Sunday, 1 March 2020
Australian Prime Minister Morrison gives full amnesty to employers who have stolen all or part of their employees superannuation
Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU), media release, 24 February 2020:
With daily revelations of wage theft dominating the start of the new parliamentary year, the Morrison Government has today passed a bill which will waive penalties for employers who have stolen superannuation from workers.
The bill protects employers from prosecution by the ATO for any theft of superannuation back to the birth of the system, regardless of the size of the theft or the intent of the employer.
This is an unprecedented move by a federal government – blanket pardoning of a serious contravention of federal law, with no caveats or limits.
The Government has said publicly that if employers cannot determine the extent of their theft before the end of the amnesty, it will be extended.
Quotes attributable to ACTU President Michele O’Neil: “We are living through a national crisis of wage theft and superannuation forms a significant part of this issue. Instead of punishing the employers who have been stealing money from their employees, potentially for decades, the Morrison Government has waved them through without any penalty whatsoever.
“This law will recover a tiny fraction of the billions in super estimated stolen since the beginning of the system and will do nothing to change behaviour in the business community.
“The Government has had seven years and has done nothing to help workers with unpaid super. Workers need their right to Super included in the National Employment Standards so that repayment can be easily pursued and have super paid at the same time as wages.
“The best way to stop wage and super theft is to allow unions to once again conduct compliance checks in workplaces to end this epidemic of ripping off workers.
“This is a shameful act by a Government which it seems will stop at nothing to cater to employers at the expense of working people.
“The ACTU will continue to explore all available legal avenues to ensure that working people get the money they are owed and that thieves are held accountable for their actions.”
The amount of unpaid super owed to workers in Australia was estimated in 2018 to be at least $5.9 billion and wages theft by employers was thought to total $12.8 billion.
Australian Forestry Industry: these future eaters need to be stopped
Australia is the world's smallest continent with a land area of 149,450,000 km2 completely surrounded by ocean.
It is not by accident that the vast majority of its est. 25.6 million strong population live along its fringes - that's where most of the forests and rivers are.
What you see on this map represented approximately 3 per cent of the world’s forests in 2016 and, globally Australia was the country with the seventh largest forest area.
It is estimated that when British-Europeans first came to Australia in 1788, forests covered one-third of the continent - a total of around 49,811,685km2.
This had fallen to less than one-fifth or 19 per cent by 2006. At that time more than 16,500 plant and 3,800 animal species had been identified as forest-dependent.
Ten years later Australia had only 134 million hectares of forest remaining, covering 17 per cent of its land area.
In the 228 years between 1788 and 2016 under the policies, legislation and regulations of successive federal, state and territory governments a total of 24,405,185km2 of predominately tall trees had disappeared under the forester's and farmer's axe, never to return.
The eating of Australia's future continues to this day as projections suggest that by 2030, another 3 million hectares of untouched forest will have been bulldozed in eastern Australia.
That's on top of the tree cover lost in the 2019-20 bushfire season when over 5 million hectares of forest and grassland burned - with 100 per cent of tree canopy lost in some areas of the vast firegrounds.
Combined forest burnt in New South Wales and Victoria this fire season has been estimated in one study as 21 per cent of Australia's entire remaining forest cover.
Yet despite what has been lost and the uncertainty surrounding what might regrow due to the continuing stressful heating and drying of the Australian continent caused by climate change, the forestry industry is pushing hard to expand its activities further into state forests, nature reserves and national parks.
The relentless, selfish greed of this industry needs to be called out for what it is - a collective madness.
