Tuesday, 15 April 2014

Sally MacManus on the subject of Tracking Abbott's Wreckage


Sally MacManus is Secretary of the Australian Services Union in NSW and the ACT and has a blog called Unions. Politics. And Stuff.

This is her list (with links to media reports) tracking Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s political, economic and social wreckage:
130. Begins dismantling GP Super clinics – 8 April 2014
129. Cuts 480 jobs from the Environment Department who are responsible for protecting places such as Kakadu, Antarctica and the Great Barrier Reef – 7 April 2014
128. Forbids public servants from making political comments online, even anonymously, and instructs them to report on colleagues who do – 6 April 2014
127. Establishes a secret, publicly funded “hit squad” to target political opponents led by the man who provided a “chaff bag” for Alan Jones to auction at a Young Liberal fundraiser – 1 April 2014
126. Imposes fees and charges on people who become bankrupt – 1 April 2014 
125. Axes free legal assistance for asylum seekers – 31 March 2014
124. Defunds Ethical Clothing Australia that worked with industry to protect outworkers in the textile and clothing industry from exploitation and abandons the Governments ethical procurement guidelines  -  30 March 2014
123. Opposes a UN resolution to conduct war crimes inquiry in Sri Lanka – 28 March 2014
122. Closes all Medicare offices on Saturdays – 26 March 2014
121. Brings back the awards of knights and dames which were abolished in 1986 – 25 March 2014
120. Cuts 400 jobs from the industry department – 25 March 2014
119. Ensures a human rights enquiry into the Manus Island detention centre is shut down and human rights lawyers are denied access to the centre – 23 March 2014
118. Abolishes one third of the jobs in Treasury costing approximately 300 jobs – 21 March 2014
117. Cuts welfare payments to orphans of soldiers –  16 March 2014
116. Moves to deny funding to artists or events that refuse corporate sponsorship for ethical reasons – 15 March 2014
115. Cuts hundreds of jobs at the CSIRO – 14 March 2014
114. Reopens 457 visa loophole to allow employers to hire an unlimited number of workers without scrutiny – 12 March 2014
113. Overturns a ban on cattle grazing in the Victorian Alpine National Park – 6 March 2014
112. Frustrated and defeated an attempt at the UN to highlight the humanitarian consequences of nuclear war – 5 March 2014
111. Axes funding earmarked to save the Sumatran rhinoceros from extinction – 28 February 2014
110. Introduces legislation to allow people aged between 17-24 years old to work for half the minimum wage and be exempted from all other work rights including health and safety laws and protections should they be injured at work – 26 February 2014  
109. Misleads the Australian public about what occurred on Manus Island when asylum seekers were attacked killing one person and injuring seventy-seven. Once the information was known to be untrue, waited five days to correct the record - 25 February 2014
108. Contravenes 113 years of established practice by moving to release the previous Government’s confidential cabinet papers to the Royal Commission into the Pink Batts scheme – 22 February 2014
107. Scraps food grants program for small farmers – 21 February 2014
106. Pressured SPC Ardmona to cut the pay and conditions for workers in return for Government money – 20 February 2014
105. Blames carbon pricing for the close of Alcoa smelters and rolling mills and the loss of nearly 1000 jobs, despite the fact the company states it had no bearing on their decision –19 February 2014
104. Breaches the privacy and puts in danger around 10, 000 asylum seekers and their families by releasing their personal details on the Department of Immigration website – 19 February 2014
103. Fails to ensure the safety of asylum seekers in our care on Manus Island who were subjected to a vicious attack, which left one person dead and seventy-seven seriously injured  – 18 February 2014
102. Reverses the previous government’s decision to care for refugee children who are without an adult family member (ie unaccompanied minors) in the community and sends them to detention centres in Nauru – 17 February 2014
101. Appoints a climate change sceptic to head a review of our renewable energy target –17 February 2014 
100. Pays hundreds of indigenous workers in his Department up to $19 000 less than non-indigenous workers doing the same job and cuts the budget for the representative body the National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples causing two-thirds of the staff to lose their jobs – 15 February 2014
99. Breaks a promise to provide fibre-to-the-premises for all Tasmanians for the National Broadband Network – 13 February 2014
98. Unemployment rate jumps to highest in more than 10 years – 13 February 2014
97. Lies to the Australian public about the reasons Toyota gave for their decision to close in order to blame the workers and their union – 12 February 2014
96. Takes down a website providing information to the Australian public on the ingredients and nutritional content of foods. It is later revealed that the person in the Minister’s office who gave this directive is married to a lobbyist  from the junk food industry and was still a share holder in their lobbying company – 11 February 2014 
95. Destroys the Australian car manufacturing industry by refusing to provide any industry assistance leading to the decision of Toyota to shut costing up to 30 000 jobs – 10 February 2014
94. Launches a Royal Commission into unions – 10 February 2014
93. Attempts to reintroduce temporary visas for asylum seekers found to be fleeing persecution preventing them ever settling in Australia and retrospectively applies them to 20 000 people. This is stopped in the Senate twice by the ALP and The Greens – 7 February 2014
92. Supports a reduction of penalty rates and other Award minimums in a submission to the Fair Work Commission’s review of all Awards – 4 February 2014
91. Lies to the Australian public about the wages and working conditions of factory workers at SPC Ardmona in Shepparton and uses this incorrect information to blame them for their job insecurity – 4 February 2014
90. Launches an “efficiency study” into ABC and the SBS - 30 January 2014
89. Cuts the wages of Australian troops deployed overseas by almost $20 000 per solider –29 January 2014
