Medianet Release
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Friday, 3 June 2016
Major parties accused of ignoring radiology in rebate freeze debate as patient gaps hit $100 on average
31 May 2016 2:29 PM AEST
Rebate freeze debate ignores radiology as patient gaps hit $100
Radiologists have accused both sides of politics of ignoring a looming health emergency, with patient gaps for scans such as X-rays, Ultrasounds, CTs and MRIs now averaging $100.
While election debates focus on rebates for GP visits and pathology tests, the Australian Diagnostic Imaging Association (ADIA) says vital diagnostic imaging services are becoming more unaffordable for everyday Australians.
"We've hit a regrettable milestone in Australia, with gap payments for diagnostic imaging services now averaging $100," said ADIA CEO Pattie Beerens.
"People are rightly upset about the three year freeze on Medicare payments to GPs, but no-one is discussing the fact that patient rebates for diagnostic imaging have been frozen since 1998.
"Bill Shorten is now on record saying that the Liberals' plan will jeopardise Medicare, bulk billing and the ability for people not to have to pay up front fees when they need a mammogram or x-ray - and that Labor will put people first.
"That is encouraging in theory, but in practice neither side of politics has made a commitment that addresses the enormous squeeze on millions of patients needing scans."
Ms Beerens said practices across Australia remained extremely concerned that the freeze on patient rebates for diagnostic imaging – which have been stagnant for 18 years and are scheduled to continue past 2020 – will continue to drive more patients away from essential diagnosis and treatment.
"The fact is that most radiology practices are local businesses operating on thin margins. This squeeze has been going on for two decades, and it has to end," Ms Beerens said.
"Patients don't just decide to have a scan, they have to be referred, but governments have cut so much money from the system that average Australians are being priced out of health care.
"Sick people will avoid getting diagnosed, and that will create huge long-term problems for our health system."
Australian Attorney-General George Brandis lists some common breaches of the rights, freedoms and privileges recognised by the common law
Australian Attorney-General and Liberal Senator George Brandis has helpfully listed common breaches of a citizen’s rights, freedoms and privileges – the same rights, freedoms and privileges which coincidentally have been eroded in federal legislation enacted since 2001.
Excerpts from the Traditional Rights and Freedoms—Encroachments by Commonwealth Laws (ALRC Report 129) tabled on 2 March 2016:
Review of Commonwealth Laws for Consistency with Traditional Rights, Freedoms and Privileges
I, Senator the Hon George Brandis QC, Attorney-General of Australia, having regard to the rights, freedoms and privileges recognised by the common law, REFER to the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) for inquiry and report pursuant to section 20(1) of the Australian Law Reform Commission Act 1996 (Cth):
· the identification of Commonwealth laws that encroach upon traditional rights, freedoms and privileges; and
· a critical examination of those laws to determine whether the encroachment upon those traditional rights, freedoms and privileges is appropriately justified.
For the purpose of the inquiry ‘laws that encroach upon traditional rights, freedoms and privileges’ are to be understood as laws that:
· reverse or shift the burden of proof;
· deny procedural fairness to persons affected by the exercise of public power;
· exclude the right to claim the privilege against self-incrimination;
· abrogate client legal privilege;
· apply strict or absolute liability to all physical elements of a criminal offence;
· interfere with freedom of speech;
· interfere with freedom of religion;
· interfere with vested property rights;
· interfere with freedom of association;
· interfere with freedom of movement;
· disregard common law protection of personal reputation;
· authorise the commission of a tort;
· inappropriately delegate legislative power to the Executive;
· give executive immunities a wide application;
· retrospectively change legal rights and obligations;
· create offences with retrospective application;
· alter criminal law practices based on the principle of a fair trial;
· permit an appeal from an acquittal;
· restrict access to the courts; and
· interfere with any other similar legal right, freedom or privilege.
Scope of the reference
In undertaking this reference, the ALRC should include consideration of Commonwealth laws in the areas of, but not limited to:
· commercial and corporate regulation; · environmental regulation; and
· workplace relations.
