New era of news begins as The West Australian and Seven Perth
Transcription
New era of news begins as The West Australian and Seven Perth
POWER HOUSE TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 2015 SPECIAL EDITION New era of news begins as The West Australian and Seven Perth join forces under one roof A PERFECT MATCH P10 NOBODY KNOWS NEWS LIKE US P12 WINNING WEB P14 CEMENTING A NEW FUTURE P16 TELETHON TREASURES P28 PERTH 2 since Fat Cat 44 Years made his TV debut INSIDE The TVW evolution 4 Sporting force 8 Dynamic duo 10 Integrated news power 12 Building a future 16 Early memories 20 On the record 24 Aerial view 26 Telethon phenomenon 28 30 Recipe for success The West Australian editor-in-chief Bob Cronin, centre, and editor Brett McCarthy oversee news conference at Newspaper House. Picture: Iain Gillespie THE WRITER Pam Casellas has been a professional television critic, commentator and interested observer of the local and national television industry for 35 years, as well as a devoted consumer of countless television hours. As a reporter for The West Australian she followed the many changes to the industry in terms of ownership, structure and technology, as well as the waxing and waning of different programming trends, including the first mini-series and the emergence of reality TV. Cover picture: Geoffrey Thomas, Basil Zempilas, Rhianna King, Rick Ardon, Mark Duffield, Susannah Carr and Angela Tsun inside the newsroom at the The West Australian and Seven Perth office in Osborne Park. Picture: Mogens Johansen THE TEAM FEATURES EDITOR Mark Mallabone 9482 3574 [email protected] EDITOR Jenni Storey 9482 3787 ADVERTISING Terence Tay 9482 9706 Brave new media world There is incremental change, the kind that moves slowly and no one really notices the difference. And then there is change that is so profound that the old ways are gone for ever and the new reality is a field of dreams and opportunities with no limits. Welcome to this brave new media world where the skills, experience, passion and commitment of two onceseparate news-gathering organisations come together to transform how information in this State is presented to readers and viewers. The West and Seven Perth, colleagues since 2011, are now firmly united in a shared newsroom to bring their combined talents into a bright new media world, the first of its 800. It puts our rivals in the shade and sets up an enviable competitive advantage. A redesigned newsroom enveloping a “superdesk” complements a highly sophisticated studio built within Newspaper House. It is from here that Seven News bulletins are now presented. The studio opens up new opportunities for a bigger local production slate across all platforms. Bob Cronin, editor-in-chief of The West and a newspaper man all his life, sees it as a perfect marriage of news gathering, where the stories which are better covered on television will be shown there and those which have their most impact in words will be in the newspaper. Where staff can move between the two media, if they wish, or A redesigned newsroom enveloping a ‘superdesk’ complements a highly sophisticated studio built within Newspaper House. It is from here that Seven News bulletins are now presented. kind in Australia and rare in the world, the busiest and the most technologically advanced newsroom in the country. The new opportunities across all platforms — print, television, online, radio, regional newspapers and regional TV — are immense. It’s a media monster, in one place, with all the efficiencies that come with that and the multitude of skills that exist in a combined staff of stay where they are the most comfortable. Where the most up-to-date technology allows the ever-increasing movement of news between the various platforms, with ever-increasing speed. Where staff will, in time, have the skills to contribute to all platforms, from reporters in country towns to photographers from the cabin of Seven Perth’s helicopter. Back in 1962, when Cronin was a raw 19-year-old, he was offered a job in television, a matter he discussed with his cadet counsellor. He was advised thus: “Son, this TV thing is a nine-day wonder . . .” While the media has always been a rollicking, ever-changing beast, neither he nor his counsellor could have imagined the scope of change. The inky smell and thumping machines of a 1950s printing room have been tamed into a cleaner, quieter, computerised place where the old crafts are long gone. In a television studio, the cans of film, the cumbersome cameras and room-sized editing machines have been replaced by digital technology and robotic cameras. Fifty years ago film took days to arrive by plane in Perth before it went to air. Press photographers transmitted their pictures back to the office, in painstakingly laborious and erratic fashion, via a “pic-gram” unit attached to a public telephone. Reporters, for whom the prospect of a mobile phone was science fiction, dictated their stories to copytakers. In 2015, the media world is instant and voracious. To prosper it needs skill, commitment and passion. Welcome to our new media world, where print and television are combined in bringing you the news in a way you had never imagined possible. 2 at ut d 3 in the West Regional 22 Titles newspaper network Integrated newsroom paves way to future KERRY STOKES CHAIRMAN, SEVEN WEST MEDIA The West Australian and Seven Perth are important parts of the fabric of the lives of all West Australians. Four years ago, West Australian Newspapers’ acquisition of the Seven Network was a significant step for the company and those it serves: our readers and our audiences. It was a transformational move for The West. The decision to bring together two great media companies created a new company that has Australia’s best-performing media businesses. It was a bold step forward and today that company, Seven West Media, has the scope and scale to continue to build our businesses and invest in our companies, our content and people. Today, we embark on an important next step: the bringing together of The West and Seven Perth in the one place. Under the leadership of Tim Worner, the chief executive of Seven West Media, and Chris Wharton, chief executive, Seven West Media WA, a great group of people has created a world first: an integrated single newsroom with state-of-the-art digital technology that allows us to gather and deliver news to the people of Western Australia on any device: from newspapers to online to broadcast television. It’s perhaps the most exciting development that secures The West’s future in this great State. The West’s strengths in publishing combined with the Seven Network’s strong media platforms — including leadership in broadcast television, a market-leading magazines publishing business and commitment to securing its future through the development of its presence in online and new communications technologies — provides significant opportunities for us to engage with you, our audiences. It is our people, and their talent, creativity and commitment that drives Seven West Media, and it is you, our readers and our audiences, who define us. We do not take your engagement with us lightly. Kerry Stokes AC says the integrated newsoom is a world first. s e, d m” We have successfully delivered Channel 7’s new media studio m y There's more to us than meets the eye. • Construct Only • Design and Construct • Management Contracting • Fit-out • New Build • Refurbishment www.broad.com.au 4 since the first 20 Years Today Tonight went to air 1 2 3 1. Linotype operator J.S. Ashton helps produce The West Australian circa the 1960s. 2. Captain Menzies, C.G. Friend, Sir Charles Gairdner and James Cruthers watch the first broadcast at TVW-7 in 1959. 3. The Goss press at West Australian Newspapers. 4. Laying out page plates at WA Newspapers. 5. TVW-7’s first TV program, featuring Leave It to Beaver at 8pm. 6. The original home of The West Australian — Newspaper House in St Georges Terrace. 6 5 4 Partnership comes full circle There is much in history which unites The West Australian and Seven Perth, the company which began life as TVW-7 in 1958 as a fledgling TV pioneer under the auspices of WA Newspapers Ltd, an ambitious gleam in the eye of its managing director, James Macartney. He had no real idea what this new-fangled medium was really like when the board of WAN, made up of local businessmen, applied for the State’s first commercial television licence. When the bid was won, there was no studio, no programs and no staff. Few people in Perth had ever seen a television picture. Jim Cruthers was at The West Australian when he was sent across the Nullarbor to examine this thing called television, and report back to his board on whether the new medium would work in WA. He was filled with enthusiasm, not just for television itself but for the role he thought WA Newspapers Ltd should take in setting up the company to run it. The board agreed and in June 1958 announced the formation of a new company called TVW Ltd. The company was registered, to raise one million pounds by selling two million shares at 10 shillings. Equipment had to be bought and shipped from England, the site for a suitable line-of-sight transmitter had to identified and acquired, production staff found, auditions for on-air talent held. And the In 2015, 136 years after The West Australian appeared for the first time and 58 years after Seven Perth’s first pictures went to air, two proud West Australian companies, with a shared heritage, are back together again. purchaser of the first TV licence in WA, a Mr J.A. Redmond, an Irishman who’d seen television overseas, handed over his five pounds. As the first broadcast approached, The West Australian remarked in an editorial that the arrival of television would make a profound change to people’s lives. A lot of rot, it said, had been talked about TV’s power to pervert young minds and dull the senses of the old. “We should remember that when all is boiled down, TV will be as good or bad as we make it.” In the 57 years which followed TVW-7’s opening broadcast, on October 16, 1959, the two companies separated, their origins a matter of local media nostalgia. But they came together again in 2011 when Kerry Stokes — who had arrived in Perth in the year that TVW-7 went to air for the first time and found work as an installer of television aerials — acquired first the Seven Network and then WA Newspapers Ltd, to form Seven West Media. Now that formal association is a physical one, after Seven Perth’s 100-plus staff moved to The West’s Newspaper House in Osborne Park, forming what is Australia’s first, and one of only a few in the world, fully integrated print and television newsroom. In the wider media world, the speed of change has been just as rapid. New owners have come and, in some cases, gone. New alliances have been formed and, in some cases, fractured. Government legislation has been tightened, then relaxed. The media industry, facing challenging times both in Australia and overseas, is watching the integration with great interest. In 2015, 136 years after The West Australian appeared for the first time and 58 years after Seven Perth’s first pictures went to air, two proud West Australian companies, with a shared heritage, are back together again. En ir te Su r n nd ow ay at 24 hb M fru ay n .co m 3 s 4 k, It’s amazing what you can achieve when you join together. Congrats to our Run For A Reason partner, Seven West Media, on bringing its team together under one roof. Here’s a great way to bring your people together: register a team at this year’s HBF Run For A Reason presented by The West Australian. on n a wo Proudly supported by: .au 6 cost of a TV licence £5 The when Channel 7 began 5 Going small has big benefits It is no small matter to build a new television studio, from scratch, in an area designed for a newspaper and its associated activities. However, in the brave new world of technology where smaller also means more efficient, there are correspondingly big benefits. Andrew Anderson is general manager, broadcast services, for the Seven Network and the many changes both to technical and staff operations fell into his ambit. It is obvious that the space once devoted to the production and presentation of television at the old site is far greater than at Osborne Park. “Television equipment has reduced in size, especially in the control rooms and desktops,” Mr Anderson said. “The big control panels in many cases have been replaced by a keyboard, mouse and screen. At the same time a change in workflow has also occurred. “Digital technology has allowed for a faster operation. “The advantages of the technology not only provide better quality and faster delivery but also allow people to make more considered and creative editorial decisions.” The edit suites may be smaller but, according to Mr Anderson, their power is incredible compared with the systems used 15 years ago. “In the 80s and 90s an edit suite with the creative power