Showing posts with label Australian Labor Party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australian Labor Party. Show all posts
Sunday 10 December 2017
Mr. Huang Xiangmo becomes terse
After allegedly giving a number of large political donations to the Liberal, National and Labor parties, wealthy Chinese national and former chairman of the Australian Council for the Promotion of the Peaceful Reunification of China, Mr. Xiangmo of Yuhu Group Australia, grows tired of the media attention ………..
Herald Sun via @johhnybridge2
Mr. Xiangmo pictured with some of his many political acquaintances
Photographs sourced from Google Images
Wednesday 11 October 2017
Pollie dripping venom at taxpayers' expense
Federal Labor MP for Melbourne Ports since 1998 Michael Danby may have let his website www.nolibirandeal.com lapse on 14 September 2017, however his venom is still dripping at taxpayers’ expense and is now pointedly directed at an ABC journalist.
Australian Jewish News, via Twitter, 1 October 2017, half-page advertisement
Australian Jewish News, 5 October 2017, half-page advertisement
Danby has a history of attacking journalists:
Australian Jewish News, 14 September 2007 via Media Watch
However, the recent increased criticism might be because Mr. Danby may no longer be hopeful of retaining Labor Party preselection ahead of the next federal election.
The Opposition Leader is not the only one deeply unimpressed by Danby’s attack ads.
Perhaps the party’s over for this parliamentarian?
UPDATE
On 16 October 2017 ABC News reported that Danby took a week's sick leave in 2016 but rather than take to his bed he took off for Israel instead.
Wonder if that trip was also at taxpayer expense?
UPDATE
On 16 October 2017 ABC News reported that Danby took a week's sick leave in 2016 but rather than take to his bed he took off for Israel instead.
Wonder if that trip was also at taxpayer expense?
Monday 9 October 2017
Polling numbers not looking good for Turnbull Government as regional Australia loses patience
The Australian, 9 October 2017:
The quarterly Newspoll analysis, conducted exclusively for The Australian, shows Labor continues to lead the Coalition by 53 to 47 per cent in two-party terms, holding the same advantage for three consecutive quarters this year.
In a shock result for the government in one of its key constituencies, the Coalition’s primary vote among voters outside the five capital cities fell from 36 to 34 per cent over the three months to the end of September.
The outcome is the government’s lowest result in regional Australia since it secured a narrow election victory last year with a 44 per cent primary vote outside the capitals, 10 percentage points higher than the new polling.
In a dramatic turnaround, Labor now has stronger core support than the Coalition among voters outside the capital cities, with its primary vote rising from 34 to 36 per cent over the quarter.
The outcome raises questions about the performance of the Nationals and country Liberals in shoring up support when the government’s fate could hinge on a handful of regional electorates in Queensland, NSW and Victoria.
This is the first time Labor has taken the lead over the Coalition among regional and rural voters since last year’s election, when its primary vote outside the capital cities was only 30.8 per cent……
The survey of 9889 voters from July to September combines results from Newspolls conducted over the quarter, smoothing out short-term movements and resulting in a smaller margin of error of 1 per cent for national results.
While the Newspoll published on September 25 showed the government had seen a small slip in its support over three weeks, with the Coalition trailing Labor by 46 to 54 per cent in two-party terms, the quarterly analysis shows an overall trend of 47 to 53 per cent in two-party terms throughout this year……
The government lags Labor in two-party terms in each state in the Newspoll analysis, ranging from a 47-53 result in Western Australia and Victoria to a 46-54 gap in Queensland and a 45-55 result in South Australia. The government improved its fortunes in NSW, narrowing the gap against Labor from 47-53 to 48-52 in two-party-preferred terms from one quarter to the next, and saw a similar one-point gain in South Australia while suffering a one-point decline in Queensland.
The Liberal Party is facing some of its toughest battles in seats outside the big cities, including the regional Victorian seat of Corangamite held by Sarah Henderson, the NSW south coast seat of Gilmore held by Ann Sudmalis, the NSW central coast seat of Robertson held by Lucy Wicks, and the northern Queensland seat of Leichhardt held by retiring Warren Entsch.
The Nationals are also under pressure in traditional strongholds including the NSW north coast seat of Page held by Kevin Hogan and the Queensland seat of Capricornia held by Michelle Landry. [my yellow highlighting]
Wednesday 23 August 2017
Things are crook at Tallarook for the Turnbull Government in August 2017
On 21 August 2017 The Australian published the 18th Newspoll in a row with negative numbers for the Coalition Federal Government:
The Turnbull government has taken a battering after a week of turmoil over the citizenship of key ministers, with the Coalition trailing Labor by 46 to 54 per cent in another brutal verdict from voters.
