Tuesday, 27 September 2011
The Port Paper parent company dissolved by Loughlin, Nardella, Atkins and 'friends'
Sunday, 4 September 2011
A now defunct Port Macquarie newspaper gets caught out in yet another conflict of interest
allegations of push polling do not explain why the newspaper’s owner/s folded their tent so quickly or why there appears to be deliberate obfuscation over the company name.
One has to wonder if they are also connected to the National Party in some manner, as The Port Paper paper often reads like those political campaign leaflets or MP newsletters not uncommonly found in NSW North Coast letter boxes.
At least one of the newspaper's advertisers (also quoted in a prominent anti-Oakeshott article) may possibly be one of these shareholders.
Monday, 29 August 2011
Hartsuyker attempts to deceive Parliament
Sunday, 4 December 2011
The Port Paper: a NSW North Coast National Party saga continues
Tuesday, 20 September 2011
Nationals testing the waters in Clarence
Do you remember the name ReachTel? They're the mob The Port Paper (Port Macquarie) commissioned to conduct a poll in the Federal electorate of Lyne in August and then go to town on the local member, Rob Oakeshott.
The Port Paper had a distinct smell about it and after completing a join-the-dots exercise it was not unreasonable to arrive at a conclusion that it looked very much like a front for the Nationals. The Port Paper has since folded, although its website euphemistically says it is "currently undergoing redevelopment".
Today's ReachTel polling in the electorate of Clarence was testing the waters in relation to a number of names.
Respondents were asked to provide their assessment of a number of individuals.
1. Favourable
2. Neutral
3. Unfavourable
4. Unknown
Given that it was all about the by-election to be conducted in Clarence later this year, the list of names included a couple of red herrings.
The names provided (in order) were:
Next question: If a state election was held today, who would you vote for?
Then, the $64 question: If you were forced to make a choice between the following candidates, who would you vote for?
Read more about Stuart George, the son of Thomas George (Nationals MP for Lismore) here.
Stuart George |
Monday, 2 October 2017
Yamba Mega Port Proposal: "This clown just won't take no for an answer"
Saturday, 27 August 2011
Update on the National Party's very friendly Port Macquarie newspaper
Although the paper parades with the banner "Your 100% locally owned and totally independent newspaper" some very elementary investigations reveal that the paper's website is owned and administered by Rob Nardella, who (like the paper's editor Sharon Davidson) has serious form in The Nationals' camp.
Nardella, a former councillor on Port Macquarie Council, is now a policy adviser for NSW Nationals leader Andrew Stoner.
The information Nardella provided when setting up the domain portpaper.com reveals he's not real strong in Australian geography. He located Port Macquarie in the Australian Capital Territory!
PS Stoner has a few problems of his own on his plate. Stoner had a prominent member of the local branch of the National Party fast-track his solar bonus scheme application. Read a report in today's edition of a Sydney newspaper about that scandal here.
Monday, 25 January 2016
Port of Yamba Expansion Deconstructed*: Des Euen is running out of timetable very fast
Somewhere along the line Euan launched another two documents into cyberspace:
Alert readers will notice that the completion date for the industrialization of the Clarence River estuary is given as 2023 - less than seven years away as I write this post.
Even some supporters of the 'New England rail trail project' apparently have their doubts about Mr. Euan and his proposal:
Come early 2015 and another slideshow blipped its way across Clarence Valley radar screens:
http://www.slideshare.net/DesEuen1/the-new-transport-era-yamba-port-rail.
At the time it was rumoured that Gulaptis and Euan were in contact.
I can find no evidence that: he has a commitment to his plan from either the federal or state governments; his company has purchased land on Goodwood Island; anyone entered into dredging or construction contracts relating to any port expansion; he has even begun organizing the many proposed development reports/assessments that would be required.
In January 2016 Mr.Euan himself is somewhat uncharacteristically silent. Perhaps he has been too busy trying to breathe new life into his daydream by cut and pasting mythical new project start and completion dates into the pages of his power point slide collection.
* And yes, I am laughing at Mr. Euen's peculiar theory of port expansion lobbying
Friday, 2 August 2013
Desmond John Thomas Euen wants a sea port
Registrar ID: WAR
Registrar Name: Web Address Registration
Status: ok
Registrant: LYNX BUSINESS SERVICES PTY LTD
Registrant ID: ABN 56146166574
Eligibility Type: Company
Registrant Contact ID: R-006499331-SN
Registrant Contact Name: Des Euen
Registrant Contact Email: Visit whois.ausregistry.com.au for Web based WhoIs
Tech Contact ID: C-001573771-SN
Tech Contact Name: Des Euen
Tech Contact Email: Visit whois.ausregistry.com.au for Web based WhoIs
Name Server: ns1.designandhost.net
Name Server: ns2.designandhost.net
He rather arrogantly asserted to one journalist that; the local indigenous population would be handsomely compensated and provided with jobs.
