The NSW Legislative Council Industry and Transport Committee Inquiry report would not go so far as to recommend damming and diverting water from the Clarence River catchment and, the Berejiklian Government would only go as far as "noting' the fallback position held by the water raiders from the Murray-Darling Basin.
Thursday, 22 November 2018
Update on attempt by water raiders from the Murray-Darling Basin to get NSW Government agreement to dam and divert water from the Clarence River system
The NSW Legislative Council Industry and Transport Committee Inquiry report would not go so far as to recommend damming and diverting water from the Clarence River catchment and, the Berejiklian Government would only go as far as "noting' the fallback position held by the water raiders from the Murray-Darling Basin.
NSW LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL, Portfolio
Committee No. 5 – Industry and Transport Augmentation of water supply for rural
and regional New South Wales,
14 May 2018:
Recommendation 40
That the NSW Government
consider establishing a stormwater and/or flood harvesting pilot program for
flood mitigation in the Northern Rivers.
6.89 The committee heard
evidence from some inquiry participants that there may be potential benefits of
diverting the Clarence River to the west. These inquiry participants were of
the view that there is merit to any strategy that seeks to mitigate floods and
flood damage in the Clarence Valley and provide additional water for
agriculture in the Barwon region. The committee acknowledges that stakeholders
were divided on the issue of water diversion. However, some inquiry
participants held strong views against diverting waters from the Clarence River
to the west.
6.90 We also acknowledge the work of local
councils in undertaking repair work for public assets and infrastructure and
the strain that such labour has on council resources, finances and staff. The
committee acknowledges that stakeholders called for the National Disaster
Relief and Recovery Arrangements to undergo a review in order to compensate for
council resources and staff, the committee supports this idea and recommends
the NSW Government pursue this through the Council of Australian Governments.
Government Response - Water Augmentation, 14 November 2018:
Wednesday, 21 November 2018
Ulmarra community puts a win on the board concerning Pacific Highway blackspot
The
Daily Examiner, January 2018: "Coffs/Clarence Local Area Command duty
officer Acting Inspector Darren Williams said the collision was between two
Queensland registered B Double trucks at 10.15pm Tuesday night when the
northbound heavy vehicle collided with the other heavy vehicle heading south
while attempting a left-hand bend near the beginning of the 50kmh speed zone."
|
Ulmarra is a picturesque Clarence Valley village which was established in 1857 and which served as a river port in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Many of its buildings are heritage-listed.
Unfortunately
for the folk who live there the busy Pacific Highway runs through one section
of this village and the lives of residents in that section are dominated by the
movement of heavy road transport vehicles – and will continue to be so since it was revealed that the Ulmarra Bypass (due for completion in 2020) will not remove B-Double trucks and 'semis' from what will then be the old Pacific Highway.
This year
the village successfully campaigned for an extension of the lowest speed limit and a speed camera to slow these big trucks down….
The Daily Examiner, 17 November 2018, p.4:
January 3
Two trucks collide on
the southern end of Ulmarra the night before. From a visit to where one of the
trucks has come to rest within metres of a home, it’s clear how lucky a young
family are to be alive. That afternoon, The Daily Examiner team
decides to launch the Let’s Not Wait campaign.
January 5
Ulmarra residents meet
with The Daily Examiner at the latest crash site to share years of
horror stories from living beside the Pacific Highway. The Daily Examiner Let’s
Not Wait campaign is officially launched.
January 10
Clarence MP Chris
Gulaptis comes out in support of Ulmarra residents and begins discussions with
the Minister for Roads and Maritime Services Melinda Pavey.
January 23
A front-page photo of
Ulmarra resident Ryan Brown holding up a speed radar gun gets the attention of
national media and the campaign is thrust into the national spotlight when
Channel Nine’s Today show visits the village.
January 26
Following increased media
attention, Mr Gulaptis and Roads and Maritime Services representatives meet
with Ulmarra residents to discuss long and short-term solutions.
January 30
A tirade of threats and
vulgarity is directed at Ulmarra residents through both online bullying and rogue
truck drivers intentionally sounding their horns while passing through the
village at night.
February 21
Coffs/Clarence Highway
Patrol increase their patrols in and around the township to keep driver
behaviour in check.
May 14
Clarence MP Chris Gulatpis
announces the extension of the 50km/h speed limit zones following a review
conducted by Roads and Maritime Services.
June 18
Another truck crashes at
the notorious black spot. This time the accident comes within metres of the
Brown family home and causes a power outage from Brushgrove, to Tucabia and
South Grafton.
June 19
Clarence candidate Steve
Cansdell calls on the NSW Government to do more to protect residents and
motorists at the notorious black spot.
June 22
More members of the
Clarence Valley community rally behind Ulmarra, including former ambulance
officer Wade Walker who calls out RMS for failing in their duty of care to the
Brown family.
