Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsGoodbye to tourism legend

Goodbye to tourism legend

As most people in Queensland’s world of top level executive hire knew, if you were shortlisting for a chair or CEO in the realms of tourism, travel and its associated industries, you’d look no further than Steve Gregg, whose 40 years of greasing the wheels of the tourism industry in a variety of important roles gave him an incomparable insight into the intricacies of the game.

What was lesser known about Steve’s stellar career were his mentoring skills and his guidance of community organisations through the pitfalls of funding and organisational issues, particularly in relation to the sporting passions that drove him, among them bushwalking, kayaking, running, cycling and, above all, surfing, which was primarily where his life and mine intersected.

Stephen Gregg, who passed away at his Sunshine Beach home last week after a courageous eight-year battle with cancer, aged 73, was a great leader, a fine man and a stoked grom until the day he died.

There are many others in this town who know far better than me the surfing stories this Brisso accumulated since he started coming to Noosa almost 60 years ago, but in my experience of him, in the water, in the boardroom and over coffee or a beer, this was a man whose word was his bond, and whose wise counsel could be trusted.

Steve offered advice and helped engineer solutions on several occasions when the Noosa Festival of Surfing was struggling, and he was with us at Noosa Council chambers in December 2013 for the inaugural steering committee meeting that would ultimately see Noosa become the 10th World Surfing Reserve six years later.

In the wider world, Stephen Gregg held senior positions that included chief executive officer of Tourism Queensland and Dreamworld, chair of Tourism and Events Queensland, chair of Queensland Rail, and chair of the Queensland Tourism Industry Council, as well as executive positions in Far North Queensland.

In the midst of all this activity, he also found time to help out locally, serving on the board of Tourism Noosa from late 2016.

Former Tourism Noosa chair Drew Pearson described Stephen’s passing as a great loss.

“As a member of the Tourism Noosa Board, Stephen brought extensive experience from his former roles with Tourism Queensland. His knowledge of the tourism industry was extraordinary. Steve was thoughtful, measured, calm and particularly astute.

He made an enormous contribution to the tourism industry and was highly respected by everyone who knew him.”

In a statement last week, Tourism Tropical North Queensland noted: “Stephen moved mountains for our industry in his calm and thoughtful way, and we say goodbye to our valued friend and mentor, one of the true gentlemen of tourism.”

Current QTIC chair Elsa Dalessio said: “His quiet leadership and thoughtful resolve touched many within our nation’s tourism sector. The various significant outcomes he achieved for tourism will have a ripple effect that stretches across generations.”

Stephen Gregg is survived by wife Christine, four daughters and six grandchildren.

His daughters posted the following on social media: “It is with immense sadness that we announce the passing of our incredible husband, father and grandfather. Dad remained in his beachside home until the end, listening to his records and surrounded by family.”

Friends are invited to join the family for a memorial service to celebrate Stephen Gregg’s life at Sunshine Beach Surf Club, 10.30am, Tuesday 27 September.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

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

Pedal and pump on local tracks

Rollers, berms and flowing turns are drawing riders back again and again to two popular Sunshine Coast pump tracks. These purpose-built spaces...

Community update

More News

Melbourne Olympics 70 years

Triple gold medallist Dawn Fraser and fellow Olympians from the Sunshine Coast will be among those celebrating the 70th anniversary of the 1956 Melbourne...

Home battery rebate, a game changer

When Andrew and Jenny moved into their new townhouse in Tewantin in late 2025, one of the first things they did was install solar...

Community update

From singing and bush care to service clubs and art, there is a wide variety of groups in Noosa. YANDINA COUNTRY MUSIC ACMA welcomes WOTYAGET as...

A more sustainable Bali

Bali has always been a popular ‘go to’ destination for antipodeans, and more recently the World. Tourists are now travelling far and wide for...

Council to highlight issues at NGA

Noosa Council have submitted six motions, all initiated by Cr Amelia Lorentson, for consideration by the Australian Local Government Association (ALGA) National General Assembly...

$15m Noosaville Bus Depot Opens

A $15 million investment in Noosa’s public transport network is set to bolster bus services across the northern Sunshine Coast, with operator Kinetic officially...

Lachlan’s legacy makes powerful impression

Precede The creation of the Lachlan Hughes Foundation to honour the life of a young farmer is making dramatic changes in the lives of others...

Surfing culture muscles up

To be honest, it doesn’t take that much to get our surfing councillor, Tom Wegener, excited – a one-foot wave at Tea Tree will...

Jazzing it up

Jazz lovers are in for a treat on Friday 27 March as live music comes to the heart of the Noosa in Noosaville with...

Huge drug bust

Police have seized more than $3 million worth of dangerous drugs and charged 25 people following a major trafficking investigation in Gladstone, about four...