The Powerhouse Museum Ultimo revitalised

The NSW Government is delivering on its election commitment to save the Powerhouse Museum in Ultimo and preserve the Wran legacy.

The Government is committing $250 million for a heritage revitalisation to the Powerhouse Museum Ultimo.

The iconic and much-loved 1988 Wran building will be saved.

The Powerhouse Museum was established in 1879 as the Technological, Industrial and Sanitary Museum of New South Wales. In 1978 an investment by the NSW Wran Labor Government investment transformed it into the modern Powerhouse Museum.

There has been no significant capital investment into Ultimo Powerhouse Museum since the museum opened in 1988.

The former government allocated $481 million for a Powerhouse renewal project.

NSW families are facing rampant inflation, as well as rising energy and housing costs. The $230 million balance from this decision will support the construction of new school and hospital projects as part of a new era of responsible long-term budget repair.

Independent engineering advice is that there are significant systems that need to be replaced to meet operation and building code requirements.

The NSW Government will undertake further consultation with current staff as well as the arts and culture sector, business and creative industries groups, the education sector, peak bodies, expert advisors, local communities, and the public on the details and timing of this heritage redevelopment.

Minister for Arts John Graham said:

“We promised at the election that we would preserve the Wran legacy and keep the Powerhouse Museum at Ultimo open. We are doing just that.

“The area around the Powerhouse Museum Ultimo has changed extensively since the museum opened in 1988. It is now a major hub for creative industries, technology, innovation, education, and research. This prudent investment allows us to save the Powerhouse Museum at Ultimo and preserve the Wran legacy in a tough fiscal environment.

“We have responded to community calls for a more modest redevelopment, saving the Powerhouse Museum and preserving the Wran legacy with a $250 million heritage redevelopment.”

Man charged after police officer assaulted – Port Stephens-Hunter PD  

A man has been charged after allegedly assaulting a police officer on the Port Stephens-Hunter region this morning.

About 8.25am (Friday 1 September 2023), police were called to a property on Morna Point Road, Anna Bay, following a concern for welfare report.

On arrival, officers attached to Port Stephens-Hunter Police District located a man and woman inside the property.

Upon making further inquiries at the scene, a male constable was allegedly stabbed by the man with a narrow metal instrument.

The 42-year-old man was arrested and taken to the Mater Hospital for assessment.

The 31-year-old constable was taken to the John Hunter Hospital for the treatment of non-life-threatening facial injuries.

Upon his release from hospital, the 42-year-old man was taken to Raymond Terrace Police Station where he was charged with seven offences, including:

  • take etc person intend serious indictable offence,
  • common assault,
  • stalk/intimidate intend fear physical etc harm,
  • assault occasioning actual bodily harm,
  • wound police officer executing duty reckless as to actual bodily harm,
  • use etc offensive weapon to prevent lawful detention, and
  • possess prohibited drug.

The Anna Bay man was refused bail to appear before Newcastle Local Court tomorrow (Saturday 2 September 2023).

PLIBERSEK APPROVES LABOR’S FOURTH COAL PROJECT

Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek has today approved the fourth coal project this year, at the Gregory Crinum Coal Mine in the Bowen Basin, to run until 2073. 

This follows project approvals for the Isaac River Coal Mine, the Star Coal Mine, and the Ensham Coal Mine.

Last week’s emissions update found that fossil fuel emissions continue to rise under Labor, their weak 43% by 2030 target won’t be reached until 2037, and Australia won’t hit net zero until 2080.

Even if Labor’s 43% emissions reduction target was reached, it is consistent with a global temperature rise of over 2C, in breach of our Paris Target commitments. 

Leader of the Australian Greens, Adam Bandt MP said:

“Labor is making global heating worse by opening new coal mines,” Mr Bandt said.

“Tanya Plibersek has just approved a new coal project that will run until 2073, when we’re meant to be reaching net zero. That’s another 50 years of coal, when the science tells us we can’t open any new coal or gas mines.

