Friday, 1 February 2013
Yamba's flood experience - guffaw!!!
The lads at the table of knowledge at the local watering hole had great trouble lifting themselves off the floor after hearing about a yarn that's doing the circuit in Yamba about how the local council is going to address the problem of removing the debris from Yamba's beaches.
The yarn might have some truth to it, then again it mightn't. Anyway, the lads have been splitting their sides laughing about it.
According to the local "talk" an individual who holds a reasonably high position at a north coast council was asked how much the clean up would cost. Apparently, the person said it'd be about $250,000.
"How was that figure arrived at?" asked someone.
No one knows for sure, but the "talk" is that the figure was plucked out of thin air. Then again, it might have been extracted from someone's derriere.
Time will tell.
Labels:
Clarence River flood,
Yamba
An armed Japanese Government customs vessel entered Australia's exclusive economic zone without permission on 31 January 2013
ABC
News
February 1, 2013:
The
Federal Government has ordered a Japanese whaling vessel to get out of
Australia's exclusive economic zone.
The
Shonan Maru Number 2 - a Customs vessel which travels with the whaling fleet -
entered the zone off Macquarie Island in the Southern Ocean yesterday
afternoon.
Environment
Minister Tony Burke said he had made it clear to Japan that vessels associated
with the whaling program "are not welcome in in Australia's exclusive
economic zone or territorial sea".
"Our
embassy in Tokyo has conveyed these sentiments directly to the Japanese
government," Mr Burke said in a statement.
Former
Greens leader Bob Brown, now the mission leader of the Sea Shepherd
anti-whaling group, says he believes the vessel has armed Japanese personnel
aboard.
On
February 1 it was reported that the customs vessel was just outside of
Australian territorial waters, but remains in Australia’s economic exclusion
zone close to Macquarie Island, in direct defiance of the objections contained
in the Australian Government’s formal notification to the Japanese Government.
World
Heritage listed Macquarie Island forms part of the State of Tasmania.
The Hon Tony Burke MP
Minister for Sustainability,
Environment, Water, Population and Communities
Media release
31 January 2013
31 January 2013
The Australian Government has
received confirmation that a Japanese whaling support vessel, the Shonan Maru
No 2, has entered our exclusive economic zone near Macquarie Island in the
Southern Ocean.
The Government strongly
objects to whaling vessels passing through Australian territorial seas or our
exclusive economic zone.
Australia has made it clear to
Japan on a number of occasions that vessels associated with its whaling program
are not welcome in Australia's Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) or Territorial
Sea.
The vessel is a non-whaling
support ship which forms part of the fleet accompanying whaling vessels.
Our embassy in Tokyo has
conveyed these sentiments directly to the Japanese government.
Labels:
Australia-Japan relations,
whales
Threat to local Landcare across North Coast region
Local Landcare Network offices across the North Coast of New South Wales may not be here after June this year, unless there is some continuity of state government funding.
The NSW State Government announced major reforms to services for rural landholders late last year and these will have significant impacts on the local Landcare support organisation in towns throughout the region and the Landcare movement across the state.
North Coast Regional Landcare Network, Chair Neville Sloss explains:
"The reforms will mean that all our member networks' main avenue of funding —the Northern Rivers Catchment Management Authority— will disappear. At this stage we understand that there will be no continuation of funding for our community support activities into the next financial year which seriously threatens our continued existence."
"It will mean no Landcare offices, no help for landholders looking for project funding, no natural resource management workshops and field days, no support for Landcare projects and the loss of a host of farming and habitat management information services."
The Government plans for new organisations called 'Local Land Services' (LLS) to administer the merged services currently provided by the CMA, Livestock Health and Pest Authorities (LHPAs) and parts of NSWDPI from January 2014.
"A reference panel is overseeing the set up and structure of the new organisation and it is heartening that the NSW State body Landcare NSW is part of this process at the State level, but there are serious challenges ahead for all our 14 local member organisations, especially in the coming transition period whilst the LLS is being set up," Mr Sloss said.
