Tuesday, 30 July 2019
The unemployed in Australia have been betrayed yet again
A
Liberal Party dominated
Australian House Of Representatives Select
Committee on Intergenerational Welfare Dependence
betrayed vulnerable Australians in April 2019.
However, neither the Labor Party
nor Centre Alliance can walk away from the shameful part they played in this betrayal.
The
Age,
23 July 2019:
A
bipartisan call to increase the Newstart allowance was removed from a
parliamentary report at the direction of the Morrison government on
the eve of the federal election.
As
Prime Minister Scott Morrison stares down growing demands by
Coalition MPs to lift the unemployment benefit for the first time
since 1994, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age can reveal former
social services minister Paul Fletcher intervened in an inquiry to
erase a major recommendation that would have turbo-charged the
sensitive issue.
The
probe into the causes of long-term welfare was established by the
government in mid-2018 to investigate why some Australians become
trapped in the system.
The
draft final report - agreed to by MPs from the Coalition, Labor and
crossbench - contained a specific call to lift the Newstart payment
for singles and families.
But
sources said Mr Fletcher demanded to review the recommendations
before they were publicly released in April and is understood to have
told the committee chair - veteran Liberal MP Russell Broadbent -
that the final report could not contain the specific Newstart
recommendation.
The
committee, which included Liberal MPs Kevin Andrews, Bert van Manen,
Ben Morton and Rowan Ramsey, as well as Labor MPs Ged Kearney and
Sharon Bird, was then hastily reconvened to change the wording of the
report.
The
opposition's policy at the time was to merely review Newstart rather
than raise it.
Following
Mr Fletcher's intervention, MPs agreed to only recommend an
examination of the "adequacy of payments on young people and
single parent families".
In
a sign of the growing sensitivity of the issue, Mr Morrison on
Tuesday warned Coalition MPs against airing personal views, telling
them "government is not a blank cheque" and that they
disrespected colleagues by pursuing personal policy agendas.
Amended
Final
Report
can be found here.
Australian
Parliamentary Library Briefing
Book,
retrieved
18 July 2019;
From
20 March 2020, Newstart Allowance will be replaced by a new JobSeeker
Payment. Over time a number of other working age payments such as
Sickness Allowance and Widow Allowance will end and recipients will
also move to the JobSeeker Payment. The new payment will have the
same payment rates and indexation arrangements as Newstart Allowance.
This is part of a 2017–18 budget measure that aims to simplify the
income support system. [my
yellow highlighting]
Monday, 29 July 2019
247,000 coastal homes in Australia are in the firing line if sea level rises reach 1.1metres
ABC News, 22 July 2019:
The
latest
figures from the Department of Environment warn
a sea level rise of 1.1 metres, considered a high-end scenario, would
cost $226 billion nationally by the end of the century.
If that
eventuates, it would put up to 68,000 homes at risk in Queensland and
the same number in New South Wales.
In
Victoria and South Australia, it would be up to 48,000 homes, up to
30,000 in Western Australia and up to 15,000 in Tasmania.
Every
coastal community in Australia
is doing its own mapping,
but Noosa may take it a step further.
The Noosa
Shire is now considering how best to warn owners, both current and
future, about the risk.
Councillors
say the estimated 2,232 Noosa properties likely to be affected by
storm flooding in 80 years' time could be told directly via rates
notices.
Possible
buyers may also be alerted through routine property or rates
searches.
Noosa
Mayor Tony Wellington said it was "a problem that every coastal
council is facing around the world now — and it's an issue of
defend or retreat obviously".
"What
we have to look at is whether it is feasible and possible to defend
property, in a worst-case scenario, or whether it is not possible,
and what the cost implications are," he said.
"And
then you have to ask whether all residents should be funding for
protection of a few properties.
"It's
a very complicated issue."
The Mayor
also said it was a matter of "buyer beware" and those in
low-lying areas ought to know the risks.
In 2015, a
report to Byron Bay Council warned that certain homes may become
"voluntary house purchases" where the council buys homes at
risk of flooding "to reduce risk to life and limb"…..
The
Insurance Council of Australia said climate declarations and
long-term fears of flooding would not affect premiums, but actual
storm or water damage could.
"If
you're already at risk and climate change predicts that you will
become further exposed, then your premiums over the next 30–80
years will go up to reflect changes in that risk," the council's
Campbell Fuller said.
Even the current rate of global sea level rise at 3.4mm each year has the potential to impact on vulnerable coastal towns such as Yamba on the NSW Far North Coast.
Even the current rate of global sea level rise at 3.4mm each year has the potential to impact on vulnerable coastal towns such as Yamba on the NSW Far North Coast.
