This blog is open to any who wish to comment on Australian society, the state of the environment or political shenanigans at Federal, State and Local Government level.
Ballina
Shire Citizen of the Year 2022 Maria Matthes with Ballina Mayor
Sharon Cadwallader. Photo supplied.
Koala
conservationist Maria Matthes was named Ballina’s Citizen of the
Year in yesterday’s Australia Day Awards, which were closed to the
public but livestreamed from the Lennox Head Cultural Centre.
MC
Sandra Jackson joined special guest Liz Ellis in presenting the
awards, along with nominees, guests, and local councillors, led by
new Ballina Mayor Sharon Cadwallader.
The
two new Greens councillors were not present. Cr Simon Chate told The
Echo, ‘While we congratulate those people who attained Australian
citizenship today, Councillor Dicker and I chose not to attend
today’s Australia Day ceremony as January 26 has become a day of
loss and mourning for our indigenous community and we feel it is
inappropriate to celebrate this date.’
In
all, thirty nominations were acknowledged across the award categories
of Sports, Young Citizen, Senior Citizen, Environmental, Community
Event, Arts/Cultural and Volunteer of the Year.
Koala. Photo Tree Faerie.
Citizen
of the Year Maria Matthes has been a threatened species ecologist for
more thirty years, with a particular interest in koalas, ecological
communities including koala habitat and fire ecology, recovery
planning and education.
In
2016 she became a koala rescuer with Friends of the Koala. Ever since
she has been on call 24 hours a day to conduct welfare checks and to
rescue sick or injured koalas and transport them to the Koala
Hospital in Lismore.
Ms
Matthes said the award was unexpected and she was ‘a bit
embarassed’ to be nominated again. ‘But with consideration I
thought that it’s a reflection of the value and importance that the
community places on our koalas and the effort I am putting into
recovering them… it has been a really tumultuous four years for
them.’
She
spoke about losses of koalas due to drought, car accidents, dogs and
disease, and her fears for koalas living along the planned Barlows
Road bypass, but said the wet weather was helping the species come
back from the brink in the wider Ballina area.
Ms
Matthes said she looked forward to government at different levels
doing more to protect koalas......
Three Coalition senators have broken ranks to side with Labor (and the crossbench) in questioning the government’s pandemic approach, Guardian Australia reports.
Nationals MattCanavan and SamMcMahon along with Liberal GerardRennickare backing a royal commission or inquiry into the Coalition’s handling of COVID-19 (incidentally, those three also crossed the floor to vote against vaccine mandates, as Sky News reported). IndependentRexPatrick wrote to Prime Minister ScottMorrison last week to ask for one, while independentZaliSteggallis working on draft terms of reference.
It comes amid warnings that the rapid antigen test shortage could stick around for “many months” — industry heavyweights told the SMHthis morning that we could make two million of the RATs a week by spending $20 million — chump change for the government — on production lines. Pathology Technology Australia’s boss added that 99% of RAT kits sold here are imported, even though Australian companies Ellume, Lumos Diagnostic, and AnteoTech have all developed tests (which are sold overseas).
Also this morning the National Retailers Association says staff are only trickling back into work amidst the relaxed close contact rule for essential workers,The Australian($) says. Employees are returning to distribution centres at a rate of 2% a day, while about 30% of staff at meat processing centres remain absent at the moment. National cabinet is meeting today to discuss supply chain issues, as well as the country’s rate of hospitalisations and deaths.
“I
acknowledge that tomorrow is a very difficult day for our First
Nations people.” Anthony Albanese, 25 January 2022.IMAGE: YouTubevideo snapshot
Leader of the Opposition & Labor MP for Grayndler since 1996, Anthony Albanese’s Press Club Address, at the 'unoffical' commencement of the parliamentary year, 25 January 2022, transcript:
Australia’s
best days are ahead of us.
Not
just the better days that we’re all hoping for right now, but the
best our nation has ever seen.
Together,
we are ready for it.
Australia
Day is a good moment for us to reflect; to consider our blessings as
a nation and to celebrate them. Perhaps that is more important now
than it has been for decades.
We
have been through a time so challenging, none of us will ever forget
it.
I
know, as we enter the third year of the pandemic, a lot of
Australians are exhausted. Worn-down by bad news, uncertainty,
inconvenience, disruption and separation from loved ones.
