SOLAR POWERED SAVINGS FOR HEALTH FACILITIES

Health facilities across NSW will save on electricity bills and reduce their carbon footprint under a $20 million NSW Government initiative for energy saving projects.
Thirty-seven health facilities statewide are now fitted with solar panels under the $5.5 million NSW Health Solar Program, and a further eight hospitals and nine ambulance stations are set to reap savings and efficiencies through a $14.5 million expanded solar upgrade program.
Energy Minister Matt Kean said the NSW Government’s $20 million investment is fast-tracking sustainable, modern and affordable energy generation for health facilities in NSW.
“Installing solar on our hospitals and ambulance sites is a no brainer – the buildings have big rooftops that are perfect for solar installations,” Mr Kean said.
“Solar will help our hospitals to save money on their energy bills and lower their carbon footprint.”
Under the $5.5 million NSW Health Solar Program, solar panel installations have now been rolled out at hospitals, Multipurpose Services, ambulance stations and health facility carparks across the state. The project is expected to save more than $500,000 in energy bills.
The NSW Government’s investment of $14.5 million for energy saving projects and large-scale solar upgrades at eight hospitals across four Local Health Districts and nine ambulance stations is expected to save $2.6 million in energy bills and reduce emissions by around 9,445 tonnes CO2e per year.
Mr Hazzard said: “More than two thirds of the solar panels have been installed at rural and regional health facilities, including hospitals recently opened at Macksville and Mudgee – projects that were fast-tracked in response to COVID-19.
“Our world-leading healthcare system never sleeps, operating 24/7 right across the State, so this funding boost will help us substantially reduce our greenhouse gas emissions.
“By making our health facilities more energy-efficient, these projects will also help keep costs down, and free up funds that can be invested back into our health system.”
The projects are expected to be completed by June 2021.
The NSW Government has invested $10 billion on health infrastructure since 2011, with $10.1 billion more committed over the four years from 2019-20, including more than $900 million for rural and regional areas in 2019-20.
Sites for the NSW Health Solar Program

Health facility Local Health District/Health Entity
Artarmon NSW Ambulance Superstation NSW Ambulance
Bankstown NSW Ambulance Superstation NSW Ambulance
Barham MPS Murrumbidgee LHD
Birmingham Gardens NSW Ambulance Station NSW Ambulance
Blacktown NSW Ambulance Superstation NSW Ambulance
Braidwood MPS Southern NSW LHD
Bungendore NSW Ambulance Station NSW Ambulance
Campbelltown Hospital Carpark South Western Sydney LHD
Caringbah NSW Ambulance Superstation NSW Ambulance
Cobar Hospital Western NSW LHD
Coffs Harbour Hospital Carpark Mid North Coast LHD
Cowra NSW Ambulance Station NSW Ambulance
Culairn MPS Murrumbidgee LHD
Goulburn NSW Ambulance Station NSW Ambulance
Grenfell NSW Ambulance Station NSW Ambulance
Griffith Hospital Murrumbidgee LHD
Haberfield NSW Ambulance Superstation NSW Ambulance
Hamlyn Terrace NSW Ambulance Station NSW Ambulance
Holbrook Hospital Murrumbidgee LHD
Kogarah NSW Ambulance Superstation NSW Ambulance
Liverpool NSW Ambulance Superstation NSW Ambulance
Macksville Hospital Mid North Coast LHD
Mona-Vale Hospital Northern Sydney LHD
Mudgee Hospital Western NSW LHD
Murrumburrah-Harden Hospital Murrumbidgee LHD
Murrurundi Hospital Hunter New England LHD
Northmead NSW Ambulance Superstation NSW Ambulance
Penrith NSW Ambulance Superstation NSW Ambulance
Port Macquarie Hospital Carpark Mid North Coast LHD
Pottsville NSW Ambulance Station NSW Ambulance
Rutherford NSW Ambulance Station NSW Ambulance
Tocumwal MPS Murrumbidgee LHD
Toukley NSW Ambulance Station NSW Ambulance
Tumbarumba Hospital Murrumbidgee LHD
Wagga Wagga Hospital Murrumbidgee LHD
Wauchope NSW Ambulance Station NSW Ambulance
Yass NSW Ambulance Station NSW Ambulance

