The Sydney Morning Herald 13 May 2015:
Friday 15 May 2015
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott is not the Minister For Women - he is the Minister for Violent Men
Destroy the Joint tally as of 12 May 2015
After cutting $30 million from affordable housing and crisis housing services in late 2014, only extending the National Partnership Agreement on Homelessness which helps fund domestic violence refuges for another two years, then calling the rate of violence against women an "epidemic" in March 2015, the self-appointed federal Minister for Women Tony Abbott cannot be surprised at these reactions to his paltry effort in the 2015-16 Budget.
The Sydney Morning Herald 13 May 2015:
The Sydney Morning Herald 13 May 2015:
A partially-funded awareness campaign was the only domestic violence measure announced in the federal budget, leaving frontline workers aghast at critical funding gaps.
Not one out of nine crucial funding areas identified by family violence experts in a pre-budget report was filled, said Renee Carr, executive director of Fair Agenda, a community organisation that consulted a dozen experts to determine what budget funding was required to address the issue.
The only announcement was a $30 million awareness campaign, to which the federal government offered $16.7 million.
Crisis and counselling hotlines, men's behaviour programs, community legal centres, primary prevention initiatives and services for indigenous or culturally diverse communities were ignored.
Treasurer Joe Hockey said on Wednesday morning that there would be more announcements in the coming weeks but Ms Carr said Tuesday night was a chance for the government to put domestic violence front and centre after recognising that it had become a national epidemic.
"Last night was a test of the government's commitment to dealing with Australia's domestic violence crisis, and it's a test they failed," she said.
"Instead, we heard no new announcements of funding to tackle this issue."
In 2013-4, 423 people were turned away from homelessness agencies every night, many of them women escaping violence. In the same year, 150,000 people were turned away from receiving legal help through community legal centres, Fair Agenda's report said.
Last year, 18,631 phone calls to the national hotline 1800RESPECT went unanswered. Domestic and Family Violence Crisis Lines Australia also expects demand to grow 40 per cent in the next year.
Karen Willis, executive officer of Rape & Domestic Violence Services Australia, which administers 1800RESPECT, said they required an extra $2 million to ensure one in four calls don't go unanswered.....
Analysis of the budget
announcement shows (as at 14 May 2015):
* 1800 RESPECT –
received no additional funding in the budget
* Community legal
centres – had no additional funding provided in the budget; and with cuts in
the funding model in some jurisdictions, and cuts made in the forward estimates
(from mid 2017), NACLC expect turn aways from Community Legal Centres will get
worse.
* Family Violence
Prevention Legal Services – received no additional funding in the budget
* Homelessness –
received the previously announced $230 million to extend the National
Partnership Agreement on Homelessness. This doesn't include indexation which means
a real cut to services of $12.58 million (over the current year and two years
of extension). Services can't meet the increasing demand without sufficient and
fair increases, so we can expect more women will be turned away unless
this is rectified.
* Men’s behavior change
programs – received no new funding
* Primary prevention –
no additional investment in strategies for primary prevention. Unless that
becomes the focus of the still to be defined national awareness campaign.
Regardless, investment is still vastly inadequate.
* Family &
relationship services – it’s unclear if any additional funding has been
provided for these services.
*Services for culturally
and linguistically diverse communities – it’s unclear if any additional funding
has been provided.
AGL Energy Limited a supplier of gas & coal based electricity is behaving badly yet again
AGL Energy Limited (AGL) sells and markets gas and electricity. It owns a number thermal stations, has an operational gas plant in the Camden area and approvals for exploration and production of coal seam gas in the Gloucester district in New South Wales.
On 11 May 2015 Smart Company reported that:
The Australian Energy Regulator has penalised energy retailer AGL for disconnecting customers in hardship or on payment plans, with AGL South Australia and AGL Sales both receiving a $20,000 fine from the regulator.
Energy retailers are prohibited from disconnecting customers under certain circumstances, including when they are participating in a hardship program or a payment plan.
However the Australian Energy Regulator said in a statement this morning, it was notified by AGL of incidents in which nine of the company’s customers were wrongfully disconnected from their electricity supply.
This is not the first time that AGL has been in the news for behaving badly.
