Tuesday 19 August 2014

So was it Clarence Valley local government councillors voting in the chamber or management acting under delegated authority who decided to overrule the NSW Land & Environment Court and council's own LEP?


This interesting snippet found in NSW court records for July 2014 alerted me to a puzzling situation:



The puzzle is of course how 18.32 ha of mortgaged RU1-Primary agricultural land (or a little over 45 acres) in the Clarence Valley with only one permanent building entitlement on record and, with apparently no council consent for a temporary rural worker’s dwelling as late as 2001-2, should suddenly acquire two habitable dwellings on the lot?

How was consent acquired?

Google Earth snapshot 2013

One has to suspect that someone at Clarence Valley Council did not refer to the complex legal history of this lot, given that a condition of consent for the riverfront house was the demolition of the original dwelling, on three occasions council had refused consent for a second dwelling, the NSW Land & Environment Court had upheld refusal and ruled against the establishment of a rural worker's dwelling on the lot, council’s own subsequent legal advice of September 2000 was that it would be acting unlawfully if it gave consent for such a rural worker’s dwelling, the NSW Dept. of Local Government conducted a preliminary investigation into council’s handling of a development application/consent on this lot which left it seriously unimpressed and, the conditions council later placed on this lot did not allow a rural worker's dwelling unless the property legitimately became a profitable commercial enterprise and supplied council with verifiable documentation to that effect.

Or am I mistaken and council did not give its consent?

The C word cannot remain unspoken if a legitimate assessment of Abbott Government economic and social policy is to be undertaken


Tim Winton on the C word that matters in The Monthly in December 2013:

I don’t think it’s an exaggeration to say that citizens in contemporary Australia are now implicitly divided into those who bother and those who don’t. It seems poverty and wealth can no longer be attributed – even in part – to social origins; they are apparently manifestations of character. In the space of two decades, with the gap between rich and poor growing wider, Australians have been trained to remain uncharacteristically silent about the origins of social disparity. This inequity is regularly measured and often reported.

In October, John Martin, the OECD’s former director for employment, labour and social affairs, cited figures that estimated 22% of growth in Australia’s household income between 1980 and 2008 went to the richest 1% of the population. The nation’s new prosperity was unevenly spread in those years. To borrow the former Morgan Stanley global equity analyst Gerard Minack’s phrasing about the situation in the United States, “the rising tide did not lift all boats; it floated a few yachts”. And yet there is a curious reluctance to examine the systemic causes of this inequity. The political economist Frank Stilwell has puzzled over what he calls contemporary “beliefs” around social inequality. Australians’ views range, he says, from outright denial of any disparity to Darwinian acceptance. Many now believe “people get what they deserve”, and to my mind such a response is startling and alien. Structural factors have become too awkward to discuss.

As the nation’s former treasurer Wayne Swan learnt in 2012 when he published an essay in this magazine about the disproportionate influence of the nation’s super-rich, anybody reckless enough to declare class a live issue is likely to be met with howls of derision. According to the new mores, any mention of structural social inequality is tantamount to a declaration of class warfare. Concerns about the distribution of wealth, education and health are difficult to raise in a public forum without needing to beat off the ghost of Stalin. The only form of political correctness that the right will tolerate is the careful elision of class from public discourse, and this troubling discretion has become mainstream. It constitutes an ideological triumph for conservatives that even they must marvel at. Having uttered the c-word in polite company, I felt, for a moment, as if I’d shat in the municipal pool.