Thursday, 2 June 2016
Australian Federal Election 2016: right-wing propaganda running wild
This scare campaign is looking suspiciously as though it is being made up as the proponents go along.
The Sydney Morning Herald, 23 May 2016:
The Sydney Morning Herald, 23 May 2016:
Research intended for use in a bid to discredit Labor's negative gearing campaign was commissioned after a meeting between Scott Morrison and a close friend and senior figure in Australia's property industry.
But the draft report contains a series of factual errors and makes bold claims of a "resale price cliff" and "social dysfunction" that have alarmed some in the real estate industry to whom it has been circulated.
An email obtained by Fairfax Media shows Greg Paramor, the managing director of property company Folkestone, discussed the need for a study critiqueing Labor's policy with Brian Haratsis, the executive chairman of advisory firm MacroPlan Dimasi. Mr Paramor, who is a friend of Mr Morrison and former president of the Australian Property Council, made the request after his encounter with the Treasurer.
"Greg recently had the opportunity to meet with The Hon. Scott Morrison to discuss negative gearing," the email notes. "As a result of that meeting, Greg agreed to provide a report to the Treasurer – he asked Brian Haratsis to undertake a study on the impact of the proposed negative gearing changes."
The email, sent from an unnamed person inside Mr Paramor's company, was sent to senior industry figures last week.
It also asks for feedback as "the Treasurer is keen to get the report next week".
Entitled "Short Memory: Negative Gearing and Capital Gains Tax: Foundations of the New Australian Housing Model," the attached draft report is also presented with an alternative title: "Shortened Memory".
It claims Labor's policy would remove 205,000 dwellings from the rental housing stock over a decade, adding to housing stress. Asked why removing dwellings from the rental stock would add to housing stress when the dwellings would still be available for use, Mr Haratsis said the phrase was meant to refer to low-income rental dwellings.
Illustration: Ron Tandberg
The draft says Labor's policy would both make housing less affordable and create a "resale price cliff" as large numbers of apartments were sold at a loss. Mr Haratsis explained the apparent contradiction by saying the market was bifurcated and that different parts of it would react differently….
The Treasurer's office denied he had asked for a report to be prepared or that he or his office had received copies.
The report also says Australian governments would need to stump up an extra $3.3 billion per year for social housing and rent assistance should Labor's policy became law, more than the $3.2 billion per year it would raise.
The total economic cost of Labor's policy would be $5 billion per year, a reference Mr Haratsis said has since been removed from the document after acknowledging that it was arrived at by adding up payments without subtracting receipts.
"I am writing this as we go, and there are a number of references that you are looking at that won't be there in the final," he said. "I want to go back and recalculate the numbers."
Prepared in haste with what appears to have been a speech recognition program, the draft at one point refers to Labor's promise to "grandfather" the entitlements of existing investors as a promise to create "ground furthered" properties.
The leaking of the report potentially blunts another avenue of attack on Labor's plan to restrict negative gearing to new properties only and halve the capital gains tax discount to 25 per cent, which has been the subject of a fierce government scare campaign.
Mr Haratsis insisted it was his decision to initiate the report after his meeting with Mr Paramor, that he would fund the work himself and that it was planned for release next week - at which point "I could maybe give it to the Treasurer".
The report critiques organisations such as the Grattan Institute, which engages in "Robin Hood economics" and chooses to "ostracise high income individuals" instead of focusing on tax efficiency.
Australian Federal Election 2016: the lengths to which an Abbott-Turnbull Government will go
As the end of Week Three of the federal election campaign drew near a little plausible deniability was obviously called for………..
News.com.au, 27 May 2016:
THE FEDERAL government has had the nation axed from a UNESCO report on climate change and world heritage sites.
Every reference to Australia has been scrapped from the final version of the 87-page report, which detailed the impact of global warming on 31 natural and man-made world heritage sites around the world.
