Saturday, 1 February 2020
Friday, 31 January 2020
Clarence Valley, Lismore & Richmond Valley get $1 million each from Drought Communities Programme after discovery of yet another alleged Morrison Government 2019 election campaign funding rort caused grant criteria to be revised & broadened
The Daily Examiner, 29 January 2020:
Yes, the Clarence Valley has been 100% drought affected with most of the land officially in either the Drought or Severe Drought categories.
This along with the bushfires has makes 2019-20 a horror year for farmers and graziers.
So this federal government grant is most welcome.
However, Clarence Valley local government area - like Lismore and Richmond Valley - only became eligible when criteria for assistance was changed after it was discovered that, just an in the 'sports rorts affair', there had been an apparent manipulation of a grant programme's funding allocations just prior to the May 2019 federal election - when of the 14 councils announced eligible as a Coalition election commitment 13 were in Coalition-held electorates and just one was not as it was held by an Independent.
The plus for Nationals MP for Page, Kevin Hogan, is that now instead of one council in his electorate being given a Drought Communities Programme grant, there are now
Public art with Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison as its subject is popping up here and there
Labels:
arts,
political comment
Thursday, 30 January 2020
Australia's 2019-20 bushfire season expected to increase total global atmospheric greenhouse gases by est. 2 per cent this year
According to NOAA Climate.gov; The global average atmospheric carbon dioxide in 2018 was 407.4 parts per million (ppm for short), with a range of uncertainty of plus or minus 0.1 ppm. Carbon dioxide levels today are higher than at any point in at least the past 800,000 years.
With the ability of Australia's east coast forests to act as carbon sinks severely impacted by bushfires and air pollutants released by these fires to date circumnavigating the earth, it was to be expected that the amount of carbon dioxide parts per million in the atmosphere will rise sharply in 2020.
UK
Met Office, media release, 24 January 2020:
A
forecast of the atmospheric concentration of carbon-dioxide shows
that 2020 will witness one of the largest annual rises in
concentration since measurements began at Mauna Loa, in Hawaii, 1958.
During
the year the atmospheric concentration of CO₂ is expected to peak
above 417 parts per million in May, while the average for the year is
forecast to be 414.2 ± 0.6ppm. This annual average represents a 2.74
± 0.57 ppm rise on the average for 2019. While human-caused
emissions cause the CO₂ rise in concentration, impacts of weather
patterns on global ecosystems are predicted to increase the rise by
10% this year. Emissions from the recent Australian bushfires
contribute up to one-fifth of this increase.
Professor
Richard Betts MBE, of the Met Office Hadley Centre and University of
Exeter, said: “Although the series of annual levels of CO₂ have
always seen a year-on-year increase since 1958, driven by fossil fuel
burning and deforestation, the rate of rise isn’t perfectly even
because there are fluctuations in the response of ecosystem carbon
sinks, especially tropical forests. Overall these are expected to be
weaker than normal for a second year running.”
Weather
patterns linked to year-by-year swings in Pacific Ocean temperatures
are known to affect the uptake of carbon-dioxide by land ecosystems.
In years with a warmer tropical Pacific, many regions become warmer
and drier, which limits the ability of plants to grow and absorb CO₂
and increases the risk of wildfires which release further emissions.
Along with other weather patterns and human-induced climate change,
this has contributed to the recent hot, dry weather in Australia,
which played a key role in the severity of the bushfires.
Professor
Betts added: “The success of our previous forecasts has shown that
the year-to-year variability in the rate of rise of CO₂ in the
atmosphere is affected more by the strength of ecosystem carbon sinks
and sources than year-to-year changes in human-induced emissions.
Nevertheless, the anthropogenic emissions are still the overall
driver of the long-term rise in concentrations.”
The
CO₂ concentrations at Mauna Loa are measured by the Scripps
Institution for Oceanography at UC San Diego and the National
Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Fire emissions
are monitored by the Global Fire Emissions Database (GFED).
The
2020 CO₂ forecast is available here.
A carbon dioxide concentration of 400 parts per million is considered unsafe - a danger warning - and Morrison Government denialist-based climate change policy is making sure that we are now well and truly exceeding that figure.
The average surface temperatures over the Australian continent and its surrounding oceans have increased by nearly 1°C since the beginning of the 20th century.
This global rise saw land surface temperature in the NSW Northern rivers region rise by somewhere between 1°C and 1.4°C by 2014, with most of that warming occurring since 1950.
How hot will this region become in 2020?
This global rise saw land surface temperature in the NSW Northern rivers region rise by somewhere between 1°C and 1.4°C by 2014, with most of that warming occurring since 1950.
How hot will this region become in 2020?
