Showing posts with label Berejiklian Government. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Berejiklian Government. Show all posts

Wednesday 15 September 2021

Another win for local community in the Battle for the Bylong Valley, NSW

 

Locals opposed the development of a the mine.(ABC News: Liv Casben)
















The fight to stop a multinational mining company from devouring the Bylong Valley in New South Wales began way back in 2010.


By 2015 Korean energy giant KEPCO held 7,385 hectares of freehold land in the valley for its proposed thermal coal mine.


In 2017 that landholding had grown to more than 13,000 hectares of Bylong Valley land. At that time the entire mining project was expected by KEPCO to directly impact/”disturb” est. 2,874.7 hectares within the 700 sq. km Bylong River catchment area.


IMAGE: The Land, 1 August 2017


Good agricultural land was being subsumed by this proposed mine and vital water resources threatened.


The Bylong Valley community and its supporters have fought on through a number of jurisdictions for the last ten years.


This is the latest legal success farmers & other residents from the area have achieved…….


On 14 September 2021 the NSW Supreme Court, Court of Appeal dismissed the KEPCO Bylong Australia Pty Ltd appeal of a Land and Environment Court of NSW judgment.


KEPCO was unsuccessful with respect to each of the five ground of appeal against the primary judge’s dismissal of its challenge to the Independent Planning Commission (IPC) decision and was ordered to pay the costs of the active respondent, Bylong Valley Protection Alliance Inc.


KEPCO can of course seek special permission to appeal to the High Court of Australia and, it seems likely that mindlessly pro-mining NSW Deputy Premier & Nationals MLA for Monaro John Barilaro will encourage such an action.


However, this 14 September Court of Appeal judgment was unanimous and that gives cause for comfort.


ABC News, 14 September 2021, excerpt:


Bylong Valley Protection Alliance (BVPA) president Phillip Kennedy hopes the decision will allow the community to rebuild itself.


"I'd really like to see this valley that's been purchased by Kepco under the pretense of a proposed coal mine 10 years ago when they started [to be given back]," he said.


"We would like to ask the South Korean government to release that land back, to allow the mums and dads and the farmers of Australia to come here and to bring it back to what it once was."


The appeal zeroed in on the interpretation of parts of environmental policy and whether or not the IPC's refusal was legally sound.


But today's verdict backed the IPC's judgement that the project would cause "long lasting environmental, agricultural and heritage impacts"….


Bylong Valley, NSW
IMAGE: ABC News, 17 April 2019





Tuesday 14 September 2021

Pandemic State of Play NSW September 2021: "hospital in the home"

 


News.com.au, 13 September 2021:



The wife of a Sydney man stricken with Covid-19 has given a harrowing account of how the “hospital at home” program is operating revealing her husband was told to remain at home even when he was coughing up blood.



The family, who spoke to news.com.au on the condition of anonymity, have raised serious concerns over the “call centre” approach to caring for patients which often involves call centre operators, not doctors or nurses, running through check lists of symptoms with patients.



Doctors have raised concerns about the “hospital in the home” Covid treatment system after more than 15 people died at home since August 1.



NSW has been left with little choice other than to rely on the hospital at home program after the number of Covid infected patients ballooned and the number of people in hospital and ICU continues to rise.



There are currently over 14,000 people with “active” Covid infection in NSW and the vast majority are being left alone at home to battle the illness.



In the case of the 37-year-old man whose family spoke to news.com.au, he was “fit and healthy” and had no underlying conditions.



He is incredibly fit and healthy, a rugby player, he’s very into his health and his diet and fitness and doesn’t have any pre-existing health issues,’’ his wife said.



My husband was diagnosed on September 2. He had really mild symptoms at that point. He received a text. He was told to isolate. And they told him to stay home. They said they would call him every day,’’ she said.



But he didn’t have a GP contacting him. We just had NSW Health Unit contact which was like a call centre. He never really saw a doctor at all. He did have one phone call with a doctor.”