The Landcare offices with Community Support Officers are in Tweed Heads, Mullumbimby, Old Bonalbo, Kyogle, Tenterfield, Glen Innes, Wollongbar, Grafton, Coffs Harbour, Bellingen, Nambucca Heads, Wauchope, Kempsey, and Armidale.
"Over the years Landcare funding has had a number of crises but none seem to be as clear and present as this one. We will be making representations to our politicians and the relevant ministers in the coming months and asking the community for their support."
North Coast Regional Landcare Network believes:
Local community based groups need certainty and continued funding to employ Landcare staff to support their catchment's landholders from 1 July 2013 during the transition to the new LLS structure
Ongoing financial support for the Landcare community must be part of the LLS structure and this is best delivered by local community networks
"We also hope anyone who cares about Landcare's future will attend a LLS reference panel community consultation session.
Lismore: March 18 1-4 pm, Invercauld House, 161 Invercauld Road, Goonellabah
Coffs Harbour: March 19 9 am-12 pm, Ex-Services club, cnr Pacific Hwy & Vernon St
Scone: April 8 9 am-12 pm, Scone RSL, 71 Guernsey St.
Community Support Officer
Clarence Landcare Inc
24 January 2013
Liberal Party Lies: What is wrong with this graph?
This rather crude graph can be found in the Liberal Party’s Our Plan Real Solutions for all Australians: The direction, values and policy priorities of the next Coalition Government recently released by Leader of the Opposition Tony Abbott.
I draw your attention to the fact that the left hand sidebar indicates the rankings are out of one hundred.
However, the World Economic Forum’s The Global Competitiveness Report 2012–2013 clearly shows that the ranking is out of one hundred and forty-four (up from one hundred and forty-two in 2011-12 and one hundred and thirty-four in 2007-2008):
Australia’s national economy ranks 20th out of 144 countries, with the third lowest ratio among advance economies of Public debt to Gross Domestic Product.
Australia ranks 48th out of 144 countries when it comes to Wastefulness of government spending.
While the nation ranks 96th out of the same 144 countries in the category of Transparency of government policymaking.
Finally, when a ranking for Pay and productivity is calculated Australia is 80th of 144 countries.
No reputable statistician would eliminate 44 countries and still keep the same ranking as does this graph. Nor would they try to merge two separate financial year ranking results in the same graph without adjusting for the 10 country difference.
Therefore this graph may be nothing more than a sly attempt to skew the electorate’s perception of how the country is faring in the lead up to the September 2013 federal election.
Thursday, 31 January 2013
Federal Independent MP Craig Thomson arrested in New South Wales
Man arrested in NSW following fraud investigation by Victoria Police
Thursday, 31 January 2013 01:21:58 PMA man wanted in Victoria on fraud offences has been arrested on the NSW Central Coast by officers from State Crime Command’s Fraud and Cybercrime Squad.
An arrest warrant had been issued for the 48-year-old man by Victorian authorities following investigations into allegations of fraud committed against the Health Services Union.
About 1pm today (Thursday 31 January 2013), detectives attached to Strike Force Carnarvon arrested the man at an address in Tuggerah.
He was taken to Wyong Police Station where he is expected to be charged by virtue of the arrest warrant with a fraud offence.
It is expected he will go before Wyong Local Court where a further 149 fraud charges are to be laid.
It is anticipated that Victorian detectives will apply for the man’s extradition to Victoria.
NSW Police media release 31 January 2013
UPDATE:
It would appear from photographs now displayed in the mainstream media that either NSW or Victorian police alerted journalists and press photographers to the arrest sometime before it was effected.
3.15pm According to Mr. Thomson's solicitor, being interviewed on ABC News, one of the 149 charges is for the purchase of an icecream.
Labels:
law
Australian Federal Election 2013: and now for the really bad news
The really bad news? Mainstream media will be playing the same old games as various news outlets attempt to get their favoured candidate over the line at this year’s federal general election.