Excerpt from Clarence Valley Council Yamba Floodplain Risk Management Plan, February 2009:
Flooding
at Yamba can occur as a result of a combination of high flows in the
Clarence River, high ocean levels, wind wave action along the
foreshore or from intense rain over the local catchment. The risk to
life due to river flooding is considered to be low as inundation
occurs gradually and with several hours (or days) warning. Similarly,
flood hazard resulting from ocean storm surge is also considered low
as there is likely to be several hours warning of an event, with the
peak of the storm lasting for less than a day. The Floodplain Risk
Management Study indicates a storm surge warning time of 6 to 24
hours. It should be noted however
that the flood hazard can become high if the low lying community to
the west of the town does not respond to flood warnings as the
available high ground is only accessible by Yamba Road, which is
readily cut by floodwaters. The only road out of Yamba to the Pacific
Highway is also inundated in the 10y ARI and greater flood events.
[my
yellow highlighting]
Ballina is another coastal town on the Far North Coast. Its CBD is on the banks of the tidal Richmond River where it empties into the sea.
Sea level rise is something Ballina has been discussing for many years because for the Ballina community the evidence is right before residents’ eyes.
This was Tamar Street in the CBD in January 2018 showing saltwater intrusion at high tide.
Photograph supplied by @Captainturtle |
Other Far North Coast towns and villages are also under threat of foreshore/beach erosion, wave overtopping and/or innundation, including Wooli, Belongil Beach and Clarkes Beach.
Labels:
climate change,
flooding,
greenhouse gases,
houses,
inundation
Domestic violence can be a whole lot more more than being slapped across the face or pushed into a wall - something the religious right in the Morrison Government fail to understand
It appears that the Morrison Government is not backing down from delivering $10 million in federal funding to predominately religious groups for the purpose of providing counselling for couples and couples with children where one adult is a domestic violence perpetrator and the other adult (and perhaps one or more of the children) is the victim of this violence.
By 23 July 2019, mainstream media had reported on the deaths by violence of 29 women this year.
One in every 4 Australian women experience domestic violence during their lifetime.
Shot, stabbed, set on fire, held under water until drowned, rammed by a car, beaten or hacked to death. These are just some of the ways women die at the hands of their husbands, partners or close male relatives.
However, there is one attempt to injure and kill that appears to be the most common.....
news.com.au, 26 July 2019 |
Women who survive strangulation are up to seven times more likely to go on to die at the hands of their partner, according to recent studies in the US.
And there are side effects that aren't always obvious to treating doctors, paramedics or police officers — everything from voice changes to blood clots, strokes and paralysis.
Survivors and medical professionals are now pushing for increased training and awareness around non-lethal strangulation — something they say could help save lives.
Sue* was strangled by her partner about a year ago in Queensland, and knows too well that the side-effects can be delayed, and severe.
"I have PTSD. I have vocal cord dysfunction," she says. "I'll get halfway through a sentence and have to stop because I can't swallow properly and I can't breathe properly because the neck just spasms because of the damage done to the vocal cords....
A quarter of all NSW murder victims had suffered a strangulation attack prior to their deaths.
There are numerous anatomic neck structures that, when collapsed, can cause morbidity and mortality in hanging injuries. Jugular veins collapse under 4.4 pounds of pressure. Carotid arteries collapse under 5.5 to 22 pounds of pressure. The vertebral arteries will collapse under 18 to 66 pounds of pressure. The trachea will collapse under 33 pounds of pressure. The cricoid cartilage will fracture under 45 pounds of pressure. The collapse of each of these vital structures can lead to immediate death, as well as delayed complications. Damages to both anterior and posterior ligaments and cervical spine dislocations have been documented as a result of strangulation injuries. Direct spinal cord injury, hematoma, or hemorrhage can both cause immediate death and paralysis.
Acute death will ensue when compression or occlusion of the trachea occurs. In the past, this was proposed as the mechanism of mortality in most strangulation injuries. Swelling to the airway and surrounding structures may also lead to acute or delayed death. Death has been documented up to 36 hours after initial strangulation injuries. Compromise to vascular structures has been proven to cause significant morbidity and mortality. This has been proven in tracheostomy patients who have committed suicide. Death in these cases did not involve compression of the trachea or airway due to the presence of an intact tracheostomy.
Compression of the jugular veins results in acute death by causing cerebral hypoxia followed by loss of muscle tone. Once muscle tone is compromised, increased pressure is applied to both the carotid arteries and trachea. Direct compression of the carotid arteries also leads to decrease or loss of cerebral blood flow and brain death. Direct pressure on the carotid sinuses causes a systemic drop in blood pressure, bradycardia, and other arrhythmias. Consequences are anoxic and hypoxic brain injury death.
