Monday, 14 November 2011

A win on the board for Labor's Peter Ellem and local nurses regarding O'Farrell Government's health funding offer


It is highly likely that people in the Clarence Valley would still be waiting and, Grafton Base Hospital still be without sufficient staffing levels to open its new orthopaedic beds in 2011-12 if Labor’s candidate in the 19 November Clarence by-election Peter Ellem (with the help of local nurses) had not managed to make it an election issue.

In The Casino Times online on 24 October 2011:

COUNTRY Labor candidate for the Clarence by-election, Peter Ellem today joined Opposition Leader John Robertson and local nurses to demand State funding for orthopaedic surgery and equipment at Grafton Base Hospital.
"The O'Farrell Stoner Government must fund orthopaedic surgery and equipment to complement the new federally-funded operating theatres at Grafton Base Hospital," Mr Ellem said.
"The Commonwealth-funded theatres are a massive boost for Grafton Base, but the O'Farrell-Stoner Government down in Sydney needs to back this up with State-funded orthopaedic surgery and equipment.
"The National Party has been far too timid in their approach to Grafton Base Hospital – I am demanding the immediate funding of orthopaedic surgery for the hospital."

From a NSW Health Minister media release on 14 November 2011:

The NSW Government has allocated $1.7 million of recurrent funding to support the establishment of an Orthopaedic Surgery Service at Grafton Base Hospital, the Minister for Health and Minister for Medical Research, Jillian Skinner, announced today…..
“This funding will allow additional nursing staff, a physiotherapist and an occupational therapist to be recruited to treat orthopaedic surgery patients,” Mrs Skinner said……
This $1.7 million allocation will complement the redevelopment of the Grafton Base Hospital operating theatres and the establishment of dedicated orthopaedic surgery beds, which have been jointly funded by the Federal and State Governments.

Although, given how the
O'Farrell Government and its candidate Chris Gulaptis fudged their earlier health announcements, one may have to wait and see if this claimed new funding isn't actually Federal Government money being announced by the NSW Coalition as its own.

Historic Casino Post Office has been placed on the Commonwealth Heritage List

Photo of Janelle Saffin MP talking to Postal Service officer, Sherrie McGrath outside Casino Post Office


Page MP Janelle Saffin has welcomed the announcement that the historic Casino Post Office has been placed on the Commonwealth Heritage List.

Ms Saffin said it is wonderful that the Post Office has been recognised for its significant heritage values.

“This heritage listing will mean increased protection for the Casino Post Office.

“From when it was built in 1879, the post office has played a central role in the development of communication services in Casino and the broader Upper Richmond River district.

“Casino Post Office was designed as a modest regional post office, with combined post and telegraph office and residence. The complex was enlarged in 1915 and again in 1975 to accommodate an increased volume of work and a larger residence.

“It is an uncommon and distinctive building and architecturally it is a fine example of hybrid Victorian Italianate and Colonial Regency Revival styles.

“The announcement of Casino Post Office being added to the Commonwealth Heritage List means national recognition for this significant community icon,” Ms Saffin said.

“Casino’s Central Business District already boasts one of the best collections of art deco buildings in Australia and the addition of the Post Office building to the Commonwealth Heritage Listing adds to Casino’s reputation as a town of significant heritage value.

“There is great potential for these local heritage sites to become more of a tourism draw card.

“When I spoke to people in the streets of Casino today about the new listing, they were very pleased with the news, and rightly proud of their town’s historic streetscape,” Ms Saffin said.

Minister for Sustainability, Tony Burke, has announced the inclusion of 43 post offices from around Australia on the Commonwealth Heritage List.   

Janelle Saffin MP for Page, Media Release, 8 November, 2011 

The CSIRO today - sometimes the threat to Australian water and food security is found in unexpected places


The commercially-driven Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Earth Science and Resource Engineering division reveals that ‘fracking’ is now considered mainstream mining technology which it supports:

* Hydraulic fracturing is a core technology in conventional petroleum production and in fast growing areas of unconventional gas, geothermal energy and carbon capture and storage.
It is also a cornerstone of innovative new methods in mining.
The CSIRO hydraulic fracture group combines theoretical development and experimental investigations with application-ready capabilities to provide basic research and novel technologies aligned with the needs of an expanding range of industries.

* Outcomes from our fundamental mechanics studies provide building blocks for a new generation of commercial and research hydraulic fracturing simulators that account for multi-scale processes in hydraulic fracturing and the interaction of hydraulic fractures with natural fractures in the reservoir rock.
We are actively pioneering new applications of hydraulic fracturing to:
·         pre-condition ore bodies for caving-type mining operations
·         enhanced gas drainage from coal seams
·         geothermal reservoir development
·         carbon capture and storage operations.  

The Greens zero in on Hapless Gulaptis


You’ve gotta enjoy the way Gulaptis’ chicken words quickly come home to roost after they fly from his mouth. Here are The Greens taking him to task in his self-appointed role of the defender of mainstream values against those dastardly interest groups in "
We all benefit from the achievements of 'noisy' minorities":

Chris Gulaptis appears to have a problem with 'noisy' minorities.

