Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'Lord Howe Island Group' has mentioned 'New South Wales' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
An island in the Tasman Sea, governed by New South Wales, Australia
density26.25/km2 (67.99/sqxc2xa0mi)Additional informationTime zoneUTC+10:30 (UTC+10:30)xc2xa0xe2x80xa2xc2xa0Summer (DST)UTC+11:00 (UTC+11) UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameLord Howe Island GroupTypeNaturalCriteriavii, xDesignated1982 (6th session)Referencexc2xa0no.186State PartyAustraliaRegionAsia-Pacific Australian National Heritage ListOfficial nameLord Howe Island Group, Lord Howe Island, NSW, AustraliaTypeNaturalDesignated21 May 2007Referencexc2xa0no.105694File number1/00/373/0001 New South Wales Heritage RegisterOfficial nameLord Howe Island GroupTypeState heritage (landscape)Designated2 April 1999Referencexc2xa0no.970TypeOther - Landscape - CulturalCategoryLandscape - Cultural
The Lord Howe Island Group is part of the state of New South Wales[13] and is regarded legally as an unincorporated area administered by the Lord Howe Island Board,[13] which reports to the New South Wales Minister for Environment and Heritage.
The island was subsequently visited by many government and whaling ships sailing between New South Wales and Norfolk Island and across the Pacific, including many from the American whaling fleet, so its reputation as a provisioning port preceded settlement,[10] with some ships leaving goats and pigs on the island as food for future visitors.
Then in 1847, Poole, Dawson, and Foulis, bitter at failing to obtain a land lease from the New South Wales government, abandoned the settlement although three of their employees remained.
In 1855, the island was officially designated as part of New South Wales by the Constitution Act.
Official control of Lord Howe Island lay initially with the British Crown until it passed to New South Wales in 1855,[47][66] although until at least 1876, the islanders lived in "a relatively harmonious and self-regulating community".
The Lord Howe Island Board is a NSW Statutory Authority established under the Lord Howe Island Act 1953, to administer the island as part of the state of New South Wales.
This consists of a state marine park managed by the Marine Parks Authority of New South Wales in the waters out to three nautical miles around the island and including Ball's Pyramid.
In July 2012, the Australian federal Environment Minister Tony Burke and the New South Wales Environment Minister Robyn Parker announced that the Australian and New South Wales governments would each contribute 50% of the estimated A$9 million cost of implementing a rodent eradication plan for the island, using aerial deployment of poison baits.
Planning for the Permanent Park Preserve is the responsibility of the New South Wales Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water.
Management of the marine areas (both State and Commonwealth waters) is the responsibility of the New South Wales Marine Park Authority.