Wednesday, 29 January 2020
Tree canopy loss in NSW Northern Rivers from Clarence Valley LGA to NSW-Qld border by January 2020
Firegrounds post major fires which were actively burning in September 2019 to January 2020, mapped by https://geo.seed.nsw.gov.au/Public_Viewer/
Southernmost half of coastal Bundjalung National Park showing full canopy loss |
Degrees of canopy loss in the Cloud Creek and Guy Fawkes region |
Labels:
bushfires,
climate change,
climate emergency,
drought,
Northern Rivers,
NSW
Tuesday, 28 January 2020
Mullum Flickerfest and Byron All Shorts film festival 30 January to 1 February 2020 at Mullumbimby Civic Hall
29th International Short Film Festival
Tour Date: Thursday 30 January - Saturday 1 February 2020
Flickerfest CafeOpen daily: 1hr prior to sessions.
Serving delicious organic treats & drinks.
Thu 30th Jan, 8.00pm - Best Of International Shorts - 2020 Tour - $25/ $22con (inc pre-screening drinks & nibbles)
Fri 31st Jan, 8.00pm - Best Of Australian Shorts - 2020 Tour - $16/ $14con
Sat 1st Feb, 8.00pm - Short Laughs Comedy - 2020 Tour - $16/ $14con
Fri 31st Jan, 8.00pm - Best Of Australian Shorts - 2020 Tour - $16/ $14con
Sat 1st Feb, 8.00pm - Short Laughs Comedy - 2020 Tour - $16/ $14con
Sat 1st Feb, 4pm – Byron All Shorts – Nth Rivers Short Film comp (Prog announced early Jan) – $14/ $12
Festival Pass: $55/45
Full Programme, Information & Bookings: www.iQ.org.au
Venue: Mullumbimby Civic Hall
Doors Open: 1 hr prior to sessions
Opening Night Party starts: 7pm
Tickets: through iQ.org.au; (or at the door).
Serving delicious organic treats & drinks.
Some of the short films being shown:
German film ‘The Jackpot’
Australian comedy ‘Chicken’
Animated film ‘Rebooted’
Australian film ‘Its Christmas’
Drama ‘A Day In Your Life’
Comedy ‘A Family Affair’
12 short films from around the NSW Northern Rivers
Labels:
arts,
entertainment,
Mullumbimby,
Northern Rivers
Lismore Diocese in the NSW Northern Rivers region once again focus of historical child sexual abuse allegations
Former Catholic priest Clarence David Anderson died in retirement at Toowoombah Qld in April 1996 and peacefully rests in a Goonellabah NSW cemetery, but his alleged victims are still seeking justice....
Newcastle Herald, 23 January 2020:
A PARISH priest is suing a NSW Catholic diocese and an order of nuns [believed to be the Presentation Sisters] in what is believed to be the first Australian case of a serving Catholic priest seeking compensation for alleged child sexual abuse by a priest.
The Diocese of Lismore has denied liability for alleged crimes by the late charismatic "surfer priest" Clarence "David" Anderson against the then 12-year-old altar boy in the 1960s, and has given notice it will seek a permanent stay against the priest's case in the NSW Supreme Court.
The move, initiated by the diocese last week, means survivors are "back to square one" in some dioceses despite legal reforms following the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, the priest's lawyer Mark Barrow said.
The permanent stay application is despite the diocese offering compensation to two families in 2004 who alleged Anderson sexually abused two brothers aged 9 and 14 in the Macksville area between 1966 and 1968, and two other brothers, aged 9 and 15, in Tweed Heads parish in 1969.
Melbourne-based Broken Rites put the two families in touch with each other after both were told they were the first to complain about Anderson, and that the diocese had no knowledge of allegations about him. Anderson was a priest for just seven years. One of his alleged victims was advised by the Diocese of Lismore in 2002 that Anderson resigned in 1970. He died in 1996......
The Guardian, 25 January 2020:
The abuse is said to have occurred at a church on the north coast of New South Wales, which sat on the grounds of a boarding school....
It is the second time in recent months that the diocese has attempted to have an abuse case thrown out due to delay.
It is the second time in recent months that the diocese has attempted to have an abuse case thrown out due to delay.
In December, the Lismore diocese successfully applied to permanently stay a case brought by a woman who alleged she was abused in the 1940s by a priest named John Curran, who has since died.
The church’s approach to delay conflicts with findings of the child abuse royal commission.
According to Broken Rites; In 2020, a legal firm is acting for eleven of Father David Anderson's victims, suing the Lismore Catholic Diocese for compensation.
Labels:
child sexual abuse,
court,
human rights,
law,
Lismore
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