The initial “World Heritage and Tourism in a Changing Climate” report included a key chapter on the Great Barrier Reef. It also referenced Kakadu and the Tasmanian forests.
But the Australian Department of the Environment made sure every mention of Australia was removed, even though it lists other sites in the Asia Pacific region and says coral reefs are “particularly vulnerable” to climate change.
This means Australia is the only inhabited continent on the planet with no mentions in the report.
In a statement to news.com.au, the Environment Department confirmed it asked for references to Australia to be removed, saying it would have a negative impact on tourism:
“Recent experience in Australia had shown that negative commentary about the status of world heritage properties impacted on tourism.
“The department was concerned that the framing of the report confused two issues — the world heritage status of the sites and risks arising from climate change and tourism……
Here is the Department’s full statement:
The World Heritage Centre initiated contact with the Department of the Environment in early 2016 for our views on aspects of this report.
The Department expressed concern that giving the report the title “Destinations at risk” had the potential to cause considerable confusion. In particular, the World Heritage Committee had only six months earlier decided not to include the Great Barrier Reef on the in-danger list and commended Australia for the Reef 2050 Plan.
The Department was concerned that the framing of the report confused two issues – the world heritage status of the sites and risks arising from climate change and tourism. It is the World Heritage Committee, not its secretariat (the World Heritage Centre), which is properly charged with examining the status of World Heritage sites.
Recent experience in Australia had shown that negative commentary about the status of World Heritage properties impacted on tourism.
The Department indicated it did not support any of Australia’s World Heritage properties being included in such a publication for the reasons outlined above.
The Department of the Environment conveyed these concerns through Australia’s Ambassador to UNESCO.
The Department did not brief the Minister on this issue. [my red bolding]
I’m not impressed Team Turnbull! Not only was it a foolish move when the world's media has been reporting on the effects of climate change on Australia's reef systems - there is no way that a government department is going to pressure the United Nations to alter a report without relevant ministers right up to the foreign minister and prime minister being aware.
Neither was lead author of this United Nations report, Adam Markham, the deputy director of climate and energy with the Union of Concerned Scientists impressed by the Turnbull Government's actions.
He issued this statement on behalf of the UCS:
He issued this statement on behalf of the UCS:
Adam
Markham, deputy director, Climate &
Energy Program | May 26, 2016, 3:06 pm EDT
A
lot has changed since Captain Cook became the first European to try to navigate
the Great Barrier Reef in 1770. It was the reports of Cook and naturalist
Joseph Banks on their return to England that first alerted the scientific world
to the existence of this biological marvel. The Great Barrier Reef is now one
of the world’s most important coastal and marine tourism areas, but its future
is at risk, and climate change is the primary long-term threat.
A
World Heritage site since 1981, the Great Barrier Reef is one of the world’s
most complex and diverse ecosystems, with at least 400 species of hard coral,
150 species of soft corals and sea fans, and more than 2,900 individual reefs
and some of the most important seagrass meadows in the world. It teems with
marine life of all sorts, including more than 1600 fish species, seabirds,
seahorses, whales, dolphins, crocodiles, dugongs and endangered green turtles.
The reef extends for 2,300km along the coast of Queensland in Northeast
Australia and has evolved over a period of 15,000 years. The region is
important for the indigenous heritage of First Australians who are Traditional
Owners including Aboriginal and Torres Straits Islander people. Climate change
threatens hunting and fishing as well as other traditional and cultural
practices. Some sacred sites are also at risk for the more than 70 Traditional
Owner groups for whom natural resources are inseparable from cultural identity.
