The traditional custodians of the district are the
indigenous people of the
Ngunnawal tribe. Following the transfer of land from the
Government of New South Wales to the
Commonwealth Government in 1911, the eighteen original districts were established in 1966 by the Commonwealth via the
gazettal of the
Districts Ordinance 1966 (Cth) which, after the enactment of the
Australian Capital Territory (Self-Government) Act 1988, became the
Districts Act 1966. This Act was subsequently repealed by the
ACT Government and the district is now administered subject to the
Districts Act 2002. The land was used for
pine forests prior to the devastation caused by the
2003 Canberra bushfires; leaving the land empty and ready for potential development. To accommodate future expected population growth and housing demand,
The Canberra Spatial Plan, already in development at that time and formally released during 2004, proposed increased
urban density along established (road) transport corridors. Further land releases were proposed, including continuing development in the district of
Gungahlin by maintaining the 1967 "Y-Plan"; and the development of new releases in the Molonglo Valley, previously set aside as green corridors. In June 2008 the Conservation Council ACT Region presented a report to the ACT Legislative Assembly Proposed Molonglo Urban Developments and their Significant Impact on Endangered Woodlands. Among other things it said: "For the Molonglo development to approach biological sustainability it should involve less clearance of Box - Gum woodland and creation of a large conservation area centered on Central Molonglo. This area could become one of the key areas of woodland conservation in Australia, and balance the
loss of biodiversity that will eventuate from urban expansion in the rest of Molonglo." In July 2008 the ABC reported NCA against central Molonglo development stating that the National Capital Authority (NCA) had ruled out urban development in the central Molonglo area. In speaking to the Standing Committee on Planning and Environment NCA spokesman Todd Rohl said the NCA board was against any future urban development in central Molonglo as well as an area east of the Orana School. Mr Rohl said the NCA had informed the ACT Planning and Land Agency of its decision which was based on environmental reports. "[There are] at least seven species of concern. A couple are listed in the Environment Protection Biodiversity Conservation Act and others are listed in the Nature Conservation Act of the ACT," he said. "Given that we know that there's ecological issues and it's highly constrained ecological area it seems nonsensical to include as urban at this time." The district was formally gazetted on 14 October 2010. In February 2024, the ACT Government proposed to the Commonwealth to reclassify the Molonglo group centre as Canberra's sixth town centre. ==Political representation==