Wednesday 9 October 2019
Australian Politics 2018 to 2019: as good an explanation as any
This is an excerpt from a version of the speech delivered by RMIT University Adjunct Professor Barrie Cassidy at the Capitol on 3 October 2019:
Consider this. The Labor Party in Australia has now won a
majority of seats in the House of Representatives, where
governments are made and unmade, a majority just once in
the last 26 years. Once since Paul Keating won the 1993
election. That once was Kevin Rudd in 2007. Julia Gillard
didn’t do it. She won minority government only. And in May
Labor failed again. Not against well-established Liberal Party
heavyweights like John Howard and Peter Costello – but
they lost to a government led by Scott Morrison, a
government that Morrison himself described as ‘The Muppet
Show’. And a government that lost so much talent from its
front bench when so many moderates simply couldn’t go
on any longer.
So why? What happened? What’s going on?
So much of went wrong for Labor is only transparently
obvious after the event. But it’s obvious just the same. First
and foremost, their agenda was too ambitious – too cluttered.
Kevin Rudd won with a single-minded attack on work choices.
Paul Keating with an attack on John Hewson’s Fightback
document, Bob Hawke with a non-specific promise of bringing
Australia together.
Labor this time had a myriad of policy and political approaches.
A combination of poor planning and poor salesmanship led to
hundreds and thousands of people who will never see a
franking credit in their lives, fearing they were about to lose
something. Fearing it to such an extent that, faced with a blunt
choice – franking credits or increased childcare benefits – they
chose the franking credits.
Now franking credits are unsustainable and at some stage
something will have to give; the numbers in just a few short
years from now will be compelling. The cost will grow
exponentially. There will have to be at the very least a trimming
of the benefits.
But having said that, it wasn’t sensible to go so hard right off
the bat at the problem, and it wasn’t sensible to put the policy
out so far ahead of time. It went out in isolation from the upside
– the benefit to community – the revenue … the money that
would then flow to other priorities.
Here’s the evidence for that. The Age and the Sydney Morning
Herald, to their credit, put out these numbers themselves. They
surveyed their own papers and what did they find? The dental
plan that was to be paid for with the franking credits policy –
that got 10 mentions; the cancer funding, virtually free cancer
treatment for older Australians – that got 21 mentions.
Franking credits ... 700.
That’s how big a start that issue – the negative issue – got over
the positive.
Same with negative gearing. It wasn’t just the policy shift – but
what in their minds it represented.
To so many it was an illustration of Labor’s inability to manage
the economy; to threaten economic welfare.
A huge lesson: you can’t take anything away from people
without a very good reason. If it’s hard to explain then it’s easy
to exploit. But more than that, the policies left Labor exposed to
a government campaign built around higher taxes. They built a
fear that taxes would go up across the board, to such an extent
that an internet-led scare campaign around death taxes even
got traction.
In retrospect, Labor would have been better off running a far
narrower campaign built around climate change and wages.
The rest could have waited until after the election. That is not
to say Labor should be forever gun-shy: too timid now to
address long-term budgetary problems that negative gearing
and franking credits represents. They should not be gun-shy.
As I said, those issues will have to be dealt with, by either a
Labor or a coalition government. But more gradually, certainly
initially impacting on fewer people.
But what we are seeing right now is a Labor Party knocked
about by a shock loss and in real danger of overreacting …
ready to abandon so much; a party that now seems hesitant to
take on the government even on some of the bigger issues.
Herein lies the dilemma now for Labor. Research has shown
that at the last election – if that election had just been held in
Victoria, NSW and the ACT – Labor would have won 48 seats
to 37. That’s probably not surprising. But throw in SA,
Tasmania and the NT – a large part of the country – and Labor
still wins 57 seats to 43. Now add the capital cities of Brisbane
and Perth – still Labor by 67 seats to 54. That only leaves the
rural and regional seats of Queensland and WA: but there are
a lot of them. 25 in fact – and 23 of those went to the Coalition.
That put the Coalition comfortably in front.
Now I’m not suggesting in any way that skewers the result. It
doesn’t. The people in those rural areas are Australians too.
Their vote counts in the same way as those in the capital cities.
The point though is this. That demographic carried it for the
Coalition. The rest of the country voted marginally Labor.
So how does Labor deal with that? What do you say to
Queenslanders? I recall 30 years ago saying to Bob Hawke:
I’ve noticed when you’re in WA you remind people that you
were educated there; when you’re in SA you remind them that’s
where you were born; when you’re in Victoria you talk about
your ACTU days; and now as PM you spend most of your time
in NSW. What are you going to say to Queenslanders? And
he said with a twinkle in his eye. I could tell them that’s where
I’ll retire!