Sites for the $14.5 million energy emission and solar upgrade projects

Local Health District/
Health entity
Description
Nepean Blue Mountains Local Health District Installation of solar photovoltaic (PV) systems and lighting upgrades at Nepean, Blue Mountains and Lithgow Hospitals.
Ambulance NSW Installation of  solar photovoltaic (PV) systems across nine sites across the state.
Hunter New England Local Health District Large-scale solar photovoltaic (PV) generation systems at Armidale, Belmont, Tamworth and Wallsend Hospitals.
Central Coast Local Health District Installation of a 1.166 MWp solar photovoltaic (PV) system at Gosford Hospital.
Western NSW Local Health District Installation of a 395 kWp solar photovoltaic (PV) system at Parkes Hospital.

DEVELOPING AGED CARE TRAINING BUSINESS CASE

The 2020-21 NSW Budget will invest $2.5 million into developing a business case for a TAFE NSW Residential Aged Care Centre of Excellence training facility to put innovation and industry engagement front and centre of the sector.
The business case will assess the establishment of a residential aged care training facility on a TAFE campus to deliver skills training needed to help meet national demand for up to an additional one million aged care workers by 2050.
Treasurer Dominic Perrottet said the centre could be located in either a metropolitan or regional area, depending on opportunities across the State in aged care.
“Today’s announcement is about investigating the options around developing a new specialty aged care facility to deliver quality training to people who want to pursue this rewarding career. The funding committed to this business case will develop the best options on how to deliver such a training centre,” he said.
Minister for Skills and Tertiary Education Geoff Lee said the TAFE NSW Centres of Excellence are game-changers for education and training in NSW.
“These innovative Centres of Excellence will transform the established approach to education by breaking down sectoral divides between VET, higher education and industry to create seamless education pathways, and meet the skills needs of NSW,” Mr Lee said.
“The business case will investigate the development of a Centre of Excellence that will provide training in a range of aged care services, from clinical care to food preparation and wellbeing activities as well as build skills in areas highlighted by the COVID-19 pandemic, including infection control, improved management and leadership skills.”
This investment will allow TAFE NSW to fast-track this initiative and kick off next steps including site selection and industry partnership processes.
The NSW Government will commit further support to aged care by delivering training places to skill people for opportunities in the industry, as part of the 2020-21 NSW Budget.
“An aging population brings work opportunities in the residential aged care sector with TAFE and private providers offering the intensive training needed to set people up for a rewarding career,” Mr Lee said.

FEASIBILITY STUDY FOR PARRAMATTA TO SYDNEY SHARED PATHWAY

The NSW Government today announced a feasibility study into the construction of a new continuous shared pathway, stretching from the Parramatta River to the Sydney Opera House.
Treasurer Dominic Perrottet announced $500,000 would be funded in the 2020-21 NSW Budget to explore the best options for establishing an 80km shared cycle and pedestrian path along the foreshore of the Parramatta River and the inner harbour.
“A pathway along Sydney’s foreshore would link the two centres of Sydney allowing more people to enjoy these jewels of our city and everything in between,” Mr Perrottet said.
“The pandemic has demonstrated the importance of having easy access to the great outdoors, providing quality spaces for people to enjoy and this is an opportunity to revitalise one of our city’s great waterways.
“The study will explore how the shared pathway can link Sydney’s two CBDs while also enabling people to use the pathway to take shorter trips on foot or by bike to shops and services, schools, parks and public transport to create a walking and cycling spine for local communities.”
Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Rob Stokes said if this vision is realised, it would reshape the way millions of Sydneysiders travel along the foreshore.
“The recent Public Spaces Ideas Competition showed there’s a huge public appetite for linear parks that showcase the best of our city,” Mr Stokes said.
“We have a vision to connect Sydney’s stunning harbour and river foreshores and create the types of public spaces and active transport options that this city truly deserves.”
A proposed plan for a shared pathway route along Sydney’s waterfront linking the Opera House and Parramatta’s CBD was presented to the NSW Government by the McKell Institute, an independent public policy institute, last month.
Transport for NSW will investigate:

  • A foreshore loop in the Blackwattle and Rozelle Bay and repairing and reopening the Glebe Island Bridge to become a key walking and cycling link to Sydney CBD;
  • A 10km foreshore loop around Canada Bay;
  • A new Connecting Canada Bay to the Homebush Bay Circuit;
  • Identifying missing links along the foreshore between Parramatta and Sydney.

