Friday, 24 June 2016
Des Euen warned off Yamba by an online supporter
Not that Des Euen needed any hint that many Yamba and Iluka residents would be against the industrialisation of the Clarence River estuary…..
Facebook, 23 June 2016
Mr. Euen is rather sensitive about the few comments on the Australian Infrastructure Developments Pty Ltd Facebook page.
He recently removed comments from two Clarence Valley residents (at least one of whom attended the “summit” he organised at Casino on 2 June 2016) but left his accusations of selfishness against individuals living in the region which would be most affected by this highhanded attempt to make his fortune at the expense of so many ordinary people.
Here's one Clarence Valley councillor losing votes ahead of local government elections in September 2016
Only around 77 days until the Clarence Valley local government election and this is one councillor who has been losing votes all year….
Letter to the Editor in The Daily Examiner on 8 April 2016:
Maclean 'sold out' by council
Councillor Andrew Baker has clearly underestimated the local position in Maclean in regards to council flogging off its strategically valuable property at No 1 MacNaughton Place, Maclean.
As reported on P.3 of Views (March 25) he states that, "The anxiety generated by the sale appears to have subsided" in relation to "the concerns in town about the sale of the building as part of the council's office rationalisation".
No, Andrew, there has been no subsidence of 'anxiety'; the fact is that 'the anxiety' never got off the ground in the first place as many people in Maclean are still quite unaware of what Council is up to here, it was all done so very quietly.
Let's make it quite clear - along with other properties in Maclean, Council is selling off our prime waterfront property at No 1 MacNaughton Place, right in the heart of Maclean's riverfront and historic precinct, and whisking the funds away upriver to help pay for the new "super depot" in Grafton.
It's a prime case of asset stripping, and an open and shut case of being yet another kick in the guts for our town.
There is every reason why this valuable waterfront property should remain in council's (public) ownership - it is in a vitally strategic riverfront position, right in the heart of a prime historic precinct, and integral to the future CBD development for Maclean.
In short, we already own it and it is a property vital to Maclean's future development.
No problem to rent it for now and keep it for future needs when a more enlightened mindset will actually plan our town.
Maclean you are being dudded yet again, "sold out" is the term.
In this case, Cr Baker's plan is that we will end up with a thin strip of land with the levee wall through it.
Fully fits Council's new policy for Maclean, which is "Something Is Better Than Nothing".
Warren Rackham, Maclean
Australian Federal Election 2016: the Nationals funding bandwagon rolls on along NSW North Coast
National MPs and candidates on the NSW North Coast are rolling out the funding promises with a vengeance now the old 2013 Debt & Deficit Disaster campaign slogan has been hidden under the bed.
Sitting MP Kevin Hogan in the Page electorate:
$1.8 million for a boardwalk along Maclean's Riverside Precinct
$200,000 on CCTV coverage of Grafton and South Grafton business districts
$5,300 for the purchase and installation of two reverse cycle air conditioners in Casino's Community Men's Shed
$1 million for rebuilding the Woolgoolga Surf Life-Saving Club
New mobile phone towers at Ramornie, Nammoona, Yorklea and Kyogle
$2 million to replace wooden bridges in Kyogle
$500,000 towards an ampitheatre at Casino
Federal candidate for Richmond Matthew Fraser:
$1 million for a second story on Kingscliff's Salt Surf Life Saving Club
Sitting MP Luke Hartsuyker in The Cowper electorate:
$12,000 for Capacity Building for Sustainable and Biological
Farming in the Bellingen/Coffs Harbour region
$45,400 Local Blueberry Industry Market Segmentation Research
to improve targeting of behaviour change tools for Best Practice
$12,000 in grants for Coffs Harbour community radio
station CHYFM
$27,695 training grant for Macksville business Mid Coast
Trucks
$4,700 Reap Coffs Harbour
$4,460 Pregnancy
Care Coffs Harbour
$1,619 Coffs and Woolgoolga Mental Health and Wellbeing Support Group
$3,950 Sanctuary Australia Foundation
$1,619 Coffs and Woolgoolga Mental Health and Wellbeing Support Group
$3,950 Sanctuary Australia Foundation
$2,250 Special
Needs Support Group
$4,004The Friends of the North Coast Regional Botanic Garden
$2,500 Swimming North Coast – Coffs Harbour
$4,004The Friends of the North Coast Regional Botanic Garden
$2,500 Swimming North Coast – Coffs Harbour
$2,800 Boambee
East Community Centre
$3,333 South
Coffs Community Garden
Somewhere in
all this is Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s $25 million promise to the
Northern Rivers and Mid-North Coast - rather vaguely called the Coalition
jobs package for NSW North Coast and aimed at new, creative and innovative local businesses in the Page, Cowper and
Lyne electorates.