Tourism
is an important economic driver
Today,
tourism (including touring, diving, beaches, sailing, fishing and cruising) is
the most important economic sector in the GBR communities, contributing $5.2 billion dollarsto the Australian economy
in 2012 and supporting 64,000 jobs, or about 90% of the total economic activity
in the region. Visitors spent nearly 43 million total nights in the GBR region
in 2012, of which nearly 2 million nights were on the reef, mainly at Cairns
and the Whitsunday Islands. Direct reef-related tourism alone contributes 4,800
jobs. Approximately 500 commercial boats operate bringing tourists out to dive
and snorkel on the reef, and there can be negative impacts associated with
this, including damage from fuel spills and walking and dropping anchors on
fragile corals. Tourism infrastructure, along with other coastal developments,
can cause habitat degradation and damaging pollution and sediment run-off.
Australia is the world’s fourth largest coal producer and debate currently
swirls around the risks embodied in plans to expand coal mining and coal shipping near the Great Barrier Reef.
Higher
temperatures and ocean acidification threaten reefs
The biggest threat to the GBR today, and to its ecosystems
services, biodiversity, heritage values and tourism economy, is climate change,
including warming sea temperatures, accelerating rates of sea level rise,
changing weather patterns and ocean acidification. Coral reefs worldwide are
being directly impacted
by warming waters and ocean acidification, and climate change is exacerbating
other localized stresses. Ocean acidification is occurring because of increased
levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. A significant portion of this CO2
is being absorbed by the oceans and the resulting increases in seawater acidity
reduces the capacity of some marine life, such as corals, to build their
calcium carbonate based skeletons. Significant drops in coral growth rate have
been recorded in the last two decades for massive Porites corals on
the Great Barrier Reef.
Worst
ever coral bleaching
Other
significant threats to the reef include coastal development, agricultural
run-off pollution, port-based shipping activities, illegal fishing and
outbreaks of the coral-eating crown-of-thorns starfish. Assailed by multiple
threats, the status of the GBR has been assessed as being poor and
deteriorating. Half of its coral cover has been lost over the last three
decades. Unusually high sea temperatures have caused nine mass coral bleaching
events on the GBR since 1979, and until this year, the worst had been in 1998 and 2002 (Great Barrier
Reef Marine Park Authority 2012, Steffen et al 2009, Hughes et al 2015). But
higher water temperatures and a severe El Nino have been pushing corals into
the danger zone all over the world in 2015-16, and the Great Barrier Reef is
currently suffering the most severe bleaching episode ever recorded.
Coral
bleaching occurs when higher than usual maximum temperatures disrupt the
relationship between corals and the photosynthetic zooxanthelae algae that live
in their tissues in a vital and mutually beneficial biological relationship.
Bleaching can kill corals, but depending on the severity of the impact and
local factors they can also recover. The same is true for coral damage from
storms, but damaged or bleached corals and reefs need time to recover. All
indications are that bleaching events will become more frequent and tropical
storms more intense with continued global warming, and that this combined with
a continued trend in warming water and ocean acidification will be massively
detrimental to the GBR. The current bleaching episode has affected more than
90% of the reef, with the worst damage being in the northern region where surveys have confirmed 50% mortality in some places.
Without
global efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions coupled with local management
responses to increase resilience, current projections suggest that coral cover
could decline to 5-10% of the GBR by the early 2020s from 28% in 1985—a
potential loss of 80% in just 40 years. Similar fears are associated
with one of the other keystone ecosystems of the GBR, seagrass meadows
representing 20% of the world’s 72 seagrass species. These shallow-water
habitats provide vital nursery areas for fish and shrimps, critical food
resources for turtles and dugongs, and act as carbon sinks, sequestering
organic carbon in marine sediments. The combination of agricultural runoff,
fishery impacts and climate change may exceed seagrass beds’ natural ability to adapt. Sea turtles
too are at risk from climate change as high temperatures and sea level rise
impact their breeding and nesting beaches.
A
need for action
Spurred
by the direct evidence of climate change already impacting the GBR, degradation
of the reefs and the likelihood of much worse to come, the Australian
government has begun to plan and implement actions to reduce the risk of future
damage. At the core of the adaptation strategy are efforts to build ecosystem
resilience, fill gaps in scientific knowledge, and monitor environmental,
social and economic impacts of climate change. Collaborative management
strategies are also being developed and tested with local communities,
Traditional Owners, as well as with business and industry. The GBR was also the
first World Heritage property for which a comprehensive Tourism and Climate
Change Action Strategy was developed. The strategy recognizes the vital
importance that a healthy GBR ecosystem plays for the Australian economy and
that the tourism industry must quickly come to grips with the problem.
