The Canberra Times, 30 September 2019:
Showing posts with label people power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label people power. Show all posts
Thursday 3 October 2019
Climate Change in 2019: Want to speak truth to power in Australia? Here's how.....
The Canberra Times, 30 September 2019:
A record number of Australians have signed an online petition calling on the federal government to declare a climate emergency.
As of Monday afternoon, the e-petition had more than 160,000 signatures, after gaining traction on social media.
It's the highest number of signatures for an online petition to parliament.
"The overwhelming majority of climate scientists around the world have concluded that the climate is changing at unprecedented rates due to anthropogenic causes," it says.
"The result of these changes will be catastrophic for future generations and so we must act now to minimise both human and environmental destruction.
"We therefore ask the House to immediately act and declare a climate emergency in Australia. And introduce legislation that will with immediacy and haste reduce the causes of anthropogenic climate change."
Australians have until October 16 to sign the climate emergency e-petition, when its four-week time limit expires....
Petition can be accessed at https://www.aph.gov.au/petition_list?id=EN1041.
By 5:36pm on 1 October 2019 the number of signatures attached to this petition stood at 176,082.
At that particular time the estimated Australian population was 25,476,409 men, women and children and the number of those registered to voter stood at est. 16,424,248 citizens 18 years of age and older.
To place the signatures figure into perspective; it was equivalent to 1.07 per cent of all registered voters and 0.69 per cent of the current estimated Australian population.
Another 0.31 per cent signing before one minute to midnight on 16 October would see this petition to the Australian Parliament equate to 1 per cent of the total population.
Have you signed yet?
Monday 23 September 2019
20 September 2019 Student Strike 4 Climate in the NSW Northern Rivers
On 20 September 2019 at gatherings large and small across Australia during the Global Climate Strike in excess of an estimated 300,000 people met to protest government and industry inaction in the face of global climate change.
Approximately 268,500 of these people participated in all eight capital cities.
Protests were reportedly also held at another 104 cities, towns and villages.Incredible pictures as Australia’s gathering for the #climatestrike— Greta Thunberg (@GretaThunberg) September 20, 2019
This is the huge crowd building up in Sydney.
Australia is setting the standard!
Its bedtime in New York...so please share as many pictures as you can as the strikes move across Asia to Europe and Africa! pic.twitter.com/7eAPUQPq5C
Echo NetDaily estimates close to 6,000 students and supporters participated in Byron Bay, 3,400 in Lismore and 1,580 in Pottsville.
In Grafton 200 people listened to stern words directed at prime minister and parliament.......
The Daily Examiner, 21 September 2019, p.3:
With more than 200 people marching down Prince St, it would be hard to deny something is building.
Supported by a sizeable contingent of adults, students in the School Strike 4 Climate marched through the Grafton CBD to protest inaction on climate change.
In a rousing speech in Market Square, strike leader and Year 12 student Shiann Broderick called out Prime Minister Scott Morrison and said a select few were benefiting from coal projects that were “sacrificing our future”.
Ms Broderick sent a clear message students would not be backing down after Mr Morrison and others in the community had earlier criticised the strikes. “We will not restrict our activism to out-of-school hours because this is the only way to make you listen,” she said.
“You are unhappy that we are not at school but I would be at school today if I didn’t have to teach you how to do your job.
“You say you don’t support schools being turned into parliaments but I think we should turn the parliament into a school since you so obviously need educating.”
With the crowd buzzing, Grafton High student Oskar Robertson said he was “sick and tired” of not having a say in decisions affecting his future and was “tired of old men in suits deciding on things that won’t even affect them”.
He too urged the crowd to keep up the fight against those who continued to “pass up our future for money”.
“If they don’t heed our demands and pass us off as some dumb kids trying to get off school for the day, we will shout so loud we will rock Parliament House to its foundations,” he said.
“We don’t want dirty coal and gas, we want clean energy that won’t poison our lungs and the lungs of the earth, that won’t send us hurtling towards an extinction event.”.......
Wednesday 18 September 2019
Eight Byron Bay businesses closing shop for 20 September 2019 global climate strike
Echo NetDaily, 13 September 2019:
There are few better ways to prove you’re serious about taking action on climate change than putting your money where your mouth is.