88. Intervenes on the side of Toyota to support cutting Australian workers wages and conditions – 28 January 2014
87. Privatises the 104 year old Australian Valuation Office costing nearly 200 jobs – 24 January 2014
86. Seeks to wind back the World Heritage listing of Tasmania’s forests – 23 January 2014
85. Withdraws funding for an early intervention program to help vulnerable young people – 22 January 2014
84. Exempts Western Australia from national environment laws to facilitate shark culling –21 January 2014
83. Defunds all international environmental programs, the International Labour Organisation and cuts funding to a range of international aid programs run by NGOs such as Save the Children, Oxfam, CARE Australia and Caritas – 18 January 2014
82. Violates Indonesia’s territorial sovereignty while turning back asylum seeker boats – 17 January 2014
81. Politicises the national school curriculum by appointing a former Liberal staffer and a Coalition supporter, both critics of the current curriculum to conduct a review - 10 January 2014.
80. Directs that people already found to be refugees who arrived by boat be given the lowest priority for family reunion - 8 January 2014
79. Fails to contradict or take any action against a member of his government, Senator Cory Bernardi, who makes divisive statements about: abortion, “non-traditional” families and their children, same sex couples, couples who use IVF and calls for parts of WorkChoices to be reintroduced - 6 January 2014
78. Devastates Australia’s contribution to overseas aid by cutting $4.5 billion from the budget, causing vital programs supporting those in extreme poverty in our region to collapse - 1 January 2014
77. Drastically reduces tax breaks for small business and fails to publicise it - 1 January 2014
76. Appoints Tim Wilson, a Liberal Party member and Policy Director of a right-wing think tank to the position of Commissioner at the Human Rights Commission even though this think tank argued for the Commission to be abolished – 23 December 2013 
75. Approves private health fund premium increases of an average 6.2% a year – 23 December 2013
74. Breaks his promise to provide the promised customs vessel to monitor whaling operations in the Southern Ocean – 23 December 2013 
73. Requests the delisting of World Heritage status for Tasmanian forests – 21 December 2013 
72. Breaks a promise to make no cuts to health by cutting $150 million from hospital and health services – 17 December 2013.
71. Scraps the Home Energy Saver Scheme which helps struggling low income households cut their electricity bills - 17 December 2013
70. Defunds the Public Interest Advocacy Centre whose objectives are to work for a fair, just and democratic society by taking up legal cases public interest issues - 17 December 2013
69. Defunds the Environmental Defenders Office which is a network of community legal centres providing free advice on environmental law - 17 December 2013
68. Axes funding for animal welfare - 17 December 2013
67. Breaks his election promise of no cuts to education by cutting funding for trade training centres in schools – 17 December 2013
66. Abolishes the AusAID graduate program costing 38 jobs - 17 December 2013
65. Cuts Indigenous legal services by $13.4 million. This includes $3.5 million from front line domestic violence support services, defunding the National legal service and abolishing all policy and law reform positions across the country   - 17 December 2013
64. Abolishes the position of co-ordinator-general for remote indigenous services - 17 December 2013
63. Breaks his promise to unequivocally support the NDIS by changing the name of  NDIS “launch sites” to “trial sites” and flags cuts to funding – 17 December 2013 
62. Abolishes the National Office for Live Music along with the live music ambassadors - 17 December 2013
61. Cuts $2.5 million from community radio – 17 December 2013 
60. Weakens the ministerial code of conduct to let ministers keep shares in companies - 16 December 2013
59. Disbands the independent Immigration Health Advisory Group for asylum seekers – 16 December 2013 
58. Dumps the National Occupational Licensing Scheme which was designed to increase productivity by making it easier for skilled workers to work interstate – 14 December 2013
57. Axes $4.5 million from charities and community groups for the Building Multicultural Communities Program – 13 December 2013
56. Starts dismantling Australia’s world leading marine protection system - 13 December 2013 
55. Scraps the COAG Standing Council on Environment and Water – 13 December 2013 
54. Breaks his NBN election promise of giving all Australians access to 25 megabits per second download speeds by 2016 – 12 December 2013  
53. Overturns the “critically endangered” listing of the Murray Darling Basin - 11 December 2013
52. Dares Holden to leave Australia. Holden responds by announcing its closure which costs Australians tens of thousands of jobs – 11 December 2013 
51. Approves Clive Palmer’s mega coal mine in the Galilee Basin which opponents say will severely damage Great Barrier Reef - 11 December 2013
50. Demands that the few childcare workers who got pay rises “hand them back” – 10 December 2013 
49. Approves the largest coal port in the world in the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area – 10 December 2013  
48. Removes the community’s right to challenge decisions where the government has ignored expert advice on threatened species impacts – 9 December 2013 
47. Downgrades national environment laws by giving approval powers to state premiers – 9 December 2013  
46. Undermines Australia’s democracy by signing a free trade agreement with South Korea allowing corporations to sue the Australian Government – 6 December 2013 
45. Damages our diplomatic relationship with our nearest neighbour East Timor – 5 December 2013 
44. Repeals the pokie reform legislation which was designed to combat problem gambling – 4 December 2013 
43. Suspends the Wage Connect program, despite it being proven to deliver good outcomes for unemployed people – 3 December 2013 
42. Axes funding to the Alcohol and Other Drugs Council of Australia, forcing the 46 year old organisation to close. It is later revealed that  a staffer in the Assistant Health Minister’s office had links to the Alcohol Industry - 27 November 2013  
41. Breaks his promise to support Gonski and back flips three times – 25 November 2013  

