Retail Supply Chain Alliance to renew MoU in Cairns

Australian horticulture industry workers will be the big winners when Retail Supply Chain Alliance members meet in Cairns tomorrow to renew the Ethical Retail Supply Chain Accord.

Formed in 2019 the Retail Supply Chain Alliance is a partnership between the Transport Workers’ Union (TWU); Australian Workers’ Union (AWU); and the Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees Association (SDA).

TWU National Secretary Michael Kaine noted that: “All parties to the Accord are committed to ending all forms of worker exploitation in the retail supply chain, from farms to consumers’ front gates, and every step in between.”

AWU National Secretary Daniel Walton said: “Safeguarding human rights in the Australian horticulture industry is a critical responsibility for participants at all levels of the supply chain. This is a growing industry, with workers on our farms coming from around the world. Consumers want ethically sourced produce, and farm workers want a fair day’s pay for a fair day’s work.”

SDA National Secretary Gerard Dwyer said: “Retail Supply Chain Alliance members are committed to the goal of a safe, sustainable, ethical, and fair retail supply chain in which no worker regardless of their employment status, citizenship or visa status needs to fear exploitation, wage theft, bullying, sexual harassment, unsafe work, or modern slavery.”

All parties also recognise that by working together across the horticulture supply chain they can better protect the rights and conditions of workers in the industry.

Coles Chief Legal and Safety Officer, David Brewster said: “As a socially responsible corporate entity, Coles recognises that a safe, sustainable, ethical, and fair retail supply chain cannot be assured in the long term without the active participation of the people who work in them.”

The signing will coincide with a Fair Go for Farm Workers Community Forum being held in Mareeba on Friday, April 22, from 5:30pm.

The forum is a chance for workers, the community and industry leaders to meet and discuss how unions, farmers, and supermarkets can achieve safe workplaces with fair wages and conditions for all farm workers in the Atherton Tablelands.

All farm workers, including seasonal workers, Pacific Labour Scheme workers, visa holders, and backpackers are welcome.

The forum will be held at Mareeba Sports Hall, 183 Walsh Street, Mareeba. It is free to attend, and there will be free food and drinks

Nine-month sanction imposed on NSW roofing company for apprentice death

The Attorney-General and Minister for Industrial Relations Michaelia Cash has imposed a nine-month sanction against New South Wales company Landmark Roofing Pty Ltd (ACN 108 495 923) after the company was found to have failed to comply with WHS laws, leading to the tragic death of an apprentice roof plumber.

The sanction means the company will be unable to tender for Commonwealth Government funded work for the duration of the sanction, which will run from 2 May 2022 to 1 February 2023.

Background Facts

In early 2018 Landmark Roofing was engaged to replace fire-damaged roofing at a Mayfield West (NSW) recycling centre.

On 8 March 2018, the first-year apprentice and his supervisor were on the roof of the building replacing a section of damaged polycarbonate skylight when the apprentice roof plumber fell around six metres through the skylight. He sustained serious injuries, from which he later died in hospital.

Both the apprentice roof plumber and his supervisor were wearing safety harnesses, however, neither of the harnesses were connected to an anchor point.

District Court decision

Landmark Roofing was the respondent to a prosecution brought by Worksafe New South Wales in the District Court of New South Wales.

On 15 May 2020, the District Court found the company:

· had a duty under section 19(1) of the Work Health and Safety Act 2011 (NSW) (WHS Act) to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health and safety of its workers while at work; and

· it had failed to comply with this duty, exposing [the apprentice] and [his supervisor] to a risk of death or serious injury contrary to section 32 of the WHS Act.

A conviction was recorded, and the company was ordered to pay a fine of $400,000 plus the prosecution’s costs.

The sentencing remarks of District Court Judge Russell SC state as follows:

Objective Seriousness of the Offence

My findings about the offender’s level of culpability are based upon the following:

(1) The risk of a fall from height was obvious and was known to Landmark. The risk created by working near old brittle polycarbonate material was well-known to Landmark.

(2) The risk was likely to occur. [name of apprentice] was an inexperienced apprentice who was working a considerable distance above the ground without being harnessed to the existing static line.

(3) The potential consequences of the risk were grave, including serious injury or death.

(4) There were available steps which could have eliminated or minimised the risk. There was an existing static line on the ridge of the roof. Both men on the roof were wearing harnesses. There were two ropes available to attach the harnesses to the static line. For unexplained reasons, one of those ropes was left in the utility at ground level.