The nation of my childhood was not classless. The social distinctions were palpable and the subject of constant discussion Australia’s long tradition of egalitarianism was something people my age learnt about at school. I recall teachers, dowdy folk of indeterminate politics, who spoke of “the fair go” with a reverence they usually only applied to Don Bradman or the myth of Anzac. Australia’s fairness was a source of pride, an article of faith. The nation of my childhood was not classless, however. The social distinctions were palpable and the subject of constant discussion. Where I came from – the raw state-housing suburbs of Perth in the early ’60s – there were definite boundaries and behaviours, many imposed and some internalised. The people I knew identified as working class. Proud and resentful, we were alert to difference, amazed whenever we came upon it. Difference was both provocative and exotic, and one generally cancelled out the negative power of the other. We expressed the casual racism of our time. We played sport with blackfellas but didn’t really socialise. We laughed at the ten-pound Poms with their Coronation Street accents but felt slightly cowed by their stories of great cities and imperial grandeur. The street was full of migrants who’d fled war-ravaged Eastern Europe. Like most of the locals, they worked in factories and on road gangs. They told us kids we were free, and we thought they were telling us something we already knew. As a boy, I believed that Jack was as good as his master. But I understood that Jacks like me always had masters.

I watched my grandfather work until he was in his 70s. Sometimes I carried his Gladstone bag for him. It seemed to signify his dignified position as an ordinary worker who did a decent day’s work for a decent day’s union-won pay. He’d started on the wharves in Geraldton, in Western Australia’s Mid West region, and spent decades as a labourer at the Perth Mint, and though the meekest of men he reserved a sly defiance for his “betters”. He was a union man, but his allegiance was more tribal than ideological. The most memorable thing he ever said to me came when I was 14 or so. Rolling one of his slapdash fags on the verandah of his rented house in sunstruck Belmont, he announced that I should press on with my “eddication”, because “that’s yours for life, and whatever else the bosses can get offa ya, they can’t take what’s there between yer ears”. This was the same man who’d pulled my mother out of school at 15 because there seemed no point in her staying on, the bloke whose sons were sent into apprenticeships without a second thought. Twenty years earlier, his world had been narrower, more constrained, and I’m not sure whether he encouraged me out of regret for curtailing my mother’s dreams or whether he was infected by the new sense of promise that was in the air with the rise of Gough Whitlam.

Monday 18 August 2014

Institute of Public Affairs accuses the Australian Broadcasting Commission of bias against coal and gas industries and calls for privatisation of public broadcasting


The somewhat notorious right-wing lobby group Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) is again accusing the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) of bias – this time bias against the coal and gas industries.

It claims that the media analysis it contracted from iSENTIA (which examined a total of 2,359 online, radio and television broadcast reports/stories on energy issues) demonstrates this.

According to IPA coal featured in 452 (19.2%), renewable energy in 790 (33.5%) and CSG in 1,117 (47.4%) of these analysed reports between 15 September 2013 and 15 March 2014.

In an occasional paper on the topic, but not in the article by its director of communications which published in The Australian on 12 August 2014, it relies on these statistics in its call for the privatisation of the ABC:


So according to IPA the ABC showed no hint of bias in 1,026 of these reports/stories (or 43.49% of the total sample), reported favourably on the industries in question in 618 instances and unfavourably in 715.

Unfortunately for anyone reading the occasional paper it does not state whether the pie charts above were in the iSENTIA study document.

IPA states that the iSENTIA relied on CARMA International methodology in undertaking the analysis. This methodology relies in large part on qualitative (therefore sometimes subjective) measurements and is more commonly used to look at the public relations performance of businesses such as Ben & Jerry's Homemade Icecream or Kyocera Mobile Phones.

Somewhat strangely for a paper which claims it utilises an exclusive study conducted by the media monitoring firm iSentia on behalf of the Institute of Public Affairs. iSentia, formerly known as Media Monitors, is Australia’s largest and most highly respected media analysis firm, the study is not cited in the bibliography.

Prominent environmentalist seeks preselection for Labor in Ballina


Keith Williams with baby Loggerhead Turtle
The Northern Star 22 January 2014

Australian Seabird Rescue Inc. treasurer and Ballina shire councillor Keith Williams, known to Twitter readers as Captain Turtle, is standing for pre-selection hoping to be Labor's candidate in the Ballina electorate at the 2015 NSW state election.

