Tuesday 2 April 2013

A weak APPEA* response last night to the ABC Four Corners program on the Australian coal seam gas industry


Australian domestic swimming pools generally hold between 22,000 and 60,000 litres of water,
with the average being between 40,000 and 50,000 litres. [Poolexpress.com.au 2011]

*  APPEA is the Australian Petroleum Production & Explration Association

Taking coal seam gas industry representative Rick Wilkinson’s statement at face value and using the highest domestic swimming pool volume quoted above, then the entire CSG industry in New South Wales generated only 120,000 litres of production/waste water in the fourth quarter of 2012.

That is only 0.12 of a megalitre from 1 September through to 31 December.

If true this is only part of the story, as the State government did not lift its ban on fracking until 1 September and the industry was not meeting 2012 exploration/production schedules by December.

It is also only part of the story because mining companies in this state appear to produce anywhere from 60,000 to 6 million litres of water annually per pilot well. While a production well might generate as much as 20,000 litres of waste water each day or an estimated 1.8 megalitres each quarter if Queensland is any example.

Indeed, at one gas field in the Bowen Basin Santos reported an average initial daily water production rate of 0.20 megalitres per well per day which only declined to two domestic swimming pools worth of waste water per day after twelve years. Coal seam gas well life is predicted to be between 5 and 20 years for each well.

The National Water Commission predicts that the NSW coal seam gas industry may generate approximately 5.7–46.9 gigalitres of co-produced water from production of NSW’s current 2P reserves(2469 PJ) of which 0.697 gigalitres (697 million litres) is expected to be drawn from Clarence-Morton Basin groundwater.

Metgasco Limited currently stores over 20 megalitres of waste water in holding ponds in the Northern Rivers and it is nowhere near commencing commercial gas production in New South Wales. That volume equates with 333 domestic swimming pools.

Of course if Mr. Wilkinson meant Olympic-sized swimming pools then this would have produced as much as 5 megalitres of water over the last three months of 2012, which still does not come anywhere near giving a reliable picture of the industry’s capacity to draw on groundwater reserves in this state if it is allowed to proceed with so little government scrutiny of its plans and commercial operations.

What was so offensive about this and other Wilkinson tweet's last night was not his attempts to wildly spin issues raised by the Four Corners program, but his obvious belief that the general public were so stupid that his spurious 'proofs' would be accepted without demur.

Women In Politics: Let's reach another milestone in the September 2013 Australian Federal Election



Australian Bureau of Statistics, Measures of Australia's Progress, 2010 

The proportion of federal parliamentarians who are women has risen markedly over the past 20 years. On 1 January 1986, one in twenty members of the House of Representatives were women (5%) rising to more than one in four (27%) by the beginning of 2008. Similarly, close to one in five senators were women in 1986 (18%) rising to more than one in three in 2010 (36%) (AEC 2009; Parliament of Australia 2010b).

In the federal government ministry, as at the end of June 2010, there were nine female ministers and parliamentary secretaries (representing 23% of ministers and parliamentary secretaries), including the Prime Minister The Hon Julia Gillard MP and a further three who were Cabinet members. Around 17% of shadow ministerial and parliamentary secretary positions were held by women (Parliament of Australia 2010b).  


When she announced her new ministry last Monday, Julia Gillard made history. For the first time, women make up one-third of the Australian government. Although the cabinet remains unchanged, the promotion of three women into the ministry has radically altered the gender balance of the government.
There are four women, including Gillard, in the 20-member cabinet which in itself is a record (and the numbers were even better before the resignation of Nicola Roxon as attorney-general this year).
But it is the outer ministry where the radical change has occurred. Gillard promoted three women: Sharon Bird, Catherine King and Jan McLucas. This means that six of the 10 members of the ministry are women. That's 60 per cent. That's unprecedented in Australia.

