Appeal for missing woman – Rutherford 

Police are appealing for public assistance to help locate a woman missing from the state’s Hunter region.

Zharnee Mitchelmore, aged 18 was last seen about 6pm on Sunday 13 February 2022 at Fagans Parade, Rutherford.

When she did not return home, carers contacted police and officers attached to Port Stephens – Hunter Police District commenced inquiries into her whereabouts.

Police hold serious concerns for her welfare as she lives with an intellectual disability. 

Zharnee is described as being of Aboriginal / Torres Strait Islander appearance, 160cm tall, of solid build, with brown hair and brown eyes.

She is known to frequent the Rutherford and Morpeth areas.

Anyone with information regarding Zharnee’s whereabouts is urged to contact Raymond Terrace Police Station or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

NSW 19U team for 2022 National Champs named 

Netball NSW is delighted to announce the 12 athletes who have been selected for the 2022 NSW 19U Team which will contest the National Netball Championships in Hobart in April.

The team includes five Suncorp Super Netball Training Partners with Sophie Fawns and Audrey Little from the NSW Swifts selected and GIANTS Charli Fidler, Erin O’Brien and Mille Roach making the cut too. 

“To be given a Training Partner contract indicates a readiness to step into Super Netball and to have five State Team athletes in that position is a testament to the strength of the QBE Swifts and GIANTS Netball Academies, Netball NSW Performance programs and the Origin Energy Premier League competition,” Margaret Hamley, General Manager of Performance & Pathways at Netball NSW, said.

As well as the Training Partners the team also includes a number of athletes from the QBE Swifts and GIANTS Netball Academies. 

Jamie Podmore Taylor, Ella Johnson (GIANTS Academy) and Kiara Bloor and Charlotte Smith (QBE Swifts Academy) have all had previous NSW State Team campaign experience yet, due to the COVID-enforced cancellations of the 2020 and 2021 Nationals, are yet to experience a National Netball Championship.

Samantha Bondietti (QBE Swifts Academy) has progressed through the ACT pathway and is welcomed to NSW as she embarks on a new chapter at university.

For Lucy Matthews (GIANTS Academy) and Erin Bloor, 2022 will be their first State Team campaign. Both athletes are exceptional role models who have demonstrated tenacity and resilience to strive to  achieve their goals.

“Netball NSW is proud of the 12 athletes selected in the 2022 19U State Team and wishes them the best of luck for the campaign ahead,” Hamley added.

Workers blindsided by Eraring announcement, urgent consultation needed 

Workers were blindsided by this morning’s announcement that Origin is seeking to close its Eraring power station at Lake Macquarie up to seven years earlier than previously planned, the Mining and Energy Union (MEU) said today.

MEU Northern Mining and NSW Energy Acting District President Robin Williams said the union was seeking urgent meetings with Origin to understand the company’s plans and put measures in place to support the workforce of around 500 people, including permanent employees and contractors.

“Hundreds of local workers have been blindsided by Origin’s announcement this morning that the power station could close in 2025, not 2032.

“For the many Lake Macquarie and Hunter Valley families that rely on the Eraring power station for their livelihoods, today’s announcement creates uncertainty for the future.

“Origin has told workers that having made today’s announcement they will now engage in consultation. We urge them to engage in genuine two-way consultation with workers about the future and not just present them with decisions.

“The interests of workers, families and communities should be front and centre as the energy generation industry undergoes major transformation.

“In addition to measures to support workers at the company level, we need an industry plan to prevent forced redundancies, create job transfer opportunities for skilled energy workers and investment in the regions that have powered Australia for decades.”

Underfunded public schools a national disgrace

Australian Greens Education spokesperson Senator Mehreen Faruqi has responded to the latest analysis released by Save Our Schools this morning, which finds that over the last decade, government funding for private schools increased by $3,338 per student, adjusted for inflation, compared to $703 per student for public schools.

Senator Faruqi said:

“The systemic underfunding of our public schools and corresponding overfunding of private schools is a national disgrace.

“Special deals such as the Liberals’ $1.2 billion so-called ‘Choice and Affordability’ slush fund for private schools have only worsened decades of systemic favouritism.

“Public schools are trying their best to navigate the impacts of Covid, inadequate and crumbling infrastructure, and provide suitable educational resourcing for students, all while enrolments tick up and funding remains stubbornly low.

“The Coalition and Labor are on a unity ticket so far as unfair, outrageous private school funding is concerned.