Media Release 13 August 2014:

Ballina Councillor Keith Williams has announced he will contest preselection for the Labor Party at the next State Election.

Mr Williams, 49, is best known for his work on our region's beaches and rivers rescuing Pelicans, sea turtles and other marine wildlife with Australian Seabird Rescue. He is married to Rochelle, daughter of Seabird Rescue founder, Lance Ferris, and father of 4 year old Finn.

A former CEO in the non-profit sector, Mr Williams says he has spent his life advocating for the disadvantaged, for better health services and for the development of industries that create jobs without trashing the environment.

"I joined the Labor Party 3 years ago because of my concern at the current state of politics in this Australia. I realised I could no longer sit on the sidelines. Labor has a proud history of achievements in Medicare, education, disability, the economy and the environment, but we also need to make a better, more responsive Labor Party to ensure this work continues."

"I am excited to take part in the first ever community preselection to occur in regional Australia. It shows, like the leadership ballots, that the Labor Party is changing. We are throwing open the doors to participation. The days of power being held in the hands of a few are coming to an end."

Mr Williams highlighted the campaign for a Coal Seam Gas Free Northern Rivers as an example of Labor listening to the community.  

"Just like many other members of this community, myself and other local Labor branch members have written letters, moved motions and lobbied senior political figures regarding our concerns about CSG.  This resulted in a unanimous resolution of the Party's State Conference that the Northern Rivers be declared CSG free. This is the policy we will take to the next election. We will give the people of the Northern Rivers a real choice."

Mr Williams said people should have no doubt about his commitment to both protect the environment and develop sustainable jobs. With a degree in Environmental Science majoring in Economics and as a former Executive Officer of the industry body Ecotourism Australia, Mr Williams says that the key is developing sustainable industries, "We do not have to accept high unemployment as a natural consequence of living in regional NSW. Too many families are struggling with part-time and low paid work."

Mr Williams cited his work as a Councillor in establishing the Port Ballina Taskforce, with its focus on dredging, rebuilding marine industries and improving river health as an example of his approach that is already bearing fruit. "We have made more progress on these issues in the last year than we had in the previous ten. We will see a dredge operating in Ballina again, we will have marina facilities and we are making real progress in helping our river recover from decades of neglect."

Mr Williams said he looked forward to the next six weeks as an opportunity to showcase a new approach from Labor. 

The NSW Labor Party announced on Friday the conduct of a Community Preselection to choose it's candidate for the State seat of Ballina. A Community preselection invites every enrolled voter in the electorate to have their say.  Participants will be able to vote online, via postal ballot or in person. The community vote is then weighted 50:50 with a vote of local members of the Labor Party.

Keith Williams

NSW ICAC OPERATION SPICER witness list for week commencing 18 August 2014 - cheat sheet


OPERATION SPICER witness list for week commencing on 18 August 2014:

Monday 18 August 2014

Tracy McKelligott (Kearney) - Managing director of Eclipse Media, Events and PR Company, Brand Marketing Manager at Parramatta National Rugby League Club and deputy-chair of Newcastle Alliance
Peter Doyle - restaurateur, vice-chairman of Restaurant and Catering Australia’s NSW/ACT state council 
Nick Dan - managing partner at Bilbie Dan: Solicitors & Attorneys, director Newcastle Knights' Members ‘Club Ltd and chair of its board, chair of Barrington Resources Pty. Ltd which holds magnetite licences for deposits in the Hunter, Tamworth, Scone regions
Rolly Dewith - Newcastle businessman and managing director of the Junction Hotel, former Newcastle Alliance board member
Neil Slater - Newcastle restaurateur and member of the Newcastle Alliance