The McKell Institute’s report estimates the project could generate between 1645 and 3145 jobs.
The NSW Government will invest around $710 million in walking and cycling infrastructure over the next four years bringing the total investment to almost $1.1 billion – the largest in the State’s history.

Labor's push to ban all MPs from accepting commissions from property developers

NSW Labor’s ban on Parliamentary Secretaries and Ministers receiving commissions from property developers has today passed the Lower House.
However, the Labor Leader, Jodi McKay has introduced further legislation to prevent all Members of Parliament from accepting such commissions.
Ms McKay said: “It shocks me that we need to do this. But as we’ve heard, the Premier thinks these payments are acceptable.”
The Independent Commission Against Corruption heard evidence the disgraced Liberal MP Daryl Maguire accepted commissions from property and that the Premier congratulated him with the words: “Congrats!!! That’s great!!! Woo hoo!”
“It’s illegal to receive donations from property developers. It should be illegal for the very same developers to pay politicians commissions.” Ms McKay said.
“We will seek support from the Government and cross bench to amend the Independent Commission Against Corruption Act to ban commissions from property developers for all MPs. They have a job to do. Their job is to represent their community.
“They should not be moonlighting with property developers and earning extra income.”

Premier refuses to support independent funding of ICAC

NSW Labor has condemned the Premier for refusing to support independent funding of the State’s anti-corruption body during Question Time at NSW Parliament.
A week after Gladys Berejiklian gave evidence to the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) about her former partner Daryl Maguire, the Auditor-General raised serious concerns about the financial independence of integrity agencies, including ICAC.
The review found the existing funding arrangements, including the Premier’s ability to restrict access to money, threatens the fairness, impartiality and transparency of:

  • The Independent Commission Against Corruption
  • The NSW Electoral Commission
  • The NSW Ombudsman
  • The Law Enforcement Conduct Commission

It also emerged Ms Berejiklian has rejected three funding requests from ICAC in five years, including during the investigation into Mr Maguire.
The NSW Labor Leader Jodi McKay said independence is more important than ever, given the recent revelations.
“How can ICAC be expected to investigate the Premier, who they rely on for funding?” Ms McKay said.
“Labor has always supported strong integrity agencies that need independent funding. If the Premier fails to act, the Parliament will.
“There are three recommendations. We accept them without hesitation. If the Premier is genuine about fighting corruption, she needs to do the same today.”

Cartel of cover-up: documents shredded, conflict of interest not declared

NSW Labor is demanding the Premier and her Ministers end a culture of cover-up, after a parliamentary inquiry heard documents relating to the approval of grants in the $252 million Stronger Communities Fund were shredded and deleted from a senior staffer’s computer.
Gladys Berejiklian’s senior policy advisor Sarah Lau said the Premier marked documents during the approval process, which Ms Lau later destroyed in the shredder and removed from her computer.
95% of the funds were given to Councils in Coalition-held seats.
The Premier’s former Chief of Staff, Sarah Cruickshank also told the inquiry that Gladys Berejiklian did not declare her relationship with Daryl Maguire when she issued $40,000 in six grants to his Wagga Wagga electorate in 2017 and 2018.
Ms Cruikshank said the Premier should have disclosed the relationship because it was a conflict of interest.
The NSW Labor Leader Jodi McKay said: “The Premier has repeatedly refused to disclose a conflict of interest.
“Gladys Berejiklian didn’t disclose her relationship when handing out thousands of dollars in grants from the Premier’s discretionary fund. She didn’t mention it during a $1.5 million Badgery’s Creek deal that would have cleared her partner Daryl Maguire’s debts.
“This is a breach of the Ministerial Code of Conduct. Senior Ministers also have a responsibility to do their duty under the Code. Right now they’re tolerating bad behaviour.
“It’s a cartel of cover-up from a desperate Government protecting an embattled Premier. And it must stop,” Ms McKay said.
“Gladys Berejiklian is undermining the office of the Premier and the integrity of the NSW Government. The Premier should resign.”