If you would like to see the federal government and east coast state governments reign in this madness, please express your views to your local state & federal members of parliament and to the following:
The Hon. Scott Morrison MP, Prime Minister of Australia, PO Box 6022 House of Representatives Parliament House, CANBERRA, ACT 2600
The Hon. Sussan Ley MP, Minister for the Environment, PO Box 6022, House of Representatives, Parliament House, CANBERRA, ACT 2600
The Hon. Gladys Berejiklian MP, Premier of New South Wales,
GPO Box 5341, SYDNEY, NSW 2001
willoughby@parliament.nsw.gov.au
The Hon. Matt Kean MP, NSW Minister for Energy and the Environment,
52 Martin Place, SYDNEY, NSW 2000
hornsby@parliament.nsw.gov.au
The Hon Annastacia Palaszczuk MP, Premier of Queensland,
PO Box 15185, CITY EAST, QLD 4002
thepremier@premiers.qld.gov.au
The Hon Leeanne Enoch MP, Minister for the Environment and the Great Barrier Reef,
GPO Box 5078 BRISBANE, QLD 4001
environment@ministerial.qld.gov.au
The Hon. Daniel Andrews MP, Premier of Victoria,
Office of the Premier, Level 1, 1 Treasury Place, EAST MELBOURNE, Victoria 3002
daniel.andrews@parliament.vic.gov.au
The Hon. Lily D'Ambrosio MP, Minister for Energy, Environment and Climate Change,
Level 16 8 Nicholson Street, EAST MELBOURNE, Victoria 3002
lily.dambrosio@parliament.vic.gov.au
The Hon Peter Gutwein MP, Premier of Tasmania,
Ground Floor, Public Building, 53 St John Street, LAUNCESTON, Tasmania 7250 peter.gutwein@dpac.tas.gov.au
Roger Janesh MP, Minister for Environment and Parks,
GPO Box 44 HOBART, Tasmania 7001
roger.jaensch@parliament.tas.gov.au
Saturday, 29 February 2020
Quotes of the Week
"As the press gallery ate up Shearer Scotty, down the road taxpayers were being fleeced." [Social media commentator Ronni Salt writing in Crikey on 17 February 2020 about the rorting of government funding during the 2019 federal election campaign]
“If there was a case of a young white boy with blond hair who later dabbled in class A drugs, and conspired with a friend to beat up a journalist, would he deport that boy? Or is it one rule for black boys from the Caribbean and another for white boys from the United States?” [UK Labour Opposition Leader Jeremy Corbyn asking a question in Parliament on 12 February 2020 which contained a thinly disguised description of Conservative Prime Minister Boris Johnson]
Friday, 28 February 2020
If you have ever wondered how Scott Morrison forms his opinions on everything from climate change & coal mining to taxation & punishing the poor......
Scott John Morrison does not appear to be a man with an abundance of intellectual curiosity, his employment history* is lacklustre with most of positions he held lasting less than 3 years and, his work ethic is not strong given he granted himself three holiday breaks in the first full year of his primeministership.
So to whom (besides the Institute of Public Affairs) does Morrison turn to when he is deciding his policy positions?
A clue might be found here......
Michael West Media, Hon Scott Morrison MP, excerpt, 2020:
Mining
Connections
John
Kunkel, the Prime Minister’s Chief of Staff: before his appointment
to his current position by Morrison in 2018, Kunkle served as Rio
Tinto’s chief advisor for Government Relations, working as a
lobbyist for the multinational mining firm. Rio is one of Australia’s
top coal miners. Before this Kunkel was Deputy CEO of the Mineral
Council of Australia for over six years.
Brendan
Pearson, Senior Advisor for International Trade and Investment for
the Office of the Prime Minister (OPM) 2019 to present. Pearson was
the CEO of the MCA from 2014 untl 2017, where BHP Billiton pressured
the MCA over Pearson’s radically pro-coal stances and insistance on
government-subsidised coal projects.
Lobbying
Connections
Former
mining lobbyists who now hold key positions within Morrison’s staff
include The Prime Minister’s Principal Private Secretary, Yaron
Finkelstein, the former CEO of Crosby Textor (now C|T) a
multinational lobbying firm with close ties to the Liberal Party and
the mining industry. Other C|T alumni include Liberal Party campaign
director, Andrew Hirst and his deputy, Isaac Levido, as well as James
McGrath, LNP Senator for Queensland and prominent public advocate for
Adani’s Carmichael coal mine.
