Saturday, 17 January 2015
So what changes so drastically between the child and the man?
Last year ABC News reported that in Australia domestic violence is the leading cause of death and injury in women under 45, with more than one woman murdered by her current or former partner every week. There are young victims too, with more than one million children affected by domestic violence. Accounting for 40 per cent of police time, the cost to the economy is $13.6 billion per year.
It further reported that there were at least 1,625 domestic violence related incidents on the NSW North Coast in 2013.
So what changes so dramatically between the attitude of male children to domestic violence and the attitude of so many adult men?
Labels:
Australian society,
violence
Twitter user flipping through a newspaper
Yeah, I know Yeah, I know Yeah, I know Yeah, I know Yeah, I know…..
(found on Twitter and apologies to the tweeter for not crediting - I've lost your handle)
Labels:
humour
Friday, 16 January 2015
Telstra/Big Pond at its "very best"
Readers, before proceeding to read what follows ensure a stiff drink is readily available. If coffee is the preferred beverage, ensure its super duper strength.
At the table of knowledge at the local watering hole this afternoon Jacko, one of the regulars, delivered the report that follows.
During the report some of Jacko's mates had to be given assistance to get up off the tiles at the watering hole. A visiting medico who was on site said they were in a state of shock and recommended a couple of the lads should, as a matter of urgency, obtain counselling to assist them in their recovery.
"As a long term Telstra/Bigpond customer (30 years+) in the Clarence valley I had no/nil/zilch ADSL service from the provider this week and, on occasions, no telephone access. When T/BP finally restored the services I contacted the telco's billing department with the view to having my bill adjusted to reflect my week's "experience".
A T/BP consultant, obviously one with a first class
honors degree in pure AND applied mathematics, used a magnifying glass and, it
would seem a multitude of other devices, to examine my account and
concluded I had been "inconvenienced" by four, maybe five
days. Consequently, I was told my account would be credited on a
pro rata basis for four days.
"Hold on", I said, "things out
here in the real wide world are not based on such thinking."
The T/BP consultant, obviously a quick thinker, said,
"OK, I see where you're coming from. We'll give you seven days'
credit."
I replied, "HEY, YOU STILL DON'T GET
IT!"
"What do you mean?" was the consultant's
response.
After an extensive period of explaining logic 101 to the
consultant an auction-like procedure was adopted.
Finally, the consultant said I should be compensated for T/BP's stuff-up and given a 50%
discount on my monthly T/BP bill.
You'd swear Telstra's bottom line was going to drop so
much its share price was destined to go down the gurgler on the basis of this
single event!
Labels:
Bigpond,
Complaints about Telstra
Rabbits Eat Lettuce won't be dancing at Upper Orara this weekend
Rabbits Eat Lettuce 2014 from SADOWSKI on Vimeo.
A Rabbits Eat Lettuce dance party in 2014
Coffs Harbour City Council v Rabbits Eat Lettuce Pty Ltd [2015] NSWLEC 2, 14 January 2015:
EXTEMPORE JUDGMENT
- Council seeks an interlocutory injunction to restrain a “dance
party” it expects the respondents to hold on Saturday/Sunday 17 – 18
January at 500 Fridays Creek Rd, Upper Orara, or at some other probably
remote location within Council’s area.
- It would be a 24 hour event occupying its site from 12 noon
Saturday to 6pm Sunday, and is intended to serve as a “taster” for a three
day event over Easter.
- On Council’s application to me as Duty Judge, at around 3pm
yesterday (Tuesday), I agreed to hear the injunction application at 11am
today (Wednesday).
- The respondents are known to Council and to the local police, from
their earlier dance party ventures, which generated many problems and
complaints, and there have been negotiations over time, which have yielded
a range of contact details, but have resulted in no undertakings being
given by the respondents.
- I am satisfied that the dance party promoters, the 1st and 2nd
respondents, know of today’s hearing, and that the 3rd respondent, who
owns the subject site, but is apparently in hospital, is at least on
notice of the application being made to me prior to the scheduled event.