Labor has climbed to its strongest primary vote this year, with its core support at 38 per cent, giving it a convincing lead that would see it form government with a gain of 20 seats if the trend held at the next federal election.
The latest Newspoll, conducted exclusively for The Australian, shows the government’s primary vote has fallen from 36 to 35 per cent over the past two weeks, amid internal rows over same-sex marriage and the storm over the foreign citizenship of three cabinet ministers.
Malcolm Turnbull has lost ground to Bill Shorten in his personal standing with Australians but has held his lead as preferred prime minister, favoured by 43 per cent of voters compared with 33 per cent who prefer the Opposition Leader…..
The combined effect has widened Labor’s lead to 54 per cent to 46 per cent in two-party terms, a swing of more than 4 per cent against the government since the election in July last year….
The Newspoll survey of 1675 respondents, conducted from Thursday to yesterday, saw most of the results move within the margin of error of 2.4 percentage points, except for the fall in Mr Turnbull’s rating as better prime minister and the greater dissatisfaction with both leaders.
This is the 18th consecutive Newspoll in which the Coalition has trailed Labor in two-party terms, a tally that is now used against Mr Turnbull by his critics because he cited the loss of “30 Newspolls in a row” as a reason for challenging Tony Abbott in September 2015.
The swing against the government, if repeated in a uniform fashion at the next election, would lead to the loss of about 20 seats — eight in Queensland, four in Victoria, four in NSW, one in South Australia and three in Western Australia.
Mr Turnbull has retained his lead over Mr Shorten as preferred prime minister but the gap between the two has narrowed.
Voters cut their support for Mr Turnbull as better prime minister from 46 to 43 per cent, while increasing their support for Mr Shorten from 31 to 33 per cent.
The proportion of voters who were “uncommitted” increased from 23 to 24 per cent.
As a result, Mr Turnbull is now 10 points ahead of Mr Shorten on this measure, compared with a lead of 15 percentage points two weeks ago.
Primary vote
If the federal election for the house of representatives was held today, which one of the following would you vote for? If uncommitted, to which one of these do you have a leaning?
Two-party preferred
Based on the preference flow at the July 2016 federal election.
Leaders' net satisfaction
Are you satisfied or dissatisfied with the way the Prime Minister is doing his job? Are you satisfied or dissatisfied with the way the Leader of the Opposition is doing his job?
Friday 5 May 2017
National Rural Health Alliance welcomes Labor commitment to National Rural Health Strategy and implementation
Medianet Release
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© Australian Associated Press, 2017
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Thursday 15 December 2016
In 2011 Australia had a Labor government and in 2016 it has a Liberal-Nationals Coalition government - see the difference
What a difference the philosophy a political party espouses makes to the physical and social environment in which they govern.
THEN……
The Australian Federal Parliament was interrupted by a group of protesters shouting 'no carbon tax' during Question Time on 11 October 2011.
This is what the Parliament House looked like after that incident – barricade free.
Photograph by Tracy Best, Saturday 24 October 2011
NOW…..
The Australian Federal Parliament was interrupted by a group of protesters shouting
'close the camps ' during Question Time on 30 November 2016.
'close the camps ' during Question Time on 30 November 2016.
This is what Parliament House looked like after that incident.
A security guard patrols the lawns at Parliament House.
Photo: Andrew Meares, The Sydney Morning Herald 1 December 2016
Saturday 15 October 2016
New Labor Senator for Victoria Kimberly Kitching - who is she?
This is newly appointed Senator for Victoria Kimberly Kitching in her own words on 23 August 2014:
“I speak 4 languages. I have tertiary qualifications, including a law degree.
I have been admitted as a Solicitor to the Supreme Court of Queensland.
I have been elected as a Councillor of the City of Melbourne, a Corporation that at that time had a budget of approximately $300 million.
I have worked as a Senior Advisor to the Minister for Industry and Trade, Major Projects and Information and Communications Technology; and as a Senior Advisor to the Treasurer of Victoria who with the Premier and other members of the Expenditure Review Committee sets (at that time) a $45 billion State Budget (FY09- 10).