A
further pro-mining lobbyist connection is Stephanie Wawn. Wawn is a
senior
advisor to Morrison and was previously employed as a manager for
CapitalHill Advisory. CapitalHill’s clients included coal miner
Glencore and pro-coal think tank, the Menzies Research Centre.
Media
Connections
Another
way in which the mining lobby exerts influence is via the Prime
Minister’s communications team. Many of Morrison’s senior
communications team have long-held ties to the Murdoch press. News
Corporation is pro-coal and anti climate change.
NOTES
* Jobs held since 1989:
National Manager, Policy and Research Property Council of Australia 1989-95.
Deputy Chief Executive, Australian Tourism Task Force 1995-96.
General Manager, Tourism Council 1996-98.
Director, NZ Office of Tourism and Sport 1998-2000.
State Director, Liberal Party (NSW) 2000-04.
Managing Director, Tourism Australia 2004-06.
Principal, MSAS Pty Ltd 2006-07.
Member iof the Australian Parliament 2007- present.
Labels:
climate change,
coal,
far right politics,
government policy,
influence,
IPA,
lobbyists,
Scott Morrison
According to media reports there are still 3,544 First Home Loan Deposit Scheme places left, before another 10,000 places are opened up on 1 July 2020
According
to the Commonwealth Bank, the First
Home Loan Deposit Scheme is a “new initiative from the
Australian Government designed to support eligible first home buyers
purchase a home sooner”.
The
National Housing Finance and Investment Corporation (NHFIC) will
provide a guarantee for eligible first home buyers on low and middle
incomes so that they can purchase a home with a deposit of as little
as 5%.
In
Yamba, Maclean and Grafton in the Clarence
Valley the loan eligibility cap is a residential property valued at
$450k. This same cap appears to apply to all of the NSW Northern
Rivers region.
This
cap deliberately limits the type of property which can be purchaed
under the Scheme because it “is
only available for the purchase of a modest home, or the purchase of
land and construction of a modest home”.
In certain areas there may be a small problem attached to having such a low property value limit to eligibility for the scheme. A residential property at $450k or less in the Northern Rivers regions is usually only a two bedroom freestanding house or unit/duplex - hardly suitable for a family with more than one child.
The sheme is available to low to middle income eaners over 18 years of
age. There is no upper age limit restriction, so an applicant could
easily be in their late 50s.
The
upper income limit before a person becomes ineligible to apply for
this concession is $125k for singles and $200k for a couple.
The scheme will support up to 10,000 home loans each financial year,
starting from 1 January 2020, through a panel of participating
lenders including the Commonwealth Bank.”
According
to media reports there are still 3,544 First Home Loan Deposit places left,
before another 10,000 places are opened up on 1 July 2020.
Labels:
costs,
first home buyers,
housing,
Morrison Government
Thursday, 27 February 2020
New Zealand National Party is a riven as its Australian cousin
Rod Emmerson |
News Hub NZ, 19 February 2020:
Botany MP Jami-Lee Ross is facing charges which carry a prison term of up to seven years if convicted. Name suppression has been lifted for the four people charged by the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) over donations to the National Party.
Ross, who made the donation allegations in the first place, is one of them.
The other three are Zhang Yikun, the wealthy Chinese businessman who allegedly offered a $100,050 donation to National; Colin Zheng, Zhang's business partner and prospective National Party candidate; and Hengjia Zheng.
In a statement made exclusively to Newshub and NZ Herald Ross made a plea, "I was the whistleblower and as a result ever since I have been attacked by the party and its supporters for bringing this matter to the attention of the nation.
"Some seek to make me out as the bad guy, while that may be convenient spin for the party I will not be the National Party’s fall guy".
If the case goes to trial Ross is promising to provide evidence to back up his claims, "it will then be clear who is behind any scheme but the public statements from Mr Bridges and the party that they had no involvement is simply not true."....
Read the full article here.
The $100,050 donation in question was made by a NZ-registered company Inner Mongolia Rider Horse Industry NZ, owned by Chinese billionaire Lang Lin.
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