“The science is crystal clear. If we’re going to stop the world going over the climate cliff, we can’t open up a single new coal project, but Labor has approved four.

“With Labor opening new coal and gas mines, it is no surprise that emissions are continuing to rise under Labor.”

Sarah Hanson-Young, Greens Environment Spokesperson, Senator for SA said:

“Another day, another coal mine approved by the so-called Environment Minister.”

“Every time this Government approves a new coal or gas project they are risking our River Murray, our Reef and the safety of our children.

“Our environment laws are broken. We need laws that stop  native forest logging and the stop pollution that fuels the climate crisis.

“The Minister has promised to fix our environment laws this year and that must include making sure they account for climate change when assessing these projects, at the very least.”

RIGHT TO DISCONNECT SHOULD BE IN IR REFORM: GREENS

In his speech at the National Press Club today the Minister for Industrial Relations Tony Burke signalled the government’s intention to criminalise wage theft but there was no mention of a glaring problem that costs Australian workers $93 billion a year in unpaid overtime.

Minister Burke’s outline of the next round of IR reforms in the Closing Loopholes Bill to be introduced to Parliament next week ignores a major loophole in our employment laws. The unrestricted access employers currently have to workers outside their paid working hours is costing the average Australian worker six weeks of unpaid overtime per year.

The Greens want to see a right to disconnect in our workplace laws to further protect Australian workers from ongoing wage theft.

Senator Barbara Pocock, Greens spokesperson on Employment said:

“Australian workers need a right to disconnect to stop wage theft and close a critical loophole for undercutting wages.

“Australian workers do an excessive amount of unpaid overtime, in large part because they are always contactable. Workers should have the right to turn off their phones, block their bosses’ calls, and switch off their emails when they’re finished work for the day.

“With so much workplace technology intruding into our lives outside work we need some legislated protections that will allow workers to get their lives back. So many ordinary Australians have caring responsibilities and need to be able to give their full attention to their families and those they care for, as well as to recharge their batteries and do the things that are important to them.

“We need a more productive workforce and the best way to achieve this is by working smarter not harder. And this means having a right to disconnect from workplace distractions when we are on our own time.

“I’m also keen to see more detail on proposed protections for workers in the gig economy which are not just the people who deliver your meals but also the workers in the care economy who look after your children or your grandparents.

“While Minister Burke signalled some minimum standards for gig workers including a minimum wage, there are some other big issues that remain unaddressed including minimum hours, pay during wait times and health and safety compensation.

“The Labor Government could be ushering in a new class of underprivileged workers with the introduction of employee-like workers if these protections are not included.”

GREENS DEMAND URGENT ACTION TO FIX MENTAL HEALTH CRISIS IN PRISONS

The Australian Greens are demanding urgent action be taken in Australia’s corrections system to address a mental health crisis and prevent further deaths in custody.

A coronial report into the death of 30-year-old First Nations man Mr Blanket, handed down by Coroner Philip Urquhart in Western Australia, has highlighted a ‘chronic shortage’ of safe cells.

Mr Blanket died in his cell at the privately run Acacia Prison in 2019, after his mental health deteriorated and he experienced multiple episodes of psychosis and self-harm.

WA Greens Senator, First Nations portfolio holder and Yamatji-Noongar woman, Dorinda Cox said:

“It is simply unacceptable that someone has been able to take their life in prison because there are not enough safe cells available, particularly for those who are also vulnerable due to their mental health.

“The evidence shows there were many failings of the current system including failure to provide previous mental health assessments to Acacia’s mental health service providers, that Mr Blanket expressed suicidal ideations to prison staff, and his mother had told prison staff of his suicide risk, but wasn’t listened to.

“Red flags were missed despite Mr Blanket having a history of self-harm and attempted suicide and Mr Blanket was not moved to a safe cell in time.

