Thursday 14 April 2016
With rates of domestic violence & sexual assault higher than the NSW average, the Northern Rivers region remains a target for federal funding cuts
The geographic area of the Northern NSW Local Health District extends from the Tweed Local Government Area (LGA) on the Queensland/NSW border in the north to the Clarence Valley LGA in the south, the Great Dividing Range in the west and the Pacific Ocean coastline in the east. The Northern NSW LHD covers a geographic region of 21,470 square kilometres with a total population in 2011 of 288,241 persons and is made up of seven LGAs and one smaller State Suburb (SSC). [Northern NSW LHD, Fact Sheet 1, July 2015]
This health district population was projected to reach over 300,000 in 2016.
One of the health issues it deals with is domestic and family violence, as do the local courts.
Between October 2014 to September 2015 in NSW the rate of domestic assault incidents per 100,000 head of population was 398.7.
For the corresponding period in the Northern NSW LHD the domestic assault rate was:
Richmond Valley Local Government Area – 550.6
Lismore Local Government Area – 478.8
Clarence Valley Local Government Area – 426.5
Tweed Local Government Area – 401.7
Kyogle Local Government Area – 399.0
Byron Local Government Area – 313.3
Ballina Local Government Area – 246.3
All but two local government areas were above the state average – four were significantly higher.
Five out of seven of these local government areas also exceeded the NSW rate for sexual offence incidents – Richmond Valley, Lismore, Clarence Valley, Byron and Ballina.
Yet this region remains a target for Abbott-Turnbull Government cuts to services used by victims of domestic violence and sexual assault.
The Northern Star reported on 8 April 2016:
SHADOW Attorney General Mark Dreyfus and Labor candidate for Page Janelle have backed the Northern Rivers Community Legal Centre's plea to have funding cuts to programs aimed at preventing domestic violence reversed.
They said the Federal Government had announced a third, or $30 million, of commonwealth funding would be cut to the 39 Community Legal Centres around the state as well as the scrapping of $100,000 per year in funding to the Lismore centre, introduced by Mr Dreyfus in 2013.
Mr Dreyfus said the cuts could mean the end of the Lismore-based centre's outreach service in Casino, as well as the possible closure of the Tweed office and the loss of a specialised family violence solicitor.
Northern Rivers Community Legal Centre acting centre manager Fia Norton said it was the biggest challenge in the centre's 20-year history.
"They're (the cuts) going to affect the most vulnerable people in our community," she said……
Ms Saffin said she was concerned the federal funding cuts would impact complimentary services to the State Government's Safer Pathways domestic violence program, a service NRCLS was selected to coordinate in Tweed in 2015.
"Last year the Northern Rivers CLC was selected by the NSW Government as one of five sites to roll out the Safer Pathways reforms for Domestic Violence, an integrated response service to prevent domestic violence deaths and serious injury to women and children," she said.
"But how will the program be impacted when cuts come into effect next year?.....
The cuts are set to come into effect in mid-2017.
May is likely to be an interesting month in 2016
All around the world directors, shareholders, beneficial owners, mob bosses, drug lords, gun runners and owners of stolen art hiding within shell companies in low tax jurisdictions will be marking their calendars…..
AFR Weekend, 8 April 2016:
The ICIJ, which has said it will not provide data to regulators, plans to release the names of more than 200,000 Mossack Fonseca companies, trusts and foundations in May, including names of directors, shareholders and beneficial owners.
Tax authorities can use this data to seek further documents under tax treaties with many jurisdictions....
Labels:
corruption,
taxation
Wednesday 13 April 2016
America begins to imagine Trump as US president
The Boston Globe, 9 April 2016:
The GOP must stop Trump
DONALD J. TRUMP’S VISION for the future of our nation is as deeply disturbing as it is profoundly un-American.
It is easy to find historical antecedents. The rise of demagogic strongmen is an all too common phenomenon on our small planet. And what marks each of those dark episodes is a failure to fathom where a leader’s vision leads, to carry rhetoric to its logical conclusion. The satirical front page of this section attempts to do just that, to envision what America looks like with Trump in the White House.
It is an exercise in taking a man at his word. And his vision of America promises to be as appalling in real life as it is in black and white on the page. It is a vision that demands an active and engaged opposition. It requires an opposition as focused on denying Trump the White House as the candidate is flippant and reckless about securing it…..
That’s
not a pretty picture. But then nothing about the billionaire real estate
developer’s quest for the nation’s highest office has been pretty. He winks and
nods at political violence at his rallies. He says he wants to “open up” libel
laws to punish critics in the news media and calls them “scum.” He promised to
shut out an entire class of immigrants and visitors to the United States on the
sole basis of their religion.
The
toxic mix of violent intimidation, hostility to criticism, and explicit
scapegoating of minorities shows a political movement is taking hold in
America. If Trump were a politician running such a campaign in a foreign
country right now, the US State Department would probably be condemning him.....
Labels:
fascism,
right wing rat bags,
USA
Australian Federal Election 2016: why are taxpayers spending so much on political has-beens?
The Sydney Morning Herald: John Winston Howard
The Liberal Party began to roll-out the aging John Winston Howard OM AC last week as part of its fundraising efforts for the upcoming federal election campaign.
But make no mistake, it’s not just Liberal Party supporters who were paying for that 11,000 guest Docklands party in Melbourne and the exclusive dinner at the Pratt family mansion in Kew the following night – the Australian taxpayer is also likely to have been subbing the former prime minister as he sipped his wine and nibbled on canapés.
