Friday, 3 March 2017
#NotMyDebt: it has spite writ large all over it
Despite any current or future ministerial or departmental denials, ‘explanations’ or excuses, I find it hard to believe that this 22 February 2017 end of business day release of a Centrelink client’s personal, sensitive, protected information to a journalist was accidental.
Particularly as this act was clearly repeated.
It has spite writ large all over it.
The Guardian, 2 March 2017:
The office of human services minister, Alan Tudge, mistakenly sent a journalist internal departmental briefings about a welfare recipient’s personal circumstances, which included additional detail on her relationship and tax history.
Senior departmental figures were grilled at Senate estimates on Thursday about the release of welfare recipient Andie Fox’s personal information last month.
Fox had written an opinion piece critical of Centrelink and its handling of her debt, which ran in Fairfax Media in February. The government released her personal details to Fairfax journalist Paul Malone, who subsequently published a piece attacking Fox and questioning the veracity of her claims.
Two responses were given to the journalist, one from the department of human services and the other from Tudge.
The department said its response – three dot points containing only minimal detail on Fox’s personal history – was cleared by lawyers and was lawful. The minister’s office then added two quotes from Tudge and sent its own response to Malone.
Guardian Australia can now reveal that the minister’s office also accidentally sent the journalist two internal briefing documents, marked “for official use only”, which had been prepared by the department.
Those documents contained additional information on Fox and her personal circumstances, which went beyond the dot points prepared by the department. They included further detail of her relationship history, including when she separated from her partner.
Those documents were then sent to Malone. The documents were also mistakenly sent to Guardian Australia when it raised questions about the disclosure of Fox’s personal information.
No mention of those documents was made in Senate estimates on Thursday, despite repeated questioning of what the minister had disclosed to Malone. Tudge’s office has now conceded the documents were sent to Malone in error. But the office says it was of no consequence, because all of their contents had been legally cleared by the department.
A welfare recipient’s personal details are considered protected information under social security law, and any unlawful disclosure is considered a criminal offence. Earlier, the department told estimates that social security law only allowed it to disclose the minimal amount of information needed to correct the public record. [my highlighting]
On 2 March 2017 Labor MP for Barton and Shadow Minister for Human Services, Linda Burney, wrote to the Australian Federal Police Commissioner requesting an investigation into the personal/sensitive information release by the minister and/or his staff:
Letter to Australian Federal Police Commissioner from Shadow Minister for Human Services Linda Burney MP by clarencegirl on Scribd
BACKGROUND
DHS & Centrelink now threatening clients who expose unfair or inappropriate implementation of social security policy?
Senate Standing Committees on Community Affairs’ Inquiry into Design, scope, cost-benefit analysis, contracts awarded and implementation associated with the Better Management of the Social Welfare System initiative
http://northcoastvoices.blogspot.com.au/search?q=centrelink
Protection
of personal information
Excerpt from Department
of Human Services Privacy Policy:
Our obligations under
the Privacy Act
This policy sets out how we comply with our obligations under
the Privacy Act 1988 and the Australian Privacy Principles which are set out in
a Schedule to that Act.
The Australian Privacy Principles (APPs) regulate how
the department, as an APP entity, must collect, use, disclose and store
personal information. The APP
What personal information and
sensitive information is
The terms 'personal information' and
‘sensitive information’ come from section 6 of the Privacy Act.
References to personal information
throughout the Privacy Policy include sensitive information unless otherwise
indicated.
‘Personal information’ means:
Information or an opinion about an identified individual, or an individual who
is reasonably identifiable:
a) whether the information or opinion
is true or not; and
b) whether the information or opinion is
recorded in a material form or not.
‘Sensitive information’ means:
a) information or an opinion about an
individual’s:
i. racial or ethnic origin
ii. political opinions
iii. membership of a political
association
iv. religious beliefs or affiliations
v. philosophical beliefs
vi. membership of a professional or
trade association
vii. membership of a trade union
viii. sexual orientation or practices
ix. criminal record.
b) health information about an
individual
c) genetic information about an
individual that is not otherwise health information
d) biometric information that is to be
used for the purpose of automated biometric verification or biometric
identification e) biometric templates
Sky
News, 2 March
2017:
It was also confirmed
Centrelink staff trawl social media for complaints about the welfare agency and
may refer serious gripes to the responsible minister.