July 23
Ulmarra resident John
Leask accuses RMS of gross negligence in its handling of the Ulmarra black spot
in a scathing email sent to various government officials.
Another collision occurs
the same day, with two cars and a truck involved, near the southern end. No one
is injured.
July 25
Coffs/Clarence Highway
Patrol stop another potential crash when they find a fatigued driver after
pulling over a southbound truck reported as swerving along the road.
August 17
Residents capture CCTV
footage of a truck driver deliberately sounding their horn while travelling
from one end of the village to the other and this reignites online debate over
who is to blame for the behaviour.
September 5
Two truck drivers are
caught by Highway Patrol, one for speeding, and the other for sounding their
horn for a sustained period of time.
October 5
The truck driver
captured on CCTV footage in August deliberately sounding the truck’s horn while
travelling from one end of the village to the other is identified and charged
by police.
November 16
The speed camera is
switched on by residents of the Ulmarra community.
Labels:
Clarence Valley,
Pacific Highway,
people power,
Ulmarra
Liberal Senator Concetta Fierravanti-Wells goes full Trump in the Australian Senate
On 21 September 2016,
the Special Minister of State, Senator the Hon Scott Ryan, asked the Committee
to inquire into and report on all aspects of the 2016 Federal Election and
related matters.
The Committee is
conducting a review of cyber manipulation of elections, specifically
considering:
the
extent to which social media bots may have targeted Australian voters and
political discourse in the past;
the
likely sources of social media manipulation within Australia and
internationally;
way
to address the spread of deliberately false news online during elections; and
measures
to improve the media literacy of Australian voters.
This simple
statement appears to have sent Liberal Senator
Concetta Fierravanti-Wells out into the twitterverse hunting the Jabberwocky.
What she actually
found was the Twitter accounts of a
number of ordinary Australians commenting on politics and life as well as one
group account involved in political activism.
To all of
whom she ascribed dark ulterior motives, asking “Who has either the inclination or
the resources to, in the main, retweet 240 times a day, year upon year?”
A sentiment
which made this Twitter user chortle knowing how easy it is to rack up tweets.
This was the
senator in full flight……
Senator
FIERRAVANTI-WELLS (New South Wales) (19:14):
Tonight I again wish to examine how political influence campaigns are being run using multiple Twitter accounts. I recently informed the Senate about the activities of Sleeping Giants Oz, an anonymous, politically motivated Twitter campaign, imported from the US, whose heavy reliance on unverifiable Twitter accounts makes its actual size deceptive. The Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters is currently looking at cybermanipulation of elections, including considering the extent to which social media bots may have targeted Australian voters and political discourse in the past; the likely sources of social media manipulation within Australia and internationally; and ways to address the spread of deliberately false news online during elections.
Tonight I again wish to examine how political influence campaigns are being run using multiple Twitter accounts. I recently informed the Senate about the activities of Sleeping Giants Oz, an anonymous, politically motivated Twitter campaign, imported from the US, whose heavy reliance on unverifiable Twitter accounts makes its actual size deceptive. The Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters is currently looking at cybermanipulation of elections, including considering the extent to which social media bots may have targeted Australian voters and political discourse in the past; the likely sources of social media manipulation within Australia and internationally; and ways to address the spread of deliberately false news online during elections.
A
submission to JSCEM from Digital Industry Group Inc, which includes
representatives from Facebook, Twitter and Google, concludes:
Fortunately, the experience of DIGI members and the use of their platforms in Australia, to date there is no evidence to suggest that election manipulation has been a widespread problem in Australia as it has been in the U.S.
Similarly a submission from Twitter says:
Fortunately, the experience of DIGI members and the use of their platforms in Australia, to date there is no evidence to suggest that election manipulation has been a widespread problem in Australia as it has been in the U.S.
Similarly a submission from Twitter says:
During
the 2016 election, we were not made aware of any activity related to the
suppression or interference with the exercise of voting rights in Australia.
These reassurances seem at odds with a recent report in The Australian that Twitter accounts linked to the Internet Research Agency, the infamous Russian troll factory, have spread politically charged posts about Australian politics, including the 2016 federal election and last year's same-sex marriage survey.
However, tonight I wish to outline to the Senate how the Australian Labor Party is benefiting from another influence campaign also being conducted via the Twitter sphere. This campaign employs a calculated and malicious strategy of spreading misinformation and political spam via a large web of mainly anonymous but also automated Twitter accounts. These accounts post similar-to-identical pro-Labor, pro-union, anti-coalition content. They primarily engage by retweeting posts from like-minded accounts, creating an echo chamber of reinforcing noise. Twitter is full of anonymous accounts that often exist only to push partisan and frequently toxic debate by interests groups, including fake news. Twitter permits automated retweets and it is easy to make a Twitter bot that will automatically 'favourite' and/or retweet tweets that contain particular words or hashtags.