And
we look forward to the day when we can put all this behind us.
My
argument to you today is that if we get this moment right, Australia
can emerge from this once-in-a-century crisis better, stronger, more
fair, and more prosperous.
My
case for government is that we must learn the lessons of this
pandemic in order to build a more resilient Australia for the future.
What
stands before us now is the opportunity to build on the best
qualities that characterise Australians, and to realise our potential
as a people and as a nation more fully than at any time in our
history.
The
chance is ours to seize.
But
it requires courage.
It
requires vision.
It
requires leadership that brings Australians together.
And
it demands a government that steps up to its responsibilities and
fulfills its most fundamental roles: to protect our people, to act as
a force for good, and to change people’s lives for the better.
Just
‘pushing through’ this pandemic is not enough. We need to learn
from it, we need to use what the last two years have taught us to
build a better future.
Paul
Keating once said the lesson of the First World War was a lesson
about ordinary people – and the lesson was they were not ordinary.
We’ve
had that same truth brought home to us these past two years.
I
say it every chance I get – the Australian people have been
magnificent during this crisis.
Calm
in the midst of turmoil, looking out for each other in tough times.
If
I’m elected Prime Minister of this great country of ours, I see it
as my deep responsibility to repay these sacrifices, to reward these
efforts, to prove worthy of the generosity and bravery of the
Australian people.
And
that means building on the lessons of this pandemic:
One,
a strong, properly funded public health system, with Medicare as its
backbone, is vital to every aspect of our lives.
Two,
the rise of insecure work has undermined too many families’
confidence in their future.
Three,
stripping our TAFE and training sector of investment over the last
decade has led to crippling skills gaps and worker shortages.
Four,
the need to manufacture more things here in Australia – to be more
self-reliant – and to back Australian businesses, so our fate isn’t
held hostage to global supply chains.
Five,
the need for a high quality NBN - because this is not an optional
extra, it is fundamental to working from home, building a small
business, education for our children, and vital medical
consultations.
And
six, affordable childcare – because this too isn’t a luxury. It’s
an essential part of family and working life.
In
a recent profile, when asked to reflect on his time in office, Scott
Morrison suggested he is not interested in leaving a legacy. For him,
leaving no legacy is a conscious choice. I find this remarkable.
If
given the opportunity, I want to make a real difference for the
people of our nation – and to strengthen the nation itself.
I
want a better future.
And
if I’m successful, the future we are working toward will be
demonstrated to Australians by the end of Labor’s first term.
An
Australia with rising living standards, lifted by more secure work,
better wages, better conditions for small business, stronger
Medicare, and more affordable childcare.
An
Australia with more secure jobs in both existing and new industries –
industries that will be reaping the benefits of cheap, renewable
energy.
An
Australia that is secure in our place in the world, standing up for
Australian democratic values and for human rights on the global
stage.
An
Australia with robust funding for the Australian Defence Force, which
rebuilds our diplomatic service, revitalises our international aid
program, and works closely with our American ally and regional
partners in the challenges and uncertainties that lie ahead.
An
inclusive society, where gender, race or religion are no indication
of a person’s opportunities or possibilities.
An
Australia reconciled with ourselves and with our history, and with a
constitutionally recognised First Nations’ Voice to Parliament.
The
desire to deliver that legacy for Australians, with the lessons of
this moment at its core, will be a driving force of a Labor
government.
Lessons
Not Learnt
Of
course, the greatest crisis we have faced since the Global Financial
Crisis is the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic.
It
is beyond comprehension that this Government has actively refused to
learn from this pandemic.
This
Government has failed repeatedly on testing, tracing, vaccinations
and quarantine – it is the Grand Slam of pandemic failure.
A
Prime Minister who is repeatedly warned by experts about what is
coming and given the opportunity to plan ahead – but repeatedly
fails to listen, and more importantly fails to act.
And
while Mr Morrison talks drivel at the cricket and shows off the
contents of his kitchen, Australians are being confronted by empty
supermarket shelves.
And
contrary to Barnaby Joyce’s statement yesterday, Australians are
dying from COVID in record numbers – over 900 lives lost in the
first 25 days of this year.
Never
before has Australia had a Prime Minister with such a pathological
determination to avoid responsibility.