And a handful of Byron business owners are doing just that, electing to forego their profits so their staff can take part in next Friday’s global climate strike.
Bella Rosa, Endless Summer, Baskin Robbins, Tasa Jara, Retrospect Gallery, Etnix, Beyond Oil electric transport, and Sustainable Futures Australia will all shut up shop between 10am and midday on September 20 for the global day of action.
One of the local organisers of the strike, Emma Briggs, said volunteers would be speaking to other local businesses in the coming days to encourage them to get on board.
‘I understand this is a significant sacrifice for business owners in a busy period, but the sacrifices we’ll all have to make if we fail to turn around the climate crisis will be far greater,’ Ms Briggs said.
‘It is the young people who will have the most to lose if we continue with business as usual.’
‘We would like to thank all our supporters very much, and hope that consumers will consider patronising the participating businesses who have shown they care about more than just short-term profit.’
Following the success of previous school climate strikes in Byron Bay, students are organising buses to bring in hundreds of strikers from around the shire to rally at the Rec Grounds at 10am and march to Main Beach.
There will also be a screening of the film Inferno at the Beach Hotel at 8.30am, with the march to kick off at 10am.
Labels:
#ClimateStrike,
Byron Bay,
climate change,
people power
Sunday 15 September 2019
Over 110 brands walked away from advertising on 2GB radio due to Alan Jones' misogynistic and violent language
The Guardian, 13 September 2019:
Faced with an advertiser exodus of more than 110 brands, Macquarie Media has written to advertisers promising a review of Alan Jones’ program, which it says failed to meet community standards.
Jones apologised last month to the New Zealand prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, for his comments that Scott Morrison should shove a sock down her throat, but this failed to stem the flow of advertisers, and 2GB and 4BC have continued to haemorrhage revenue.
The chairman of Macquarie Media, Russell Tate, wrote to advertisers on Friday to apologise for the comments about Ardern and “any disruption caused to your company as a result of remarks made by him”.
Alan and I are happy to talk and meet with as many of our advertisers as possible over the next two months to hear your views on how we can best serve your business, but in the meantime, I would be very interested to hear any comments or thoughts which can help us do that.
Jones is already on a final warning after Tate took the unprecedented step of scolding him publicly last month.“This incident has brought into sharp focus the need for all Macquarie Media broadcasters to ensure that the debate they bring to the microphone and the words they use are, at all times, respectful and reflect the standards expected today by our listeners, our clients, and the wider community,” he said......
Labels:
2GB radio,
advertising,
people power,
shock jocks
Thursday 12 September 2019
Remembering Terania......
ABC
News, 17 August 2019:
VIDEO:
Looking
back on the legacy of Terania Creek (ABC News)
It
has been 40 years since the first images emerged of protesters
blocking the path of bulldozers to stop the logging of rainforest at
Terania Creek on the New South Wales north coast.
The
protest is regarded as a watershed moment in Australia's
environmental movement and cited as the first time people physically
defended a natural resource.
While
the fight to save the rainforest reached its climax in August 1979,
the story began several years earlier when a young couple from
Melbourne moved to a single-room cabin bordering the rainforest in
Terania Creek.
PHOTO: Protesters Falls in Nightcap National Park are named after the demonstrations. (ABC North Coast: Leah White) |
Hugh
and Nan Nicholson said they were drawn to the incredible beauty of
the area and were shocked to learn the following year that the
Forestry Commission planed to clear-fell the forest.
"Our
involvement was very sudden, very abrupt," Mrs Nicholson said.
"We
had no experience, we were very young, but we felt we couldn't let
this go, we had to try to do something."
Over
the next four years, the Nicholsons said their efforts to halt the
logging escalated from writing letters and submissions and lobbying
politicians to hosting hundreds of protesters and being at the
coalface of the fight.
"We
found there were many other young people who had just moved to the
area and they also were appalled at the idea of this beautiful forest
being flattened," Mrs Nicholson said.
"So
we quite quickly got into a group that was going to fight it, and
that was the start of years and years of battle."
'Not
so peaceful' protest say loggers
While
the demonstrators' intentions were "non-violent, peaceful
protest", not everybody held to that ideal.
