Letter from Melbourne
Transcription
Letter from Melbourne
Issue 177 25 July to 20 September 2012 The Grollo Edition Letter from Melbourne A monthly digest about government decisions affecting business opportunities in Victoria and beyond. Established 1994. Now in its nineteenth year. State Government INSIDE THIS ISSUE Construction productivity, and law Teachers fight continues Ted and China Challenging Information Laws Auditor-General to retire Charities and Big Society Attorney-General active Local Government super issues IBAC getting closer Flinders Street Station Design Elephants everywhere The best dream possible Victorian Premier Ted Baillieu’s campaign for a federal inquiry into construction costs and productivity has paid off. According to The Age, the Council of Australian Governments will appoint a panel to review the industry, with wide terms of reference, including workplace relations. However, the review will be done by ‘three eminent independent people’ rather than the Productivity Commission, and will be appointed by COAG – meaning the three people will require bipartisan support. Nearby The Victorian Government has given terms of reference to the state’s Construction Code Compliance Unit to undertake a detailed investigation and report on the current state of compliance with the law and applicable codes of practice in the Victorian building and construction industry. EDITORIAL These terms of reference add to the work already being undertaken by the CCCU at the Premier’s request to provide an urgent report on matters relating to the Grocon blockades. The terms of reference require the CCCU to provide an urgent interim report on matters including: There is no doubt that, although it may not have effected all or many Victorians directly or immediately, the strong stance of building group Grollo and the Victorian government on the building sites against the unions is a very important and strong chapter in leading to a more productive Victoria. Enough said for now. • conduct at the recent blockades of Grocon construction sites, including conduct that may be unlawful and/or a breach of the Government’s construction industry guidelines; Nearby, the Victorian government is clearly challenging the federal government in many areas: education, workplace relations, infrastructure, energy and disabilities to name a few. Usually in coordination with the other states with similar governments. The editor was up at Victorian Parliament House recently, crowded in with a classroom of school boys and girls who had come a long way from the outer suburbs with their teachers to learn about how government works. Question time got to about an 8 ou of 10. The figure is a measuring device by the attendants to explain the level of shouting and gesticulation. The youngster beside me could not believe that these people were the actual elected Members of Parliament. ‘Where are the real ones? The elected ones?’ I gave him a brief explanation and agreed with the teacher beside him that I would pop out to the school later in the year to give them a clearer explanation as to what the chamber is all about. This edition covers a slightly longer period than usual and is a few more words. Staff took off to Canada and had university courses.More importantly, we are having a change of presentation, and perhaps colour. We are trying to distance ourselves from magazines. After all, Letter from Melbourne is a serious briefing document for senior professionals of business and government and other important folk in Society. We look forward to any feedback. • the use of violence, intimidation or harassment within the industry; • the obligations of other employers whose workers took part in the Grocon blockades; • breaches of industrial and other laws that may have occurred during the Grocon blockades; • the effectiveness of current Commonwealth regulation of the building industry, including whether action could be taken by the Commonwealth in relation to the Grocon blockades • recommendations for immediate actions compliance with the law and the guidelines. to strengthen The CCCU has also been directed to provide a further detailed report, covering: • practices that create a tolerance of unlawful conduct; • other conduct and practices in breach of the guidelines; • possible involvement of organised crime elements within the industry; • the current state of compliance with legal obligations within the industry in comparison with historic compliance levels; Continued page 3... Alistair Urquhart, Editor Subscription $275.00 inc. GST Letter from Melbourne CONTACT US CONTENTS AFFAIRS OF STATE 3 State Government 15 Justice. Police 14 Collins Street Melbourne, 3000 Victoria, Australia P 03 9654 1300 F 03 9654 1165 4 Federal 17 Local Government 5 Bushfires 17 Melbourne [email protected] www.letterfrommelbourne.com.au 6 Arts 18 Media, Multimedia & IT 6 Education 18 Planning. Building 11 Energy 19 Sport 12 Environment. Conservation 19 Transport. Ports 12 Events 19 Transport. Air Letter from Melbourne is independent. It’s not party political or any other political. It does not have the imprimatur of government at any level. Letter from Melbourne developed a federal and national coverage. This spawned Letter from Canberra (www.letterfromcanberra.com.au) four years ago. 12 Gaming 20 Transport. Rail 13 VECCI Article 20 Transport. Road 14 Health 22 Utilities The only communication tool of its type, Letter from Melbourne keeps subscribers abreast of recent developments in the policy arena on a local, state and federal level. 14 Business. Investment 22 Society 15 Industrial Relations Letter From Melbourne is a monthly public affairs bulletin, a simple précis, distilling and interpreting public policy and government decisions, which affect business opportunities in Victoria and Australia. Written for the regular traveller, or people with meeting-filled days, it’s more about business opportunities than politics. Published by A.B Urquhart & Company Pty Ltd trading as Affairs of State. Disclaimer: Material in this publication is general comment and not intended as advice on any particular matter. Professional advice should to be sought before action is taken. Material is complied from various sources including newspaper articles, press releases, government publications, Hansard, trade journals, etc. Copyright: This newsletter is copyright. No part may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission from the publisher. Affairs of State respects your privacy. While we do believe that the informastion contained in Letter from Melbourne will be useful to you, please advise us if you do not wish to receive any further communications from us. Edited words in this edition: 17,000 177 editions. 1.7million words approx. STAFF Editor Alistair Urquhart [email protected] Sub Editor Morgan Squires [email protected] ABOUT THE EDITOR Alistair Urquhart, BA LLB Alistair Urquhart graduated from the Australian National University in Canberra, in Law, History and Politics. He may even hold the record for miles rowed on Lake Burley Griffin. He was admitted as a barrister and solicitor to the the Supreme Court of Victoria, and remains a (non-practicing) member of the Law Institute of Victoria. Previously, he graduated from high school in Bethesda, Maryland, and had many opportunities to become aware of the workings of Washington D.C. For 30 years, he listened every Sunday evening to the late Alistair Cooke and his Letter from America. Alistair’s early career was mostly in the coal industry, where he became involved with energy, environmental and water issues, and later in the SME finance sector. He found time to be involved in a range of community activities where he came to understand some of the practical aspects of dealing with government and meeting people across the political spectrum. He now chairs a large disability employment service, including its British operations. ABOUT THE PUBLISHER Affairs of State, established in 1993, is an independent Australian public affairs firm with contemporary international connections. Affairs of State provides a matrix of professional tools to multinational businesses, professional and industry associations, government agencies, pressure groups, NGOs and community causes in Australia and abroad. Design, Advertising & Events Camilla Orr-Thomson [email protected] The firm works with many engineering and information technology firms and other professional association and industry groups on a wide range of issues in Victoria, Canberra and overseas. Copy Editor Robert Stove [email protected] The firm provides the following to clients: Subscriptions Tony McAdam [email protected] - Two monthly publications - Events at our offices and elsewhere - Charts and specialist directories - Facilitation with business and legal skills - Training courses - Mentoring of senior executives 2 Letter from Melbourne State Government • Continued from page 1... • the impact of recent changes to the Guidelines to the National Code and the abolition of the Office of the Australian Building and Construction Commissioner (ABCC); and • recommendations for future actions to enhance compliance with the law and the guidelines. The Victorian Government’s guidelines, which came into operation on 1 July 2012, require all building companies that tender for Victorian Government work to commit to comply with all applicable legal obligations and to act to ensure that inappropriate or unlawful practices do not occur on their projects. The CCCU is to provide its interim report by 15 October this year, and its final report by 31 March next year. Organised crime where? According to the Herald Sun, Victoria is the nation’s capital of organised crime in the construction industry. This emerged from a report by the Victorian government’s building watchdog. Nigel Hadgkiss singled out the Wonthaggi desalination plant, West Gate Bridge, Epping market and the Royal Children’s Hospital as high profile sites brought to his attention. CFMEU assistant secretary John Setka denied crime was rife. Baillieu blast According to the Financial Review, Premier Ted Baillieu has criticised the Council of Australian Governments, COAG, process for failing to improve the nation’s productivity, saying that the system needed urgent attention. The key problems, according to Mr Baillieu, are the ‘broken’ system for distributing GST, the federal encroachment into areas of state responsibility, and ‘profound’ inadequacies at COAG. Andrews musings After the July state bi-election for the seat of Melbourne, Opposition leader Daniel Andrews wrote in The Australian that ‘I don’t abuse the Greens but I did expose their fraud.’ Standby Counter-terror experts and police were placed on high alert for expected retaliatory attacks after the violent Islamic protests that rocked Sydney in mid-September. According to the Herald Sun, Victoria Police revealed it had developed plans to stop violence spreading to Melbourne. Present thin protest laws The Victorian government is investigating whether tougher legislation is needed to prevent political process closing down businesses, after magistrates found in favour of anti-Israeli demonstrators targeting the Max Brenner chocolate shop. Magistrate Simon Garnet dismissed trespassing charges against 16 protesters, finding that they had a lawful right to be in the public space outside the store, and a demonstration in July last year was also lawful and not present a threat to public order. The Premier condemned the campaign and the actors plan to celebrate the court victory with another protest outside the Melbourne shop. Bracks’ autobiography In his recently released autobiography A Premier’s State, Steve Bracks reveals why he made the decision not to reappoint Sir James Gobbo as Governor. ‘Sir James’ connection to a Liberal affiliated lunch club called the Rumour Tank led to his decision’. Sir James said he would be surprised by this reason for his departure, as he only went to lunch at the Rumour Tank about twice in the three years he was Governor. Bracks writes that when the media later got hold of the story, he rubbished claims that he’d replace Sir James because he was concerned about politics or his involvement in the Rumour Tank. The media was right!! Days later, Bracks announced the athletics legend John Landy would take the role. Victorian councils super Under a government superannuation scheme, current and former staff of Victorian councils, water authorities, libraries and other agencies are facing a bill of more than half a billion dollars. This money must be allocated to meet the shortfall in a ‘defined benefit’ scheme for staff that was closed to new members in 1993. This will create increasing pressure on rates and services, as the shortfalls range from $20 million down to much lower figures, according to Chief Executive of the Municipal Association of Victoria Rob Spence. So keen to hear The Herald Sun reports that the Victorian government is appealing against the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal ruling that criticised the government’s handling of the Freedom of Information request for the diary of Premier Baillieu’s former chief of staff. The government wants to overturn a ruling by VCAT that suggests parts of Michael Kapel’s diary is subject to FOI laws. The Sunday Herald Sun launched legal action against the government after their request for a key month of his electronic work diary was denied. This period covered his duties during this Victoria’s Police leadership crisis early last year. Herald Sun editor 3 Damon Johnston said the newspaper had taken the VCAT action because of enormous public interest in the events. Transparency The Department of Premier and Cabinet took an average of 123 days to process FOI requests in 2011-12, when under law it was required to do so within 45 days. According to The Age, the department’s annual report, tabled in Parliament recently, showed 80 per cent of the 92 requests made over the year were not processed on time. More than half (52 per cent) of the requests took more than three months to process. The department said it had been trying to clear a backlog since January, and by June had three requests overdue. RRRRR Victorian Auditor General Des Pearson has announced that he will step down from the role of the state’s chief government financial and other watchdog in December. Mr Pearson, a career civil servant who started in the Commonwealth Auditor General’s Office, was West Australia’s Auditor General for 15 years before taking up his most recent role. Applications for this vital job to John Allen, admin@jdcallen. com.au. Wot’s new According to The Age, some Coalition backbenchers are being urged by the Premier’s Office to run ads in local papers putting a positive slant on TAFE funding cuts. It is understood MPs have been provided with a template defending the budget decision to axe the vocational education and training budget. The ads – recently run in local newspapers by several Coalition MPs - claim ‘an extra’ $1.2 billion is being spent ‘for the skills Victoria needs’. Au so tender The Victorian government plans to spend $755,000 on the revamp for Australia Day 2014 and, if successful, will extend the contract to 2016. The traditional flagraising ceremony, march and concert, are likely to undergo major rejuvenation. According to the Herald Sun, the Australia Day Committee will appoint organisers for six events, including a fireworks show, lunch and celebrations in Alexandra and Kings Domain Gardens. Tender documents detail a push to boost crowd numbers, increase relevance and get a broader cross-section of the community involved. Established events such as the Australia Day concert and vintage car show in Kings Domain Gardens will be judged on their diversity and the number of migrant communities taking part. Legal focus WorkSafe, the workplace safety commission has apparently quietly shifted Letter from Melbourne its prosecuting focus away from small and medium-sized companies - where most workplace deaths and serious injuries occur - to large businesses. In The Age, WorkSafe publicly revealed its new focus on larger companies. A spokesman said WorkSafe was now taking on ‘larger, better-resourced businesses who have breached the law’. New lives (1) Applications for 2,600 voluntary redundancy packages across the public service are now open, forming part of 3,600 positions that will be cut from the public service under the government’s sustainable government initiative, announced last December. Public servants (2) According to the Financial Review, AuditorGeneral Des Pearson said that ‘there is too much belief and trust in the public sector, in terms that when they delegate they think that their responsibility is finished.’ He said that his audits revealed that frameworks were often sound, in theory.... Our Big Society A government ‘confidential’ audit commission report calls for a revolution in the way government services are delivered. Including that charities and private businesses taking responsibility from bureaucrats. The Australian reported that the final recommendations of the Victorian review, delivered to the government in January, were so controversial that the Victorian government has suppressed it and instead appointed another taskforce, including secretaries of the Premier’s Department and Treasury to review its findings. The state’s Independent Review of State Finances was headed by former Victorian Treasury secretary Mike Vertigan and included Ian Harper, the former head of the Fair Pay Commission, and the former secretary of Tasmania’s Treasury, Don Challen. The final report borrows from the ‘big society’ plans of David Cameron’s government in Britain, which has sought to get charities and volunteers to take over the delivery of government services. Officials associated with the review say that, wherever possible, the government should get out of directly delivering services, such as welfare, early childhood education and housing. Rather than simply outsourcing government functions, it calls on the government to create competitive markets so that charities and other private bodies would bid for government contracts. The report says state government should retain no more than a residual capacity to provide services to cover a potential failure by a private provider. China in mind Ted Baillieu has set the scene for an expansion of Chinese investment in Victoria, saying he wouldn’t blink if China was to fund, build and operate major projects such as an east-west tunnel and a metro rail link. According to The Age, the comments effectively bring Mr Baillieu into a heated debate raging within the federal Coalition. In his first trip to China as (federal) Opposition Leader, Tony Abbott last month appeared to advocate tougher controls on Chinese state-owned enterprises buying existing Australian businesses. Dividend The Transport Accident Commission has posted an after-tax loss of $1.02 billion that the Victorian government has blamed on ‘external factors’. According to the Herald Sun, a report also revealed that Treasurer Kim Wells took a $140 million dividend from the TAC. No to 0 According to the Herald Sun, the hotel industry has blasted Victoria’s top traffic cop Robert Hill for saying the bloodalcohol limit should be dropped from .05 to .02. Australian Hotels Association chief executive Brian Kearney said the move was ‘excessive and ill-informed’. He also said the current .05 blood-alcohol limit was ‘overwhelmingly accepted by the community as a reasonable threshold’. In the Herald Sun, opinion editor James Campbell wrote that ‘Blind Freddy can see the next step will be 0.00, which would mean restaurant meals without wine and trips to the pub without beer.’ More migrants in the House? A Government minister says we need more migrants in state Parliament to better reflect Victoria’s cultural diversity. In the Herald Sun, Greek-born Multicultural Affairs and Citizenship Minister Nick Kotsiras said yesterday that more than a quarter of Victorians were foreign-born, but only 14 per cent of MPs were. An election now and… According to the Herald Sun, a damaging internal poll result shows the State Government could lose four seats if an election were held now. The paper wrote that this seems to have placed more pressure on Premier Ted Baillieu. The Opposition said the seat-by-seat polling revealed in the Herald Sun by three Liberal MPs showed the extent of public concern over government policies. Bullying A state government survey of thousands of Victorian public servants found that 36 per cent had witnessed workplace bullying in the past year. According to The Age, a 4 further 20 per cent said they had directly experienced bullying, while 3 per cent had also submitted a formal complaint. The State of the Public Sector report was tabled in the Victorian Parliament in May by the State Services Authority, and sent to MPs last month. Federal On the tarmac A Victorian trial of the National Disability Insurance Scheme will go ahead, after the Victorian government listened to public pressure, agreeing to put $42 million towards it, the federal plan. According to The Age, Premier Ted Baillieu declared the issue too important to play politics with and pledged $17 million over three years to lift state disability spending, along with $25 million to help establish and run a new agency in Geelong. Licensing reforms Council Of Australian Governments has agreed to develop a national occupational licensing system that would remove inconsistencies across state borders and allow for a more mobile workforce. The Regulation Impact Statements on options for reforming occupational licensing for electrical, refrigeration and air conditioning, plumbing and gas fitting occupations are available for comment, www.nola.gov.au. Gonski focus? According to the Herald Sun, Premier Baillieu has slammed the federal Government’s proposed education reforms, saying they have ‘failed Victorian families and Victorian schools’. Baillieu said Prime Minister Gillard had offered no details about how the $6.5 billion ‘education crusade’ would be funded or assessed, leaving school communities in the dark. ‘The Commonwealth do not run a single school, they do not employ a single teacher, but what is proposed is ... a massive bureaucratic burden for schools’. School funding The Age reported that the federal government has moved to diffuse tensions over school funding by agreeing to negotiate separately with each state over what school improvements would be required to receive additional money. Victorian Education Minister Martin Dixon said he was assured not all states would be judged in the same way and that the Commonwealth would acknowledge some had school improvement reforms already in place. Road cash In The Age, Treasurer Kim Wells has urged Prime Minister Gillard to ‘put politics aside’ Letter from Melbourne and immediately hand over funding for the East-West Road Link. In a major economic speech to the Victoria at the Crossroads conference in August, Wells also delivered an optimistic assessment of Victoria’s prospects, saying the government is ‘on the right track’, despite looming challenges including the high dollar and a new era of austerity by consumers. Power bills Prime minister Gillard will ramp up the pressure on state governments to reform their energy markets, a s trategy designed to shift the blame for big retail electricity price rises from the carbon tax to the ‘goldplating’ of transmission networks. ‘For too long, some state governments have been increasing their revenue at the expense of the family electricity bill – that has to stop.’ Critics say transmission companies spend too much upgrading their equipment, which drives up prices. Bit far removed An old friend of Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s partner Tim Mathieson was recently charged with a fifth offence over a scandal engulfing a regional Victorian council. Councillor Milvan Muto, 52, will face Shepparton Magistrates’ Court next week charged with blackmail, drug and gun offences. It is part of a police investigation into the allegedly illegal recording of councillors, and Muto also faces legal action to take enforced leave from council while the criminal case and another matter are dealt with. He was found to have assaulted a council staff member and called a council officer a ‘dog’ and having made ‘personally offensive’ comments during a council meeting. Bracks to PM The Age reported that Victorian premier Steve Bracks has some advice for Julia Gillard: stop talking about Tony Abbott. Speaking at the Melbourne Writers Festival recently, Mr Bracks said the Prime Minister’s fortunes would improve if she ignored the Opposition Leader - and focused more on selling her own agenda. Pre-selections in the regions The Liberal Party has pre-selected small business owner Greg Bickley to run in retiring Labor backbencher Steve Gibbons’ seat of Bendigo against union official Lisa Chesters. Nearby, applications are invited from members of the Liberal party seeking endorsements of the Victorian division of Ballarat at the next federal election. Applications by 12 noon, Wednesday, September 5, www.vic.Liberal.org.au Bushfires Everyone to share levy Households will soon pay about $140 through their council rates to help fund Victoria’s fire fighting services under one of the biggest shake-ups of state taxes in decades. The Victorian government says the changes - from 2013-14 - will leave most households better off as it will scrap the existing fire services levy on house and business insurance premiums from next July, spreading the tax burden to more people through a new property-based levy. The changes largely follow recommendations by the Royal Commission on the Black Saturday bushfires and mean homes and businesses currently not insured or underinsured will now make a full contribution to the costs of running the Metropolitan Fire Brigade and the Country Fire Authority. The former head of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, Professor Allan Fels, has been drafted as a monitor on insurance companies to ensure the savings are passed on. All in A class action by victims of the Marysville bushfire on Black Saturday is to be launched against power company SP AusNet, whose power lines have been found by police to be the likely cause of the blaze. According to The Age, a large number of people affected by the fire could be expected to join the legal action, as the fire destroyed 538 houses and many businesses and burnt a vast area of farmland after it ignited near the Murrindindi sawmill on Black Saturday. Maurice Blackburn Lawyers confirmed the impending legal action. Next best According to the Herald Sun, Victorian fire fighters will be issued with secondhand equipment and have their training and over time slashed under austerity measures blamed on state government funding cuts. Less than four years after Black Saturday, the issuing of ration packs to feed fire fighters who spend up to 18 hours in the field is under review — and first-aid training will be limited as regional CFA stations try to make ends meet. Over the River According to a report in the Herald Sun, a leaked internal letter to CFA training staff says that ‘due to funding cuts’ two key courses for Victorians run by Ballarat University will no longer enrol students. The CFA has confirmed the courses that teach professional fire fighters skills including how to manage injuries at emergency scenes, suppress urban fires, deal with hazardous materials 5 and respond to marine and aviation emergencies will now be taught interstate. The Herald Sun reported that Ballarat University spokesman Matthew Freeman said 140 people were studying Certificate Three in Public Safety (fire-fighting and emergency operations) and Certificate Four in Fire Technology. That training will now be conducted by the Open Training and Education network at TAFE NSW’s Western Sydney Institute. Bushfires The Bushfires Royal Commission report, released in July 2010, recommended that the state government designate community refuges areas of very high risk with various other limited bushfire safety options, such as remote townships. Both government and Royal Commission sources revealed that up to 30 high-risk communities could have refuges. The Fire Services Commissioner, Craig Lapsley, said plans were afoot to incorporate these refugees into community buildings, rather than creating entirely new stand-alone shelters. He also acknowledged that communities were growing frustrated by delays. CFA chief officer Euan Ferguson admitted that there was a lot of work to be done on identifying the sites and assessing the engineering standards. Bushfires (2) Bushfire Royal Commission Implementation Monitor Neil Comrie says the state’s burning program should focus on protecting high-risk fire areas and public safety rather than simply meeting targets. Mr Comrie says that there is still only one designated community fire refuge in the state three years after the Black Saturday fires killed 173 people. He also found that some Neighbourhood Safer Places – defined as buildings or spaces designated within a community that may afford protection from radiant heat during the bushfire - were inappropriate on safety grounds. Despite the fact that good progress has been made, overall, in responding to the bushfire threat, Mr Comrie believes that the target to burn 5 per cent of Victoria’s public land every year to ease bushfire risk must be reconsidered. Fire refuges Three primary schools in the Yarra Ranges Council - considered one of the country’s highest bushfire risk areas - will double as community fire refuges this summer in a new bushfire trial. According to The Age, the refuges are all new buildings constructed since the Black Saturday fires of 2009 and meet bushfire building rules introduced since then. More work will be done on them before summer, and this work could include installing toughened glass and window shutters. The trial announcement came six weeks after former police chief Neil Comrie urged the government to move faster on refuges. Letter from Melbourne Stupid bureaucracy Our Art Fair The Herald Sun reports that power companies could ruin suburban neighbourhoods if they are given more power to prune trees in fire-risk areas, councils say. There are reports that energy firms needlessly destroyed vegetation while clearing power lines in low bushfirerisk areas, according to a Municipal Association of Victoria submission to the state government. According to The Australian, since 1988 the biennial Melbourne Art Fair has been held at the Royal Exhibition Building. The Melbourne Art Fair opened with 70 galleries representing more than 900 artists. Agriculture Friend laws The Sunday Age reports that veterinarians are calling for tougher new dog laws, including proposals which, if implemented, would mean that a dog that escaped a backyard and was impounded two or more times in a year would be deemed a potentially dangerous animal. In a report released in August, veterinarians also urged mandatory reporting to a national database by doctors, police and council workers of every dog fight, so that authorities can better track vicious animals. The Australian Veterinarian Association’s recommendations, backed by the RSPCA, mean that dogs declared dangerous would have to wear a warning collar. The proposal comes after debates about the responsibilities of dog owners, just days after four dogs, believed pit bulls, killed a guide dog and injured a cocker spaniel. Last year the Victorian government launched a crackdown on dangerous breeds after a four-year-old was mauled to death. However, the association wants breed-specific dog laws to be scrapped and replaced with education programs, temperament testing, and mandatory reporting of dog bites. Victorian Agricultural Minister Peter Walsh