L–R: Penny Wong, Tanya Plibersek, Jenny Macklin, Julia Gillard, Kate Lundy, Kate Ellis, Julie Collins
Australian Prime Minister with some of the federal ministers

Tony Abbott has a case to answer

 
 
The 1977 race for the presidency of the SRC was the first political contest that really mattered to Abbott. He was the great hope of the right. The campaign that winter term was bitter and he lost, heavily, to Barbara Ramjan. Though she was of the left, her work as the SRC’s welfare officer had made her a popular figure across the factions. Her victory was declared on the evening of 28 July in the SRC’s rooms in the basement of the Wentworth building. It was an especially dismal time for Abbott: his defeat came two days after the birth of the child he thought was his son.
A science student was using the cheap photocopier in the SRC foyer when trouble erupted around him. He had many friends in the SRC but was not politically active. Now a professor of biomedical science, he told me: “Suddenly a flying squad of yahoos led by Abbott came down the stairs. Abbott is unmistakable. Everybody knew Tony Abbott. He was all over campus all the time. He walked past me quickly but his gang screamed ‘commie’ and ‘poofter’ and the guy behind him grabbed me by the shoulders and threw me against the wall. I was furious. I picked myself up and immediately followed these thugs down the corridor.”
Ramjan was in the corridor. As Abbott approached, she thought he was coming to offer his congratulations. “But no, that’s not what he wanted. He came up to within an inch of my nose and punched the wall on either side of my head.” She recalls with cold disdain: “It was done to intimidate.”
Two “great logs of guys” were obscuring the science student’s view. “I saw Abbott raise his elbow above his head and his fist was clenched and then he drove his fist down. I did not see a punch land. As I pushed along the corridor, I saw Barbara being helped up very ashen-faced.” He has no doubt who it was. “These two polarising figures on campus were unmistakable and here was Abbott acting as he did all the time. He was a bit of a thug and quite proud of it I think.” He never forgot the incident: “I have been talking about it for a long time.”……

Monday 1 April 2013

A powerful move by Lismore Workers Club


Letter to the Editor in The Northern Star 22 March 2013:

Powerful move
I WANT to congratulate the Lismore Workers Club for its practical commitment to a clean energy future (Power surge at the workers, NS 16/3), with the installation of a 100kw solar energy system.
As the general manager Stephen Bortolin said, this was not only about saving money on energy but lending a hand to the environment.
The Federal Government has a commitment to at least 20% of our electricity coming from renewable sources by 2020.
Here on the North Coast we have a strong history of support for renewable energy, and not surprisingly we have the highest uptake of rooftop solar systems in the country.
It's great to see the Workers Club demonstrating this community and business leadership towards a low-carbon future.
The club will also get a big seal of approval from its patrons for going solar, particularly those committed to renewable energy who have been gathering at the club regularly (and will be there again tomorrow night) for anti-CSG events.
Janelle Saffin MP
Federal Member for Page

Scientists think a 5.7 earthquake was caused by mining wastewater being injected into underground 'compartments'


Population density

Aftershocks 5 -12 November
Click on images to enlarge


Abstract

Significant earthquakes are increasingly occurring within the continental interior of the United States, including five of moment magnitude (Mw) ≥ 5.0 in 2011 alone. Concurrently, the volume of fluid injected into the subsurface related to the production of unconventional resources continues to rise. Here we identify the largest earthquake potentially related to injection, an Mw 5.7 earthquake in November 2011 in Oklahoma. The earthquake was felt in at least 17 states and caused damage in the epicentral region. It occurred in a sequence, with 2 earthquakes of Mw 5.0 and a prolific sequence of aftershocks. We use the aftershocks to illuminate the faults that ruptured in the sequence, and show that the tip of the initial rupture plane is within 200 m of active injection wells and within 1 km of the surface; 30% of early aftershocks occur within the sedimentary section. Subsurface data indicate that fluid was injected into effectively sealed compartments, and we interpret that a net fluid volume increase after 18 yr of injection lowered effective stress on reservoir-bounding faults. Significantly, this case indicates that decades-long lags between the commencement of fluid injection and the onset of induced earthquakes are possible, and modifies our common criteria for fluid-induced events. The progressive rupture of three fault planes in this sequence suggests that stress changes from the initial rupture triggered the successive earthquakes, including one larger than the first.
Received 18 September 2012.
Revision received 23 January 2013.
Accepted 23 January 2013.

Mother Jones March/April 2013:

Such seismic activity isn't normal here. Between 1972 and 2008, the USGS recorded just a few earthquakes a year in Oklahoma. In 2008, there were more than a dozen; nearly 50 occurred in 2009. In 2010, the number exploded to more than 1,000. These so-called "earthquake swarms" are occurring in other places where the ground is not supposed to move. There have been abrupt upticks in both the size and frequency of quakes in Arkansas, Colorado, Ohio, and Texas. Scientists investigating these anomalies are coming to the same conclusion: The quakes are linked to injection wells. Into most of them goes wastewater from hydraulic fracking, while some, as those in Prague, are filled with leftover fluid from dewatering operations.



