus of my term as mayor, and we are working hard to activate and renew areas within...

Flashes of beauty everywhere

Julie Hope was diagnosed with an aggressive type of brain cancer two years ago. She speaks with Jena Carr about her cancer journey ahead...

Arrests made following afternoon police incident

Two people have been arrested after an allegedly stolen vehicle reversed into a school bus while attempting to flee from police in Geelong yesterday...

Man charged after body found on beach

A man has been charged with murder after the body of a woman was found in Geelong this week. A community member...

Open for learning

As thousands of children across the region returned to school after the summer break, two new primary schools in Greater Geelong opened their doors...

Arts grants now open

Local artists and creatives can now apply for grants from the City of Greater Geelong to help further their professional development. Applications are now open...

Youth leaders ready to represent

Geelong’s newest youth councillors are ready to make their mark on their city. The 11 members of the 2026 Youth Council, aged between 13 and...