Friday, 10 May 2019
“Welfare-to-work” is now a billion-dollar industry which consistently fails vulnerable jobseekers
The
Guardian, 4
May 2019:
“Welfare-to-work” is now
a billion-dollar industry. Providers compete for the lucrative contracts, worth
$7.6bn to the taxpayer over five years when the last round was signed in 2015.
Proponents for the
privatised system argue the model is much cheaper and boasts a better
cost-to-outcome ratio.
But myriad reports –
including recent findings from
a Senate committee and a government-appointed
panel – have found the most disadvantaged jobseekers are being left
behind.
In 2002, a
Productivity Commission report that was largely supportive of the
then-new privatised model still warned “many disadvantaged job seekers receive
little assistance … so-called ‘parking’”. That practice still occurs under this
name today, according to employment consultants who spoke to Guardian Australia
for this story.
When a person applies
for Newstart, they are assigned a Jobactive provider and placed into one of
three categories ordered by the level of assistance they might need: streams A,
B and C.
The outlook for the
most-disadvantaged jobseekers is bleak: only a quarter will find work each
year. Overall, 40% of those receiving payments will still be on welfare in two
years. While Jobactive has recorded 1.1 million “placements” since 2015, one in
five people have been in the system for more than five years.
New data provided to
Guardian Australia by the Department of Jobs and Small Business shows about 1.9
million people have participated in Jobactive between July 2015 and 31 January
2019. In that time, 350,000 – or 18% – have been recorded gaining employment
and getting off income support for longer than 26 weeks.
And of those 350,000,
only 35,852 – or 10% – had been classified as disadvantaged in Stream C.
Since Lanyon was placed
on Jobactive, he’s had eight job interviews and sent in about 150 applications.
Eighteen months ago he says he slept in his car and showered at a homeless
shelter after finding work close enough to take but too far away for a daily commute.
He knows his chances of
getting back into work diminish each day he’s out of the workforce.
Thursday, 9 May 2019
Liberal Party election campaign strategy is a bit of a joke
The Liberal Party of Australia as part of its official election campaign uses a forty-two year-old US movie franchise to market its leader Scott Morrison on social media - by crudely photshopping his middle-aged, plump jowled face onto the svelte body of a then 26 year-old actor.
Wednesday, 8 May 2019
The Liberal & Nationals answer to all the water policy mistakes they have made in the past. Full speed ahead to make some more!
In 2006 the
Howard Coalition Government’s then Minister for Water Malcolm Bligh Turnbull attempted an under-the-radar progression of
a proposal to dam and divert water from the Clarence River system into the
Murray Darling Basin. He was sprung and it lost his government the seat of Page
in 2007.
When Tony Abbott was prime minister he was
all gung-ho for damming east coast rivers, but was by then wary of the mood of Clarence
Valley communities.
Despite a
certain coolness on Tony Abbott’s part and Turnbull's silence once he followed Abbott as prime minister, the wannabee water raiders within the Basin have never given up on the idea of destroying the Clarence River in order
to continue lucrative water trading for profit and inappropriate levels of farm irrigation
in the Basin.
This is a mockup of what these raiders would like to see along the Clarence River.
North Coast Voices, 1 March 2013 |
On 30 April
2019 Scott Morrison and Co announced
the proposed creation of the National
Water Grid which in effect informs communities in the Northern Rivers region that
our wishes, being “political” because we are not their handpicked ‘experts’,
will be ignored when it comes to proposed
large-scale water diversion projects including dams if they are
re-elected on 18 May 2019.
The Daily Examiner, 4 May 2019, p.10:
“Just add water” is the
Nationals’ answer to “unleashing the potential” of regional Australia but it
would come at a cost to areas flush with the precious resource.
Deputy Prime Minister
Michael McCormack announced on Tuesday at the National Press Club that a
returned Coalition government would establish an authority, the National Water
Grid, to manage water policy and infrastructure.