But the serious dilemma now for Labor is essentially this.
Do they abandon policies because regional Queensland hates
those policies? Do they appease Pauline Hanson and her ilk?
Do they make compromises simply aimed at winning back a
share of that vote? Do they appease the regions of Queensland
but in the process risk looking and sounding wishywashy in
other parts of Australia?
One answer surely is to be true to yourself. Back yourself to
grow the vote in the rest of Australia; without abandoning
Queensland altogether. Sort out what you stand for and be
resolute behind those values.
Labor lost the last election, sure, but by and large they died
on their feet. If they’re not careful they’ll over analyse and die
on their knees at the next one.
Read the full speech here.
13th Byron Bay International Film Festival, Australia’s independent showcase, 18-27 October 2019
Echo NetDaily, 4 October 2019:
In two weeks time, the Northern Rivers’ biggest movie festival event
will unfold in cinemas screening a massive 125 feature-length and
short films.
The 13th Byron Bay International Film Festival Australia’s
independent showcase for cutting-edge films, documentaries and
VR experiences has announced its official programme selection
for 2019 to screen across 10 days in a diverse set of venues in
Byron Shire and the Tweed.
independent showcase for cutting-edge films, documentaries and
VR experiences has announced its official programme selection
for 2019 to screen across 10 days in a diverse set of venues in
Byron Shire and the Tweed.
Highlights of the event include screenings of The Cave, dramatised
account of the rescue of the team trapped underground in Thailand
last year, a documentary following Freestyle Footballers from all
corners of the world; Gloomy Eyes a VR film narrated by Collin
Farrell; In My Blood It Runs, an up-close study of a gifted,
questioning 10 year old Aboriginal boy, Dujuan Hoosan; A Son of
Man – Oscar nominated for Best Foreign Language film, featuring the real life characters, unscripted and shot purely by drone in the
Amazon jungle; Honeyland, the most awarded film in Sundance;
Out Deh – The Youth of Jamaica portrays the daily struggles of
three young Jamaicans searching for a way to create bright
futures for themselves; Live Baby Live sees iconic band INXS’s
legendary 1991 Wembley Stadium tour restored
account of the rescue of the team trapped underground in Thailand
last year, a documentary following Freestyle Footballers from all
corners of the world; Gloomy Eyes a VR film narrated by Collin
Farrell; In My Blood It Runs, an up-close study of a gifted,
questioning 10 year old Aboriginal boy, Dujuan Hoosan; A Son of
Man – Oscar nominated for Best Foreign Language film, featuring the real life characters, unscripted and shot purely by drone in the
Amazon jungle; Honeyland, the most awarded film in Sundance;
Out Deh – The Youth of Jamaica portrays the daily struggles of
three young Jamaicans searching for a way to create bright
futures for themselves; Live Baby Live sees iconic band INXS’s
legendary 1991 Wembley Stadium tour restored
The festival will feature 22 documentaries, 17 dramatic features,
20 music videos, 78 shorts, 10 films by young Australian
filmmakers and a mind-blowing range of over 15 Virtual Reality
experiences were chosen from more than 1000 films submitted
from all over the world.
20 music videos, 78 shorts, 10 films by young Australian
filmmakers and a mind-blowing range of over 15 Virtual Reality
experiences were chosen from more than 1000 films submitted
from all over the world.
The 13th Byron Bay Film Festival runs from October 18-27 at
the Palace Cinema, the Byron Community Centre, Pighouse
Flicks and venues in Brunswick Heads and Murwillumbah......
the Palace Cinema, the Byron Community Centre, Pighouse
Flicks and venues in Brunswick Heads and Murwillumbah......
Labels:
Byron Bay,
entertainment
Tuesday 8 October 2019
Nationals MP for Page Kevin Hogan avoids questions about Coalition Government-Indue Limited's punitive cashless debit card for welfare recipients
Clarence Valley Independent, 2 October 2019:
The latest federal budget underwrote $128.8 million over four years, from 2019-20, to fund the trial rollout of the Cashless Debit Card (CDC), including the provision of “funding to expand the Cashless Debit Card to a fifth site”.
Test areas are located in the Ceduna region in South Australia (from March 2016) and the East Kimberley (from April 2016) and Goldfields (from March 2018) regions in Western Australia.