40. Shifts Australia’s position at the UN on Israeli settlements - 25 November 2013
39. Damages our diplomatic relationship with the Indonesian Government by refusing to apologise for tapping the phones of their President, his wife and senior Government officials – 23 November 2013 
38. Converts crucial Start-Up Scholarships into loans, increasing the debt of 80,000 higher education students by $1.2 billion – 21 November 2013 
37. Gifts two navy patrol boats to the Sri Lankan government to stop asylum seekers fleeing the Sri Lankan government - 17 November 2013
36. Introduces a Bill to impose on workers who are elected onto unpaid union committees huge financial penalties and jail terms for breeches of new compliance obligations – 14 November 2013 
35. Condones torture by foreign governments by saying “sometimes in difficult circumstances, difficult things happen” – 14 November 2013 
34. Hides information from the Parliament and the people about the government’s treatment of asylum seekers – 13 November 2013
33. Separates a refugee mother from her newborn baby – 10 November 2013 
32. Cuts 600 jobs at the CSIRO - 8 November 2013
31. Abolishes Insurance Reform Advisory Group which provided a forum for industry and consumer bodies to discuss insurance industry reform - 8 November 2013
30. Abolishes the Maritime Workforce Development Forum which was an industry body working to build a sustainable skills base for the maritime industry - 8 November 2013
29. Abolishes the High Speed Rail Advisory Group whose job it was to advise Governments on the next steps on implementing high speed rail for eastern Australia - 8 November 2013
28. Abolishes the Advisory Panel on the Marketing in Australia of Infant Formula which for 21 years ensured companies comply with agreements on the advertising  of infant formula - 8 November 2013 
27. Abolishes the Antarctic Animal Ethics Committee who ensured research on animals in the Antarctic complies with Australian standards - 8 November 2013
26. Abolished the National Steering Committee on Corporate Wrongdoing that for 21 years worked to make sure the law was effectively enforced on corporate criminals - 8 November 2013
25. Abolishes the National Inter-country Adoption Advisory Council which provided expert advice on overseas adoption - 8 November 2013
24. Abolishes International Legal Services Advisory Council which was responsible for working to improve the international performance of Australia’s legal services - 8 November 2013
23. Abolishes the Commonwealth Firearms Advisory Council a group of experts in gun crime and firearms which was set up after the Port Arthur massacre - 8 November 2013
22. Abolishes Australian Animals Welfare Advisory Committee a diverse group of experts advising the Agriculture Minister on animal welfare issues - 8 November 2013
21. Abolishes the National Housing Supply Council which provided data and expert advice on housing demand, supply and affordability - 8 November 2013
20. Abolishes the  Advisory Panel on Positive Ageing, established to help address the challenges the country faces as the number of older Australians grows – 8 November 2013 
19. Refuses to offer support to manufacturing in  Tasmania, despite requests and warnings. Caterpillar announces the move of 200 jobs from Burnie to Thailand, costing around 1000 local jobs – 5 November 2013
18. Provides $2.2 million legal aid for farmers and miners to fight native title claims - 1 November 2013