- As no respondents have chosen to appear or be represented today, I
granted leave to Council to proceed ex parte.
- It is in the interests of all interested persons, including up to
2,000 intended participants, that this decision be given immediately.
- It is clear on the cases – e.g. Baulkham Hills Shire
Council v Horseworld Australia Pty Ltd, BC9707595,
(Land and Environment Court (NSW), Lloyd J, 27 June 1997, unrep), Byron
Shire Council v The Rising Damp Corporation Pty Ltd [2001]
NSWLEC 260, and an earlier decision involving the 2nd respondent, Bellingen
Shire Council v Lamir-Pike [2010] NSWLEC 195 – that dance parties
of this type are “development” within the meaning of the Environmental
Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (“EPA Act”).
- Also, the Coffs Harbour planning documents, especially the Local
Environmental Plans of 2000 and 2013, require a Development Consent or a
“temporary use” approval to be in place.
- It is also clear to the Court that the respondents know of these
legalities – indeed one has admitted the absence of compliance – and that
no relevant approval is in place.
- These matters establish that there are serious issues to be tried
in the substantive proceedings, and that is a vital consideration on the
question of granting interlocutory relief.
- It is in the public interest to restrain development which is in
breach of the EPA Act, but, in addition, all the evidence suggests that
the proposed event poses serious threats to public safety and the
environment generally. There is also evidence that some aspects of the
suggested venue represent breaches of the planning regime in the area, and
may themselves pose a safety threat.
- The relevant principles for the granting of ex parte interlocutory
relief are well established – see Beecham Group Ltd v Bristol
Laboratories Pty Ltd [1968] HCA 1;118 CLR 618, American
Cyanamid Co v Ethicon Ltd [1975] AC 396; [1975] 1 All ER 504,Castlemaine
Tooheys Ltd v South Australia [1986] HCA 58; 161 CLR 148, Silktone
Pty Ltd v Devreal Capital Pty Ltd (1990) 21 NSWLR 317, Tegra
(NSW) Pty Ltd v Gundagai Shire Council [2007] NSWLEC 806; 160
LGERA 1, Shoalhaven City Council v Bridgewater Investments Pty Ltd [2010]
NSWLEC 103, Save Our Figs Inc v General Manager Newcastle
City Council [2011] NSWLEC 207;186 LGERA 127, and Hume
Coal Pty Ltd v Alexander [2012] NSWLEC 267.
- They have been previously applied to dance party situations, such
as occurred in Bellingen Shire Council v Lamir-Pike [2010]
NSWLEC 195, and in the other cases to which Council refers in paragraph 20
of its submissions.
- Some of those particular cases were brought immediately before, or
shortly after, the event commenced, but in this case I am satisfied that
no exercise of discretion in favour of the event is justified on the
grounds of any alleged delay on Council’s part. In this case, the orders I
intend to make will or should be served at least 48 hours prior to the
advertised starting time of the event.
- Those orders were articulated in the summons and amended summons,
but had been clearly foreshadowed in warning correspondence sent to the
respondents by hand, by email, by post of various types, by facsimile, and
lately via Facebook.
- Apart from the large number of likely patrons, huge vehicular
traffic is expected (Exhibit C1, tab 1, p20). The relevant senior
Council officer, Mr Oliver, deposes to the constraints of the site – flood
risk, threat to water quality and koala habitat, fire risk, poor emergency
and other access and evacuation arrangements, and likely neighbour
impacts.
- Those concerns are echoed by the two police witnesses (Inspector
Jameson and Sergeant Roach), and the Court notes that Council had put the
respondents on formal notice of its safety concerns in a letter dated 11
April 2014.
- The balance of convenience clearly lies in favour of granting
Council the relief it seeks.
- I am satisfied, apart from lack of consent, that inadequate
attention will be paid to the State Government’s “Dance Party Guidelines
1998” or Sgt Roach’s “Standard Operation Procedures Manual 2008”.