In January this year, a trial commenced in the Bundaberg / Hervey Bay region in Queensland – the Clarence Valley local government area is statistically much the same as Hervey Bay’s, according to the 2016 census, apart from the valley being home to a larger indigenous population.
“This proposal is expected to have a positive impact on regional Australia by reducing alcohol consumption, illegal drug use, and gambling in communities and providing improved technology for participants subject to welfare quarantining,” the Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Cities and Regional Development website states.
Another Clarence Valley publication recently ran a headline with Page MP Kevin Hogan reportedly saying the implantation of the cashless welfare card is a “no brainer” an described his position as an “impassioned defence” of the CDC.
With the possible rollout of another trial area and the similarity of Clarence Valley LGA’s census data to the Hervey Bay area, the Independent sought Mr Hogan’s thoughts, preparing several questions (with context provided) and putting them in an email, along with an invitation to speak directly about the issue, which Mr Hogan declined.....
Read the full article here.
Australian Home Affairs Minister calls for welfare payments to be stopped for climate change protesters
The six-person protest in Creek Street, Brisbane Image: Daily Mail |
According
to an interview with 2GB radio shock jock Ray Hadley, Australian
Minister for Home Affairs & Liberal MP for Dickson Peter Dutton is not happy with six
climate change protesters belonging to Extinction Rebellion
blocking Creek Street, Brisbane, for one hour and forty minutes on
Wednesday 2 October 2019.
He also took exception to the fact that the magistrate they appeared before
did not record convictions after all six entered guilty pleas.
Of
course in the end Dutton sheeted home the blame for this incident to
Queensland Labor governments appointing magistrates
who were too tolerant
of civil disobedience – just
as he did in 2016
after Magistrate Trevor Morgan said he would probably be proud if it
were his daughter taking part in protest action.
It seems Dutton hasn’t forgotten those protesters who climbed on his electoral office roof in 2016.
It seems Dutton hasn’t forgotten those protesters who climbed on his electoral office roof in 2016.
The New Daily, 3 October 2019:
Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton has called for climate change protesters to be “named and shamed”, jailed and have their welfare payments stopped.
Warning protesters in Queensland are “putting lives at risk”, Mr Dutton said the fines are not good enough after the activist group Extinction Rebellion caused traffic chaos in Brisbane.
“The community expectation is that these people are fined or jailed and they should be jailed until their behaviour changes because they are putting lives at risks. They are diverting police and emergency service resources from tasks they should be undertaking otherwise,” Mr Dutton said.
Speaking on radio 2GB, Mr Dutton was then asked by host Ray Hadley if the protesters should have their welfare payments stopped because they are “bludgers sticking themselves to roads”.
“Well, I agree, Ray,” he said…..
Mr Dutton urged people to surveil the protesters and distribute their images.
“People should take these names and the photos of these people and distribute them as far and wide as they can, so that we shame these people,” Mr Dutton said.
“They are acting outside of the law. Let their families know what you think of their behaviour.”
“They keep turning up week after week because a slap on the wrist is just not working.”
Mr Dutton also called for mandatory sentencing of protesters disrupting traffic and shutting down cities…..
“But you know raiding farms, climbing on to the roof of my electoral office and then get told by the magistrate he would be proud of her if it his daughter had done it.
The Saturday Paper, 4 October 2019:
A number of Liberal National Party MPs have supported Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton’s call to strip welfare payments from climate protesters and jail them. Employment Minister Michaelia Cash told The Australian ($): “Taxpayers should not be expected to subsidise the protests of others.” Other supporters include ($) Scott Buchholz, the assistant minister for road safety. Their backing comes after Dutton agreed with the 2GB radio host Ray Hadley that welfare payments of climate protesters should be cut and added: “they should be jailed until their behaviour changes”. The Greens leader, Richard Di Natale, told the ABC that Dutton was starting to “sound more like a dictator than he is an elected politician. Because somebody says something that he doesn’t like, that he doesn’t support, he’s saying we’re going to strip away income support.” Some activists have taken leave from their jobs to protest against government inaction on climate change. The Morrison government is also seeking to require Newstart recipients who fail drug tests to use cashless welfare cards.
Monday 7 October 2019
Centre-based childcare costs have risen in NSW Northern Rivers region in 2019
According to the federal Dept. of Education's Child Care in Australia report for March quarter 2019, a total of 1,940 Clarence Valley children were enrolled in either centre-based child care, family day care or after school care in the March Quarter 2019. This is a decease in total enrolments on the December 2018 quarter figures.