said the government was monitoring its reforms and had no plans to change them at this stage. Arts NGV The new director of the National Gallery of Victoria, Tony Ellwood, returns to the NGV, after five years as director of the Queensland Art Gallery and the Gallery of Modern Art where he attracted recordbreaking audiences with its high-profile events. In The Age, Ellwood said that Victoria’s state gallery was different to Queensland’s because they did not have the significant historical collections up there. Education Sports at risk According to the Herald Sun, camps, excursions, sports training and plays could be cancelled next year as teachers may vote to work to a maximum 38-hour week. Teachers will decide on the tough new industrial action during the biggest strike in Victoria’s history, when up to 40,000 teachers and support staff walk off the job for 24 hours. Australian Education Union President Mary Bluett said the new work bans would show the government and parents how hard teachers worked. She is about to retire after 31 years in the job. HMMM The Age reported that Parents Victoria passed a motion at its annual general meeting calling for religious classes to be moved outside the normal school day. The Education Department stipulates that primary schools run religious classes during school time if an accredited instructor is available. About 96 per cent of special religious instruction in Victoria is provided by Christian organisations and affiliated ministries. The government is under pressure to change this policy, with the case still before the courts, alleging the classes are discriminatory and segregate children on the basis of religion. The Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal has been asked by parents to order that the classes be held outside school hours. Catholic teachers Catholic teachers are expected to join their colleagues from government schools in the biggest school strike in Victoria’s history. The Age reports that staffers in Victorian Catholic schools have their wages tied to increases in government schools, so they are directly affected by the outcome of the pay deal. Ringwood school closure The Age reported that hundreds of families in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs will be forced to find new a high school after the proposed closure of Parkwood Secondary College by the end of 2012. The school council voted to close the school, saying that projected 2013 enrolments had reached a critical point. The lobby group Parents Victoria and the Australian Education Union blamed the closure on the failure of the State Government to fund 6 the proposed merger between Parkwood and nearby Norwood Secondary College. They argued that Ringwood is a projected growth area and that the decision to close the school is short-sighted. RMIT job cuts RMIT University says it will have to axe jobs and courses as a result of state government cuts to TAFE funding. While it is unclear how many jobs and courses will go, RMIT is assessing the impact of losing $20 million in government funding. RMIT has already begun increasing fees for a government-subsidised TAFE places to test student demand and to estimate the viability of programs. Department cuts The Victorian government will axe up to 950 Education Department jobs, the union covering public sector workers says, and not the 400 cuts outlined by the Premier in June. According to The Age, hundreds of Education Department bureaucrats were invited by managers to attend a meeting recently for a briefing on a restructure first flagged last December - and still not completed. TAFE umbrella The Age reports the Ballarat University is leading a push to bring the majority of Victoria’s regional TAFE institutes under one umbrella. It is rumoured that the institution will be named after Prime Minister Sir Robert Menzies. The proposal would entail joining with six other TAFE institutes to continue offering courses that are facing closure following state government funding cuts. The institutes would include Ballarat, Central Gouburn, Goulburn Ovens, Wodonga, Bendigo Regional, Sunraysia and East Gippsland Advance TAFEs, spread across 28 campuses. Ballarat’s Vice-Chancellor, David Battersby, said he would meet the state government next week to discuss the ‘Menzies Affiliation’ network. Another $400m The federal government has threatened to withhold vocational grants to Victoria because of Premier Ted Baillieu’s TAFE cuts, which have put in doubt almost $435 million of federal funding. According to The Age, as tertiary bosses prepare to sell campuses, increase fees or cut courses and staff to cope with state government cuts, Canberra has warned that ‘national partnership’ payments to Victoria are at risk. In a move that has outraged the state government, federal Tertiary Education Minister Chris Evans is considering withholding money that should flow to Victoria as part of an agreement signed off by the Council of Australian Governments in April. Letter from Melbourne R-Co is an innovative brand design + digital agency. We use strategy, creativity and technology to invent, re-invent and build brands that accelerate business growth and success. COLOUR ADVERTS R-Co can use brand design to benefit your business: call 9639 8332 or visit www.r-co.com.au & #&$# %% $, !$#!) -00/%*#!#+&% # # (#!) %$ ( !(# (%"#'$##&&!! * #+#! &$ # ##!(# #!$ $%# -‐.#! 7 18 NOVEMBER to 15 DECEMBER 2010 hotter than Mulhouse A month after Premier John brumby announced Victoria would buy the five distinctive bumblebee trams from France, it has emerged hundreds of thousands of dollars must be spent fixing airconditioning on the vehicles, so they can cope with Australian summers. The government will not reveal how much the public has paid to keep the five bright yellow trams, which the Department of Transport rented from the French town of Mulhouse in 2008. Higher Tresmorn high and myki As part of the myki smartcard rollout, Met card will be turned off next year, The Age reported. Myki is a reusable smartcard for public transport, but Higher Tresmorn offers breakfast the new system includes short-term disposable accommodation in a stunning metickets. will with be available dievalThey farmhouse breathtak- in Melbourne views over the ends. Cornwall coast- Premier John wheningthe Metcard Former line. All buildings are beautifully brumby did not say when Metcard would go, equipped, ensuring a comfortable but indicated that it was likely to be next year. and pleasant stay. Each short-term myki ticket has a computer chip and costs the government about 35c. Metcard, with its cheaper magnetic strip, costs 3c. When the former governments signed the $1.35b myki Higher Tresmorn Farm contract, it expected 10 per cent to 20 per cent St Gennys, Nr Bude, of trips would use disposable tickets. But in the North Cornwall EX23 0NU six regional towns with myki, http://www.highertresmorn.co.uk 60 per cent of Telephone: 01840 230371 passengers used short-term tickets. Mobile: 07966 690654 en garde The Age reported that in a resolution passed by ticket inspectors, and followed by a vote of metropolitan railway station staff, members of the Rail, Tram and Bus Union opposed the new Government’s armed guards promise for trains and stations. Yes The Age reported that a straw poll it conducted found large support for the idea of quiet carriages. Monash University’s Chair of Public Transport, Professor Graham Currie, and dr Simon Smith, a historian, author and lawyer, both want Melbourne to begin a quiet carriage trial. A tram summit? The campaign to rescue Melbourne’s classic W-class trams scored a victory with the government agreeing to a tram summit to consider options on the future of the vehicles, The Age reported. almost 1,000 trucks going down their streets every hour. The Maribyrnong Truck Action Group and Footscray’s Less Trucks for Moore protested on the steps of the parliament with toy trucks to demand assistance from whoever won the election Who’s in? The Regional Rail Link project is a new $4.3b rail line that will provide capacity for enough extra train services for up to 9,000 passengers across the network in peakNorthern hour by separating An Idylic out the regional from the metropolitan services. It is jointlyCornwall funded by Retreat the Australian and Victorian governments, with the Commonwealth contributing $3.2b. The Regional Rail Link Authority is now releasing the Request for Proposals for the Alliance Works Packages C and G for the Regional Rail Link project, www. tenders.vic.gov.au. Fine tuning Myki is overcharging passengers on a handful of Melbourne bus routes because of faults with the GPS system that the $1.35b smartcard system uses to locate bus stops. The Transport Ticketing Authority, the government department in charge of the ticket system, identified the problem in July but still has several locations around Melbourne where bus passengers can be wrongly charged using myki, The Age reported. road into reverse Premier ted baillieu was expected to begin winding back clearway times introduced across inner Melbourne in theOlympic past two yearsEnjoy by the Attending the London Games? former Brumby government, The Age reported a peaceful break in the Cornwall countryside! in early December. Road user group the RACV has warned the government against making a knee-jerk reaction by winding back the extended clearway times, saying they are crucial to keeping traffic flowing. baillieu altered a clearway sign at midday, December 9, on High Street, Prahran, to mark the first step in reversing the laws. The Herald Sun reported replacing clearway signs will cost taxpayers $2m. It is believed most of the old clearway signs were turned to scrap metal. A challenge for ted Just over a week before the election, Premier John brumby flagged the possibility of tolls on the Western Freeway – a $5b, six-lane road to go under Footscray and through Sunshine West, The Age reported. Nearby, residents of Melbourne’s inner west say they are having to cope with big thinkers (think tanks, knowledge brokers, networks & opinion shapers) The 2009 edition of Affairs of State’s Good focus latest publication Big Thinkers The Municipal Association of Victoria is (thing tanks, knowledge brokers, convening a working group to meet with the utility networks & opinion shapers) sector in an endeavour to improve thehas operation beenManagement launched by ofjust the Road Act,historian which has ongoing Geoffrey Blainey. issues relating to communications and process, where utilities interface with roads in particular. BigMAV’s Thinkers the only compreThe weeklyis‘Local Government’ bulletin on hensive accurate guide to think line providesand a good focus on this sector. tanks, thinking/ideas organisations andnanny… opinion shapers in Australia. dear County Court Judge James Montgomery, (aged ?), said that there a lot than to be300 said for It assembles a list of ismore compulsory licence retesting fororganisapeople 65 years think tanks, think/ideas oftions age orand over,opinion The Age reported. shapers from a cross section of disciplines to help you understand the new financial and policy environment. air World Withwide easy-to-read summaries, Big Qantas passengers suffered anotherinformid air Thinkers provides up-to-date scare on 15 November – taking the number of mation including: Qantas mid-air incidents to five in ten days – Academic think tanks when a Boeing 747 flying to Argentina was forced Government think tanks to return to Sydney amid reports of smoke in the Contract research think tanks cockpit. Policy advocacy think tanks No-for-profit policy centres Flying kangaroos go with Virgin University public policy partnership and The AFL has ended a nine-year research centres with Qantas as its official carrier, a move the editors,itcolumnists airline Opinion claims is because would not agree to and writers an exclusive contract with the league. The deal is now worth $6m annually for Virgin Blue, The Age reported. Only $110 inc. 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The High Court ruled that when the assets and business of the Port of Portland authority was sold in 1996 by the Kennett government, there was a clause on the liability of the buyers to pay land tax on the site. Watc The and Coal depa Com victim he h politi the n play of ru Over in Co Brum in th The sugg on t Coun of th to w resul after Com comp sque in th majo a gai ende the o seats The D of its onda retire Party an u the G Coun the P for t race Victo narro thre Metr Labo Wha The A to pu unop a ma the p minim susp wind the O uppe for a Paul of th Hera gove WICKED PROBLEMS, GREAT OPPORTUNITIES! Leadership and courage for volatile times. Over 40 innovators, thinkers and business leaders will present valuable strategies, stories and insights to create an interactive event of a lifetime. Ci2012 includes a world class 2 Day Conference, Master Classes, Deep Conversations and a Gala Dinner. 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Proudly presented by Brand experience by www.blueboat.com.au Letter from Melbourne LOOKING TO ADVERTISE? Founded in 1984, the Outdoor Education Group (OEG) is an independent not for profit organisation which focuses on helping young people reach their true potential Outdoor Experiental Learning. We work with young people in order to instill the key values of Respect and Responsibility and to help prepare them for the personal, social and environmental challenges they will face in their lives. The perfect platform to attract the attention of the who’s who of Melboure’s public and private sectors. For a copy of our media kit or information regarding advertising: Please contact Camilla Orr-Thomson [email protected] or 03 9654 1300 To make sure you don’t miss out on our special offer, fill out the coupon today! 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Web: www.letterfrommelbourne.com.au Letter from Melbourne Wider community concerns Ready to talk Still under consideration In an editorial run in the Herald Sun, David Williams argues that TAFE cuts will keep hurting Premier Ted Baillieu. He suggests that the $300 million cuts from TAFEs have been met with widespread condemnation, because there is unanimous agreement in the community that the decision is wrong. Across Victoria, community groups such as the City of Geelong are holding townhall meetings to help people understand the impact of these cuts. TAFE education, he argues, is a vital component of Victoria’s key export - tertiary education. More recently, Australian Education Union state president Mary Bluett has flagged that she is prepared to move on the teacher pay claim of a 30 per cent pay rise over three years. According to The Age, Ms Bluett, who recently also said that she would stand down as president at the end of the year, conceded that the Victorian government was unlikely to pay Victorian teachers more than their colleagues in Western Australia. Ms Bluett said that the 30 per cent rise was what would have been required had the government kept its pre-election promise to make Victorian teachers the highest-paid in the nation. The Victorian government is presently refusing to say whether it remains committed to its election policy of five per cent of Victoria’s energy coming from solar power by 2020. Education state In The Age, Victoria University vicechancellor Peter Dawkins writes that learning is the key to Victoria’s future wealth. He explains that the university sector and the school systems are strong, and that the Global University City Index has Melbourne highly ranked as a great place for students. Unfortunately, vocational education and training has tended to have second-class status in Australia. Areas that can be improved, he suggests, include outcomes of students from lower socio-economic backgrounds and outcomes in early childhood development. He writes that ‘getting education right has big payoffs - greater skills bring higher wages and more adaptable workforce […] If Victoria was viewed nationally and internationally as the “Education State”, export earnings would rise, our position in Asia during the Asian Century would be improved, and so would productivity, living standards and social inclusion.’ Premier hits Canberra According to The Age, more than $1 billion worth of programs for Victorian schools, hospitals and homelessness is at risk of being scrapped next year when money from the federal government dries up, in a warning from Premier Ted Baillieu. Baillieu told The Sunday Age that programs to provide computers in schools, to improve the health network, to lift teacher quality, and to reduce the number of people sleeping rough on the streets are under threat unless Canberra continues to fund them. Under the agreement, money provided by the federal government is matched by the states in a bid to lift outcomes and facilitate reform. But if Canberra’s funding ceases, Victoria says it would face two choices: force taxpayers to foot the bill, or cut the programs altogether. New school According to The Age, a primary school will be built in the heart of South Melbourne amid fears that a ‘tidal wave of preschoolers’ is about to put further pressure on overcrowded state schools. Innercity schools are bursting at the seams, with portable classrooms eating up the playground at Port Melbourne Primary, which has seen enrolments almost double in three years. Energy Energy bills A report by the St Vincent De Paul Society identified the average household energy bills including electricity and gas had risen by as much as $1,100 in some regions over the past 4 years. The average Victorian household will pay an extra $300 in energy bills this financial year. Energy promise Solar power Victoria could soon capture enough energy from the sun to meet its electricity needs twice over. According to the federal report, as in The Age, the state also matches or surpasses other parts of the world in harnessing wind power. Climate Commission member Gerry Hueston, a former BP Australasia President, said that Australia and Victoria had made a start encouraging renewable energy, but investment had been held back by political uncertainty. Solar power (2) According to The Age, the price paid to Victorian households for rooftop solar power they feed into the grid has been cut, under an overhaul of incentives for small-scale renewables by the Victorian government. The changes will reduce the price paid for each grid-fed kilowatt-hour of solar power to 8¢ from next year, down from the existing rate of 25¢, following recommendations by the state’s competition body. These changes will affect new customers, with households now getting higher prices remaining on those rates. Households that have paid a deposit or have a solar system installed already can still get the 25¢ price, if the necessary paperwork is lodged with electricity suppliers by the end of this month. Under the changes, Victoria’s renewable incentives have been broadened to include other smaller-scale renewable energy technologies generating under 100 kilowatts of electricity, such as micro-wind and fuel cells. Wind farms and health The Hamilton Spectator reported that Hamilton’s RMIT campus is stepping into the debate on wind farms, with a plan to study the claims that wind turbines affect people’s health. 11 According to The Age, the Victorian government could save $2.5 billion on concession payments over the next 20 years if it fulfilled an election promise to improve the average energy efficiency of Victorian homes. Research recently released said that retrofitting one million low-income households would reduce the long-term state budget burden of helping them pay power bills. Gillard focus on state power bills Prime Minister Julia Gillard will increase pressure on state governments to reform energy markets, according to The Financial Review. This decision has been described as a strategy designed to shift the blame from big retail electricity price rises from the carbon tax to the ‘gold-plating’ of transmission networks. Critics suggest that transmission companies spend too much upgrading their equipment, which drives up prices. Gillard explained: ‘For too long some state governments have been increasing their revenue at the expense of the family electricity bill - that has to stop.’ The Age reports that Julia Gillard has warned that the states will face tough federal action if they fail to act. According to Australian Bureau Of Statistics, in the five years to June retail electricity prices rose in Melbourne by 84 per cent, this being the greatest jump measured in any capital city. Gillard pointed out that suburban housing didn’t even have smart meters to measure peak demand, although they are being introduced elsewhere in Victoria. The Age reported that the Prime Minister sought to turn attention away from the impact of the government’s carbon tax on power prices, even as the premiers tried to put the spotlight right back on it. Premier Ted Baillieu said that if the Prime Minister was really concerned about raising energy costs, she could do something about the carbon tax. Electricity a multifaceted problem The Age reports that Victoria’s electricity distributors don’t deny that increased investment poles and wires contributed to the large increases in electricity prices. However they argue federal and state Letter from Melbourne government interventions such as smart meters, energy efficiency schemes, and reliability targets, as was the carbon tax, equally to blame for driving up electricity bills. Premier Ted Baillieu said that the Prime Minister is wrong if she thinks Victoria is to blame for rising energy prices. Andrew Dillon, General Manager of Corporate Affairs at the Energy Supply Association of Australia, which represents energy distributors, generators, and retailers, said that ‘there was no doubt that investment in infrastructure is impacting on bills - but there’s also no question that programs like renewable energy target, state solar feed in tariffs, and energy efficiency schemes have also added to power bills.’ Freeze on fracking According to The Australian, a moratorium on the controversial mining process of fracking was set to be announced by the Victorian government until a set of national guidelines is implemented. Speculation is rife in the resources industry that Victoria will adopt the lead of the government in NSW, and accordingly will take a cautious approach to the controversial mining process used to extract coal-seam gas. The fracking process – also known as fracture stimulation – involves injecting water, sand and chemicals into the ground to retrieve the resource. However, the process has become highly controversial, amid growing anger in Queensland and NSW about its side-effects, with the chief concern being that the fractures created can potentially contaminate the water supply. Make your home smart An event was hosted by the Australian Alliance to Save Energy titled ‘Make Your Home Energy Smart’ on 13 September at the Melbourne Town Hall. Your editor attended. The focus was on energy efficiency, well presented, and reminding us of all the things that we might have mostly known. promised by the Victorian government at the 2010 election. In the Federal Court in Melbourne, the Victorian Solicitor-General, Stephen McLeish SC, said that the federal Environment Minister Tony Burke is in relying on reports and advice that had not been presented to him by the state government in its referral. Justice Susan Kenny reserved her decision. Native fauna Last year, the Department of Sustainability and the Environment issued licenses to kill wombats, wallabies, kookaburras, swans, emus and parrots. The move has outraged animal rights activists. The DSE also approved the killing of more than 32,000 kangaroos and wallabies. The Herald Sun also maintained that animals marked for death included Easterners others, rainbow lorikeets and sulphur-crested cockatoos. Under Freedom of Information laws, Green leader Greg Barber has been campaigning to have all animal killing elements made public. Other documents obtained under FoI laws show that the authorities gave permission to shoot 100 brush-tail possums in the Geelong Botanic Gardens, while Avalon Airport was allowed to kill 10 magpies, 20 galahs, 40 ravens and two Cape Barren Geese who were interfering with aircraft. Events Melbourne Recital Centre A full program for the rest of the year fell out of some newspaper, or visit melbournerecital.com.au or call 9699 3333. The Victorian Major Events is holding talks regarding a Red Bull Air Race, dubbed ‘the Formula One of the skies, in 2014 over Albert Park. The sport sees pilots race against the clock through slalom-style inflatable air gates and pylons. Premier Ted Baillieu pledged while in Opposition to spend $4 million to bring the spectacular at July, but officials have rejected Corio Bay as a venue, and have preferred that the race be held at Albert Park later in the year after the March Grand Prix. Writers Fest Lisa Dempster, the former director of the Emerging Writers Festival, will be the new director of the Melbourne Writers Festival. She will take over from Steve Grimwade after this year’s literary event. Bell Shakespeare presented The School for Wives, at The Arts Centre in midSeptember, a modern day translation by Sydney/Paris based Australian Justin Fleming. Pretty dry but fun. Aye The Robert Burns Annual Scottish Festival was held in Camperdown from 24 to 26 August, Camperdown is the home of the oldest known statue of Robert Burns, well documented by former Victorian parliamentarian Gordon Ashley, who has travelled the world to document all other Burns’ statues. The festival included Len Murray, one of Scotland’s finest speakers on Robert Burns. And lots of dancing, singing, eating, drinking and piping. Your editor did not compete but did have his pipes tunes by Australia’s best pipers. Gaming Festivals Environment. Conservation The Melbourne Festival, from 11 to 27 October. Easily one of the most extraordinary arts festivals in Australia. Visit arts.vic.gov.au. Melbourne Spring Fashion Week, from 3 to 9 September, was given a full run down in the September edition of Melbourne News. Plan for next year. City Recycling Grand Prix According to a report in The Age, a government audit of 600 recycling bins in four Melbourne councils found that 20 per cent of the rubbish sent to landfills each week could be recycled. This was despite a survey showing 99 per cent of respondents saying that recycling was important. A report obtained by the Herald Sun estimates that more than $200 million a year in publicity for Melbourne is generated by the Grand Prix. This came from a report from British company Formula Money, which takes into account footage of the city which is broadcast throughout the world. Cattle grazing The future The Age reported that the Victorian government is challenging the decision to block the trial of grazing cattle in the Alpine National Park as a way to reduce bushfire fuel and risk. The trial was Up there Recently the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre hosted the Today, Tomorrow and Beyond event, targeted at businesses and business leaders, with its aim being to inspire and innovate. 12 Pokies Capital Adults in the Greater Dandenong region, in Melbourne’s south-east, lost more on poker machines per person than those in any other local government jurisdiction during the 2010-11 financial year. Each adult who lives in the area loses $1,110 per year at the poker machines. This figure, starkly contrasts the local average income of $426 a week. The area also has the second-highest density of machines to be found in any municipality of metropolitan Melbourne. It has 8.9 machines for every 1,000 adults who live there. Pubs lose According to the Financial Review, the ban on cash machines being located in pubs and clubs with gaming areas has led to a fall in poker machine revenue, as gamblers have to go to greater lengths to fund the habit. Anecdotal evidence from poker machine manufacturers suggest Letter from Melbourne ARTICLE bLOCKADE CONFIRMS WORST FEARS ABOUT VICTORIAN CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY By Mark Stone, Chief Executive Officer of VECCI The recent blockade by construction unions and workers at Grocon’s Emporium site in Melbourne confirms the worst fears about the challenges facing the building and construction industry in Victoria. There were three very serious matters of concern raised by the blockade. The first is the attack on Grocon’s right as an employer to decide who it wants to employ. The second is the denial of the right of Grocon and its employees to access the Emporium site free from intimidation and harassment and the third is the defiance of the CFMEU and its members in the face of orders of the Supreme Court of Victoria. VECCI has regularly highlighted the range of problems that have had a damaging effect on Victoria’s reputation as a place to conduct construction work and the action taken at the Grocon site is yet another example. VECCI was a strong supporter of the State Government’s decision to introduce the Code of Practice for the Building and Construction Industry. Victoria needs productive construction sites with high standards of occupational health and safety, where projects are delivered on time and on budget and everybody abides by the law. The Code was necessary because of the Federal Government’s abolition of the highly effective Office of the Australian Building and Construction Commissioner (ABCC). Victoria needs productive construction sites with high standards of occupational health and safety, where projects are delivered on time and on budget and everybody abides by the law. VECCI also consistently called for an inquiry into construction costs because the costs of construction in Victoria are far greater than in other states and when compared with international standards. The Federal Government’s recent agreement to launch an inquiry into the cost of construction as a result of a determined campaign by Premier Baillieu is long overdue and the sooner work gets underway on this, the better. However, what we saw at the Grocon blockade was a resumption of the sort of extremely damaging behaviour previously experienced on major infrastructure projects such as the Westgate Bridge upgrade and the construction of the Wonthaggi desalination plant. The Federal Government must restore the ABCC and legislate to ensure that construction unions and workers obey the law in future. It is intolerable that scenarios continue to develop requiring businesses to launch Supreme Court action to try and protect the fundamental right of free access to their premises. We simply won’t get the infrastructure Victoria needs if we don’t have a framework that helps deliver it harmoniously, productively and in accordance with the law, and nor can business afford the economic damage that results from the sort of rogue behaviour of the CFMEU and its members on the Grocon blockade. The Victorian Employers’ Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VECCI) is the peak body for employers in Victoria, informing and servicing more than 15,000 members, customers and clients around the State. 