Senior bureaucrats
responsible for Centrelink say their workers sift through print, broadcast and
social media for individual complaints.
Deciding on whether to
report grievances to the human services minister depended on the circumstances
of each case.
Labels:
#notmydebt,
big data,
Centrelink,
data retention,
debt,
privacy,
safety,
welfare payments
Yamba Bay Park safe - for now
Coastal development pressure is never ending in the NSW Northern Rivers region and this was just the latest example, in the small town of Yamba perched where the mighty Clarence River meets the Pacific Ocean.
This was the NSW Roads & Maritime Services (RMS)request received according to Clarence Valley Council Ordinary Monthly Meeting Minutes, 21 February 2017:
In a letter to Council from RMS received 2 December 2016 a potential site situated on Yamba Road, Yamba was identified by RMS as being suitable. The land situated to the north of Yamba Road is identified as Lot 7053 DP 1114190 and the landward portion of Lot 164 in DP 751395. The RMS objective is to construct a two storey operations facility to cater for up to fifteen staff from the three agencies. According to RMS the parcel of land would give the three on-water compliance agencies easy access to the water via the adjacent launching ramp and the RMS marina facility.
One of these lots is covered by Native Title and the other is the subject of an Aboriginal Land Claim.
It is a popular little park used by both locals and visitors and is part of the Yamba Road streetscape.
Council in the Chamber wisely decided against turning it into a state government agency office building:
COUNCIL RESOLUTION – 15.010/17
Williamson/Clancy
That Council not support the transfer of Lot 7053 DP 1114190 and part Lot 164 DP 751395 for the reasons
outlined in this report.
Voting recorded as follows:
For: Simmons, Kingsley, Clancy, Ellem, Novak, Williamson, Toms
Against: Baker
Hopefully Clarence Valley towns and villages will be able to defend all their green spaces as this set of Clarence Valley councillors scramble to find money to meet the $1.2 million project shortfall resulting from a badly planned remediation of the former Grafton depot site – costing to date an est. $6,976,72. Which represents an est. $2.5 million blowout of the remediation budget.
A problem created by the foolish former council initially agreeing to proceed based on a concept level plan only and despite the lack of sufficient information concerning potential costs associated with the Grafton Depot Rationalisation Project.
Not forgetting the need to make up additional $4.13 million cash flow shortfalls these councillors inherited and, in small part have helped exacerbate since their election.
Labels:
Clarence Valley Council,
coastal development,
parks,
Yamba
70 year-old Australian children's picture books author treated like dirt by Trump Regime
Mem Fox is a retired Associate Professor of Literacy Studies (Flinders University, South Australia) and a well-known picture book author.
On 25 February 2017 ABC News reported on her experience of the Trump Regime:
Australian author Mem Fox has received a written apology from the United States after what she said was a traumatic detention by immigration officials at Los Angeles Airport.
Fox, who was questioned by Customs and Border Protection officers for two hours earlier this month as she was on her way to Milwaukee to address a conference, said she collapsed and sobbed at her hotel after she was released.
She said the border agents appeared to have been given "turbocharged power" by an executive order signed by President Donald Trump to "humiliate and insult" a room full of people they detained to check visas.
That executive order was eventually halted by Federal Courts and it was expected a new order would be signed this week, designed to avoid the confusion caused by the original.
"I have never in my life been spoken to with such insolence, treated with such disdain, with so many insults and with so much gratuitous impoliteness," Fox said.
"The entire interview took place with me standing, with my back to a room full of people in total public hearing and view — it was disgraceful.
"I felt like I had been physically assaulted which is why, when I got to my hotel room, I completely collapsed and sobbed like a baby, and I'm 70 years old."
Fox, whose books include classics such as Possum Magic and Ten Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes, said she was questioned about her visa status, even though she had travelled to the United States 116 times previously without incident.
"My heart was pounding so hard as I was waiting to be interviewed, because I was observing what was happening to everybody else in the room," she said.
"They accused me of coming in on the wrong visa and they were totally wrong about that.
"The person who interviewed me was heavy with weaponry, was totally dressed in black with the word 'police' in hand-sized letters across his chest."