Sunday 31 March 2013

NDIS forums in Goonellabah and Ballina next Tuesday 2 April 2013



Visit to Page by Amanda Rishworth MP, 
Parliamentary Secretary for Disabilities and Carers

TIME:  9.00AM – 11.30AM, GOONELLABAH

VENUE: Lismore Workers Sports Club, 202 Oliver Avenue, GOONELLABAH

EVENT: Amanda Rishworth MP and Janelle Saffin MP will deliver the first of 2 local public  forums to update the community on the NDIS legislation that has recently passed Parliament.
           
TIME:   1.00pm – 3.00pm, BALLINA

VENUE:  Richmond Room, Regatta Avenue, BALLINA

EVENT: Amanda Rishworth MP and Janelle Saffin MP will deliver the second public forum on the NDIS legislation.

 Media are welcome at both events.                  

Media contact:  Matt Dunne 0417 287 456

Remembering when 2,000 of cartons of beer fell into the Tweed River.....


From MURBAH2484

Hard work pays off 

A few years back a large beer truck lost its load in the Tweed River just outside the main business area of Murwillumbah. The river was, as a result of this accident, full of imported bottles of beer. 

Now the good citizens of Murwillumbah will always help and on this occasion they went out in force to help – themselves – to the booty that lay on the sandy floor of the river. They came in wet suits and with boats. They spent hours under water retrieving the loot and as night fell it was party time in them tha hills. 

On hearing of this major rescue operation the insurance company for the truck wanted the beer back. No chance. Even the local police (allegedly) had a stash in the lock up!

ABC PM program covered The great beer salvage on 17 April 2001.

An Easter Message


Saturday 30 March 2013

My day of reckoning is upon me......

Tomas Young’s letter published in Dangerous Minds 19 March 013:

To: George W. Bush and Dick Cheney
From: Tomas Young

I write this letter on the 10th anniversary of the Iraq War on behalf of my fellow Iraq War veterans. I write this letter on behalf of the 4,488 soldiers and Marines who died in Iraq. I write this letter on behalf of the hundreds of thousands of veterans who have been wounded and on behalf of those whose wounds, physical and psychological, have destroyed their lives. I am one of those gravely wounded. I was paralyzed in an insurgent ambush in 2004 in Sadr City. My life is coming to an end. I am living under hospice care.

I write this letter on behalf of husbands and wives who have lost spouses, on behalf of children who have lost a parent, on behalf of the fathers and mothers who have lost sons and daughters and on behalf of those who care for the many thousands of my fellow veterans who have brain injuries. I write this letter on behalf of those veterans whose trauma and self-revulsion for what they have witnessed, endured and done in Iraq have led to suicide and on behalf of the active-duty soldiers and Marines who commit, on average, a suicide a day. I write this letter on behalf of the some 1 million Iraqi dead and on behalf of the countless Iraqi wounded. I write this letter on behalf of us all—the human detritus your war has left behind, those who will spend their lives in unending pain and grief.

I write this letter, my last letter, to you, Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney. I write not because I think you grasp the terrible human and moral consequences of your lies, manipulation and thirst for wealth and power. I write this letter because, before my own death, I want to make it clear that I, and hundreds of thousands of my fellow veterans, along with millions of my fellow citizens, along with hundreds of millions more in Iraq and the Middle East, know fully who you are and what you have done. You may evade justice but in our eyes you are each guilty of egregious war crimes, of plunder and, finally, of murder, including the murder of thousands of young Americans—my fellow veterans—whose future you stole.

Your positions of authority, your millions of dollars of personal wealth, your public relations consultants, your privilege and your power cannot mask the hollowness of your character. You sent us to fight and die in Iraq after you, Mr. Cheney, dodged the draft in Vietnam, and you, Mr. Bush, went AWOL from your National Guard unit. Your cowardice and selfishness were established decades ago. You were not willing to risk yourselves for our nation but you sent hundreds of thousands of young men and women to be sacrificed in a senseless war with no more thought than it takes to put out the garbage.