Many of the accounts to which I refer have tweeted or retweeted hundreds of thousands of times and continue to do so hundreds of times a day, cranking out pro-Labor, anti-coalition messaging on an industrial scale. Often they admit a union connection or Labor viewpoint, together with an eclectic mix of other interests which collectively cover the entire gamut of left-wing concerns. Some accounts run lies and smears against the coalition or needle coalition candidates and parliamentarians while promoting Labor initiatives or running interference for Labor. They are frequently a vehicle for unfounded and defamatory allegations, low-grade research or catalogues of alleged coalition misdeeds which wouldn't be publishable by or rate any interest from the mainstream media. Some recycle media stories which boost Labor or are unflattering to the coalition. For example, @virgotweet, [easily identifiable Queensland retiree] which mainly retweets 80 times a day, recycles old news about alleged coalition scandals and presents it as if new. They typically follow or are followed by a mix of Labor figures and also engage with Twitter feeds of other leftwing organisations. The aim is to discredit the coalition, to promote allies and to distort public opinion by massively amplifying messages which feed into like-minded networks and engage both anonymous and real Twitter users.
These reassurances seem at odds with a recent report in The Australian that Twitter accounts linked to the Internet Research Agency, the infamous Russian troll factory, have spread politically charged posts about Australian politics, including the 2016 federal election and last year's same-sex marriage survey.
However, tonight I wish to outline to the Senate how the Australian Labor Party is benefiting from another influence campaign also being conducted via the Twitter sphere. This campaign employs a calculated and malicious strategy of spreading misinformation and political spam via a large web of mainly anonymous but also automated Twitter accounts. These accounts post similar-to-identical pro-Labor, pro-union, anti-coalition content. They primarily engage by retweeting posts from like-minded accounts, creating an echo chamber of reinforcing noise. Twitter is full of anonymous accounts that often exist only to push partisan and frequently toxic debate by interests groups, including fake news. Twitter permits automated retweets and it is easy to make a Twitter bot that will automatically 'favourite' and/or retweet tweets that contain particular words or hashtags.
Many of the accounts to which I refer have tweeted or retweeted hundreds of thousands of times and continue to do so hundreds of times a day, cranking out pro-Labor, anti-coalition messaging on an industrial scale. Often they admit a union connection or Labor viewpoint, together with an eclectic mix of other interests which collectively cover the entire gamut of left-wing concerns. Some accounts run lies and smears against the coalition or needle coalition candidates and parliamentarians while promoting Labor initiatives or running interference for Labor. They are frequently a vehicle for unfounded and defamatory allegations, low-grade research or catalogues of alleged coalition misdeeds which wouldn't be publishable by or rate any interest from the mainstream media. Some recycle media stories which boost Labor or are unflattering to the coalition. For example, @virgotweet, [easily identifiable Queensland retiree] which mainly retweets 80 times a day, recycles old news about alleged coalition scandals and presents it as if new. They typically follow or are followed by a mix of Labor figures and also engage with Twitter feeds of other leftwing organisations. The aim is to discredit the coalition, to promote allies and to distort public opinion by massively amplifying messages which feed into like-minded networks and engage both anonymous and real Twitter users.
These
accounts often show signs of direct user engagement via unique tweets and
topical comments, which is indicative of their close maintenance and operation.
A key account called @Talaolp
tweets rather than retweets an unremitting torrent of Labor propaganda. It
claims it is:
… sharing information about the Liberal Governments, State and Federal, their deception, lies and misinformation to the Australian Public.
Based in Western Australia, @Talaolp has tweeted 230,000 times in the last five years. That's about 125 times a day. Some of its anti-coalition material is scurrilous and intended simply to smear. It typically posts to three other accounts: 'Sir Clyde of Nob' @Nobby15 [‘Sir Clyde of Hansard, West Australian retiree], 'Big Al' @banas51 and 'Mari R' @randlight.
Sir Clyde of Nob, supposedly a retired IT specialist also based in Western Australia, has tweeted 790,000 times over the last nine years, an average of 240 times a day. It mostly retweets, but every seventh to eighth engagement, on average, is a personal tweet or comment on a post, showing frequent personal intervention. It retweets TALAOLP extensively and boasts about its Twitter reach, in a recent week receiving over 1,600 mentions, 1,500 likes, almost 400 retweets and 230 replies. Big Al, who describes himself as a 'lefty' and a 'hard worker', has retweeted over 200,000 times in the last four years, an average of 135 a day, namely retweeting a broad fare of left-wing commentary. Mari R, who says she wants Bill for PM, has retweeted almost 450,000 times over the last seven years, an average of 175 times a day.
