Saturday 3 September 2016
Quote of the Month
As one of the 21 candidates in the upcoming local government elections in the Clarence Valley I attended the Maclean meet the candidates night last night with 17 other candidates. The question was asked "If you support the Yamba Mega Port put up your hand?" Not one candidate's hand was raised. End of story. [Dr. Greg Clancy, 26 August 2016]
Friday 2 September 2016
Policy Platforms of Candidates in the Clarence Valley Local Government Elections, Saturday 10 September 2016 - Part Three
North Coast Voices contacted as many Clarence local government election candidates as was possible and issued an invitation to supply their policy positions for our readers.
Here are the third post in this series.
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SUE HUGHES
I have been a Councillor since 2008
and my vision for the next term of Council is for unity and financial
sustainability. I want to see Councillors work together for the betterment of
our community, for the entire Clarence Valley and not just in their own backyard. I have lived in Yamba, Grafton and on the
banks of the Mann River and I currently work in Maclean, Gulmarrad, Lawrence
and all over the Clarence Coast. I believe I am a true representative of the
Clarence Valley. I feel privileged to represent you the ratepayers and
residents and treat my role seriously and with a professional manner and always
with the highest integrity.
Being a Councillor isn’t just about
attending Council Meetings, it’s about working within our community,
representing our community and being a leader in the community. Councillors should be advocates for the
broader community and make decisions based on what the majority of the
community want and not what the minority want.
It’s about keeping the community’s best interests in mind and listening,
engaging and being active with our residents and ratepayers.
During the past term of Council, we
have had to make some very tough decisions around rates and budgets etc. And
our role can be very difficult as we try and balance the expectation from the
community with the financial and budgetary constraints that we are faced
with. It is very much an ongoing
challenge. All the financial indicators demonstrate that Council needs to
increase the level of funding it has committed, to the renewal and maintenance
of its building and infrastructure assets.
I want to continue with the hard work
that has been undertaken in the past term of Council, continue to make those
challenging decisions whilst listening to our community AND finding that
balance I mentioned earlier.
I strongly believe that Council is
heading in the right direction for long term sustainability, we just need to
ensure that those decisions we make have an impact on our long term not just
the short term.
During my term on Council over the
past 8 years I been involved with the following committees, the Saleyards
Committee, the Tourism Advisory Committee, Clarence Roundtable, Clarence Valley
Business Advisory Committee, the Gallery Advisory Committee, the Sports
Marketing Australia Committee, Australia Day Committee and have Chaired the
Environment, Economic and Community Committee of Council.
I may be the least outspoken
Councillor on Council but I sure as heck have the community’s best interest at
heart. I demonstrate this daily by my
involvement with voluntary roles such as President, Yamba Chamber of Commerce,
President, Light up the Darkness (Mental Health Advocacy Group), and I, MC at
events and festivals when invited to do so. I also have volunteered with the
Gallery Foundation for the Grafton Regional Gallery, Art in the Paddock and
Gate to Plate events. In addition I’m an inaugural member of the Surfing the
Coldstream Festival and inaugural member of the CV Business Excellence
Awards. I also created and manage five
different Facebook pages dedicated to promoting our lifestyle and showcasing
our natural beauty around Yamba, Maclean and Lawrence.
I am passionate about the Clarence
Valley, passionate about business and economic growth, passionate about
tourism, arts and culture and I’m passionate about making a difference where I
live.
The next 4-5 years are critical in the
Clarence Valley, with the Pacific Highway upgrade, the Grafton Gaol, the Bridges
and the Blueberry Industry we need to not only take advantage of the economic
boom but put strategies in place for when the projects are completed and there
is a nose dive in activity.
We need to continue to foster existing
businesses and help grow and encourage new businesses to our region and most
importantly keep them here.
Should you vote for me on 10th
September, I promise to continue to work hard and represent you the ratepayers
and residents of the Clarence Valley to the best of my ability, it is indeed a
privilege.
Text and photograph supplied by Sue Hughes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
KEITH BATES
Flyer supplied by Keith Bates
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
URSULA TUNKS
Ursula Tunks
We are facing a dire
financial situation, the new council needs to face this issue head on; with
integrity. If elected I will advocate for the new council team to immediately
contract an independent Auditor to undertake a thorough internal audit of the
Council’s finances. Should that auditor recommend that the new council be
removed and replaced by an administrator I will support this recommendation. My
aim is purely to ensure that the CVC survives the current fiscal crisis without
inflicting the absurd SRV on our community.