Recommended actions include reducing direct impacts and greenhouse gas
emissions from tourism companies operating on or near the reef; increased training
and awareness for guides and operators; helping to raise public understanding
of the threat, and; supporting scientific research and monitoring activities.
The plan also calls for the industry itself to plan adaptive responses for
declining reef conditions and to contribute to risk management strategies for
climate disasters.
Despite
these measures, international concern has continued to grow, however, that
without a comprehensive response more in keeping with the scale of the threat,
the GBR’s extraordinary biodiversity and natural beauty may lose its World
Heritage values. The World Conservation Outlook 2014 published by IUCN
(International Union for Conservation of Nature) assessed the status of the
World Heritage values of the GBR as of “high concern” and experiencing a
deteriorating trend. The most recent strategy from the Australian government,
the Reef 2050 Long-term Sustainability plan addressed this issue head on and
has been designed to “ensure the Great Barrier Reef continues to improve on its
Outstanding Universal Value every decade between now and 2050 to be a natural
wonder for each successive generation to come”.
The full UNESCO report, World Heritage and Tourism in a Changing Climate, can be read here.
Wednesday, 1 June 2016
Come to the Climate Change Exchange at Grafton Cathedral grounds, 9am to 1pm Saturday 4 June 2016 & question election candidates about their climate change policies
Come to the Climate Change Exchange
Saturday 4 June 2016
Grafton Cathedral grounds, corner of Fitzroy St and Duke St
9am to 1pm.
Ask your election candidates about their climate change policies
Tell them what you expect of them
Stand on a soapbox and air your own views
Check out the latest on climate change
Enjoy a coffee and cake, or a sausage sandwich
Meet other people who care
Convened by Climate Change Australia (Clarence Branch) 0423 747 468
Australian Federal Election 2016: going down like skittles
In a federal election campaign where all three big political brands have been hustings-ready since March, candidates are still going down like skittles........
The latest are the Liberal candidate Carolyn Currie who was contesting the NSW lower house seat of Whitlam and first-time Labor Senator for the Northern Territory Nova Peris.
Ms. Currie’s rather novel reason for withdrawing from the fray is that she is like a general with no troops because no party rank and file were coming to her support on the election trail.
Senator Peris intiallly failed to give any explanation for retiring from the lists, leaving mainstream media to speculate that she is seeking employment elsewhere. Later she cited family reasons.
Also in the
Senate the Liberal’s Concetta
Fierravanti-Wells is
tettering on the edge of the political gutter with The
Canberra Times revealing on 26 May 2016 that:
The
preselection hopes of controversial Turnbull government minister Concetta
Fierravanti-Wells have been hit by allegations she broke a promise not to
employ a key Liberal Party executive and factional ally.
The
hard-right NSW senator hired as an electorate officer Nathaniel Smith, a
Kogarah councillor and the son of former NSW attorney-general Greg Smith,
who also serves on the party's state executive.
Liberal
sources accused Senator Fierravanti-Wells of breaking an
explicit promise to senior party figures that she would not employ Mr
Smith or run a "factional office".
She
is also accused of trying to conceal Mr Smith's employment by
demanding his removal from her staff list and denying him a parliamentary
email address.
As
an electorate officer his taxpayer-funded salary would be close to $100,000.
It
comes as a spectacular factional battle over preselection for the NSW Senate
ticket comes to a head, with the state executive trying to relegate Senator
Fierravanti-Wells into sixth place, against the wishes of Prime Minister
Malcolm Turnbull……
Rumour has it that Ms. Fierravanti-Wells' political future may be on the line despite Malcolm Turnbull's support keeping her on the senate ticket.