He
declares:
It’s
not my job.
It’s
not a race.
It’s
a matter for the states.
He
doesn’t hold a hose – and he doesn’t give a RATs.
Every
action, every decision has to be dragged out of him – and so often,
after all the build-up, he gets it wrong anyway. And it’s always
too little too late.
Australia
needs leaders who first show up and then step up.
Not
a Prime Minister who goes missing and thinks that “getting out of
the way” helps Australians manage an unprecedented crisis in the
midst of uncertain, difficult times.
For
all their talk of less government, they are Australia’s biggest
government in three quarters of a century – with the largest
deficit since World War II, the largest debt and, outside of the
Howard era, our highest taxing government in modern Australian
economic history.
Creating
the Way
Australia
needs good government now more than ever.
A
country and a people as extraordinary as ours deserve a government to
match.
A
government of competence and integrity.
A
government that doesn’t get out of the way but helps to create the
way.
A
real government is the steering wheel of a nation, not just a bumper
sticker.
A
country and a people as extraordinary as ours deserve a government to
match.
Since
Federation, we have been united from our Pacific coast to the Indian
Ocean.
To
use Edmund Barton’s phrase – ‘a nation for a continent and a
continent for a nation’.
On
the eve of Australia Day, consider just how remarkable that is.
Some
talk about Federation as a mere administrative change – but it was
so much more than that.
It
was fuelled by a belief that we could be more than the sum of our
parts.
And
an ambition to do things better – and differently.
When
you consider how much we have achieved since Federation, that belief
has been justified time and time again.
Yet,
as we begin 2022 there is an obvious need to bring the nation back
together again.
To
treat the states with respect, rather than simply as objects of
political opportunity or attack.
To
be as concerned with the regions as with our biggest cities.
We
cannot be complacent in our good fortune.
Even
Australia is not immune to the forces of division, whether it’s
ideology, political opportunism or cynical self-interest.
We
have seen how this plays out across the world.
This
is not the path I will take.
I
choose the path built on the lessons that the pandemic made so clear
to us: that we are stronger together.
More
resilient together.
Better
together.
And
that is a truth that guides me as someone who now puts himself
forward to be Prime Minister.
It
is why we need federation reform.
After
decades of moving toward more national consistency - with technology
helping us steadily overcome the distances on our vast continent -
what we’ve seen in recent times is a reversal of that once
inexorable trend.
More
differences. Less cohesion.
I
will change that. I will work with all state and territory leaders,
to advance Australia’s common interest for the benefit of all.
Backbone
of Public Health
As
the pandemic has so forcefully reminded us, our togetherness is
underpinned by our universal public health system.
Perhaps
the greatest lesson we can take from these last two years is what a
grave mistake it would be to take our public health system and
Medicare for granted.
Right
now, our health workers are paying the price for some of the most
serious public policy failures our country has seen.
They
are overworked. They are exhausted.
We
might roll our eyes about wearing a mask to the shops – they suit
up in full PPE for 10 hour shifts.
Like
firefighters during the Black Summer, they put their own wellbeing on
the line for their fellow Australians.
They
embody the best of the Australian spirit.
We
owe it to them to study what the pandemic has revealed about the
vulnerabilities of our public health system – and strengthen it for
the future.
At
the heart of it all is Medicare – a proud Australian achievement.
Medicare is part of who we are. It makes our way of life possible.
With
its green and gold, it is the most patriotic piece of plastic you can
have in your wallet.
Medicare
was established by the Hawke government, building on years of work by
Bill Hayden.
Bob
Hawke’s government never hid behind the cowardly pretence of
‘getting out of the way’ – they knew good governments made the
way.
Bob’s
first instinct was to bring Australians together. Under him, Labor
built Medicare not just as a safety net but as a conscious act of
nation building.
Right
now, we could strengthen both the safety net and our sense that we
are all in this together by making rapid antigen tests available free
to every Australian through Medicare.
That
is what a Labor government would have done at this moment.
Because
Labor will always strengthen Medicare. We know there is nothing more
central to our families, our communities, our schools and our economy
than our health.
A
Labor government will deal with the damage inflicted by nine long
years of neglect from this Liberal Government.
Protecting
the health of Australians will be a defining issue in the upcoming
election. And a critical choice will be this: who do you trust to
keep Medicare safe?