Should an auditor find
that the new council can continue operating my priorities are:
Approaching the State
Government for support in rectifying their ill thought out amalgamation process
and establish their liability to our community for the resulting chaos, seeking
their commitment to contributing to the recovery of the CVC to a functional and
viable local government body.
Work with the CVC
Management, as part of the team, to rein in spending and to include all staff
in an urgent analysis of areas where cost savings can be achieved.
Work with the newly
elected council to establish a strategy and subsequent plan to achieve a
positive cultural change in the CVC’s organisational identity. CVC staff and
ratepayers MUST insist on an organisational culture which focuses on the
support of the staff and community and immediately removes the fear and control
management style that has been permitted to flourish without check for the past
few years.
There will be a need to
focus the CVC on the ‘core’ service delivery over the term, an obligation that
it MUST meet. I will advocate for cuts, which will be unpopular, however
popularity isn’t our answer. If we are truly committed as a community to
improving our local government governance and service delivery then we must
brace for a four year period of reigning in spending. To this end I will be
advocating that a process be established to support those groups which may be
subject to funding cuts, to identify new income streams, private and government
funding. My commitment will be to ensuring that where CVC is unable to continue
to support groups that we assist those groups in identifying new support and
funding sources.
My voting preferences
are:
1. Ursula Tunks
2. Ian Saunders
3. Margaret McKenna
4. Brett Tibbett
5. Peta Rogers
6. Andrew Baker
7. Joy de Roos
Text and photograph supplied by Ursula Tunks
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ian Saunders
Ian Saunders
VOTE 1: IAN SAUNDERS
To build a fairer, more equitable, more inclusive and more humane Council that is a part of our community rather than behaving like its ruler.
- ACADEMIC QUALIFICATIONS: Bachelor of Engineering; Master of Engineering Science; Graduate Diploma in Management - electives in Project Management, Contract Law, Public Finance.
- RELEVANT EXPERIENCE: 40 years of professional experience in Australia, Thailand, Indonesia, and The Seychelles including 14 years of Local Government experience with Brisbane City, Logan City and 4 years with The Clarence Valley Council
- EMPLOYER & CLIENT ORGANIZATIONS: Snowy Mountains Engineering Corp., AusAid, World Bank, Asian Development Bank, Queensland Electricity Commission, Water Resources Commission, Queensland Alumina Ltd., Munro Johnson & Assoc (later Parsons Brinkerhoff).
- TASKS FOR THE NEW COUNCIL: Independent internal audit of Council, particularly the Trust funds; Review the role and authority of the GM and HR Manager; Public disclosure of employment contracts for executive staff and amounts paid in out of court non-disclosure agreements; Mandatory project review for all CVC projects that over run budget and completion dates.
Changes to the Local Government Act to
bring it into line with State and Federal governments regarding issues such as
Council meeting procedures and the protocols and conventions observed in
Westminster Democracies; The pre-election "caretaker mode" to prevent
the awarding of contracts like the Tyson St Depot contract, immediately prior
to elections; An immediate moratorium on public assets sales. No SRV, in fact
rates reductions should be possible after a complete overhaul of Council
operational strategies; Finally, a reconstitution and restructure of the
Tourism Advisory Committee and its funding.
I'm not into election time motherhood statements and I’m not trying to be an apologist for the last Council, particular the majority five Councillors who so frustrated the minority four. But trying to do one full time job guarding the chickens from the foxes as well as working another to earn a living is “Mission Impossible”! That said, Root Cause analyses of almost ANY of the issues confronting Clarence Valley Council keep returning the same result: Clarence Valley Council is the product of a hopelessly bungled amalgamation. It’s one thing to merge a bunch of little country Councils into a multi-million dollar public corporation, but to then walk away leaving them floundering under the Legislation designed for the little country shire is reprehensible. The State Government caused the problems and it’s the State Government that needs to sort them out starting with the $127M debt. The Minister will need to bring out the cheque book he used for the recent bout of forced amalgamations; the one that CVC didn’t see in 2004. Successive Ministers sat back in Sydney for 12 years and watched this disaster unfold and they did absolutely nothing! It’s time to “pay the piper”. Then there needs to be a new Local Government Act Mk 2 that will fit the needs of the big amalgamated Councils. We don’t want another 9 elected mushrooms and a despotic CEO with a watering can and a bucket of manure running the entire circus. A skills audit to identify the glaring gap between what we need and what we have now in Councils executive, management and staff, and a strategy to fill that gap would also be helpful. Maybe then, a new debt free Council might have a slightly better than even chance at delivering some stability, economic sustainability, some semblance of a representative democracy, and the prosperous future the Valley people deserve.