“The Greens are taking to the federal election a fully-costed plan to invest $32 billion in our public schools over the next decade and achieve 100% funding of the Schooling Resource Standard for public schools by 2023.”

Greens Election Policy: https://greens.org.au/campaigns/fully-funded-public-schools

Biggest coal power plant closure means urgent national climate and energy plan needed: Greens

Greens Leader Adam Bandt MP says the closure announcement of Australia’s largest coal fired plant shows why Australia urgently needs a credible climate and energy plan.

Origin Energy has brought forward closure of the NSW Eraring power plant, one of the most polluting in the country, by seven years to 2025.

Despite this build up of announced coal closures before 2030, the government’s own projections that they took to Glasgow show another one to two further coal plants closing in the next eight years, which the government won’t tell us – or coal communities – about.

Greens Leader Adam Bandt MP said:

“We urgently need a national climate and energy plan to manage this accelerating shift from coal.”

“Instead of lying to coal workers and their communities about a future for coal, Liberal and Labor need to get real and join the Greens with a plan that secures workers’ future.”

“By lying to communities about the future of coal, Liberal and Labor are leaving workers exposed to the wolves of the market.

“The climate crisis and falling costs are driving a renewables revolution and it’s not going to stop.”

“Everyone could see this coming. Instead of fighting the renewables revolution, Scott Morrison should have been investing in renewables and storage and putting in place a planned phase down of coal.

“Coal workers and the Hunter community are being left behind by the big energy corporations and the Morrison government. They have failed to put in place a renewables and industry investment plan for the region, leaving everything to the decision of overseas corporate boardrooms.”

“The fact Origin is giving only the minimum notice for the power plants closure shows that coal is on the nose financially.”

The Greens election policy calls for increased government investment in renewables, storage and the grid and a timetable for the orderly closure of coal fired power stations and support for workers and communities.

Mr Bandt and NSW Greens Senate Candidate David Shoebridge will visit the Hunter region to meet with the community and coal workers next week.    

Record registrations recorded, despite COVID impacts on organ donations

The rate of new registrations for organ donation has reached record levels, with 87 per cent year-on-year growth in Australians signing up as an organ donor.

Data released today reveals a substantial increase in new registrations on the Australian Organ Donor Register (AODR), in a report that also outlines the ongoing impact COVID-19 has had on donation and transplantation rates.

Minister responsible for the Organ and Tissue Authority (OTA), Dr David Gillespie released the 2021 Australian Donation and Transplantation Activity Report, confirming that despite a further drop in donation and transplantation rates last year, public support for donation is increasing.

“We saw 350,000 more Aussies getting behind organ and tissue donation in 2021, registering to be donors at a rate never seen before,” Dr Gillespie said.

“It’s heart-warming to see that even during the toughest of times, Australians understand the importance of donation and have joined the 7 million other Australians on the AODR.”

“Importantly, 1,174 Australian lives were saved in 2021 through an organ transplant, due to the generosity of 421 deceased organ donors and their families.”

Dr Gillespie said that while record-breaking new registrations were a step in the right direction, the strain that COVID-19 has put on the Australian healthcare system continues to be felt.

There was a nine per cent decrease in the number of organ donors and a seven per cent decrease in the number of people who received a transplant during 2021, compared to 2020.

Overall, this equates to a 25 per cent drop in donation and transplantation activity from pre-COVID levels seen in 2019 and is consistent with the experience of comparable countries like the UK and Canada.

“Despite the drop, donation and transplants continued throughout the year, which is testament to a highly skilled workforce of doctors and nurses who helped to minimise risk,” Dr Gillespie said

“Australian DonateLife teams worked with transplant teams to navigate the challenges created by COVID-19 — including pressures on hospitals, staff impacts, restricted family visits in hospitals, and logistics impacting the national program, such as flight reductions and border closures.

Dr Gillespie said there were 200 people who received a kidney from a living donor in 2021, more than 2,400 people with restored eyesight through a corneal transplant, and over 10,000 people who received tissue (e.g. musculoskeletal, heart, skin) transplants – all thanks to the life-changing gift of donation.

“I would like to acknowledge all donors and express heartfelt thanks to families who say “yes” to organ donation and give the gift of life to others,” Dr Gillespie said.

“There are around 1,850 Australians who are waitlisted for an organ transplant and an additional 13,000 people on dialysis – some who may need a kidney transplant one day.

“The best chance we have to address the challenge of the longer waitlist is to have more Australians say “yes” to donation – both yes to registering and yes in the hospital if there is the opportunity to donate.”