17. Abolishes the 40 year old AusAID costing hundreds of jobs - 1 November 2013
16. Launches a successful High Court  challenge which strikes down the ACT Marriage Equality laws invalidating the marriages of many people and ensuring discrimination against same-sex couples continues – 23 October 2013 
15. Denies there is a link between climate change and more severe bush fires and accuses a senior UN official was “talking through their hat”  – 23 October 2013 
14. Appoints the head of the Business Council of Australia to a “Commission of Audit” to recommend cuts to public spending – 22 October 2013  
13. Cuts compensation to the victims of bushfires - 21 October 2013
12. Instructs public servants and detention centre staff to call asylum seekers “illegals” - 20 October 2013
11. Appoints Howard era Australian Building & Construction Commission (ABCC) Director to help reinstate the ABCC with all its previous oppressive powers over construction workers – 17 October 2013 
10. Axes the Major Cities Unit a Government agency with 10 staff which provided expert advice on urban issues in our 18 biggest cities - 24 September 2013
9. Breaks his promise to “stop the boats” – 23 September 2013  
8. Scraps the Social Inclusion Board, which had been established to guide policy on the reduction of poverty in Australia - 19 September 2013 
7. Abolishes the Climate Commission – 19 September 2013 
6. Appoints himself Minister for Women – 16 September 2013 
5. Appoints only one woman into his cabinet and blames the women for his decision, saying he appoints “on merit”– 16 September 2013 
4. Abolishes key ministerial positions of climate change and science – 16 September 2013 
3. Breaks his promise to spend his first week with an Aboriginal community -
14 September 2012
2. Takes away pay rises for childcare workers – 13 September 2013 
1. Takes away pay rises from aged care workers – 13 September 2013 
The Broken Promise Count
1. Does not spend his first week as Prime Minister with an Aboriginal community – 14 September 2013. This promise was made in front of indigenous elders and participants at the Garma Festival on 10 August 2013, this is a live recording.

2. Fails to “stop the boats” – 23 September 2013.   This promise was repeated so many times I can’t count. Here’s Abbott’s 2013 campaign launch speech.

3. Breaks his promise to support Gonski - 25 November 2013. Fails to commit to future funding or to require States to match the Commonwealth funding commitment. See paragraph two from Christopher Pyne on 29 August 2013
4. Breaks its NBN election promise of giving all Australians access to 25 megabits per second download speeds by 2016 – 12 December 2013   This was the Coalition’s policy they took to the election first announced 9 April 2013.
5. Changes name of  NDIS “launch sites” to “trial sites” and flags cuts to funding – 17 December 2013.  The unequivical promise to deliver the NDIS in full was made 20 August 2013 and is in the policies they took to the election
6. Breaks his election promise of no cuts to education by cutting funding for trade training centres in schools on 17 December 2013. He made this promise at the National Press Club on 2 September 2013 and in writing on 5 September 2013 as part of their policy commitments.
7. Breaks a promise to make no cuts to health. He made this promise at the National Press Club on 2 September 2013 and in writing on 5 September 2013 as part of their policy commitments. This promise was first broken on 27 November 2013 when they cut funding to the Alcohol and Other Drugs Council and again on 17 December 2013 when they cut $150 million from hospitals and health services. 
8. Fails to provide the promised customs vessel to monitor whaling operations in the Southern Ocean – 23 December 2013 Promise made by Greg Hunt - 9 April 2013
9. Breaks a promise to provide fibre-to-the-premises for all Tasmanians for the National Broadband Network. This promise was confirmed my Malcolm Turnbull on 17 August 2013and confirmed as broken by the NBN Co executive chairman Ziggy Switkowski on 13 February 2014.