iCare secretly hands millions recruitment firm linked to the Liberal Party

Treasurer Dominic Perrottet’s scandal-ridden agency iCare broke its own procurement rules to award at least $6 million of contracts to Korn Ferry, a recruitment firm closely linked to former NSW Liberal Party Minister and Party Treasurer Robert Webster.
Robert Webster was a senior Minister in the Greiner Government. He also served as the NSW Liberal Party’s Finance Director in 2005. Until earlier this year, Korn Ferry listed Mr Webster as its Senior Client Partner & Head of Asia Pacific Board Services.  Public records show that since 2015 Mr Webster has donated $61,345 to the Federal Liberal Party.
Mr Webster was responsible for recruiting the iCare Board Director that replaced NSW Treasury Secretary Michael Pratt’s after his resignation in 2017.
Korn Ferry is currently searching for three new directors to be appointed next year.
NSW Labor’s Shadow Minister for Finance and Small Business, Daniel Mookhey said iCare’s latest scandal was ’shocking:’
“It’s incredible that iCare would break their own rules to put the former Treasurer of the NSW Liberal Party in-charge of board recruitment,” Mr Mookhey said.
“It’s hard to believe Korn Ferry would have won this tender without their close connection to the Liberal Party.
“Worse – The Treasurer is letting a Liberal-aligned company pick iCare’s new directors despite the cloud of suspicion hanging over their own appointment.”
Last month, NSW Labor exposed iCare for handing $18 million without tender to the IVE Group, another major party donor led by a former NSW Liberal Party President.
Public disclosures show that since 2014 the IVE Group has donated $151,004 to the Liberal Party. Mr Mookhey said:
“iCare has been secretly handing contracts to Liberal-aligned businesses like confetti. It stinks.
“No one can have confidence in iCare’s independence when it so entwined with senior Liberal Party figures and donors.”
iCare provides workers compensation insurance to more than 326,000 businesses. It insures 3.6 million employees. The agency’s investment portfolio is worth $38 billion. The Treasurer created iCare in 2015. It has only ever answered to him.
Under Dominic Perrottet’s stewardship:

  • iCare secretly paid a labour hire company $700,00 to hire a former US Republican Operative to work in Dominic Perotett’s personal office.
  • iCare underpaid 52,000 workers up to $80 million.
  • iCare in February tried to prematurely eject 17,500 workers from the workers compensation system to offset the scheme’s growing losses.
  • iCare secretly tried to cut off payments to thousands of injured workers to make up for years of multi-billion losses in the state’s workers compensation scheme.
  • iCare sought to hike employer premiums by 4% and introduce a ‘gap fee’ for injured workers needing to see a doctor.
  • iCare is under investigation for paying $22 million to insurance brokers in breach of the law.
  • iCare’s CEO resigned after it emerged that iCare handed his wife a contract.
  • iCare’s CEO and another top executive took an undisclosed sponsored trip to Las Vegas paid for by a multi-million contractor to the agency.
  • iCare’s top executives took a 36 foreign trips in four years – ten times more than SIRA, their regulator.
  • iCare faced an ICAC referral for handing an $11 million marketing contract to a company secretly owned by a top executive at the agency.
  • Treasury in September 2019 secretly cancelled an external investigation into probity and governance at iCare after the former CEO complained.
  • The State Insurance Regulatory Authority (SIRA) made referrals about iCare to the Independent Commission Against Corruption for further investigation.
  • A damning independent review found that in 46 percent of claims handled, iCare failed to follow the relevant law.
  • iCare organised with the Treasury a secret $4 billion bailout of the workers compensation fund for police, nurses, prison guards and teachers to stop it from collapsing.
  • The Treasurer was warned in May that iCare was set to lose another $850 million before COVID-19 hit the scheme even harder.
  • iCare racked up underwriting losses totalling $4.54 billion in the past three years.
  • iCare’s $3.9 billion surplus effectively disappeared, before COVID-19 affected investment returns.

Despite this record Mr Perrotett told Parliament that iCare did a ‘superb’ job.
Mr Mookhey said:
“The Treasurer has his head-in-the-sand about the going-ons of his $38 billion agency.
“Sick and injured workers and employers have lost confidence in iCare. The Treasurer needs to go.”

