Wednesday, 30 January 2019
Prime Minister Scott Morrion's bullying of single mothers increases
The
Guardian, 28
January 2019:
Single mothers placed on
a compulsory welfare program for disadvantaged parents allege they were
pressured into allowing private job service providers to collect their
“sensitive information”.
ParentsNext participants
are asked to sign a privacy notification and consent form, which is similar to
documentation provided to those on other welfare programs such as the
employment scheme Jobactive.
The program is
compulsory for those who want to receive parenting payments and are considered
“disadvantaged”, but departmental guidelines state that participants may
decline to sign the form and still take part.
Instead, some case
workers have told participants that they would have their payments cut if they
refused to sign the form.
The situation has meant
women who did not want to give their consent have done so anyway. One of the
five participants who spoke to Guardian Australia about their experience said
they felt the situation represented “coercion”.
“She [my case worker]
just said, flat out, ‘If you don’t sign it, you won’t get your parenting
payment’,” one mother, who did not want to be named, told Guardian Australia.
“It was simple as that.”
The women were concerned
by the fact the privacy form states that providers “may collect sensitive
information … [which] may include … medical information”. It is understood the
form would allow providers to handle participants’ mental health information.
Parenting payment is the
sole income for many women on the ParentsNext program, which
is currently the subject of a Senate inquiry.
While is standard
practice for welfare recipients to be asked to sign privacy consent and
notification forms, the chairman of the Australian Privacy Foundation, David
Vaile, noted that, in this case, the women felt they needed to sign the form in
order to keep receiving their payments.
“It has all the
characteristics of bad consent,” Vaile said.
Ella Buckland, who has
been campaigning against ParentsNext since she was placed on the program, has
asked her provider to destroy the consent form she signed last year. She was
told she needed to sign the form to take part in the program – and therefore
keep her payments.
“I felt humiliated and
disempowered that I didn’t have a choice,” Buckland, a former Greens staffer,
told Guardian Australia. “[I thought] if I didn’t sign it, I wouldn’t be able
to feed my kids.”
The department has told
Buckland in writing she may withdraw her consent at any time. Her provider, who
did not reply to a request for comment, has been asked by the Department of
Jobs and Small Business to respond to her claims.
Terese Edwards, the
chief executive of the National Council of Single Mothers and their Children,
said many women had legitimate reasons for refusing to sign the form, such as
having left a violent relationship.
“Providing this information reduces their
sense of security,” she said. “It could be where the child is getting schooled,
which then has the address of the parent. It could also have the name of the
child.”
Among the women Guardian
Australia has spoken is a mother of a transgender child who did not want to
sign the form because she was concerned about the privacy of her daughter.
Eva* is eligible for an
exemption from the program because she homeschools her daughter, but was told
in a text message she would have to sign the consent form for this to be
processed. She was also told she would have to attend a meeting with her
provider, about two hours’ drive away, and to provide evidence that her
daughter was homeschooled......
ParentsNext privacy notific... by on Scribd
Murray-Darling Basin irrigator has cotton farm asset frozen under Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act - required to pay back $15.7 million
People living along the major rivers on the NSW Far North Coast, particularly those on the Clarence River, will remember that it was irrigators in southern Queensland as well as other areas within the Murray-Darling Basin who made repeated calls to dam and divert one of more of these coastal rivers to fill heir greedy maws with additional water.
The
Courier Mail,
25 January 2019, p.27:
Authorities have gone to
court to force an award-winning Queensland cotton farmer to pay $16 million to
the state’s Public Trustee after a “covert source” told them the accused
water fraudster had sold his farm for more than $100 million.
John Douglas Norman, 43,
a former Australian Cotton Farmer Of The Year, from Toobeah in southern
Queensland, has been charged with defrauding the Murray-Darling Basin water program
of $20 million.
The charges are before
the Brisbane Magistrates Court.
Last week the State
Government was granted an urgent court order, forcing Norman to pay $15.7
million to the state’s Public Trustee, after the police received a tip that his
company had sold its Queensland cotton and grain farms to a global corporate
giant.
Norman must pay the
$15.7 million once his deal with the $43 billion Canadian giant Manulife
Financial Corporation settles, a Supreme Court judge has ruled. The order was
made under the Criminal Proceeds Confiscation Act.
The mega-deal was due to
settle last week, court documents state. Until the $15.7 million is paid,
Norman’s share of the giant farms, west of Goondiwindi, will remain frozen by
the Supreme Court.
The remaining share of
the business is owned by his mother Aileen Joan Norman. She has not been
charged with any crimes and has not had her assets frozen.
The farms, spread over
18,000ha, are mostly irrigated and run along or close to the NSW-Queensland
border, the court heard. They are in “a core crop production region” and with
“significant water entitlements”.