Another such account is MSM Watchdog, supposedly dedicated to 'Exposing unconscionable attacks on the poor'. This account has tweeted 447,000 times over the last five years, an average of 240 a day, predominantly retweets of predictable anti-coalition and pro-Labor material. But MSM Watchdog was stung into life by my recent speech on Sleeping Giants Oz, claiming that the Liberal Party hates social media because 'they are hopeless at it.' If being good at it means flooding the twittersphere with propaganda up to 100,000 times a year, I'll take that as a compliment. MSM Watchdog retweets far more frequently than Sir Clyde of Nob. Some days it only retweets hundreds of times; other days there are also some personal tweets and comments. Both accounts appear to be operated closely by individual users but are almost totally reliant on retweets as a method of amplification. Who has either the inclination or the resources to, in the main, retweet 240 times a day, year upon year? I suggest that the description of many accounts as being operated by unionists offers a clue.
Another account, 'Old and Cranky' [Queenslander who loves football] , which describes its owner as a 'true believer still looking for the light on the hill'—good luck!—has tweeted 329,000 times in the last four years, an average of 225 a day, of antigovernment messaging. Its last 3,200 engagements are all retweets. Similarly, 'Gold Coast Nurse' , which describes its owner as a proud union delegate and member, tweeted 88 times a day in the last five years and has also not tweeted an original thought in its last 3,200 tweets.
What I have described tonight is the Twitter equivalent of a Labor union telephone tree, a Twitter tree, though perhaps a better analogy would be a jungle, and the law of the jungle applies when it comes to its content. An organised union operation backed by Labor volunteers is the most likely source of this influence campaign, but the anonymity of accounts means we can't be sure exactly who they are. These accounts were active during the 2016 election. They're in full swing and, unless checked, will be active during the next election. Twitter's submission to JSCEM claims:
We focus on developing machine learning tools that identify and act on networks of spammy or automated accounts automatically by tracking account behaviour. This lets us tackle attempts to manipulate conversations on Twitter at scale, across languages, and different time zones.
I submit that Twitter is on a steep learning curve and still has a long way to go, and I would suggest it review the activities of the accounts to which I have referred as well as many other high-volume accounts like 'Wowbagger' and 'Fair Dinkum Troublemaker' [Queensland retiree].
As we approach the next election, we need to be aware that political interest groups as well as potential state actors are trying to amplify their messaging and distort debate, including by disseminating fake news using social media platforms. In relation to state actors, I again note that a US intelligence report assessed that:
Moscow will apply lessons learned from its Putin-ordered campaign aimed at the US presidential election to future influence efforts worldwide, including against US allies and their election processes.
Clearly, there is much to be on guard about as we approach the next election. I will be forwarding this speech to JSCEM as I believe it adds qualitative material. [my yellow highlighting]
… sharing information about the Liberal Governments, State and Federal, their deception, lies and misinformation to the Australian Public.
Based in Western Australia, @Talaolp has tweeted 230,000 times in the last five years. That's about 125 times a day. Some of its anti-coalition material is scurrilous and intended simply to smear. It typically posts to three other accounts: 'Sir Clyde of Nob' @Nobby15 [‘Sir Clyde of Hansard, West Australian retiree], 'Big Al' @banas51 and 'Mari R' @randlight.
Sir Clyde of Nob, supposedly a retired IT specialist also based in Western Australia, has tweeted 790,000 times over the last nine years, an average of 240 times a day. It mostly retweets, but every seventh to eighth engagement, on average, is a personal tweet or comment on a post, showing frequent personal intervention. It retweets TALAOLP extensively and boasts about its Twitter reach, in a recent week receiving over 1,600 mentions, 1,500 likes, almost 400 retweets and 230 replies. Big Al, who describes himself as a 'lefty' and a 'hard worker', has retweeted over 200,000 times in the last four years, an average of 135 a day, namely retweeting a broad fare of left-wing commentary. Mari R, who says she wants Bill for PM, has retweeted almost 450,000 times over the last seven years, an average of 175 times a day.
Another such account is MSM Watchdog, supposedly dedicated to 'Exposing unconscionable attacks on the poor'. This account has tweeted 447,000 times over the last five years, an average of 240 a day, predominantly retweets of predictable anti-coalition and pro-Labor material. But MSM Watchdog was stung into life by my recent speech on Sleeping Giants Oz, claiming that the Liberal Party hates social media because 'they are hopeless at it.' If being good at it means flooding the twittersphere with propaganda up to 100,000 times a year, I'll take that as a compliment. MSM Watchdog retweets far more frequently than Sir Clyde of Nob. Some days it only retweets hundreds of times; other days there are also some personal tweets and comments. Both accounts appear to be operated closely by individual users but are almost totally reliant on retweets as a method of amplification. Who has either the inclination or the resources to, in the main, retweet 240 times a day, year upon year? I suggest that the description of many accounts as being operated by unionists offers a clue.