Since he lost his seat in the 2007 federal election Howard has milked the public purse for $1.82 million in additional entitlements over and above his very generous parliamentary pension.
That $1.82 million pays for a fully equiped modern office including phone & internet, office consumables, domestic air travel for himself and on occasion a family member and travel in government cars, as well as subsidising the running costs of his own private vehicle1.
Given his obvious sense of entitlement which saw him bill taxpayers over $67,000 in the first half of 2015 (the latest Dept. of Finance entitlement record published) it will come as no surprise to eventually discover his trip from Sydney to Melbourne and return will not be paid by either Howard or the Liberal Party.
Footnote
1.Howard is one of five former prime ministers still receiving these additional entitlements
Tuesday 12 April 2016
One member of the Liberal Party and his historical myopia
Herald Sun: Oliver Walsh in 2014
This was the Herald Sun reporting on Oliver Walsh on 24 March 2016:
AN INDIGENOUS services group head says the Darebin deputy mayor should resign for questioning the genocide of Aborigines.
Deputy mayor Oliver Walsh last week said he was “not totally comfortable” with the inclusion of Aborigines in the city’s monument to Victims of Genocide and Genocidal Acts.
“I still have issues with this,” Cr Walsh said at Monday night’s council meeting. “In many ways I have issues with the Aboriginal part, because technically it is not a recognised genocide.”
Cr Walsh’s comments were labelled “disappointing” and “unbelievable” by Victorian Aboriginal Childcare Agency (VACCA) chief executive Muriel Bamblett.
“I think it’s just really disappointing, I think it’s a step backwards and I hope the people that elect people with these values and principles really think about it, and I think we should call for his resignation,” Ms Bamblett said.
“If he insists that his statement is correct and he stands by them then I think his deputy role and capacity to lead are in question……
Apparently Deputy-Mayor Walsh is of the school of thought which argues that if Australian colonial governments didn’t label their own official policies and actions as genocide at the time, then these cannot be called genocide now.
I’m sure it will come as no surprise to many that this insensitive man is a member of the Liberal Party, was previously electorate officer for Victorian Liberal MP Graham Watt and also employed as campaign manager for Liberal candidate Kyle Dadleh during the 2010 Victorian state election.
It seems those ‘bright young things’ in the Liberal Party just can’t help themselves when it comes to cultivating a social tin ear and historical myopia.
On the Turnbull-Joyce ticket the old Age of Entitlement endures
On Thursday 24 March 2016, in a week in which the House of Representatives was not sitting and on the eve of the Easter long weekend, Nationals MP for New England and Deputy-Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce decided to go to faux election campaigning by helicopter – slugging very weary Australian taxpayers somewhere between $3,836 and $4,166 for the ride (depending on which of his staffers journalists were quoting).
However, despite his protestations otherwise, this was not the first time Joyce had hopped into a helicopter rather than a car since 2013.
However, despite his protestations otherwise, this was not the first time Joyce had hopped into a helicopter rather than a car since 2013.
Ah, yes….on the Turnbull-Joyce ticket the old Age of Entitlement endures.
The Sydney Morning Herald, 7 April 2016:
It was the day before Easter in Drake, a sleepy village in northern NSW, when the peace was interrupted by a helicopter depositing Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce on a sporting field behind the popular local pub, the Lunatic Hotel.
Drake is just a 40-minute drive from Mr Joyce's second electorate office in Tenterfield but his office insists a helicopter was the best option to avoid a four-hour drive from his home base in Tamworth. It was his second chopper ride to the village in less than a year.
After I'm finished I'll have a beer and jump in the chopper and head off to fly over the blueberry farm
The latest Drake visit, which will cost the public almost $4000, happened two days after the Turnbull government released a long-awaited review into parliamentary entitlements sparked by the "choppergate" scandal that engulfed former speaker Bronwyn Bishop and sent Tony Abbott's prime ministership into a final nosedive.
The review called for clear guidelines so the "use of charter transport must constitute value for money, and in particular that, in the absence of compelling reasons, helicopters cannot be chartered to cover short distances".
Mr Joyce, who has been in unofficial election campaign mode since Tony Windsor recently declared his challenge in New England, arrived in Drake on March 24.
During the three-hour visit he launched a Telstra mobile tower - first announced in June 2015 - and visited the school, a local blueberry farm and inspected a bridge in need of an upgrade.
The Age, 8 April 2016:
Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce chartered a helicopter to visit an area less than an hour and a half by road from his ministerial office in Armidale.
The flight to Copeton Dam places a question mark over a key plank of the National leader's defence of his helicopter usage, supported on Friday by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, that choppers were used as an alternative to unreasonably long drives.
The 120 kilometre flight from Armidale to Copeton Dam cost $2211 return.
The most controversial helicopter flight in Australian political history, Bronwyn Bishop's $5000 hop from Melbourne to a Liberal Party fundraiser in Geelong, was just 40 kilometres shorter…..
He took a fourth helicopter trip from Armidale to Legume near the Queensland border in February last year, according to parliamentary records for electorate-related travel.
That flight, to announce a $350,000 road upgrade, cost the public $4737.
Confirmation of four helicopter flights forced Mr Joyce's office on Friday to withdraw its statement to Fairfax Media on Thursday that the two flights to Drake were his only helicopter usage since becoming the MP for New England in 2013.
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