“It is time for the what the coroner described as a ‘chronic shortage’ to be addressed.

“These shocking and continuing deaths are avoidable and the coroner has found that the treatment and care provided to Mr Blanket was anything but culturally appropriate.

“The continuing deaths in custody cause ongoing distress for First Nations communities and Mr Blanket’s family has been seeking answers and change so that no other family endures the pain of losing a loved one.

“I have previously called on our governments to implement all the recommendations of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody report handed down in 1991, I reiterate that call with what is another tragic and devastating death in custody.”

Greens Justice Spokesperson Senator David Shoebridge said:

“More than 30 years since the Royal Commission we have a prison where only a tiny fraction of cells were safe cells without hanging points, that’s disgraceful.

“The coroner has found that the lack of safe cells a cause of Mr Blanket’s death, meaning the WA Government cannot dodge responsibility for this dreadfully predictable loss.

“It is deeply distressing for Mr Blanket’s family to hear how the lack of treatment programs denied him parole and left him in jail as his mental health deteriorated.

“Mr Blanket was killed by a system that refused to provide him with treatment and then locked him in a room with hanging points, a situation we have known is unsafe for decades.”

George Newhouse, Principal Solicitor of the National Justice Project said:

“The coroner has made some significant recommendations however they do not go far enough and Aboriginal medical services need to provide culturally safe therapeutic health care in prisons.

“The prison system needs to listen to families who know their loved ones well; they need a voice, they need to be heard.

“The failure to allow Mr Blanket to participate in a rehabilitation program meant that he was precluded from parole which destabilised him and contributed to his mental health crisis.

“The coroner has called on the Department and Serco to address the inability of short-term prisoners to access programs that are necessary to get parole. Corporate prison operators like Serco have an economic incentive to deny programs to prisoners and keep people like Mr Blanket behind bars but that can destroy lives.”

BANDT DRUMS UP OPPOSITION TO LABOR’S COAL AND GAS AGENDA ABROAD AND AT HOME

Leader of the Australian Greens Adam Bandt MP has offered support to Pacific Leaders to demand Labor stop opening coal and gas mines in return for hosting a climate summit, while also encouraging people to join a non-violent ‘people’s blockade’ of Australia’s largest coal port in Newcastle this November. 

Mr Bandt has written to Pacific Island Leaders, backing recent calls from prominent Pacific elders that Australia should stop opening up new coal and gas before it is awarded a global climate COP summit. 

Last night, Mr Bandt also made a speech at a ‘Rising Tide’ event in Melbourne, as part of the ‘People’s Blockade Speaking Tour’, where the group is building support for ‘thousands of people to gather and demand an immediate end to new coal projects and the end of coal exports from the world’s largest coal port, by 2030’. Mr Bandt said growing civil disobedience is necessary to help pressure Labor to stop opening new coal and gas mines. 

The letter to Pacific leaders backs a recent bold call from the Pacific Elders’ Voice, a collection of former regional leaders including the Marshall Islands, Kiribati, Tuvalu and Palau, that Australia should stop trying to hurry their smaller nations’ current leadership to support our bid for COP31.

As Climate Minister, Chris Bowen, was last week travelling around Pacific Island Nations to seek support for hosting the COP, Mr Bandt says that stopping new projects is “the single biggest thing the Australian Labor government could do to protect our region” and has offered the Greens’ support for any pressure Pacific Island nations wish to exert on Australia to stop opening coal and gas mines in return for co-hosting the COP.

The latest National Greenhouse Gas Inventory quarterly update showed a 2.1% rise in oil and gas emissions over the year to March 2023, together with a long-term increase in Australia’s emissions from coal and gas.

Excerpts from the speech to the Peoples Blockade Speaking Tour:

We must come together and fight back. Together, we must demonstrate that we can stop Labor and the big corporations from threatening our survival. 