Another account, 'Old and Cranky' [Queenslander who loves football] , which describes its owner as a 'true believer still looking for the light on the hill'—good luck!—has tweeted 329,000 times in the last four years, an average of 225 a day, of antigovernment messaging. Its last 3,200 engagements are all retweets. Similarly, 'Gold Coast Nurse' , which describes its owner as a proud union delegate and member, tweeted 88 times a day in the last five years and has also not tweeted an original thought in its last 3,200 tweets.
What I have described tonight is the Twitter equivalent of a Labor union telephone tree, a Twitter tree, though perhaps a better analogy would be a jungle, and the law of the jungle applies when it comes to its content. An organised union operation backed by Labor volunteers is the most likely source of this influence campaign, but the anonymity of accounts means we can't be sure exactly who they are. These accounts were active during the 2016 election. They're in full swing and, unless checked, will be active during the next election. Twitter's submission to JSCEM claims:
We focus on developing machine learning tools that identify and act on networks of spammy or automated accounts automatically by tracking account behaviour. This lets us tackle attempts to manipulate conversations on Twitter at scale, across languages, and different time zones.
I submit that Twitter is on a steep learning curve and still has a long way to go, and I would suggest it review the activities of the accounts to which I have referred as well as many other high-volume accounts like 'Wowbagger' and 'Fair Dinkum Troublemaker' [Queensland retiree].
As we approach the next election, we need to be aware that political interest groups as well as potential state actors are trying to amplify their messaging and distort debate, including by disseminating fake news using social media platforms. In relation to state actors, I again note that a US intelligence report assessed that:
Moscow will apply lessons learned from its Putin-ordered campaign aimed at the US presidential election to future influence efforts worldwide, including against US allies and their election processes.
Clearly, there is much to be on guard about as we approach the next election. I will be forwarding this speech to JSCEM as I believe it adds qualitative material. [my yellow highlighting]
One Twitter response....
@nobby15 @AnnieOdyne @MrNixonsWife @MSMWatchdog2013 @DresserMelissa Meanwhile at Botsky Central, the Bots were working frantically to get the message out- Senator FW is on to us... pic.twitter.com/CSvjo0O3NQ— Sir Clyde Of HANSARD (@nobby15) November 16, 2018
Tuesday, 20 November 2018
More reasons why establishing a federal independent commission against corruption is a good idea
The
Sydney Morning Herald,
14 November 2018:
Australia is becoming
more corrupt because successive federal governments have failed to create an
effective national anti-corruption body similar to the NSW Independent
Commission against Corruption, a leading jurist has argued.
Writing in support of a
national anti-corruption body, David Harper, a former Court of Appeals justice
at the Supreme Court of Victoria, noted that in 2012 Australia ranked seventh
in Transparency International’s global corruption index, but that today we were
ranked 13th.
“The lack of a federal
anti-corruption agency remains a reason why we have never come close to being
corruption-free,” he has written in an opinion piece for the Herald.
Mr Harper writes that
the lack of an effective federal anti-corruption watchdog had allowed corruption
to flourish undetected and, in turn, allowed federal politicians to hide behind
the myth that the federal sphere is free of corruption.....
One can see Mr. Harper's point. Allegations of federal corruption regularly surface and are never fully addressed.
Take the allegations that one Liberal MP when minister borrowed money to buy into a proposed coal seam gas field (a proposal he supported in the parliament) and another Liberal minister inappropriately handed federal funding to his mates.......
ABC
News, 14
November 2018:
A Northern Territory
consulting company that employs Country Liberal Party president Ron Kelly was
awarded more than $1.4 million through federal grants intended to tackle
Indigenous disadvantage.
North Australian Remote
Management Consultants (NARMCO) was given the money by Indigenous Affairs
Minister Nigel Scullion over a three-year period through the Indigenous
Advancement Strategy and the Aboriginal Benefits Account.
The Indigenous
Advancement Strategy is a $4.9 billion federal fund that was designed "to
improve the way that the Government does business with Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander people to ensure funding actually achieves outcomes".
NARMCO is not an
Aboriginal-owned company, but has previously said it works with Indigenous
companies.
It is unclear how the
award of funds achieves the stated aims of the IAS fund.
Mr Scullion has recently
faced criticism for his allocation of IAS funds, with Indigenous groups calling
for an investigation into the awarding of hundreds of thousands worth of Indigenous grants to a variety of non-Indigenous groups
to assist their legal opposition of land right claims.
The NT Amateur
Fishermen's Association, the NT Cattlemen's Association and the NT Seafood
Council received funds.