I have been employed in private enterprise: I was an employee at LookSmart, a technology company that went on to list on the NASDAQ, and was involved in the first tranche of its capital raising; I have also been employed at Drake International, the largest privately owned human resources company globally and was responsible for their Government and Corporate Relations, and for strategic human resources advice for clients.
I have been a Director on several boards, and have been a Vice President and Trustee of the Victorian Branch of the Australian Labor Party.
In late 2012 I was studying for the entrance exam to participate in the Victorian Bar Readers' Course.”
A fairly impressive resume.
The problem for the federal Labor Party is those words are taken from the first of two witness statements tendered to the Abbott Government’s notorious Royal Commission into Trade Union Governance and Corruption in which Kitching was giving evidence concerning her time as General Manager in the equally notorious Victoria No.1 Branch of the Health Services Union. [See here and here]
Her husband past president of Melbourne University Student Union and former political blogger, Andrew Landeryou, is not necessarily seen by all as an asset to her new career in the Senate – having been associated with the health union's past power struggles and then arrested in St. Kilda at 2.40am on the morning of the July 2016 federal election for allegedly vandalising Greens and Liberal polling material at multiple polling stations from Elwood to Port Melbourne, and allegedly driving at volunteers who tried to stop them.
Already a couple of media commentators are characterising Opposition Leader Bill Shorten’s endorsement of Kimberly Kitching as either “courageous” or “brave” – either way it is not meant as a compliment to Mr. Shorten’s judgment.
* Image found at @kimbakit
Labels:
Australian Labor Party,
politics,
Senate
Thursday 30 June 2016
What Labor's Janelle Saffin promises to deliver and fight for when it comes to local community & telecommunication infrastructure in Page
Labor Candidate For Page Janelle Saffin, media release, 18 June 2016:
SAFFIN ANNOUNCES COMMUNITY INFRASTRUCTURE PROGRAM FOR PAGE
Janelle Saffin, Labor candidate for Page, today announced a Labor Government would provide a $2.9 million Community Infrastructure Program to build and upgrade sport and recreational facilities for local families on the North Coast and Northern Rivers.
Ms Saffin said the program was designed to allow more people to enjoy healthy, active lifestyles, and to build more connected communities.
“Modern technology means that people are spending more time on computers and electronic devices – and less time being physically or socially active – than ever before.
“This is having a pronounced impact on the way our communities function – with fewer people getting involved in local organisations such as sporting clubs or community groups.
“It’s also having an impact on our health, with the alarming rise of chronic conditions such as diabetes.
“That’s why it’s so important that we invest in facilities that encourage people to get out of their lounge rooms, being active and social, and participating in community life.
“The Community Infrastructure Program will not only improve regional sporting facilities, it will ensure local families have access to playgrounds, parks and trails.”
Page Community Infrastructure Program
o
Woolgoolga
Surf Life Saving Club - $1.2 million
o
Rushworth
Park soccer complex upgrade - $1 million
o
Broadwater
Skate Park - $210,000
o
Casino
to Lismore Rail Trail feasibility study – $65,000
o
Woodburn
Riverside Adventure Playground - $250,00
o
Casino
Showgrounds Canteen Facility - $180,000
o
Woodburn
Riverside Pontoon - $110,000
o
Colley
Park Sports Centre - $150,000
Ms Saffin
said a Labor Government would continue investing in local infrastructure as a
priority.
“Unlike
the Nationals, Labor believes that investing in local communities is more
important that giving tax cuts to multinationals.
“I will
always advocate for our local needs, because modest investments can make a
major difference to community life.
“Labor is
delivering on health, education, skills, training, and jobs. Labor has
announced important programs like Work Futures to tackle youth unemployment,
and renewable energy hubs that will have a significant impact on our local
economy.”
Ms Saffin
said she would also fight to deliver funding support for a range of other
important local projects, including:
o Alstonville Swimming Pool upgrade - $4m
o Albert Park Baseball Complex upgrade - $4m
o Oakes Oval upgrade (1.4m)
o Replacing wooden bridges in Kyogle - $5m
o Woolgoolga Multi-Purpose Centre - $2.5m
o Sustainable Economy Jobs Officers - to be employed within local councils $3m
o Small Towns & Villages scheme to upgrade local community facilities and encourage use of solar energy - $3m
o Grafton Men’s shed - $350,000
Shadow Minister for Regional Communications Stephen Jones and Labor Candidate For Page Janelle Saffin, joint media release, 28 June 2016:
Shadow Minister for
Regional Communications, Stephen Jones, and Labor candidate for Page, Janelle
Saffin, today announced that a Shorten Labor Government will provide funding to
fix mobile blackspots in the Northern Rivers and North Coast region of NSW.