The Greens will keep fighting in Parliament to stop Labor opening new coal and gas mines. But we will have a better chance of winning together if there is a more powerful movement on the streets, around kitchen tables, in universities and in schools, in workplaces and at the pubs.

And we need non-violent civil disobedience. The types of civil disobedience that have been so crucial throughout history in securing change, from ending slavery to gaining women’s suffrage, from workers’ rights to civil rights.

Big coal and gas corporations have too much power. They behave like criminal cartels, buying off governments, engaging in sports washing and not giving a damn about the damage they cause. And it is a power which is state sanctioned. 

They’re extorting us, and they’re being protected by the state. 

This isn’t about the government protecting jobs, because coal and gas threaten the millions of jobs that rely on a safe climate. It isn’t about the benefit to the economy, because the gas industry is a systemic non payer of tax. 

Labor has sold us out to the coal and gas corporations for a few thousand in donations. They’ve sold out our kids and the future generations. And they’ve sold out working people.  

This is the fight we’re in. The world’s greediest and most dangerous corporations, backed by the political class. 

The Liberals and Nationals were kicked out of office for thumbing their nose at the climate crisis for being callous and captured, but with Labor, it’s somehow more disappointing, because you know they know what they’re doing is wrong. Some Labor MPs might not get into politics to help out Woodside, but sure enough they end up there. 

Now, we need to embrace the importance of protest and civil disobedience. We must come together and fight back.  

Rising Tide has been doing this for a generation now. “Just stop oil” protesters disrupted the Ashes and Wimbledon. The Extinction Rebellion has been shutting down the streets. There needs to be more. More protests, more rallies, more non-violent civil disobedience, more organising politically and more power and wealth back to the people. 

We need to celebrate our activists and open our movements up to all. Someone smart once said to me campaigns are like nature, and in nature there isn’t scarcity but abundance, and that in a campaign we mustn’t think there’s only one pathway, or one simple set of actions, everyone must do everything they can, whatever it is, whether it’s knitting for refugees or door knocking in your community.  

We might not all want to climb a coal bridge or sit in the foyer of Woodside, but we need to back the right of people to do so, and celebrate and feel joy from their action. 

It might cause a temporary disruption, but that’s nothing compared to the death and devastation being inflicted by global boiling. 

Radical, non-violent civil disobedience against the action of big corporations backed by the state are never going to be sanctioned by the government. As a former lawyer, the law is often complex, but the morality is simple. 

This country is built on the back of civil disobedience. The Wave Hill Walk off, the Franklin Dam rallies and the Green bans – these were often against the law, but they were on the side of what’s right.   

These halls we stand in are built by those who fought for their safety and their rights and fought back against unethical laws. 

Our laws have made it legal to destroy our world by mining and burning coal and gas. Our environment laws do not protect us. Our laws must change so they give power and wealth to the people. 

This is why we need a strong movement who, like the labour movement, will once again take people back to the streets. We need a movement with real power. 

With Labor hell bent on opening more coal and gas mines, we need to build an even more powerful movement and get in behind the Disrupt Burrup Hub, Rising Tide and Extinction Rebellion and those who are prepared to engage in nonviolent civil disobedience.

We need to stop all new coal and gas. Everyone needs to do everything.

PAY FOR SUPER ON PPL WITH PROPOSED SUPER TAX

The Greens will use their Senate balance of power to hold up proposed changes to the tax treatment of large superannuation accounts until the government puts superannuation on paid parental leave. The Greens support for that reform will be contingent on passage of legislation to put super on Paid Parental Leave (PPL).

The Government announced in their 2023-24 Budget that from 2025‑26 the tax rate on earnings of superannuation balances above $3 million will be lifted from 15% to 30%. This is expected to affect around 80,000 people in 2025-26 and in the first full year of collection (2027-28) is expected to increase receipts by $2.3 billion.