of a standard digital news edit suite cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, took several people to operate and was slow,” he said. “The options are immense, as we now have better storytelling tools and the volume of stories can be higher. The material used in one edit suite can be accessed and repurposed by other people using digital edit suites and workstations. “This is especially important during rolling news coverage of important events or disasters where many people are creating content from the same material.” There are two main drivers of the space requirements in a television operation. One is the human operational area itself, which is the desks, control rooms and wo wh co an ro sp wo of An re all by “m op eq e 7 number of years Channel 7 55 The called Dianella home le d . st e s. re e e workstations; and the equipment, which resides in a temperaturecontrolled “rack room”. “Everything has decreased in size and power requirements, so the rack room is smaller and the human space has been reduced to more of a workstation-based operation instead of huge control rooms,” Mr Anderson said. “Cabling has also reduced because digital technology allows interconnection of equipment by LAN cabling instead of big “multicore” cables. “In the old days, television operations were dominated by equipment and cables. These days, television operations are dominated by the people with the digital tools augmenting the space.” The most challenging part of the process was the human change with a new location and a new system. He said that the smaller studio was simply a reflection of the newer technology and equipment available. “The lighting systems are simpler LED-based devices that use less energy and are more reliable. This means that air-conditioning and power requirements reduce. That reflects on space requirements in a studio, in particular overall height. “As well, we are able to use new cameras and automated pedestals that have a smaller footprint (and of course are high definition so the picture quality is superb). We have also introduced virtual set technology so that we can augment (electronically) the environment around the Seven News anchor desk. He regards the changes made in Perth as the next step in the digital era. “In 2000 the digital era began in Australia and we are seeing the evolution of digital about every five years. The changes we are implementing in Perth take full advantage of this evolution.” However, for all the wizardry now available, some things never change. “Human communication and workflow is at the heart of any studio and television operational design. While we depend on technology to tell our stories we are a people-based operation.” The smaller studio reflects the new technology and equipment available. The Perth changes also mark the next step in the digital journey. “While we depend on technology to tell our stories we are a people-based operation.” Commercial Office Fitouts Refurbishments Base Builds Integrated Fitouts Demolition “REAL PEOPLE DELIVERING REAL SOLUTIONS TO CONNECT PEOPLE & PLACE” Make Goods Turn Key Solutions BUILDING SOLUTIONS TOGETHER Maintenance New Construction & Regional CHANNEL SEVEN & WEST AUSTRALIAN NEWSPAPERS EXCLUSIVE FITOUT PARTNER PROUDLY DELIVERING A QUALITY WORK ENVIRONMENT FOR THE SEVEN WEST TEAM PH: 08 9309 9700 | www.davidsonprojects.com.au Unit 1/21 Dellamarta Rd, Wangara, WA 6065 8 now working 1968 Employees at Newspaper House B At the top of the big league ‘Now we are on the same floor we can share ideas and will be able to continue to raise the bar in all platforms.’ CRAIG NITSCHKE SPORTS EDITOR C C Fi Ne tel no at th tel ha ha Ne In 2014 at the Australia Open, the Seven Network pioneered the use of HBBTV to stream live coverage from eight courts simultaneously via the Seven Sport app. The app was the number one free app on iTunes during January and saw a record number of Australians watch the Open. Looking ahead to Rio 2016, for the first time Aussie sport fans will be able to watch what they want when they want it from any of the Olympic venues via a 7Sport app on their tablet or mobile device. And for the first time since 1986 WAFL football returns to Seven in 2015 with 18 home-and-away games plus finals broadcast on Seven and 7Mate. Today Tonight’s Mark Readings will head up the commentary team. Seven Perth sports presenter Basil Zempilas is part of the network’s AFL commentary team and the Australian Open and Melbourne Cup Carnival hosting teams while veteran WA-based broadcaster Dennis Cometti will be behind the microphone for his 29th season in 2015. The West Australian’s sports inv stu ne fac ad 19 sc ar in fro mo pr The AFL and the Olympics are covered comprehensively by Seven and The West Australian. Pictures: Iain Gillespie, Daniel Carson/AFL Media editor Craig Nitschke said WA sports fans would be the big winners from the new joint newsroom. “We now have a greater pool of journalists to cover sport in this State which will benefit readers of The West Australian and thewest.com.au and viewers of Seven News and Today Tonight,” Nitschke said. “Seven will add another dimension to The West’s international and national stories, as well as providing extra value to our already extensive local content. Ch “We have already dipped our toe in the water in the past year with Channel Seven reporters writing for The West Australian and online and journalists from The West Australian providing some quality content for television. “Now we are on the same floor we can share ideas and continue to raise the bar in all platforms. It is a very exciting time and offers some wonderful opportunities for the talented team of sports reporters we have at our disposal.” 2773067πRCRM110315 The coverage of sport — State, national and international — is a major focus for both television and the newspaper. Engagement with sports lovers has long been central to the work of both organisations. That engagement now is even broader. Seven Perth’s sports editor Chris Young says: “The combining of resources happens just as the new AFL season is starting and for the first time in 20 years the WA Football League coverage is back on Seven. “This means our coverage of the local league will be second to none, and spread across all platforms, newspapers, online and television.” There are world events, too, in which he expects the combined team to shine. “The Rio Olympics are a little more than 12 months away and are the first of three for which the Seven Network holds the rights,” he said. The key components to Seven’s coverage of live sport are tennis, including the Australian Open, Wimbledon and the local Hopman Cup; horse racing (all the big spring races, culminating in the Melbourne Cup); the AFL Premiership season plus all finals and the Brownlow Medal, and this year the WAFL football. 7 ng 9 watched TVW-7’s 70,000 People first broadcast Back to the future ‘With changing consumer media habits, people want their news in many different forms.’ CHRIS WHARTON CHIEF EXECUTIVE, SEVEN WEST MEDIA WA Fifty-six years ago West Australian Newspapers was awarded the first television licence in WA and TVW-7 — now Seven Perth — was born. Studios were established on what was, at the time, the outskirts of Perth and the area became the city’s commercial television hub. Nearly six decades later, the wheel has turned full circle and Seven Perth has moved back in with West Australian Newspapers at Osborne Park. We have made a considerable investment in new state-of-the-art studios and facilities, including the newsroom “superdesk”. Our broadcast facility uses the most technologically advanced equipment available. It is high definition running the 1920/1080 50i standard. In excess of 250 vision monitoring screens are used in the operational areas and control room. More than 30km of cabling have been installed. The tower above the studio is 43m from the ground. Its main purpose is to mount the microwave dishes that provide a transmission path from the CHRIS WHARTON studio to the transmitter sites in the Perth Hills. Seven West Media WA (SWM WA) is the largest media centre in Australia. With changing consumer media habits, people want their news and information in many different forms. At SWM WA we are leading the way in accommodating those demands. In the big State, SWM WA is the go-to media source. Its newspapers (The West Australian and 22 regional mastheads), television, online, digital and regional radio cover the complete spectrum for readers, viewers and listeners. With the integration of the combined sales forces of The West Australian, Seven Perth, Red FM, Spirit Radio Network and thewest.com.au, and as a preferred partner of Google AdWords, SWM WA provides an unparalleled opportunity to reach customers across the gamut of media in WA. To quote our chairman, Kerry Stokes AC, on the challenging consumer and media landscape “we confront these challenges with confidence and see them as opportunities for us to drive our future”. Chris Wharton says the combination offers unparallelled opportunity. Picture: Michael Wilson or d we a we You know it’s serious when you move in together. Congrats. 2773067πRCRM110315 Proud suppliers of precast wall panels for the new Seven-West Media studios 9251 3500 | www.australprecast.com.au 10 number of ‘good signal’ 140 The miles from TVW-7 in 1959 Perfect match RICK ARDON SEVEN NEWS PRESENTER SUSANNAH CARR SEVEN NEWS PRESENTER Susannah is one of those rare people who connects with everyone. And our connection has been special because, while we’re different people, we both have a continuing excitement in being side by side, presenting live news that’s always changing. I remember being excited back in the mid-80s when I learnt Sue was coming from the ABC to join us at Seven. I had already admired her mellifluous reading style, and marvelled at her polished presentation. Such is Susannah’s professionalism, she adapted from the almost-British ABC to the more conversational world of commercial TV in the blink of an eye. We’ve been sitting smoothly side by side at Seven Perth for 30 years now, longer than both of us have been married. And it may surprise some to know that I find presenting the news at six the most relaxing part of the day, such is our ease at the newsdesk together. If there’s an on-air glitch, we’ll cover for each other. If there’s a speed bump in a script to be read, we’ll always find it for each other. Yet we’re different, with contrasting lives away from work that still interconnect because of similar interests. These include a love of great food, art, our beautiful beaches and travel. We are often your typical yin and yang but have similar very high standards in news gathering and presentation. My training as a young journalist at The West Australian included the almostbiblical code of ethics, which has made me passionate about getting it right every time. Sue’s training at the ABC was different as a presenter and announcer, yet she has the same embedded values enhanced by Aunty. Perhaps we’re perfectly paired as perfectionists, scrutinising scripts for syntax and spelling. Yet Sue’s always on time and I’m sometimes a little late, trying to cram too much into my day. While I love covering breaking stories on location, Susannah is unrivalled in her ability to deliver under pressure, with empathy, at the newsdesk. The recent Sydney siege showed how professional she is . . . hosting the live coverage around Australia from our Perth studio, at short notice because Sydney was out of action. Sue ad-libbed for three hours live on air, with an accurate and measured description of what was happening in that cafe. That won her praise Australia-wide. And why does the relationship work so well? Wikipedia sums us up: “In Chinese philosophy, yin and yang describes how apparently opposite or contrary forces are actually complementary, interconnected, and interdependent in the natural world, and how they give rise to each other as they interrelate to one another.” Long may the yin and yang continue. I remember the first time I met Rick. It was at a Clear Speech Award night back in the early 1980s. We were both contenders. I was reading ABC news at the time and Rick was the good-looking young Channel 7 reader who had a legion of fans. He’d left the world of print media for the shiny lights of television news and made his mark early. My life at the ABC was so different, mixing radio with television. I loved the variety it had to offer . . . reading TV news one day, hosting a music program on radio the next, compering a classical music concert in the evening. But a couple of years later, our worlds joined. Channel 7 was revamping its news, moving to a two reader line-up, and changing from 6.30pm to 6pm. It asked me to be part of the team and, 30 years later, I’m still here, with Rick, reading Seven News Monday to Friday. It’s been a fantastic partnership for all concerned . . . I like to think of it as a win-win-win situation. We love doing the job, the public seem to like us and the Seven Network is happy . . . what could be better? Why does it work? We’re different in many ways but similar in others. A love of news and knowing what’s happening in the world are shared. We both love travel and unusual places. On the other side . . . Rick is a passionate surfer and football player. He has great sports knowledge. I’m more likely to swim laps at the local pool, walk the dog and then hit the kitchen to try out a new recipe that’s been brewing in my head. Our careers at the Seven Network have been fantastic. Back in 1987 when Channel 9 tried to poach us, we made a commitment to each other to stay as a team. We loved where we worked, the people, the feeling at Seven Perth. It was a decision we’ve never regretted. On February 23, we began broadcasting from our new studios in Osborne Park as part of our merger with The West. The State’s first TV station has moved into a new era. Oh, and that Clear Speech Award all those years ago? I won that one! ’It’s been a fantastic partnership . . . I like to think of it as a win-win-win situation.’ SUSANNAH CARR Rick Ardon and Susannah Carr. Picture: Mogens Johansen 5 l’ 11 on air during the first 5 Hours TVW-7 broadcast in 1959 Extra hands on the job MONICA KOS TODAY TONIGHT PRESENTER For Monika Kos, presenter of Today Tonight, the arrival of Seven Perth staff at Newspaper House is business as usual. With extra benefits. “We’ve long worked collaboratively with people from The West,” she said. “The bond was always there. “Many reporters from The West — Geoffrey Thomas, Rob Broadfield, Gary Adshead and Ray Jordan are just some — have been involved in different projects for TT,” she said. They were used to working on TV as well as in print, she said, and their contribution was valuable. “The style of writing for TV and newspapers is different — we know pics, they know words — so between us it works well.” She thinks the effect of having the two newsrooms physically close will see more local stories unearthed — TT may well come up with ideas for the newspaper and the other way round as well. “It’s like having extra hands on the job,” she said. “We’re a content-driven program. We survive on having great local content.” These days TT’s content is almost 100 per cent local, a change from the days when at least one story a day came from the network. With TT killed off in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane a year ago, the pressure is on Perth to fill from its own resources Special reports from TT are also shown on The West’s website. Kos has presented Today Tonight since 1997. She’s excited by the challenge of moving to a new and technically sophisticated studio, and to experience the reality of Australia’s first integrated newsroom. And TT will be the only local current-affairs program in the country to come out of the same newsroom that produces a newspaper and TV news bulletins. ‘The style of writing for TV and newspapers is different — we know pics, they know words.’ MONICA KOS Monika Kos believes the integrated newsroom will mean more local stories. TOYOTA RUMOUR FILE #882 HAS MOVED K THE TOYO TA RUM OUR FILE - WHE RE THE BIG STOR IES BREA 7AM AND 8AM WEE KDAYS 12 is the height of the Seven 43 Metres Perth tower at Newspaper House New era a meeting of two minds 1. West reporter Steve Pennells in Sri Lanka with locals after a tsunami killed thousands of people. Picture: Barry Baker 2.The newsroom of TVW-7 studios in Tuart Hill in the days of typewriters. Picture: Ray Ogborne 3. The Seven News chopper in action. 4. Seven News reporter Amelia Broun. Two men, in particular, have driven the vision of an integrated newsroom at Newspaper House, The West Australian’s editor Brett McCarthy and Seven Perth’s news director Howard Gretton. Initially interested but unsure how to proceed, they headed overseas to visit some of the few newsrooms in other parts of the world which have become integrated. “On the first hour of our first visit to the first integrated newsroom I was convinced we hadn’t been thinking about it in the right way,” McCarthy said. They both recognised that the embryonic plans for moving Seven Perth’s staff to the Osborne Park headquarters of The West would need revision. The initial plan, more than two years ago, had been to move Seven Perth to one floor of the building, leaving the two newsrooms to run independently. But the two men saw instantly that joining the newsrooms offered enormous potential for news gathering, the like of which has never been seen in this country. They were thankful the chief executive of Seven West Media WA Chris Wharton had had the foresight to send them to explore the possibilities. The newspaper which convinced them was the Helsingin Sanomat in Helsinki, Finland’s biggest subscription newspaper. The situation was not quite comparable to Seven West Media in that the partnership was more newspaper driven, with TV as a smaller add-on. But it was apparent to them immediately that putting in one room the collective experience, skill, wisdom and news-gathering expertise would create a powerful, peerless organisation able to provide material across all platforms, from newspapers and television, to radio, digital and online services. The advice they were given there, reinforced by other newsrooms they visited, was to let everyone involved in the merger find their own way — no one should be forced into either television or newspapers. The two men come into the process far apart in experience. Gretton has worked only in television, McCarthy only in ‘I can’t wait for a really big story to happen. The power of the room, from journalists to photographers and cameramen, will be amazing.’ HOWARD GRETTON NEWS DIRECTOR 1 2 newspapers. They have needed to learn from each other and to understand the strengths and weaknesses of each area. McCarthy says he’s learnt how quickly and efficiently television news gatherers work, whereas newspapers, generally with kindlier deadlines, can afford to take more time. Newspapers are better at longterm planning, the results of which can also be useful for TV. One of the things they learnt on their European visit is the importance of a central desk, called a superdesk at Newspaper House. This is where the heads of department of both organisations sit, making instant communication possible so that everyone knows what is happening. There are now nearly 200 people in the newsroom, in all areas from general news for both The West and Seven Perth, as well as sport, features and production. “What we have created,” McCarthy said, “is a great media hub. There is enormous energy here, as well as an impressive media brain.” Gretton said: “I can’t wait for a really big story to happen. The power of the room, from journalists to photographers and cameramen, will be amazing.” They do not underestimate the uncertainty which the merged newsroom created in some minds. “Newspaper people may be a bit fearful of television,” Gretton suggested. “What they don’t know is that television people are just as uncertain about writing for a newspaper.” And then there is the question of where particular stories will be placed. “The best answer is there is no blueprint,” Gretton said. “We will decide where the story fits best.” It might be a story told better in pictures on TV and followed up in print the next day. It might be a story promoted on television and told in full the next day. “There are no rules,” McCarthy said. “But generally, whoever gets the story will keep it.” Some stories will be joint efforts, and the case of Geof Parry and Gareth Parker’s work on the Troy Buswell car crash is a glowing example of how two minds can be better than one. Some newspaper reporters will appear on TV from time to time, some TV people will write occasionally for the newspaper. Gretton sees the new newsroom as a vast computer where only 10 per cent of the power is being used. This was just the beginning, he said, of an enormous change in the way news was gathered right around WA, also using The West’s regional reporters. More than that, it is a welcome, optimistic acknowledgment that, in a difficult media landscape, there is enthusiasm and passion for a new way forward. “We’ve both been in the media for 30-odd years and we’d never imagined being part of something like this,” McCarthy said. It is, they agree, a privilege to be steering this immense new ship into waters which will be watched very closely by competitors. 3 n se 13 sets in private homes when 3300 TV TVW-7 went to air in 1959 Rhianna King, Basil Zempilas, Angela Tsun, Rick Ardon, Mark Duffield, Susannah Carr and Geoffrey Thomas at the office. Picture: Mogens Johansen Political reporters Geof Parry and Gareth Parker. Picture: Bill Hatto Talented tag team get Buswell scoop 4 3 Nothing exemplifies the potential benefit of an integrated newsroom better than the work of The West Australian’s Gareth Parker and his political counterpart at Seven Perth, Geof Parry, in the story of Troy Buswell’s final fall from grace. By pooling their knowledge, gained from separate contacts and after a great deal of digging around, they were able to bring the story to both readers and viewers, first by Parry on Seven News’ 6pm bulletin on Sunday night, then developed by Parker in the following day’s issue of The West. It might never have become the news event that it did but for some luck — good for Parry and Parker, bad for Mr Buswell. A member of the public had seen a car being driven erratically in Subiaco late on a Saturday night and called the police. The police attended but, by then, there was nothing to see and their investigation went nowhere. With Mr Buswell on unexplained personal leave, that witness had reason to revisit what he saw. On the night, he told a police call-centre operator that the driver “looked like Troy Buswell” but that information was never passed on to attending officers. The witness thought he might have some information that was connected to Buswell’s absence and, when the police made no further contact with him, he called Parry. Parry’s initial story mentioned only that the car was believed to belong to Mr Buswell and that other cars parked in the area had been hit, as had the gatepost at Mr Buswell’s home. Parker’s story the next day took it further, after his and Parry’s investigations revealed Mr Buswell had been drinking at a wedding on the night of the accident. By then the matter had become public ‘I’m really proud that at no stage did we sensationalise anything.’ GARETH PARKER and the Premier, Colin Barnett, was forced to hold a press conference to announce Mr Buswell had left the State and was receiving medical care in Sydney. The reporters recall with some amusement their frustration at not being able to see the front, and possibly damaged, part of Mr Buswell’s car while it was parked behind gates in his driveway. “I’m taller than Geof,” Parker said with some understatement. “So I took a run-up and jumped high enough to see that the front bumper was hanging off.” Both Parry and Parker understood the fine line they were walking in pursuing a story about a man with health concerns. “I’m really proud that at no stage did we sensationalise anything,” Parker said. Both note that, when Mr Buswell was ready to resign, he asked that they conduct his final interview, Parker with the initial news and then Parry with an interview the next day. He had never, they point out, complained about the media’s treatment of him and both have run across him socially, with no hint of recrimination. A measure of the man, they think. While the Buswell story happened before the two newsrooms were physically joined, Parker and Parry believe the outcome was a good example of how breaking news is enhanced by combining their efforts. The new political team they are part of now numbers five, with Parker also having an on-camera role. 14 number of years Susannah Carr and Rick Ardon 30 The have been reading the news together ‘One team’ approach perfect for website Online editor Chris Manly in the integrated newsroom. Picture: Michael O’Brien For The West’s online editor Chris Manly, the integration of the two newsrooms could not come quickly enough. “It’s been talked about for a long time,” he said. Now it’s a reality and he couldn’t be happier. The superdesk arrangement, which has all department heads physically close by, means that everyone knows what is going on at any moment. While the two organisations have been working co-operatively for some time, the chance for a “one team” approach means wider news coverage, enhanced ability to run breaking news and more efficient use of resources across all platforms. “Our thinking becomes wider,” he said. He sees the thewest.com.au as the “breaking news” aspect of the integration. “The website is the ‘what happened’ and the paper the next day asks why and offers analysis.” While the newsrooms will continue to operate independently, online is an area where those ‘There is a time in newspapers when it’s over for the day, the edition is done. But this never ends and it’s voracious.’ CHRIS MANLY operations merge. This means there are effectively more reporters at work, each filing news and pictures to the website. Add The West’s country newspapers and Seven’s GWN7, and the footprint becomes Statewide, he said. “We can be first to the scene of a breaking story and get pictures on the website very quickly, too.” Seven’s news bulletins are replayed online and constantly updated. Live streaming on the website, from sporting events, news conferences and coverage of breaking news, offers further opportunities for co-operation between the two newsrooms. News video filed through social media by Seven News reporters at the scene are embedded in reports with pictures and reports from The West’s news team. Manly has had plenty of experience in the print version of news gathering: “There is a time in newspapers when it’s over for the day, the edition is done. But this never ends and it’s voracious.” Keeping a close eye on what stories are put on the website and linked via social media is important. The brands of both organisations need to be protected and any temptation to use “clickbait”— cheap, unsubstantiated and titillating stories to attract online traffic — must be resisted. The interactive nature of social media can be a valuable addition to the website. The recent visit to Perth by the Giants gave people the chance to take their own photographs and share them on social media. The photos were collected and promoted on The West’s website and the result was a wonderful illustration of the community joy the visit provided. And the fact that it attracted traffic was proof that the public enjoyed the coverage. Thewest.com.au, relaunched in 2009, continues to grow each year and Manly can see nothing but expanded opportunities ahead. WEBSITE WINS In just a few years, thewest.com.au has collected a swag of local and international awards for online content and presentation as well as community involvement. At home the website has won WA Media Awards for its Frontline Afghanistan coverage and its package on the Perth Hills bushfires, After The Flames. In 2011, thewest.com.au’s coverage of the Christmas Island asylum boat tragedy received a WA Media Award for best online series, with judges commenting on the depth and accuracy of the content and the website’s “rapid delivery of material”. Recent global honours include gongs from the Asian Digital Media Awards for three consecutive years. Last year, thewest.com.au won gold at the prestigious Asian awards for its powerful anti-drink-driving campaign, Pledge for Nate. In 2013 its coverage of Syria’s refugee crisis also achieved gold in the Cross Media Editorial category, as well as the silver award for Best Online Video for Bali Remembered. Video presentations were also honoured in the 2012 Asian Digital Media Awards. Online editor Chris Manly said the awards were testament to the dedication of a tight-knit team. $ n s ed o e 15 of gold found at TVW-7 $2,976,477.35 Worth as part of the Perth Mint swindle History in the making BRETT McCARTHY EDITOR, THE WEST AUSTRALIAN For a newspaper with a 182-year history of serving this State there have been many changes at The West Australian over the years. But the revolution that has unfolded in the past few weeks within our newsroom is the biggest and most exciting change this newspaper has seen. We now publish The West from Australia’s only fully integrated newsroom, also producing commercial TV news bulletins, a public affairs show, websites and digital products. This has been made possible by the coming together under one roof of The West and Seven Perth. The planning of the integrated newsroom has been happening for more than 18 months and to see it come together successfully has been a great honour. This revolution brings The West right into the digital age and helps to secure the future of the newspaper. By bringing together the best journalistic brains in this State, we aim to produce even better journalism for our readers and viewers across all platforms — the printed newspaper, our website, Seven News and Today Tonight. We will not only have the ability to quickly and efficiently cover the big breaking stories here in WA but also we will be able to spend time examining issues that matter to our State in depth. The results will be able to be read in the printed newspaper, online and in other digital formats plus often seen on TV. We are proud of our 182-year history as the State’s daily newspaper and excited by the future that lies ahead. ‘We aim to produce even better journalism for our readers and viewers across all platforms — the newspaper, our website, Seven News and Today Tonight.’ BRETT McCARTHY EDITOR Brett McCarthy says benefits will be seen across all platforms. Picture: Sharon Smith c Congratulations to the major media powerhouse As a proud partner of The West Australian, we congratulate you on the achievment of the two companies coming together again, in yet another exciting step forward in West Australia’s media landscape. All the best for the future. WRH Global Australia Pty Ltd. Unit 3, 73 Beauchamp Road Matraville NSW 2036 Phone +61 2 8336 2700 Fax +61 2 8336 2788 [email protected] www.wrh-global.com.au 16 on The West Australian/ 200 Staff Seven Perth news floor Cementing a new future Moving Seven Perth into Newspaper House involved a complex renovation and state-of-the-art studio fit-out over 16 months. Pictures: Ben Crabtree, Simon Santi, Gerald Moscarda ’The bringing together of Seven Perth and The West Australian in one place is an exciting development that secures The West’s future in this great State.’ SEVEN WEST MEDIA CHAIRMAN KERRY STOKES 1 n/ topped the $1 million 1980 Telethon mark for the first time TOWER FOCAL POINT The landscape at Osborne Park changed with the installation of a tower as part of the relocation of Seven Perth’s studio. The height of the tower itself is 36.4m and it sits on top of the studio which is 6.6m, providing an overall height of 43m. It was constructed off-site in two main sections, with the upper being craned on to the lower during the on-site installation phase. The tower’s primary purpose is to provide a backup transmission path to Seven Perth’s other transmitters, which are at Bickley and Carmel. Towards the top of the tower are two, 2.4m microwave-link dishes which provide a line-of-sight connection to these sites. The microwave links can be fed either with fibre-optic or satellite — the latter, also on the studio roof, is controlled by a 4.8m satellite dish. 17 18 number of years the Christmas 43 The Pageant has warmed Perth hearts 1 C ST Re ou Au Th tw cha hav Heart of the community One of the founding visions of TVW-7 when it was formed in 1958 was that it be the people’s channel. The then managing editor of WA Newspapers, James Macartney, told James Cruthers, founding general manager of TVW-7, that he wanted the station to have a strong community base, not just among shareholders and with a slate of local programs but in its contribution to the local community. And so it has always been, from early events such as the Pet Parade, which brought 20,000 cats and dogs to scenes of mayhem at Langley Park, the Birdman Rally, the Teddy Bears’ Picnic and the Milk Carton Regatta through to newer events such as the growing Mandurah Crab Fest. And, of course, the biggest of them all are Telethon and the Christmas Pageant. Telethon was first held in 1968. The Christmas Pageant — this year will be the 44th — now has The West as a partner in bringing 300,000 people, mums, dads and kids, to the city at the start of the festive season. This support adds to The West’s existing community commitment and the closer association with Seven Perth presents options across all platforms for even more engagement. The West’s longstanding commitment to events, such the HBF Run for a Reason and the WestBusiness Pinnacle Awards, now packs an even bigger punch. ABOVE: The Crab Fest has grown into a huge event. Picture: Travis Hayto LEFT: HBF fun runners start in the city. Picture: Dione Davidson Sev in sce ad cov the cov A pre fam cu co pic eve ‘It yo di st ST ab nt. : 19 number of shillings it cost to 10 The buy an original TVW-7 share Challenge and opportunity STEVE BUTLER REPORTER Reporter Steve Butler has already worked out how to combine his words in The West Australian with pictures on Seven News. The trick, he thinks, is to realise when the two will combine effectively. “The integration opens up new challenges and opportunities. You just have to find your place in it,” he said. He points to the package he did with Seven News on Neil Brooks. A nice story in The West followed by pictures shot in scenic Bali, where Brooks was living, to add another element to the piece. He was also in New York last year, to cover former Eagle John Worsfold’s run in the New York Marathon, also providing coverage for Seven News. Another example is the package he presented in which he went back to the family farm in the Barossa Valley with current Eagle Shannon Hurn, an effective combination of words for the paper and pictures on Seven. “In some cases, it just works for everyone, though I do still find my main ‘It’s certainly the case that you start to think about the different possibilities of a story.’ STEVE BUTLER motivation in the newspaper,” he said. “I think we’re really lucky to have the chance to work in both, when the opportunity is there. It’s certainly the case that you start to think about the different possibilities of a story. “As long as you keep everyone in the loop, and I have a good relationship both with The West’s chief-of-staff Ben Spencer and Seven’s news director Howard Gretton, I think the integration will work really well. “It’s brought a new level of activity and lifted the mood of the newsroom.” He also has a good relationship with Today Tonight, for which he did a weekly football segment while working in The West’s Melbourne office. Butler crosses easily between sport and general news and, having been based in Bunbury early in his career, has legend status for the vast range of contacts he maintains in the South West. He’s been a political writer, too, but there’s another thing he holds dear — the South Bunbury Football Club with its rousing motto cede nullius, or yield to none. Steve Butler, Adrian Barich, Ryan Daniels and Mark Readings. Picture: Danella Bevis Proud to have partnered with the Seven West Media Group in providing Project Management and Superintendent Services for the new Channel 7 Studios Development and Relocation Project. We wish to congratulate and thank everyone who contributed to the successful delivery of this exciting project. BIOFORE IS PAPER. What if paper was invented today? It is manufactured from renewable raw material. It is produced by using bioenergy. 2780731πRCTT110315 s www.ausmaid.com.au (02) 9960 1868 It is recyclable and biodegradable. It is a perfect – and versatile – product in line with the principles of sustainable development. Biofore is not only the future. It is a thing of the present. For more information, please visit www.upmbiofore.com. 20 since the first West Coast 28 Years Eagles game was televised Richard Ashton behind the TV camera. Nothing left to chance at debut The memories of TVW-7’s opening night in 1959 burn brightly for those who were there, with all their nervousness and relative inexperience, yet the knowledge that this night was a piece of history. One of them is Richard Ashton who, with fellow camera operator Gordon McColl, helped put that first telecast to air. And last month he returned to Seven Perth to watch the last bulletin go to air from the Dianella studios. Recalling the first broadcast, Ashton said trumpeters from the Fifth Military District band ushered in the governor, Sir Charles Gairdner, as he left his Daimler and strode into the new studio about to play his part in history. Rehearsals were, of course, extensive but they went one better. To ensure that every element was correct, a week before the big day the studio’s clocks were set to the time of the opening night and the entire telecast run through. All segments had to be in place, including commercial breaks and the various segments. Nothing was left to chance, Ashton said. And so, when it was time for the real thing, there was a fair degree of confidence that it could be achieved without a hitch. And so it was, down to the governor’s “Tonight is a very important one for our State, certainly a milestone in our progress which would have profound effects on the lives of all of us . . . ”, before declaring commercial television in WA off and racing. There’s a little memento, however, if you listen carefully to the telecast. You might hear a little tinkle at one point. “I had two lens caps on my camera platform and the cable knocked one of them to the ground,” he said. “I saw Jim Cruthers’ eyes flicker — he used to remind me about it for years.” It’s certainly one way to make an unexpected mark in history. R ‘I had two lens caps on my camera platform and the cable knocked one to the ground.’ RICHARD ASHTON Daily News editor Jack Harrison, left, and a staffer wait for a decision on the fate of the afternoon newspaper. They are told that after 108 years the paper will be closing. Picture: Nic Ellis Then and now 1879 The West Australian is launched as a broadsheet, emerging from previous locally owned publications beginning in 1833 1958 WA Newspapers awarded the first commercial TV licence in WA 9 1959 First pictures transmitted on TVW 7 1980 Telethon passes $1 million mark for the first time 1968 First Telethon held 1987 Robert Homes a Court’s Bell Group buys WA Newspapers Ltd 1969 Melbourne’s Herald and Weekly Times buys WA Newspapers Ltd 1988 Alan Bond’s Bond Corporation wins control of WA Newspapers Ltd 1989 Last papers printed at 125 St Georges Terrace, with print works moved to new facility at Osborne Park Telethon cracked $1 million mark in 1980. 1990 The Daily News closes 1992 WA Newspapers becomes a public company 1998 WA Newspapers leaves its second St Georges Terrace home for Osborne Park 2011 Seven West Media created 2015 Seven Perth moves to Newspaper House st 21 number of WA mine sites reached by 97 The the Redfm/Spirit Radio network. LEFT: Ben Harvey launching the Your Money liftout in The West. Picture: Steve Ferrier BELOW: Nick Bruining’s Retirement Masterclass at the Hyatt. Picture: Mogens Johansen Retirement issues a growth area The West’s group business editor Ben Harvey sees much potential for growth in the association between the newspaper and Seven News, particularly in the field of superannuation and retirement planning. “With the first of the baby boomers retiring and millions more preparing to stop work, this area of finance journalism is more important than ever,” he said. “The Business section at The West has a long history of working with Seven. Financial reporting is a nuanced field and the technical abilities of The West’s business reporters have been sought by television producers regularly.” The frequency of the newspaper’s business journalists appearing on Seven News has increased in the short time Seven Perth has been in Newspaper House and this trend will continue as the media group increases its focus on retirement planning and superannuation strategy. He said that the creation of an eight-page Your Money personalfinance liftout in February was seen by some as the culmination of this effort. “In fact, it was just the first step,” he said. In conjunction with financial commentator Nick Bruining, The West holds regular Retirement Masterclass seminars. “We have increased the amount of radio airtime devoted to this field at Redwave radio and through a partnership with 96FM. “Each August, we publish an annual magazine called Securing Your Future, which coincides with Financial Planning Week.” The West’s personal finance editor Neale Prior appears regularly on Today Tonight to talk about the stories being covered in print and Bruining has become a fixture of Seven News’ weekend bulletins. “The combined newsroom has made these two commentators far more accessible for Seven,” Harvey said. “The fact that Bruining can come to Newspaper House for a meeting with me about Your Money and then walk across the hall to Redwave to voice five scripts for 6PR and finish the afternoon in Seven’s studios doing a piece to camera on what he is writing about in The West and talking about on radio is a realworld example of how well the system works.” ‘The Business section at The West has a long history of working with Seven.’ BEN HARVEY GROUP BUSINESS EDITOR Welcome to your new home. 22 West Australian moved to 1998 The Newspaper House in Osborne Park 1 1 2 3 4 in ha ro sa on ov Alison and Jeff — absolute pros 1. Former Seven Perth colleagues Alison Fan and Jeff Newman catch up over coffee in Claremont. Picture: Danella Bevis 2. Jeff Newman in 1967, the year he joined Seven Perth. 3. Over and out for legendary weathman Jeff Newman, right, as Ric Ardon, Geof Parry Susannah Carr, Basil Zempilas and Alison Fan celebrate the end of an era. Picture: Barry Baker Their collective experience in the media, both in print and on television, is without peer in Perth. Alison Fan and Jeff Newman — a duo so recognisably part of Seven Perth it is difficult to imagine them being anywhere else. Their combined years of experience take us over the century mark. In fact, for both of them the story did begin elsewhere. Fan as a cadet on the WA Newspapers Ltd afternoon paper the Daily News and Newman, via radio in Geraldton and then 6PM to Nine, where he presented that channel’s first night on air in 1965. A technical disaster, he recalls. Fan was a columnist on the Weekend News, the weekend edition of the Daily, when the company changed hands. As a contributor she was, she says with an equanimity she may not have felt at the time, “sacked on Friday afternoon. On Monday, Darcy Farrell (then news editor at TVW-7) offered me a job”. That was in 1968. She left again for a couple of years, to accommodate a growing family, to work at the ABC (where she met her good friend Susannah Carr) and then returned to Seven Perth. She has not budged, despite overtures from other organisations, including Nine’s 60 Minutes. Newman left Nine in 1967 after a disagreement with management and “was unemployed for two days” before being approached by Max Bostock to join Seven Perth. “I had no phone at home and Garry Meadows knocked on my door when he heard I’d left Nine,” he said. Their careers have been divergent, their experiences disparate, linked by solid friendship and their loyalty to TVW-7. Newman’s long, varied and illustrious career encompassed such programs as Reach for the Stars, It’s Academic and, from 1968, Telethon, for which he was presenter for 37 years. He was also a newsreader and in 1982 became Seven Perth’s weatherman, a position he held until retirement in 2009. Between 1978 and 1991 Fan was his newsreading colleague. She was, she thinks, initially assigned “the fluffy stuff ”, the lightweight material. But she proved her worth time and again with the heavy stuff. Not much different from the Daily News really, she recalls, where she was constrained to fashion and the social pages and a column called The Scene, about a young woman’s view of lifestyle issues. “It was case of doing the job better and working harder,” she says, as it was for many women then. She began Seven Perth’s court coverage, which led her to many landmark Perth crime stories. In Telethon’s early years, Newman was in charge of finding the talent to fill up the 24-hour telecast. “One year, I ran out of acts at 2.30am,” he says. “There was a gaping hole until 6am, when the kids’ stuff started.” Some swift talking with the remaining performers and they stayed on the job, going through their material again and again. Over coffee and hilarity, the memories keep coming. The things that went wrong, the things that went surprisingly right. The things the public never saw. The frankly awful Telethon guests, the laborious technology of the early days. And the particular joy in being part of an emerging industry which ran on passion and a love of the job. They have seen the rapid changes in technology, from film to video and the end of splicing, the emergence of live crosses and the end of the necessity for “line of sight” with the Bickley transmitter before pictures could be sent. They were there when our screens magically turned from black-andwhite to colour and Newman recalls how premier Sir Charles Court was prevailed on to flick a switch which flooded the screen with colour for the first time. He was also production manager at TVW-7, making Spellbound with Martin St James and doing a deal with Alexandra the Great 48 (never heard of her, never mind . . .) to introduce movies for men in the late hours. And there was Perth’s New he Faces, Letterbox and What in the World. Add the beauty pageants, the one-off programs, the community events and his place in the birth of television in this State is assured. It is a particular joy that, after so many years of doing stories of bad people doing bad things, Fan has turning her attention to Today Tonight and some of the State’s most generous individuals. “We had no mobile phones, of course,” she says of those early days. “It was a matter of finding a public phone booth to communicate with the station. “Then we had pagers but we couldn’t use them because Nine could listen in. Then we had those brick-sized mobile phones.” She can lay solid claim to being one of the country’s most experienced TV news gatherers, covering the toughest stories going in WA, including royal commissions and the trials of former premiers Brian Burke and Ray O’Connor. She also covered the Birnie murders and the Claremont serial killings. And, long before that, while working in the US she was tear-gassed during anti-Vietnam War protests. In 1989 she had the extraordinary experience of having a million dollars’ worth of gold sent to her at Seven Perth, an odd sequel to the stories she’d done on one of the city’s most famous stories, the trial of the Mickelberg brothers for the Perth Mint swindle. Her hardest live cross lingers in her memory. ‘I was on the top of a skyscraper in Hong Kong during the British handover to the Chinese, filming the royal yacht in the harbour. Two cameramen were holding on to my ankles so I wouldn’t topple over.’ ALISON FAN mo na k he o ost ys. c 23 since the first newspaper was printed 136 Years under The West Australian masthead 5 4 “I was on the top of a skyscraper in Hong Kong during the British handover to the Chinese, filming the royal yacht in the harbour,” Fan says. “Two cameramen were holding on to my ankles so I wouldn’t topple over.” She is, she says, hopeless with heights and suffers from vertigo. She’s banned helicopters from her mode of transport, too, after several nasty incidents, including a slide down an embankment which caused her to throw up. Her numerous awards include the AJA Journalist of the Year Award, Perth Press Club Award and Daily News Centenary Prize. For his part, Newman, a Telethon Trustee who is heavily involved in the development of the soon-to-open Telethon Juvenile Diabetes Family Centre, has five Logies and an Order of Australia to his name. 4. Jeff Newman on Telethon in the mid-1970s. 5. Alison Fan with an Arriflex 16mm cine-camera. - Congratulations Seven Perth From Ron (Dingo) Reddingius and all the people who have worked on Home in WA for more than 15 years! Channel Seven’s support over our 511 episodes has been much appreciated. M: 0417 279 103 E: [email protected] I reflect fondly on my years at TVW 7. My career there began when I was a young 18 year old in 1969. TV was black and white back then and I started out working in the Video Tapes section and the other technology we used was called Telecine. My supervisor was Kevin Campbell. This provided an excellent grounding for me as I was so young and as was the way back then, you learnt starting from the ground up and from the best people. The corridors of the old building was always abuzz with activity as most of the productions were live in the studios. g ns he nd In Perth Tonight, Stars of The Future, It’s Academic, Children’s Channel Seven and so many more programmes and telecasts were produced in those studios. Over the years, the 7 team produced the Bath Tub Races and Birdman Rallies at Yanchep Sun City. The Speedway was very popular and we did live outside broadcasts almost weekly. The nightly news was shot on film and edited and processed in time for the evening bulletin. Great skill was needed when the splices failed. y t The programmes were produced onto huge reels which contained two inch wide video tapes which arrived from all over the world. l Clockwise from left: On the roof of Castledare Boys Town checking the link back to the studio. Ron recording the Speedway on 2 inch Video Tape. Focused on producing special promos for the 30th year celebrations. Signing the yearly Master Builders partnership with director Michael McLean. What great times they were and how lucky I was to develop and build a career at 7. Every day was different. Over my 40+ years with 7 Perth I’ve made lifelong friends, seen many pass, but the soul of Seven Perth remains strong because of the connection with community. I take this opportunity again to congratulate Channel Seven Perth and The West Australian newspaper on this milestone of moving back together and a new era beginning. From all the team at HOME in WA we wish you all the very best. Television Programmes | TV Commercials Corporate Videos www.homeinwa.com.au 24 since Alison Fan and Susannah Carr were the first women in Australia to jointly read a news bulletin 29 Years 7 On the record Crowds gather outside The West Australian offices in August 1914 as war is declared between Britain and Germany. Television technicians George Baker, left, and Ray Walsh install a camera at the TVW-7 Tuart Hill studios in the late 1950s. Da Fa Printers feed reels of newsprint into the presses in the basement of old Newspaper House in St Georges Terrace, Perth. Th TWN-7’s pioneering weatherman Vin Walsh chalks his map for his final appearance in 1962. TVW-7 cameraman and former photographer with The West Australian, Tom Hall, in the field. A n 25 highest number of pages ever 716 The published on November 17, 2007 st es as Alison Fan hands over the Perth Mint gold bar she received in the mail to Inspector Bill Chilvers in 1989. David Farr reads the news and film editor Jim Healy changes records, cued by Darcy Farrell, during a review being recorded at old Newspaper House. TWN-7 tests are carried out on a television set in the aircraft of Capt. J. Woods, 3000 feet above Perth. Sketch of convicted murderer Eric Edgar Cooke by staff artist Norman Aisbett. Congratulations Channel 7 The City of Stirling congratulates Channel 7 on its relocation to the commercial centre of Osborne Park. We are delighted Seven West Media has taken the opportunity to remain within the City’s boundaries and base its state-of-the-art media house in this key strategic metropolitan centre. The Sandover Medal count at TVW-7 in 1964 — the first to be aired from a TV studio. A linotype machine operator at work at The West Australian. No other location in Western Australia has a mixture of established employment, land and the potential for further expansion to grow local jobs and the economy. Great step forward Channel 7! 