A grant from the Australian Research Council allowed Melbourne University Associate Professor and Reader in the School of Social and Political Sciences, Sally Young, to undertake a five year research project studying media reporting of election campaigns using over 10,000 election news reports—mainly from the 2001, 2004 and 2007 federal elections—with some from 2010.
An excerpt from her August 2012 public lecture Media Reporting of the Next Federal Election: What Can We Expect?:
How will the media report the next federal election?
A few caveats to begin. Firstly, I am talking particularly about the mainstream media—especially newspapers (online and printed) and television news. Secondly, even so, it is true that of course not all media are the same, not all outlets are the same and certainly not all individual journalists are the same. There will be variations in how media outlets and journalists report the 2013 election and these are important. And, yet, there will also be some generally occurring patterns and, if my study of previous elections holds true, a lot more similarity in Australian election reporting than we might expect.
There will be an overarching campaign narrative with a well-defined beginning, middle and end. The campaign proper begins with the Prime Minister driving to meet the Governor-General and asking for a dissolution of parliament. TV crews will wait patiently outside Government House to capture the drive through the gates (Sky News excels at this waiting and filling in time) because this is so symbolic and represents the beginning of the campaign. Then, in the middle, are the day-to-day campaign activities, especially of the leaders. These are all building up to the climax of polling day and are usually reported in those terms: ‘what does this mean for the likely result?’ On polling day, the Labor and coalition leaders will be recorded casting their own votes in their respective electorates. This is another highly symbolic moment that will be shown on all of the TV news bulletins on election night. Once the result is known, the winning party leader gives a victory speech and the loser a concession speech; these speeches mark the acceptance of victory and defeat. This is the traditional, obvious and seemingly predetermined election narrative. I would argue that it is not predetermined, does not suffice and causes a particular kind of focus in reporting.
When deciding which topics and individuals are most newsworthy, there will be a striking degree of sameness about mainstream media coverage of the next election. When I mapped the content of TV news clips and front-page newspaper reports across the 41 days of the 2007 election campaign, 95 per cent of the time, the five free-to-air TV news bulletins covered the same topic. Often they used the same visuals, sound bites and sometimes even the same story order as well. On 17 days (41 per cent of the campaign) a story was judged so newsworthy that every major media outlet covered it¾all free-to-air TV news programs and all of the nine newspapers I studied on their front page. For more than three-quarters of the campaign, at least half of the newspapers reported the same topic on their front page. (And even this does not reveal the full extent of homogeneity because I focused on front pages and the election did not always make it on to the front page (especially for tabloids) but was covered inside the newspaper.)
The news agenda will be dominated by the two major parties’ planned events, especially the leaders’ policy announcements, their public statements and visuals of them out campaigning. To look at the content of election news is to see that reporting the day-to-day events of the election campaign, the news agenda is largely the product of the parties’ tightly controlled campaign techniques successfully woven as they are into the narrative that news media outlets use to tell the story of the election. The method of reporting which sees the leaders followed by a bus (or plane) of accompanying journalists is also at the root of this. And this is mostly now junior reporters following while senior reporters watch and report from afar, away from the hermetically sealed bubble. This roadshow is a limited snapshot of the campaign but it is a major focus in news media and the main exceptions outside of the pre-planned, diary-style reporting will be when any gaffes are made by any of the main campaigners (which the media will gratefully seize upon) plus promotion of any media-initiated pseudo-events including opinion polls but also The Great Debateand any media-organised town hall meetings of the type seen in 2010.
The two major parties’ leaders will be the prism through which the campaign story is told. The Labor and coalition leaders will be the only political actors who regularly get to have a say in their own words in most news reports. One or other leader (usually both for the sake of even-handedness) will be quoted (or get a sound bite) in nearly three-quarters of front-page newspaper articles and TV news reports. Their words will shape the news agenda. Their photos will be used to signify what the election is all about. The focus on them will be unrelenting and highly personalised. It will be almost as if the hundreds of other candidates running for office (or the people they represent) do not exist.