Paying superannuation on PPL would cost the Government less than ten percent of that, an estimated $200m per annum according to the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (AFSA).1

Greens leader in the Senate and spokesperson on Women, Larissa Waters said:

“The Greens will use our balance of power in the Senate to ensure the government makes superannuation on Paid Parental Leave a priority reform, as part of its changes to super. 

“This is such a timid proposed change to the tax concessions the obscenely wealthy receive. If Labor is not going to improve it, the least they can do is put it to good use.

“Paying superannuation on Paid Parental Leave would cost $200m each year, less than ten percent of the $2.3 billion expected to be raised from the government’s proposed changes to superannuation tax concessions.

“We will use our balance of power in the Senate to get outcomes for women and young families who are struggling with the cost of living crisis. 

“We know Australian women are retiring with significantly less superannuation savings than men, with the gender retirement gap currently sitting at 23 per cent2. Women deserve fairer Paid Parental Leave, and it’s only fair if it includes super. 

“It’s been almost a year since business groups and unions came together at Labor’s Jobs and Skills Summit to call for 26 weeks paid parental leave and super to be paid on it; and three months since they ignored the Women’s Economic Equality Taskforce calls for super on paid parental leave – a key recommendation of its interim report.

“Labor is dragging out the increase to 26 weeks, making women wait while it’s introduced gradually over the next two years. And they rejected a Greens amendment in May to pay super on PPL. 

“They are drip-feeding the ‘idea’ of paying super on PPL until a date that suits them politically. 

“While we wait for the Government to come up with a campaign plan, the gender superannuation gap continues to grow, and a comfortable retirement feels more out of reach for more women and young people.

“Labor agreed to a binding resolution at national conference to ‘work to implement payment of superannuation on government Paid Parental Leave as a priority reform’. Now’s their chance.”

1.https://www.superannuation.asn.au/media/media-releases/2023/media-release-7-march-2023
2.60-64 age bracket: Towards gender equity in retirement (kpmg.com)

GAS CODE OF CONDUCT COULD BE SENT BACK TO THE DRAWING BOARD

The final Gas Code of Conduct was tabled in the Parliament last sitting week. While this is a complex piece of regulation that needs closer scrutiny, what is clear is that the government has again watered down its proposal to benefit Australia’s powerful gas corporations. The Greens cannot guarantee support for this weakened Code.

New Ministerial powers in the Code allowing gas companies off the hook have exploded from five classes of exemptions to thirteen. These include exemptions that would encourage new gas field developments in spite of catastrophic global boiling.

Before coming to any decision about disallowing or protecting the regulation, the Greens have secured support to send this legislative instrument off to a Senate inquiry before a final vote in October. Evidence presented at the inquiry will inform the Greens final position. 

Treasury spokesperson, Senator Nick McKim said:

“The government should not take our support for this instrument for granted.”

“There is no doubt this country needs policies that regulate the greed and unscrupulous behaviour of gas companies, but not at the expense of encouraging new gas fields to open.” 

“The Greens are open to sending the government back to the drawing board on this. This should be our opportunity for Australia to wean itself off gas by electrifying homes and businesses. Instead Labor is using this code of conduct to encourage new gas supplies even as the planet boils around us.”

“While the Albanese Government is again bending over backwards to please Woodside and Santos, it seems to have forgotten that it is the Parliament, not the powerful gas cartel that has the final say on what laws are put in place.”

Coalition wins fight to save pharmacies and maintain cheaper medicines

The Coalition strongly supports Australians having access to cheaper medicines.

We support 60-day dispensing.

For months we have stood up to the Albanese Labor Government and called them out for their lack of consultation and rushed policy making, which was putting Australian’s healthcare access at risk.

We called on them to get back to the table with the community pharmacy sector and negotiate an Eighth Community Pharmacy Agreement to resolve the legitimate concerns on their approach to 60-day dispensing.

Today, it is clear that our hard work has paid off.