(5) There was no cost or inconvenience in the two workers being roped onto the static line.

(6) The death of [name of apprentice] was a direct consequence of Landmark’s breach of duty.

(7) The maximum penalty for the offence is a fine of $1,500,000, which reflects the legislature’s view of the seriousness of the offence.

I find that Landmark’s level of culpability is in the high end of the mid range.

Deterrence

The penalty imposed in relation to this offence must provide for general deterrence.

Employers must take the obligations imposed by the Act very seriously. The community is entitled to expect that both small and large employers will comply with safety requirements.

General deterrence is a significant factor when safety obligations are breached. … This is particularly so when the offence involves a fall from height, which is one of the most common scenarios to come before this court.

The penalty must reflect the need for specific deterrence. Landmark is still conducting a business in a high risk industry. Its operations involve the removal of existing roofing material, replacement with metal sheet roofing and the installation of metal sheet roofing on new construction projects. Landmark continues to engage workers, including apprentices, for these projects.

Aggravating Factors

The injury, emotional harm, loss or damage caused by the offence was substantial. [The apprentice] died from the severe injuries that he sustained when he fell through the polycarbonate skylight sheeting.

[The apprentice] was a vulnerable, young, inexperienced worker. He was in the first year of his apprenticeship at the time of the incident.

Mitigating Factors

Landmark has no record of previous convictions.

Landmark is otherwise of good character. The steps which it took after the incident demonstrate this. Landmark has been in business for 16 years.

Landmark is unlikely to re-offend.

Landmark has good prospects of rehabilitation. It has taken positive steps to guard against the risk of an incident such as this ever happening again. It has brought its documentation and its procedures into line with those which, on all the evidence, should have been in place before this accident occurred.

Landmark gave assistance to law enforcement authorities. It co-operated at all times with the prosecutor and provided all documents requested in a prompt fashion.

Victim Impact Statements

A court to which a Victim Impact Statement has been tendered must consider the statement at any time after it convicts but before it sentences, and may make any comment on the statement that the court considers appropriate. In this regard the court offers its own sympathies to (the victim’s mother and father) and the wider family on the tragic loss of their son, a fine young man who was highly regarded by all who knew him.

A Victim Impact Statement of a family victim may also be taken into account by the court in connection with the determination of punishment for the offence, on the basis that the harmful impact of a primary victim’s death on family victims is an aspect of harm done to the community. … The prosecutor submits that the Victim Impact Statements of [the victim’s] mother and father should be taken into account in setting the appropriate level of penalty in this matter.

I determine that it is appropriate to take the statements into account.

Referral to the Minister by the ABCC Commissioner

The ABCC Commissioner found that Landmark’s breaches of the WHS Act, constituted breaches of the Code for the Tendering and Performance of Building Work 2016 (the Code).

Landmark Roofing was found to be in breach of subsection 9(3) and 17(1) of the Code providing that a code covered entity must:

· comply with work health and safety laws …, and

· notify the ABCC of a breach, or suspected breach of [the Code] … and advise the ABCC of the steps proposed to be taken to rectify the breach.

The Code sets out the Australian Government’s expected standards of conduct for building industry participants involved in Commonwealth funded building work.

If the ABCC Commissioner recommends a sanction for a breach of WHS laws, the Minister must impose an exclusion sanction unless satisfied that it is not appropriate in the circumstances because of the nature of, or factors contributing to, the failure to comply.

On 9 April 2022, the Minister decided to impose an exclusion sanction of 9 months for the period 2 May 2022 to 1 February 2023.

ABCC Commissioner Stephen McBurney said:

“Given the considerable amount of Commonwealth Government funding available for building and infrastructure projects, recourse to an exclusion sanction is an important deterrent against companies breaching work health and safety laws.

“The tragic circumstances of this case have resulted in a significant exclusion sanction. There is no rectification capable of addressing the harm done in this case.

“The victim impact statements submitted to the District Court and summarised by His Honour speak to the devastating impact this workplace fatality has had on the victim’s family.

“The genuine statement of remorse from the sole director of Landmark was also acknowledged by the Court.

“The ABCC will continue to monitor breaches of WHS laws to ensure that Code sanctions can be referred to the Minister whenever it is appropriate to do so.”

The nine-month sanction is the longest sanction handed to a company for a breach of the Code for the Tendering and Performance of Building Work 2016.