I joined the Army two days after the 9/11 attacks. I joined the Army because our country had been attacked. I wanted to strike back at those who had killed some 3,000 of my fellow citizens. I did not join the Army to go to Iraq, a country that had no part in the September 2001 attacks and did not pose a threat to its neighbors, much less to the United States. I did not join the Army to “liberate” Iraqis or to shut down mythical weapons-of-mass-destruction facilities or to implant what you cynically called “democracy” in Baghdad and the Middle East. I did not join the Army to rebuild Iraq, which at the time you told us could be paid for by Iraq’s oil revenues. Instead, this war has cost the United States over $3 trillion. I especially did not join the Army to carry out pre-emptive war. Pre-emptive war is illegal under international law. And as a soldier in Iraq I was, I now know, abetting your idiocy and your crimes. The Iraq War is the largest strategic blunder in U.S. history. It obliterated the balance of power in the Middle East. It installed a corrupt and brutal pro-Iranian government in Baghdad, one cemented in power through the use of torture, death squads and terror. And it has left Iran as the dominant force in the region. On every level—moral, strategic, military and economic—Iraq was a failure. And it was you, Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney, who started this war. It is you who should pay the consequences.

I would not be writing this letter if I had been wounded fighting in Afghanistan against those forces that carried out the attacks of 9/11. Had I been wounded there I would still be miserable because of my physical deterioration and imminent death, but I would at least have the comfort of knowing that my injuries were a consequence of my own decision to defend the country I love. I would not have to lie in my bed, my body filled with painkillers, my life ebbing away, and deal with the fact that hundreds of thousands of human beings, including children, including myself, were sacrificed by you for little more than the greed of oil companies, for your alliance with the oil sheiks in Saudi Arabia, and your insane visions of empire.

I have, like many other disabled veterans, suffered from the inadequate and often inept care provided by the Veterans Administration. I have, like many other disabled veterans, come to realize that our mental and physical wounds are of no interest to you, perhaps of no interest to any politician. We were used. We were betrayed. And we have been abandoned. You, Mr. Bush, make much pretense of being a Christian. But isn’t lying a sin? Isn’t murder a sin? Aren’t theft and selfish ambition sins? I am not a Christian. But I believe in the Christian ideal. I believe that what you do to the least of your brothers you finally do to yourself, to your own soul.

My day of reckoning is upon me. Yours will come. I hope you will be put on trial. But mostly I hope, for your sakes, that you find the moral courage to face what you have done to me and to many, many others who deserved to live. I hope that before your time on earth ends, as mine is now ending, you will find the strength of character to stand before the American public and the world, and in particular the Iraqi people, and beg for forgiveness.

Tomas Young

 

Quote of the Week


“In the end, all that transpired was that a bunch of self-entitled blokes finally cleared out of the cabinet and left Gillard to get on with the job of running the country instead of baby-sitting their egos.” {Corrine Grant How to burst a blood vessel 26th March 2013}

Friday 29 March 2013

If this is what several hundred coal seam gas wells would leave behind in Pilliga, what would Metgasco's 1,000 wells do to the Northern Rivers?


No-one could seriously believe that the O’Farrell Government, in its headlong rush to satisfy the coal seam gas industry, has given any thought to the consequences for north east NSW economies based on agriculture, forestry, fishing and tourism after reading what it is prepared to visit on another region.


Artificial lakes will be dug out of the arid soil of the Pilliga district, in north-western NSW, to hold millions of litres of contaminated water from coal seam gas wells.

Gas company Santos plans to drill several hundred wells in the area. The plastic-lined lakes will store the huge volumes of water that will be sucked up, along with gas, from a kilometre underground.

Construction of the lakes, which will hold enough salty brine to fill about 240 Olympic-sized swimming pools, was approved by the state government this week.

That was despite the NSW Environment Protection Authority writing to government planners in January, warning of the "inherent risk" of approving construction before a complete water management plan had been developed.

The site has been plagued previously by contaminated water spills, which were only made public after local residents tipped off the EPA. Investigations continue into the damage caused by the spills, which took place when the site was being managed by another gas company, Eastern Star, in 2010…….

Santos regards the new water storage scheme as a way to close down and rehabilitate the network of small, polluted ponds which dot sections of the Pilliga Forest as a result of drilling test wells, and to consolidate the waste water in one place.

But it is unclear what will happen to the water once it is in the lakes.

The company says it could be treated for use on farms, or injected back underground to "recharge" aquifers that may have been partially drained by the drilling.