13 Letter from Melbourne that pokies revenue in the state fell by an average of five per cent last month, after the new restrictions came in on 1 July. In the money As of 16 August, hotels and clubs own and operate Victoria’s 27,500 poker machines located outside of the casino, with the Tatts and Tabcorp duopoly having ceased on that date. According to The Age, this means that the cut of the more than $2.6 billion which punters lose each year on the machines will be split between venues and the government, rather than the previous three-way split (venues, the government, and Tatts-Tabcorp). Clubs Victoria and the RSL have welcomed the new deal, which allows venues to purchase 10-year entitlements to operate poker machines. Ethical challenge Doxa Youth Foundation, a youth foundation for disadvantaged children founded by a Catholic priest, is being funded through two large Melbourne poker machine venues. Gamblers lost almost $14 million last financial year in these venues. The two poker machines that are operated by the Doxa Social Club, were established to fund the foundation. The foundation was formed in 1972 by Father Joe Giacobbe, and it receives more than $1 million a year from the poker machines. The annual report highlights Doxa’s close links to poker machines. Mark Zirnsak, of the Victorian InterChurch Gambling Taskforce, said it was problematic for a community service agency to be running pokies at all, because 40 per cent of the money from pokies is coming from problem gamblers. Tabcorp demands The Victorian government’s beleaguered bottom line faces an even stiffer challenge than the $490.5 million being sought by the Tatts Group – Tabcorp. This duopoly is claiming that it is owed a poker machine licence ‘refund’ of $686.78 million and payment is due. Poker machine licences for Tatts and Tabcorp both expired recently and the companies are now seeking more than $1 billion from the government. Crown jackpot According to The Age, Crown Casino is set to be one of the big winners from the Victorian government’s bid to prevent local councils from imposing high rates on gaming and other businesses they regard as socially harmful. Poker machine venues in Manningham, Moreland and Darebin already pay double the standard commercial rates. In recent years, other councils, including those of Shepparton and Geelong, have also used differential rates to slug late-night drinking spots. Two months ago, three Melbourne city councillors made their first push for higher rates for gaming venues across the city, including Crown. Had it been successful, it would have added millions to the municipal bill of the city’s largest single ratepayer. Business. Investment Health Business as usual Welcome to Melbourne Quit Victoria has reportedly called on Health Minister David Davis to ban smoking within four metres of entrances to public buildings, including Melbourne Airport. The Herald Sun reported that the chief executive of the Victoria Tourism Industry Council, Dianne Smith, said that the review was a good idea and that the cloud of smoke currently greeting visitors to the state did not leave a good first impression. Ciggies According to the Herald Sun, the first cartons of plain packaged cigarettes have arrived in Victoria. The drab, uniform boxes – which feature the brand name in small generic print beneath a gruesome health warning graphic – are about to hit the shelves. Planning ahead According to the Herald Sun, Health Minister David Davis has gone to a medical conference in the US, the AIDS 2012 International Conference. Melbourne will host the conference in 2014. Good job The Minister for Health is calling for applications for appointment to the role of Health Services Commissioner, kerri. [email protected]. Violence in hospitals According to police data, three people are assaulted each week in Victorian hospitals. The Australian Medical Association and the Australian Nursing Federation are demanding new laws to be extended to all health care workers in the community, not just the emergency department. Representatives of peak nurses and doctors groups have reiterated these concerns. Supported living According to The Senior News, new laws governing the operation of Victoria’s supported residential services are now in force. Minister for Health and Ageing David Davis said the laws were designed to protect the safety, well-being and rights of vulnerable people. ‘Residents will benefit from new financial protections, including the new requirement to set up a trust account for residents and new limits on the type and amount of up-front payments that can be charged’. 14 A survey by the Victorian Employers’ Chamber of Commerce and Industry of 300 employers found that more than half of businesses expected weaker national economic conditions in the year ahead. According to the Herald Sun, the Victorian government has played down the survey of business owners, the survey having shown that these owners’ confidence in the economy is at its lowest level since the Global Financial Crisis. Building business concerns At least three building-related businesses are going into receivership every week in Victoria, reports The Age. This rate of failure is prompting industry leaders to plead that urgent government help is needed to bolster the struggling sector. The building industry employs about 200,000 Victorians, with some developers considering relocation to other states. Much like the manufacturing industry, the building sector – the one-time darling of the state economy – is now feeling the squeeze. Executive Director of the Master Builders Association of Victoria, Brian Welch, said that the competition was intense and that there was a limited amount of work from private and public tenders. A recent survey by the Property Council and the ANZ Bank showed that confidence levels in Victorian construction industry were the lowest of all states. Foreign labour The Herald Sun reports that plastics company MHG has a glass factory in Geelong as well as locations in Thailand, and will deliver its first orders to Ford within months. Thailand is expected to make two million cars this year across the 16 different car manufacturers in the industry that employs 500,000 people. The touring car parts suppliers are being promised a discount workforce for just $1.12 per hour in offshore factories. Thailand’s Board of Investment is offering cheap labour to 30 companies at a seminar at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre in August. The Thailand expo was organised by the head of a federal-government-funded car lobby group, Automotive Supplier Excellence Australia. The Manufacturing Workers Union said it worried about the car industry’s future here, as competition from Asian countries had led to an uneven playing field, because of these countries’ industries being so well supported by their governments. Letter from Melbourne Industrial Relations Grollo vs unions Daniel Grollo has attacked Australia’s industrial relations regime and says he lost more than $100,000 a day from the bitter Melbourne CBD dispute. The tense standoff lasted for several days, with police not ruling out further action after they had earlier used riot gear, horses and capsicum spray to end a picket at Colonial First State’s $250 million Emporium Melbourne. Four officers fell to the ground and protesters slammed into horses as a sea of hundreds of construction employees stood their ground. Tempers also flared at another Grocon site in Footscray. The ugly nature of the dispute led to Premier Ted Baillieu and business leaders calling for a tougher action against rogue unionists. Government joins fight According to The Age, the Victorian government will pursue Victoria’s biggest construction union for heavy damages (millions!) – even if the union settles a bitter dispute with builder Grocon. The government joined Grocon at the Supreme Court, pursuing the Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union for contempt after it refused to lift a blockade of the Emporium site on Lonsdale Street. Attorney-General Robert Clark said that the government was joining the action against the union because there should be consequences if orders were not obeyed. ‘Over the past two weeks, the Supreme Court has made a number of orders requiring the [union] to end various blockades.’ These had been ‘wilfully and repeatedly ignored’. Justice. Police Grollo vs unions (2) Grocon chief executive Daniel Grollo also warned that his company would ‘absolutely’ sue the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union for damages from the dispute that stopped work at a large CBD site for nearly a week-and-ahalf. Central to the dispute is the role of shop stewards, with the CFMEU accusing Grocon of reneging on a deal on how they would be nominated. Wearing union apparel also has its issues. Grocon boss Daniel Grollo chose to ignore ‘a well thought-out’ (!) proposal from Fair Work Australia president Iain Ross for a two-week cooling-off period. During these two weeks, the picket would end and Grocon would adjourn its legal action. It was hoped that such an adjournment would allow cooler heads to prevail and a resolution to take place. Grocon vs unions (3) According to the Herald Sun, the union blockade of the Grocon city building site cost taxpayers at least $500,000 a day. The bill for policing the Grocon Emporium development had already topped $2 million, according to official sources. Retailers are also ruing lost business, with about 5,000 commuters having been left stranded by re-routing of tram services. Grocon’s own losses have reached about $4 million. But a coalition of Victoria’s building and construction companies is planning a fight-back against the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union action, which, it says, is crippling the state. A campaign to lobby for deregistration of the CFMEU will be discussed, and there were also calls for it to be forced to repay the cost to taxpayers of policing the site. Protesters had blocked the entrance in breach of Supreme Court orders. Terror raids Police recently raided up to a dozen properties in Melbourne, seizing guns and arresting one man over alleged links to home-grown Islamist terrorism. The Age reported that the operation targeted individuals connected with the Al-Furqan centre in Springvale. Equal rights According to The Age, the AttorneyGeneral has sought to rebuild the Equal Opportunity Commission by appointing three new board members – but so far his appointees are all men. Robert Clark had a testy time with the human rights community when all the board’s members except for its chairman, John Searle, resigned. They did so once Mr Clark had personally vetoed their choice to lead the organisation. With an apparent eye for diversity, Mr Clark named Abeselom Nega, Damien Bell and Josef Szwarc as new board members. Szwarc is the manager of research and policy at the Victorian Foundation for Survivors of Torture and previously worked for former federal Liberal MP Petro Georgiou. Nega, who has a Somalian background, is chief executive of a training and recruitment service that helps refugees and new arrivals. No hearings? According to The Age, the state government is considering scrapping committal hearings as part of a justice overhaul. Attorney-General Robert Clark has held talks with the courts, the Director of Public Prosecutions and Legal Aid over the costs and backlogs caused by what he describes as ‘unnecessary examination of cases’. Other possible reforms include tightening committal laws so fewer cases go to trial, restricting cross-examination 15 of witnesses and scrapping the system of preliminary hearings. Rape laws According to The Age, Victoria’s two most senior judges have led a severe criticism of the former director of public prosecutions for appealing against a rape sentence as a means of attacking sentencing practices. In a judgment handed down yesterday, they dismissed an appeal in which former DPP Jeremy Rapke called for tougher sentences for rape. New taskforce The Herald Sun reported that Chief Commissioner Ken Lay said the new Operation Bia would tackle violent theft, as armed robberies were up 5 per cent in the 12 months to March. Crime stats According to the Herald Sun, more than 25,000 assaults reported to 000 in just one year never made it to Victoria Police statistics. The paper reported that there were deleted despite repeated officials amends for the data to be used so Victorians know the true level of crime in their community. Crime statistics also revealed crime skyrocketed 8.2 per cent to 391,325 offences in Chief Commissioner Ken Lay’s first full year as top cop. Car thefts had been steadily dropping over the past decade until last financial year, when they jumped 9 per cent to 15,663 reported thefts. Children checks The Age reported that checks on people working picture of being toughened after several applicants convicted of serious crimes had their rejections overturned by a tribunal. New legislation will mandate a new ‘reasonable person’ test, under which the Justice Department or the tribunal must be satisfied that reasonable parents would let the applicant have unsupervised contact with the child. Domestic Violence Domestic violence agencies are facing a crisis as cash-strapped services struggle to cope with a surge in cases, leaving women more exposed to violent situations. The state’s leading agencies told The Age that a massive shortfall in funding meant the most vulnerable women were not receiving support to move away from abusive relationships, and staff members were facing burn-out. The paper reported that domestic violence is increasingly becoming the focus of front-line police, who are supposed to report incidents to the agencies close to the victim’s home, the idea being that these agencies contact the woman to offer services. The latest police statistics show reports of domestic disputes leapt by one-third to 41,000 in 2010-11, and police now seem to be referring many more of these Letter from Melbourne cases to agencies. Robyn Gregory, of Women’s Health West, the only service agency in Melbourne’s west, said the sector welcomed the spike in reporting, because it meant more perpetrators were facing justice and more women were being helped. IBAC The new anti-corruption body is powerless to investigate criminal allegations against former Victoria Police chief Simon Overland, and against two members of his senior command, because of an impasse between the state and federal governments. Former Assistant Commissioner Noel Ashby and Paul Mullett have finalised a formal complaint containing allegations of perjury, of breaches of federal telecommunications laws, and of perverting the course of justice. IBAC (2) Victoria’s new anti-corruption body will not be fully open for business for months, with the Victorian government recently unable to guarantee it would take public complaints this year. According to The Age, the Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission – which it promised to have up and running in July last year – has been hit by a string of delays, and remains unable to investigate corruption. The government has hit a snag on the fourth piece of legislation that will give the commission its full powers, including the ability to tap telephones, this ability currently involving a federal law. The government had been expected to introduce the bill into Parliament in the past two sitting weeks. Oh to be Premier for the Day In his new book, former Premier Steve Bracks reportedly outlines why he refused to hold a royal commission into the gangland war. An extract was published in the Herald Sun. Nearby, how many of us are frustrated by the positive (...) media coverage of the Team Gangland. Gangland threats Melbourne mayor and former State Opposition Leader Robert Doyle, as revealed to the Herald Sun, received death threats during Melbourne’s gangland war, and was offered protection by the federal police. He was briefed on how to avoid being a target, and was offered round-theclock surveillance. Next The Herald Sun reports that Robert Richter QC, will help Hoddle Street killer Julian Knight to sue his way to freedom. Knight, 44, wants the Supreme Court to overturn the Parole Board decision to refuse him parole. Richter defended Knight after the Hoddle Street massacre 25 years ago. Ararat prison Weapons The Federal Workplace Relations Minister Bill Shorten has weighed in on talks on behalf of underpaid sub-contractors and workers over the stalled $400 million redevelopment of Ararat prison. The Minister is disappointed with the Baillieu government’s lethargic handling of this matter. The Minister planned to attend a meeting in Melbourne during early August, to hear from contractors and unions about the collapse of the project, and about the outstanding payments of up to $25 million for work completed. The homicide squad has uncovered further details of the final route of slain taxi driver Stephen Seymour. Inside the taxi of Mr Seymour a knife and identification documents have been found stopped he was stabbed to death by an unknown passenger in Mount Waverley. The Herald Sun reports that the killer stole the taxi, crashing into a power pole four kilometres from the scene. Any information to Crime Stoppers on 1800 330 000. Ararat prison (2) After a new contract was approved by the State Government, taxpayers are yet to discover how much it will cost to resurrect the stalled Ararat prison project. The Age believes that the government is close to a deal that will allow the existing development firm or part thereof to complete the Ararat prison, which includes refurbishment of an existing jail and the addition of a new facility. The paper reports that ‘a the project is becoming a major headache for the government, with out-of-pocket contractors, the local Ararat business community, the Council, and building unions calling in unison for the government to intervene and ensure the project restarts.’ Ted Baillieu signed a refinancing agreement that will allow work on the stalled $400 million development to continue, with the prison to be built by the end of 2014. The rescue deal is a win for the hundreds of sub-contractors, who will repay debts which they have been owed since May, when the builder St Hillier’s Construction Pty Ltd went into liquidation. The Ararat scheme could not be saved before project builders ran into serious financial trouble and work ground to a halt. However, it’s still unclear when workers will get their money. Claims must first clear a strict assessment process. The State Government, the Commonwealth Bank, the Bendigo Bank and the Adelaide Bank will search for new builders to take over construction. Ararat prison (3) The Age reported that a building company at the heart of the stalled prison development has offered its first explanation for the collapse of the project, claiming that it was doomed by the Brumby government’s insistence in 2010 that the whole enterprise be a publicprivate partnership. The executive general manager of New Zealand-based Hawkins group, Dan Ashby, explained that the flexibility required for such a complex job was incompatible with a public-private partnership (PPP) model, under which companies are obliged to deliver projects according to a rigid, fixed price contract. 16 Challenging Job Victoria Police has been looking for a new Director Of Corporate Strategy And Government. Applications closed mid August, a full job description at www. careers.state.gov.au. And another justice job The Department of Justice is seeking to appoint a new Commissioner for Corrections. The Department has responsibility for ensuring that the correctional system provides a relevant, responsive and cost-effective service that enforces the orders of the Courts and the Adult Parole Board. It also ensures that prisoners are safely and securely contained, and aims to reduce re-offending by addressing the underlying causes of offending behaviour. Applications closed in mid August, www.justice.vic.gov.au. On your bike According to the Herald Sun, bikies and underworld syndicates are to be targeted in tough new laws. In the final stages of drafting before Cabinet talks, AttorneyGeneral Robert Clark revealed how the laws would allow police to have bikie groups declared a criminal organisation by the Supreme Court. On your bike (2) Bikie tensions are simmering in Victoria as outlaw clubs take on new members and defend their turf. According to the Herald Sun, there have been rising tensions between clubs over dozens of defections and numerous assaults across the state in the past three years. Police have confirmed that many new members of powerful Melbourne gangs – namely the Comancheros – are from Middle Eastern and Pacific Islander descent, and many new ‘patched’ bikies are being recruited from kick-boxing backgrounds. In your car Police intelligence has identified the state’s top 500 repeat hoons – including drinkdrivers and those involved in pursuits – and has reported that only 15 per cent of them hold a current driver’s licence. The road menaces will be covertly scrutinised during Operation Road Bia, which starts Letter from Melbourne today and will run over the next five weeks. Among areas to be blitzed are Dandenong, Yarra, Casey, Darebin, Whittlesea, Hume and Geelong. Local Government Local Council Elections Local council elections will be held this October for every council in Victoria except Brimbank City Council. To vote in your local council election, you need to be directly enrolled by 4pm on Friday, 31 August. The Liberal Party does not stand candidates at local government elections in Victoria. Many conservativish candidates stand as independents. Greens stand as Greens. Various smaller parties and other independents also stand. Have a nice day. announced that elections for Brimbank due this year will be postponed until March 2015 because of ‘the very real risk of a return to the discredited and damaging practices of the past’ at the council. Melbourne Outdoor smoke ban Baw Baw Shire Council last night voted unanimously to prohibit smoking within 10 metres of al-fresco dining areas. Mayor Diane Blackwood said the decision put the community first. The Herald Sun reported that that the local law change will be advertised and open to public submissions, before a final decision is made after October elections. According to The Age, contractors have been called in because the floating fern on the ornamental lake at the Royal Botanic Gardens could not be removed on previous attempts. It has dominated the lake since March, and winter is apparently the ideal time to try and remove it. Transcending politics.. The Herald Sun reports that local councils are spending money on Aboriginal Welcome-to-Country ceremonies amid claims by a tribal elder that some costs are extravagant. Some councils have even signed annual agreements with these indigenous groups. According to documents released under Freedom of Information laws, Moreland, Port Phillip and Yarra councils have each paid about $22,000 of ratepayers’ funds on ceremonies in the last two years. Lord mayor Robert Doyle faces an uncomfortable pre-poll rebellion over his bid to appoint former politicians, including ex-Labor premier John Brumby, to the board of waste and cleaning company Citywide, which is owned by the Town Hall. According to The Age, Mark Birrell, a former minister in Jeff Kennett’s cabinet, is also among the list of names proposed for appointment to directorships, which attract up to $125,000 (for the chairing role) per year. Since its establishment in 1995, Citywide has grown into a company with turnover of about $250 million and more than 1,000 employees. It has turned record profits every year since its founding, and has waste, cleaning and park management contracts across the country. Super bills Funds investigation Country councils have started deferring projects and cutting budgets for roads, bridges and other assets, so as to meet a shock superannuation bill of more than $500 million, which is now facing councils, water authorities and other agencies. According to The Age, the impact of the bills will be particularly sharp on financially squeezed country councils, which have smaller populations and budgets, but must maintain vast networks of roads, buildings and other assets. Small country councils that have recently battled costly drought and floods in northern Victoria are contemplating cuts to roads and other capital spending – as well as taking out big loans to meet their shortfall – but are reluctant to increase their rates. According to The Age, a Moonee Valley councillor faces jail and hefty fines after being summonsed to appear in court to face a charge that he misused his position to obtain an advantage. Councillor Paul Giuliano was summonsed last week by the Victorian Local Government Investigations and Compliance Inspectorate after a long investigation. Cr Giuliano is alleged to have misused his position as a councillor to obtain an advantage for then council chief executive, Rasiah Dev, in the amount of $38,615. Welcome Next The Ombudsman is investigating links between Darebin Council and state and federal politicians, council planning decisions and grants and is expected to deliver a report on the council before October’s council elections. Some at the council are concerned about whether councillors have made clear all links to community groups when approving grants. The Brumby Labor government sacked Brimbank Council in September 2009 after a second investigation was critical of the council. The Victorian government has Garbage plan weighed up Hobsons Bay Council will consider charging ratepayers for each kilogram of rubbish that they produce. A feasibility study is recommended under a five-year waste and litter management plan, one which has been approved by Hobsons Bay councillors. According to the Herald Sun, the Municipal Association of Victoria president, Cr Bill McArthur, said it was a novel idea as councils moved to improve waste management. But the Keep Australia Beautiful national executive officer, Peter McLean, said that some people could put their rubbish into their neighbours’ bins to avoid paying more, and that others might dispute the weight of their rubbish. 17 Weed The Zoo A new book, 150 Years: Melbourne Zoo, details how the zoo was built in 1862 on 22 hectares by the Acclimatisation Society of Victoria, and is on sale from zoo locations. Hence the 50 or so elephants standing in the streets of the City. Puffing away It has been 50 years since Puffing Billy reopened between Belgrave and Menzies Creek, after an outpouring of support in 1954 saw it reopen in 1962. Now, that was a community fight. Open house The newly revamped Hamer Hall helped slash open house Melbourne attendance records, as almost 135,000 visitors explored the Hall and surrounding buildings and spaces, which opened in late July. Open House Melbourne has grown every year since launching in 2008, with 30,000 visitors to eight CBD buildings. Spokesman Robert LaRocca said that people eager to explore the city’s architecture helped the event to break last year’s record of 106,000 visitors. Gardens of Melbourne Melbourne’s CBD will be transformed into an urban sky-top oasis under a plan to bring trees and rooftop gardens to the city. Town Hall plans a green revolution under a 20-year blueprint to fight climate change, with predictions the inner-city population could more than double to 208,000 residents. Melbourne City Council’s urban forest plan calls for more trees in streets and plazas, an expansion of rooftop gardens and the greening of walls and balconies. Under the plan, the city’s green canopy cover would rise from 22 per cent of public areas to 40 per cent by 2040. But a report to be considered at council says that many of the city’s 60,000 council-owned trees are dying, and that century-old landscapes are struggling to adapt to the changing climate. Letter from Melbourne Media, Multimedia & IT The Drive seat New 3AW Drive host Tom Elliott has promised to listen to his audience after replacing Derryn Hinch. The son of businessman John Elliott, Mr Elliott also said he would let his Liberal Party membership lapse. Planning. Building North Melbourne super complex The Age reported that Victoria’s Planning Minister Matthew Guy has approved a proposal from the supermarket Woolworths to build the controversial apartment and retail complex in Canning Street, North Melbourne. This development comprises 300 apartments and the 4,300-squaremetre Woolworths supermarket. Yet the Melbourne City Council, local residents, and the North Melbourne Football Club all object to the Canning Street plan. The council vows to take the matter to the state planning tribunal, VCAT. Plans being finessed Space for God According to The Age, Planning Minister Matthew Guy has announced that a prime government-owned site in Docklands will be provided for a place of worship. The government said that the new place of worship would be located on a 5,525-sqmetre site on the Footscray Road-Little Docklands Drive intersection, with work to be under way by 2015. The place of worship could be one religious organisation or multi-denominational. Simpler laws .... The Victorian director of the Property Council of Australia, Jennifer Cunich, said that the government’s proposed planning zones would re-energise Melbourne and breathe new life in Victoria’s other retail and commercial hubs. She also said that reducing excess planning regulations would help revitalise Victoria’s commercial, industrial and retail dead zones, thus freeing up development opportunity. In The Age, the Victorian Employers’ Chamber of Commerce and Industry chief executive, Mark Stone, said that the planning reforms simplified arrangements and allowed a broader range of activities to be considered in the planning process. This was supported by the Master Builders Association, which said that the reforms would create greater planning certainty and thus foster growth and jobs. Opening up According to the Financial Review, state developer Places Victoria (the former VicUrban) has selected 28 potential private sector partners to join a delivery panel to help develop 690 hectares of land at three locations in Aurora, Officer and Craigieburn. Chief executive Craig Sangster: ‘it’s a huge opportunity for the private sector to come in and access land that it previously had not an opportunity on’. Panel members were culled from a list of 42 submissions after 168 registrations of interest. The panel was created as the authority shifted its focus from Melbourne’s Greenfields market to the urban in-fill market. According to The Age, the Hotel Windsor’s owner has won an urgent VCAT hearing as it seeks to overturn Planning Minister Matthew Guy’s refusal to allow the delay of its controversial redevelopment. Adi Halim – a director of the hotel’s owner, the Halim Group – said that Mr Guy’s refusal to grant an extension was ‘clearly aimed’ at halting the Windsor’s $285-million, 26-storey redevelopment. Under the current permit, which was granted by the previous Labor government, work on the plan must start by November. The hotel owner states that the project was delayed by a year while it waited for heritage approval, and that now it deserves a permit extension. If work was rushed to meet the current deadline, Mr Halim said that he would have to close the hotel and cancel thousands of roomnights of bookings. Flinders Street Design The Flinders Street Station design competition, with a prize of $1 million, has attracted more than 100 international and local architects and friends. This competition closed on 1 August. Industry insiders say that interest in the competition has been enthusiastic, despite the complexities of the station, the fact that the state government is yet to commit itself to any funding of the redevelopment, and many entrants have needed to find ways to pay in part for the final project. Swinburne development Prahran MP Clem Newton-Brown has ruled out/is keen to discourage a plan by Swinburne University to convert its Prahran campus into apartments, so as to fund a new building at another site. had until 19 August to begin work, or else the permit would lapse. Last month, the developers became concerned that the Minister would not make a decision in time and rushed for an urgent hearing at VCAT. The VCAT deputy president Helen Gibson and member Ian Potts said that Guy had been supplied with reasonable time to make a decision. Sky is the limit The Herald