Death
threats were made and received by each side.
Even
though Hurfords Hardwood had nothing to do with the Terania logging
operation, the family's South Lismore mill was burnt to the ground.
The
company who held the licence for the coupe at Terania Creek was the
Standard Sawmilling Company from Murwillumbah.
John
Macgregor-Skinner, the production manager at the time, said the toll
from protests put an "astronomical" strain on his workers
and family.
"We
had tractors sabotaged, people threatened [with] chainsaws, trees
spiked, bridges sabotaged and the like," he said.
"From
a personal perspective, we received telephone calls to say that my
wife was going to get raped, they knew where the kids were going to
school and they weren't going to come home tomorrow.
PHOTO:
Loggers say protesters sabotaged equipment during the Terania Creek
protest. (Supplied: David Kemp)
"That
happened on several occasions to the point that we had police
protection and I had a direct line to the police inspector.
"Nothing
did eventuate, but by gee you don't know."
Mr
Macgregor-Skinner said the protest also had a detrimental impact on
jobs on the NSW north coast.
"Terania
Creek was only a very, very small part of our operations," he
said.
"But
what eventuated out of Terania Creek closed down the mill."
Mr
Macgregor-Skinner estimates 600 jobs were lost in the region when
Neville Wran, then New South Wales premier, made the historic
'rainforest decision' in October 1982, removing about 100,000
hectares of forest from timber production.
Legacy
of saving the 'big scrub'
Bundjalung
woman Rhoda Roberts was only young when the Terania Creek protests
took place, but she can remember her late father, Pastor Frank
Roberts, talking about the new arrivals who were eager to save the
environment.
She
said at the time traditional owners were living under the Protection
Act.
"We
didn't really have a voice. You've got to remember there were
curfews, they were taking kids.
PHOTO: Rhoda Roberts remembers her father talking about the significance of the Terania Creek protest. (Supplied) |
"People
were very frightened, so to have a group of people who arrived on
country and were determined to love that environment, from our
perspective, was incredibly new."
Ms
Roberts said the big scrub, which includes Terania Creek, is a
'storybook' place where knowledge is exchanged among generations.
"I'm
indebted now because my children and the coming children … when we
travel our territories, we still have a sample of land that we know
has been there since time immemorial," she said.
"I
pay my greatest respects to everyone who was involved in Terania
Creek because you saved country for us, and we are all benefiting
from that.".....
Read the full article with more images here.
Read the full article with more images here.
Labels:
#standup4forests,
Northern Rivers,
NPWS,
people power,
trees
Tuesday 10 September 2019
North Coast Voices going dark on 20 September 2019 as part of GLOBAL #CLIMATE STRIKE
In solidarity with the youth of the world and in consideration of their future and their children's future in a world wracked by the impacts of climate change, North Coast Voices is going dark on 20 September 2019 as part of GLOBAL #CLIMATE STRIKE.
Labels:
climate change,
people power
Saturday 24 August 2019
Wednesday 31 July 2019
One of the reasons regional living is so good is the size and strength of community spirit
The Clarence Independent, 25 July 2019:
Iluka Bowls Club’s president, Ray Flaherty (4th form right, front), Ann and John McLean (centre with white t-shirts), pictured with bowls club directors and members. Image: Contributed
Iluka Bowls Club has offered to provide land for the proposed ambulance station in Iluka.
Estimated to come with a $10million price tag, the NSW Government is currently working on “detailed service planning” and “site acquisitions studies” for the proposed station, Clarence MP Chris Gulaptis said after the NSW budget was released in June.
The bowls club’s general manager, Nicola Donsworth, said the land is located next to the netball court on the corner of Denne and Spenser streets.
“It would be a perfect central location, with two street accesses, next to the helicopter landing area on the sports oval and next to the skate park and, and as we know, the majority of our town’s population is ageing.
“It may be necessary to rezone the land but it might be an offer that the council and state government might find difficult to refuse.
“We are hoping that if this offer is viable it may speed up the process and get this ambulance station established.” Ms Donsworth said the club’s board is in favour of the idea, subject to the club members’ approval.
Ambulance Action Group spearheads, Ann and John McLean, welcomed the offer.