26 of newsprint 50,000 Tonnes are used annually 9 A Ru ma co ar de vie be co me div gr ra 80 re Seven Perth’s Mario D’Orazio. Picture: Michael Wilson New door opens for advertisers The emergence of Seven West Media as a multi-platform organisation creates a raft of new opportunities for advertisers. Seven Perth managing director Mario D’Orazio says audiences and readers are becoming more demanding and more sophisticated. To reach them requires an intelligent, carefully balanced strategy. “Bringing Seven and The West together again vastly improves an advertiser’s capacity to make the necessary impact,” he says. “Our suite of platforms is the answer for the ‘new normal’ in the digital age.” According to The West’s sales director David Bignold, in an increasingly competitive and fragmented media landscape, traditional media brands continue to perform. “The West Australian is one of the cornerstone brands of Seven West Media, driving the daily news agenda and shaping public opinion in WA,” he says. But now the company is anything but traditional. “As part of Seven West Media WA, The West Australian, thewest.com.au and Seven Perth work together with our advertisers to create multichannel campaigns that connect with the right people, at the right time in the right environments,” he says. “ It’s all about leveraging our assets and advanced targeting and data capabilities to ensure your campaign is relevant and actionable to your core-market segments.” “The fully integrated SWM allows access to the dynamic WA market — across print, digital, television, radio, Google, social media, events and, most recently, personalised customer connections through advanced data capabilities (RedFusion).” He says the paper is leading the way in audience delivery, innovative creative executions, award-winning colour reproduction and out-of-thebox, cross-platform advertising solutions. “Our message is simple, we’re open for business with a fully integrated offering and we look forward to partnering with you to achieve the best return on your advertising investment,” he says. ‘Our suite of platforms is the answer for the “new normal” in the digital age.’ MARIO D’ORAZIO lis Ba tow re ga an av We Bu Ni pr fut th Blue sky for aviation guru ABOVE: Geoffrey Thomas in the 777 simulator at Flight City in Jandakot. Picture: Ian Munro RIGHT: Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce chats to Thomas last year. Picture: Robert Duncan The West Australian’s aviation editor Geoffrey Thomas is already a well-known face to Seven Network watchers from his frequent analyses of the airline industry and particularly his reports on the major airline disasters of last year. Now, he thinks, his working life will change in many positive ways. “It’s very convenient for us all to be in one spot,” he said. “Now, we’re truly thinking in a multimedia way and we can dovetail our reporting, expanding the written stuff with a visual element. “We will all start to think about stories in a different way. I’m probably the oldest journalist in the building and I think this move really focuses our attention on how to cover a story on the many levels now available to us.” His work with both The West and Seven Network, including on Sunrise, on the missing and downed planes last year shows how effectively a “words and pictures” approach works, expanding information which can be given to readers and viewers in an accessible way. With more minds working together there are, quite simply, more minds to bring ideas to the table. “This is now the best newsroom in the country,” he said. “We have a great roster of really good journalists at The West and a team of great professionals at Seven.” Thomas is particularly enamoured of the new superdesk arrangement, where heads of all departments sit together all day. He thinks that’s where a new level of energy has come from, inspired by the instant communication that is now possible. “There’s been a significant change in the level of energy with the arrival, too,” he said, first with the arrival of the superdesk system. “And that went up a notch with the arrival of the Seven staff. There are some interesting characters coming in!” He sees more print journalists becoming increasingly comfortable following in his footsteps and crossing to television, even if only to film “a grab” to promote a newspaper story. Skynews, with whom he also works frequently, is another new arrival to Newspaper House, further streamlining his working life. “Now I can just walk across the corridor to do a grab for them,” he said. News was now an instant business, he said, and also a multimedia business across all platforms, from print, TV, radio, online and social media, and being able to respond to those demands is imperative. “We have simply become more efficient, more focused at doing what we do,” he said. There is an attraction, too, in being part of the giant leap into the first integrated newsroom in Australia, the first to adopt a truly cross-platform presence. ‘There’s been a significant change in the level of energy with the arrival, too.’ GEOFFREY THOMAS AVIATION EDITOR als th sto co u 27 number of radio licences owned 9 The by Seven West Media in regional WA A very big footprint Russell Waterman, network sale manager for Redwave Media, has a constant reminder of the new arrival at Newspaper House. His desk on the top floor gives him a fine view of the new transmission tower. It’s happy reminder, though, because it is evidence of increasing co-operation between the three media organisations. Redwave, a division of the Seven West Media group, is geographically the biggest radio network in Australia, covering 80 per cent of the State with three regional radio networks. RedFM and The Spirit have listeners from Wyndham to Bremer Bay, broadcasting to regional WA towns, a bewildering number of remote mine sites and some oil and gas platforms, agricultural areas and tourism centres. The Spirit is available in the South West. “We already have some of The West’s sporting people — Steve Butler, Mark Duffield and Craig Nitschke — contributing to our programs and we hope that in the future we will also be able to tap into the resources of Seven,” he said. He said that the radio network also worked with regional papers in the SWM group, cross-promoting stories where possible. He said the network was considering a magazine-style program, in association with The West’s lifestyle sections. Also on the drawing board was a travel segment. “And we already use Nick Bruining (a regular in The West and on Seven) for finance segments. RedFM targets the younger, 18-39 age group, including 29,000 fly-in, fly-out workers and Spirit the older 30-54-year-olds. Advertising can be tailored to suit particular markets, with a staff of 38 spread across the network in Bunbury, Geraldton, Karratha, Port Hedland and Broome. Redwave’s combined reach is about 300,000 listeners. Apart from the South West, all networks are exclusive commercial services in the regions. RedFM’s Robbie Klitzing, left, and Adam McGuire. Congratulations er w CONGRATULATIONS FROM NOVA 93.7 from Nova 93.7, the radio station with the most listeners in Perth, FM Global g s me e congratulates The West Australian, the newspaper with the most readers, and Channel Seven, FM Global is proud to partner with Seven West Media, providing innovative and cutting-edge property insurance solutions and loss prevention engineering. the television station with the most viewers, Working together since 2004, we are pleased to have been part of the Osborne Park studio project. on being back together after half a century apart. 2776852πRCTT090315 Your partner in business resilience. For more details contact: John Rutherford Russell Carson [email protected] [email protected] +61 488 788 304 +61 411 438 425 www.fmglobal.com.au Level 15, 1 Macquarie Place, Sydney NSW 2000 – P: (02) 8273 1400 Level 37, 140 William Street, Melbourne VIC 3000 – P: (03) 9609 1300 17032 nt 28 per second is the top speed of the web press at the Herdsman Print Centre 12 Metres Fundraising opportunities open up for Telethon STEVE MUMMERY QIPC – EAE ARE PROUD to be part of the KBA project at Seven West Media Limited in Osborne Park (NZ). s Optimizing printing proces automation s Consistent high print quality s Savings on waste, and labour s0D[LPXPHIÀFLHQF\ www.qipc.com www.eae.com which helps those with a disability to reach their potential in the pool. The chief executive of Telethon is Steve Mummery who, with his two full-time staff members and two part-timers, have made the move to Osborne Park. The joining of the two companies, he says, has already paid off for Telethon’s bottom line. “The West takes care of our Telethon Annual Tallyboard Result $25,000,000 rig As Te jam wh to we as of de for ra ye 4 $20,000,000 $15,000,000 $25,271,542 $20,701,272 $0 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 $16,805,622 $13,473,159 $9,237,539 $6,374,375 $7,535,678 $6,527,576 $5,000,000 $3,217,437 $10,000,000 $3,017,000 ‘The joining of the two companies has already paid off for Telethon’s bottom line.’ the generosity of West Australians. Visiting celebrities, including Sammy Davis Jr, Michael Jackson, Stevie Wonder, Julian Lennon, Harry Connick Jr and Elton John, lent the appeal their support, too, as did a very long list of local and national performers and celebrities. The total flipped over the annual $1 million mark in 1980 and in 2014 raised more than $25 million. The combined $180 million raised is now administered by a charitable trust, chaired by Kerry Stokes, chairman of Seven Network, for children’s social and medical research and support. Its beneficiaries are the Telethon Kids Institute, Princess Margaret Hospital, Telethon Speech and Hearing Centre and about 40 other medical and social charities. These offer support for children and young adults with cystic fibrosis, cerebral palsy, autism and arthritis, as well as those being helped by organisations such as Camp Quality for cancer patients, Legacy for children who have lost a loved one to war and Superfins WA, $2,867,467 Telethon. It had humble enough beginnings back in 1968 when the late Brian Treasure, TVW-7’s first general manager, went to a supportive board with the idea of a 24-hour appeal to raise money for the community. While it has changed significantly in the intervening 46 years, the essence of Telethon remains constant. It now runs for two days, it outgrew the studios at Tuart Hill and now is telecast from the Perth Convention and Exhibition Centre. Brian Treasure’s son Bret, just a boy when the first Telethon went to air, says it was the first time he’d seen his father cry, when it emerged that the inaugural appeal would raise more than $100,000. In fact, the appeal went even better and the first total was $104,829. The community embraced Telethon, taking enormous pride in books,” he says, “and also human resources matters. It created our website and keeps it up to date. All these things help us keep our overheads down and put more money into Telethon. Seven provides us with office space.” There are also greater opportunities to promote the various Telethon activities across the radio, online, magazine, digital and print platforms. As well, one of The West’s fundraising events, the HBF Run for a Reason, is now a joint effort and this year Telethon has the naming 1 2012 2013 2014 On behalf of everyone at the Fremantle Dockers, we wish Channel 7 Perth and The West Australian all the best in the next exciting phase of their rich history. 