In the first week, she said she was given a list of things that would require her husband’s case to be escalated or taken to hospital. The woman is trapped in Victoria where she was trying to help him over the phone.



If you’ve got freezing cold skin and you can’t warm up no matter what you do. If you’ve got shortness of breath, chest pain, infrequent urination, and if you’re coughing up blood. So those are the things. We felt in good hands at that point. Then, he started to deteriorate,’’ she said.



A week ago on Sunday, he started “coughing up blood and having respiratory distress”.



We monitored that overnight and on September 6, we called NSW Health to tell them that he was presenting with one of those symptoms, requiring hospitalisation along with shortness of breath,’’ the man’s wife said.



They then told us that the health advice had changed, and that that was very normal and that we should not be alarmed. And that he should continue to stay home and just take Panadol, which I thought was really striking because I don’t see how the health advice on coughing up blood could change. I could not understand it. The system was overwhelmed, struggling, I can understand that. But I don’t see why the health advice would change.



The woman said she “knew something was not right”.



We had that anxiety, we kind of knew it wasn’t right. And that’s when I called the ambulance on September 6, because the blood, it was quite a lot of blood, it’s like in his mucus, it was not just like a few droplets, the mucus that he was bringing up was entirely blood.”



At this stage, the man was home alone in an apartment with a flatmate who was also battling Covid. But the ambulance said he should still stay at home.



The ambulance arrived and did a check. They were satisfied with his vitals, at that point. And they told him to monitor the colour of his blood. So if it changed to a deep red or brown, he should call them again. So he felt quite good at that point because he’d had medical attention. NSW Health called him to follow up and said that they would have a GP contact him every day, from that point to monitor where he’s at with those systems and the colour of the blood, and his breathing.”



However, the promised daily contact from a GP never happened. The next time the man contacted his wife he was so sick he couldn’t speak.



Well, the GP, he called one time, one time was on Thursday, that’s like in four days. It was getting worse. And then on Saturday morning, my husband sent me a text message saying that he needed an ambulance. He couldn’t even speak.



So I called the ambulance and it attended, and they did an oximeter reading and took him to hospital because he did need oxygen, and they were concerned about it. They put a camera down (his throat) to check what’s going on and then they removed all the blood in his respiratory tract, and gave him three injections. They gave him one to open up his lungs. And yeah he’s receiving oxygen.



The woman said she was terrified her husband could have died at home.



BACKGROUND



Well into the second year of the global SARS-CoV-2 pandemic’s intrusion into Australia and New South Wales was at a point on 15 June 2021 of having no locally acquired COVID-19 transmission for the last 41 days and infection growth in the community had ceased.



The only COVID-19 infections within NSW were those that had come into the country from overseas and just 39 confirmed active cases from all sources remained.



By this time NSW had been vaccinating those people 16 years of age up to 90+ years since 22 February 2021.



On 16 June 2021 the Berejiklian Government became aware that the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 had entered the state and suddenly there were 4 locally acquired cases within 24 hours.



Three days later that had climbed to 10 cases, two days after that the number rose to 25 and the average growth factor of locally acquired cases was calculable again at 1.4.



In that first week the West Hoxton superspreader event had occurred and its risk disastrously underestimated by the Berejiklian Government and its advisers.



The Bereijiklian Government continued to underestimate the nature and virulence of the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 over the coming weeks until basic public health social measures, contact tracing systems and the NSW hospital system began to buckle under the the caseload numbers.



The public health system alert level turned Red on 26 June 2021 in metropolitan areas and then statewide by 17 August, where it has remained ever since.



By 12 September 2021 Covid-19 confirmed infections remained at over 1,000 recorded per day and the number hospitalised on a given day was similarly high. Deaths of those with a COVID-19 diagnosis were being announced daily.