- In all the circumstances, especially those regarding time, I accept
Council’s submission that, because of public interest considerations, I
should apply Rule 4.2(3) of this Court’s Rules, and not require
Council to give an undertaking as to damages.
- I make the following orders:
1. Pending the final determination of this
application or until further order of the Court:
a) The First and Second Respondents by
themselves, their servants, agents or assigns be restrained from the carrying
out of a dance party event known as the 'Rabbits Eat Lettuce Launch Party' on
17 and 18 January 2015 as advertised on the website
www.rabbitseatlettuce.com.au and the social media site Rabbits Eat Lettuce
Facebook Page at premises known as 500 Fridays Creek Road, Upper Orara or on
land within the local government area of Coffs Harbour City Council, without
the prior development consent of Coffs Harbour City Council.
b) The Third Respondent by himself, his
servants, agents or assigns be restrained from carrying out or permitting,
causing or suffering the carrying out of a dance party event known as the
'Rabbits Eat Lettuce Launch Party' on 17 and 18 January 2015 as advertised on
the website www.rabbitseatlettuce.com.au and the social media site Rabbits Eat
Lettuce Facebook Page at premises known as 500 Fridays Creek Road, Upper Orara,
or on land within the local government area of Coffs Harbour City Council
without the prior development consent of Coffs Harbour City Council.
2. The Applicant to have leave to serve the
First and Second Respondents by:
a) delivery of a sealed copy of these
orders to premises known as 4 Braithwaite Ave, Bellingen by 1pm Thursday 15
January;
b) serving the First Respondent by its
known email address info@rabbitseatlettuce.com.au by 6:00pm on Wednesday 14
January 2015; and
c) serving the Second Respondent via his
known email address info@rabbitseatlettuce.com.au by 6:00pm on Wednesday 14
January 2015.
3. The Applicant has leave to serve the
Third Respondent by delivery of a sealed copy of these orders to premises known
as 500 Fridays Creek Road, Upper Orara.
4. Direct that the Applicant cause notice
of these orders to be posted at a prominent location at the entrance to any
property notified as a site for the proposed dance party event.
5. The Respondents jointly and severally
are to pay the Applicant's costs of these proceedings to date.
6. The parties to have liberty to apply to
the Duty Judge on short notice.
7. The substantive proceedings are stood
over to the first Friday List for 2015, Friday 6 February 2015.
Labels:
Coffs Harbour City Council
Lifting the veil on Yes2Gas
This advertisement has been in the news in 2015:
If examined closely, readers can see that it is authorised by Louise Tout, Narrabri.
There is little information about Ms.Tout on the Internet, other than she is the spokesperson for Yes2Gas.
However, there is one short ABC radio interview with her on 2 December 2014.
In this interview Ms. Tout claims that the Yes2Gas group is one hundred percent local, one hundred percent independent. She also admits to talking to Santos all the time and that the ‘group’ doesn’t have an identifiable membership.
Ms. Tout stated in the radio interview that a few local businesses fund the group. A suspicion that these few may be Santos contractors raises its head.
Despite the lack of members,Yes2Gas does have a Facebook page (which has a subversive clone run by another person/group) and a website.
Website details:
The website was created on 29 September 2014, the registrant is listed as Kate Campbell (a Narrabri-based freelance photographer who is also the tech contact for this website), but its physical address is in the Sydney metropolitan area at 11 Colgate Street, Balmain NSW 2041:
There is a second registered website titled Yes2Gas - a parked site yes2gas.com whose purpose is unknown. This site was registered by Kate Schwager of Wee Waa on 2 October 2014:
____________________
UPDATE:
In an email dated 26 February 2016 Kate Schwager informed North Coast Voices that she no longer owns yes2gas.com and that she initially registered this domain so that it could not be used to promote the gas industry.
