Saturday 19 December 2020

Last Meme of the Year

 

@unclepete_100

Quote of the Week

 

"The global transition to zero emissions has negative implications for Australia’s important coal and LNG exports. The border taxes that the EU and US will apply to carbon-intensive goods will compound the loss. Join the developed countries of the northern hemisphere on the climate and energy transition, and we gain far more from the new zero-emissions economy than we lose from the old fossil energy. Investment in the new zero-emissions economy can provide much of the stimulus required for Australia’s own movement to full employment." [Professorial research fellow at the University of Melbourne Ross Garnaut, writing in the Financial Review, 11 December 2020]


Friday 18 December 2020

COVID-19 PANDEMIC AUSTRALIA DECEMBER 2020: New South Wales back to square one just days before Christmas

 

The following newspaper articles make this statement by Australian Prime Minister & Liberal MP for Cook Scott Morrison look very old and reinforces the oft heard complaint that NSW residents have grown too complacent in their attitudes toward this global pandemic:



ABC News, 17 December 2020:


NSW Health says the Northern Beaches COVID-19 cluster has grown to 17 cases and it has directed all residents in the area to limit their movements.


Residents have been advised to work from home, keep to their household group and avoid all unnecessary gatherings.


"Do not visit friends or relatives in aged care facilities or hospitals unless [it is] essential," a NSW Health statement said.


"Avoid visiting high-risk venues including clubs, restaurants, places of worship and gyms."


Residents have also been urged to avoid unnecessary travel outside their area, while those in other locations have been told to avoid travel into the Northern Beaches.



In a statement, NSW Health said people who had visited the following Northern Beaches locations should get tested immediately and isolate until they received a negative result:


  • Woolworths Mona Vale, 25/29 Park St, Mona Vale, December 13, 12:00pm-12:30pm

  • Aldi Mona Vale, 13 Bungan St, Mona Vale, December 13, 12:45pm-1:30pm

  • Avalon Beach Surf Life Saving Club, December 13, 14 and 15, 9:00am-9:30am

  • Palm Beach Rockpool, Lot 1 Rock Bath Rd, Palm Beach, December 14, 9:30am-10:30am

  • Woolworths Avalon, 74 Old Barrenjoey Rd, Avalon Beach, December 14, 5:00pm-5:30pm

  • Chemist Warehouse, 4/74 Old Barrenjoey Rd, Avalon Beach, December 14, 5:20pm-5:25pm

  • Commonwealth Bank, 47 Avalon Parade, Avalon Beach, December 51, 12:00pm-12:15pm

  • Mitre 10, 49 Avalon Parade, Avalon Beach, December 15, 12:00pm-12:20pm

  • Roof Racks World, 13/87 Reserve Rd, Artarmon, December 15, 2:00pm-2:30pm

  • HongFa BBQ Restaurant, Dee Why, December 15, 4:30pm-4:45pm

  • Dee Why Fruit Market, 33 Oaks Avenue, Dee Why, December 15, 4:45pm-4:55pm

  • North Avalon Cellars, 4/3 N Avalon Rd, Avalon Beach, December 15, 6:00pm-6:05pm

  • Careel Bay Dog Park and Hitchcock Park, Barrenjoey Rd, Avalon, December 16, 7:00am-7:30am

  • Palm Beach Pool, Lot 1 Rock Bath Rd, Palm Beach, December 16, 8:00am-9:00am

  • Brot and Wurst, 1442 Pittwater Rd, North Narrabeen, December 16, 2:00pm-2:05pm

  • Avalon Beach Post Shop, 45 Avalon Parade, Avalon Beach, December 16 3:30pm-3:50pm


The director of NSW Health's COVID response branch, Jeremy McAnulty, said he was concerned.


"The new cases are mostly in the northern part of the Northern Beaches. We are currently investigating where they all are and where they may have been," Dr McAnulty said.


"We are asking people on the Northern Beaches to help keep the community safe.