The average growth factor of the Delta strain fluctuates weekly but never falls below 1.3.  A safe level is 1 or below for 4 or more weeks, at which point community transmission is thought to cease.



However, intransigent as ever, the Berejiklian Government, openly encouraged by Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison and in defiance of the wishes of National Cabinet, maintains its intention to open NSW borders and significantly lower public health social measures around mid-October 2021. At which time its 70% fully vaccinated 16 year-olds to 90yrs and over target is expected to be reached.



It is highly unlikely that 70% of the real NSW resident population numbering est. 8,172,500 men, women and children (ABS Dec 2020) will be fully vaccinated by mid-October this year or that viral infection growth in the community will have ceased.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



Of the 1,257 locally acquired COVID-19 cases in NSW Local Health Districts reported for the 24 hours to 8pm on Sunday 12 September 2021:



427 are from South Western Sydney LHD,

314 are from Western Sydney LHD,

181 are from Sydney LHD,

127 are from South Eastern Sydney LHD,

78 are from Nepean Blue Mountains LHD,

27 are from Illawarra Shoalhaven LHD,

22 are from Northern Sydney LHD,

18 are from Hunter New England LHD,

16 are from Central Coast LHD,

12 are from Western NSW LHD,

7 are from Far West LHD,

2 are from Southern LHD,

8 are in correctional settings,

18 cases are yet to be assigned to an LHD.



There were est. 35 public hospitals where on 12 September 2021 a combined total of 1,189 COVID-19 patients were currently admitted and est. 20 of these hospitals had a combined total of 222 infected patients in intensive care unit beds.


As at 7 September 2021 there were 3,446 people with a COVID-19 infection receiving "hospital in the home' care in New South Wales and another 445 receiving "out of hospital care".


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



Sources:



Saturday 11 September 2021

Tweet of the Week


 



Lede of the Week

"NSW Police have slapped former Prime Minister Tony Abbott with a $500 fine after he was photographed maskless in Manly on Wednesday.

The infringement notice was issued after he was snapped chatting with a friend at the beach by a concerned bystander who promptly took photographs and reported him to police." [news.com.au, 10 September 2021]


Friday 10 September 2021

Deputy Premier John Barilaro seeks to reassure the NSW people that the Berejiklian Government "worked with industry to design this roadmap" to COVID-19 "freedoms"


'Deputy Premier John Barilaro said the NSW Government has worked with industry to design this road map, which is our biggest incentive to get vaccinated, to reach the 70 per cent target as soon as possible. “Our roadmap outlines the freedoms that twice vaccinated people will enjoy once we reach 70 per cent double dose which means a meal with loved ones or a drink with friends is just around the corner”' [NSW Deputy Premier John Barilaro and Nationals MLA for Monaro, 9 September 2021]



Despite NSW Delta Variant Outbreak COVID-19 infection numbers, hospitalisations and deaths still climbing to record levels across the state this week, on Thursday 9 September 2021 the Berejilkian Coalition Government issued these two media releases.



NSW Deputy Premier & Nationals MLA for Monaro John Barilaro, media release, 9 September 2021:



Lockdown lifted in parts of regional NSW



Parts of regional NSW currently deemed low risk and which have seen zero COVID cases for at least 14 days will emerge from lockdown at 12:01am Saturday 11 September, but will continue to operate under restrictions to ensure the safety of regional communities.



Local Government Areas (LGAs) still seeing COVID case numbers will continue to follow stay-at-home orders and will be monitored by NSW Health with updates provided as circumstances develop.



Deputy Premier and Minister for Regional NSW John Barilaro said regional communities are doing an incredible job following health advice and getting vaccinated which has made the easing of lockdown in some areas possible.



Today, I can announce that while unfortunately many regional LGAs will remain in lockdown due to COVID case numbers, for other parts of the state, stay-at-home orders will be lifted allowing more freedoms for those communities,” Mr Barilaro said.