____________________
The Yes2Gas quotes Max Davis of Rosewood, Narrabri, who ABC News tells us has a farm which is just a few kilometres from Leewood, a property south of Narrabri that's owned by Santos, and the location of what the company is calling a 'state of the art water treatment facility'. Leewood is a 246 ha property fronting the Newell Highway at Narrabri.
Mr. Davis' address may possible host this business:
Mr. Davis' address may possible host this business:
Hopefully Max Davis’ cropping property is more than a few kilometres away from Leewood, as Santos proposes up to 850 production wells will be drilled across its Narrabri tenements:
Wells not drawn to scale and positioning potential only
But what of the claims in the advertisement?
Santos is an Australian company
Yes, Santos Ltd was established in Adelaide SA in 1954.
According to its Annual Report 2013 it had 112,397 shareholders and 970,270,108 fully paid ordinary shares listed on the Australian Securities Exchange at 28 February 2014.
However, despite the large number of shareholders, Santos states it is the top 20 shareholders who represented 65.09% of the total voting power in Santos by February 2013 and, these predominately institutional shareholders are not necessarily “Australian”.
Indeed the two largest shareholders, with a combined share percentage of 37.74% of all ordinary shares, are large U.K. and U.S. based investment banks.
HSBC Holdings plc (UK based, located in 75 countries and reportedly Europe’s largest banking group) is the largest shareholder through its subsidiary HSBC Custody Nominees (Australia) Limited (HSBC Bank Australia Limited) and, JP Morgan Chase & Co (US based international investment banking group) is the second largest shareholder through its subsidiary JP Morgan Nominees Australia Limited.
Santos is an excellent neighbour
as professional as Santos
So is Santos an excellent neighbour and professional in its business activities?
This is the area in which the Santos Pilliga/Narrabri gas project operates:
In 2014 the NSW Environmental Protection Authority (EPA) issued Santos NSW (Eastern) Pty Ltd with one clean up notice (29 July 2014) for its Narrabri NSW gas fields and one penalty notice for water pollution at its Bibblewindi Water Transfer Facility.
EPA Media release: 18 February 2014
The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) has issued a $1,500 fine to Santos NSW (Eastern) Pty Ltd following a pollution incident at their Narrabri Gas Field operations in the Pilliga.
In March 2013 Santos notified the EPA after results from routine ground water sampling around the Bibblewindi Water Treatment Plant showed elevated levels of total dissolved solids and slightly elevated levels of others elements.
EPA Chief Environmental Regulator, Mark Gifford said EPA staff immediately began an investigation into the cause of the elevated readings.
“Our investigation into the matter revealed the installation of the liner within Pond 3 was of poor quality which resulted in the integrity of the liner being questionable.
Pond 3 had historically been used to contain the water and brine generated by the gas field. Water quality testing by Santos of the surrounding aquifers showed elevated levels of total dissolved solids and other elements outside the average readings for the aquifers in the area,” Mr Gifford said.
“Further investigation showed the pond had been installed in 2007 by the site’s previous owner, Eastern Star Gas. A report Santos provided to the EPA showed there was no evidence that contractors, engaged by Eastern Star Gas, had carried out the necessary field testing, quality control or quality assurance during the installation, as is required by current government standards.
Santos has applied to the EPA for an Environment Protection Licence for this site. The EPA is close to finalising this application and has put in place strict conditions to ensure an incident of this nature is not repeated.
The EPL includes a legally binding Pollution Reduction Program requiring Santos to develop and implement a Groundwater Remediation and Monitoring Plan that is aimed at remediating that affected aquifers,” Mr Gifford said.
EPA Media release: 28 March 2014
The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) is investigating a release of about 500 litres of produced water which entered a diversion drain at the Santos Narrabri Gas Field on Tuesday March 25.
The produced water entered the diversion drain during transfer from an assessment well to a holding pond.
Immediately following the release, the diversion drain was blocked to prevent the produced water leaving the site.
The produced water was captured and returned to the pond.
The EPA is undertaking further investigations.