Data shows that nine out of 10 families consent to donation if their loved one is registered, but this drops to 4 out of 10 if they don’t know what their what they wanted.

Registering to be an organ and tissue donor is easy. You just need your phone, Medicare card and one minute. Head to donatelife.gov.au or you can join through the Express Plus Medicare app when you download your COVID-19 vaccination certificate. The report is available at the above link.

AUSTRALIA’S BIGGEST COAL POWER STATION TO CLOSE EARLY, IN 2025

Origin Energy has today announced it is bringing forward the closure of Australia’s largest coal fired plant – Eraring Power Station in the Hunter Valley, NSW – seven years earlier than planned, from 2032 to mid-2025.

The announcement comes as the price of renewable energy continues to drop, with it already supplying 30% of Australia’s electricity needs.

Eraring is the biggest of 16 remaining coal-fired power plants supplying the National Energy Market, with seven of those already scheduled to close by 2035 and the last planned to shut by 2051.

The following experts are available for comment (others may be available on request):

Sam Mella, Hunter Engagement and Project Lead, Beyond Zero Emissions, said:

“Origin’s announcement today highlights the urgency to ensure our energy jobs are protected. The Hunter has so much expertise in energy and a Renewable Energy Industrial Precinct is the right vehicle to keep the Hunter thriving through the massive changes. All levels of government should be focussed on this.”

Sam is lead author of the Hunter case study in the Million Jobs Plan. She has worked on renewable energy and energy exports since 2011. Sam is available until 4pm today Thursday 17 February.

Tim Buckley, energy market analyst and coal expert at Climate Energy Finance, said:

“Origin energy today announced the closure of its Eraring coal power station in the Hunter Valley by 2025, that’s Australia’s largest coal power plant in terms of capacity at a notional 2,880 MW. It will be replacing it with a 700MW battery.

“This follows news last week from AGL that they are bringing forward the closure of their two large coal power stations, Bayswater, which is also in the Hunter Valley, and Loy Yang A in Victoria’s Latrobe Valley.

“These announcements underscored the rapid technological, financial and policy changes coming globally with the transition to green energy, which are accelerating and inevitable.

“It is beyond time Australia actually had a government focussed on planning for the transition to green energy, rather than denying it.”

Dr Amanda Cahill, CEO of The Next Economy, a not for profit that works with business, local government and the community to manage the transition from fossil fuels to clean new industries, said:

“Early closure announcements like this are becoming increasingly common. We need to do more to support affected workers and communities years before any closures happen. We need to make sure workers have opportunities to retrain for new jobs or be redeployed to other plants.

“Communities need support to diversify their economic opportunities and attract new investment and industries that can be powered by renewable energy. All levels of government have a responsibility to manage these changes if regions are to prosper into the future.”

Dr Madeline Taylor, Climate Councillor, Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University, School of Law and energy expert:

“Coal is not a commercially viable industry any longer. Just like AGL last week , this is a commercial decision made by Origin Energy to close its Eraring coal power station seven years early.”

“Some of Australia’s biggest power companies are not able to compete from a price perspective and policy perspective, as the states and territories cash-in on a net zero future, bringing with it cheaper renewable power, economic investments and new clean jobs. The newly announced Hunter-Central Coast Renewable Energy Zone (REZ) is set to provide 100 Terawatt hours of power by the mid 2020s, which is almost double the generation of NSW’s entire coal fleet. The new Hunter REZ is just one of the state’s four proposed REZs.”

“Coal is not going to cut it anymore when we have cheap and reliable renewable energy and storage that’s already powering over a third of Australia’s largest electricity grid and providing almost 25 percent of NSW’s power.”

Victorian Supreme Court Judge sexually harassed and pursued two of his female staff

Leading law firm Maurice Blackburn Lawyers today welcomed findings made by eminent barrister Kate Eastman SC that a former Victorian Supreme Court Judge sexually harassed two women who worked as his associates.

The women were prompted to contact Maurice Blackburn Principal Josh Bornstein in July and October 2020 following findings that claims of sexual harassment by former High Court Judge Dyson Heydon were upheld by an independent investigation.

Mr Bornstein formalised the women’s complaints to the Victorian Supreme Court and Ms Eastman was engaged to investigate them, delivering a damning report into the Judge’s behaviour last month.

Ms Eastman found the Judge wrote sexualised poetry to one of the women, sent her renaissance art featuring a naked cherub, told her he loved her and made unwelcome sexual advances.