"Please work from home and stay at home as much as possible for the next three days.


"We know this is hard, but it is important we all work together to contain this outbreak.


"Anybody who has even the slightest symptoms, please come forward as soon as they appear so we can find cases."



The Australian Health Protection Principal Committee (AHPPC) will meet tonight in response to the cluster.


NSW Chief Health Officer Kerry Chant said authorities were working on a theory the virus spread may have originated at the Avalon RSL.


Authorities are urging everyone who attended the club on December 11 to get tested.


A man in his 60s from Frenchs Forest tested positive on Thursday after performing with his band at the club on that day.


He has been travelling extensively with the band.


Testing orders are also in place for anyone who attended the Penrith RSL Club on December 13 (from 1:00pm to 6:00pm) and the Kirribilli Club on December 14 (12:00pm to 3:00pm).


The Department of Education confirmed one of the new COVID-19 cases was an employee at its corporate office in Redfern.


"We directed all staff from the office affected to immediately work remotely from home while we complete the contact tracing process and have the office thoroughly cleaned," a spokesperson for the department said.


All staff at the office have been told to self-isolate until they receive further notice from NSW Health.


Additional locations a COVID-19 person or persons visited:


  • Hungry Ghost Cafe, 20 Avalon Parade, Avalon on Sunday, December 13 between 9.30am and 11am and Tuesday, December 15 between 9.30 and 11am

  • Sneaky Ground Cafe, Avalon Beach on Monday, December 14 between 10.30am and 11am

  • Barramee Thai Massage and Spa, 4/42-44 Old Barrenjoey Road, Avalon Beach on Monday, December 14 between 2pm and 3.30pm

  • Bangkok Sidewalk Restaurant, 1/21-23 Old Barrenjoey Road, Avalon Beach on Monday, December 14 between 7pm and 8pm

  • Palm Beach female change rooms on Sunday, December 13 between 9am and 9.15am

  • Coast Palm Beach Cafe, Palm Beach on Sunday, December 13 between 10am and 11am

  • Avalon Bowlo (bowling club), Avalon Beach on Sunday, December 13 between 5pm and 7pm (not 3-5pm as previously reported) and Tuesday, December 15 between 3pm and 5pm

  • Bing Lee, Gateway, 1 Mona Vale Road, Mona Vale on Monday, December 14 between 4.30 and 4.45pm

  • Woolworths Avalon Beach on Sunday, December 13 between 12pm and 5pm

  • Oliver’s Pie, Careel Shopping Village, Avalon Beach on Monday, December 14 between 9am and 9.15am


News.com.au, 18 December 2020:


States and territories have been quick to reimpose border restrictions on people travelling from New South Wales in response to the state’s growing coronavirus outbreak.


The news will come as a heavy blow to people who were hoping to cross state lines to see their families at Christmas.


Here’s a snapshot of what they look like:


QUEENSLAND


Queensland’s chief health officer, Dr Jeannette Young, said the new rules would apply to anyone who had been in the Northern Beaches region on or since Friday, December 11.


If that’s you, and you are already in Queensland, you are required to get tested for the virus and quarantine in your home or accommodation until 14 days after the date you left the Northern Beaches.


If you arrived in Queensland on a flight from Sydney after midnight (12am Friday, December 18), the same rule applies.


Finally, if you arrive in Queensland after 1am on Saturday, you’ll be required to go into hotel quarantine at your own expense.


These new requirements affect both interstate visitors and Queensland residents who are returning home.


Dr Young said Queensland Health would continue to “closely monitor the situation”, and provide an update on Friday morning.



WESTERN AUSTRALIA


In Western Australia, anyone arriving from New South Wales from Friday onwards will have to quarantine for two weeks.


If you travelled to WA from NSW since December 11, you must get tested and then self-isolate until you get a negative result.


I understand these changes will cause frustration and uncertainty for some people, and be very upsetting for many families looking to reunite and spend Christmas together,” Premier Mark McGowan said.