This decision is based on NSW Health advice, and the LGAs which remain in lockdown will continue to be monitored and we will update those communities on a regular basis.



My strong advice to everyone in regional NSW is to get vaccinated as soon as you can. Our communities need to continue to get vaccinated so that when NSW reaches 70 and 80 per cent, restrictions can ease significantly.”



The following freedoms will be available to all people in regional LGAs where stay-at-home orders have lifted:



Gatherings in the home and public spaces:



  • Up to five visitors will be allowed in a home (not including children 12 and under).

  • Up to 20 people can gather in outdoor settings.



Venues including hospitality, retail stores and gyms:



  • Hospitality venues can reopen subject to one person per 4sqm inside and one person per 2sqm outside, with standing while drinking permitted outside.

  • Retail stores can reopen under the one person per 4sqm rule.

  • Personal services such as hairdressers and nail salons can open with one person per 4sqm, capped at five clients per premises.

  • Gyms and indoor recreation facilities can open under the one person per 4sqm rule and can offer classes for up to 20 people.

  • Sporting facilities including swimming pools can reopen.



Schools



  • Schools will re-open with Level 3 COVIDSafe measures in place.



Stadiums, theatres and major outdoor recreation facilities:



  • Major recreation outdoor facilities including stadiums, racecourses, theme parks and zoos can reopen with one person per 4sqm, capped at 5,000 people.

  • Up to 500 people can attend ticketed and seated outdoor events.

  • Indoor entertainment and information facilities including cinemas, theatres, music halls, museums and galleries can reopen with one person per 4sqm or 75 per cent fixed seated capacity.



Weddings, funerals and places of worship:



  • Up to 50 guests can attend weddings, with dancing permitted and eating and drinking only while seated.

  • Up to 50 guests can attend funerals, with eating and drinking while seated.

  • Churches and places of worship to open subject to one person per 4sqm rule, with no singing.



Travel:



  • Caravan parks and camping grounds can open.

  • Carpooling will be permitted.



Masks:



  • Masks will remain mandatory for all indoor public venues, including public transport, front-of-house hospitality, retail and business premises, on planes and at airports.

  • Only hospitality staff will be required to wear a mask when outdoors.

  • Children aged under 12 will not need to wear a mask indoors.



Stay-at-home orders will remain in place in the following LGAs:






















~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



Reportedly the full list of those regional NSW local government areas emerging from lockdown at 12.01am on Saturday includes:


A. Albury Armidale

B. Ballina Balranald Bellingen Berrigan Bland Byron

C. Carrathool Clarence Valley Cobar Coffs Harbour Coolamon

Coonamble Cowra Cootamundra-Gundagai

D. 0

E. Edward River

F. 0

G. Gunnedah Gwydir

H. Hay Hilltops

I. Inverell

J. Junee

K. Kempsey Kyogle

L. Lachlan Leeton Lismore Liverpool Plains Lockhart

M. Moree Plains Murrumbidgee

N. Nambucca Valley Narrandera

O. 0

P. Port Macquaire-Hastings

Q. 0

R. Richmond Valley

S. Snowy Valleys

T. Tamworth Temora Tenterfield Tweed

U. Upper Lachlan Uralla

V. 0

W. Wagga Wagga

X. 0

Y. Yass Valley

Z. 0

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



NSW Minister for Health and Medical Research & Liberal MLA for Wakehurst Brad Hazzard & NSW Health, media release, 9 September 2021:



Roadmap to freedom unveiled for the fully vaccianted



Stay-at-home orders for adults who have received both doses of the COVID-19 vaccine will be lifted from the Monday after NSW passes the 70 per cent double vaccination target, under the roadmap to freedom released today.



The roadmap is subject to further fine-tuning and health advice if circumstances change drastically or if cases within a designated area remain too high.



Premier Gladys Berejiklian said we are well on the way to hitting the 70 per cent double dose milestone which will allow the state to open up for those who have received both doses of a COVID-19 vaccine.