The farms and a $2
million riverfront Southport mansion, owned by Norman’s wife Virginia, were
raided and searched by police during the probe, court documents state.
BACKGROUND
The Land, 30 August 2018:
Meanwhile in Queensland,
a major alleged fraud in the cotton industry was uncovered by police, with two
executives from Queensland's cotton group Norman Farming charged over an an
alleged $20 million fraud involving federal funds earmarked for Murray-Darling
water savings.
Norman Farming CEO John Norman,
43, and his chief financial officer Steve Evans, 53, were granted bail after
appearing in Brisbane Magistrates Court over the alleged fraud.
Police allege the
director of the company submitted fraudulent claims, including falsified
invoices related to six water-efficiency projects on a property near
Goondiwindi, called Healthy Headwater projects.
Police allege the fraud
occurred over seven years.
In NSW, the Natural
Resources Access Regulator (NRAR) has issued a number of charges in the north
and south-west of NSW for various alleged water offences.
The NRAR is the new
independent water regulator in NSW. It started operations on April 30, after an
outcry over alleged water deals in northern NSW exposed by the ABC's Four
Corners program….
NRAR said it was
pursuing the following cases:
● A Moree company has
been charged with water theft offences. It is alleged the company, involved in
irrigation, took water from a river while metering equipment was not working,
an offence against section 91I(2) of the Water Management Act 2000. It is
further alleged they constructed and used a channel to convey water without
approval.
● A Carinda man has been
charged with using a channel to convey water without approval, an offence
against s91B of the Water Management Act 2000.
● Two men have been
charged with water theft offences on properties in Walgett and Mallowa.
● A 35-year-old man from
Carinda in Northern NSW alleged he provided false and misleading information to
water investigators.
● Two men have been
charged after they allegedly carried out controlled activities on the Murray
River near Corowa.
ABC News, 13 February 2018:
The Murray Darling Basin
Authority (MDBA) is powerless to prevent upstream farmers harvesting overland
floodwaters desperately needed to flow through the river system for the benefit
of all users, the authority's head has admitted.
It comes as details
emerge of massive earthworks built to enable upstream farmers to carry out
"floodplain harvesting"…..
Last week, MDBA head
Phillip Glyde travelled to Mr Lamey's farm to see first hand what was
happening.
"I've learnt a
lot," Mr Glyde told 7.30.
"For people like
the Lameys, it's very hard to negotiate through and find what's the best way to
make sure the problems they're experiencing don't occur."
Although he admitted
floodplain harvesting was a serious issue, he acknowledged there was nothing
the authority could do in relation to the approval and regulation of irrigation
earthworks.
"There's
overlapping responsibilities: local, state, different departments," he
said.
"Then you've got
the Commonwealth, then you've got the Murray Darling Basin Plan."
On Wednesday, the Senate
decides whether to pass a proposed reduction in the amount of water Queensland
irrigators give back to the ailing Murray Darling River system.
"We don't want the
irrigators to be keeping even more water, we want the banks pulled down in
Queensland," Mr Lamey said.
"We want the river
to run like it should."
Labels:
local courts,
Murray-Darling Basin,
rivers,
Supreme Court,
water wars
Tuesday, 29 January 2019
First Newspoll of 2019 doesn't end Morrison Government's losing streak
SBS News, 29 January 2018:
The coalition's primary
vote has risen in the first Newspoll of 2019, but Labor remains in front.
Support for Scott
Morrison's government increased by two points, according the poll published by
The Australian on Monday night.
The Newspoll shows Labor
ahead in the two-party preferred vote 53-47.
The poll was conducted
between January 24-27 and based on a survey of 1634 voters across Australia.
Graphics on Twitter, 29 January 2019 |
Scott Morrison
remains preferred prime minister at 43 to Shorten’s 36 per cent in this latest
Newspoll.
The last time
the Coalition were ahead on a Newspoll Two
Party Preferred (TPP) basis was on 2 July 2016 when the Turnbull Government
stood at 50.5 per cent on the day of the 2016 federal election.
That
represents a 30 month long losing streak for the Liberal-Nationals Coalition to date.
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/newspoll
While the Coalition's easy dominance of the Newspoll Primary Vote had ended within five months of the last federal election and disappeared completely by 26 August 2018.
|
Labels:
Australian politics,
elections 2019,
poll,
statistics
Wangan and Jagalingou people's fight against foreign mining giant Adani continues into 2019
ABC
News, 25
January 2019:
The United Nations has
asked the Australian Government to consider suspending the Adani project in
central Queensland until it gains the support of a group of traditional owners
who are fighting the miner in court.