Fixing mobile black
spots by building critical infrastructure will save lives and improve mobile
communications for residents and businesses in regional NSW.
Stephen Jones said that
only Labor was committed to improving the administration of the Mobile Black
Spot program across Australia.
“Labor will not only
match the Turnbull Government’s promises on mobile black spot funding, we will
actually improve the administration of the Mobile Black Spot program and give
priority to regional areas of Northern NSW prone to natural disasters, like
bushfires and floods,” Mr Jones said.
“Mr Turnbull’s Mobile
Black Spot program just isn’t up to scratch. There are some locations, such as
Maclean, Wooli, Summerland Way and Woodenbong, that should have been funded but
were not.
“We must do more to help
regional communities when it comes to mobile black spots. This is vital
infrastructure that people rely on,” Mr Jones said.
Labor candidate for
Page, Janelle Saffin, said local communities have waited too long to have
better or any mobile phone coverage.
“Mobile phone coverage
saves lives in an emergency and is central to the daily life of our region,” Ms
Saffin said.
“Many parts of our
region are vulnerable to flood and bushfire, so these services are very
important to the community.
“The lack of coverage is
particularly problematic for the elderly members of our community who rely on
these connections to stay in touch with family and friends.
“Of the 499 mobile
towers funded in Round One of the Mobile Black Spot program, as of 4 May 2016
only 21 had been switched on.
“A Shorten Labor
Government will ensure that the roll out continues and is focused on the getting
better coverage for Northern NSW," Ms Saffin said.
Thursday 23 June 2016
Saffin promises Labor will establish a headspace centre in the Clarence Valley
Shadow Minister For Families And Payments, Shadow Minister For Disability Reform & Member for Jagajaga Jenny Macklin and Labor Candidate For Page Janelle Saffin (pictured above), joint media release, 14 June 2016:
LABOR WILL ESTABLISH A HEADSPACE CENTRE IN THE CLARENCE VALLEY
Shadow Minister for Families and Payments, Jenny Macklin and Labor candidate for Page, Janelle Saffin today announced that a Shorten Labor Government will provide funding for the development of a Headspace Centre in the Clarence Valley which will provide assistance to young people experiencing mental health issues.
“There is a clear gap in mental health services in the Clarence Valley, and this $1.8 million in funding will address that gap by ensuring local young people can access the help they need,” Ms Saffin said.
“Establishing a Headspace Centre will give young people in Grafton and the Clarence Valley the same support as people in Coffs Harbour and Lismore.”
Ms Saffin said the Clarence Valley community had been rocked by the death of 11 young people from suicide in just 12 months.
“There are a number of factors behind the high levels of youth suicide and mental health problems on the North Coast. These include high levels of unemployment, cuts to other youth services, and substance abuse.
“We cannot turn a blind eye to this reality and pretend it’s not happening. Ignoring the mental health needs of young people is effectively casting them adrift.
“That’s why I am so passionate about this issue, and so determined to make sure all young people in the Northern Rivers and North Coast have access to services such as Headspace.
“I have fought for the Headspace service for our region, and secured the Lismore Headspace. I have since argued that the Clarence Valley needs one as well, and if I am elected I will deliver it.”
Shadow Minister for Families and Payments, Jenny Macklin, said regionally delivered and funded services were vital to preventing mental illness and building stronger, more resilient communities.
And Nationals MP for Page for the last three years, Kevin Hogan scrambles to catch up……
The Daily Examiner, 15 June 2016, page 6:
Federal Member for Page Kevin Hogan said an array of extra mental health services were about to be provided in the Clarence Valley due to extra resourcing.
"Mental health is a very serious issue, every suicide in our community a tragedy," he said.
"Following a community meeting in December last year I organised a Consultation Workshop on May 23. This brought together local agencies to decide how the extra resources should be allocated in the Valley.
"There will be an outreach of Headspace from Coffs operating in the Clarence before the end of the year. There will also be more resources allocated at the acute care level.
"Many good mental health services exist in the Clarence Valley. It was identified that many people were not aware of the current services."