Rumour has it that Ms. Fierravanti-Wells' political future may be on the line despite Malcolm Turnbull's support keeping her on the senate ticket.
In
2015 Labor’s then MP for Oxley Bernie Ripoll announced he would not be
standing at the 2016 federal election so as an official retiree he escapes
being included in the skittles tally, however Minister for Territories, Local
Government and Major Projects & Liberal MP for Bradfield Paul I Know Nothing Fletcher does not and has apparently
been caught out sidestepping full disclosure of his wife’s interests in his 44th
Parliament Statement of Registrable
Interests.
The
Australian,
27 May 2016:
Mr
Fletcher, a stalwart ally of Malcolm Turnbull, declined to disclose the
business interests of his jeweller wife, Manuela Zappacosta, exploiting a rule
that only requires MPs to disclose family interests “of which the member is
aware”.
Consequently
Mr Fletcher’s declaration omits Ms Zappacosta’s directorship and 50-per-cent
shareholding in Baba Management, a firm run from an accountancy practice in
Albury, southern NSW.
Mr
Fletcher wrote in his declaration of interests: “I do not know if Manuela
Zappacosta is a director of any other companies and I have not made inquiry.”
A
Liberal spokesman said: “Mr Fletcher said his approach was consistent with the
approach used other Members of Parliament since at least 1990 and that the
Clerk of the House had not raised any concerns about it.”
Mr
Fletcher’s position mirrors that of Bob Katter, the independent Queensland MP,
whose declaration obscures his wife Susan’s vast wealth as “she regards this as
her private business”.
Clerks
do not generally raise concern about MPs’ declarations. Liberal senator Chris
Back mistakenly filed an essentially blank form in August 2014 that went
unnoticed until The Australian brought the oversight to the senator’s attention
11 months later…
Four days earlier
Fletcher had been reported as using the completion of multimillion dollar works
on Tasmania's busiest section of road as a Coalition election promotion despite
the funding being secured by former Labor MP for Franklin Julie Collins.
Tony Abbott’s 2015 captain’s pick in Canning, former army officer and Liberal
MP Andrew Hastie, in what looks
suspiciously like a desperate throw of the dice is
defying the Australian Electoral Commission order to remove corflutes and
other campaign material which depict him in military uniform.
Both images of Hastie are old pics – in uniform he looks to be around seven to eight years younger and the babe in his arms in 2015 is now a considerably larger 10 month old.
Come 28 and 29 May and there was another foolish rabbit in the headlights over at The Sydney Morning Herald
A
Liberal candidate's bid to gatecrash one of Bill Shorten's campaign events
has backfired spectacularly with a car-crash media interview.
Chris
Jermyn found himself unable to articulate the Coalition's health
policies before declaring his hatred for journalists and beating a hasty
retreat.
The
Liberal candidate for the Victorian seat of McEwen showed up at Mr Shorten's
event at the Sunbury Community Health Centre on Saturday. Mr Shorten shook
his hand on his way in, joking that at least he was getting to see
one leader this election...... [http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/federal-election-2016/election-2016-liberal-candidate-chris-jermyn-implodes-at-bill-shorten-event-20160528-gp6536.html]
Coalition candidate Chris Jermyn was involved in a notorious student politics conference in which his fellow Young Liberals proudly chanted about being racist, sexist and homophobic.
But Mr Jermyn insists he was there in an official capacity and did not participate in any protests or chants.
Television footage of the 2005 National Union of Students conference in Ballarat shows Mr Jermyn, then a Melbourne University student and active member of the Young Liberals, walking through a raucous crowd.
This was the same conference where a group of right-wing Young Liberals wearing black T-shirts emblazoned with the words "Shut the f--- up" sang this chant: "We're racist, we're sexist, we're homophobic."
That was followed by "Glory, glory Liberal students"…..