Yet treating the briny water will leave behind mounds of salt, probably laced with traces of arsenic and heavy metals, which have been detected in water from test wells already operating on the site.....

Metgasco’s preliminary plans for Casino in the Northern Rivers in 2012: Metgasco says it needs about 1000 wells to make the money it predicts in a recent economic forecast report.

Abbott's plan for Australia?


First make a train wreck of the Australian Constitution and democratic processes……

But if the Senate proves intransigent, the Government could increase the stakes by including amendments to the Electoral Act as part of a double dissolution trigger.
A parliamentary secretary, Mr Tony Abbott, who is close to the Prime Minister, has weighed into the debate by floating two radical options to curb the power of minor parties.
The first involves expanding the size of the Parliament, making it easier for the main parties to win a majority of Senate seats in each State, thereby diminishing the ability of the minor players to affect the outcome of votes on legislation.
The second option would divide each State into two Senate constituencies, with minor parties having to achieve a much higher quota of votes to get elected.
While conceding there are drawbacks with both, Mr Abbott said the options would give the Government a handy weapon to threaten the Senate if the Upper House refused to acknowledge the Government's election mandate. [The Sydney Morning Herald, 7 August 1996, “Senate voting rethink to curb minor parties”]

Thursday 28 March 2013

This is Gary Gray, Federal Minister for Resources and Energy, Tourism and Small Business



For readers on the east coast unlikely to know more than the name - this is the Hon Gary Gray AO MP the new Federal Minister for Resources and Energy, Tourism and Small Business, former climate change sceptic and former supporter of the Lavoisier Group.

This is what he said about himself before his recent political elevation to the Gillard Cabinet:

Gary arrived in Australia from Yorkshire, England in 1966 and settled with his family in state housing in Whyalla, South Australia.
Gary got his first job after high school in the local BHP steelworks. In 1981, he graduated from the Australian National University, Canberra with a degree in economics.
In 1983 Gary moved to Kwinana, Western Australia to study education at the University of Western Australia.
He began working for the Labor Party in the Northern Territory and then in the United Kingdom. From 1986 to 1992 Gary worked on every state and federal election.
In 1993 Gary was elected as National Secretary of the ALP holding this office until 2000 when he relocated back to Perth with his wife, Deborah and three boys.
On returning to Perth in 2000 Gary was asked by the Chairman of Wesfarmers, to work as the Executive Director of the West Australian Institute for Medical Research.
In 2001 Shell attempted to take over Woodside Energy, Australia’s biggest independent oil and gas company, which has its head office in Perth. Gary was engaged by Woodside as an Adviser in the campaign to keep the company in Australian hands – which succeeded.
Gary was then asked to join the company, becoming the Director of Corporate Affairs and a member of the company executive team. In this position Gary represented Woodside before governments on four continents as a negotiator, advocate and leader. Gary left this exciting position in 2007 to commit full-time to the community of Brand.
Gary’s contribution to Australia’s democratic process was recognized in 2003 when he was invited to accept the high civil award of Officer in the Order of Australia (AO) and an Australia Medal.
In 2007, Gary was appointed Parliamentary Secretary for Regional Development and Northern Australia in the Labor Government. In 2009, he was appointed Parliamentary Secretary for Western and Northern Australia.
At the 2010 Federal election Gary was re-elected as the Federal Member for Brand and later appointed Special Minister of State & Special Minister of State for the Public Service and Integrity.

In 2007 this is what Gary Gray said about uranium mining:


 Wikipedia had this to add about Gary Gray:

Foreign worker EMAs

As a parliamentary secretary in the Gillard Government, Gray chaired a taskforce comprising employment and training agencies, unions and employers to examine ways of dealing with the expected shortage of workers on major resource projects. In July 2010, the National Resources Sector Employment Taskforce put recommendations to the Australian Government, including a proposed enterprise migration agreement (EMA). After consideration by the government, the Minister for Immigration and Citizenship, Chris Bowen and the Minister for Resources and Energy, Martin Ferguson, announced on 25 May 2012, the first EMA for the planned $9.5bn Roy Hill iron ore mine, proposed by businesswoman Gina Rinehart. The announcement said more than 8000 workers would be required for the construction phase and to meet labour demand, the government would allow up to 1715 457 visas for overseas workers for the three-year construction phase….