A quick Internet search brings up this disturbing timeline:
* August 2003
* September 2004
* July 2005
* August 2006
* May 2008
* May 2011
In May 2011 a large drilling fluid spill occurred at
AGL’s CSG well head at Camden North in NSW during routine maintenance. According to STOP CSG!, AGL failed to
report the incident for two days until the leakage was shown on TV.
* September 2012
* 2012
* March 2013
* May 2013
* July 2013
* December 2013
* December 2014
* January 2015
* April 2015
Labels:
Coal Seam Gas,
consumer choice,
electricity,
gas industry,
safety
Thursday 14 May 2015
The Abbott Government's 2015-16 Budget is like the curate's egg#
"My determination is to ensure that this budget is fair"
[Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott speaking
with 3AW's Neil Mitchell, May 2015]
Only time will tell just how 'fair' this federal budget is. It still contains elements of Tony Abbott's desire to penalise the poor and vulnerable at every opportunity, his determination to avoid funding climate change initiatives or water savings measures where possible and his seeming need to stifle innovation and science.
Here are some of the features of the Abbott Government’s 2015-16 Budget:
* The
government is providing $131.3 million over three years to help the telecommunications industry meet their
initial capital costs of retaining all metadata belonging to phone and internet
accounts held by Australian citizens.
* Income management will continue for another two years in all twelve locations where it currently operates, with possible expansion to four new communities at a cost of $145.8 million and with these scheme trials ending on 30 June 2017. However, the scheme will no longer include Voluntary Incentive Payments and the Matched Savings Payment.
* The government will also spend $2.7 million over three years from 2014-15 to undertake a trial of new welfare debit card arrangements in up to three communities, based on the recommendations made in the report Creating Parity — the Forrest Review, with locations to be determined in consultation with key stakeholders.
*Low Income Supplement — cessation. This represents the loss of an annual $300 payment to eligible low-income households.
* Personal Contact Interviews will be removed from the repertoire of activities required of individuals receiving unemployment benefits. However, from 1 July 2016, the Government will extend the ‘no show no pay’ principle to missed appointments and activities like work for the dole, to encourage positive job seeker behaviour and compliance. Job seekers who fail to undertake adequate job search will be subject to income support payment suspension until they demonstrate genuine job search efforts. These job seekers would also no longer be able to have the financial penalty waived by agreeing to undertake a compliance activity.
* Cessation of the Large Family Supplement of Family Tax Benefit Part A. Large families will continue to receive a per child rate of FTB Part A for each eligible child in their family.
* Family Tax Benefit Part A — reduced portability. With some exceptions the amount of time Family Tax Benefit (FTB) Part A will be paid to recipients who are outside Australia will be reduced to 6 weeks in every twelve months they are overseas.
* 1 July 2016 onwards the government is removing all or part of federal paid parental scheme entitlements for to an estimated 79,000 working women expected to take maternity leave. Under federal legislation these women had an expectation of receiving up to $11,500 for maternity leave of 18 weeks duration.
* From 1 January 2017 the government will reduce from 26 weeks to six weeks the period that some recipients of the Age Pension, Wife Pension, Widow B Pension and the Disability Support Pension can be paid their full basic means-tested rate while absent from Australia. After six weeks absence from Australia, pensioners who have lived in Australia for less than 35 years will be paid at a reduced rate proportional to their period of Australian Working Life Residence (AWLR). The AWLR is the period a person has lived in Australia, as a permanent resident, between the age of 16 years and Age Pension age.
* The Government will not proceed with changes to eligibility thresholds for Australian Government payments for the next three years that relate to the Age Pension, Carer Payment, Disability Support Pension, and the Veterans’ Service Pension income test free areas and deeming thresholds over three years from 2016-17. The pension income test free areas and deeming thresholds will continue to be indexed annually by the Consumer Price Index. This means that 170,000 extra pensioners with moderate assets will now receive a full or increased pension. At the same time, the asset test taper rate will increase from $1.50 to $3. This means for every $1,000 of assets over the asset free threshold (eg. $202,000 threshold for a single homeowner age pensioner & 286,500 for home owning age pension couples), the pension rate will reduce by $3 a fortnight. Those who no longer receive a pension will remain eligible for a Commonwealth Seniors Health Card or Health Care Card. The Government has decided not to proceed with the 2014 Budget measure to index pension and pension equivalents by CPI alone.