Australians
know where Labor stands.
Labor
built Medicare. Labor has always fought for Medicare. And only Labor
will protect Medicare.
Back
on Track
The
past two years have been hard for all Australians, but I think all
parents know that our children have done it especially tough.
Remote
learning, exam chaos, cancelled sport, and now the delays in vaccine
supply, have turned what should be some of the best years of their
lives into a cascade of stress and uncertainty.
Some
children have fallen behind academically, and many are struggling
with their mental health. And so many are just missing their friends.
Parents
are stressed from home schooling; anxious about the weight the
pandemic has put on their children’s shoulders, as well as their
own.
Over
the past two years, time-starved parents put aside their own needs to
support their children.
Homes
have been reconfigured into classrooms, while parents sit with the
quiet heartbreak of knowing this wasn’t the childhood they had
hoped to give their precious children.
They
want to do the right thing, to keep their children safe and make the
best choice. They are looking for guidance from their federal
government.
But
they are waiting in vain for Mr Morrison to come good on his vows.
The
man who stood before the country and promised a national plan for
getting our children back to school – but didn’t deliver one.
He
promised a national approach in which his government would work with
the states – instead he did what he always does: he palmed off his
share of the work on to the states.
The
states have done a great job in picking up the slack from the
slackest government in living memory.
But
this is not how it is meant to be.
Like
a heart that decided to give itself a bypass, this government has
decided to outsource responsibility for the fulfilment of its core
obligations to the Australian people.
It
has run from its responsibilities to schools for nine long years -
since Tony Abbott’s horror first budget in 2014.
Education
is fundamental and essential to the jobs, productivity and prosperity
of the future.
And
education is the biggest and most powerful weapon we have against
disadvantage.
Labor
sees education as about creating opportunity. Liberals see it as
about entrenching privilege.
It’s
why Labor remains committed, working with state and territory
governments, to getting every school to 100 per cent of its fair
funding level.
And
it’s why today I‘m announcing Labor’s plan to help our schools
and students bounce back.
Our
plan starts with the Student Wellbeing Boost. It will provide funding
for school activities that get children back on track.
This
could mean more funding for school counsellors and psychologists, and
for camps, excursions, sporting and social activities that improve
children’s wellbeing.
Every
Australian school stands to benefit from this investment. And the
schools themselves will decide how to use the extra money to best
help their students.
Our
plan will fund a free mental health check tool. Schools could choose
to use this to help quickly identify students who may need extra
support.
Our
plan will direct the Education Department to conduct an urgent review
of the impact of COVID on students with disability, so they get the
support they need.
These
children have been among the most vulnerable during this pandemic,
and they deserve a government that prioritises their protection along
with their education.
The
other element of our plan is a Schools Upgrade Fund, which will
provide much needed support for improving ventilation in schools and
creating outdoor learning areas.
Both
are key to managing the spread of Covid. Just as they will be
valuable for schools in a post-Covid world as well.
This
is something the Morrison Government should have already been doing
to make sure schools are safe for our kids and teachers to return to.
And
not just for this term.
Chief
Medical Officer Paul Kelly tells us that Covid will be with us for
some time, so we need to act and adapt.
That
means making our schools safer and better prepared for what’s
ahead.
Mr
Morrison never thinks as far ahead as next week, but the very
business of a Labor government is to plan for the future.
This
is what good government does – it plans ahead instead of waiting
for a crisis before acting, and then doing too little, too late.
It’s
one more pandemic lesson Scott Morrison hasn’t learnt – but we
have.
Plans
for a Better Future
Throughout
the pandemic, Labor has developed a series of plans that share a
common spirit: to avoid repeating the mistakes of the present, and
allow us to build the very best version of Australia possible.
To
imagine a better future and then set about creating it.
Covid
has made it clear that being at the end of a global supply chain is a
precarious place to be. We must be a country that manufactures things
here.
Our
plan for a Future Made in Australia, with our National Reconstruction
Fund at its heart, will propel our growing self-sufficiency.
It
will work alongside our plans for Secure Australian Jobs and a Better
Life for Working Families to give Australians the tools they need to
shape the lives they want and deserve.