What he told The Australian in June 2012 about bringing in foreign skilled workers:

without the EMA, "we won't get the next generation of mining and oil and gas facilities constructed on time and on budget".

Quoted in The West Australian in May 2012 on the subject of cash incentives to encourage workers to relocate to WA:

WA Labor frontbencher Gary Gray said there had long been a deep reluctance to head west for work, conceding financial incentives had generally failed to get people to shift.
"For many, the relocation is difficult because of the great distance, the lifestyle change, and the separation from family and friends," he said.
"Today, there is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for all Australians to be part of the amazing economic expansion in the north, where miners are offering the best wages and conditions on new projects."

On the matter of coal seam gas exploration in 2012:

GARY Gray, the federal Special Minister of State, is assessing an application for coal seam gas exploration at Holsworthy Military Reserve.
If approved, it would be the first time seam gas exploration work would take place on military land and could possibly set a precedent for future applications.
A spokeswoman from the Department of Finance and Deregulation confirmed to the Champion an application had been made by AGL.
"AGL has expressed interest in obtaining access to commonwealth owned land located in NSW, including in the Holsworthy area," the spokeswoman said.
"Under the Lands Acquisition Act 1989, all decisions to authorise or to refuse access to Commonwealth land by mineral explorers are made by the Special Minister of State."
An AGL spokeswoman told the Champion consultations had begun for preliminary exploration….

On Sky News PM Agenda, 19 March 2013:

 I'm a strong supporter of the coal seam methane industry, of the shale gas industry, of unconventional gas as we call it.

On the subject of mining generally:

In The Sydney Morning Herald,  25 March 2013

Our resource industry rests on a secure and sound environmental approvals process,
A good approvals process is as essential to a successful mining operation as good engineering and sound banking.

Speaking with Emma Alberici he stated that the mining industry needs bankable approval processes.

Hansard, 17 September 2009 on the subject of his contact with James Hardie:

I rise to discuss a matter recently published in a book called Killer Company by Matt Peacock, a book about James Hardie and about James Hardie’s actions in seeking to deal with asbestos issues. In that book the author records as follows:
Baxter quickly sought advice from Hardie’s other PR consultant, Gavin Anderson and Co, which suggested hiring Stephen Loosley, a former secretary of the New South Wales Labor Party and then consultant with PricewaterhouseCoopers, where he had been joined by the former national secretary of the Labor Party, Gary Gray.
At no time have I ever worked for PricewaterhouseCoopers. At no time have I ever provided advice to James Hardie. At no time have I ever been a paid consultant for PricewaterhouseCoopers. Indeed, this allegation as recorded by the author, Matt Peacock, followed an article in the Sydney Morning Herald five years ago which prompted me to write a letter to the editor which was published in that newspaper. In his article about the James Hardie inquiry, ‘Guns are trained on Hardie’s messenger’, in the Sydney Morning Herald dated 24 September that year, Richard Ackland wrongly asserted that I had been engaged by James Hardie to work for it behind the scenes. The facts are as follows. In 2000 I worked for the West Australian Institute for Medical Research. One of the research projects was on mesothelioma, funded in part and for many years by James Hardie. The research was highly regarded. I approached James Hardie in late 2000 specifically with regard to its funding of this research. During that approach I was asked if I was able to work for James Hardie as a consultant. I said I was not able to work for it but that I might be able to if I accepted a position, which I was at that time considering, as a consultant to the legal firm PricewaterhouseCoopers. As things worked out, I did not work for that legal firm. I did not work for James Hardie and I received no payment from James Hardie, and I did not provide it with any advice. I was not engaged to work behind the scenes, and I said in that letter that if Mr Ackland had checked his facts with me he would have known that to be the case.
Unfortunately, it is the case that Matt Peacock did check the facts with me and I did inform Matt that at no time had I ever worked as a consultant to PricewaterhouseCoopers and at no time had I worked as a consultant to James Hardie. I find the way in which Mr Peacock has recorded this fact pattern to be both bizarre and inaccurate. He could have done better in order to better illustrate his story of the need for adequacy in the funding vehicle which was to be created by James Hardie to fund future actions with regard to victims of asbestosis. I am more than prepared to say to Matt Peacock that his book is a fine piece of work. I have not found any other inaccuracies in it and regard it to be an excellent study of the dynamics and the consequences of Hardie’s actions.

Snake! Snake! Snake!