The author lodged a complaint with the Australian embassy in Washington, and later one with the United States embassy in Canberra to which she received an emailed letter of apology.
"I said any decent American would have been shocked to the core by what had happened, it was so dreadful," Fox said.
"And I had an absolutely charming letter from them within hours of my email hitting their desk."
The author said she was unlikely to visit the United States again despite the friendliness of ordinary Americans.
Labels:
Australia-US relations,
Donald Trump,
fascism,
Trump Regime
Thursday, 2 March 2017
Clarence Valley Council: a local government history lesson......
In August 2011 it was announced that Clarence Valley Council had a new general manager, Scott Greensill.
Mr. Greensill came to the Clarence Valley trailing considerable baggage from his previous position as Singleton Council’s general manager.
It has been an open secret ever since that Clarence Valley Council staff have become disturbed by an uncomfortable ‘atmosphere’ developing in the workplace - as well as residents, ratepayers and a numbers of councillors being unhappy with a perceived decrease in local government administrative transparency and those project cost blowouts amounting to millions of dollars.
From 2011 through to the 2016 local government election the general manager had the unwavering support of then Clarence Valley mayor, Richie Williamson.
So much so that an effort was made to entrench the general manager’s position ahead of the 2016 local government election.
The
Daily Examiner,
23 February 2015:
The publication of the minutes of the
meeting on Friday revealed council has offered Mr Greensill a new five-year
contract incorporating his existing job description and remuneration package.
But the vote to approve the new
contract did not include Crs Baker and Toms, who, according to the minutes,
left the chamber before it was concluded.
The remaining seven councillors voted
unanimously to renew the general manager's contract to run from February 17,
2015 to February 16, 2020.
It took the intervention of a member
of the public, Geoff Helisma, to encourage councillors to debate whether the
matter should be public or heard in private.
Mr Helisma said he was worried
renewing the general manager's contract at this point meant the next group of
councillors elected in September next year would have a general manager they
had no say in selecting.
He pointed out this had been a
consideration when the State Government's review of local government ruled
councils could not appoint a general manager less than six months out from an
election.
This was a North Coast Voices post published on Monday 23 February 2015:
How to constrain an incoming council in one easy lesson
It took Council in the Chamber less than twenty-six minutes to decide to renew the general manager's $240,000 contract, approve additional financial provisions and extend his employment to 17 February 2020 - thereby binding the next duly elected Clarence Valley Council to a particular general manager for all but the last seven months of its four-year term in office.
So rushed was this process that it appears that the new employment contract was signed on the night.
1. COUNCIL RESOLUTION – 07.003/15
(Crs Williamson/McKenna)
That
Council resolve itself into Committee of the Whole and the press and public be excluded to allow consideration of one confidential report 10.001/15: In accordance with Section 10A(2)(a) of the Local Government Act 1993, it is recommended that as the matter contains personnel matters concerning a particular individual (other than Councillors) that the matter be dealt with in closed session.
Voting recorded as follows
For:
Councillors Williamson, McKenna, Hughes, Lysaught, Simmons, Howe, Kingsley
Against:
Councillors Baker, Toms
2. The microphones were turned off, live streaming ceased and the press and public were excluded from the Chamber.
Council moved into the Committee of the Whole at 9.21 pm to consider Item 10.001/15.....
The Ordinary Council meeting resumed at 9.47 pm.
3. COUNCIL RESOLUTION – 10.001/15
(Cr Williamson)
(a) That Council enter into a Deed of Variation with Mr Scott Greensill to vary the current contract of employment between Council and Mr Scott Greensill by deleting the words “or at the most 18 months” from Clause 5.3 and that the Common Seal of the Council be affixed to the Deed.
(b) That subject to the Deed referred to in Paragraph (a) above being executed by Council and Mr Scott Greensill, Council offers Mr Scott Greensill a new five year contract of employment, incorporating the existing job description, and inclusive of a total remuneration package equal to his current total remuneration package, to commence on 17 February 2015 (or as soon as the documentation is executed) and terminating on 16 February 2020 (or 5 years after commencement).
(c) That the contract of employment be in accordance with the standard contract required by the NSW Office of Local Government.