A further 7,280 children were enrolled in the Richmond Valley region and 4,390 in Tweed Valley. These figures represent an modest increase in enrolments for both Richmond and Tweed valleys.
The average centre-based child care fee per hour in the Clarence Valley was $9.13 (up 11.9% on March 2018), in the Richmond Valley coastal region $9.19 (up 6.3%) and in the hinterland $8.89 (up 6.2%), while the Tweed Valley per hour charge was $9.01 (up 9.5%).
The official fee cap for centre-based childcare is $11.77 per hour and the national average out of school hours care fee is $9.95.
Out of school hours care fees were not recorded for the Clarence Valley as less than 5 children were recorded, but these fees went down in Richmond Valley coast and hinterland as well as in Tweed Valley by -3.9%, -0.3% and -4.6% respectively.
Remembering that Clarence Valley local government area population at the 2016 national census contained over 8,000 children 14 years of age & under and in the December quarter 2018 report there were 1,990 children enrolled in childcare, I find it rather strange that Nationals MP for Page Kevin Hogan blames the recent price rise on "increased demand" for services when valley enrolment numbers were down by 50 children in January to March 2019.
Labels:
childcare,
cost of living,
Northern Rivers
Groundwater plays a critical role for rivers worldwide and many aquifers are in trouble
National Geographic, 2 October 2019:
There’s more fresh water hidden below Earth’s surface in underground aquifers than any other source besides the ice sheets. That groundwater plays a critical role for rivers worldwide, from the San Pedro to the Ganges, keeping them running even when droughts bring their waters low.
But in recent decades humans have pumped trillions of gallons out of those underground reservoirs. The result, says research published Wednesday in Nature, is a “slow desiccation” of thousands of river ecosystems worldwide. Already, somewhere between 15 and 21 percent of watersheds that experience groundwater extraction have slipped past a critical ecological threshold, the authors say—and by 2050, that number could skyrocket to somewhere between 40 and 79 percent.
That means hundreds of rivers and streams around the world would become so water-stressed that their flora and fauna would hit a danger point, says Inge de Graaf, the lead author of the study and a hydrologist at the University of Freiburg.
“We can really consider this ecological effect like a ticking time bomb,” she says. “If we pump the groundwater now, we don’t see the impacts until like 10 years further or even longer. So what we do right now will impact our environment for many years to come.”
Groundwater holds up modern life
The last undammed river in the U.S. Southwest, the San Pedro of southwestern Arizona, used to gush and roil. Birds chirped and splashed on its banks when they stopped by on their migrations. Rare fish swam in its pools.
But in the 1940s, wells started to pop up in the nearby area, sucking clean, cool water out of the region’s underground aquifers.
It turned out that a good portion of the water that flowed through the river came not from rain and upstream snowmelt, but from those underground sources. The more water that got pumped out of the aquifers, the less flowed into the river—and the wetlands, cottonwood stands, fauna, and rushing waters of the San Pedro all suffered.
Groundwater is the hidden scaffold propping up much of modern life. Globally, about 40 percent of the food we grow is watered with liquid extracted from below Earth’s surface.
But many of the aquifers from which this water is extracted took hundreds, or even tens of thousands of years to fill: The water inside may have percolated through cracks in the earth when giant ice sheets last covered New York City 20 thousand years ago.
Much of that water is being removed much faster than it can be replenished. That has enormous potential consequences for people who want to drink water grow and crops in areas that don’t get enough rain. But far before those impacts emerge, the effects will—and in fact already have—hit rivers, streams, and the habitats around them.
“Think of an aquifer like a bathtub full of water and sand,” explains Eloise Kendy, a freshwater scientist at the Nature Conservancy. Then, imagine running your finger lightly through the top of the sand, creating a little trail. That little trail fills up with water that percolates through the sand into the “stream.”
“If you pump out just a little bit of water out of the bathtub, that stream is going to dry out, even though there’s plenty of water still left in the bathtub,” she says. "But as far as healthy rivers go, you’ve destroyed it. But because rivers don’t scream and shout, we don’t necessarily know that they’re in trouble.”
Read the full article here.
Labels:
#WaterIsLife,
food security,
water,
water security
Sunday 6 October 2019
Grafton experienced more hot days in past 30 years
Grafton's average monthly rainfall 1959 to 2018:
Grafton's average water balance after the evaporation rate is accounted for:
Graphs from http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/climate-guides/
It should be noted that longterm averages are a crude measurement tool and do not always reflect conditions experienced in specific years.