Monday, 14 April 2014

Latest Fairfax Nielsen poll shows voters not happy with Prime Minister Abbott or the Australian Coalition Government


Fairfax Nielsen Poll 10-12 April 2014, published 14 April 2014:

Found at @GhostWhoVotes 

When it came to job performance; half of all those polled by Nielsen disapproved of Prime Minister Abbott, both men and women almost equally disapproved and, at least half of those under 55 years of age disapproved.

Abbott led as preferred prime minister nationally by 1 percentage point, but half of those under 40 years of age and 45% of those between 40-54 years preferred Labor Opposition Leader Bill Shorten as prime minister.

The Coalition primary vote had dropped 6 percentage points nationally since it won government in September 2013 and, it trailed Labor by 4 percentage votes on a two party preferred basis.


Just on seven months into its first term, the Abbott Liberal-Nationals Government polling is looking as jaded as a federal government four times older.


The Guardian discovers the Battle for Bentley


The Guardian 10 April 2014:



Bentley farmers who support the movement against mining, from left, Robert Lowrey, Peter Neilson, Colin Thomas and Charles Wilkinson. Photograph: David Lowe

There is a strange political alliance building in this country, one that governments and major parties will do well to consider.

It is the alliance between farmers and the environmental movement on land use issues around coal seam gas and mining.
It has the capacity to change the political landscape in rural Australia and leave a scar as gaping as an open-cut mine on the (predominant) Coalition support.
In rural towns, farmers are joining fellow community members, environmentalists and, yes, the hippy fringe to stop developments of coal and unconventional gas extraction in their neighbourhood. The hot spots are around Bentley, the Pilliga, Gloucester in New South Wales and the Coonawarra in South Australia.

It has become clear the opposition is not coming just from a tie-dyed fringe but also includes very conservative people who do not join the political fray easily. Farmers are now chaining themselves to mining equipment to make their point, a tactic associated by farmers in the past with the “feral” end of the green movement....

Consider the story of one farmer, one of many, who has decided to speak out. Robert Lowrey lives at Bentley in the Northern Rivers of New South Wales, upstream of Metgasco’s gas exploration on a farm belonging to a near neighbour Peter Graham, a former Lismore councillor and National party member.

Lowrey’s father, the elegantly-named Dunbar Lowrey, was chairman of the Bentley National party branch. Robert Lowrey and his wife, Nanette, have the family farm that transitioned from dairy to cattle during deregulation. He describes the farming community around the town as extreme conservatives, “old school” farmers who are reluctant to take a stand.
Yet he has joined up with a friend and fellow farmer Tony Davis to write a letter to the local paper. Davis initially agreed to have a test well on his place, based on Metgasco’s claim the gas would be used for a power plant for Casino. However, once he discovered larger plans, including plans for export, he backed out…..
“When we first heard about the gas, it was about a few wells, a power station for Casino and long-term jobs,” the letter says. “Some of us accepted, even welcomed, test wells on our properties.

“Now we hear about hundreds of wells, pipelines over the ranges, fracking, suspicious chemicals ruined farms, polluted waters and valleys destroyed. Could our valley end up looking like an industrial wasteland? This makes us worry about a lot of things.

“We are worried about the Graham family. They have been our fellow farmers, workmates and friends for decades. Their farm may be the centre of the dispute, but it could easily be one of ours. They need our support, they do not deserve abuse.