We’ve
already announced a number of key policies that set us on this path:
Our
Buy Australian Plan – because government should back our
businesses;
Our
creation of Jobs and Skills Australia and our Made in Australia
Skills Plan offering free TAFE places in areas of skill shortages –
because these shortages are hampering our recovery and wasting the
potential of our people;
Our
plan for Secure Work – because casual jobs disappeared without
warning during the pandemic, and it isn’t the Australian way to
leave each other so vulnerable;
Our
Cheaper Childcare Plan – because working families need the support
– especially women. It will give families more choice, it will
strengthen the economy, and it will be good for future generations;
Our
longstanding plan for the NBN – because high speed internet, as
originally conceived by Labor, is vital to work, school and family
life;
And
our Disaster Ready Fund, because Australians deserve a government
that looks forward and plans to mitigate the impact of natural
disasters.
Our
plans add up to a better future in which Australia stands on its own
two feet, self-reliant and self-assured.
A
country that embraces its place in Asia, the fastest growing region
of the world in human history; forging deeper relationships in the
region as the tyranny of distance gives way to the privilege of
proximity.
A
country that is smart, innovative, and adaptive, where businesses
find a partner in a resolutely pro-growth, pro-employment,
pro-investment government.
A
country with secure, good-paying work – because a job is about so
much more than a wage. It’s about identity, community, connection –
and giving your family the standard of life that you aspire to.
A
country with world class health care, education and child care – so
that at every stage of life our people have all the opportunities and
tools they need to succeed and thrive.
A
country that treats its natural environment as a national asset to be
protected – not only because it supports communities and local
economies, but because of our moral obligation to preserve our land
and water for future generations.
I
also see us as a country that uses its abundant natural resources to
drive new industries and become a renewable energy superpower,
creating jobs as power prices fall, and writing a new chapter in
Australia’s proud energy story.
Our
Powering Australia plan will reduce Australia’s emissions by 43 per
cent by 2030, putting us on track for net zero by 2050.
It’s
a plan with economic growth at its heart: creating over 600,000 jobs,
attracting $52 billion of private sector investment, spurring new
industries and cutting power bills by $275 for the average family.
Unlike
Mr Morrison’s glossy pamphlet, Powering Australia is underpinned by
the most extensive independent expert modelling ever done for any
policy by an Opposition.
Our
plan has the backing of the Business Council of Australia, the
Australian Industry Group, the Australian Chamber of Commerce and
Industry, the ACTU, the National Farmers Federation, and a range of
non-government organisations.
That
is just one practical example of how I will bring Australians
together, united by a common vision and a national partnership for
progress.
We
can – finally – put the climate wars behind us.
How
We Do It
Setting
Australia on a path to a better future is not just about what we do.
It also matters how we do it.
It
was here at the National Press Club that Paul Keating first said if
you change the government, you change the country.
My
team and I want to change the government – and we want to change
the way government operates and the way government is perceived.
I
don’t expect to make Australians fall in love with Question Time –
but I do want more people to have greater faith in the integrity of
our parliament and its representatives.
Australian
democracy is a great national achievement.
But
our system is no more immune to the threat of extremism and
polarisation and the decaying, corrosive influence of corruption and
cynicism than other democracies around the world – many of whom are
grappling with these very challenges.
The
best way to make democracy stronger is to make government work
better.
That’s
why I will advocate for federation reform, with greater co-operation
between the Commonwealth and the States – to be true to that vision
of Australia as so much more than the sum of its parts.
And
we need a National Anti-Corruption Commission – to restore faith in
government and trust in our public officials.
We
will end this government’s culture of rorts – because public
money should not be splashed around in cynical vote-buying exercises.
And
just as I want to encourage the Commonwealth and state governments to
work together better, I want to encourage business and unions to work
together, because ultimately they share the same interests: a
stronger economy, increased productivity, more good jobs.
We
can create a better deal for workers and grow our economy at the same
time, with leadership that brings both together.
For
our country to advance together, as one, we must advance equality for
women.
We
need to respect women across all elements of our culture – at work,
at home, in schools and in our community. Women’s safety must be an
absolute national priority.
And
on her final day as Australian of the Year, I’d like to take a
moment to thank Grace Tame for her extraordinary courage and fierce
advocacy.
Grace,
you’ve inspired countless Australians and you’ve earned enormous
respect.