In the main, ministers and shadow ministers will be newsworthy when they make gaffes. Backbenchers and new candidates will be largely absent in the most accessed media, only likely to appear in TV news clips when they perform as a human backdrop, nodding away behind their leaders as they visit their electorate.
With the exception of Julia Gillard (a big exception I know), female candidates will be underrepresented in election coverage of all kinds¾not just news but also current affairs, breakfast TV and talkback interviews. If they are included they will generally be seen but rarely be heard. In the 930 election reports I examined across newspapers, TV and radio over three elections, only ten per cent of news stories included a quote from a female politician.
Independents and candidates from minor parties will be similarly excluded. During the three elections of the 2000s, only five per cent of newspaper articles ever quoted any minor party politician or independent, and only four per cent of radio clips and six per cent of TV clips. This marginality is self-perpetuating as the smaller parties then struggle to attract the media coverage they need to win public support.
In other countries, including in the US, there has been an increasing use of ‘experts’ in news coverage including pollsters, political insiders, business leaders, academics, political scientists, union leaders and people from an NGO, lobby group or religious organisation. In Australian election reporting that trend is not nearly so strong. Mostly, it will be journalists calling upon other journalists to comment—although there will also be the usual suspects of party-affiliated spokespeople. And the experts who will be called upon to give their views on the election in 2013 will overwhelmingly be male. Even in 2007, only one per cent of the experts quoted in newspaper reports were women, improving only marginally to eight per cent on TV. If history is a guide, business leaders and other journalists will be the two groups most often quoted as experts in 2013.
The public will be surprisingly absent from media reporting, most often seen as faces in a crowd or a shopping mall or their hands being shaken at campaign events. With the spotlight firmly on the major party leaders, only occasionally will some other actor steal the media limelight and, for a member of the public, the most likely way to achieve this is to fall over in their presence in front of the TV cameras.
It is a clichĂ© but true—the horse race will be the focus. The narrative within the narrative is—‘who’s ahead?’ The proportion of news stories quoting opinion poll results increased by 34 per cent in newspapers and 33 per cent in TV news between 2001 and 2007. Even these quantitative figures do not capture just how much opinion polls permeated news coverage in the 2000s. As Rodney Tiffen has noted, journalists tend to report each new poll ‘with breathless proclamations of its importance’.[2]
Regular opinion polls will be reported in a way that generates a sense of uncertainty and unfolding drama about the election result. News reports will emphasise change rather than stability, reporting on what has changed since the last poll—even if this is small, inconsequential or within the margin of error—rather than what has stayed the same. If 2013 election reporting follows that of the 2000s, opinion polls will be used to create a narrative of a close contest between the major parties—even if there isn’t one—because this is far more interesting than a foregone conclusion. That may be more difficult this time around but not impossible. Even if Labor has been consistently behind in opinion polls for months, nay years, I predict there will still be, in the last few days of the campaign, a titillating sense of a potential comeback, a drawing closer, a narrowing of the gap. To take just a few examples from 2007, on the day before polling day, ABC News reported that the latest polls were suggesting ‘tomorrow’s federal election could be a cliffhanger’ (ABC 7pm News). SBS also reported that it ‘could be a cliffhanger after all’. Channel Nine 6pm News said Howard ‘appears to be in sight of the impossible’ and, in classic horse-race terms, was ‘surging towards the finishing post’.