This has been a difficult decision to make, but we need to follow the health advice and do what is in the best interest of all Western Australians.”


TASMANIA


Tasmania has banned anyone who’s been in the Northern Beaches area on or since December 11 from entering the state.


If you’re already there, you have been asked to call the Public Health Hotline on 1800 671 738 to advise it of your movements and book a test.


NORTHERN TERRITORY


The Northern Territory has declared the Northern Beaches a virus hotspot.


Chief Minister Michael Gunner has announced anyone travelling to the NT from the region must undertake 14 days of supervised quarantine in either Alice Springs or Darwin, at a cost of $2500 per person.


If you are intending to travel to the Northern Territory from an identified COVID-19 hotspot, you are advised to rethink your plans,” the NT government said.


Anyone who has already arrived in the Northern Territory from Northern Beaches Council LGA on or after December 11 needs to arrange for a COVID-19 test and self-quarantine while awaiting the test results.”


VICTORIA


Victoria has asked anyone who’s been in the Northern Beaches area since December 11 to “stay at home and get tested tomorrow”.


They should stay at home until results are available and especially avoid visiting aged care facilities and hospitals. Further guidance will be issued as information becomes available,” the state’s Department of Health and Human Services said.


In addition, anyone who was in the Northern Beaches region or other NSW exposure sites on or since Friday, December 11 and arrives in Victoria after 12.01am on Friday, December 18, must get tested and quarantine in their home or accommodation for 14 days from the date they left the Northern Beaches.


Further travel advice will be announced on Friday.


AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY


There are no current restrictions for travellers moving to or from the ACT, however this is being monitored closely.


SOUTH AUSTRALIA


South Australia has not made any announcements yet. Currently, those who have come from NSW are urged to monitor themselves and isolate if they develop symptoms.



According to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology the risk of the Clarence River flooding this week has passed


Now that is looking more likely that rivers within the Clarence River catchment will be back to normal for the Yuletide season, here is a little local history......


Clarence Valley Council, retrieved 17 December 2020:


From the first cedar-getters and European settlers in 1830 to the commencement of sugar farming in 1868, only relatively small floods topped the natural river banks near the early settlements.


Over the following few decades, however, the security of the floodplain was seriously questioned. Floods overtopping the banks in that period included the great flood of 1890, with a height of 24 feet. This would be equivalent to 7.834 metres AHD (Australian Height Datum).


One of the floods in 1950 killed two people, over 1000 head of cattle and damaged several thousand homes.

The most recent floods have occurred in 2001, 2009, 2011 and 2013 and have reached levels of - 7.70 m AHD, 7.37m AHD, 7.64m AHD and 8.08m AHD respectively.


Since flood records commenced in 1839, Grafton has been subject to over 120 floods - the highest being in January 2013 at 8.08m…...floods occur more often from January – Apri…...[but also have been recorded in every month including on 19 December 1966 when flood waters passed through at below minor level at 1.2m and 16 December 2020 when flood waters reached minor level at 2.29m].


Make no mistake, the Morrison Government intends to set the Australian electoral system up for voter suppression if it can get Murdoch's backing & the numbers in parliament

 

On 29 July 2019 then Minister for Finance & Senator, Mathias Cormann, asked the Joint Standing Committee On Electoral Matters to inquire into and report on the conduct of the 2019 federal election and matters related thereto.


The Committee published an Interim Report in February 2020 and a Final Report on 10 December 2020 with only six sitting days remaining in the parliamentary year.


This is how the mainstream media and a number of concerned citizens see the final report…...


The Age, 10 December 2020:


Federal election rules would be overhauled to limit early voting and require Australians to show photo ID before they cast their ballots under a plan that has been labelled an “outrage” that deprives people of their rights.


A key parliamentary committee revealed the proposal on Thursday in a report that also backed the idea of increasing the number of federal politicians because electorates had grown so large.