(d) That the Mayor be authorised to negotiate the employment contract terms applicable to provision of a Council motor vehicle to Mr Greensill to be consistent with Council’s standard policy arrangements for provision of motor vehicles to other staff.
(e) That Schedule A under Clause 4.5 of the contract of employment extend the application of the following Council Policies to the General Manager:
• Gifts and Benefits
• Reimbursement of Legal Costs to Staff
• Business Credit Card Use
• Motor Vehicle Management Protocol
• Sick Leave/Carer’s Leave
• Staff Travelling Expenses
(f) That the contract of employment be executed by affixing the Common Seal of the Council.
Voting recorded as follows
For:
Councillors Williamson, Hughes, Howe, Simmons, McKenna, Lysaught, Kingsley
Against:
Nil
Noting that Crs Baker and Toms were absent from the Chamber and did not vote
4. COUNCIL RESOLUTION – 07.004/15
(Crs Hughes/Simmons)
That
Council move out of the Committee of the Whole and the Ordinary Meeting resume.
Voting recorded as follows
For:
Councillors Williamson, Howe, Hughes, Simmons, McKenna, Lysaught, Kingsley
Against:
Nil
Noting that Crs Baker and Toms were absent from the Chamber and did not vote.
5. Cr Baker, Cr Toms, Scott Greensill, Troy Anderson, Des Schroder, Ashley Lindsay and Kristian Enevoldson returned to the Council meeting at 9.53pm......
5. Cr Baker, Cr Toms, Scott Greensill, Troy Anderson, Des Schroder, Ashley Lindsay and Kristian Enevoldson returned to the Council meeting at 9.53pm......
There being no further business the meeting closed at 9.53 pm.
Guidelines
for the general manager performance management framework under section 23A of the Local Government Act 1993
(July 2011) state:
Performance review panels should
comprise the mayor, the deputy mayor,
another councillor nominated by
council and a councillor nominated by the general manager. The council’s governing body
may also consider including an
independent observer on the panel.
Panel members should be trained in the
performance management of general
managers.
The role of the review panel includes:
*
conducting performance reviews
*
reporting the findings and recommendations of those reviews to council
*
development of the performance agreement.
The governing body of council and the
general manager may agree on the
involvement of an external facilitator
to assist with the process of performance
appraisal and the development of new
performance plans. This person should be selected by the governing body of
council or the performance review panel.
As had been done in previous years, a performance review was undertaken in 2016.
On 19 February the four-man Performance Review Committee for 2015-16 (Crs. Williamson, Howe, Simmons and Lysaught) undertook a review of the General Manager’s performance (facilitated by Mike Colreavy) covering the year of his employment contract from 17 February 2015 to 16 February 2016 and Council-in-the-Chamber endorsed the performance review report 7 votes to 2.
On 19 February the four-man Performance Review Committee for 2015-16 (Crs. Williamson, Howe, Simmons and Lysaught) undertook a review of the General Manager’s performance (facilitated by Mike Colreavy) covering the year of his employment contract from 17 February 2015 to 16 February 2016 and Council-in-the-Chamber endorsed the performance review report 7 votes to 2.
Rather oddly, at the post-2016 local government election extraordinary council meeting of 27 September 2016 when council committee memberships were allocated there was no mention of forming a new Performance Review Committee for 2016-17 .
Presumably that situation was a part-reason for this item placed on the agenda of the 21 February 2017 Clarence Valley Council ordinary monthly meeting by current mayor, Jim Simmons:
An excerpt from Clarence Valley Council Ordinary Monthly Meeting Minutes, 21 February 2017:
MOTION
Simmons/Kingsley
That the Confidential Mayoral Minute (Item 11.001/17) on the General Manager’s Performance Agreement
– Proposed Variation be brought forward and considered as the next item of business. CARRIED.
Mr Scott Greensill declared an interest and left the Chamber at 4.03 pm.
MOTION
Toms/Kingsley
That Council move into Confidential Session to consider Item 11.001/17. CARRIED.
The press and public were excluded from the meeting at 4.04 pm.
MOTION
Toms/Kingsley
That Council move back into open forum at 4.47 pm. CARRIED.
The press and public were invited to return to the Chamber.