* The government will pause for a further two years the indexation of 78 programmes under the Administered Programme Indexation Pause measure announced in the 2014-15 Budget. For each programme, the extension of the pause to indexation will apply from 1 July 2017 or 1 July 2018 depending on the original start date of the pause.
All elements of the Indigenous Advancement Strategy do not appear to be resuming indexed funding until 2018-19.
Department of Veterans’ Affairs dental and allied health provider payments will not resume being indexed until 1 July 2018.
* A new single Child Care Subsidy (CCS) will be introduced on 1 July 2017. Families meeting the activity test with annual incomes up to $60,000 (2013-14 dollars) will be eligible for a subsidy of 85 per cent of the actual fee paid, up to an hourly fee cap of $11.55 for long day care, $10.70 for family day care, and $10.10 for outside school hours care. The subsidy will taper to 50 per cent for eligible families with annual incomes of $165,000. The CCS will have no annual cap for families with annual incomes below $180,000. For families with annual incomes of $180,000 and above, the CCS will be capped at $10,000 per child per year.
* Cooperative Research Centres — reduced funding. Lost funding will be $26.8 million over four years from 2015-16.
* Industry grant programmes — reduced funding. Lost funding will be $31.7 million over three years from 2014-15 and will apply to the following programmes; Commercialisation Australia, Enterprise Connect and Industry Innovation Precincts.
* Regional Development Australia Committees — reduced support. This loss of support activity represents $3.6 million over four years.
* Sustainable Rural Water Use and Infrastructure Programme — reduced funding. Loss of $22.7 million in water buyback funding over two years from 2017-18.
* National Low Emissions Coal Initiative — funding adjustment. Funding for the Australian National Low Emissions Coal Research and Development Project will be reduced by a one-off $3.4 million before 30 June 2015.
* The
Government will abolish the Commonwealth
Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Environment Strategic
Advisory Committee, as the function has been reallocated by CSIRO to the
relevant flagship advisory committee. IIF
Investments Pty Ltd, and its assets, have been transferred to the
Department of Industry and Science. IIF Investments was
established as a mechanism to deliver the Government’s capital into the venture
capital funds licensed under Rounds 1 and 2 of the Innovation Investment Fund
(IIF), PreSeed Fund (PSF) and Renewable Energy Equity Fund (REEF) programmes. It
will also dissolve the Bureau of
Resources and Energy Economics (BREE) and the Consumer Advocacy Panel.
* The Government will reduce the company tax rate to 28.5 per cent for companies with aggregated annual turnover less than $2 million. Companies with an aggregated annual turnover of $2 million or above will continue to be subject to the current 30 per cent rate on all their taxable income. Individual taxpayers with business income from an unincorporated business that has an aggregated annual turnover of less than $2 million will be eligible for a small business tax discount of five per cent of the income tax payable on the business income received from an unincorporated small business entity. The discount will be capped at $1,000 per individual for each income year, and delivered as a tax offset.
* Application of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) will be extended to cross border supplies of digital products and services imported by consumers from 1 July 2017.
* Under the new arrangements, increased criminal penalties and a new civil pecuniary penalties regime will be introduced for breaches of the Foreign Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975. A reduced penalty period for foreign investors that have previously breached the foreign investment rules in relation to residential real estate has been provided until 30 November 2015. These investors may avoid prosecution, but will be required to divest the property.
* Stronger Relationships Trial — cessation. Those couples with a $200 pre-marriage relationship counselling subsidy will have these honoured up until 30 June 2015 for couples who registered prior to 9 February 2015.
* Expenses under the broadcasting sub‑function are estimated to decrease by 3.2 per cent in real terms from 2014‑15 to 2015‑16 and by 8.5 per cent in real terms from 2015‑16 through to 2018‑19. Due to these cuts the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS) is reportedly withdrawing from the digital platform FreeView so if viewers wish to see a certain documentary, drama, comedy or current affairs show they will have to view it on their television at the time of broadcast and wait for any televised repeat in the future if they miss doing so.
* The Australia Council arts funding will be
cut by $110 million between 1 July 2015 and 30 June 2019. This arts funding
will be transferred to the Attorney-General’s Department to be distributed at
its direction of the Attorney-General.