“The need for an ambulance station in Iluka has become more important than ever,” Ms McLean said. “Response times are getting longer.
“There have been many incidents where paramedics have been sent from Grafton and Evans Head, due to there not being an ambulance available in Yamba or Maclean.
“This is often caused because the paramedics are being utilised to transport patients from Maclean to Lismore or the Gold Coast.....
The budget papers list the ambulance station as commencing “prior to March 2023”.
Tuesday 4 June 2019
US Court Blocks Trump's Border Wall As Court Case Proceeds
It would appear that two years and four months after Donald Trump was sworn in as President of the United States of America a healthy resistance against his heavy-handed autocratic tendencies is still alive and well........
“The position
that when Congress declines the Executive’s request to appropriate funds, the
Executive nonetheless may simply find a way to spend those funds “without
Congress” does not square with fundamental separation of powers principles
dating back to the earliest days of our Republic." [Judge
Haywood S. Gilliam, US District Court Northern District of California, Sierra Club et al v Donald J. Trump et al, 24
May2019]
American
Civil Liberties Union (ACLU),
25 May 2019:
From the beginning of
his campaign for president, Donald Trump claimed that he was going to build a
wall along the southern border. He said “nobody
builds walls better than me.” He said the wall would be “big”
and “beautiful.” He said someone
elsewould pay for it. And he said it would be built so fast that “your head would
spin.”
Last night, for the first time, a federal judge made clear to President Trump he couldn’t get his wall by illegally diverting taxpayer money.
The judge’s ruling comes in an ACLU lawsuit on behalf of the Sierra Club and the Southern Border Communities Coalition (SBCC). Together, the Sierra Club and SBCC represent the communities who live in, protect, and treasure the lands and communities along our southern border. For years, these communities have engaged in the democratic process and successfully persuaded their congressional representatives to deny President Trump funding to build his wall.
Our lawsuit centers on the question of whether the president abused his power to divert funds for a border wall Congress denied him. Unfortunately for President Trump, the Constitution is clear on the matter: only Congress has the power to decide how taxpayer funds are spent. And Congress, like border communities, said no to the President’s wall.
Congress didn’t bow to Trump’s pressure even after he caused the longest government shutdown in U.S. history over his demands for billions of dollars for his wall. Congress allocated only a fraction of the money that Trump demanded, and imposed restrictions on where and how quickly any border barriers could be built.
In a blatant abuse of power meant to circumvent Congress, President Trump declared a national emergency on February 15, 2019, and announced he would illegally divert $6.7 billion from military construction and other accounts for the border wall project.
From the beginning, the emergency was obviously a sham. Trump said as much himself when he declared the emergency, saying he “didn’t need to do this” but he’d prefer to build the wall “much faster.” He added that he declared a national emergency because he was “not happy” that Congress “skimped” on the wall by denying him the billions he demanded.
Despite this, the Trump administration tried to argue in court last Friday that Congress never actually “denied” President Trump the billions of dollars he is now trying to take from the military. The court rejected the administration’s argument, reminding the administration that “the reality is that Congress was presented with—and declined to grant—a $5.7 billion request for border barrier construction.”
The court’s ruling blocks the sections of wall that the Trump administration announced would be built with military pay and pension funds. It also invites us to ask the court to block additional projects as they are announced in the future. The judge emphasized the government’s commitment to inform the court immediately about future decisions to build.
It may be easy to ridicule President Trump’s desperation for a border wall — an absurd and xenophobic campaign promise for which he has only himself to blame. But as pointless and wasteful as it may be, Trump’s campaign promise now threatens to cause irreparable and real damage to our constitutional checks and balances, the rule of law, border communities, and the environment.
The wall is part of an exclusionary agenda that President Trump has targeted, over and over, at people of color. From his notorious Muslim Ban, to his efforts to eliminate protections for immigrants from Haiti, Sudan, Nicaragua, and El Salvador, courts have found“evidence that President Trump harbors an animus against non-white, non-European” immigrants. Trump has repeatedly justified his wall by lying about border communities, falsely claiming that America needs a wall.