Sun reports that the 71-storey tower in Queensbridge Street will become Melbourne’s fourth tallest building after approval from planning Minister Matthew Guy. It will stand between the recently approved 276-metre Queensbridge Tower and the Prima Pearl Tower, which stands at 255 metres. The 205-metre Freshwater Place and the 297-metre Eureka Tower stand close by. The state government is drawing up plans for a ‘Grand CBD’ five times larger than the existing boundaries, with the next generation of tallest buildings in Docklands and Fishermans Bend. However some city dwellers have been critical of the proposals, which have cost many of them their views and given them street-level crowds and winds. Despite the Melbourne City Council having planning control of the Southbank, skyscraper proposals fall under the jurisdiction of the Planning Minister. Inner-city Choice More than 10 per cent of those new homes approved in Victoria in the past year will be built in the City of Melbourne, as developers switch gears to meet demand in the area of inner-city living. The Age reports that the Australian Bureau of Statistics shows that the past two years, approvals for new homes in Melbourne’s outer fringe plunged 25 per cent. Yet approvals within inner-city Melbourne have almost doubled. Green wedge concern According to the Herald Sun, the family of former premier Sir Rupert Hamer say that the architect of Melbourne’s green wedges would be horrified to see what his party was now doing to the ‘lungs of the city’. Sir Rupert’s widow, Lady April Hamer, was recently appointed patron of the Green Wedge Coalition to fight plans to open up sections of the protected spaces. Parks/tourism balance Slow winds The Herald Sun reports that the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal issued stern words to Matthew Guy, regarding his delayed decision, as Planning Minister, on the proposed wind farm made famous by the orange-bellied parrot. The developers on the Bald Hills wind farm in South Gippsland were waiting on final approvals by Guy before beginning work on the project. Under the planning permit, the first issued eight years ago, the developers 18 Low-rise hotels and jetties will be among the private tourism developments allowed in Victoria’s national parks. According to The Age, in response to a longawaited tourism inquiry, the Victorian state government has paved the way for private investment in national parks, with Treasurer Kim Wells saying that the changes brought Victoria into line with other states and territories, except for the ACT. The private sector is now being encouraged to put forward ‘sensitive and Letter from Melbourne sensible’ tourism proposals in parks. If environmental conditions are met, leases of up to 99 years will be granted. Building auditor The Building Commission is Victoria’s peak building authority with a mandate to regulate and lead the industry. The commission has been seeking an Audit Committee Member. Applications closed at the end of August. Places Victoria Peter Clark has stood down as chairman of Places Victoria pending a review by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission. According to The Age, another member of the urban renewal authority Places Victoria is in the spotlight over the collapse of a property empire. Lorna Gelbert, a partner at law firm Madgwicks, was legal adviser to the company behind the Prime Retirement and Aged Care Property Trust, which failed in October 2010 after taking $550 million from investors. A third Places Victoria board member, acting chairman Ken Fehily, also has a connection to Prime Trust, through tax advice which he gave to the company that controlled it, namely Australian Property Custodian Holdings. ASIC alleges the directors made improper use of their position when approving a fee to Mr Bill Lewski. Yarra development Planning Minister Matthew Guy has conceded that the Yarra River is at risk of encroachment, and requires new rules to limit ‘over-development’ and inconsistent planning decisions along its edge. According to The Age, Boroondara mayor Heinz Kreutz said that his council had been lobbying the government for ‘greater controls and more consistent controls’ for some time. ‘Mandatory controls provide the certainty that residents want,’ Mr Kreutz said. Such mandated stipulations would also leave fewer council rulings open to being overturned in the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal. The government is looking at introducing the tighter regulations as part of its metropolitan planning strategy, which is being developed to guide growth across the city over the next 30 to 40 years. Sport Sport increases injuries The Age reports that hundreds of Victorians are dying or sustaining life-threatening industries by taking part in community sport, in particular cycling, football and motorsports. Monash University has released a study of major trauma in sport finding that during the six-year period between 2001 and 2007, 218 people died while participating in sport – including onroad cycling – and over 1,000 sustained major trauma that did not kill them. Maybe its back to the couch! (That’s the editor’s comment!) Running red lights The Age reported that almost 40 per cent of Melbourne cyclists admit to sometimes illegally riding through red lights, leading to calls for better strategies and more bikefocused infrastructure to reduce risky riding. site preparation works, and services infrastructure. Meanwhile, Arup Pty Ltd has been engaged to provide maritime engineering consulting services for the project’s extensive maritime works. The maritime program includes re-engineering the existing wharves at Webb Dock East, dredging and the design of a new 920-metre wharf for the port’s automotive trade which will be consolidated into a new world class facility at Webb Dock West. Expression of interest The Department of Transport is now seeking expressions of interest from appropriately qualified individuals who wish to be considered for approval by the Minister for Ports for the purpose of auditing port management plans. Approved auditors must have experience in risk management, environmental management and an understanding of port activities. Applications, which had to be in PDF format and e-mailed by PDF, were due on 31 August, to [email protected]. gov.au. Bay West Race fixing According to The Age, some of Australia’s top jockeys are being ordered to answer questions about their knowledge of suspected race-fixing as part of an inquiry launched by racing stewards this week. The inquiry was initiated by Racing Victoria chief investigator Dayle Brown and chief steward Terry Bailey, but it will be undertaken by an independent panel, because of these officials’ involvement in overlapping inquiries. Police intelligence An inquiry into race-fixing in Victoria is expected to lead to new laws to improve co-operation between police and racing authorities seeking to stamp out corruption. Announcing the 25-day inquiry, Racing Integrity Commissioner Sal Perna said his probe might result in recommendations to the state government, to enable racing stewards to receive information from police, and to allow Racing Victoria to act on unlicensed people suspected of unusual betting activity. Transport - Ports For example Webb underway The plan to build three luxury townhouses metres from the Yarra, on a picturesque spot at 12 Coppin Grove in Hawthorn, has angered residents, councils and Melbourne Water, with many people being concerned it could set a precedent for development on the river. Port of Melbourne Corporation’s $1.6 billion redevelopment of Webb Dock is advancing, with the awarding of civil and maritime design contracts to two consultants who will be responsible for the delivery of detailed designs for the project’s internal roads, services infrastructure, interface buffers and maritime engineering services. The contract for civil engineering design services was awarded to Aurecon Australia Pty Limited. The scope of the civil works includes detailed design of internal roads, interface buffers, 19 A confidential Department of Transport briefing urges the government to investigate a ‘Bay West’ option that would likely involve a new port between Point Wilson, near Geelong, and Werribee South. According to The Age, the briefing, obtained under Freedom of Information laws, concludes that the Bay West site offers ‘significant potential advantages’, including the ample availability of suitable land, ‘almost unlimited potential berth capacity’ and close proximity to Avalon Airport and key road and rail connections serving the city, regional areas and southeast Australia. Transport - Air Airport plans According to a report in The Age, drivers won’t be able to drop passengers off at the front doors of Melbourne Airport under a far-reaching airport development plan. Instead, a new and elevated road would be built to funnel airport traffic into a multistorey, multi-modal transport hub situated further away from the terminal. Covered pedestrian fly-overs would bridge the new transport hub and the terminal buildings, but such developments would mean a longer walk for passengers and their bags after being dropped off. The changes, which are only at the concept stage, are designed to alleviate traffic congestion and the current forecourt clash between cars and pedestrians on zebra crossings. The proposed development is part of the next airport master plan, which will open for public comment early next year before it is submitted to the federal government for approval. Letter from Melbourne Transport - Rail 228.9 million in 2010 to 2011. Gippsland train services Avalon link Recently the federal advisory agency Infrastructure Australia rejected Victoria’s request to finance a study into the Avalon rail link. Curtin University Prof Peter Newman said that ‘it doesn’t seem to have a strategic value at all.’ Money on the way According to The Age, Melbourne’s $30 billion rail crossing headache could be solved by using a funding cocktail of property levies, special rates and private sector concessions and tolls. A report on funding options, titled Moving Melbourne, says that for level crossings, the options could include a levy on all properties close to a particular project, in recognition of the rise in their land value, as well as the sale of development rights around the project, or a toll on the new overpass. Melbourne has more level crossings than any other Australian city, and in peak times boom gates have blocked some major arterial roads for up to 45 minutes or an hour. Off trains onto buses According to The Age, passenger trips on Melbourne trains dropped by almost 7 million last financial year, but the decline in rail patronage was more than matched by increases in tram and bus trips. Public Transport Victoria chief Ian Dobbs blamed a number of factors for the decline, including ‘lower retail sales in the city, the broader impact of a downturn in the global economy, decline in petrol prices and the highly publicised period of poor performance in April 2011, when Metro’s punctuality fell to just 76 per cent - the lowest level in decades.’ Doncaster The Age reported that a railway to Doncaster could be built for $840 million and be paid for using taxes raised from the higher property values which it would generate. A report, jointly written by transport experts from Curtin University and RMIT University, as well as from global engineering firm Arup, has also found that the railway line transport about 100,000 passengers a day if it was linked to the proposed Melbourne Metro rail tunnel, at the added cost of $300 million. Less seats More feet Melbourne Metro confirmed that 58 trains would lose seats to create more standing room. More handles will be installed, to assist people to remain upright during the long ride home. Public Transport Victoria found patronage has increased 94 per cent, from 118 million in 1998 to 1999 to Despite being the most congested train line in Melbourne, Gippsland rail passengers would be forced to catch Metro trains between Pakenham and the city, under a plan to relieve congestion on the busy Dandenong line. All V/Line trains from Traralgon and Bairnsdale would terminate at Pakenham Station, on Melbourne’s eastern fringe. The plan, which is being considered by Public Transport Victoria, would require at least two million more passengers a year to squeeze onto Pakenham trains. This would also make Gippsland rail users the only people in the state required to switch from V/Line to Metro to reach the city. Myki error The Herald Sun reported that commuters have been refunded more than $340,000 after being overcharged by the myki ticketing system. Another $284,000 was handed back to thousands of commuters, due to either faulty equipment or travellers forgetting to ‘touch off.’ The Transport Ticketing Authority and TTA boss Bernie Carolan said that refunds were a tiny percentage of the $282 million collected by myki. Myki (2) More than 13,400 commuters have lodged complaints about the myki ticketing system this year. According to the Herald Sun, complaints included overcharging, an inability to top up cards, faulty myki cards, and card readers that didn’t work. In total, 37,606 Victorians have complained about myki since 2010. Myki (3) The Age reports that Myki vending machines could compromise the credit card security of thousands of public transport users because of the flaw in how the machines issue receipts. Passengers who declined a printed receipt after topping up at the vending machine with a credit card sometimes had one automatically issued anyway, and often they unwittingly left behind a receipt that included their full name, nine digits of their credit card and a credit card expiry date. The information on the receipts exceeds the guidelines of the Australian Securities and Investment Commission and credit card companies, put in place to minimise the risk of unauthorised transactions. The Transport Ticketing Authority admitted yesterday that the manner in which myki vending machines issue receipts is flawed, and says that it is working to fix the problem. Myki (4) Transport Ticketing 20 Authority chief executive Bernie Carolan said the authority and the former government should have looked more closely at the problems other systems had struck. ‘There wasn’t so much effort, with hindsight, in taking jurisdictional soundings … either elsewhere in Australia or overseas to canvass the pitfalls of implementing a new smartcard system,’ Mr Carolan told a hearing at State Parliament. It was little understood when myki developer Kamco was awarded the $500 million contract to roll out the system in 2005 that the project would primarily be ‘a software exercise’. Myki (5) In a report tabled in State Parliament recently, outgoing Auditor-General Des Pearson said that the state would have to cover an estimated $350 million shortfall in public transport revenue caused by fare evasion since myki was introduced in 2009. According to The Age, Pearson also lashed the Department of Transport for its failure to react to the Myki-led spike in fare evasion. ‘The gradual rise in fare evasion before the end of 2009, the imminent introduction of Myki and the suspension of revenue risk sharing should have triggered greater departmental oversight’. Patrolling trains The Age reports that about a fifth of Melburnians believe that armed guards deployed at railway stations should also patrol the trains to boost safety across the network. The government has rejected this move, saying that there are already enough transit police. While the survey showed that making the system safer topped respondents’ lists of the most important things the protective services officers could do, other areas of concern included dealing with anti-social behaviour and patrolling of trains. There were 36 reported robberies and 152 assaults on Victorian trains in the 2010-11 financial year. Report