1. M 2. is a 3. 4. Gr e l or t 29 annually gives The West Australian 10,000,000 Kilometres the biggest distribution run in the world 1 2 rights to the Freeway Bike Hike for Asthma, with funds going to Telethon. Mr Mummery’s whiteboard is jam-packed with the Telethon events which happen throughout the year, to culminate in the October 17-18 weekend telecast. The money raised by Telethon is astounding, particularly the extent of the annual increases in the past decade or so. Mr Mummery has only one hope for each year’s appeal: “That we raise one dollar more than last year,” he says. 3 4 4 1. Michael Jackson visits sick children at PMH. 2. Perth Wildcats captain Damian Martin meets Telethon child Patrick Majewski, who is a massive Wildcats fan. Picture: Nic Ellis 3. The panel celebrates the final tally at Telethon 2014. Picture: Ben Crabtree 4. A Telethon Golden Moment from the first Telethon in 1968 when Johnny O’Keefe, Graham Kennedy, Bobby Limb and Stuart Wagstaff shed their shirts for a dare. Great things happen when smart people collaborate. Congratulations to Seven West Media from OMD (WA) and all the people we love to work with. 30 year Seven West Media was created through the acquisition 2011 The of Seven Media Group by West Australian Newspapers 1 Food for thought Broadfield and video journalist Clarissa Phillips. Picture: Kate Ferguson If a fat, bald, 55-year-old bloke can work in television, says The West’s acclaimed food writer Rob Broadfield, anyone can. It’s his way of encouraging any reporter who might be harbouring reservations about baring themselves for the television camera. Not that the partnership between the two organisations is his first experience of TV. He was a cadet on Brisbane’s Courier Mail, coincidentally owned by the Seven Network, and the transition between print and television was common enough. Admitting also to a deep love of radio, he thinks he’s come full circle now, with his regular appearances on Today Tonight and more options being discussed for the future. They include cooking segments, which might appear as single segments or be packaged into some kind of program. It’s what he describes as “the perfect storm” of opportunity and an exciting way forward for the industry which is, he thinks, finding a place in a new age. It helps that interest in food has grown into a new dimension, with a great deal of television, magazine and newspaper space devoted to it. When food knowledge in the shape of the aforementioned unlikely television star can be shared both in newspapers and on television, the planets have truly aligned. “And it’s great fun, too,” he said, of his forays into television which, if Today Tonight’s ratings are an indicator, show a liking for him among viewers. One of his proudest moments, though, is the Telethon Dinner with Rob Broadfield, now preparing for its fourth year. What started as a discussion over “a few sherbets” with the Hawaiian Group’s Russell Gibbs, last year saw the Telethon total boosted by a staggering $350,000. Which, by way of comparison, is more than three times the total raised in the first Telethon in 1968. The event has grown since the first such dinner raised $125,000. Now it is held over a weekend, with Perth’s prominent and philanthropic businesspeople flying to Broome’s Cable Beach Club Resort & Spa for a weekend of culinary indulgence, fine wines and fundraising. Last year, chef Neil Perry created a dinner for the event and there was fierce bidding for auction items across the weekend. Chefs, apart from Perry, who have been involved include Guillaume Brahimi, Adriano Zumbo, David Coomer and Peter Manifis. Life through a lens Among the many, many stories Seven News’ former head cameraman Bob Goodall has in his professional history, one has been brought back into sharp focus by events in Bali. He was in Malaysia in 1986 for the execution of drug smugglers Kevin Barlow and Brian Chambers. Chambers was from Perth and the men’s trial, conviction and sentencing to death by hanging had attracted enormous attention. Goodall, who started with Seven News in 1978, had followed the story at different times during the twoyear legal process and had come to know the resolute mothers of the men. Goodall, whose career spanned 28 years with Seven, still remembers the “appalling Pudu Prison” where the men died, built in the 19th century for 700 prisoners and, at that time, holding 6000. He captured some of the most graphic images of the men’s death when their bare-footed bodies arrived at the morgue. On a happier note, he was also in South Africa for Nelson Mandela’s election, a visit which resulted in a favourite piece of footage, a joyful, purple-clad Desmond Tutu dancing gaily in celebration. He was in Seven’s helicopter one day, following a car chase near Williams, when he thought the pilot had got a bit close to the treetops. There was a bit of a thump and a wobble and, when he managed to look out, a pine tree had taken a bit of a haircut. “The next day a bloke came to the station with a 2m lump of pine in the back of his ute. He thought we’d like it as a souvenir,” Goodall recalls gleefully. He’s been a war cameraman in the Middle East, was based for the Seven Network in Los Angeles for a period, covered Olympic and Commonwealth Games, was chief-of-staff at Seven and worked so often, and squabbled so familiarly with Alison Fan, that someone once asked her what it was like working with her husband. And then there was the Mickelberg story, surely one of the most remarkable events in the State’s criminal history. It was Goodall who found 55kg of the 86kg of gold stolen from the Perth Mint in 1982 and delivered mysteriously to Channel 7 in Tuart Hill in 1989. The Mickelberg brothers, Ray and Peter, Pil Thursday Marc Scenic Plans afoo lookout fe PAGE 3 Ro ■ Glenn Cordingl Cattle roamin Broome and De volved in 32 veh the past five ye fatality and a medical attentio Eighteen Kim were recorded o ern Highway, 12 and two on Broo And 68 of the d removed from t of road at the Roads — apart f way — from Jun Roadh after K ■ Gareth McKnig The owners of Roadhouse are bull by the horn new eye-catchin herd. After an eigh life-size Brahma rived at the roa seas last month pride of place in Co-owner Mat the pair, one gr brown, had caus customers since “Brahmans ar gion,” he told Th er. “We initially w out the front bu were too good t they have found bar. “The reaction far. It’s been pr Food writer Rob Broadfield, at home in the kitchen. Picture: Iain Gillespie ‘If a fat, bald, 55-year-old bloke can work in television anyone can. And it’s great fun, too.’ ROB BROADFIELD had been charged, convicted and exonerated with stealing the gold. But the gold was still missing. One afternoon Fan, who had covered the trials closely, showed Goodall a letter she’d just received which said they should “look for the stolen gold behind the hangar”. Initially they thought of Jandakot airport but Goodall thought he’d have a wander around the staion’s helicopter hangar. Fan says she didn’t want to ruin her pink suede shoes and let him go alone. And there it was, in oil drums — and Goodall’s initial fear was that close rivals and near neighbours at Channel 9 might see what was going on and ruin an exclusive. In the event, the police ruined it by holding a 4.30pm press conference and showing off the pelletised gold. And no, he says, firmly, neither he nor Fan had a claim on the gold, valued then at more than $3 million. “The Mint gave us a silver dump, valued at $50, for our trouble.” Despite Goodall’s devotion to all things television, he finds the integrated newsroom an exciting development. “I think the joint newsroom is a great thing,” he said. “It adds value. More journalists, more resources — you end up with a better result.” Alison Fan and Bob Goodall at the spot where 55kg of gold pellets from the Perth Mint swindle were hidden. 31 year Countryman 1885 The was established Regional input The news-gathering footprint across rural and regional WA is growing. Regional publications editor Laura Morris believes it’s a case of more eyes looking more widely into rural and regional news. Morris, who co-ordinates The West’s northern newspapers from Newspaper House, said reporters in the regions were already filing to thewest.com.au and, where possible, provided video for Seven News. “We are also working with Redwave (Media) in crosspromotional ideas,” she said. The benefit of being in the same building cannot be underestimated. “It’s so good for our young reporters, who do it hard in their regions, to be able to work more closely with the best in the business. Pilbara News reporter Tom Zaunmayr. Picture: Peter de Kruijff Readership 19,100 Thursday, March 5, 2015 Thursday March 5, 2015 broomead.com.au 7724 weekly to Broome, Derby, Fitzroy Crossing, Kununurra $1.10*(inc. GST) In a flap Action Shorebirds documented PAGE 4 Fighters in Arnold Classic PAGE 23 Rogue cattle pose threat ■ Glenn Cordingley Cattle roaming free between Broome and Derby have been involved in 32 vehicle accidents over the past five years, including one fatality and another requiring medical attention. Eighteen Kimberley Brahmans were recorded on the Great Northern Highway, 12 on Derby Highway and two on Broome Highway. And 68 of the dead animals were removed from the same stretches of road at the expense of Main Roads — apart from Broome Highway — from June, 2013, to October, 2014. The figures released by Transport Minister Dean Nalder in State Parliament have prompted local police to warn that stray cows were a “reality” and have urged motorists to exercise caution. Derby police officer-in-charge David Dench said the most effective way to avoid potential accidents with the beasts was to obey the speed limit and not drive while under fatigue. “This has become a reality in our region,” he said. Broome resident Sam Bettess had a lucky escape last July when his four-wheel-drive struck a cow about 8pm on the Great Northern Highway. “I was towing a boat and had the wife and our two kids in the vehicle. It was a very scary experience,” he said. In response to questions from MLC Robin Chapple in State Parliament, Mr Nalder revealed the owner of the animals was unknown. He said adjoining pastoral leases were Yeeda, Roebuck Plains and Mowanjum as well as unallocated crown land. Mr Chapple said Main Roads and the Pastoral Land Board should be doing more to ensure pastoralists carried out proper maintenance of their fences, especially on major thoroughfares such as the Great Northern Highway. But Mr Nalder said fenced properties have been known to be damaged by storms, fires or by the cattle themselves or by gates being left open for extended periods of time. He said all Pastoral Lands Board directives and notices were issued with regard to specific circumstances of the case and would prevail until the board was satisfied — a process he admit- ted that could take “several years”. “The time it takes for lessees to comply also varies and can take anywhere between one month and several years,” Mr Nalder said. Mr Chapple said the statistics did not paint an accurate picture of the sheer number of cattle roaming free over this section of highway or the risk to drivers. “I recently received a report of 97 cattle counted in just one morning on one small section of the Great Northern Highway,” he said. ៑ CONTINUED PAGE 2 Roadhouse bulls named after Kimberley croc man ■ Gareth McKnight The owners of Roebuck Plains Roadhouse are keen to grab the bull by the horns in 2015 with two new eye-catching additions to the herd. After an eight-month wait, two life-size Brahman bull replicas arrived at the roadhouse from overseas last month and have taken pride of place in the venue’s bar. Co-owner Matt Sharpe admitted the pair, one grey and the other brown, had caused quite a stir with customers since arriving. “Brahmans are iconic in the region,” he told The Broome Advertiser. “We initially wanted to put them out the front but we thought they were too good to leave outside, so they have found a new home in the bar. “The reaction has been great so far. It’s been pretty funny seeing the kids sitting on their backs for a photo.” Brahmans were introduced into the west Kimberley last century in an attempt to breed cattle better suited to the sub-tropical environment and are now symbolic in the North West. Matt, Brooke and Leeland Sharpe took over the roadhouse, which is 30km east of Broome, last May and sparked a recent debate on Facebook after the Brahmans’ arrival. With photos posted online, suggestions for names for the two new additions came in thick and fast from the Broome community. However, despite the array of submissions Matt said the final decision was a popular choice among the roadhouse staff. Named after famous Broome crocodile fanatic and wildlife documentary maker, Malcolm and Douglas have found new pastures. kalminer.com.au Monday, March 