Border communities know firsthand that walls are dangerous and wasteful. They divide neighborhoods, worsen dangerous flooding, destroy lands and wildlife, and waste resources. As our clients explained to the court, “we are a community that is safe, that supports migrants, that works well together and supports one another, that is worthy of existence.” What border communities truly need is infrastructure and investment, not militarization and isolation.
The court’s order is a vindication of border communities’ advocacy for themselves, and of our Constitution’s separation of powers. As the court wrote, “Congress’s ‘absolute’ control over federal expenditures—even when that control may frustrate the desires of the Executive Branch regarding initiatives it views as important—is not a bug in our constitutional system. It is a feature of that system, and an essential one.”
Labels:
ACLU,
Donald Trump,
law,
people power,
US politics
Thursday 9 May 2019
Friday 26 April 2019
"Stop Adani" convoy gets good reception as it passes through the NSW Northern Rivers region
Supporters at Ferry Park, Maclean, on Pacific Highway heading north Photo: The Daily Examiner online |
The Daily Examiner, 22 April 2019, p.4:
Protesters came out in
support of the anti-Adani convoy as it made its way through the Clarence Valley
yesterday.
Up to 180 cars, many of
them electric, decorated in “Stop Adani” paraphernalia made their way along the
Pacific Highway as part of a two-week campaign, organised by conservationist
Bob Brown, to stop the proposed Carmichael coal mine.
Karen von Ahlefeldt said
many in the convoy stopped for a chat and were “boosted” by the show of
support.
“A lot of people
standing there wished they could be on the convoy, this was a good chance for
them to be part of it,” Ms von Ahlefeldt said.
Clarence Valley
Councillor and Greens party member Greg Clancy stood at South Grafton waving on
the cars as they made their way north.
“Politicians are not
listening, and some of the public don’t understand,” Cr Clancy said.
“They think it is jobs,
we need coal, but we don’t, we are phasing it out. Coal is not the future, it
is the past.”
He said it was
unthinkable to “dig up more of the Galilee Basin” and the proposed coal mine
would be “contributing to climate change”.
Cr Clancy said movements
such as the convoy were important steps to making change.
“Bob Brown has said this
is going to be another Franklin River issue,” he said.
“People are not going to
stand by. There will be protests, there will be arrests, it will be big.”
“You just have to look
at how many vehicles have gone past today to know it’s going to be big.”
Mr Clancy called on
politicians to commit to oppose the Queensland mine ahead of the federal
election next month.
Listen up @billshortenmp and @ScottMorrisonMP - we’re heading headfirst for climate catastrophe. @BobBrownFndn leads the #stopadaniconvoy up to Galilee Basin. Here we are at #mullumbimby for the 2nd rally of the day, with an incredible turnout. #auspol pic.twitter.com/fYDwOSDHZZ— Ellen Kirkwood (@Nelled) April 21, 2019
Friday 12 April 2019
Is NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian intending "to make it a priority to finish off effective protection of the natural environment – something started years ago under the Coalition State Government"?
On Thursday 4 April 2019 the local Knitting Nannas held a protest knit-in outside the electoral office of NSW Nationals MP for Clarence, Chris Gulaptis.
Below is the text of their letter to Mr. Gulaptis dated the same day.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Knitting Nannas Against
Gas
Grafton Loop
c/- PO Box 763
Grafton 2460
knaggrafton@gmail.com
4th April 2019
C O P Y
Mr C Gulaptis MP
Member for Clarence
11 Prince Street
GRAFTON NSW 2460
Dear Mr Gulaptis
Dissolving of Office of Environment and
Heritage
The Grafton Nannas are very concerned about
your Government’s recently announced intention of doing away with the Office of
Environment and Heritage as an independent entity.
We have long been worried about the
Government’s lack of concern about protecting the natural environment for
current and future generations of humans as well as for other life forms.
Government policies over recent years have
been seen by many in our community and elsewhere as being a de facto war on the
natural environment.
For example:
- Changes to vegetation laws which have led to a large increase in clearing of habitat which is important to the survival of native flora and fauna. This weakening of the former laws is also likely to lead to increased topsoil loss and general land degradation.
- Changes to logging regulations which threaten the sustainability of native forests which belong to the people of NSW – and not to logging interests. These changes include limiting pre-logging fauna surveys, an inevitable increase in clear-felling, and reduction in the width of buffer zones along streams.