Ms Eastman also found the Judge put his hand between the thighs of one of the women and on another occasion kissed her on the lips.

“(The Judge) used his position and power to satisfy his personal needs,” Ms Eastman’s report found.

The Judge kept tabs on the women after they left the Court and also contacted one of them after he learned of Ms Eastman’s investigation in August last year.

“I acknowledge his actions in August 2021 have caused (the former associate) significant distress and further anxiety. She fears retribution, embarrassment and holds concerns about her privacy and safety,” Ms Eastman wrote.

Mr Bornstein’s said the Judge’s behaviour was disgraceful and left both women traumatised.

“The two women I represent welcome the findings of the Eastman report. Regrettably, the legal profession is a high-risk profession when it comes to sexual harassment. A reckoning is underway and a critical part of that reckoning is confronting the truth of what has happened and ensuring that there is appropriate accountability.

“In due course, claims for compensation for both women will be pursued, he said.

One of the women no longer works in the legal profession.

Mr Bornstein added that further progress could be made to address gender inequality if the Federal Government were to legislate to require organisations to proactively take steps to stamp out gender inequality in their workplaces, as recommended by the Respect At Work Inquiry. Most of the recommendations of that inquiry have not been adopted.

Mr Bornstein is representing a number of other women who allege sexual harassment by judges at both the federal and state level, with further claims for compensation arising from those other cases likely.

REVIEW TO BREATHE NEW LIFE INTO HISTORIC MELBOURNE DEFENCE FACILITY

The Morrison Government has started planning for the renovation and ongoing use by Defence of an historic art-deco building in the Victoria Barracks precinct in Melbourne.

Defence has engaged Melbourne architects Lovell Chen to conduct a feasibility study into the refurbishment and re-use of the former Repatriation Outpatients Clinic located at 310 St Kilda Road, Melbourne.

Lovell Chen specialises in the preservation and adaptive re-purposing of heritage buildings.

The building, which adjoins Victoria Barracks on St Kilda Road near the CBD, was completed in 1937 and contains heritage elements of Commonwealth significance.

It was constructed to provide outpatient support to World War I veterans and continued providing services to veterans for decades.

The site was used by Defence up until the late 1990s but has been vacant for more than 20 years.

The feasibility study will identify opportunities for the renovation and ongoing use of the building, while taking into account a planned redevelopment of the wider Victoria Barracks precinct.

Minister for Defence Industry Melissa Price said the study would allow Defence to consider options for the future re-use of 310 St Kilda Road.

Minister Price said this would include accommodation for both Defence and Defence-related community groups, such as veterans’ organisations.

“The Morrison Government is committed to ensuring the future use of 310 St Kilda Road preserves the building’s heritage and architecture,” Minister Price said.

“We are seeking to balance the growing needs of Defence, while noting the building’s close links to Australia’s military history and our veteran community.”

This study will guide Defence’s restoration and repurposing of the building, and potential accommodations for Defence-related community groups, including veterans’ organisations.

Energy expert responds to Origin coal closure announcement

Similar to the shock announcement of the early closure of Victoria’s Hazelwood Power Station in 2016, Origin Energy is aiming to close it’s Eraring coal power station in NSW’s Hunter Valley seven years early, by August 2025. Eraring is Australia’s largest coal power station (in terms of its capacity). It emits over 11 million tonnes of carbon dioxide annually – around 8 percent of the state’s total.

Dr Madeline Taylor, Climate Councillor, Senior Lecturer at Macquarie University, School of Law and energy expert said:

“Coal is not a commercially viable industry any longer. Just like AGL last week, this is a commercial decision made by Origin Energy to close its Eraring coal power station seven years early.”

“Some of Australia’s biggest power companies are not able to compete from a price perspective and policy perspective, as the states and territories cash-in on a net zero future, bringing with it cheaper renewable power, economic investments and new clean jobs. The newly announced Hunter-Central Coast Renewable Energy Zone (REZ) is set to provide 100 Terawatt hours of power by the mid 2020s, which is almost double the generation of NSW’s entire coal fleet. The new Hunter REZ is just one of the state’s four proposed REZs.”

“Coal is not going to cut it anymore when we have cheap and reliable renewable energy and storage that’s already powering over a third of Australia’s largest electricity grid and providing almost 25 percent of NSW’s power.”

“States and territories are investing in storage technologies and that needs to continue. It’s increased storage that we need, not more investment in expensive electricity generation stemming from gas, which our carbon budget cannot afford and may leave us with stranded assets.”