Australian
Financial Review 13
May 2015:
While Thursday
marks the 29th anniversary of Paul Keating's famous "banana republic"
warning that ushered in two decades of more disciplined government, more than
$1 out of every $4 created by the economy will be taxed and consumed by
the Abbott government.
According to
a Treasury measure of the "call on
resources", which gauges the tax and borrowings needed to fund
the government, the burden will hit 26.7 per cent in 2015-16 and 2016-17…..
The budget
papers show the measure will remain at more than 26 per cent for at
least four years, until 2018-19. The figure looks better than it seems in
the final year, which is when the federal government plans to cut $80
billion in funding to states.....
Between 1987 and 2013 the size of government breached 26-per cent only once, in 2009-10, when the Labor government's stimulus package led to increased borrowing. It climbed above that level for only the second time in 26 years in 2013-14, which was the Coalition's first budget, and it has remained there since.
# It is said that the term “a curate’s egg” refers to something that is obviously and essentially bad, but is euphemistically described as nonetheless having good features credited with undue redeeming power. It’s origin is thought to be early 20th century from a cartoon in Punch (1895) depicting a meek curate who, given a stale egg at the bishop's table, assures his host that ‘parts of it are excellent’.
Australian Prime Minister and Minister for Women Tony Abbott's double dipping lie is an insult to working women
On Mother’s Day 2015 the Abbott Government announced that it would be removing all or part of federal paid parental scheme payments to an estimated 79,000 working women who take maternity leave from 1 July 2016 onwards.
Under federal legislation these women had an expectation of receiving up to $11,500 for maternity leave of 18 weeks duration.
In the interview with Laurie Oakes the Treasurer Joe Hockey used the word double-dipping to describe the lawful right of working women to access both the federal paid parental leave scheme and that of their employer if there was one in place:
At the moment people can claim parental leave payments from both the government and their employers so they are effectively double dipping. We’re going to stop that. You can’t double dip, you can’t get both parental leave pay from your employer and from taxpayers.
The Double Dipping Lie Was Repeated In The 2015-16 Budget Papers Two Days Later
Removing Double-Dipping from Parental Leave Pay
The Government will achieve savings of $967.7 million over four years by removing the ability for individuals to double dip when applying for the existing Parental Leave Pay (PLP) scheme, from 1 July 2016. Currently individuals are able to access Government assistance in the form of PLP, in addition to any employer-provided parental leave entitlements. The Government will remove the ability for individuals to double dip, by taking payments from both their employer and the Government.
The Truth About The Commonwealth Paid Parental Leave Scheme
This is an extract from the Commonwealth Paid Parental Leave Act 2010:
Division 1A—Object of this Act
(1) The object of this Act is to provide financial support to primary carers (mainly birth mothers) of newborn and newly adopted children, in order to:
(a) allow those carers to take time off work to care for the child after the child’s birth or adoption; and
(b) enhance the health and development of birth mothers and children; and
(c) encourage women to continue to participate in the workforce; and
(d) promote equality between men and women, and the balance between work and family life.
(2) Generally, the financial support is provided only to primary carers who have a regular connection to the workforce.
(3) The financial support provided by this Act is intended to complement and supplement existing entitlements to paid or unpaid leave in connection with the birth or adoption of a child. [my red bolding]
It is noticeable that the main budget decision-makers in 2015, all six members of the federal Expenditure Review Committee, are privileged white males living off the public purse - with one receiving a salary higher than that of the U.S. president and another being a millionaire many times over.
It is also worth noting that this scaling back of the federal paid parental leave scheme was not put to voters at the last general election.
UPDATE
It would seem that despite their attempts to vilify working mothers, Coalition MPs not only voted with the then Labor Government to introduce paid parental leave - some of their wives/partners accessed both the government and their employer's leave schemes.
ABC
News 14 May2015:
Assistant Treasurer Josh
Frydenberg has revealed his wife claimed paid parental leave payments from her
employer and the Government, as Labor steps up its attacks on the Coalition's
plan to stop women benefiting from two schemes.
"We accessed both
schemes as my wife was entitled to and there are many people I'm sure on both
sides of the House who have done that," Mr Frydenberg told Sky News.
Finance Minister Mathias
Cormann, who is also on cabinet's Expenditure Review Committee, has deflected
questions about whether his wife claimed money from two schemes.