The findings, from a Coalition majority on the committee led by Liberal National Party senator James McGrath, included a divisive suggestion to drop compulsory preferential voting in favour of optional preferential voting.


One Labor member of the committee, Queensland MP Milton Dick, said the report should be rejected because it would undermine the country’s compulsory voting system.


"The report that the government members of [the joint standing committee on electoral matters] have produced from the committee’s inquiry into the 2019 federal election is an outrage," he said.


Instead of proposing considered, sensible electoral reform, the government has used this as just another opportunity to silence its critics, suppress the vote and stop unions and grass-roots campaigners from participating in our democracy."


Labor's spokesman on electoral matters, South Australian senator Don Farrell, said the report was a "window on to a very dark future" under the Morrison government…..


The report has 27 recommendations on voting rules, electronic voting, campaign finance, the size of Parliament and four-year terms…..


The report has 27 recommendations on voting rules, electronic voting, campaign finance, the size of Parliament and four-year terms.


More than 4 million voters cast their ballots early at the last federal election, taking advantage of Australian Electoral Commission booths that opened three weeks before polling day on May 18.


In their majority report, Senator McGrath and his Coalition colleagues call for the early voting period to be cut to two weeks and for AEC officials to ensure voters meet legislated rules on voting early, rather than doing so merely because they want to.


In a sign of frustration over the time taken to count votes on election day, the report raised the idea of sorting the envelopes from 4pm so the count could begin at 6pm.


It also suggested the AEC prepare a timeline for the introduction of an electronic certified roll before the next federal election, and called for changes to the law so voters would have to show photo ID, such as a driver's licence or passport, to vote.


The report suggested the 151-member House of Representatives should be expanded as the population grew in each electorate, but did not make this as a firm recommendation…..


In the same way, it asked the government to consider getting the committee to explore the need for non-fixed four-year terms.


The current Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 can be found here. It has been amended on 48 occasions since 2000.


Given that Prime Minister Scott Morrison appears to take personal and political advice from unsavoury, unreliable and extremely far right ideological quarters, it is almost a given that he will latch onto those aspects in this report which are most dangerous to Australian democracy.



Thursday 17 December 2020

The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare releases a new report but the problem of homelessness remains


Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW), media release, 11 December 2020:


More than 290,000 Australians were assisted by government-funded Specialist Homelessness Services during 2019–20, according to a new report from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW).


The latest Specialist Homelessness Services annual report covers the 2019–20 period, including months before and during the COVID-19 pandemic and is accompanied by updated Specialist Homelessness Services Collection Data Cubes with information on clients assisted in states and territories.


Government-funded Specialist Homelessness Services (SHS) assist Australians who are experiencing homelessness—or at risk of becoming homeless—with services such as advice, counselling, professional legal services, meals and accommodation, said AIHW spokesperson Dr. Gabrielle Phillips.


Between 2015–16 and 2019–20, the number of clients helped by specialist homelessness agencies increased by an average of 1.0% per year from 279,200 to 290,500 people. ‘In 2019–20, about 114,000 clients were homeless when they first presented to services seeking help and 152,300 were at risk of homelessness.’


Of the 290,000 clients who were assisted in 2019–20, 60% (174,500) were female and 29% (85,000) were aged under 18 years.


About 119,000 clients assisted by Specialist Homelessness Services had experienced family and domestic violence, up from 116,000 clients in 2018–19. Ninety per cent of adult clients who had experienced family and domestic violence were female and over half (51%) of clients aged under 18 years had experienced family and domestic violence.


About 88,300 clients accessing services in 2019–20 reported having a current mental health issue which was almost 1 in 3 of all SHS clients (30%).


People with current mental health issues is one of the fastest growing client groups, increasing by 22% since 2015–16,’ Dr. Phillips said.


Various factors, including increased identification, community awareness and reduced stigma, may have had an impact on the increase in self-identification and reporting of mental illness among Specialist Homelessness Services clients.’