MOTION
Williamson/Novak
That Council adopt the motion in Confidential Session as follows:
That
1. Council seek agreement with the General Manager for the General Manager’s performance review to be undertaken under the terms of the guidelines for the appointment and oversight of general managers issued by the Office of Local Government July 2011 noting that the request that, in open Council, one Councillor (other than the Mayor, Deputy Mayor, and General Manager’s nominee) will be appointed to the Performance Review Committee as requested by the General Manager and one Councillor will be nominated by the General Manager.
2. If agreement is not reached then the matter be reported to Council.
Voting recorded as follows:
For: Simmons, Baker, Clancy, Ellem, Williamson, Toms, Novak
Against: Kingsley
MOTION
Simmons/Toms
That subject to agreement to Point 1 by the General Manager, a Councillor be appointed to the Performance Review Committee. CARRIED
MOTION
Toms/Clancy
That Councillor Ellem be appointed to the Performance Review Committee. CARRIED.
Mr Scott Greensill returned to the meeting at 4.55 pm.
The result of this council resolution appears to be that the current Performance Review Committee is almost certain to be composed of Crs. Simmons, Kingsley, Ellem and the councillor nominated by the general manager which is likely to be either Williamson or Lysaught.
A committee profile with which Mr. Greensill may not be in wholehearted agreement.
Enquiries from local media have elicited a statement from Clarence Valley Council that the General Manager has since gone on “sick leave” until 13 March 2017.
Unconfirmed rumour on social media suggests that Greensill has in fact resigned.
In recent years it has been rumoured that he was eager to obtain employment outside of the Clarence Valley for 'personal' reasons.
In recent years it has been rumoured that he was eager to obtain employment outside of the Clarence Valley for 'personal' reasons.
This is a Clarence Valley Council meeting notice in March 2017:
There is no business paper currently available for this extraordinary meeting and for the most part it will be dealt with in confidential session, so residents and ratepayers may have to wait until the local grapevine kicks in to flesh out whatever the meeting minutes reveal.
UPDATE
The 3 March 2017 extraordinary meeting took a whole 8 minutes to move into a closed session which lasted approx. 1 hour & 21 minutes and, then a further 6 minutes to unanimously pass a motion to the effect that the closed session resolution/s concerning the General Manager's employment contract is to remain confidential and close the meeting.
Labels:
Clarence Valley Council,
local government
How major electricity suppliers take advantage of rural and regional customers
This is what NSW Dept of Industry, Resources and Energy advises owners of roof top solar power previously covered by pre 31 December 2016 feed-in tariffs:
It is up to individual customers to decide what metering arrangement will best suit their property, system and budget. You may wish to refer to the fact sheet Small Scale Solar PV Generators.
Generally if you do not receive a feed-in tariff, or if your feed-in tariff is lower than the price you pay for electricity, you are likely to be better off with a net meter. Under net metering, electricity from a solar PV system is first used to meet any consumption that takes place at the time of the generation. This means that for each kilowatt hour you consume of your own generation, you save the retail price that would otherwise be paid for that consumption.
Customers are encouraged to contact their distributor or accredited service provider to discuss their metering options before making a final decision.
Endeavour Energy customer contact number 131 003Ausgrid call centre number 131 535
Essential Energy contact number 13 23 91
The writer of this letter to the editor, published in the Clarence Valley Independent on 22 February 2017, appears to be currently exporting all his solar power to a residential energy supplier for a pitiful return.
This is occurring because the power supplier (which based on stated costing is likely to be Origin/Essential Energy) is refusing to install a net meter function for the solar power system because of alleged deficiencies in mobile coverage.
Mobile cover is required as the digital net meter in question is to be read remotely and, apparently existing NBN satellite or fixed wireless cover in the Braunstone area is not considered satisfactory by the energy company's representative.
I'm sure there are more than a few Northern Rivers residents in the same situation as Mr. Philipse and, I rather suspect that residential energy suppliers are quite content to have it continue that way. As the est. $18 cents per kwh hour net profit earned from a customer's rooftop solar power output by charging top price of 24.2 cents per kwh for that same solar power as residential supply back to that customer, is money for jam for these companies.
Labels:
electricity,
Northern Rivers,
renewable energy,
rorts
Remember the NSW Premier who needed to urgently & immediately retire because he was needed by his family?