The
events in parliament that were revealed last year constituted a
powerful wake-up call. But we have had so many wake-up calls. We have
no excuse to wait for another.
Every
time I look around our Caucus Room and see my colleagues such as
those here today – Tanya Plibersek, Linda Burney, Katy Gallagher,
Kristina Keneally, Michelle Rowland - I am reminded of a simple,
powerful truth: that our country will be so much closer to what it
should be when women enjoy true equality.
We
cannot look to our future without also reflecting on the past,
including injustice to First Nations’ people.
Until
a nation acknowledges the full truth of its history, it will be
burdened by its unspoken weight.
We
must acknowledge the wrongs, learn from them, and look for ways of
healing.
Truth-telling
can be confronting – but it need not be grounds for conflict.
We
should come to this process not armed for battle in culture war, but
with an open mind – and far more importantly – an open heart.
With
the lessons of our history and our enduring Australian values, we can
forge an inclusive, sustainable, and fair social compact.
With
the lessons of our history and our enduring Australian values, we can
forge an inclusive, sustainable, and fair social compact.
And
a key part of that is to keep heading down the path to become a
country deeply proud of being home to the oldest continuous cultures
on Earth.
A
nation that takes up the Uluru Statement from the Heart and its
gracious, patient call for Voice, Treaty, and Truth.
A
powerful and inspiring new chapter in a 60,000 year story.
Conclusion
This
crisis has shown us we are stronger together.
But
that truth is older and runs deeper than this pandemic.
Tom
Uren was the closest person in my life I had to a father figure.
He
fought in World War 2. He spent most of it as a prisoner of war.
And
he always said his fellow Australian prisoners survived because of a
simple code:
The
healthy looked after the sick, the strong looked after the weak, the
young looked after the old.
To
me, that’s always been the best of Australia.
And
those are the values I want to bring to the job of Prime Minister.
Leadership
that brings people together in a spirit of compassion and decency.
A
government that seeks to unite the country – that earns the respect
of Australians by treating them with respect, by dealing with them
truthfully, by taking responsibility.
One
day, the COVID-19 pandemic will be written about in the past tense.
We
all hope that day is soon.
By
then, I know that, as Australians, we will have done so much more
than get back on our feet.
Beyond
the recovery, I see renewal and rejuvenation. An Australia rebuilding
on the foundation of its people’s greatest strengths and best
qualities.
An
Australia that is worthy of our people – and their potential.
An
Australia where no-one is held back and no-one is left behind.
Our
best days are ahead of us. Together, we will get out of the pandemic
and chart a path to them.
~~~~END~~~~
Questions from journalists and Anthony Albanese's replies begin at 34:49 mins into this video.
Anthony Norman 'Albo' Albanese
Born
2 March 1963 in
Sydney and raised in
the inner western suburbs of that city.
Qualifications:
Bachelor of Economics (University of Sydney).
Elected
to the Australian Parliament House of Representatives as Labor
MP for Grayndler, New South Wales, in 1996. Re-elected 1998, 2001, 2004,
2007, 2010, 2013, 2016 and 2019.
Leader
of the Opposition from 27.5.2019.
Former
ministerial
appointments
Minister
for Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local
Government from 3.12.2007 to 14.9.2010.
Cabinet
Minister from 3.12.2007 to 18.9.2013.
Minister
for Infrastructure and Transport from 14.9.2010 to 18.9.2013.
Minister
for Regional Development and Local Government from 25.3.2013 to
1.7.2013.
Deputy
Prime Minister from 27.6.2013 to 18.9.2013.
Minister
for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy from 1.7.2013
to 18.9.2013.
Connection
to the Northern Rivers region in NSW
– holidayed here in his youth & in
2007 spoke in
support of Northern Rivers communities’ strong
opposition to the Howard-Turnbull plan to turn one or more of the state's northern coastal
rivers inland, for the intended benefit of business & industry in Qld & NSW sections of the Murray-Darling Basin to the detriment of our region.
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[Adopted and proclaimed by United Nations General Assembly resolution 217 A (III) of 10 December 1948]
Hi! My name is Boy. I'm a male bi-coloured tabby cat. Ever since I discovered that Malcolm Turnbull's dogs were allowed to blog, I have been pestering Clarencegirl to allow me a small space on North Coast Voices.