9, 2015 Starlight Sport Indian residents celebrate with splash of colour Charitable meet to raise money for Foundation Kalgoorlie College gear up for Metro Cup PAGE 3 GOLD $US1168.70 ់ $AU1514.23់ PAGE 16 PAGE 7 NICKEL $US6.4773៌ ASX 5898.9 ■ CURRENCY $AU1 = US 0.77194់ EU 0.71194៌ UK 0.51331៌ VICIOUS DOG ATTACK ■ Tegan Guthrie A Boulder family marking the first anniversary of their daughter’s death has been left further devastated, after the beloved pet cat they adopted shortly after the tragedy was mauled to death by two stray dogs. City of Kalgoorlie-Boulder Rangers are currently searching for the dogs, described as tan and dark coloured “staffys”, which killed “Kitty” and a blue heeler cross in separate attacks in South Boulder on Friday morning. Speaking to the Kalgoorlie Miner, Lauren Copping said the attack came shortly after her partner left for work and let their cat out into the yard. “She had been out there for all of five minutes … there are scratch marks all on the pavement near our front door so it looks like she wanted to come inside and they cornered her,” she said. “When I ran out there they both had hold of her and were ripping her, there was blood everywhere and she was gasping for air and fitting.” Ms Copping said the dogs dragged the cat along the footpath to the front of a neighbouring house. CACTUS BUSTERS Bull rider Harry Sharpe, 2, fuels up at Roebuck Plains Roadhouse with help from Jess Leete. Picture: Gareth McKnight A West Australian Newspapers publication Holi day Meet the team tasked with battling the prickly infestation plaguing Willi t “I felt so helpless, I got a towel and wrapped her up and sat at the front door crying as she passed away in my arms,” she said. Kitty first turned up at Ms Copping’s house last year, just three months after her seven-month-old daughter Zara passed away. After the cat refused to leave, and no owner came forward, Kitty became part of the family, providing comfort for Ms Copping and her partner after their sad loss. “I was already feeling for Zara this morning, and then to have this happen to Kitty, who came to us so close after her passing, it’s just too much,” she said. “It brought back so many memories of Zara because Zara passed away in our arms and Kitty passed away in my arms in a world of pain this morning.” CKB Ranger Service co-ordinator Mike Molyneux said limited descriptions and information of the attacks were available and urged anyone who could assist to come forward. “The City takes these incidents very seriously, as the safety of the community is at risk while these dogs remain unfound which leads to the risk of further incidents occurring,” he said. He said there had been 45 report- ed dog attacks of varying severity in the current financial year. “The City has seen a number of serious attacks, defined as ones that cause injury or damage to a person or animal, however these dogs have been captured and dealt with,” Mr Molyneux said. “There have been six dog attacks, including these two attacks, of varying degrees of severity so far in 2015.” If you saw or heard anything which may assist the investigation, or you are missing a dog that matches any of the descriptions above, phone the Rangers on 9021 9697. FASHION FESTIVAL FACE FINALISTS .com.au/swt / Connect with us online | @SWTimes @ | of the YEAR 2005 2007 2010 PAGE 3 Smart phone BACK PAGE 2012 2013 2 013 .com.au/swt | www.swtimes.com.au Death could change law Family’s courageous fight set to make sweeping changes to industry USMAN AZAD THE death of a Bunbury trades assistant has forced the State Government to propose a major shake-up of the electrical industry. EnergySafety, the State Government department tasked with ensuring safe practices in the sector, Jay dreads the day he loses his hair CHLOE VELLINGA WITH less than a week to go until the World’s Greatest Shave, nerves are building for Australind man Jay Jenkinson as he gets ready to shave off his precious dreadlocks. Mr Jenkinson’s long locks began at 13 when he was “lazy and lacking the motivation” to brush his hair, resulting in a matted mess. Now 28, Mr Jenkinson has decided to step up and take part in the World’s Greatest Shave alongside workmate Harley Kemp, who lost his mother to cancer last year. Mr Jenkinson and wife Samara met when they were 15 years old, so she has never seen him without his dreadlocks. “I’ve been hoping he would do it for a long time, but I am quite proud he has chosen this event,” Mrs Jenkinson said. Mr Jenkinson has already exceeded his original target of $1500 and is now hoping to raise $3000 for the charity event. The Bunbury Forum will hold a shave event from 11am to 12pm on has proposed to ban work on live circuits which would force electricians to either isolate circuits or turn off the power before starting work on almost all projects. The proposal follows the death of 18-year-old Jayden Zappelli, who died while working in the roof of an East Bunbury home in 2013. He died after his supervising electrician did not make sure the power was isolated before work began. EnergySafety announced it would look at the change following the South Western Times publishing the Zappelli family’s impassioned plea on February 12. Jayden’s father, Greg, who has been campaigning for changes to the law to prevent another death, said it was a positive step. “But we still have a way to go,” he said. Jayden’s uncle and former electrician Mark Zappelli said the immediate focus of any law change They can see where their careers might one day go.” Seven West Media’s regional stable of 22 titles includes the 125-year-old rural bible Countryman. Editor Ray Chan also sees many mutual benefits emerging from the union with Seven News. He thinks his team’s knowledge of rural affairs could easily be mined by Today Tonight, for instance, in the case of a big rural or agricultural issue, as it could to add comment to a news event. A former ABC reporter, he has no fear of television and thinks the possibility of cross-promoting across all platforms is an exciting one. He thinks that a regular segment A West Australian Newspapers publication $1.50 BUNBURY BOY’S NBL DREAM Go mobile with your local newspaper Established 1895 A West Australian Newspapers publication $1.60 Scenic Plans afoot for lookout feature PAGE 3 A West Australian Newspapers publication Established 1888 NEWSPAPER on should be on the residential sector rather than the complex industrial sector. The family is pushing for the mandatory installation of RCDs – an electrical safety device – in all homes. ៑ CONTINUED PAGE 4 Tuesday, March 10, 2015 :HI67A>H=:9&--- Good news History All-clear message celebrated Farming artefacts preserved PAGE 3 PAGE 5 albanyadvertiser.com.au ESTABLISHED 1885 Vol. 131 No. 6310 Shopping centre in limbo ■ Toyah Shakespeare The Bayonet Head Shopping Centre project — stalled for more than two years — hangs in the balance as negotiations between the City of Albany and Cuscuna Nominees remain as tangled as ever. Open since January 2013, a Woolworths supermarket remains the only store trading in the centre. The two parties remain embroiled in a Supreme Court case after the City appealed a magistrate’s decision. Also, Cuscuna Nominees has appealed a Great Southern Joint Development Assessment Panel ret- Stars shine at sports awards Robert Cridge, Steve Hurley and Blake Watson were among the local sports stars honoured at the 2014 Albany Sportsperson of the Year Awards on Friday night. Cridge won the disability category, while Hurley won a record sixth senior title and Watson was crowned junior winner. Absent veteran winner Rob Slattery was the overall Sportsperson of the Year. REPORT BACK PAGE Picture: Malcolm Heberle rospective planning decision in the State Administrative Tribunal. The Bayonet Head Pharmacy has been unable move to a new shop in the centre after they originally expected to in February 2013. The Terry White franchisee is suing Cuscuna Nominees for breach of contract and it is understood stock for the new store had to be sold to other pharmacies, while other products have expired. City planning and development services executive director Dale Putland said the dispute related to aspects of the centre’s construction not complying with planning directives. “The City is disappointed with the ongoing delays but remains optimistic a resolution will be reached and the shopping centre will be able to fully operate,” he said. Mr Putland said the City prosecuted Cuscuna Nominees, alleging it breached the original planning approval several times. Albany Magistrate’s Court ruled Cuscuna Nominees had no case to answer in May last year and the City has appealed the verdict in the Supreme Court, which is yet to make a decision. Mr Putland said the centre was unable to be fully occupied until fire safety issues were addressed, A WEST AUSTRALIAN NEWSPAPERS PUBLICATION $1.30 February 19, 2015 countryman.com.au ᔢ $1.90 SEE PAGE 8 and Cuscuna Nominees has taken the issue of fire safety requirements to the SAT. He said Cuscuna Nominees agreed to install alternative fire arrangements satisfactory to the City and Department of Fire and Emergency Services. In a separate but related issue, Cuscuna Nominees lodged an application for retrospective planning approval for the centre, which was approved by GSJDAP last year subject to conditions. Cuscuna Nominees is now appealing these conditions through the SAT. Mr Putland said these included safety works at the Bayonet Head Road intersection and a public art contribution. The City will not know the full legal costs until proceedings are finished, but it is insured. Cuscuna Nominees managing director Sam Cuscuna said he was “extra frustrated” with the stalled negotiations. “It’s a service to the community out there, there are 4000 people in the area,” he said. “Minor things have been blown out of proportion.” Tell us what you think. Email [email protected] or send us a letter. Shutdown after road crumbles ■ Jo Fulwood Concerns raised by opponents of the Tier 3 rail line shutdowns were strengthened this week with the forced closure of the CunderdinQuairading road because of damage caused by an increased number of trucks. Ratepayers in the Cunderdin Shire could also be hit with a hefty bill to fix the road, which has been used to cart almost 30,000 tonnes of grain since the end of the 2014 harvest. Under section 3.50 of the Local Government Act, the Shire of Cunderdin has closed the road to heavy haulage traffic for the maximum period of four weeks. Shire of Cunderdin president Clive Gibsone said costings for the roadworks were yet to be determined but an engineer would provide further information in coming weeks on the extent of the damage and the works involved. He estimated the road had 70 truck movements a day during peak carting periods, equating to a truck movement every five to seven min- utes. “We will be requesting funding assistance from Main Roads WA once we receive that report,” he said. But Mr Gibsone said since this was a local road, it was most likely ratepayers would be forced to foot the bill. The public notice issued last week said the road was closed because of “severe structural damage to the road surface and subsurface from continual heavy movements over the past week in extreme weather conditions”. According to Bureau of Meteorology recordings, the Shire suffered three days above 42C early last week. Mr Gibsone said the extreme hot weather had exacerbated the road damage. Cunderdin farmer Frank O’Hare, who owns property on both sides the Cunderdin-Quairading road, said he had to be particularly careful when moving sheep and machinery between his properties. “I have noticed a considerable in៑ CONTINUED PAGE 3 Cunderdin farmer Frank O’Hare with Shire of Cunderdin president Clive Gibsone and local farmer and shire councillor Dennis Whisson at a damaged section of the Cunderdin-Quairading road Picture: Jo Fulwood Broome Advertiser’s Nicola Kalmar and Gareth McKnight. Picture: Glenn Cordingley on radio would be a good way to promote Countryman in its rural market, an example of how the broad range of platforms available within SWM can be used efficiently. SWM’s State-wide coverage is enhanced by affiliate GWN7’s regional television reporters who provide material for Seven News when required. The arrangement, according to Seven News Perth director Howard Gretton, is based on goodwill. A state-of-the-art headquarters in Osborne Park co-ordinating an extensive network of reporters, photographers and cameramen means West Australians can access news from Kununurra to Esperance. Jeonju Paper is pioneering the globalisation footprint of the paper. Through continuous improvement, Jeonju Paper is striving to become the world’s leading paper company and the centre of excellence in the global paper market. Global Leader in Paper- Jeonju Paper Australian Agent – Bong-Yong International Pty Ltd | Suite 217, 1 Katherine Street, Chatswood, NSW 2067 Tel: +61 2 9884 9901 | Email: [email protected]