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To celebrate Good Weekend's 30th anniversary, we have selected 30 of the magazine's best features of the past three decades. This article was originally published on October 12, For the full list, click here. The town was a little known backwater before it was revealed that a child with an AIDS related disease was attending a local day care centre.
Three months of intense media interest from television, radio and the press has made Kincumber famous nationally. Credit: Scanned from original Good Weekend story. As anyone in the area knows, it has been publicity that it could have done without. The issue has split the split the small community. On the one side are the child's parents, Gloria and John Van Grafhorst, and their supporters and on the other the parents of the other 58 children who used to attend the daycare centre.
People are searching for a scapegoat. They place the blame for what has happened on the NSW Health Department, or the local council, or the Van Grafhorst family, or the parents of the other children at the centre. Former mayor of Gosford: Peter Coleman. The argument over whether the child, three-year-old Eve Van Grafhorst, should continue to attend the centre has been highly emotional.
It is also characterised by a degree of resentment, even bitchiness. Yet, it is an argument which is likely to recur in the next few years throughout Australia as more children are found with varying degrees of AIDS infection. Kincumber, a relatively new Central Coast settlement, is a suburb of Gosford, about 80 kilometres north of Sydney.
The expanse of new housing estates distinguish it from the older and more exotically-named waterfront suburbs, such as Saratoga and Copacabana. Its residents are largely young families with a high proportion of two-income families and some single parents. NSW's Central Coast has been regarded as a weekend resort since the mids. Sydney people bought small houses, usually or weatherboard, close to the beaches or in one of the settlements on Brisbane Water.