On 19 January 2017 then Liberal MP for Manly and NSW Premier Michael Bruce 'Mike' Baird announced that due to serious illness in his extended family he needed to quit politics right now.
Despite a generous parliamentary pension calculated on 9 years & 10
months as a member of parliament, 7 years as a shadow minister, over 4 years as
a minister and 2 yrs, 9 months & 7 days as state premier, he immediately started to look for a high powered job in the private sector.
Forty days later it was reported that Baird had been made part of National Australia Bank's senior executive team as head of its corporate and institutional banking division.
Where his parliamentary pension will be topped up by a NAB annual remuneration package which includes cash salary in the vicinity of $1 million (based on executive remuneration in NAB 2016 Annual Financial Report) and benefits such as superannuation and performance rights.
A cash salary around three times more than he received as NSW premier.
It seems that having decided that he didn't want to fulfil his commitment to his electorate and serve his full term Mike Baird came up with a 'reason' for going that doesn't bear close scrutiny.
One again a Liberal Party politician played New South Wales voters for fools.
UPDATE
According to one South Australian reader on 1 March 2017 Mike Baird admitted to the ABC that his total annual remuneration package was $2 million.
Wednesday, 1 March 2017
Tony Abbott MP: the man who lied about a carbon tax is preparing to lie to voters once again
The week
former chief of staff to Tony Abbott, Peta
Credlin, confirmed that he had deliberately
lied when
characterising the Gillard Government’s price on carbon as a "carbon tax", The Sydney Morning Herald reported this:
Tony Abbott has
laid out a five-point plan for the Coalition to have a chance at the
"winnable" next election, including cutting back immigration and
scrapping the Human Rights Commission.
In a major speech
in Sydney at the launch of a new book, Making Australia Right, on Thursday
evening, Mr Abbott gave the clearest signal yet he believed the
Turnbull government is failing to cut through with voters, and that
the contest of ideas - and for the soul of the modern Liberal Party - between
the current and former prime minister has a long way to run.
Mr Abbott noted nearly
40 per cent of Australians didn't vote for the Coalition or Labor in the 2016
election: "It's easy to see why".
In a sign a return to
the leadership was on his radar, Mr Abbott set out ideas on
how to take the fight to Labor and win back Coalition voters thinking
of defecting to Pauline Hanson's One Nation.
"In short, why not say to the people of Australia:
we'll cut the RET [renewable energy target] to help with your power bills;
we'll cut immigration to make housing more affordable; we'll scrap the Human
Rights Commission to stop official bullying; we'll stop all new
spending to end ripping off our grandkids; and we'll reform the
Senate to have government, not gridlock?"
He said the next election was winnable for the Coalition,
however, "our challenge is to be worth voting for. It's to win back the
people who are giving up on us".
[my
highlighting]
So let’s look
at this jumble of potential three-word slogans being readied for the next Coalition federal
election campaign.
RET –renewable energy target
In 2014 the
Abbott Government ordered a review of RET. This review found that RET tends to lower wholesale
electricity prices and that the RET would have almost no impact on consumer
prices over the period 2015–2030.
Despite Abbott's downgrading of RET targets when he was prime minister, in 2017 the Turnbull Coalition Government (of which Abbott is a member) continues its support of these targets.
According to the Dept of Industry, Innovation and Science network costs are the biggest factor driving up the cost of electricity and a large part of these higher costs has been the need to replace or upgrade ageing power infrastructure, as most electricity networks were built throughout the 1960s and 1970s.
Despite Abbott's downgrading of RET targets when he was prime minister, in 2017 the Turnbull Coalition Government (of which Abbott is a member) continues its support of these targets.
According to the Dept of Industry, Innovation and Science network costs are the biggest factor driving up the cost of electricity and a large part of these higher costs has been the need to replace or upgrade ageing power infrastructure, as most electricity networks were built throughout the 1960s and 1970s.