The Government has designated the EPA the lead regulator of environmental and health issues associated with coal seam gas, and established the Office of Coal Seam Gas in NSW Trade and Investment to regulate other important issues, including petroleum titles, rehabilitation, safety and engineering standards.
Contact: Pamela Wilson
A NEWCASTLE City Council-owned waste facility has been receiving contaminated coal seam gas waste from far-west NSW, and little is known about where it ends up.
Environmental Protection Authority documents from 2013 accessed by the Newcastle Herald reveal the council-owned Summerhill Waste Depot was the destination for contaminated soil and waste from the Santos Gas Project in the Pilliga Forest.
Santos says the waste includes ‘‘soil, sediment and pond liner materials’’ removed as part of its $17million rehabilitation of the site following its takeover from Eastern Star Gas in 2011.
But the council won’t say what happened to the waste when it got to Summerhill, where it ended up, or whether it is still receiving the waste.
A spokeswoman said in a statement that Summerhill ‘‘operates as a landfill facility with basic recycling activities’’ and is ‘‘not a treatment facility for contaminated wastes’’, but did not say where the waste ended up.
‘‘Council is not prepared to discuss any commercially confidential arrangements it has with any of the customers that use the Summerhill Waste Management Centre, this includes any details around waste and revenue receipts,’’ the spokeswoman said.
With the lesser known issue of air pollution being raised.
With the lesser known issue of air pollution being raised.
World
Coal 7
January 2015:
Astronomers
at the Siding Spring observatory in Australia have warned light pollution from
a planned coalbed methane (CBM) development may force the observatory to close.
Siding Spring
is the country’s premier observatory. The site of the Australian National
University’s observatory, near Coonabarabran in New South Wales (NSW),
currently benefits from clear, dark skies above it.
This
environment allowed the observatory’s powerful SkyMapper telescope to discover
the oldest known star, at 13.6 billion years old, in 2014.
Yet
astronomers have voiced concern that CBM developments at gasfields around 50 km
away could produce so much light pollution the observatory is rendered useless.
Dark skies
are vital if astronomers are to pick out stars and other celestial objects in
space.
Mining firm,
Santos, plans to tap the area, known as the Gunnedah Basin, for gas sourced in
coal seams.
Astronomers
are also worried that material dispersed from CBM mining operations will prove
corrosive to telescope lenses.
Peter Small,
a technical support engineer for Siding Spring, said an existing CBM operation
at Boggabri already gives off more light than the neighbouring towns of
Narrabri and Gunnedah.
“We get light
pollution from that – we even get light pollution from Sydney, which is 400km
away, so you don’t have to be that close,” he said.
“This will
reduce visibility. If there’s light pollution from anywhere, never mind about
the gasfields, this site becomes unviable. It would shut down and all those
local jobs would be lost,” he added. “I’d hope there would be a compromise, but
no dialogue has taken place with Santos as yet.”....
Santos does not appear to be quite as good a neighbour and not as professional a corporation as Yes2Gas would have us believe.
Whoever the principal or principals of Yes2Gas are, they may have to be very active in 2015 if they are to support their favourite coal seam gas miner Santos Ltd through this.
Whoever the principal or principals of Yes2Gas are, they may have to be very active in 2015 if they are to support their favourite coal seam gas miner Santos Ltd through this.
The
Sydney Morning Herald 8 January 2015:
Billions of
dollars worth of projects face an uncertain future amid write-downs and job
losses across Australia's battered oil and gas sectors as the global oil crash
deepens…..
"You
have to believe you're going to see enormous write-downs in particular from
Santos and Origin – BG have already taken an initial write-down on QCLNG
and alluded to the fact it could take a larger one."
Carrying
values for some acquisitions made over recent years could also be at risk.
"I don't
see how Santos could still carry Narrabri at the book value of the acquisition
of Eastern Star Gas," Mr Samter said of Santos's NSW coal seam gas
business, based on its $924 million takeover of Eastern Star in 2011.