“The drilling must stop, the risks are too great. We only have one chance and, if it goes wrong, it is our children, not the mining company, who will bear the consequences.”
Lowrey’s argument is there is no need for gas in the region, given the area’s “good fortune” that provides an environment for clean food production and tourism. Gas extraction development will be such a shame, he says, especially given the Northern Co-operative Meat Company has just started certifying grass-fed beef and the company is “just 10 miles away from the dirty thing”. The closest large town to Bentley is Casino, which markets itself as the beef capital of Australia…..
In some ways the anti-mining campaign has the hallmarks of any big power battle. Governments and large companies came into small communities offering jobs and riches. Football teams were sponsored. Social compacts were made. Then when resistance was met, they tried shouting, which only made things worse. Lowrey says former New South Wales Liberal minister Chris Hartcher came to town for a public meeting.
“Chris Hartcher told us we were anarchists trying to wreck the state’s economy,” Lowrey says. “Nanette was angry. I would just say this household’s personal response is we have been contributing to the economy for 150 years.
“We don’t consider ourselves an elite group. We are just here doing what we set out to do over 100 years ago.”
Just this week, another New South Wales government representative came to town to test farmers’ knowledge, to check they were not reading silly fear mongering on social media.
“I don’t even know how to turn a computer on,” Lowrey says. “I can read Joseph Conrad but not a computer manual. I assured them I was not swayed by social media.”….
The kicker in the story is what this episode has done to political support. Of the farmers and smaller block owners I’ve spoken to, all were National party voters. All say they will be looking to shift their vote elsewhere. They feel like they have been betrayed after many years of support. Lowrey’s response is typical. His father was proud to have a visit from National party leader Sir Earle Page in his little Bentley branch. Now the son has forsaken the party. All parties.
“The political process is being broken down by nepotism and other interests able to bring to bear power through lobbyists, large amounts of money and very persuasive argument,” he says. “As our system becomes more dependent on money, it becomes vulnerable.
“I am sick of parliamentarians taking material they had access to as ministers and peddling it, taking up positions in industry.”
He names former Labor federal resources minister Martin Ferguson, now a director of British Gas, and former National party leaders John Anderson, a former chairman of Eastern Star Gas, and Mark Vaile, who is on the board of Whitehaven Coal.
“It’s moving people away from conservative ordinary politics and interest in National party [here] is waning,” said Lowrey. “People are weighing up alternative parties. Some, quite a few, are going to the Greens.”
They may not move their vote. As a National party MP said to farmers in the Pilliga: “Who else are you going to vote for?” But what is clear from this debate is it will not get easier for governments or mining companies.
For there is nothing so stubborn as a farmer.

NO PLACE TO BE A WOMAN? NSW Far North Coast's 2013 domestic & sexual assault rates by local government area


Women are still the largest identified victim group in reported domestic and sexual assaults.



The NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research released the NSW Recorded Crime Statistics 2013 report on 10 April 2014.

Unfortunately three of the seven Far North Coast local government areas show domestic violence rates above the state rate and, all seven local government areas had sexual assault rates above the state rate.

How these rates breakdown across the Northern Rivers region:

TWEED Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Domestic assault incidents
10 year trend: Up 3.1% per year
Rate per 100,000 population: 374.1
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 391.2

TWEED Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Sexual assault incidents
2 year trend: Stable
Rate per 100,000 population: 67.7
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 62.7

BYRON Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Domestic assault incidents
10 year trend: Stable
Rate per 100,000 population: 361.4
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 391.2

BYRON Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Sexual assault incidents
2 year trend: Stable
Rate per 100,000 population: 71.0
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 62.7

LISMORE Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Domestic assault incidents
10 year trend: Down 3.6% per year
Rate per 100,000 population: 409.4
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 391.2

LISMORE Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Sexual assault incidents
2 year trend: Stable
Rate per 100,000 population: 104.5
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 62.7

BALLINA Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Domestic assault incidents
2 year trend: Down 9.3% per year
Rate per 100,000 population: 318.4
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 391.2

BALLINA Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Sexual assault incidents
2 year trend: Stable
Rate per 100,000 population: 84.3
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 62.7

KYOGLE Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Domestic assault incidents
10 year trend: Stable
Rate per 100,000 population: 324.0
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 391.2

KYOGLE Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Sexual assault incidents
2 year trend: n.c.
Rate per 100,000 population: 141.7
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 62.7

RICHMOND VALLEY Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Domestic assault incidents
10 year trend: Down 2.2% per year
Rate per 100,000 population: 579.7
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 391.2

RICHMOND VALLEY Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Sexual assault incidents
2 year trend: Stable
Rate per 100,000 population: 116.8
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 62.7

CLARENCE VALLEY Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Domestic assault incidents
10 year trend: Stable
Rate per 100,000 population: 410.7
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 391.2

CLARENCE VALLEY Local Government Area
Jan 2013 to Dec 2013
Sexual assault incidents
2 year trend: Stable
Rate per 100,000 population: 100.8
NSW rate per 100,000 population: 62.7