- Failure to protect the health of rivers, particularly those in the Murray-Darling Basin. For years the NSW Government, as well as the Federal Government, has been pandering to the irrigation industry while ignoring the need to protect river health by ensuring that flows are adequate for river health. The drought is not an excuse for this folly.
- Other examples include the cutting of funding to the National Parks & Wildlife Service and penny-pinching changes to its structure as well as the failure to ensure that the existing weak environment laws are enforced and appropriate penalties imposed on those who breach them.
We are aware that the Premier recently stated that her Government
would make the environment a priority.
Since hearing that OEH was to lose any of
the limited independence it currently has and is to be pushed into a
mega-Planning Department, we are left wondering about what the premier actually
meant about “priority”. Did she mean
that she intended to make it a priority to finish off effective protection of
the natural environment – something started years ago under the Coalition State
Government? It looks very much like that
to the Nannas.
Yours sincerely
Leonie Blain
On behalf of the Grafton
Nannas
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thursday 11 April 2019
When local people power has a win
The rejection of a $25 million development at Byron Bay’s
Ewingsdale Rd for a 282-lot subdivision was met with thunderous applause.
Villa World’s plan for a controversial development was
unanimously rejected by members of the Northern Joint Regional Planning Panel
at a meeting on Monday.
It was the second DA for the West Byron site to be
refused by the panel, as a $40 million development put forward by West Byron
Landowners Group was rejected earlier this year.
Numerous speakers pleaded with the NRPP on many grounds,
including that they “did not want a Gold Coast” in Byron Bay.
The proposal was refused on 10 grounds including: adverse
impacts to surrounding properties; a significant visual impact and undesirable
impact on the street scape inconsistent with the northern entrance to Byron
Bay; the development was likely to have had adverse impacts on threatened
species and ecosystems; no adequate discharge of storm water and was not considered
in the public’s interest.
Echo
NetDaily, 9
April 2019:
No social or
environmental license
Newly reelected MP
Tamara Smith said this another great win for our community and people power.
‘The thousands of community submissions and actions highlighting the
fundamental flaws in developing this land have successfully culminated in the
NRPP rejecting both subdivision plans – against the odds,’ she said.
‘With the rejection of
both the West Byron subdivision applications by the NRPP the developers should
immediately approach the State government and request that they buy the land
and restore it to the Cumbebin Swamp Reserve.
Ms Smith said there is
no social or environmental license for a subdivision of the swamp land known as
West Byron. ‘So why waste more money on legal battles when the community is
utterly opposed.
‘Restitution is on offer
for the landowners and they should jump at the chance to be made whole and walk
away. They need only look to Condon Hill at Lennox to see decades of iconic
land ownership that has never passed muster to see development on it. Get out
now is my advice.
‘I strongly advise Byron
Shire Council to shelve any idea of a reduced sub-division and instead
respectfully ask them to help me actually deliver what the community wants – No
West Byron Mega-development.”
Justifiable opposition
Former Byron Shire Mayor
Jan Barham also spoke to the panel. She said she wanted to acknowledge the
amazing efforts of the community in their justifiable opposition to the
inappropriate proposals for the West Byron lands.
‘This development fails
on every point,’ she said. ‘From the destruction of biodiversity and the threat
to the local koala population and wallum froglet, the filling of a flood prone
area, likely negative impact on the Belongil Creek and the Cape Byron Marine
Park and further traffic chaos on Ewingsdale Road, that will not be alleviated
by the bypass.
‘I’m confident these
points have been raised in sufficient detail in the submissions to inform a
refusal.’
Ms Barham summed up the
general feeling on the day. ‘The refusal of Villa World by the Planning Panel
alongside the previous West Byron refusal, justifies years of commitment by our
community to protect and preserve our special place, with evidence, passion and
genuine concern for the future,’ she said after the decision was announced.
‘It makes me feel so
proud to be a member of an activist community who knows the value of standing
up for what we believe in and thankfully, this time, the independence of the
process delivered the right outcome.
‘Well done to everyone
who took the time to be involved, no doubt there will be more challenges to
come but the refusals vindicates us and our role as protectors.’
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