Compared to the horse-race focus, policy coverage will be minimal. Another clichĂ© but one I found to generally be true of Australian election reporting: policy analysis has declined over time. There is less focus—at least in the front pages and TV news bulletins—on policies, including less discussion of a smaller range of policies and policy areas. If this holds true in 2013 it is also likely that media reports will, as they generally were in the 2000s, be reactive in their coverage of policy issues, reporting on policies once they are announced by the party leaders and then often analysing policies in terms of the horse race (will this help Labor/the Coalition’s chances of winning the election?) rather than providing background or context, or exploring what the policy is actually designed to do, whether it will achieve its goals or how it compares to other policies or to those in place in other countries, for example. The parties have, of course, been partly the cause of this by using campaign strategies that see them adopt ‘small targets’, releasing their policies late in the campaign and using their knowledge of the news cycle to manipulate reporting by not providing sufficient time or opportunity for journalists’ inquiries. It requires time, resources and expertise to try to head off such strategies and, in order to be proactive in reporting policies in more detail, it requires a different understanding of the news cycle.
Journalists will write themselves into the story in 2013 but not necessarily in a way that helps the public understand journalism nor the relations between media and politics. Politicians exert a high degree of control over the daily news agenda during an election campaign. The way journalists report elections is at the core of this but, rather than change the conventions of reporting—for example, broaden the focus, use a wider circle of sources, conduct investigations, move from the day-to-day focus or otherwise change the main narrative—journalists have tended to take another route. Reporting on opinion polls is one way journalists have sought to regain the initiative. Another is by writing themselves into the story, giving politicians less coverage and giving themselves more. In the 2000s, journalists became increasingly important brokers of meaning in political coverage as they paraphrased, narrated and commented on politicians’ activities. This was partly about reasserting control over the news agenda but also about keeping audiences watching when politicians were seen as a ‘turn off’.
This means that the shrinking politician sound bite will continue. In Australia, politicians’ sound bites were down to 6.9 seconds in 2007. In an average TV news story in 2007, reporters and other media figures (including news anchors/hosts and other journalists interviewed as part of the story) spoke for three times longer than the politicians they were reporting on.
The metacampaign will also go on. As political spin, political marketing and PR have ramped up, journalists have (rightly) been concerned with revealing to their audiences the behind-the-scenes interactions of politics, including the ‘metacampaign’ that politicians conduct for the benefit of the media. The shot of the media pack gathered around the politician or their advisers in the background are some of the more obvious symbols of this. Journalists highlight how politicians try to manipulate news coverage. We therefore know a lot more about how politics is conducted today than we did forty years ago because of the willingness of journalists to write about it. At its best, meta-coverage gives citizens important information about how the electoral process actually works, highlighting what is going on behind the scenes and pointing out important shifts in how politics is conducted. At its worst, it can descend into simplistic representations and take a very cynical form.
Many journalists will bemoan how stage-managed, sterile and boring the campaign is. They have done so since 1996. This type of meta-coverage helps journalists reiterate their professional role, demonstrate their distance from politicians and explain gaps in their reporting brought about by the effectiveness of political PR. A world-weary, cynical tone often creeps in to coverage even though it is boring to keep hearing how boring reporters find election campaigns.
Journalists will tell their audiences how politicians control and disseminate information but they will be much less forthcoming about their own methods, tactics and motivations. Although journalists are writing themselves into stories and turning the camera upon themselves, this is rarely done with any critical scrutiny. Self-analysis often goes only as far as highlighting the importance of the media’s role but stops far short of critically interrogating it. The meta-coverage frame has therefore not reached its full potential to give audiences a full sense of how the interactions between the media and politicians work, or indeed, how those between the media and their audiences work.
There will be a focus on entertainment and potentially less election coverage. Journalists not only have to select stories from all of the material available, they also have to make those stories matter to their audiences. That is not an easy proposition. Many Australians say they are not particularly interested in political news; reporters (like politicians) have to flick the switch to vaudeville. This is amplified in an era of economic pressures in commercial news organisations and the choices often seem to be to give the audience something else instead of politics or make political coverage more ‘interesting’ and entertaining. Even the ABC’s audience surveys in the 2000s showed increasing numbers of viewers and listeners reporting that they thought the ABC focused too much on coverage of federal politics. When I compared Australian coverage to British and American election reporting, I found our TV news clips are already shorter than comparable outlets overseas. Politics is not automatically given priority. Increasingly, it has to win its place in the news. Increasingly, audience members—who have many other leisure, entertainment and media options—scan news and stay only briefly.