About $68.7 million in financial assistance was provided to clients in 2019–20, up from $61.1 million in 2018–19. This included $32.3 million used to help clients establish or maintain existing tenancies and $21.9 million to provide short-term or emergency accommodation, some of which was related to COVID-19 responses.


Clients supported each month can be found in our SHS monthly data product; the latest release includes preliminary data for the June–September 2020 time period.


In New South Wales in 2019-20 homeless agencies provided 70,400 individuals with a a service – 41% of these people were in regional areas, 1% in remote areas and 58% in major cities.


At least 38,334 of these individuals were homeless when they first presented (around 3,066 having no shelter or improvised shelter) and the majority of these homeless people appear to have been female.


Given that 1.6 million women in Australia are thought to have experienced sexual and/or physical violence from a partner it should come as no surprise that family or domestic violence was one of the top three reasons given by those seeking assistance.


The services offered by homeless agencies could have been information only, referral to another agency, overnight accommodation, short-term accommodation, advocacy in an effort to obtain permanent accommodation pr retain existing accommodation - or no assistance was able to be given at the time so that the individual walked out as homeless as when they entered the agency. On average 25 requests for assistance went unmet each day.


The 2016 national census revealed that across Australia 116,000 people were experiencing homelessness on census night. It also revealed the NSW Northern Rivers region was no stranger this homelessness. In the Richmond Valley – Hinterland 57.5 persons out of every 10,000 were homeless, in Richmond Valley – Coastal it was 53.9 persons per 10,000, the Tweed Valley 48.6 persons and Clarence Valley 44.8 persons.


In 2020 it was reported that local police believed that up to 400 women were sleeping in tents or cars in the Byron Bay area and it is thought that over 200 people may be sleeping rough in the Clarence Valley.


National DNA Program for Unidentified and Missing Persons has been established at the Australian Federal Police laboratories in Canberra


ABC News, 13 December 2020:


Each year, around 38,000 people are reported missing.


Most are found quickly — perhaps they are visiting relatives, or seeking some solitude, or on a drug-induced bender.


But at any one time, there are around 2,600 Australians who remain stubbornly unfindable, leaving in their wake trails of grief and confusion.


Less well known are the 500 sets of anonymous bones languishing in police archives across the country…….


This year, a national DNA database has been launched in the hope it will be a game-changer.


The $4 million National DNA Program for Unidentified and Missing Persons has been established at the Australian Federal Police laboratories in Canberra.


Program director Jodie Ward says it will apply world-class forensic science techniques to the backlog of unsolved cases in a methodical way…..


Until now, DNA sampling has been patchy and, crucially, not coordinated across the states and territories.


That means human remains found in New South Wales in the 1990s could belong to a person reported missing across in Victoria in the 1980s, with DNA samples from the bones and remaining relatives never having been compared.


State and territory police are auditing their DNA archives and collecting samples from the relatives of historical missing persons where needed.


They will be submitted to Professor Ward’s team along with DNA or bone samples from unidentified remains…..


Missing Persons In NSW


The Missing Persons Registry (MPR) was established in July 2019 and not only oversees every Missing Persons report in NSW, but also the unidentified bodies and human remains. Although the MPR is made up of a team of detectives and analysts, it does not usually investigate Missing Persons, instead it reviews each report and provides a supportive role to the police in the field.


In 2019 there were a total of 10,212 reported Missing Persons across NSW, averaging 28 missing people every day. Most people are located almost immediately however around 1% go on to become Long Term Missing Persons.


As of June 2020 there have been a total of 3,430 reports of Missing Persons, with 62 persons currently outstanding.


The MPR not only oversees the investigation of new reports but also historical Missing Persons dating back to 1945. There is currently 769 outstanding Long-Term Missing Persons across NSW however this number does vary slightly each day. 


The National Missing Persons Co-ordination Centre database can be viewed at:


https://www.missingpersons.gov.au/view-all-profiles.