“We know the key to
unlocking the potential of regional Australia is simple – just add water,” he
said.
The announcement of the
National Water Grid has sparked fears the Clarence and Nymboida rivers may be
dammed to irrigate drought-stricken areas of the country – a prospect the
Clarence Valley community has faced before.
The Nationals’ Page
MP, Kevin Hogan, said there were “no plans to dam the Clarence
River”.
“There are proposals in
other drought-affected areas of the country,” he said…..
The planned National
Water Grid would ensure water infrastructure would be based on the best
available science, “not on political agendas”, Mr McCormack said.
It would “provide the
pipeline of all established, current and future water infrastructure projects
and then identify the missing links”.
Mr McCormack said dams
were the answer to “create jobs”, “back agriculture and back farmers”.
“While we are being bold
and building big, we are often stopped at the first hurdle when it comes to
short-sighted state governments that choose politics over practicality, and
indeed science,” he said…..
There's nothing original about Scott Morrison's campaign style - it is pure Donald Trump
Smirking during 'leaders' debate.......
Scott Morrison (left) and Donald Trump (right) |
Trying to physically intimidate by invading personal space.......
This has everything. Sky after dark got good for the #leadersdebate pic.twitter.com/CqVklg3RJo— Brett Worthington (@BWorthington_) May 3, 2019
Snapshot of Morrison attempting to bully during Leaders Debate on 3 May 2019 |
The Guardian,11 October 2016
Tuesday, 7 May 2019
People and groups recently banned by Facebook for promoting hate and/or violence
Finally, a
step in the right direction by Facebook
Inc as it addresses
hate speech and incitement to violence while coping with the possibility
of a US$5 billion fine for the social media platform’s privacy issues.
The following
have been banned from Facebook and Instagram:
English Defense League
Knights Templar International
Britain First
British National Party (BNP)
National Front
Louis Farrakhan
Alex Jones
Paul Nehlen
Milo Yiannopoulos
Paul Joseph Watson
Laura Loomer.
Unfortunately
Australia’s Fraser
Anning and Andrew
Wilson are not on this list.
Labels:
hate speech,
Social media
Lobby group giving farmers a bad name
The
Guardian, 2
May 2019:
The Queensland farm
lobby AgForce has deleted more than a decade worth of data from a government
program that aims to improve water quality in the Great Barrier
Reef, in response to state government moves to introduce new reef
protection laws.
Guardian Australia
revealed in June that the state’s auditor general had raised concerns that
agriculture industry groups had refused
to share data from the “best management practices” program due to privacy
concerns.
In recent months,
AgForce and others had campaigned against the imposition of new reef protection
regulations, which set sediment “load limits” in reef catchments and impose new
standards on farmers.
The proposed new laws,
which have been introduced to state parliament, also include a provision to
allow the environment minister to obtain data from agricultural groups……
The Queensland environment
minister, Leeanne Enoch, told the Courier-Mail the decision flushed “so much
work and the taxpayer dollars that have been supporting it out to sea”.
“AgForce often claims that they are true environmentalists but this decision is not the action of a group that wants to protect the environment,” she said.
“AgForce often claims that they are true environmentalists but this decision is not the action of a group that wants to protect the environment,” she said.
The Queensland audit
office last year found that the success of the best management practices
program could not be properly measured because the agricultural groups that
receive government funding would not provide data on whether producers had
actually improved their practices.
“This detailed
information is currently held by the industry groups,” the report said.
“Despite this work being funded by government, the information is not provided
to government due to privacy concerns from the industry.
“These data restrictions mean government does not have full visibility of the progress made and cannot measure the degree of practice change or assess the value achieved from its investment of public funds.
“These data restrictions mean government does not have full visibility of the progress made and cannot measure the degree of practice change or assess the value achieved from its investment of public funds.
“This means that the
reported proportion of lands managed using best management practice systems
could be overstated.”
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