Through the advocacy of the Coalition and community pharmacists across the country, we have supported Australians to have access to more affordable medicines without risking their local pharmacy closing.

Our focus was always on resolving the legitimate concerns that were raised for the serious impacts that unconsulted, unmodelled and rushed policy could have on patients and communities.

The Government did not adequately consult with community pharmacists before they announced this policy and they refused to model the potential flow-on impacts that this policy could have on patients, particularly the most vulnerable.

That is why we took this fight to the floor of Parliament House, on behalf of patients, communities and their local pharmacists.

The Coalition will always stand up for the best interests of Australians, and we are pleased that the Minister for Health has finally heard our calls and will immediately enter into new negotiations.

Shadow Minister for Health and Aged Care, Senator the Hon Anne Ruston said that the Coalition has genuinely listened to the concerns of patients and pharmacists and was proud to fight for them.

“Pharmacists are very highly regarded members of local communities, and for this Government to totally dismiss consultation and force a measure on them that would potentially see thousands of job losses was inconceivable,” Senator Ruston said.

“We understood that rushing this policy could have significant consequences for Australians, particularly for those communities in rural and regional Australia where the local pharmacist is the only primary healthcare professional in town. Getting it wrong could force up healthcare costs for the most vulnerable Australians and reduced access to critical services and advice.”“The Coalition is the only Party that understands the importance of consultation and good policy making to ensure no one is worse off. We are proud to have forced the Government to do the right thing by patients, pharmacists and communities, and we now implore them to enter into the upcoming negotiations in good faith.”

It is harder and more expensive to see a doctor under Labor

Latest data has revealed that bulk billing rates have drastically fallen under the Albanese Labor Government.

Since Labor came into government, bulkbilling rates have been dropping consecutively every single month – The latest data showing a total Medicare bulkbilling rate of 77%, and 80.2% for non-referred GP appointments, in the 12 months to June this year.

These are the lowest bulkbilling rates recorded since 2013.

This is in stark comparison to the 12 months to June 2021, which saw rates at an all-time high of 88.8% under the Coalition.

The Albanese Government is overseeing plummeting bulk billing rates at a time when Australians are struggling to pay the bills, let alone cough up for an unexpected GP appointment.

Rates have continued to fall every month despite the Government’s Budget announcement that they will triple the bulkbilling incentive, showing they have failed to restore confidence in the system at this critical time.

Now it has become clear that changes to payroll taxes will only exacerbate this concerning trend and eat away at any potential benefit provided by their budget measure.

As reported in the Sydney Morning Herald this month, “patients are set to pay up to $20 more to see a GP” and the new State Government payroll taxes will “kill off bulkbilling”.

With wall-to-wall state Labor premiers on the mainland, it is astounding that the Albanese Government is letting the states effectively quash their bulkbilling budget measure with these changes.

The Shadow Minister for Health and Aged Care, Senator the Hon Anne Ruston said that this is a worrying double hit for patients.

“Bulkbilling rates are falling and the cost of seeing a GP is increasing, creating an unacceptable barrier for Australians in need of critical healthcare,” Senator Ruston said.

“The Albanese Government was elected with a promise to ‘strengthen Medicare’, yet all of the data is pointing in the exact opposite direction.”

“Despite all their rhetoric, the reality is that the Coalition Government oversaw record high bulkbilling rates while we were in Government, while Labor has let them fall to the lowest levels since the Rudd-Gillard-Rudd years.”

“Medicare has been weakened from every angle, and Australians cannot afford for this concerning trend to continue,” Senator Ruston said.

Under the Albanese Labor Government, Medicare-subsidised mental health support has been slashed, less than half of their promised Urgent Care Clinics are operational, and 70 telehealth items have been cut from Medicare.

Australians must look at this Government’s actions and not their words.

Without urgent action from the Albanese Government to address the current decline in bulkbilling and rising health costs, Australians’ access to critical healthcare will be increasingly at risk.