Wednesday 22 June 2016
Labor's plan to rescue the National Broadband Network and scale up rollout of fibre-to-the-premises
For everyone tired of the debacle that is the Abbott-Turnbull Government’s National Broadband Network (NBN) rollout, there may be some hope……..
http://www.100positivepolicies.org.au/
Labor
Candidate For Page Janelle Saffin,
media release, 13 June 2016:
An incoming Shorten Labor Government will direct NBN Co. to prioritise the rollout of Fibre-to-the-Premises NBN to homes and businesses across the electorate of Page.
In the entire electorate of Page, not a single existing home or business will get Malcolm Turnbull’s second rate Fibre-to-the-Node network by 2016 as initially promised. Not one…
Janelle Saffin said that there was a lot of dissatisfaction in the region about Turnbull’s flawed NBN.
“Stephen and I spoke to Keda Ley and her family today to find out why the NBN matters so much to them,” Ms Saffin said.
“She is a mum of three who works and studies from home and she needs a strong, reliable Internet connection to make this happen.
“There are families just like the Ley family across the region; in the 21st century they need first-rate Internet services.
“Of course it isn’t just households who stand to benefit from Labor’s plan. Small business owners can’t compete if they are constantly being held back by an inferior broadband connection.
“The NBN build has not even started in Grafton, Lismore, Alstonville, Casino, Evans Head, Woolgoolga and Yamba. These areas deserve better and Labor will deliver for them......
Monday 20 June 2016
Labor Candidate Janelle Saffin: public sector infrastructure investment declined by 50 per cent under Abbott-Turnbull Government and investment in the Pacific Highway upgrade was cut by $351 million
Shadow Minister For Infrastructure And Transport, Shadow Minister For Cities and MP Grayndler Anthony Albanese & Candidate For Page Janelle Saffin, joint media release 12 June 2016:
COALITION HAS LET DOWN PAGE
The Abbott-Turnbull Government has short-changed the people of Page with more than $11 million in cuts to financial assistance grants used by local councils to maintain roads.
The Government also cut investment in the Pacific Highway duplication by in the 2016 Budget, following on from a cut of $130 million in the 2015 Budget.
Only a Shorten Labor Government can be trusted to invest in the infrastructure needed in northern NSW to boost economic productivity and improve road safety, and to ensure councils have the resources they need to maintain local roads.
We stand on our record.
Between 2007 and 2013, the former Labor Federal Government invested $7.9 billion on the Pacific Highway duplication.
That investment dwarfed the $1.3 billion invested by the former Howard Coalition Government over 12 years.
Labor also promised, built and opened the Alstonville Bypass, which was completed in 2011.
The bypass has reduced the level of traffic moving through Alstonville by 50 per cent and eliminated a major bottleneck between Ballina and Lismore.
The Liberal-National Government has talked a lot about infrastructure investment but cut funding.
Australian Bureau of Statistics figures show that between the September quarters of 2013 and 2015, public sector infrastructure investment declined by 50 per cent.
To conceal its failures, the Government has re-announced road projects developed and funded under budgets of the former Labor Government to pretend they were new.
A Shorten Labor Government will get nation building back on track.
Wednesday 15 June 2016
Australian Federal Election 2016: Labor candidate for Page Janelle Saffin announces a Shorten Government will repair Coalition budget cuts to community legal centres
Labor Media Release, Friday 10 June 2016:
SAFFIN ANNOUNCES $300,000 FOR NORTHERN RIVERS COMMUNITY LEGAL CENTRE
Janelle Page, Federal Labor Candidate for Page, today said a Shorten Labor Government would provide $300,000 over three years to ensure the Northern Rivers Community Legal Centre has the funds to continue helping people in need.
The Federal Budget confirmed that the Liberal-National Government would cut funding for Community Legal Centres by 30 per cent, however Labor will inject a total of $43 million into the sector over three years from 1 July 2017.
Ms Saffin said Labor understood how important the Northern Rivers Community Legal Centre was to people in the seat of Page.
“Access to legal assistance when you need help is as important as access to Medicare when you’re sick. That’s why Community Legal Centres are such an important local service.
“The Northern Rivers Community Legal Centre helps local people deal with a wide range of legal issues – from tenants’ rights, to domestic violence and family law disputes.
“Labor will ensure that CLCs can continue their vital work helping people to navigate their way through our complex legal system.”
Ms Saffin said the Liberal-Nationals attack on Community Legal Centres was another example of how local MP Kevin Hogan had failed to needs of regional communities.