Earlier today Senator
Cormann described the Coalition's push to stop women getting two payments as a
"fairness measure" and defended the Government calling it
"double dipping".
But this afternoon,
under questioning from Labor senator Sam Dastyari, Senator Cormann did not deny
his wife received benefits from her employer and the Government PPL scheme.
The
Australian 17
June 2010:
AUSTRALIA has its first
universal paid parental leave scheme, catching up with the rest of the
developed world, after the Coalition voted with the Rudd government to back the
historic legislation.
Can a photograph be any more contrived than this one?
Photo: Andrew Meares
Prime Minister Tony Abbott appearing to 'console' treasurer Joe Hockey during a prearranged and very posed photo shoot promoting 2015-16 budget papers preparation.
Labels:
Abbott Government,
Abbott spin-cycle
Wednesday 13 May 2015
Unsolicited ratbaggery
Residents in the Lower Clarence area have been receiving hand-delivered plain white envelopes addressed "HELLO NEIGHBOURS".
"There's nothing too wrong about that." I hear you say.
Well ... take a look at the contents (2 pages) of the envelope.
Page 1
Page 2
Labels:
say no more!
Small puzzles in the Abbott Government 2015-16 Budget Papers
Budget Measures Budget Paper No. 2 contains a number of small puzzles:
* Treasury estimates it will be raising $1.18 billion between 12 May 2015 and 30 June 2019 from decisions taken but not yet announced. Apparently we can all look forward to budgetary surprises scattered like rose petals across our path during the next four years.
* The nature of the Combatting [sic] multinational tax avoidance — stronger penalties measures is such that a reliable estimate cannot be provided so there are no figures given for any financial year. However, the Abbott Government expects an unquantifiable gain to revenue over the forward estimates period from companies with global revenues of more than $1 billion. It has this expectation even though there is no proposal to make unlawful the billion dollar tax avoidance schemes currently used by large multinationals such as Google, Microsoft, Apple, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto.
* Removing access to the government paid parental leave scheme for pregnant women if their employer has a parental leave scheme is listed as an “expense” to the Australian Government of $1.67 billion between 1 July 2016 and 30 June 2019 and will only achieve “savings” of an est. $967.7 million over the same period. Perhaps a reader can explain that one.
* The Australian Consensus — establishment is listed as an expense but no figure is attached for any financial year. Despite the fact that $4 million over four years commencing in 2014-15 (announced as a grant to the University of Western Australia in April 2015 which it quickly returned to federal government coffers) is mentioned in the text, as is the government commitment to go forward with establishing this centre. Because this budget item was not included in the previous 2014-15 budget and is merely a title in this year’s budget it is a rather a strange little orphan whose inheritance is probably stuffed under the education minister’s mattress.
* Government expenses relating to Managing Biosecurity Risks — expanded surveillance and offshore audit are nfp (not for publication). Apparently cost estimates associated with this scheme are too sensitive for voters’ eyes while government is allegedly still in ongoing consultation with industry.
* Cost of the Home Insulation Program Industry Payment Scheme — establishment is nfp. It would appear that the transparent, equitable and evidence-based process for the assessment of business losses and the making of payments to over 200 businesses promised by the Abbott Government doesn’t extend to providing a budget estimate of the total cost of this scheme which was announced in December 2014 and was to be completed by mid-2015.
* One-off Government Response to the Home Insulation Program Royal Commission — act of grace payments made in 2014-15 are nfp. Again, the total cost is not for voters’ eyes and this item brings the total number of not for publication items to around nine.
Labels:
Federal Budget 2015-16
Who is to blame for Abbott Government 2015-16 Budget?
“The budget belongs to no individual minister, it belongs to all of us but it particularly belongs to all the members of the Expenditure Review Committee.”
CHAIR: Prime Minister Tony Abbott (Liberal Party Leader)
DEPUTY CHAIR: Treasurer Joe Hockey (Liberal Party MP)
MEMBERS:
Deputy Prime Minister Warren Truss (National Party Leader)
Minister for Social Services Scott Morrison (Liberal Party MP)
Minister for Finance Mathias Cormann (Liberal Party MP)
Assistant Treasurer Josh Frydenberg (Liberal Party MP)
Make no mistake, the contents of the Abbott Government 2015-16 Budget Papers are heavily influence by the worldview of Tony Abbott.