Santos shares
dropped another 1.3 per cent to $7.45 on Wednesday and are now 51 per cent down
from their August high.
Steps it took
last month to relieve pressure on its balance sheet, including a 25 per cent
cut to its 2015 capex budget and an extra $1 billion loan facility, have failed
to calm investor fears that it will eventually have to raise equity to protect
its investment-grade credit rating. It is also considering asset sales.
Illustrating
the extent of the impact of the lower prices on Santos, Mr Samter released
research that found the company's equity is worthless if current oil prices and
foreign exchange rates are assumed to persist forever.
The Australian 12 January 2014:
STANDARD and
Poor’s has cut its oil price forecast for the third time in five weeks, in a
move that will increase concerns Santos will be forced to raise equity to keep
its investment grade credit rating.
The ratings
agency already had Santos (STO) and
Origin (ORG),
which both have BBB credit ratings, on negative watch and has said further cuts
to oil price forecasts could lead to downgrades for the two companies, which
are both building LNG plants at Gladstone. The price of LNG is linked to crude
oil prices.
“Over the
coming weeks, we will be updating our assumptions, and we anticipate a number
of corporate rating actions,” Standard and Poor’s said.
Labels:
Coal Seam Gas Mining,
pollution
The Port of Yamba infrastructure romancer soldiers on
If there is one thing that can be said about Queensland’s former truck driver and wannabee infrastructure entrepreneur, Des Euen (left), it is that he is persistent.
A dated suit, a striped tie, a fancy corporate title, a couple of $1-1 share companies with no visible cash or staff and an unworkable idea1 – then he’s off to turn the small Port of Yamba into an international coal port/container terminal & transport hub by 2023.
From first sod to finished port complex in just eight years from now - based on a unsolicited proposal which is yet to get through the Baird Government’s front door.
Mr. Euan has been touting his 'dream' for at least the last two to three years and, he turned up again last December on the website of IQPC’s Infrastructure Privatisation 2014 but it is unknown if he actually participated in the two-day event.
Mention of him popped up again this week when this short email landed in my Inbox:
Hello, I have upset Mr Euen also! He gets very upset when you send links to your blog page to councillors in the region. He has threatened me with legal action. Is he full of hot air and bluff? Keep up the good work.
Apparently the self-promoting Mr. Euen thinks that he should decide when he is mentioned on the Internet and the manner in which he is mentioned.
1. Brief Background:
Labels:
Clarence River,
Clarence Valley,
Yamba
Thursday, 15 January 2015
Abbott Government health funding cuts will hit home on the NSW North Coast
New South Wales residents can expect the state public hospital system to experience a further strain on service delivery in 2015 courtesy of both federal Abbott Coalition and state Baird Coalition governments' health policies.
On 5 June 2014 The Sydney Morning Herald reported:
The Bureau of Health Information report released on Thursday shows that from January to March more than 600,000 people visited NSW public hospital emergency departments, a 2 per cent jump compared to the same time last year.
About 73 per cent of patients left emergency departments within four hours, up from 66 per cent last year, but still falling far short of the 81 per cent target…..
The new figures show that while about 97 per cent of people are getting surgery on time, some patients are still waiting more than six months.
Median waiting times for ear, nose and throat surgery are now 153 days. Gynaecology, urology and prostate surgery waits increased between seven to 10 per cent.
''NSW still has the longest waiting times for elective surgery in Australia and close to the longest in developed countries,'' said Dr McDonald. ''A 302-day median wait time for a knee replacement is just unacceptable.''
On 11 January 2015The Australian noted:
NSW has abandoned a national target for attending to people who need treatment in hospital emergency departments after the federal government cut reward payments.
Under a national partnership deal struck between the states and the commonwealth in 2011 under the Gillard government, all states were meant to have reached a benchmark of seeing 90 per cent of patients in emergency departments within four hours from January 1 this year.
The agreement included rewards of $50 million a year for reaching this target, but in the federal budget last year the government abolished the payments.