Text and photograph supplied by Ian Saunders
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Previous posts in the 2016 Clarence Valley local government election candidate profile series:
ASIO wouldn't be asking for these extensions to its coercive powers if Australian Attorney-General George Brandis hadn't already given the nod
If Labor and the crossbenches agree to this demand then there is little hope left that Australians will have adequate protection under law.
The Sydney Morning Herald, 27 August 2007:
ASIO has proposed scrapping the need for judge-approved warrants to detain and question Australians for up to a week without charge in terrorism investigations, in a watering down of safeguards that has alarmed lawyers and rights advocates.
The power to grant the security agency a controversial "questioning and detention warrant" would rest instead with the Attorney-General – a situation the Law Council of Australia has branded "unprecedented".
The changes being requested by ASIO would also remove a current separate requirement that an independent legal authority, such as a retired judge, is present when a person is being questioned. Rather, oversight of questioning would rest with the intelligence watchdog, the Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security.
Under laws passed in the wake of the September 11 and Bali bombing attacks, ASIO has the power to hold someone for up to seven days and question them if it may "substantially assist the collection of intelligence that is important in relation to a terrorism offence", even if the person isn't a terrorism suspect themselves…..
Currently ASIO needs an "issuing authority" in the form of a serving judge to approve the warrant.
The laws include both "questioning warrants", which make it an offence to refuse to answer ASIO's questions and also "questioning and detention warrants", which allow ASIO to have the Australian Federal Police arrest and hold someone so ASIO can question them…..
Police and intelligence agencies say that terrorism plots in the Islamic State era are increasingly rudimentary and fast-moving, which means processes such as obtaining warrants need to be streamlined as much as possible so authorities can swoop to protect the public.
But the detention warrants have never actually been used in the 11 years they've been in place. Questioning warrants have been used 16 times since 2004, though not since 2009.
The Attorney-General already has the power to approve intelligence-gathering methods such as phone intercepts and surveillance.
But Law Council of Australia director Arthur Moses, SC, who also gave evidence to the inquiry, told Fairfax Media: "We're talking here about persons being detained in custody and deprived of their liberty. That takes it to an entirely different level."
"Western democracies have always taken the position that we do not in effect have a situation where a politician can give that authority … Usually people have the protection of a judicial officer … In my view it's unprecedented.
"We accept and understand that in respect of an evolving security threat environment, sometimes legislation and procedures need to be amended … but we are not aware of any issue that has arisen where ASIO has attempted to obtain a detention warrant and it has not been able to."…..
Labels:
ASIO,
human rights,
law,
right wing rat bags,
Turnbull Government
Australian Census 2016 stumbles on.....
The Australian reports on the desperation of the Australian Bureau of Statistics to achieve the numbers required to legitimize census results, 29 August 2016:
The Australian Bureau of
Statistics’ grand experiment with digital technology has entered a new phase,
asking more than 25,000 census collectors to use their own smartphones and
tablets in a blitz of 3.5 million households that have failed to return their
questionnaires.
In one of the world’s
largest “bring-your-own-technology” enterprises, more than 500 varieties of
smartphone and tablet have been registered to track which homes have been
visited and what hazards collectors should expect when they arrive.
The initiative is part
of an ABS effort to match the 98.3 per cent coverage achieved by the census in
2011 — a target the federal opposition suspects is now out of reach amid public
panic over privacy concerns and website outages in its early stages.
Census chief Duncan
Young said the census field collectors had been equipped with Apple iOS and
Android applications instead of the hefty bound books issued to census
collectors in previous years. Mr Young downplayed the system’s vulnerability to
cyber attack, saying collectors faced strict security hurdles before being
allowed access to the system……
If this exchange is correct in its details then something is seriously wrong with the attitude and actions of the Australian Bureau of Statistics, the Turnbull Government and, with Australian society if it tolerates this behaviour.
Census collectors came to my place last week. They knocked on and then tried to OPEN my door. Another #CensusFail
@_AmyGray_ I came home Sat evening to find a card ON MY DINING TABLE that the census person had left!
@kelloveslife No one had let them in?
@_AmyGray_ no one was home except the dog & cat
@kelloveslife Just to confirm: no one who lives in your home took materials from or let in a census worker?
@_AmyGray_ AFAIK no, there was nobody home all day
@kelloveslife Have you asked the other people in your house? Sorry, just trying to confirm and edge out any potential deniablity from them.
9:21 AM - 26 Aug 2016
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