A false flag musing: I have noticed one particular voice on Facebook which is Pollyanna-positive on the subject of the Port of Yamba becoming a designated cruise ship destination. What this gentleman doesn’t disclose is that, as a principal of Middle Star Pty Ltd, he could be thought to have a potential pecuniary interest due to the fact that this corporation (which has had an office in Grafton since 2012) provides consultancy services and tourismbusiness development services.
A religion & local government musing: On 11 October 2017 Clarence Valley Council has the Church of Jesus Christ Development Fund Inc in Sutherland Local Court No. 6 for a small claims hearing. It would appear that there may be a little issue in rendering unto Caesar. On 19 September 2017 an ordained minister of a religion (which was named by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in relation to 40 instances of historical child sexual abuse on the NSW North Coast) read the Opening Prayer at Council’s ordinary monthly meeting. Earlier in the year an ordained minister (from a church network alleged to have supported an overseas orphanage closed because of child abuse claims in 2013) read the Opening Prayer and an ordained minister (belonging to yet another church network accused of ignoring child sexual abuse in the US and racism in South Africa) read the Opening Prayer at yet another ordinary monthly meeting. Nice one councillors - you are covering yourselves with glory!
An investigative musing: Newcastle Herald, 12 August 2017: The state’s corruption watchdog has been asked to investigate the finances of the Awabakal Aboriginal Local Land Council, less than 12 months after the troubled organisation was placed into administration by the state government. The Newcastle Herald understands accounting firm PKF Lawler made the decision to refer the land council to the Independent Commission Against Corruption after discovering a number of irregularities during an audit of its financial statements.The results of the audit were recently presented to a meeting of Awabakal members. Administrator Terry Lawler did not respond when contacted by the Herald and a PKF Lawler spokesperson said it was unable to comment on the matter. Given the intricate web of company relationships that existed with at least one former board member it is not outside the realms of possibility that, if ICAC accepts this referral, then United Land Councils Limited (registered New Zealand) and United First Peoples Syndications Pty Ltd(registered Australia) might be interviewed. North Coast Voices readers will remember that on 15 August 2015 representatives of these two companied gave evidence before NSW Legislative Council General Purpose Standing Committee No. 6 INQUIRY INTO CROWN LAND. This evidence included advocating for a Yamba mega port.
A Nationals musing: Word around the traps is that NSW Nats MP for Clarence Chris Gulaptis has been talking up the notion of cruise ships visiting the Clarence River estuary. Fair dinkum! That man can be guaranteed to run with any bad idea put to him. I'm sure one or more cruise ships moored in the main navigation channel on a regular basis for one, two or three days is something other regular river users will really welcome. *pause for appreciation of irony* The draft of the smallest of the smaller cruise vessels is 3 metres and it would only stay safely afloat in that channel. Even the Yamba-Iluka ferry has been known to get momentarily stuck in silt/sand from time to time in Yamba Bay and even a very small cruise ship wouldn't be able to safely enter and exit Iluka Bay. You can bet your bottom dollar operators of cruise lines would soon be calling for dredging at the approach to the river mouth - and you know how well that goes down with the local residents.
A local councils musing: Which Northern Rivers council is on a low-key NSW Office of Local Government watch list courtesy of feet dragging by a past general manager?
A serial pest musing: I'm sure the Clarence Valley was thrilled to find that a well-known fantasist is active once again in the wee small hours of the morning treading a well-worn path of accusations involving police, local business owners and others.
An investigative musing: Which NSW North Coast council is batting to have the longest running code of conduct complaint investigation on record?
A which bank? musing: Despite a net profit last year of $9,227 million the Commonwealth Bank still insists on paying below Centrelink deeming rates interest on money held in Pensioner Security Accounts. One local wag says he’s waiting for the first bill from the bank charging him for the privilege of keeping his pension dollars at that bank.
A Daily Examiner musing: Just when you thought this newspaper could sink no lower under News Corp management, it continues to give column space to Andrew Bolt.
A thought to ponder musing: In case of bushfire or flood - do you have an emergency evacuation plan for the family pet?
An adoption musing: Every week on the NSW North Coast a number of cats and dogs find themselves without a home. If you want to do your bit and give one bundle of joy a new family, contact Happy Paws on 0419 404 766 or your local council pound.
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