Of course all these businesses, from Taree and Port Macquarie up to Lismore and Ballina, will be competing with each other for a slice of this relatively small amount of money.
* My apologies to North Coast Nationals MPs and candidates if I omitted any funding pledges which have been made to date, but that's the sort of thing that will sometimes occur when election campaign press releases aren't sent out to social media.
Thursday, 23 June 2016
Clarence Valley Council will pursue doof and rave hosts - "no ifs, buts or maybes"
June 16, 2016
Rave party property owner cops maximum fine
THE Clarence Valley Council has promised to take legal action against any landowner who hosts a ‘doof’, ‘rave’ or similar party on their property without proper approval.
Council this week issued a $3000 fine (the maximum allowable) against a property owner who hosted an unauthorised rave party at Newton Boyd where 24-year-old David Gallagher
of Green Pigeon died.
Council general manager, Scott Greensill, said council would go after any landowner who hosted similar events without approval.
“Rules are in place in order to make sure public events are safe, that they have proper medical facilities, proper effluent disposal, traffic management, safe food service and a range of other issues,” he said.
“We will not allow people to flout rules that govern people’s safety.
“If landowners think they can host illegal events like this without penalty they are completely misguided.
“If they choose to break the law we will prosecute, no ifs, buts or maybes.
“If you’re a landowner in one of these remote locations and you are approached by these operators, tell them you’re not interested and notify police. If you don’t, you could face severe penalties.”
Mr Greensill said council’s investigations into the weekend event were continuing and it would work with other agencies, including police, to determine what other sanctions could be applied.
“We make no apology for what some might consider a heavy-handed approach,” he said.
“A young person who attended this latest festival is dead and their family grieving. We will do what we can to make sure other families don’t have to go through the same pain.”
Labels:
Clarence Valley Council,
law
Saffin promises Labor will establish a headspace centre in the Clarence Valley
Shadow Minister For Families And Payments, Shadow Minister For Disability Reform & Member for Jagajaga Jenny Macklin and Labor Candidate For Page Janelle Saffin (pictured above), joint media release, 14 June 2016:
LABOR WILL ESTABLISH A HEADSPACE CENTRE IN THE CLARENCE VALLEY
Shadow Minister for Families and Payments, Jenny Macklin and Labor candidate for Page, Janelle Saffin today announced that a Shorten Labor Government will provide funding for the development of a Headspace Centre in the Clarence Valley which will provide assistance to young people experiencing mental health issues.
“There is a clear gap in mental health services in the Clarence Valley, and this $1.8 million in funding will address that gap by ensuring local young people can access the help they need,” Ms Saffin said.
“Establishing a Headspace Centre will give young people in Grafton and the Clarence Valley the same support as people in Coffs Harbour and Lismore.”
Ms Saffin said the Clarence Valley community had been rocked by the death of 11 young people from suicide in just 12 months.
“There are a number of factors behind the high levels of youth suicide and mental health problems on the North Coast. These include high levels of unemployment, cuts to other youth services, and substance abuse.
“We cannot turn a blind eye to this reality and pretend it’s not happening. Ignoring the mental health needs of young people is effectively casting them adrift.
“That’s why I am so passionate about this issue, and so determined to make sure all young people in the Northern Rivers and North Coast have access to services such as Headspace.
“I have fought for the Headspace service for our region, and secured the Lismore Headspace. I have since argued that the Clarence Valley needs one as well, and if I am elected I will deliver it.”
Shadow Minister for Families and Payments, Jenny Macklin, said regionally delivered and funded services were vital to preventing mental illness and building stronger, more resilient communities.