NSW Norther Rivers "cult' back in the news again
The Daily Examiner, 3 October 2019, p.8:
Almost $600,000 was clawed back from the charity founded by a Northern Rivers “cult” leader after the Australia Taxation Office found it was not entitled to receive tax deductible gifts.
Universal Medicine founder Serge Benhayon, who a Supreme Court jury found was “the leader of a socially harmful cult”, founded the College of Universal Medicine (CoUM) in August 2011.
Mr Benhayon started his “esoteric healing” business in 1999 after what he claims was an “energetic impress”.
Mr Benhayon sued blogger Esther Rockett for defamation but the jury ruled against him, finding most imputations made against him to be “substantially true”.....
ABC News, 13 September 2019:
A Brisbane multi-millionaire who
donated $300,000 to a charity associated with a group later found in
court to be a "exploitative cult" has said he gave the
money freely as a reward for treating his chronic pain.
But
software business owner Stephen Ninnes got his cash back, after an
Australian Tax Office (ATO) crackdown forced the College of Universal
Medicine (COUM) to relinquish almost $600,000 in donations.
The
COUM promotes the teachings of Universal Medicine's (UM)
multi-millionaire founder Serge Benhayon — a former bankrupt tennis
coach who claims to be Leonardo Da Vinci reincarnated.
Mr
Ninnes said in hindsight, after damning findings by a New South Wales
Supreme Court jury last year in a defamation case brought by Mr
Benhayon, "without any shadow of a doubt, I would have nothing
to do with it".
The
COUM remains a registered charity, despite being stripped of
tax-deductable gift registration by the ATO, which found it was not
operating a "college" for tax purposes…..
In his
failed Supreme Court defamation claim against anti-cult activist
Esther Rockett, Mr Benhayon gave evidence that UM followers had given
$269,525 towards paying the mortgage.
The court
heard UM was a $2 million-a-year business for Mr Benhayon, who had
accumulated other multi-million-dollar properties and paid wages to
his entire extended family.
It heard
Mr Benhayon flies business class for annual retreats in Vietnam and
twice-yearly vacations on a British country estate…..
The
jury found Mr Benhayon was a "charlatan" who "swindles
cancer patients",
was "engaged in a healing fraud that harms people" and was
"sexually manipulative of his cult followers".
It also
found Mr Benhayon had "an indecent interest in girls as young as
10 whom he causes to stay at his house unaccompanied"…..
Documents
filed in the defamation case detail the tax office action against
COUM, which took $581,775 in donations for its "school building
fund" between 2011 and 2015.
But then
an ATO investigation found COUM was "not operating a school"
because the courses it offered, such as "Being a woman in the
world today", did not qualify as "knowledge-based teaching"
for tax purposes.
It noted
that COUM was fundraising to renovate a building to the "potential
capital benefit" of its owner, Mr Benhayon, who would also earn
$80,000 a year in rent.
Although
there was no indication money was misspent, the ATO found most of the
donations to the building fund were not maintained separately to
COUM's money, meaning it could potentially use the cash "for
other purposes" and "the safeguard of public money is
threatened".
In
February 2015, the ATO retrospectively stripped COUM's deductible
gift recipient (DGR) status and COUM returned $563,282 to donors in
October 2015…..
The
Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC) continues
to endorse COUM as a registered charity.
An
ACNC spokesman said it could not comment on individual charities but
"all registered charities must remain not-for-profit [and] have
solely charitable purposes".
"The
ACNC takes all concerns seriously and will investigate where there is
evidence that a charity has failed to comply with its obligations,"
he said.
Lismore
MP Janelle Saffin denounced UM in NSW Parliament last month and
called for a judicial inquiry into its "infiltration" of
government departments.
"It
is a cult that has caused the separation of families, is a wealthy
commercial enterprise … and has targeted those who speak out,"
Ms Saffin said.
"Those
who have escaped its clutches, or had their loved ones snared in its
web of commerce and bizarre beliefs, have told me of its practices
and harm."
UM
devotees include medical practitioners, academics, child protection
workers, and a police officer.
Saturday 5 October 2019
Lower Clarence experienced two prolonged blackouts within three days
Twice within three days the Yamba area was plunged into prolonged darkness.
The second blackout on Tuesday 1 October 2019 was caused by a pivotal substation malfunctioning and catching fire.
This left 6,500 people without lights or power and local businesses had to close their doors from around 6pm under about 10pm when Essential Energy restored power.