Mr Scullion told the ABC
he issued NARMCO with a "show-cause notice" about how it intended to
manage the perceived conflict of interest, but the company declined to comment
on how it handled that and said it was following proper processes.
ASIC records show NARMCO
was established by longstanding CLP member John Jansen in 2003.
According to Government
records, the company received its first IAS payment in June 2015 — nine months
after Mr Scullion assumed the role of Indigenous Affairs Minister.
Mr Scullion was
president of the CLP until October when he was succeeded by Mr Kelly, who
formerly worked as Mr Scullion's chief of staff.
Mr Kelly began working
for NARMCO in February 2018.
He previously worked as
former NT chief minister Adam Giles's chief of staff before being handed a
lucrative role as chief executive of the NT Department of Mines and Energy in
2015.
NARMCO 'supporting
regional and remote people'
NARMCO's first grant
through the Indigenous Advancement Strategy was awarded in June 2015.
It received $385,000
for a 12-month project that was later amended by the Department of Prime Minister
and Cabinet to $330,000 for a 36-month project in Katherine, under the heading
of "provide employee management and support".
Later in June 2015, the
company received $225,000 listed as money "to provide Indigenous
employment and economic development and business support services to indigenous
Australians".
It was later changed to
a 13-month contract from a 28-month term, which is permitted under the grant
rules.
On September 13, 2017,
NARMCO was again awarded $251,453 for a 10-month project in Katherine, but this
time through the Aboriginal Benefits Account to "deliver outcomes by
getting adults into jobs, fostering Indigenous business and assisting
indigenous people".
On December 7, 2017, the
company received $289,300 for "VRD Quarry Enterprises — Indigenous
Business Entity Establishment" to run until June 2018.
The ABC asked Senator
Scullion and NARMCO to explain how the grant money was spent for each project
listed.
NARMCO said it supported
"regional and remote people to establish and develop sustainable
businesses and implement Indigenous employment programs", but would not
release the names of which companies they worked with, citing confidentiality
issues.
It said it could not
comment on how it spent the money, and added that it does not distribute the
funds to Indigenous companies on behalf of the Commonwealth Government.
ABC
News, 31
October 2018:
The Indigenous
Advancement Strategy was established in 2014 to improve employment, economic
development and social participation in Indigenous communities, and has been
funded to the tune of $4.9 billion.
Senator Scullion told
the hearing the money would help speed up longstanding land claims in the
Northern Territory by allowing non-Indigenous groups affected by the claims to
submit "detriment" applications to the Aboriginal Land Commissioner.
The commissioner is due
to make recommendations by the end of the year about 16 outstanding land claims
which have previously been recommended for grant, but never finalised.
"I'm sure many
Aboriginal people wouldn't be happy with their public money being used by third
parties who are effectively trying to cease or alter an Aboriginal land
claim," NLC chairman Joe Morrison told the ABC.
"I think it's a
poor look."
But during the hearing,
Senator Scullion rejected concerns from Labor senator Malarndirri McCarthy that
the funding would be used to oppose land claims.
"It is about making
their position about how they use the land at the moment and about how
different determinations may affect their industry in different ways," he
said.
"It certainly
wouldn't be about opposing land claims … this is a process about establishing
what detriment they will have.
"The land
commissioner can then cross-examine or question or ask for more evidence about
that, but it is a requirement under the act that the land commissioner take
detriment into consideration."
Funding to educate
members and represent interests
Senator Scullion pointed
out that the Northern Land Council had received $7.5 million in federal funding
to progress the claims, and that another $1 million had gone to the land commissioner.
But Mr Morrison said
AFANT, NTCA and NTSC should not have received their funding from the IAS.
"There's a process
under the Land Rights Act that if people require assistance to submit detriment
claims then that's dealt with by the Attorney-General's department, not by the
Indigenous Affairs Minister," he said.
The
Australian,
16 February 2018:
Barnaby Joyce owns land
near a coal-seam gas project he promoted as resources minister, despite
admitting it could be seen as a conflict of interest and pledging to sell it 4½
years ago.
The land, at Gwabegar in
central NSW, is covered by the same petroleum exploration licence as Santos’s
Narrabri Gas Project, which could supply up to half the state’s gas needs for
the next 20 years.
Santos is seeking
approval to drill up to 850 wells on 425 sites in the Narrabri project area,
about 25km to the east of Mr Joyce’s land. If approved by the NSW government,
the project could make way for further LNG developments in the area including,
potentially, on Mr Joyce’s property.
The Deputy Prime
Minister and his wife hold the land in two blocks totalling 970 hectares. They
paid $230,000 for the first, on Heads Road, Gwabegar, in July 2006. They
purchased an adjacent block for $342,000 in 2008.