And Nationals MP for Page for the last three years, Kevin Hogan scrambles to catch up……
The Daily Examiner, 15 June 2016, page 6:
Federal Member for Page Kevin Hogan said an array of extra mental health services were about to be provided in the Clarence Valley due to extra resourcing.
"Mental health is a very serious issue, every suicide in our community a tragedy," he said.
"Following a community meeting in December last year I organised a Consultation Workshop on May 23. This brought together local agencies to decide how the extra resources should be allocated in the Valley.
"There will be an outreach of Headspace from Coffs operating in the Clarence before the end of the year. There will also be more resources allocated at the acute care level.
"Many good mental health services exist in the Clarence Valley. It was identified that many people were not aware of the current services."
Wednesday, 22 June 2016
Fish n Chips not Mega Ships!
"All
the major economic sectors in the lower Clarence Valley are dependent to a
considerable extent on understanding and protecting the estuary’s and
floodplain’s natural processes and values." [DLWC, Umwelt
(Australia Pty Ltd, 2003, Clarence
Estuary Management Plan: The Clarence Estuary - A Valued Asset]
The economic value of tourism is worth an est. $239.4 million per annum to the Clarence Valley with recreational fishing forming a significant part of the region's income and, in 2010 the commercial fishing industry was worth an est. $92 million annually to the valley.
The economies of the three main towns in the Clarence River estuary are heavily based on commercial and recreational fishing and water-based tourism, with Yamba and Iluka being principal holiday destinations.
Boating is a major
recreational activity, with 90% of recreational boating related to fishing and
61% involving retired people. [Clarence Valley Council, 2003]
Fresh seafood caught locally forms part of the staple diet for many Lower Clarence households.
These are the faces of some of the people who threw a line in the last two months:
Bluff Beach, 10 June 2016
Catch at Moriaty’s Wall, 8 June 2016
31 May 2016
[Images from Iluka Bait & Tackle]
However, Australia Infrastructure Developments Pty Ltd and Deakin Capital Pty Ltd - along with Messrs. Des Euen, Thomas Chui, Lee and Nigel Purves - want to destroy this great year-round and holiday lifestyle by lobbying government to allow the
construction of a large industrial port covering over 27 per cent of the Clarence River estuary.
Thereby severely compromising lower river commercial and recreational fishing grounds with the constant movement in and out of the river of mega ships such as these:
construction of a large industrial port covering over 27 per cent of the Clarence River estuary.
Thereby severely compromising lower river commercial and recreational fishing grounds with the constant movement in and out of the river of mega ships such as these:
[North Coast Voices, February 2016]
With their bow wave and propeller wash sucking at known seagrass beds as well as riverbanks along the main estuary channels as they pass.
Many of us who live on the river are firmly of the belief that we would rather have
“Fish n Chips not Mega Ships!”
Brief Background
Long before the arrival of Europeans in the area, local Bundjalung people were fishing the waters of the 'big river' for oysters and fish, as evidenced by the large middens found along the river banks and coastline. The first settlers to the area found a bountiful river surrounded by dense subtropical forests and swamps flowing out to the coastline. Fish were easy to come by and made up an important food source for the early settlers who set about developing forestry and farming in the area. Grafton was established in the 1850’s with the river being a principal source of transport. The introduction of sheep grazing to the area occurred in the late 1850’s and sugar cane farming was carried out as early as 1868 (Anon, 1980a). A small commercial fishery had its beginnings in 1862 when fish were caught to supply workers and their families employed in the construction of the river entrance works. This major project was designed to provide safe navigation for the coastal steamers that traded upriver. Commercial fishermen were supplying fish to the local market by the 1870’s, particularly seasonal fishing for mullet, which was an important local industry supplying the Grafton market (Anon, 1880). The fishing industry began in earnest in 1884 when shipments of fish were sent to Sydney twice a week, weather permitting. The fish, mainly whiting, bream, flat tailed mullet and flathead were packed in ice in large insulated boxes. The boxes were then reused to bring ice on the return trip (Anon, 1994). [Fisheries Research and Development Corporation, A socio—economic evaluation of the commercial fishing industry in the Ballina, Clarence and Coffs Harbour regions, 2009]
o The commercial industry in Northern NSW provides about one-third of the product (fish) landed in the whole of NSW.