A UN committee raised
concerns that the Queensland coal project may violate Indigenous rights under
an international convention against racial discrimination if it goes ahead,
giving Australia until April to formally respond.
Meanwhile, a public
interest legal fund backed by former corruption fighter Tony Fitzgerald has
stepped in with financial backing for a federal court challenge to Adani by its
opponents within the Wangan and Jagalingou (W&J) people.
The Grata Fund, which
boasts the former federal court judge as a patron, agreed to pay a
court-ordered $50,000 bond so W&J representatives can appeal a court ruling
upholding a contentious land access deal secured by the miner.
The UN Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination last month wrote to Australia's UN
ambassador to raise concerns that consultation on Adani's Indigenous Land Use
Agreement (ILUA) "might not have been conducted in good faith".
These allegations
"notably" included that members of the W&J native title claim
group were excluded, and the committee was concerned the project "does not
enjoy free, prior and informed consent of all (W&J) representatives"….
UN committee chair
Noureddine Amir in a letter told Australia's UN ambassador Sally Mansfield the
committee was concerned ILUAs could lead to the "extinction of Indigenous
peoples' land titles" in Australia.
Mr Amir said it was
"particularly concerned" by 2017 changes to native title laws to
recognise ILUAs not signed by all native title claimants, "which appears
to be in contradiction" with an earlier landmark Federal Court ruling.
"Accordingly, the
committee is concerned that, if the above allegations are corroborated, the
realisation of the Carmichael Coal Mine and Rail Project would infringe the
rights of the Wangan and Jagalingou people, rights that are protected under the
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination," Mr Amir said.
The committee gave
Australia until April 8 to outline steps taken to ensure proper consent
"in accordance with Indigenous peoples' own decision-making
mechanisms".
It asked Australia to
"consider suspending" the Adani project until consent was given by
"all Indigenous peoples, including the Wangan and Jagalingou family
council".
It invited Australia to
seek expert advice from the UN experts on Indigenous rights and to
"facilitate dialogue" between the W&J and Adani.
Labels:
Adani Group,
court,
human rights,
law,
mining,
Native Title,
United Nations
Why is the Australian Government subsidising a News Corp television program?
On 21
December 2018 the Australian
Communications and Media Authority announced:
The ACMA has awarded
up to $3.6 million in grants to regional and small publishers under
the first round of the Regional and Small Publishers Innovation Fund.
Round one of the
Innovation Fund will support 29 projects by 25 successful applicants
nationwide, with a mix of regional and metropolitan proposals funded.
Grants
will support innovation and digitalisation across a wide range of activities,
including market research, trials of new business models, podcasts, and video
capability.
A list of successful
applicants and their projects is here.
However,
there is another grant stream which sees News Corp’s Sky News Channel - part of
multinational media empire - receive
money to cover 15 per cent of a particular Sunday program’s production costs.
BuzzFeed, 25 January 2019:
The show is partly
funded through a Commonwealth government grant awarded to Mundine's business
Nyungga Black Group, through a closed non-competitive selection process,
according to the grant information published online.
The grant, running from
June 18, 2018 to Aug. 1 this year is for a total of $220,000. The Department of
Prime Minister & Cabinet confirmed to BuzzFeed News that the grant was for
Mundine's Sky News show.
News Corp’s 2018
annual report states of the corporation’s news channel:
Australian News Channel
ANC operates 10 channels
featuring the latest in news, politics, sports, entertainment, public affairs,
business and weather. ANC is licensed by Sky International AG to use Sky
trademarks and domain names in connection with its operation and distribution
of channels and services. ANC’s channels consist of Sky News Live, Sky News
Business, Fox Sports News, Sky News Weather, Sky News UK, Sky News Extra, Sky
News Extra 1, Sky News Extra 2, Sky News Extra 3 and Sky News New Zealand. ANC
channels are distributed throughout Australia and New Zealand and available on
Foxtel and Sky Network Television NZ. ANC also owns and operates the
international Australia Channel IPTV service and offers content across a
variety of digital media platforms, including mobile, podcasts and social media
websites. In addition, ANC has program supply arrangements with third parties
such as WIN Corporation. ANC primarily generates revenue through monthly
affiliate fees received from pay-TV providers based on the number of
subscribers and advertising.
ANC competes primarily with other news providers
in Australia and New Zealand via its subscription television channels, third
party content arrangements and free domain website. Its Australia Channel IPTV
service also competes against “over-the-top” IPTV subscription-based news
providers in regions outside of Australia and New Zealand.
This is a corporation
which admits to having assets of over $16 billion in June 2018 - $2 billion of
which was held as cash or cash equivalents - and yet the Australian Government feels the need to subsidise its weekend programming?