Housing affordability
In December
2016 the Australian Bureau of Statistics
(ABS) recorded 11.3 million houses/units/flats purchased by investors for rent
or resale by individuals and a further 1.3 million for rent or resale by
others. [ABS 5609.0 Housing Finance]
The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) in June
2015 clearly indicated that purchase of housing stock by investors had
increased to almost 23 per cent of all housing stock and, that increased
investor activity and strong growth in housing prices were occurring along with
an increase in negatively geared investment properties. [RBA, Submission to House of Representatives
Standing Committee on Economics Inquiry into Home Ownership]
The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS)
put the matter bluntly in Fuel on the fire: negative gearing,
capital gains tax & housing affordability - The
tax system at both the federal and state level inflates housing costs,
undermines affordability, and distorts the operation of housing markets. Tax
settings are not the main reason for excessive growth in home prices, but they
are an important part of the problem. They inflate demand for existing
properties when the supply of new housing is insufficient to meet demand.
Ironically, many public policies that are claimed to improve affordability -
such as negative gearing arrangements, Capital Gains Tax breaks for investors,
and first home owner grants for purchasers – make the problem worse.
Competition between investor-developers recently saw $1.3 million added to the sale price of an older house at a Sydney metropolitan auction.
Competition between investor-developers recently saw $1.3 million added to the sale price of an older house at a Sydney metropolitan auction.
Although
population growth is a factor in competition for housing stock, nowhere in
reputable studies or reports can I find mention of immigration levels significantly
contributing to this competition. Which
is not surprising, given that natural population increase and increase through
migration do not occur uniformly within Australian states & territories and
natural increase will outstrip migration in some states and territories in a
given year.
Human Rights Commission
On 26
December 1976 the Fraser Coalition Government announced its intention to
establish a Human Rights Commission which
would provide
orderly and systematic procedures for the promotion of human rights and for ensuring that Australian laws were
maintained in conformity with the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights and in order that citizens
who felt they had been discriminated against under specific Commonwealth laws
such as laws relating to discrimination on
grounds of race or sex (but excluding laws in the employment area) would be able to have their complaints
examined.
The
Commission was created in 1981 by an act of the
Australian Parliament and later rebirthed as the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity
Commission in 1986 by another act of the
Australian Parliament.
Whilst ever
no Commonwealth statute exists which sets out the core rights of Australian
citizenship the federal parliament continues to fail to guarantee protection
against its own legislative or regulatory excesses.
The Human
Rights Commission is one of the few points at which ordinary citizens without considerable
financial means can seek redress of a wrong or harm done to them.
No new spending
I simply
refer readers to Tony Abbott’s economic record in the slightly less than two
years he spent as Australian prime minister, when on his watch economic
growth was slowing and living standards were falling.
Senate reform
This is Section
57 of the Australian Constitution which would have to be amended and is
required to be taken to a national referendum before reform can occur:
If the House of Representatives passes any proposed law, and the Senate rejects
or fails to pass it, or passes it with amendments to which the House of
Representatives will not agree, and if after an interval of three months the
House of Representatives, in the same or the next session, again passes the
proposed law with or without any amendments which have been made, suggested, or
agreed to by the Senate, and the Senate rejects or fails to pass it, or passes
it with amendments to which the House of Representatives will not agree, the
Governor-General may dissolve the Senate and the House of Representatives
simultaneously. But such dissolution shall not take place within six months
before the date of the expiry of the House of Representatives by effluxion of
time.
If after such dissolution the House of Representatives again passes the
proposed law, with or without any amendments which have been made, suggested,
or agreed to by the Senate, and the Senate rejects or fails to pass it, or
passes it with amendments to which the House of Representatives will not agree,
the Governor-General may convene a joint sitting of the members of the Senate
and of the House of Representatives.
The members present at the joint sitting may deliberate and shall vote together
upon the proposed law as last proposed by the House of Representatives, and
upon amendments, if any, which have been made therein by one House and not
agreed to by the other, and any such amendments which are affirmed by an
absolute majority of the total number of the members of the Senate and House of
Representatives shall be taken to have been carried, and if the proposed law,
with the amendments, if any, so carried is affirmed by an absolute majority of
the total number of the members of the Senate and House of Representatives, it
shall be taken to have been duly passed by both Houses of the Parliament, and
shall be presented to the Governor-General for the Queen's assent.
The last national
referendum held in Australia was in 1999 and cost
$66,820,894 according to the Australian Electoral Commission for a vote on
two questions.
Like 34 of
the 44 referendum questions before them these two questions did not carry. In
fact the
last referendum questions to be carried were in 1977.
Prospect of
successful right-wing reform of the Senate?
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