2013 will be heralded ‘the internet election’. There has been a tendency for every election since 1998 to be proclaimed in media reporting as ‘the internet election’ and this one will be no different except the prediction may be more nuanced. Perhaps it will be cast as ‘the Twitter election’ or ‘the YouTube election’ or with a focus on social networking or on smart phones. We have certainly seen proclamation after proclamation and, while it is true that things keep changing (for example, mobile technology has the capacity to drastically alter audiences and news production), and the internet has had profound effects (particularly on news production, I would argue) the fact will remain that next year, when it comes to getting election news, TV will still be the most important medium for the majority of Australians in 2013. Radio and newspapers will still be very important to setting the news agenda and influencing other media.
Can the internet save journalism and enhance election reporting? There is no doubt that the internet has made political news and information much more widely available but involvement by the public is still very selective and uneven. Just because political news and information become available on a new medium does not mean that people without previous interest in politics suddenly become interested. Nor does use of a different medium mean that the political news audience suddenly becomes more representative. The evidence we have (as opposed to the speculation) suggests the biggest effects of the internet have been on news production—the internet has changed the way news is gathered, reported and disseminated and particularly has affected theeconomic models that major news organisations rely upon. In terms of audiences—who accesses online news and especially political news, which sites they visit, what they do there—so far, much of the evidence suggests the internet has largely been ‘normalised into the traditional political world’[4] with existing inequities continued online. This means the online political news audience looks a lot like the offline political news audience especially in terms of ‘quality’ news—older, white, male, affluent and educated. Along with the challenge of how to find an economic model for online journalism, the challenge of how the technology can help engage new audiences—as opposed to just giving the old audience new ways to get information—remains.
I hesitate to bring this point up but I can safely predict that there will be accusations of bias. There always are! Conservatives will point to the ABC as biased against them and perhaps Fairfax (although this may be diluted or may depend upon Gina Reinhart’s role) while Labor and the Greens will point to the role of News Ltd including its tabloids but also the Australian. Here, I shall just note these claims and point out that I think there are very important issues at stake before I move on from what is a hot debate and one that may yet get warmer. I want to get to the next part of the puzzle—what should we expect from media reporting in a complex age? What can we do to support and encourage election reporting?
How prescient Professor Young was is demonstrated by these two newspaper headlines on the day Prime Mininster Gillard announced the date of the 2013 federal election - with the second attempting to be a journalistic self-fullfilling prophesy:
How prescient Professor Young was is demonstrated by these two newspaper headlines on the day Prime Mininster Gillard announced the date of the 2013 federal election - with the second attempting to be a journalistic self-fullfilling prophesy:
Brisbane Times - 30 January 2013
The 2013 federal election will be the first in the nation's history where social media is every bit as important as a soapbox on the hustings
Julia Gillard Announces 2013 Election | Twitter Reaction #auspol
www.smh.com.au › National Times › Political News
You +1'd this publicly. Undo
30 January 2013– The Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, has surprisingly announced the date of the federal election months in advance of the poll. By revealing |
Labels:
Australian society,
Federal Election 2013,
media,
politics
Coal seam gas mining company Metgasco finally admits that sustained community opposition is an investment risk
The Northern Star 25 January 2013:
METGASCO has admitted to investors for the first time that community opposition to coal seam gas was disrupting its operations.
In a statement to the Australian Stock Exchange yesterday, Metgasco said protest action caused delays in drilling at Glenugie and also resulted in the company deferring one of its planned core wells.
"Our program started a little later than expected as a result of a range of factors which included rig availability, approvals and some protest action," CEO Peter Henderson said in the statement to the ASX.........
The Daily Examiner 25 January 2013:
Click on image to enlarge
Labels:
ASX,
Coal Seam Gas Mining,
Metgasco,
people power
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