Mr Joyce is on record as
saying he didn’t realise the blocks — in The Pilliga region between
Coonabarabran and Narrabri — were subject to a petroleum exploration licence
when he bought them.
He told Fairfax Media
before the 2013 election that he would sell the properties, acknowledging it
could be “viewed as a conflict of interest”.
But the register of
members’ interests, updated in January, shows he still holds the blocks.
Mr Joyce’s office
told The Australian the Deputy Prime Minister was open to offers on
the land, but declined to say what steps he had taken to sell it.
Real estate agents in
the area said the properties were not currently listed for sale. Mr Joyce
grazes cattle on the land, but locals say it is marginal farming country.
Mr Joyce advocated
strongly for the project to go ahead in September last year, when, as resources
minister, he and Malcolm Turnbull met with Santos and other gas companies.
Labels:
anti-corruption,
corruption,
federal government
Climate Change: Wallarah 2 longwall coal mine legal challenge
The Australian Coal
Alliance states it is; concerned citizens of
the Central Coast are worried about the impact that longwall coal mining in the
Central Coast Water Catchment Valleys and beneath residential homes will have
upon our drinking water catchment, and upon our health, lifestyle and properties. We will continue to
demand that the government introduces legislation into the Parliament to
protect the Wyong Water Catchment District, the largest drinking water resource
on the Central Coast, from mineral extraction, and to protect homes from being
undermined by longwall coal mining.
This is its legal battle............
Environmental Defenders
Office NSW, 14
November 2018:
EDO NSW, on behalf of
the Australian Coal Alliance (ACA), argued in Court that the Planning
Assessment Commission’s (PAC) decision to approve the Wallarah 2 longwall coal
mine on the Central Coast was unlawful and invalid.
Barristers Craig Leggat
SC and Josie Walker argued against the approval of the mine on the basis of
climate change, ecologically sustainable development, impacts to water
resources and flooding impacts.
The legal team: Craig
Leggat SC, Josie Walker of Counsel, Brendan Dobbie, Acting Principal Solicitor
and Isaac St Clair-Burns, Solicitor of EDO NSW.
“Our client ACA
argued that the PAC’s decision was invalid on 10 specific grounds”, said David
Morris, CEO of EDO NSW. "We focused on the PAC’s assessment of the mine’s
downstream greenhouse gas emissions and impacts to the Central Coast water
supply and likely flood-affected properties.”
The Wallarah 2 project
is predicted to have impacts on 88 private properties, which will be exposed,
in varying degrees, to increased risks of flooding. The mine has proposed
various options to mitigate those impacts or, where that is not practicable, to
make arrangements for the voluntary purchase of flood affected properties. The
ACA questioned the legal validity of those conditions.
In addition to the
predicted impacts from flooding and to the Central Coast water supply, Wallarah
2 will make a substantial contribution to greenhouse gas emissions – estimated
to be more than 264 million tonnes of CO2 over the 28-year life of the mine.
NSW law required the PAC to consider an assessment of those emissions when
approving the mine. However, the ACA argued in Court that the PAC specifically
disavowed consideration of downstream greenhouse gas emissions and therefore
the approval was contrary to the law and also to the principles of ecologically
sustainable development, which includes the principle of intergenerational
equity.
“This case is by its
very nature climate change litigation, which we’re seeing more and more in
Australia. We argued that the law in this case wasn’t followed with respect to
climate change impacts and the principle of intergenerational equity”, David
Morris said.
Of additional interest,
this was a paperless trial, one of the first that EDO NSW has been involved
with, and it proceeded very smoothly.
A judgment is expected
sometime before the end of May 2019.
Further detail on this
case can be found here: www.edonsw.org.au/wallarah2_aca
EDO NSW is an independent community
legal centre specialising in public interest environmental law and members of Northern Rivers communites can
contact the EDO at any time via the hotline on 1800 626 239 for free legal advice concerning local environmental matters.
Labels:
climate change,
coal,
EDO NSW,
law,
mining,
NSW Central Coast
Monday, 19 November 2018
Will a minority Morrison Government be forced to raise Newstart & Youth Allowances?
Depending on where you live in New South Wales the unemployment rate in September 2018 ranged from 2% to 9%, while youth unemployment went from 4% to 24%.
At the same time employment growth was -3% to barely 10%.
Which means that in September there were est. 195,300 job seekers on Centrelink's books in NSW and only est. 82,400 job vacancies available.
Centrelink Newstart Allowance for a single jobseeker is currently $275.10 per week and Youth Allowance is $222.90 per week for a single jobseeker under 21 years of age.
The million dollar question many people struggling on meagre unemployment benefits in rural and regional NSW will be asking themselves is whether Adam Bandt, Cathy McGowan, Kerryn Phelps, Andrew Wilkie, Rebekha Sharkie, and Bob Katter will use the increased bargaining power which comes to the crossbench in a minority government to force the government's hand on this welfare payment issue. Or will they turn to water?