"I cannot stress enough how important it is for people to get vaccinated – if you have not had both doses of the vaccine by the time we hit the 70 per cent milestone, you will not be able to take advantage of these freedoms," Ms Berejiklian said.



Deputy Premier John Barilaro said the NSW Government has worked with industry to design this roadmap, which is our biggest incentive to get vaccinated, to reach the 70 per cent target as soon as possible.



"Our roadmap outlines the freedoms that twice vaccinated people will enjoy once we reach 70 per cent double dose which means a meal with loved ones or a drink with friends is just around the corner," Mr Barilaro said.



Only fully vaccinated people and those with medical exemptions will have access to the freedoms allowed under the Reopening NSW roadmap.



The freedoms for vaccinated adults will come into effect on the Monday after NSW hits the 70 per cent double dose target and include:



Gatherings in the home and public spaces

  • Up to five visitors will be allowed in a home where all adults are vaccinated (not including children 12 and under).

  • Up to 20 people can gather in outdoor settings.



Venues including hospitality, retail stores and gyms

  • Hospitality venues can reopen subject to one person per 4sqm inside and one person per 2sqm outside, with standing while drinking permitted outside.

  • Retail stores can reopen under the one person per 4sqm rule (unvaccinated people will continue to only be able to access critical retail).

  • Personal services such as hairdressers and nail salons can open with one person per 4sqm, capped at five clients per premises.

  • Gyms and indoor recreation facilities can open under the one person per 4sqm rule and can offer classes for up to 20 people.

  • Sporting facilities including swimming pools can reopen.



Stadiums, theatres and major outdoor recreation facilities

  • Major recreation outdoor facilities including stadiums, racecourses, theme parks and zoos can reopen with one person per 4sqm, capped at 5,000 people.

  • Up to 500 people can attend ticketed and seated outdoor events.

  • Indoor entertainment and information facilities including cinemas, theatres, music halls, museums and galleries can reopen with one person per 4sqm or 75 per cent fixed seated capacity.



Weddings, funerals and places of worship

  • Up to 50 guests can attend weddings, with dancing permitted and eating and drinking only while seated.

  • Up to 50 guests can attend funerals, with eating and drinking while seated.

  • Churches and places of worship to open subject to one person per 4sqm rule, with no singing.



Travel

  • Domestic travel, including trips to regional NSW, will be permitted.

  • Caravan parks and camping grounds can open.

  • Carpooling will be permitted.

Non-vaccinated young people aged under 16 will be able to access all outdoor settings but will only be able to visit indoor venues with members of their household.



Employers must continue to allow employees to work from home if the employee is able to do so.



There will be revised guidance on isolation for close and casual contacts who are fully vaccinated, with details to be provided closer to the reopening date.



Masks

  • Masks will remain mandatory for all indoor public venues, including public transport, front-of-house hospitality, retail and business premises, on planes and at airports.

  • Only hospitality staff will be required to wear a mask when outdoors.

  • Children aged under 12 will not need to wear a mask indoors.



Treasurer Dominic Perrottet said the easing of restrictions would come as a huge relief to struggling businesses and workers, who just want to get their lives back on track, safely.



"This roadmap gives us the light at the end of the tunnel we all want and will enable our economy to start firing again, driving our state back to prosperity," Mr Perrottet said.



Health Minister Brad Hazzard said the government will continue to be guided by the health advice, and may still require targeted restrictions to deal with outbreaks.



"As we work toward reopening NSW, it is vital people continue to come forward and get vaccinated to help protect the community and reduce transmission of the virus," Mr Hazzard said.



When NSW hits the 80 per cent double dose target, the government intends to open up further freedoms around international travel, community sport, major events and other areas.



If you are not booked in for a COVID-19 vaccine, please book an appointment as soon possible.



For the latest information visit NSW government website - COVID-19