Then ABC News and other mainstream media outlets delivered a body blow to the Liberal Party image on 30 May 2016:
NSW Police have charged a Central Coast man over allegedly posting racist comments on the Facebook page of outgoing Northern Territory Labor senator Nova Peris.
Woy Woy-based chiropractor and osteopath Chris Nelson, 64, was arrested at his business this afternoon.
He has been charged with using a carriage service to cause offence.
Nelson has denied he is responsible, saying his account was hacked.
At the time the comments were posted, Nelson was a member of the Liberal Party's NSW division.
A spokesperson for the Liberal Party has confirmed that Nelson has been stripped of party membership over the allegations.
The comments included several instances of profanity.
"You were only endorsed by Juliar because you were a black c***," the comments read.
"Go back to the bush and suck on witchety grubs and yams."
On her own social media accounts, Ms Peris labelled the comments as "racist and vile hatred".
Just when the Liberal Party thought things could not get any worse along came The Kelly Gang and this was reported in The Sydney Morning Herald on 30 May 2016:
Liberal MP Craig Kelly, one of the most vociferous supporters of Tony Abbott before and during the challenge by Mr Turnbull in September, has been handing out election flyers that contain his wish to "contribute to a Coalition government under Tony Abbott".
Liberal MP Craig Kelly, one of the most vociferous supporters of Tony Abbott before and during the challenge by Mr Turnbull in September, has been handing out election flyers that contain his wish to "contribute to a Coalition government under Tony Abbott".
Fairfax Media has obtained a copy of the flyer, which was being handed out by personally by Mr Kelly at Sutherland railway station on May 20.
"When talking to people across Hughes, it is clear they want a government that will reduce cost of living pressures, support local jobs and small businesses," the flyer states.
"I want to continue my fight to protect the way of life we have all worked hard to build and am looking forward to having the opportunity to contribute to a Coalition government under Tony Abbott."
Mr Kelly insisted on Monday that the brochure was not a bizarre factional call-to-arms but rather a clerical stuff-up……
Meanwhile, much earlier in May the Greens candidate for Grayndler Jim Case, accidentally shot himself in the foot from a distance of years when old YouTube footage surfaced which recorded him in 2014 seated next to Greens member for Melbourne Adam Bandt and NSW Greens senator Lee Rhiannon while expressing a preference for Mr Abbott’s re-election.
Around the same time Arfur came back on the radar one more as
reported in the Brisbane
Times:
Cabinet secretary Arthur
Sinodinos has been referred to the powerful Senate privileges committee to
determine if he is in contempt by refusing an order to attend an inquiry into
political fundraising bodies.
The Senate on Wednesday
resolved to refer Senator Sinodinos for an inquiry into whether he
"disobeyed a lawful order of the Senate without reasonable excuse"
and "whether any contempt was committed in that regard".
It follows Senator
Sinodinos' refusal last week to appear before an inquiry into the controversial
Free Enterprise Foundation and similar fundraising bodies, despite the Senate
directing him to do so.....
President of the Casino Chamber of Commerce, Luke Bodley, lends his support to proposed environmental vandalism on a large scale
Des Euen and ‘friend’ on the Iluka side of the Clarence River mouth at an unspecified date
There is obviously one born every minute somewhere in the world and on 26 May 2016 it was the turn of the National Party's Luke Bodley of Realo Group Pty Ltd to step into the limelight and be recognised .
Here he is on Facebook promoting a proposal to destroy existing environmental, cultural, social and economic values in the Clarence River estuary:
And who is he doing this promotion for? Why for a $1 shelf company, with no apparent business address (instead using the address of the Minter Group), no listed business phone number and, most importantly, no local, state or federal government support.
A phantom-like company which states it has had international development funding approved for five inter-related projects est. to cost $42.7 billion in total.