Many of the martial arts “submission holds” are known to place direct pressure to these vascular structures primarily and can result in strangulation injuries. There can be long-term consequences of strangulation injuries due to vascular compromise as well. Long-term anoxic brain injury, thrombotic stroke, dissection, and aneurysm of vessels can all cause significant morbidity. [my yellow highlighting]
Sunday, 28 July 2019
Clarence Valley Council Living Sustainably Awards - nominations accepted until 5 August 2019
Clarence
Valley Council, media release, July 19, 2019:
Rewards
for those who live sustainably
THE
call has gone out to nominate those who have made outstanding
contributions to environmental sustainability in the Clarence Valley.
The
Clarence Valley Council is calling for nominations for its annual
Living Sustainably Awards and has categories for individuals,
community groups, businesses, schools and ‘our backyard’.
The
our backyard category is new and according to council environmental
officer, Suzanne Lynch, has been introduced to applaud the commitment
to backyard sustainability that many residents make.
“We
would love to get applications from everyday people who are shrinking
their carbon footprint and making a difference in their own backyards
or their streets,” she said.
“This
award is open to individual families or groups of residents in a
street who have gone the extra mile by growing and sharing food,
using renewable energy, incorporating energy efficiency and
sustainable building practices, being committed recyclers, growing
sustainable gardens or other great sustainable initiatives.”
The
winner of the 2018 community group section was the South
Grafton-based Mend and Make Do Crew and its spokeswoman, Ursula
Tunks, said that for many people recycling was a way of surviving.
“The
huge issue is there's more than enough to go around on this planet
and there's absolutely no reason anyone should be going without,”
she said.
“For
us it's literally redistributing the wealth via what people throw
out/donate. The environment is vital to all humans and not wasting
anything is an important part of minimising the impact on all the
environment.
“The
award was an amazing opportunity for our team to get encouragement
and acknowledgement that the work we do is valued outside our
existing client agency base.”
For
further information and to download a nomination form, visit
http://bit.ly/2XKeACGsustainable
Nominations close August 5.
Release
ends.
Labels:
Clarence Valley Council,
sustainability
Saturday, 27 July 2019
Quote of the Week
"I
don’t even think the bastardry is intentional, it’s just what he
[Scott
Morrison]
is. In a sense it is the inevitable culmination of
his bankrupt and moribund party. His re-election might provide a
reset but I am not optimistic.”
[Journalist
and commentator Mungo
McCallum
quoted in The
Monthly,
July 2019]
Labels:
Scott Morrison
Tweets of the Week
In 2018, the Democratic National Committee filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, against the Russian Federation et al. Donald Trump Jr is one of the defendants. There is a court hearing today - Trump Snr trying shut lawsuit down #USPolitics pic.twitter.com/hT2ioGEhPS— no_filter_Yamba (@no_filter_Yamba) July 19, 2019
Good morning @ScottMorrisonMP— 💧🌏🏳️🌈Jenny Frecklington-Jones; #NotMyPM (@Triplejay58) July 20, 2019
While you're off to Hillsong to clap your hands & speak in tongues, just wanted to let you know that my 90yo Mum who was once a milliner is busy today making this for you in Blue.
Let me know if you'd prefer black text.
& you're welcome. #auspol pic.twitter.com/hG4MVQJ5H7
exciting to see major media have worked out that #RaiseTheRate would be an actual stimulus measure. Looks like we’re just waiting on how government can work it into their economic narrative and it might just happen. Priorities. #Insiders— Ingrid M (@iMusing) July 20, 2019
Labels:
court,
Donald Trump,
law,
Scott Morrison,
US politics
Friday, 26 July 2019
Land clearing law in New South Wales
Environmental
Defenders Office NSW (EDO), 17 July 2019:
It’s
been almost two years since the NSW Government introduced a new
scheme for regulating land clearing and biodiversity in NSW. While
the business of tree clearing has continued apace under self-assessed
codes and a new Vegetation SEPP, fundamentally important parts of the
scheme are still missing. This EDO NSW series of legal updates looks
at how the laws are being implemented and the regulatory gaps that
are putting our wildlife and healthy sustainable landscapes at risk.
Our
first
update looked at clearing in rural areas and outlined the
fundamentally important parts of the scheme that are still missing
even while tree clearing has continued apace under self-assessed
codes. The second
update looks at elements of the new scheme that are missing or
lack clarity for tree clearing in urban areas and e-zones. This third
update looks at compliance and enforcement of new clearing laws.
Read
the third update here.
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