Here is where the crossbench stands now.....
The
NewDaily, 16
November 2018:
Pressure is mounting on the
Coalition government to raise the Newstart rate following
unanimous lower house crossbench support for a $75 increase.
The Guardian, 16 November 2018:
The entire lower house
crossbench has come out in favour of an increase to Newstart, prompting
Australia’s peak body for the community services sector to accuse the major
parties of being out of touch.
Bob Katter outlined his
support for an increase to the unemployment benefit on Friday, saying it would
help tackle malnutrition in Indigenous communities.
His statement follows
Rebekha Sharkie calling for an increase earlier this week, while the new
Wentworth MP Kerryn Phelps committed to raising the payment in a candidates’
survey during the byelection campaign.
Cassandra Goldie, the
chief executive of the Australian Council of Social Service, said the “diverse
crossbench’s unity on increasing Newstart confirms just how out of touch the
major parties are on this issue”.
“When Adam Bandt, Cathy
McGowan, Kerryn Phelps, Andrew Wilkie, Rebekha Sharkie, and Bob Katter all
agree, it’s time to stop talking and act,” she said.
Katter said the payment
was insufficient for those in regional Queensland, where the cost of finding a
job was high.
“If you’re outside of
Brisbane, it’s no car, no job,” he said.
Increasing the dole
“would go a long way to enabling First Australians to buy fresh fruit and
vegetables”.
“You’ve crucified us
with the cost of food, you’ve crucified us with the cost of electricity,” he
said. “We can’t possibly live on Newstart.”
The prime minister,
Scott Morrison, has said the government had no plans to increase the payment –
currently $275.10 a week – despite an improved budget position, saying “I don’t
think you can all of a sudden go ‘oh, let’s make whoopee’”.
He said earlier this
month that the government would be more inclined to increase the pension, which
stands at $458.15 a week. The pension was increased during the Gillard
government while Newstart was last raised in real terms in 1994.
Labor has not committed
to lifting Newstart, but signalled it would use a “root and branch review” to
argue for an increase.
Labels:
Australian society,
jobs,
politics,
unemployment,
welfare payments
Eastern Australia is now a global deforestation hotspot and koala numbers are plummeting
Image: Wilderness Society |
Echo
NetDaily, 16
November 2018:
Koala numbers have
plummeted by 33 per cent over the last twenty years and experts are now warning
that they are likely to be driven to extinction. In NSW the decline of koalas
and other native wildlife is being driven by inadequate state laws regulating
both private land clearing and logging.
The National Parks
Association of NSW (NPA) is calling on the NSW government to ‘abandon its draconian logging plans and chart an exit out of
native forest logging, and for the federal government to rethink its commitment
to signing new Regional Forest Agreements (RFAs),’ said Ms Alix Goodwin, NPA
CEO.
They’ve based their call
on the recent study by three University of Canberra academics for Forest
& Wood Products Australia (FWPA) reported recently in the Sydney Morning
Herald that showed a strong majority of people oppose native forest
logging.
‘The study found that
urban and rural votes broadly share the same strong disapproval of logging –
putting the lie to claims that only urban dwellers care about the environment –
and that logging is unpopular even where the remnants of the industry persist,’
said Ms Goodwin.
‘The results are in line
with polling conducted in the NSW electorates of Lismore and Ballina in
December 2017 that showed 90 per cent support for protecting forests for
wildlife, water, carbon stores and recreation.
‘This is the latest
piece of evidence that clearly demonstrates how far the NSW government’s plans to intensify logging, abandon species
protections and open protected forests up for logging are removed from public
expectation,’ she said……
‘Koala numbers are
plummeting in NSW. It is estimated they fell from 31,400 to 21,000 in the two
decades from 1990–2010, and their numbers are continuing to decline in most
parts of the state.
‘Deforestation rates
have escalated in NSW and eastern Australia is now a global deforestation
hotspot. We need new laws to turn this around.
‘We want people to
understand that koalas face extinction unless we stop destroying their homes,
which means ending deforestation and the bulldozing of habitat.’
NSW Nature Conservation
Council CEO Kate Smolski said: ‘In one district in the northwest of the
state, more than 5,000 hectares of koala habitat were bulldozed in just 12
months.
‘Trees in that region
were bulldozed at a rate of about 14 football fields a day, and that’s just one
part of our state.
‘We know what the
solution is. We need strong new laws to end deforestation and start restoring
degraded habitat so wildlife like koalas can thrive.
‘That’s why we are
advocating for law reform to protect high-conservation-value forest and
bushland, and to set up a biodiversity and carbon fund to pay landholders to
restore degraded areas.....
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