The exception on both occasions was Yamba Bowling Club (the designated bushfire/flood emergency gathering point) as it has a generator.
Media reports state that The Bowlo was packed last Sunday after Yamba homes went dark, as sports fans piled in to watch Australia take on Wales in the Rugby World Cup.
Unfortunately other businesses suffered in these blackouts, with one hotel reporting a loss of $19,800 in expected revenue.
Labels:
electricity,
Yamba
Friday 4 October 2019
And the climate change denying madness continues in New South Wales
All
those political donations to the Liberal and National parties seem to
be paying off for the Minerals Council of Australia –
$28,800 in 2015-16, $50,645 in 2016-17, $88,700 in 2017-18.
Cheap
at twice the price if this comes to pass…….
The
Guardian, 2
October 2019:
The
New South Wales government is considering legislation that could
limit the ability for planning authorities to rule out coalmines
projects based on the climate change impact of emissions from the
coal once it is burned.
It
comes after a campaign from the NSW Minerals Council over decisions
that have referenced the impact of “scope 3 greenhouse gas
emissions” as a reason for either rejecting a mining project
entirely or for imposing conditions on it.
For
a coalmine, scope 3 greenhouse gas emissions are from the burning of
the coal after it is sold into the market, including overseas.
The
planning minister, Rob Stokes, said it was “not appropriate for
state governments to impose conditions about emissions policies in
other countries”.
He
said the government was looking at a range of options, including
legislation or a new guideline for how planning authorities should
factor scope 3 greenhouse gas emissions into the assessment process.
The
recent decisions include the NSW land and environment court’s
rejection of the Rocky Hill coalmine in February, which cited the
impact the mine would have on climate change, including through the
burning of coal in other countries, at a time when “a rapid and
deep decrease” in global emissions was urgently needed.
In
August, the NSW Independent Planning Commission approved the expanded
United Wambo coal project near Singleton but as a condition said the
coal could only be exported to countries that have ratified the Paris
agreement.
In
September the commission rejected the development of a greenfield
coalmine in NSW’s Bylong Valley, citing the impact the mine would
have on groundwater, agricultural land and on climate change.
The
NSW Minerals Council has since launched attack ads that target the
planning system for “failing the people of NSW”.
In
a statement last week, the council’s chief executive Stephen
Galilee said the decision to launch a campaign came after months of
“warnings to the minister for planning and others in the government
about the risk of the planning system to jobs and investment”.
He
said the situation had reached “crisis point” with the Bylong
Valley decision.
Stokes
said the Minerals Council was one of the stakeholders the government
was consulting in its development of a policy on scope 3 emissions.
“We
are working with key stakeholders, including the federal government,
NSW Minerals Council and consent authorities, to develop a clear
policy direction as quickly as possible to provide certainty to the
community, industry and investors,” he said.
“We
are looking at a range of options including legislation.”
The
consent authorities in this instance include the NSW land and
environment court.
But
environment groups are warning the government not to bow to pressure
from the mining industry. Lock the Gate said the impact of downstream
greenhouse gas emissions “is arguably the most complicated, severe
and lasting environmental impact of NSW’ export coalmines”.
Lock
the Gate coordinator George Woods said the public should also have a
say in how planning decisions address the climate consequences of
coal developments and that should be done through a public hearing
process run by the independent planning commission.
“It’s
disappointing and frankly dangerous for the planning minister to
narrowly consult only with the mining industry on a matter of
profound importance like this,” she said.
“The
mining industry has flexed its political muscle but the government
really needs to address the bigger issue and the public sentiment on
this.”
Elaine
Johnson, the principal lawyer with the Environmental Defenders Office
of NSW, which represented Groundswell Gloucester in the Rocky Hill
case, said if the government was planning changes to the way planning
authorities consider scope 3 emissions, the consultation for that
should be broad and include other key stakeholders such as community
and environment groups.
“The
land and environment court, in the Rocky Hill decision, has confirmed
that it is entirely appropriate for decision-makers to impose
conditions on projects that will contribute to dangerous climate
change in a planning context,” Johnson said.
She
said that was recognised by the independent planning commission in
the United Wambo and Bylong Valley assessments.
“We
would also say that in 2019 we are making planning decisions in a
context which includes advice from the world’s best scientists that
we’re approaching a climate emergency,” she said.
“If
global emissions continue to rise and if serious action is not taken
at all levels of government, by communities and business, the impacts
of dangerous climate change will be catastrophic.”...... [my yellow highlighting]
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