The Daily Examiner 22 March 2013:

EIGHTY-seven-year-old bingo enthusiast Una Walters responded to the cry of "snake" faster than she could say "house" at South Grafton Ex-Servicemen's club last week.
A red-bellied black snake interrupted the weekly meat raffle on Friday by crawling up a lady's leg.
As the club's secretary manager Col Green panicked and scrambled for a handbag to capture the metre-long intruder, one of his most loyal customers leapt into action.
"I turn around, and here's Una standing there with the snake in one hand," Mr Green said.
"I'm not scared of the bastard!" Una shouted as she held the snake near its head.
It was about 6.45pm last Friday and the meat draw was well under way when someone from a table in the centre of the room yelled: "Snake! Snake! Snake!"
Commotion ensued and people scattered from their chairs as the red-bellied black slithered its way between the feet of scurrying patrons and club staff.
"He (the snake) had crawled up a woman's leg and tried to curl around it," Mr Green said.
"I grabbed a lady's handbag, hoping to get the snake in there so we could send him on his way."
The perpetrator evaded being caught for some time until Una intervened.
"I turn around and here's Una standing there with the snake in one hand," Mr Green said…..

Wednesday 27 March 2013

Former Member for New England and Nationals candidate in the 2013 federal election has home raided by ICAC


The Armidale Express  27 March 2013

The Telegraph online 27 March 2013:

DUMPED nationals candidate Richard Torbay has had his house raided by ICAC, following revelations last week that he had been referred to the corruption watchdog.

UPDATE

The Coffs Coast Advocate 27 March 2013:

FORMER Northern Tablelands MP Richard Torbay was believed to be lying low at a property near Coffs Harbour today as ICAC officers reportedly performed a search of his Armidale home this morning.

Position vacant: appplications to be forwarded to Chris Gulaptis, Member for Clarence


The lads at the table of knowledge at the local watering hole had a rib tickling session yesterday. The main topic on the session's agenda was local MP Chris Gulaptis's bit about who would have the honour of presenting the trophy to the owners of the winner of the 100th Grafton Gallops Cup this year. On Monday Gulaptis told State Parliament the Premier had been invited to present the trophy but the Premier would be otherwise engaged on the day so has had to rsvp with an inability card.

Gulaptis went on to say, "Unfortunately, I cannot see anyone (else) of sufficient standing to present the trophy to the 100th Grafton Cup winner this year."

So, there you have it! No Barry, ... , no one up to his standing, ...

Does that mean the cup will have to be abandoned?

O'Farrell's new coal seam gas policy is an invitation to corruption


In March 2013 the O’Farrell Government placed a draft State Environmental Planning Policy on public exhibition which purports to create exclusion zones wherein coal seam gas exploration and mining cannot take place in future.

However, this draft amendment to the Mining State Environmental Planning Policy allows local councils to grant exemptions to these exclusion zones.

Apparently Premier O’Farrell and his backers have decided to ignore the fact that local government is the most corruptible of all three tiers of government in Australia.

One has only to look at this short list of NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) investigations into councils over the last five years to realise this.

In 2012 ICAC found that twenty-one people employed or formerly employed by fourteen different local government councils had acted corruptly and, that fifteen employees of private sector companies and one employee of a government agency had assisted in these corrupt activities.
Also in 2012 ICAC found that a councillor and a property developer had acted corruptly in 2009 and 2010.
In 2011 ICAC found three employees at three separate councils had acted corruptly.
In 2010 the Commission found an employee and a contractor had acted corruptly at one council, while a job applicant had been found to have offered a bribe at a second council. In that same year another person was found to have acted corruptly when seeking a licensing agreement with a third council.
In 2009 ICAC made corruption findings involving two persons associated with a property development and one council employee and, also found that two person had attempted to bribe council employees at another council.
In 2008 the Commission found ten people had acted corruptly with regard to one particular council, including four sitting councillors and, that this corruption had allegedly involved 139 offences.
In 2007 ICAC made corruption findings involving three councils.

As for any thought that the revamped Division of Local Government (now under the wing of the Dept. of Premier and Cabinet) may curb any future enthusiasm for corrupt behaviour should local councillors and senior managers be given any right to extinguish the possibility of exclusions zones on land wanted by mining companies – on past performance aid from this quarter is highly unlikely. Especially as the Division appears to prefer sending problems brought to its notice back to councils for resolution and, as since April 2012 the pecuniary interest of councillors is no longer a bar to voting on the creation or amendment of a local environmental plan which is a land use planning instrument.