Some of the achievements of noisy minorities:

• voting rights for women
• the end of child labour in the U.K.
• the end of open slavery
• the protection of the Franklin River
• the end of cigarette advertising in the media

Do you belong to a noisy minority?

If a state election was held today the Nationals would gain 6% of the state's primary vote. The Greens would gain 14%. (Latest Newspoll- The Australian, November 10)

Sunday, 13 November 2011

Families rally for the Nymboida and Clarence Rivers in November 20011

Protest picnic drawing attention to proposed mining
in Nymboida River and Clarence River catchments,
Karangi Dam, Saturday November 12, 2011.
Photographs from Mid North Coast Greens

Nationals Chris Gulaptis continues to align himself with admitted lawbreaker


Some aspiring politicians kiss babies, help little old ladies find a seat and shake the hands of old soldiers.

Not the NSW Nationals' candidate in the Clarence by-election, Chris Gulaptis.

He keeps buddying up to former disgraced MP Steve Cansdell who had to resign his seat because he had been outed for signing a false statuatory declaration in which he lied in order to keep his driver's license after repeat speeding infringements.

The snapshot of Chris and Steve (above) comes from a Gulaptis campaign leaflet being delivered across the Clarence Valley this month.

UPDATE:


He confessed, so why delay the arrest? Could the police be dragging their feet for political reasons, asks the Herald Sun on 13 November 2011.

Clarence By-Election: Remembering that Gulaptis Grand Tanty of 2007 & the Fiji Dictatorship


This letter to the editor in The Daily Examiner last Saturday reminded voters that Chris Gulaptis can throw a spectacular sulk.

Vowed never to return


I'm not sure whether G Dobbin (DE Letters) is a passionate Labor supporter with deep concerns for Peter Ellem's dress sense or a National Party stooge, but whatever it was that prompted his or her letter to the editor they got one thing dead right; Labor still has integrity.

So much so, in fact, that Chris Gulaptis, despite his desperate attempts, couldn't make it onto the Labor membership books and get the ALP pre-selection he thought would lead to a seat in parliament.
What a shame the Nationals, unlike the ALP, can't spot political opportunism when it's staring them in the face.
If they could, we poor voters would have been spared the odious situation of being saddled with a National Party candidate who had the hide to vent his spleen on the people of Grafton, simply because they failed to vote for him at the Federal elections.
And the National Party would not now be stuck with someone they prefer to keep hidden rather than out on the campaign trail.
Chris Gulaptis stormed out of Grafton after his Federal election loss vowing never to return.
What a shame he didn't stick to his promise.

BILL O'DONNELL
Maclean

What the letter didn't mention was the fact that he also ratted out ratepayers because he was still a Clarence Valley councillor with another 10 months on the clock when he lost at the 2007 federal election - months in which he was an absentee representative working overseas for much of the time.
And that after the Australian democratic process chewed him up and spat him out he first worked in a South Pacific dictatorship run by Josaia Voreqe 'Frank' Bainimarama before settling in Queensland. Indeed, Gulaptis said "his work overseas was more of a priority" than Clarence Valley local government.
The Bainimarama totalitarian regime obviously approved the resort he worked on as it still hosts the company's job vacancy advertising.
So while the ordinary people of Fiji were suffering the ongoing effects of a coup which stripped them of democratic rights (and saw people physically intimidated, sexually assaulted, beaten to death, detained, tortured, spied on, deprived of free speech) Gulaptis was helping to bring into being this foreign-owned Fijian island resort for the rich and famous:
"Small plates are the order here, with seven-course meals of smartly proportioned gourmet dishes. The airy, colonial-style Plantation House contains a fine-dining restaurant, a lounge and an impressive wine cellar. (Premium wines can be had at an additional cost, starting at $55 and going as high as $1,280 for a 1995 Château Mouton Rothschild Premier Cru.) At the Seagrass Lounge, the fare is Asian-fusion. The Beach Bar grills a mix of meat, seafood and vegetables; the clifftop Rock Lounge is best for sunsets, cocktails and savory bites; and the Pool Bar offers an addictive tuna carpaccio with French-fried zucchini and wasabi dipping sauce.
Service at Fiji’s better resorts has always been wholehearted, but it has also been famously slow. Not so at Laucala. With a staff of 360 and a guest count below 80, a call for coffee produces a smiling employee carrying a steaming pot in three minutes flat. One recent guest, out for an early round with New Zealand golf pro Tony Christie, came upon a perfectly set table near the fourth hole. Someone had decided they might like breakfast with their game.
Accommodations begin at $3,800
{a night} for two people." Or as Gulaptis likes to brag "ranging from $4000 to $30,000 per night".
This is definitely an 'invitation only' resort.


Update:
Gulaptis admits he missed five meetings from April 2008 to the council elections in September 2008.