Wednesday 2 November 2011

What one local thinks of the O'Farrell Government health centre funding offer


One local responding to this article:

By EmmaB from Yamba on 25/10/2011
This meager funding offer by the O'Farrell Government is little more than a confidence trick. If the Yamba community were to cast its mind back to not so long ago, it would recall that the Area Health Service CEO stated that if the building were to be established it would only be staffed when money from within the health service's existing budget could be identified and that full staffing of a community health centre would take a number of years at least.
All Yamba would ever see for probably a decade is the few existing health services operating out of Treelands Drive Community Centre transferred to the new building.
Skinner is offering to partly fund a white elephant and it is no accident that she makes this statement in the lead up to the Clarence by-election.
What a hollow sham!

Tuesday 1 November 2011

151st Melbourne Cup - 3pm 1st November 2011 - radio & tv links


Archer - winnner of the 1861 and 1862 Melbourne Cup

Emirates Melbourne Cup Day - official website

The $6.175 million Melbourne Cup is a 3200m race run at 3pm on the first Tuesday of November and is the richest prize in Australian sport.

Quick links

ABC Radio live streaming Melbourne Cup Coverage - 8.30am (AEDT)

Channel 7 TV live cover from Flemington Race Course

Yahoo ful coverage here

Melbourne Cup Field at a glance
here

YouTube -
Flemington Race Course Channel for a recap

O'Farrell Government exposes itself as a ship of fools


The Hon Robyn Parker
, Minister for the Environment, and Minister for Heritage, exposes the level of her incompetence concerning matters affecting the NSW North Coast.NSW Parliament Legislative Council Environment and Heritage Committee - Estimates Hearing, 27 October 2011

A little more of Stuart Ramsey's business history gets an airing


In a letter to the editor in The Daily Examiner on 26th October 2011, a little more of Stuart Ramsey’s business history gets an airing:
Grafton will lose a part of its history
AS A 13-year-old, my father uprooted our family and we moved to Grafton so that he could run and manage the Grafton abattoir under the company name of the Victorian-based Gilbert & Sons. He managed the Grafton Meatworks for the next 25 years, which made fantastic profits and provided lucrative wages for the hard work endured.
It started to go south when Gilbert & Sons' companies were struggling financially with their Victorian plants and unfortunately the Grafton abattoir was under the same umbrella. However, it was still operating at a substantial profit.
Approximately 15 years ago it was dragged under with the other Gilbert & Sons' companies. Around 300 workers were out of jobs and at this stage Stuart Ramsey put up his hand to purchase the abattoir and run it as a going concern.
With huge input from the Meatworkers Union, Harry Woods and Terry Flanagan (local politicians), I accompanied another three workers and we convinced Bob Carr (the then premier) to give Ramsey approximately $500,000 in set-up grants to keep the jobs of the people affected within our community. The whole town, including the council, all offered to help Stuart Ramsey to get the abattoir up and running. All workers took pay cuts and became the lowest paid abattoir workers in Australia.
I don't think much has changed in that regard. I joined the consultative committee when we tried, for a whole year, to negotiate a better agreement, after working on the present one for three years. When negotiations went sour I and the 11 or so other members of the consultative committee were terminated. We took the case to the Federal Court of Australia and after four years we won all and every aspect of the case. To this day, approximately 10 years after my termination, I still have not received my entitlements awarded by the outcome of the court proceedings. I know what it is like to be out of a job and not knowing whether you will receive your entitlements or not and I feel for these workers.
If the doors finally close at the Grafton Meatworks I will probably shed a tear. The tear won't be for the concerns of an upstanding citizen such as Ramsey, but for all those people that such a radical decision is going to affect. It will also be for the fact that Grafton will lose a part of its history as it has been part of our community for such a long time. And the fact that the Grafton abattoir has been a huge part of the McKenzie family.
PAUL McKENZIE