o An assessment of fish stocks in NSW indicated most fisheries are probably sustainable but that there should be no expansion of catches.
o The economic modelling results demonstrated that the industry provides quantifiable economic benefits to the Northern NSW region in the form of output, income, employment and value added (gross regional product).
o The combined harvesting and processing sectors of the industry in Northern NSW provided total flow-on effects of $216 million derived from output, $36.1 million in income, 933 employment positions and $75.5 million in value added.
o Two-thirds of the money generated by the operation of the industry is spent in the local and regional economies.
o Commercial fishing activity in the Clarence River occurs in the Estuary General and Estuary Trawl Fisheries.
o The ocean fleet has home port facilities in both Yamba and Iluka.
o The Clarence River Fishermen's Co-op operates two depots with Maclean primarily processing catch from the river fishery and Iluka processing catch from the offshore fishery.
o Ocean Hauling was one of the earliest fisheries to be utilised on the beaches in the Clarence district and continues to be an important fishery in the area.
[Fisheries Research and Development Corporation, 2009 & Clarence Valley Council, 2016]
o In 2010 Clarence Valley Council estimates that the commercial fishing industry is now worth over $92 million and generates over 430 jobs, while the recreational fishing industry which forms a large part of the $280 million tourism industry in the Valley generates much of the economic base of Yamba, Iluka and Maclean.
o Due to tourism Yamba and Iluka regularly double their population during major holiday periods and many retired and family holiday makers are thought to be drawn to the area by fishing and other recreational opportunities on the river.
o Commercial ocean fish and crustacean species both breed and feed in the Clarence River estuary system.
[J.M. Melville, Submission to the Inquiry into the impact of the Murray-Darling Basin Plan on Regional Australia, No. 177, December 2010]
All the
major economic sectors in the lower Clarence Valley are dependent to a
considerable extent on understanding and protecting the estuary’s and
floodplain’s natural processes and values…..
The
outstanding threat nominated by the Maclean group was population growth and
urban development, particularly where this is located close to the estuary.
This is an interesting result, given that the Clarence overall is not an
urbanised waterway. It may reflect the rapid changes that are occurring in
Yamba, and the view in the community that further growth in this area will
require major sustainability issues to be addressed. The appropriate growth
rate and style of development in Yamba has been a major source of discussion
for residents in the lower Clarence, especially in response to Council’s
interpretation of the results of its community survey on the future of Yamba.
Several other frequently nominated threats were examples of the types of
threats that are associated with poorly managed urban growth that exceeds the
capability of the natural system. Declining health of the estuary (from any
cause) was perceived as a major threat by the lower Clarence community,
acknowledging the high economic dependence on estuary health in this area.
[DLWC,
Umwelt (Australia Pty Ltd, 2003, Clarence
Estuary Management Plan: The Clarence Estuary - A Valued Asset]
Labor's plan to rescue the National Broadband Network and scale up rollout of fibre-to-the-premises
For everyone tired of the debacle that is the Abbott-Turnbull Government’s National Broadband Network (NBN) rollout, there may be some hope……..
http://www.100positivepolicies.org.au/
Labor
Candidate For Page Janelle Saffin,
media release, 13 June 2016:
An incoming Shorten Labor Government will direct NBN Co. to prioritise the rollout of Fibre-to-the-Premises NBN to homes and businesses across the electorate of Page.
In the entire electorate of Page, not a single existing home or business will get Malcolm Turnbull’s second rate Fibre-to-the-Node network by 2016 as initially promised. Not one…
Janelle Saffin said that there was a lot of dissatisfaction in the region about Turnbull’s flawed NBN.
“Stephen and I spoke to Keda Ley and her family today to find out why the NBN matters so much to them,” Ms Saffin said.
“She is a mum of three who works and studies from home and she needs a strong, reliable Internet connection to make this happen.
“There are families just like the Ley family across the region; in the 21st century they need first-rate Internet services.
“Of course it isn’t just households who stand to benefit from Labor’s plan. Small business owners can’t compete if they are constantly being held back by an inferior broadband connection.
“The NBN build has not even started in Grafton, Lismore, Alstonville, Casino, Evans Head, Woolgoolga and Yamba. These areas deserve better and Labor will deliver for them......
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