He would not have been able to resist the urge to dominate and override his ministers, as his frequent 'captain's picks' demonstrate.
Labels:
Abbott economics,
Abbott Government
The Australian general public overwhelming rejected a national medical records database but the Abbott Government is still insisting on gathering every piece of medical data on citizens that is available
On 10 May 2015 the Australian Minister for Health Sussan Ley freely admitted that two years and ten months after the federal government’s national database of personally controlled health records (PCEHR) opened for business as eHealth less-than one-in-ten Australians have decided to opt-in to this scheme.
Less than one-in-ten appears to indicate that an estimated 18 million adults have decided to not hand over their own medical records and those of their children to a federal government agency.
The Abbott Government’s response, to what can only be seen as an overwhelming rejection by both the general public and GPs, is to insist that all citizens now be mandatorily included in this national database which will allegedly have a new opt-out provision.
The reason given for this move to add every citizen to a re-worked national database is a recommendation contained in an ‘independent’ six-week review of eHealth by a three person panel ordered by then Minister for Health Peter Dutton in November 2013.
This recommendation by Messrs. Royle (Australian Private Hospitals Association), Hambleton (Australian Medical Association) & Walduck (Australia Post) was for an opt-out model to be implemented by 1 January 2015 as there was little meaningful use of the existing opt-in eHealth database.
A brief background of the evolution of this national database on North Coast Voices:
Friday, 17 April 2009 So you want to look through my medical records?
Wednesday, 10 June 2009 Federal Labor and Health Minister Roxon crossing a bridge too far
Thursday, 13 August 2009 Hoyden Laurelhed quite rightly expresses disquiet over Federal Government progression of a national e-health data base
Sunday, 24 January 2010 Australian Health Minister Nicola Roxon is not telling the truth about the Medicare e-card
Thursday, 28 January 2010 e-Health: something's rotten in the State of Kevin
Sunday, 7 March 2010 And these are the people Rudd & Co intend to trust with access to a national database containing all your sensitive personal information?
Monday, 15 March 2010 Who's guarding the guards guarding your personal information?
Wednesday, 9 March 2011 Felling unwell? Take two aspirin and stay away from NSW hospitals
Thursday, 14 April 2011 PCEHR opt-in provision expected to allay privacy concerns. Pull the other one!
Tuesday, 13 December 2011 So you thought the Gillard Government had promised you would control your own e-Health database information?
Tuesday, 7 February 2012 eHealth – when “We told you so” gives no satisfaction
Wednesday, 7 November 2012 e-Health: join at your own risk
Tuesday, 6 May 2014 e-Health PCEHR platform: what is the Abbott Government trying to hide?
Tuesday 12 May 2015
Tony Abbott's latest budget pork pie
Excuse me?
Every single one of these people receiving a part aged pension will continue to do so – it will just not be in the form of cash into their bank accounts.
Under Abbott’s sleight-of-hand the announced changes will lose them the small fortnightly cash transfers some currently receive, but they will all retain the highly financially lucrative seniors health card – a benefit worth thousands of dollars a year to the average retiree.
If you want proof of this just look at the paltry savings the Abbott Government is supposedly garnering from the this measure – a total of est. $177.7 million each year over the next four years.
An estimated 91,000 of those independent retirees (some of them millionaires) who structured their post-retirement assets, tax-free superannuation lump sums and income streams to allow themselves a regular federal government welfare payment and/or benefit, will lose their Centrelink cash transfer, but retain the right to bulk-billed medical services, heavily subsidised pharmaceuticals, subsidised public transport travel, telephone account concessions and, energy supplements etc via retention of the seniors health card.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott, Treasurer Joe Hockey, Finance Minister Mathias Cormann and the rest of their far-fight rabble must think Australian voters are fools if they expect them to swallow this politically convenient stop-gap measure aimed at neatly sidestepping the need for superannuation tax status reform.
Treasurer Joe Hockey spinning so hard he loses all memory of his own past media releases
It has become increasingly difficult to take this Australian Treasurer seriously.
He treats the economy as his political plaything.
Joe Hockey on Tuesday 4 December 2012
Joe Hockey on Tuesday 5 May 2015
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