Labor calls for serious and systemic destruction of documents to be investigated

NSW Labor has asked the Information and Privacy Commission to investigate the serious and systematic destruction of records that occurred in the Office of the Premier of NSW regarding the controversial Stronger Communities Fund -Tied Grants program.
Over 95 per cent of the $252 million fund was used for political purposes and awarded to projects in Coalition-held seats before the 2019 NSW State election.
A senior policy adviser to the NSW Premier recently gave evidence that she had shredded the only written records showing the Premier’s approval of $141.8 million of grants funding.
The adviser went on to delete all electronic copies describing the illegal destruction of documents as her ‘normal record management practice.’
NSW Labor Leader Jodi McKay said: “This is a monumental cover-up. Gladys Berejiklian used public money for blatantly political purposes and then her staff destroyed evidence to cover-up the Premier’s involvement in this dodgy scheme.
“Under this Premier’s leadership, NSW is heading back to the bad old days. The public sees rort after rort and cover-up after cover-up but Gladys Berejiklian and her Ministers simply refuse to be held to account.”
Shadow Minister for Local Government Greg Warren said: “I have requested that the Information Commissioner investigate this incident and the serious and systemic breaches of record keeping obligations plaguing the Office of the Premier.
“These were public funds to be spent on local communities – not funds to be used for electioneering purposes by the NSW Liberals and Nationals.
“This is a further erosion of public trust and it leads right to the Premier’s door.”

Labor calls for free preschool to drive economic recovery

NSW Labor is urging the Government to make preschool free for a further 18 months to boost workforce participation and kickstart the State’s economic recovery.
NSW Labor Leader Jodi McKay said free preschool should be included as one of the Government’s key stimulus measures in the upcoming State budget: “Families are struggling. Access to free preschool will ease the pressure on household budgets so kids can stay in vital early learning regardless of their parents’ financial position.
“If the Government backs this initiative they’ll have bipartisan support. Economic recovery and jobs are the most important issues facing NSW,” Ms McKay said.
The Shadow Minister for Early Childhood Learning Jodie Harrison said it’s vital the Government ensures no children fall behind as NSW endures one of the worst economic downturns since the Great depression.
“In the long-term, there’s nothing more important than giving every child in NSW access to quality education. That starts before school. In this recession, with lots of families doing it tough financially, we want to make sure no children miss out.”
The benefits of early childhood education are significant and widespread:

  • There are 5,500 early childhood education services in NSW including more than 750 pre-school services, and of the 400,000 children in services. 45,000 are in pre-school (more than 10%)
  • Early childhood education provides a 1:2 Return on Investment (According to analysis undertaken by PwC for the Front Project ) – $2 of benefits flow to the economy for every $1 spent on early childhood education
  • Closing the workforce participation gap could boost GDP by $60 billion over 20 years

Labor slams Perrottet's plan to cut workers' wages for the second time

Labor has slammed the NSW Liberal Government’s decision to cut workers’ wages for a second time, after Treasurer Dominic Perrottet announced today that he would cut the public sector wage cap from 2.5% to 1.5%.
The Treasurer refused to consult with workers and their unions and instead announced a wage cut for workers across NSW on Melbourne Cup Day and on the eve of the US presidential election.
Instead, 400,000 workers across NSW woke up tomedia reports that the NSW Government plans to cut their wages in the midst of the most serious economic crisis since the Great Depression.
NSW Labor Leader Jodi McKay said: “This morning 400,000 workers in every city, region and town in NSW have woken up to this slap in the face from the Treasurer.
“This cut to workers’ wages is an act of economic vandalism and a betrayal of those who protected us during the bushfires and the pandemic.
“Not only is this money that teachers, nurses and cleaners won’t have in their pockets, its money that small businesses and communities across our state won’t have to survive” Ms McKay said.
Shadow Minister for Industrial Relations Adam Searle said: “It is clear this has been Dominic Perrottet’s plan all along and he has snuck it out on Melbourne Cup Day and on the eve of the US presidential election.
“This is an insult to every single worker who kept our society going during the pandemic. The Treasurer is trying to ram through another wage cut for workers across our state which will cause even more damage to businesses and communities all across our state.”
Shadow Treasurer Walt Secord said: “The Treasurer is picking the pockets of workers to pay for his economic mismanagement.
“Dominic Perrottet is responsible for $13.5 billion in Budget blow-outs and a secret $4 billion bail-out out of his scandal-ridden iCare and now he wants workers to pay for it.”