In 2011-12 alone at least 34 per cent of the complaints concerning 125 councils the Division received involved either natural resource management, public land management, land use planning/development or pecuniary interest.

That mining companies may offer bribes as a matter of course in doing business is not a new issue, often misleadingly referring to them as tax deductible facilitation payments or business expenses if they appear on company books at all.

The O’Farrell Government’s desire to shift responsibility for creating lasting exclusion zones back onto local government, with its highly suspect track record, is an act of betrayal of Northern Rivers communities. Nothing more, nothing less.

If Federal Labor retains the Page electorate in September 2013 it will be due to the almost universal respect won by the sitting member Janelle Saffin


Only the most rusted on of Liberal or Nationals supporters dispute the assertion that Labor's Janelle Saffin is a respected and hardworking advocate for her electorate.

This is a typical view.......

UrsulaTunks from Grafton in The Daily Examiner 22 March 2013:

Janelle has always been a Kevin Rudd supporter, since this government was first elected. She didn't commit political suicide she simply displayed her integrity and remained loyal. Janelle isn't interested in 'politics' per say, Janelle’s primary interest is our electorate. I'm not a Labor voter, nor a member of the Labor party. However when it comes to Members of Parliament Janelle will go down in history as one of the best, hardest working members in the history of Federal Government.

Just how many unfortunate nicknames can one bloke have?


 LUKE AQUINAS FOLEY MLC giving evidence before ICAC last Tuesday morning and revealing to the world knowledge of obscure nicknames:
“Well, one of Ian Macdonald’s nicknames was bestowed by Bob Carr that he was Della’s pet crocodile, another nickname was that he was Obeid’s left testicle.”

Tuesday 26 March 2013

Cansdellgate continues


Northern NSW newspapers, including The Northern Star and The Daily Examiner, are carrying reports about the latest 'happening' associated with disgraced former Member for Clarence Steve Cansdell.

Smith won't pressure DPP to charge MP Steve Cansdell 

Attorney-General Greg Smith has told NSW Parliament he will not call on the Director of Public Prosecutions to pursue criminal charges against disgraced Clarence MP Steve Cansdell until "otherwise advised".
Despite lying about not being behind the wheel of his car when it was snapped by a speed camera in 2005, the former police secretary escaped criminal punishment when the staffer he claimed was driving refused to make a statement.
The Government's handling of the investigation has been subject to debate since retired QC Bruce James suggested in February that Mr Cansdell could still have been prosecuted for lying under oath.
He questioned whether the DPP had properly investigated the charges that could have been laid.
Earlier this month Mr Smith told parliament Mr James's concerns were a matter for the DPP.
But in a letter sent to shadow Attorney-General Paul Lynch last week, the DPP advised that Mr James's recommendations must be referred by Mr Smith's office.
Yesterday, Mr Lynch again asked Mr Smith if he would use his power to ask the DPP to consider the senior barrister's advice.
Mr Smith said while he had "great respect" for Mr James, he was willing to "stand by" other well-respected lawyers who did not agree with the advice until "otherwise advised".
Mr Lynch he would not give up, the questions raised must be pursued and instead of "sitting on his hands", Mr Smith needed to ensure the DPP "has another look".
Mr Cansdell quit shortly after the 2011 election following revelations he had told police his staffer Kath Palmer was driving at the time of the offence to avoid being stripped of his licence.

Source: The Northern Star and The Daily Examiner.

Have you accepted The Out Of Order Coke Challenge?

'Sticking it to Coke' for suing the Northern Territory over their 'cash for cans' scheme and standing up for our wildlife!

Abbott the hypocrite par excellence



A yet to be Leader of the Opposition Tony Abbott writing to BA Santamaria when he was considering entering politics and Santamaria was advising him to join the Liberals:

To join either existing party involves holding ones nose.

The Liberal Pary is without soul, direction or inspiring leadership.

Abbott during Question Time on 21 March 2013:

I have seen enough of good people on both sides of this chamber to have some respect for the Labor Party…..

Abbott in an Address to the Victoria Liberal Party State Council on 28 April 2012:

And we, my fellow Liberals, are fundamentally a party of values and of principles.

Tony Abbott photograph from Google Images