Licola, a tiny town nestled in Victoria's bushland with only five residents, is now up for sale. The entire village, including a general store, caravan park, and petrol station, is listed online for 6 to 10 million Australian dollars. The Lions Club, which has owned Licola since the 1960s, decided to sell due to rising costs and declining camp attendance. Leanne O'Donnell, who runs the general store and is one of the five full-time residents, faces eviction by January 31. "I absolutely love this town... if it gets into the hands of a developer and turns into something that it's not, it [will] just break my heart," she said. O'Donnell says she was told the store lease would be extended but now must leave. Local and regional communities have strongly opposed the sale. An online petition to save the store and renew O'Donnell's lease has over 8,000 signatures. Some Lions members criticized the board for poor consultation. The Lions Village Licola board said the sale was not taken lightly and all proceeds will fund youth camps across Victoria in the future. The board added that future camps in Licola are uncertain due to low bookings. The new owners and their plans remain unknown, but there is considerable interest in buying the village.