NSW Health Minister Jillian Skinner said, because of that, “there is currently no formal target tied to rewards payments”.
NSW intended to keep to last year’s target of 81 per cent instead of using the new target of 90 per cent, she said.
Although emergency department performance has been improving, it has not met national benchmarks…..
Under a national partnership deal struck between the states and the commonwealth in 2011 under the Gillard government, all states were meant to have reached a benchmark of seeing 90 per cent of patients in emergency departments within four hours from January 1 this year.
The agreement included rewards of $50 million a year for reaching this target, but in the federal budget last year the government abolished the payments.
NSW Health Minister Jillian Skinner said, because of that, “there is currently no formal target tied to rewards payments”.
NSW intended to keep to last year’s target of 81 per cent instead of using the new target of 90 per cent, she said.
Although emergency department performance has been improving, it has not met national benchmarks…..
In practice this means that during a year public hospital emergency departments are expected to experience an increase in the number of patients presenting because the Abbott Government has cost-shifted its Medicare rebate cuts onto individuals and families from January 20151, its public hospital funding cuts have also made matters worse for those seeking treatment at hospital accident and emergency departments.
The figure below clearly shows the best that the ill or hurt in NSW could expect in late 2014 – an average wait to receive treatment of between 41 minutes and 2 hours 29 minutes for the majority attending A&E departments.
The 95th percentile represents the time period within which most people received the relevant care or treatment.
On the NSW Far North Coast this averaged out for the majority of patients seeking treatment as a wait of between 29 minutes and 2 hours 11 minutes:
The Australian Medical Association (AMA) is predicting that public hospital emergency department waiting times will now rise not by a factor of minutes but by hours in 2015.
1. Increased GP fees are expected to commence from mid-January 2015 and increase again in July for over 15 million Australians, as Medicare rebates cover less of general practice & specialist doctors standard fees. Many patients will be paying a standard upfront fee of $75 or more for a simple 10 minute visit to their local doctor as fewer medical practices are expected to continue bulk billing. The Medicare rebate formula would have meant that the the federal government met half of that cost for non-concessional patients. However, from 1 July 2015 the medicare rebate on a $75 fee will be reduced to $32.04 leaving the patient $42.95 out-of-pocket.
If a medical practice decides to use the AMA recommended schedule of fees and abandon bulk-billing all together, then concessional patients (such as aged and disability pensioners or children under 16 years) will also have to pay an upfront fee of $75 for a 10 minutes consultation and be $34.95 out-of-pocket.
For non-concessional patients seen by their doctor for between 6 and 10 minutes the rebate reduction will increase their out-of-pocket expense to $20.10 from 19 January rising to $25.10 after 30 June 2015.
If a medical practice decides to use the AMA recommended schedule of fees and abandon bulk-billing all together, then concessional patients (such as aged and disability pensioners or children under 16 years) will also have to pay an upfront fee of $75 for a 10 minutes consultation and be $34.95 out-of-pocket.
For non-concessional patients seen by their doctor for between 6 and 10 minutes the rebate reduction will increase their out-of-pocket expense to $20.10 from 19 January rising to $25.10 after 30 June 2015.
UPDATE
A statement that needs to be taken with a grain of salt…….
The
Sydney Morning Herald 15 January 2015 at 12:34pm:
The
government has capitulated and scrapped its plans to next week cut the Medicare
rebate by $20 for short visits to the doctor after a fierce backlash by doctors
and non-government Senators, who vowed to veto the measure.
In her first
act as the new Health Minister, Sussan Ley broke her holidays to announce on
Thursday that the cuts - quietly introduced by her predecessor Peter Dutton
late last year - are now "off the table".
Ms Ley said
she was still committed to introducing price signals into Medicare including
the revised $5 GP co-payment due to start July 1, but pledged to "pause,
listen and consult".....
Labels:
Abbott economics,
Abbott Government,
health,
hospitals
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