“Mr Hogan has been missing in action. He’s been too busy defending the city-centric Liberal-Nationals to defend local community legal services.
“Labor will ensure the Northern Rivers Community Legal Centre can keep its doors open and go on providing vital services to the people of the North Coast and Northern Rivers.”
Ms. Saffin told The Daily Examiner on the same day:
"Access to legal assistance when you need help is as important as access to Medicare when you're sick. That's why Community Legal Centres are such an important local service," Ms Saffin said.
"The Northern Rivers Community Legal Centre helps local people deal with a wide range of legal issues, from tenants' rights, to domestic violence and family law disputes.
"Labor will ensure that CLCs can continue their vital work helping people to navigate their way through our complex legal system."
Ken Beilby, the Principal Solicitor for the Northern Rivers Community Legal Centre in Lismore said the funding will mean they do not have to shut offices in the Richmond Valley in Casino and the Tweed Valley office in Murwillumbah.
"It's going to help us maintain front line services to disadvantaged clients in our region," Mr Beilby said.
"One of the main priorities of our centre is women experiencing domestic violence and providing early intervention.
"Our ability to continue assisting vulnerable clients will be greatly diminished without those funding cuts being restored."
Monday 13 June 2016
Australian Federal Election 2016: recalling better times in the Page electorate
The
public hospital system in the NSW Northern Rivers region has been attempting to
deal with state and federal health funding cuts by Coalition governments for years now (including est.$730 million over ten years from the Northern NSW Local Hospital District) and the strain is beginning to show.
So it’s
only natural that a good many regional voters look back fondly on the hard work
then Labor MP for Page Janelle
Saffin put in to securing health funding between 2007 to 2013.
This
effort on the electorate’s behalf included:
$4
million for a community health centre in Yamba
$20
million for the upgrade of Grafton Base Hospital and 114,000 for new equipment
for the Emergency Department
$487,000
to refurbish 10 student nurse accommodation rooms at Grafton Base Hospital
Federal
grant to establish the Grafton Super Clinic
$60.25
million to redevelop Lismore Base Hospital, including new emergency
department, an express community care clinic and a new renal dialysis unit
$7
million on top of the $8 million already committed for Lismore Base Hospital
radiology services
Magnetic
resonance Imaging (MRI) services for Lismore Base Hospital and North Coast
radiology’s Clarence Valley Imaging in Grafton
$15
million to fast track the Lismore Integrated Cancer Centre
$2.7
million for a second linear accelerator at the Lismore Base Hospital
Integrated Cancer Centre, providing cancer treatment for an extra 30 patients
a day
$7
million for Lismore GP Super Clinic
$2.6
million for Our House Cancer Patient Accommodation in Lismore
for cancer patients and families -150 construction jobs
$2.53
million to St Vincent’s Private Hospital Lismore for two new operation
theatres, $884,414for state-of-the-art teaching centre and
$157,000 to purchase equipment to develop aUrological Centre of
Excellence
$7.9
million to establish the University of Western Sydney's new Rural Clinical
School in Lismore and Bathurst
$407,000
to expand McKid Medical Private General Practice in Kyogle under the Primary
Care Infrastructure Grants Program and $295,455 to upgrade the Urbenville
Medical Centre
$9.22
million to North Coast Medicare Local to establish its headquarters in
Ballina and for operational funding
$1.45
million investment in dental funding for the Northern Rivers, announced
this year as part of the Commonwealth Dental Health Program
Five new
GP registrars to train in Lismore, Goonellabah, Ballina and Alstonville
and four specialist doctors in Lismore area
$1.6million
to Interrelate to boost mental health services in Ballina and Kyogle
shires and the Richmond Valley
$640,000
to Local HACC services Home and Community Care Program funding
$1.45
million investment in dental funding for the Northern Rivers announced in
2013 as part of the Commonwealth Dental Health Program
Five new
GP registrars to train in Lismore, Goonellabah, Ballina and Alstonville
and four specialist doctors in Lismore area
$1.6million
to Interrelate to boost mental health services in Ballina and Kyogle
shires and the Richmond Valley
$700,000
to Clarence Valley Council under the Healthy Communities Initiative
to combat obesity
A total
of $522,000 to Bulgarr Ngaru Aboriginal Medical Service to expand its
health service with new premises and practice manager
$1.9
million for local crisis intervention services.
A list of
funding for a range of services within the Page electorate between August 2010 and
September 2013:
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