The Auditor-General has released a 30page report entitled Fare Evasion on Public Transport, www.audit.vic.gov.au. Subscribers can always call Letter From Melbourne, 9654 1300 if they need a Transport - Road hard copy of any report mentioned in this publication, if it makes something easier. Cycling budget According to a report in the The Age, bicycle groups have said that the gaps in Melbourne cycling network is crucial if it’s to become the ‘bike city’ that the government said it was a year ago. Letter from Melbourne the Melbourne City Council. Additionally about 70 cars a month are towed from clear ways in King and Spencer streets, with an estimated $31,000 in fines and fees being paid to free impounded vehicles. Cycling advocates continue to question the government’s commitment, after the number of infrastructure projects which it planned to fund in 2012-13 was slashed from 22 the previous year to four. Cyclists open up Congestion tax Feral cabbies According to The Age, 40 per cent of Melbourne cyclists admit to sometimes riding through red lights, leading to calls for better strategies and more bike-focused infrastructure to reduce risky riding. In an online survey of 2,061 Melbourne cyclists by the Monash University Accident Research Centre, 37.3 per cent of respondents said they rode through red lights on occasions. The most common reason given was to make a left turn, followed by an inability to trigger a change in a traffic light from red to green (as opposed to cars, which can trigger just such a change, when they cross electronic sensors beneath the road surface). According to The Age, a congestion tax to discourage motorists from driving at peak times could be introduced under a controversial plan flagged by the federal government’s chief infrastructure adviser. Infrastructure Australia chairman Sir Rod Eddington said it was time for ‘mature and dispassionate’ discussion over a new system of road charges to cut congestion and help pay for major transport projects. ‘Transport shortfalls across the freight and passenger networks are imposing substantial productivity constraints on our nation,’ Sir Rod told the Infrastructure Partnerships Australia conference. He said roads were often treated as free goods, because the ‘current opaque charging structure’ clouded the actual cost of using them. The paper also reported that only a handful of cities – including London, Singapore and Stockholm – impose so-called congestion taxes. Whilst the application of such taxes varies, the theory remains that tolls are raised or lowered depending on the time of day, location and congestion. More than 2000 complaints were lodged with the Victorian Taxi Directorate in the last financial year. The most common complaints were of fare refusal, unprofessional behaviour, driving infractions and overcharging. According to the Herald Sun, the figures also revealed that almost three cab drivers a month were removed from service for crimes of rape, making threats to kill, assault and child pornography. Councils respond Bike lanes across Melbourne are being redesigned to protect cyclists from ‘dooring’. Traffic engineers on several councils are planning to put buffer zones between parked cars and bike lanes, to move riders away from car doors. According to The Age, Boroondarra and Stonnington councils are also believed to be pushing for the traditional greenpainted bike lanes to be narrowed and moved away from parked cars on roads, including Chapel Street and Glenferrie Road, notorious for so-called ‘dooring’ incidents. Plans have included a thick white line aimed at keeping parked cars as close as possible to the kerb, and an unpainted strip between the white line and green bike lane, where cyclists should not ride. No light no light Cyclists riding without bike lights are three times more likely to be seriously injured in a crash than those who are lit up, according to a report in The Age. The statistics are contained in a 12-month study of 158 cyclists who were admitted to hospitals in December 2010 and November 2011. Parking tax According to the Herald Sun, the controversial congestion levy has barely altered motorist behaviour, despite sucking $250 million into state coffers. The car-park tax — designed to deter drivers who arrive in peak hour and stay all day — requires a radical overhaul to achieve its aims, university researchers say. The study found the tax had backfired, with some car-park operators slugging short-stay diners and shoppers, instead of passing the levy to early-bird and allday customers. The charge on about 50,000 city car spaces was introduced by the Brumby government in 2006, in the hope that it would divert drivers to public transport or car pools. Country taxis The Herald Sun reports that after a draft recommendation from the cells taxi enquiring the cost benefit analysis, the Victorian taxi directorate has suspended the compulsory installation of cameras in towns with 10 or more taxis. Security cameras remain compulsory in all taxis in Melbourne, Geelong, Ballarat and Bendigo. The directorate announced that it would carry out spot checks of taxis in an effort to ensure that the $2,800 devices worked. At risk Safety slogan Victoria is getting a new vehicle number plate slogan – ‘Stay alert stay alive’, a slogan designed to help cut the road toll. The new plates will have the same colour scheme as the current plates. Violence fix Running trains and trams later on weekends could reportedly help stem the tide of drunken bashings in the CBD. The Age reported Superintendent Rod Wilson as urging the state government to consider a trial running public transport until 3AM or 4AM, to cope with some of the 380,000 people in the city each night on weekends. Boom gates Recently The Age reported that a multimillion-dollar plan to build an underpass beneath the New Street railway crossing in Brighton was quietly abandoned by the Victorian government. Instead, the government decided to install new automated boom gates. The Herald Sun reported that local MP Louise Asher revealed that work on the new electronic gates at Brighton would begin within six months. Hospital parking According to the Herald Sun, the cluster of hospitals off Victoria Parade and Albert Street, East Melbourne is the hardest-hit clearway zone around Melbourne, reaping $44,000 a month in fines and penalties for 21 The Age reports that new problems have emerged with Yarra Trams’ troubled first fleet of low-floor trams. A damning ergonomic report found that they sway so heavily at speeds above 25 kilometres per hour, that the safety of drivers and passengers is at risk. Engineer Mark Dohrmann observed that the lateral sway was likely to have contributed to a number of workplace injuries in the past decade. It was also found that the trams snaked at the rear, potentially putting passengers at risk. West Gate Bridge The 10-kilometre WestLink project, which included a tunnel linking the Port of Melbourne to West Footscray, has been overtaken by research on a tunnel connecting the Tullamarine and the Eastern freeways. Plans for a second river crossing to take the traffic burden off the West Gate Bridge have also been sidelined. Yarra community representative Bruce Light warned the West would be stuck with trucks, worsening congestion and the bridge plagued by jams. Peninsula Link It seems that motorists face a longer wait to use the troubled Peninsula Link, as questions over financial reporting irregularities engulf the company building the major state project. According to the Herald Sun, property giant Lend Lease this week took control of subsidiary Abigroup after discovering discrepancies Letter from Melbourne in accounting for two projects, including the $655- million Peninsula Link. Four senior executives were stood aside on Monday and it is understood there are concerns over whether the December 2012 handover timeline set by that team will be met. Ancient river systems In early August, underground surveys began, with the aim of finding any ancient river systems that could affect progress on the proposed $5 billion-dollar east-west Tunnel. The gravity surveys are designed to measure tiny distortions in the Earth’s gravitational field caused by changes in soil and rock conditions deep underground. The test aims to identify hidden dangers from cavities that could collapse during construction or unexpected quarter leakages. These tests will be continue over the coming weeks at hundreds of locations in Collingwood, Clifton Hill, Fitzroy and Carlton. East-West Road Link The Herald Sun reports the new underground rail tunnel, the East-West Road Link, is at the top of the Victorian government’s priority list. Billions of dollars worth of major infrastructure projects are on the wish list of federal financing. The government’s 2012 submission to Infrastructure Australia also includes the Port of Hastings development and expansion of the Dandenong railway Utilities line. The government has also finished its business case the Melbourne Metro rail tunnel from Footscray to South Yarra. Other projects include the Dandenong Rail Capacity Program, the M80 Ring-Road Upgrade, the Western Interstate Freight Terminal, and the Melbourne Metro Tunnel. Wettest July According to the Herald Sun, this was the wettest July in five years and topped various water shortages. Melbourne Water supply manager John Woodland said that storages had not been so high in Melbourne since December 1997. Overcharged The Age reported the consumers who were overcharged a total of $230 million by Melbourne Water, but who are no longer serviced by one of Melbourne’s three water retailers, will be able to apply for a refund. Society At last According to The Age, water from Victoria’s $5.7 billion desalination plant will begin trickling into Melbourne’s supply in midSeptember, with quality tests under way. A Royal Cup? According to the Herald Sun, it appears likely that Prince Charles and Princess Camilla will attend this year’s Melbourne Cup, amongst other royal duties. Fed up? Barry Humphries, in town for his Dame Edna farewell show, recently labelled Federation Square as ‘frog spawn’, and that getting used to it was like getting used to leprosy. However one of its architects Vale said he wasn’t fazed by the attacks – he’s used to them. Historic church Victorian parliamentarian and water minister Peter Walsh recently bought St Mary’s Church in the small township of Kingower, to preserve the history of both his family and the district. The Age reported that his great-great-grandfather, the Rev William Hall, founded the church in 1871. Richard Francis Baillieu, a cousin of the premier, 57. Dr Stuart Henry Bartle. Ken Begbie, Marionette Master. Sidney Dean Boxall, 95. Alexander Brock, former member of the Doreen Fire Brigade. Jan Brownrigg, former Assistant Secretary of the Australian Nursing Federation (Vic). Clive Bunston, former long serving Vice-Principal at Kingswood College. Max Bygraves, 89, veteran singer and comedian. Daryl Cotton, 62, pop star, actor and TV host. Adam Cullen. Archibald prize-winning artist and one of Melbourne’s best-known contemporary artists. David James Bremner, former executive director of the Victorian Bar. Burtta Cheney MBE, life Member at Golf Victoria. Br Robert Costello-Sparta. 22 Christian Brother. Archibald Paterson Crow, Scotch College old boy and later its school chaplain. Pamela Helen Darling OAM, 90. Raymond Thomas Davie, 91, journalist at The Age. Mary Elizabeth Dossetor OAM. Chris Duffy, 63. Esme Weldon Dunell MBE, 92. Nurse and administrator. Lesley Edna Doris Fairbairn, 89. Nance Mary Featherstone, 90. Frank Fisher. Ronald Foskett. Melbourne Legacy. Clarence Charles Gardner, 97, former 460 Squadron Leader, RAAF. Michael Stephen Fynn. Dudley James Gay, 91. Mary Catherine Gleeson. Dr Alan James Goble OAM, 87, cardiologist and rehabilitation pioneer. Peter Ronald Gunnerson, 59. Jonathan David Hardy, 71, actor, writer, director. John Henry Lidstone Holberton, international banker and businessman, 9o. Geoffrey Hughes, 68, British television actor, famous for Coronation St and Keeping up Appearances. Robert Hughes, 74, art critic and historian. Irving David Saulwick, 82. For 23 years, he conducted the Saulwick poll which was published in The Age and in The Sydney Morning Herald. It was one of the ‘big four’ media-connected public opinion polls of that time, the others being AGB, Morgan Gallop and Newspoll. Samuel Thomas Murray Johnstone, 87, sportsman and scientist and former Caulfield Grammarian. Jack Keating, former employee of the Australian Electrical Union and teacher. Richard Kingsland AO CBE DFC, 95. Anastasia Mallos, 79, cookbook author. Robert Maple-Brown, 72, respected boutique funds manager. Gary McAllister, former teacher at Xavier College. John McCarthy, 22, Port Adelaide and Collingwood footballer. Howard Winfrey McCorkell. James Swan McDonald, 68. Kevin Alexander McDonald, 87. Dr Damian John McMahon. Peter Reginald McNamara. Reginald Michael Montgomery, 91. Merv Neagle, 54, former Essendon footballer. Barbara Nettlefold, 93. Peter Michael Nickolls. W. Bruce Nixon, 78, scholar, pastor, historian, publisher and patron of the fine arts. Peter Nolan, former ACTU Secretary. Lady North, a beautiful and elegant lady of racing. Dr Bruce Osborne, 61, psychiatrist, general practitioner and administrator. Peggy Perkin, friend of Australian journalism. Joan Pritchard (née Buckingham), 87. Andrew Preston Ringin, 93, former RAAF. Bill Sandilands, former curator and caretaker at Carey Grammar. Craig Seymour, music director, conductor. Clyde Simpson, 50 years in radio. Ralph Slatyer, 83. Former first chief scientist and former ambassador to UNESCO. Anthony Carroll Smith, 69. Ron Taylor, 78, marine conservation pioneer. John Treloar AM, athlete, businessman. Denis Ashton Warner OBE CMG, 94, war correspondent, author and editor. George William Westlake, AM, 84, cardio-thoracic surgeon. Campbell Riding Whalley, 75, game warden and teacher. Sr Ruth Winship, former Principal at Loreto Mandeville Hall. Need some advice to achieve a successful government outcome? AFFAIRS OF STATE Strategic Advice. Successful Outcomes. Established in 1993, Affairs of State has built a strong matrix of client services including government relations, mentoring, facilitation and research. Our wideranging network can connect you to the decision-makers. If you have an issue, want to make new connections, or have an specific matter resolved - we can help. We know the players. We know the pitfalls. We know how to plan. We know how to succeed. AFFAIRS OF STATE 14 Collins Street, Melbourne, Vic 3000 | P: (03) 9654 1300 F: (03) 9654 1165 | E: [email protected] | W: www.affairs.com.au Letter from Melbourne THE MINISTER The Hon. Robert Maclellan AM has had a distinguished career in state government as a cabinet minister with portfolios in transport, industrial relations and planning. THE DEPARTMENTAL HEAD Dr David Wilson, geographer and engineer, has held executive positions in the Victorian Government and the private sector. He is a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne. THE BUREAUCRAT Doug Connell is a project management and logistics expert who has held senior positions in industry, the Port of Melbourne, the Department of Transport and Australia Post. THE LOBBYIST Alistair Urquhart is a respected public affairs professional with over 20 years experience in Australia and overseas. 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The course includes a VIP tour of Parliament House, full catering courtesy of the Hotel Windsor, a workbook, and a package of essential lobbying materials valued at $200. 24 Next Event: Please call us for more information on 03 9654 1300 Venue: The Hotel Windsor, Spring Street, Melbourne For a free brochure and general enquries please contact: Camilla Orr-Thomson Affairs of State Level 2, 14 Collins Street, Melbourne VIC 3000 P: 03 9654 1300 F: 03 9654 1165 E: [email protected]