Wednesday, 2 February 2022
CASH SPLASH: a lesson in how to retain your parliamentary majority between elections
Leslie Williams Liberal MP & former Nationals MP for Port Macquarie since 26 March 2011 IMAGE: Manning River Times, 4 Feb 2015 |
The Saturday Paper, 26 February 2022:
Less than a month after New South Wales Port Macquarie MP Leslie Williams sensationally quit the National Party to join the Liberals, the defector was in direct conversations with then treasurer Dominic Perrottet’s office about a controversial $5 million grant to a private nursing home in her electorate.
The building project – for a new community centre, as part of a wider redevelopment of the St Agnes’ Care and Lifestyle facility in the coastal town that gives the state seat its name – was not part of any NSW government program. It was not on the radar of any official, or recommended by bureaucrats. Senior Treasury officials warned the state government’s powerful expenditure review committee (ERC) that the funding made no sense and should not be supported.
Instead, exactly one week after Leslie Williams forwarded details of the aged-care company’s development application to Perrottet’s ministerial staff, the $5 million grant was approved by the ERC, which was led by Perrottet and then premier Gladys Berejiklian.
The money was not new funding. It had to be found from elsewhere in the Health budget. As the coronavirus pandemic raged, the $5 million was taken from the Department of Health’s general spending budget and handed to St Agnes’ Care and Lifestyle for capital works on land owned by the Roman Catholic Church Diocese of Lismore. At the time, the-aged care operator had $34.7 million “cash on hand” and had received $3.1 million in federal JobKeeper funds.
The funding proposal that went to the ERC was blunt in its assessment of the project. Under the heading “risks, sensitivities and any other issues”, Treasury officials wrote that the grant was “not supported”.
The document prepared for the review committee said: “The proposal provides financial support for the establishment of a private residential aged-care facility. Given funding and regulation of aged care is a matter for the Commonwealth government, and the benefits accrue to the private residents and operator of the facility, the need for government support is unclear.”
As it happens, the decision had already been made. Hours before the ERC meeting actually took place, public servants were given the job of writing a press release for the announcement.
A week later, on October 27, 2020, Berejiklian was in Port Macquarie posing for a ceremonial sod-turning at the development site next to newly minted Liberal MP Leslie Williams. The official press release, now absent from the NSW government directory but still hosted by Williams on her MP website, includes quotes from the then premier and her treasurer.
“Port Macquarie has one of the highest prevalence rates of dementia in NSW and this state-of-the-art facility will offer transformational care for the elderly,” Berejiklian said.
And from Perrottet: “We expect this unique project, which is a NSW first, to create hundreds of jobs in the health, building and construction industries on the mid-North Coast.
What is clear from the time line of events is that the government, with negotiations handled out of the then treasurer’s office, moved quickly to rush through the $5 million in funding. This raised eyebrows internally.
“The aged-care sector is poised to grow substantially in NSW, contributing to jobs growth and the economy but as Covid events have shown us, quality of care is paramount.”
The ERC brief from Treasury did not put a figure on the jobs created, noting only that it was “TBD” or “to be disclosed”.
Williams, naturally, was thrilled. At the time, she said: “The NSW government’s investment will help build the community centre in the village, which houses all the social amenities that make this facility unique.”
St Agnes’ Care and Lifestyle chief executive Adam Spencer remarked that “both Ms Williams and the premier have been very supportive of this project”…..
Thursday, 1 September 2011
Good riddance of bad rubbish
The Port Paper is closing its doors today ... how sad! Not too many tears will be shed over that bit of information.
The paper, which paraded under a banner of so-called independence, has been nothing but a mouth piece for local National Party stooges.
Sunday, 17 May 2015
Desmond John Euen is still hunting the Snark*
Saturday, 23 August 2008
Business Council of Australia in 2008: Irresponsiblity Unlimited
Ever since we set up our first crude commercial efforts at Botany Bay in the late 1700s, business big and small has been producing consumable goods and services laced with a good measure of pollution.
In 2008 this peak body still wants business to get a free ride to continue polluting with greenhouse gases.
BCA President Greig Gailey today launched the BCA paper, Modelling Success: Designing an ETS that Works, incorporating research from Port Jackson Partners Limited (PJPL) examining the impacts of the proposed emissions trading scheme on 14 businesses across a range of sectors including minerals processing, manufacturing, oil refining, coal mining and sugar milling.
Mr Gailey said: “In releasing its Green Paper the government has invited input into the final design of its Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme (CPRS). The BCA fully supports adopting a comprehensive emissions trading scheme as the best way to reduce emissions, but getting the design detail right is critical”.
“The Green Paper puts Australia on a path to addressing climate change challenges through a partnership between business, government and the community. But the scheme must send the right signals to businesses,” he said.
The "right signals" Mr. Gailey speaks of are apparently for government to essentially change nothing, except for a bit of window dressing which would allow business to be 'paid' for doing nothing and fully pass on the supposed cost of this inaction to the consumer.
I'm predicting that the Business Council of Australia will suddenly discover the vital necessity of a nuclear power industry to ensure that they can all point to something which would allow, by misdirection, their 'big bag of nothing' to continue.
The 'study': Modelling Success: Designing an ETS that Works
Tip - page 3 starts the real laughs coming.