Tuesday 19 August 2014

Paul Murphy - Newcastle businessman and chairman of the lobby group the Newcastle Alliance
Lynda Jane Harkness - former executive assistant at Hunter Land Pty Ltd (founded by Hilton Grugeon and Graham Burns) which undertakes development of industrial and commercial projects
Vincent Fedele -  owner of Mesh Media printing
Sam Crosby - chief executive director of The McKell Institute and former senior policy adviser for the NSW Treasurer in the Keneally Labor Government
Dominic Schuster - Director Business Policy & Performance NSW State Treasury Garry Webb - former CEO of  Newcastle Port Corporation 

Thursday 21 August 2014

Rex Newell - artist
Samantha Brookes - wife of Andrew Cornwell
Andrew Cornwell - disgraced former NSW Liberal MP for Charlestown
Chris Stone - former Liberal Party state campaign manager
Clint McGilvray - former Australian Business Foundation head of communications and member of Barry O’Farrell’s 2011 campaign team
Matt Kelly - Newcastle Herald journalist
Rocco Leonello - former staffer with then NSW Labor Minister for Finance Joe Tripodi

Friday 22 August 2014

David Simmons - a former federal Labor MP then working as a registered Buildev consultant 
Ann Wills - former Labor staffer, worked for Buildev and took part in the Stop Jodi's Trucks pamphlet campaign
Troy Palmer -  CEO Hunter Sports Group, Chief Financial Officer of Patinack and a Buildev Group director
David Sharpe - former co-owner and executive at BuildDev property developer

Removed from this week's witness list at 4pm 18 August 2014

John Hart chairman of the North Sydney Forum, a fund-raising entity attached to the Liberal Party federal electoral conference in Australian Treasurer Hockey's seat of North Sydney and, CEO of Restaurant and Catering Australia, the national lobby group for the hospitality industry

Sunday 17 August 2014

Oh, the irony! Human Rights Commission appears to have received a s18C Racial Discrimination Act complaint from a Twitter troll. **WARNING: Offensive Language/Graphic Image**


Snapshot from ABC Media Watch Episode 28 on 11 August 2014

Excerpt from Mike Carlton’s The Sydney Morning Herald column on 24 July 2014 which elicited a very hostile response:

The onslaught is indiscriminate and unrelenting, with but one possible conclusion: Israel is not fighting the terrorists of Hamas. In defiance of the laws of war and the norms of civilised behaviour, it is waging its own war of terror on the entire Gaza population of about 1.7 million people. Call it genocide, call it ethnic cleansing: the aim is to kill Arabs.
As none other than Malcolm Fraser tweeted this week: "If any other country went to war killing as many civilians, women and children, it would be named a war crime." But it is not, although the UN is asking the question of both sides.
Yes, Hamas is also trying to kill Israeli civilians, with a barrage of rockets and guerilla border attacks. It, too, is guilty of terror and grave war crimes. But Israeli citizens and their homes and towns have been effectively shielded by the nation's Iron Dome defence system, and so far only three of its civilians have died in this latest conflict. The Israeli response has been out of all proportion, a monstrous distortion of the much-vaunted right of self defence.

Carlton asserts he was then subjected to a barrage of abusive emails on his Gmail account and I tend to believe him. Unfortunately, in tit-for-tat, he was less than polite in his replies.

News Corp now reports that two 18C Racial Discrimination Act 1975 complaints have been received by the Australian Human Rights Commission.

Unless there has  been a third complaint, the second complainant appears to be Simon Goldstein (@simongolds), who until his Twitter account was suspended last week (presumably for offensive, abusive, racist language and graphic images) described himself as a Jewish-Australian teen, UQ student, anti-Hamas, Pro-Israel, Young Liberal! Brisvegas, QLD.

This is the last photo of himself Simon posted on his account and this is his message:




Simon's account appears to have a distasteful history: 






Unfortunately, I rather suspect that the Human Rights Commission will never be fully aware of the pressure that trolls hunting in packs can bring to bear, especially if they are encouraged by the attitude of Murdoch’s minions.

On the other hand, I'm sure the Liberal Party is well aware of the vile side of the Young Liberals organisation and appears to tolerate its members' excesses.