This is the second time in less than two years that the Coalition Government has given News Corp money for programming. Then it was a funding package worth a cool $30 million.
Labels:
News Corp,
Rupert Murdoch
Monday, 28 January 2019
Climate change denialism is alive and apparently thriving in 2019
One would
expect this dodgy co-sponsorship from the likes of Facebook Inc, but Google and
Microsoft do surprise.
Mother Jones, 22 January 2019:
Google, Facebook, and
Microsoft have publicly acknowledged the dangers of global warming, but last
week they all sponsored a conference that promoted climate change
denial to young libertarians.
All three tech companies
were sponsors of LibertyCon,
the annual convention of the libertarian group Students for Liberty, which took
place in Washington, DC. Google was a platinum sponsor, ponying up $25,000, and
Facebook and Microsoft each contributed $10,000 as gold sponsors. The donations
put the tech companies in the top tier of the event’s backers. But the
donations also put the firms in company with some of the event’s other
sponsors, which included three groups known for their work attacking climate
change science and trying to undermine efforts to reduce carbon emissions.
Among the most notable
was the CO2 Coalition, a group founded in 2015 to spread
the “good news” about a greenhouse gas whose increase in the atmosphere is
linked to potentially catastrophic climate change. The coalition is funded by conservative foundations that have backed other climate
change denial efforts. These include the Mercer Family Foundation, which
in recent years has donated hundreds of thousands of
dollars to
right-wing think tanks engaged in climate change denialism, and the
Charles Koch Institute, the charitable arm of one of the brothers behind Koch
Industries, the oil and gas behemoth.
In the LibertyCon
exhibit hall, the CO2 Coalition handed out brochures that said its goal is to
“explain how our lives and our planet Earth will be improved by additional
atmospheric carbon dioxide.” One brochure claimed that “more carbon
dioxide will help everyone, including future generations of our families” and
that the “recent increase in CO2 levels has had a measurable, positive effect
on plant life,” apparently because the greenhouse gas will make plants grow
faster.
In a Saturday
presentation, Caleb Rossiter, a retired statistics professor and a
member of the coalition, gave a presentation titled “Let’s Talk About Not
Talking: Should There Be ‘No Debate’ that Industrial Carbon Dioxide is Causing
Climate Catastrophe?” In his presentation, Rossiter told the assembled students
that the impact of climate change on weather patterns has been vastly
exaggerated. “There has been no increase in storms, in intensity or frequency,”
he said. “The data don’t show a worrisome trend.”
He insisted that when he
hears the news that carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere are rising, “I’m
cheering!” That’s because, he said, carbon dioxide “is a fertilizer” that has
made Africa greener and increased food production there, reducing human misery.
Rossiter also claimed
that carbon dioxide emissions correlate with wealth and that the greenhouse gas
“improves life expectancy” because poor countries that start burning fossil
fuels have a more consistent power supply and can then clean up their water.
“I’m happy when carbon dioxide is up, because it means poverty is down,” he
declared.
“I come not to bury your
carbon but to praise it,” he concluded.....
Commonwealth Integrity Commission: “It’s a body set up to shield parliamentarians and public servants"
The Morrison Government's proposed new Commonwealth Integrity Commission gets another bad review.
The
Guardian, 24
January 2019:
A former judge of
Victoria’s highest court has attacked the
Coalition’s proposal for an anti-corruption body, describing it as a
sham designed to shield politicians and public servants from scrutiny.
Stephen Charles, a
retired Victorian court of appeal judge, said there was simply “no
justification” for the Coalition’s proposal to limit the commission’s powers
when investigating the public sector. He said the proposal to not allow public
hearings for public-sector cases – as opposed to investigations of law
enforcement – made no sense. Nor did the proposed body’s narrow remit, the high
burdens of proof needed to initiate an investigation, its inability to take
public tip-offs and its lack of resources.
“We see this body, the
[Commonwealth Integrity Commission], insofar as public servants and
parliamentarians are concerned, as a sham,” he told Guardian Australia. “It’s
not really an anti-corruption commission at all.
“It’s a body set up to shield parliamentarians
and public servants.
“It’s a very glitzy
model filled with all the bells and whistles but it masks the fact that it’s
not an anti corruption [body] at all in so far as public servants are
concerned. And the public servants are where the really large money is going.”
The Coalition’s model
for an integrity commission was released late last year. It drew early
criticism for not allowing public hearings or public tip-offs. The body is also
only able to begin an investigation if it is satisfied to a high threshold of
suspicion that a crime has been committed.
Transparency
International Australia, one of the key anti-corruption agencies lobbying for a
federal integrity commission, also criticised the narrow focus of the reform.
The group said major improvements were needed to systems governing lobbying,
donations and a revolving door between politics and big business.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)