Sunday, 10 March 2019
Cannabis worth $24.2 million nabbed across northern NSW
The Bellingen Courier-Sun, 5 March 2019:
More than 12,000
cannabis plants have been seized by police as part of this year’s Cannabis
Eradication Program in the state’s north.
The CEP is an annual
operation, led by detectives from the State Crime Command’s Drug and Firearms
Squad, which targets the outdoor cultivation of cannabis throughout Northern
NSW.
Detectives were assisted
by police from New England, Tweed/Byron, Richmond, and Coffs/Clarence Police
Districts, as well as PolAir, the Dog Unit, Rural Crime Investigators, and
other specialist units.
During this season’s
program, police seized 12,096 plants, with an estimated potential street value
of more than $24.2 million.
This includes 4153
plants seized in New England Police District between 19 and 23 November 2018,
1692 plants seized in Tweed/Byron Police District between 4 and 8 February
2019, 3503 plants seized in Richmond Police District between 18 and 22 February
2019, and 2748 plants seized in Coffs/Clarence Police District between 25
February and 1 March 2019.
All the plants were
certified by an agronomist and have since been destroyed.
Officers also seized
about 30kg of cannabis head and leaf, 1kg of cannabis resin, and various
calibres of ammunition.
In total, 25 people were
served Court Attendance Notices for various drug and firearms/ammunition
offences.
More fish kills predicted along the Darling/Barka River
The
Sydney Morning Herald,
6 March 2019:
Residents at Menindee
are bracing for a fourth mass fish kill in the Darling River in about three
months, as a new paper finds water savings in the Murray Darling Basin may be
just one-tenth the amount modelled.
The NSW Department of
Primary Industries has warned the arrival of a cold front after another
heatwave in the region this week posed a "high risk" of another bout
of widespread fish deaths.
Possibly millions of
fish, mostly bony herring but also endangered perch and Murray cod, were killed
in the three previous events. A sudden drop in dissolved oxygen levels - as
blue-green algae died and began decaying - was the prompt for the previous fish
kills.
"They're
super-stressed. It takes less [to kill the fish]," Graeme McCrabb, a
Menindee resident, said on Tuesday. "The numbers of golden and silver
perch and the cods got less [during each die-off]."
Separately, a report
published in the Australasian Journal of Water Resources by John
Williams and Quentin Grafton from the Australian National University found the
$3.5 billion spent on water-saving infrastructure - such as concrete canals -
may have saved 70 billion litres a year compared with the federal government's
estimate of more than 10 times that figure.
Professor Grafton said
their analysis showed the average cost of water recovery could be as much as
$50,000 per megalitre returned to the Murray-Darling Basin every year, or about
25 times more expensive than buying the water back from willing sellers.
The key issue is the
failure to measure and account for so-called return flows - the leakage of
water into aquifer that ceases when irrigation becomes more efficient.
"It's a travesty
for all Australians," he said. "You've spent billions of dollars and
you've not measured what you've got."….
Saturday, 9 March 2019
Quote of the Week
"They were openly saying that they would cooperate, but I think you
could almost say that the way that they classed their cooperation would be
similar to a protester lying on the ground in the middle of the street not
resisting the police, but the police would have to pick that person up and drag
them off the street. I think that that's the level of cooperation that the
Catholic Church gave us." [Former Detective Sergeant Doug Smith, speaking of Victoria Police
Taskforce SANO's investigation into Cardinal George Pell, quoted in ABC News
online, 4 March 2019]
Tweets of the Week
Gold. Treasury ticks off the government for verballing it over the effect of Labor's negative gearing policy on house prices.— Peter Martin (@1petermartin) March 1, 2019
From tonight's Treasury FOI dump. #ausecon #auspol pic.twitter.com/kfPSmgNjKR
Remember when Scott Morrison said he'd change this? Well, he didn't. Children can be expelled and teachers sacked #MardiGras19 https://t.co/5ThKkkxwyU— Sally McManus (@sallymcmanus) March 2, 2019
— Behrouz Boochani (@BehrouzBoochani) March 2, 2019
Friday, 8 March 2019
Something to think about - Part One
September 2015 to January 2019 |
8501.0 - Retail Trade, Australia, Jan 2019 |
* All images from Twitter.
Twenty-eight climate scientists, academics & former heads of energy companies tell the world that Morrison and Co are lying to the Australian people
“Proud to be a signatory to this statement from @climatecouncil. Between us, we have devoted 600 years to this issue. Last week's announcements are not enough to get us to meet our lousy Paris Target. That target, by the way, isn't even nearly enough to ensure a safe climate.” [Tim Baxter, Twitter, 4 March 2019]
Climate Council, 4 March 2019:
Dozens of the country’s
leading climate and energy experts – including climate scientists, academics
and former heads of energy companies – have signed a joint statement stressing
that without further action Australia
will not meet its 2030 pollution reduction target.
Thursday, 7 March 2019
Be A Voice For The Koalas Of The NSW Northern Rivers
In the beautiful Northern Rivers of NSW there is a dark secret.— Nature NSW (@naturensw) February 27, 2019
We can turn this story around for koalas if we act now. Sign the petition and be a voice for koalas 👉 https://t.co/vBHkdxIKD7 pic.twitter.com/Yq8Xbj072P
Labels:
flora and fauna,
Koala,
Northern Rivers
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)