Projects which appear to still be mere sketches on the back of envelopes if this plan for a large industrial port is any indication:
Figure 1 shows a port precinct which covers an est. 27.2 % of the entire Clarence River estuary,
www.aid-australia.com.au/project-1/
www.aid-australia.com.au/project-1/
According to Mr. Euen the indicative timeline will see Stage 1 of this approx. 36 sq km super-port operational sometime in 2018 - even though not one of the required in-depth reports has been generated to date by AID Australia, no planning application has been submitted yet and no comprehensive surveying undertaken. He laughably states the entire proposed port infrastructure will be completed in around twelve years.
I wonder if Mr. Bodley has ever puzzled over the fact that there is no roar of support emanating from the Clarence Valley for these personal projects of former Queensland truck driver Desmond John Thomas Euen?
Has he thought about why an infrastructure 'plan' that has been hawked around the country for at least the last four to five years has been unable to gain official support in all that time from either local, state or federal governments?
Or wondered why Euen isn't holding his "summit" in the area covered by the lynch-pin in his grandiose plan, the Lower Clarence?
Has he thought about why an infrastructure 'plan' that has been hawked around the country for at least the last four to five years has been unable to gain official support in all that time from either local, state or federal governments?
Or wondered why Euen isn't holding his "summit" in the area covered by the lynch-pin in his grandiose plan, the Lower Clarence?
Perhaps this Google Earth snapshot of what the lowest section of the Clarence River estuary looks like today might give him a hint:
What this image shows is a river from the mouth to Harwood which has been held under Native Title since 2015 and an approach to the river partially blocked by a culturally & spiritually significant coffee rock reef which is the indigenous ancestor Dirrangun.
It shows the base for the largest commercial river & offshore fishery in NSW (generating in excess of an est. $92M output and $15.4M annual income) which supports a fleet moored on both the Iluka and Yamba sides of the river and as far up as Maclean.
There are also oyster leases and aquaculture ponds within the estuary.
This snapshot covers part of the range of one of only two river-dwelling dolphin pods on the east coast of Australia and one which successfully co-exists with the tourism-reliant small towns of Yamba, Iluka and Maclean, as well as with the many domestic and international yachts and other pleasure boats which use the lower river.
The green is this image predominately comprises cane farms, extensive national parks, dedicated foreshore nature reserves and one of this country’s few World Heritage areas, a 136 ha remnant of the ancient Gondwanna subtropical rainforests proclaimed by the United Nations in 1986.
In 2006-07 the people of the Clarence Valley successfully fought off a Howard Government proposal to dam and divert water from the Clarence River catchment for the benefit of mining, agricultural irrigation and land development interests in the Murray Darling Basin and southern Queensland.
That fight was part of the reason why Australia’s federal government changed in 2007.
As late as 30 May 2016 Nationals MP for Clarence and Parliamentary Secretary for the North Coast, Chris Gulapatis, has this to say in response to Euen's scheming:
While even Des Euen himself recently told The Daily Examiner that it is NSW Government policy to direct import-export sea freight to the major ports of Port Jackson, Port Botany, Port Kembla and the Port of Newcastle.
UPDATE
North Coast Voices received this email today:
North Coast Voices Blog - Correction of information required
From: redacted [mailto:redacted@gnfrealestate.com.au]
Sent: Wednesday, 8 June 2016 1:59 PM
To: northcoastvoices@gmail.com
Cc: Darren Perkins
Subject: North Coast Voices Blog - Correction of information required
Sent: Wednesday, 8 June 2016 1:59 PM
To: northcoastvoices@gmail.com
Cc: Darren Perkins
Subject: North Coast Voices Blog - Correction of information required
Good afternoon,
With regard to the below blog link for North Coast Voices,
Luke Bodley ceased employment with GNF Real Estate Pty Ltd on the 28th
April 2016. We request that the mention of George & Fuhrmann Real Estate be
removed from the article.
Regards
Darren Perkins
Managing
Director
George
& Fuhrmann
However Luke Bodley was still listed as part of this real estate company's Casino staff as at 2.28PM on 8 June 2016:
When there is public evidence online that Mr. Bodley is no longer associated with this company the mention will be removed from the body of the post, but the correspondence and comment will remain.
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