Litigation Timeline

On 15 May 2020, the District Court of NSW found the company:

· had a duty under section 19(1) of the WHS Act to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health and safety of its workers while at work; and

· it had failed to comply with this duty, exposing [name of the apprentice] and [his supervisor] to a risk of death or serious injury contrary to section 32 of the WHS Act.

A conviction was recorded, and the company was ordered to pay a fine of $400,000 plus the prosecution’s costs.

On 12 August 2020 Landmark Roofing filed an appeal with the Supreme Court of NSW Criminal Court of Appeal against its District Court conviction and penalty.

On 13 May 2021 in a unanimous decision, Landmark Roofing was found to have failed to establish any of its appeal grounds and the appeal was dismissed.

On 16 June 2021 Landmark Roofing filed an application for special leave to appeal the decision of the Supreme Court of NSW Criminal Court of Appeal in the High Court of Australia.

On 14 October 2021 the High Court of Australia dismissed Landmark Roofing’s application for special leave to appeal with costs awarded against the company.

Following the completion of Landmark Roofing’s avenues of legal appeal, the ABCC Commissioner referred the matter to the Minister for consideration of an exclusion sanction.

Three arrested for illegal hunting – Hunter

Three people have been arrested following an investigation into alleged illegal hunting in the state’s Upper Hunter region.

On Wednesday 20 April 2022, teams from the Hunter Valley Rural Crime Investigations and NSW Department of Primary Industries Game Licencing Unit conducted proactive patrols of the Murrurundi and Little Jacks Creek areas, following reports of illegal hunting and other rural crimes in the region.

About 6.45am (Wednesday 20 April 2022), a SUV utility carrying a dog crate was detected allegedly trespassing and illegally hunting on a private property at Merriwa Road, Little Jacks Creek.

Police stopped the ute and spoke to three male occupants, aged 15, 17 and 23.

Five hunting dogs were located within the dog cage, with four of those wearing hunting collars. Two of the dogs were not microchipped and were fitted with electronic shock collars.

Police searched the ute – which was unregistered – and seized knives, hunting collars, a GPS tracking unit, spotlights and various tools.

All three were arrested and taken to Muswellbrook Police Station.

The 23-year-old man from Belmore was charged with enter private land to hunt animal without owner consent, enter enclosed agricultural land accompanied by hunting dog, custody of knife in public place, have custody of non-prescribed electrical device (two counts), companion animal (other) not registered (two counts), and not identify companion animal as prescribed – other (two counts).

He was given conditional bail to appear at Muswellbrook Local Court on Tuesday 31 May 2022.

The 17-year-old youth from Hunterview was charged with enter private land to hunt animal without owner consent, enter enclosed agricultural land accompanied by hunting dog, never licensed person drive vehicle on road, cause or permit use of unregistered vehicle on road, and custody of knife in public place.

He was given conditional bail to appear before a Children’s Court on Monday 30 May 2022.

The 15-year-old boy from Singleton was released and will be issued with a youth caution for the offences of hunt game animal on private land without consent of owner, and enter enclosed agricultural land accompanied by hunting dog.

Greens to make gas corporations pay their fair share of tax

On Wednesday, Greens Leader Adam Bandt and Greens spokesperson for Mining and Resources Senator Dorinda Cox will be in Karratha, WA to launch the final component of the Greens’ Tycoon Tax, which will end tax breaks for corporations undertaking offshore gas extraction in Commonwealth waters and oblige them to pay royalties on the natural resources that rightfully belong to the people of Australia.

The Greens will push the new tax in balance of power in the Senate after the next election.

The Greens’ plan will repair the broken superprofits tax on the profits of oil and gas corporations operating in Gorgon, Wheatstone, Pluto and Prelude gas fields and require them to finally pay royalties on the gas they currently extract and sell for free. The plan is costed by the PBO and is expected to return at least $92.3 billion to the budget over the decade, bringing the total revenue that will be raised by super profits taxes on tycoons to $430 billion.

The Australian Tax Office has referred to the gas industry as “systemic non-payers of tax”. The combined value of the tax credits held by gas corporations is bigger than the GDP of Finland or Portugal at $282 billion. Despite gas revenues reaching tens of billions of dollars each year, the ATO expects no significant tax revenue from gas companies until “the mid-2030s”. Many  of these gas companies will never pay any tax at all under the current laws.

Greens analysis of the latest year of corporate tax data shows there are 27 gas companies that earned $77,088,581,964 in revenue without a single cent in tax being paid between them.

Chevron is the worst offender: they dominate WA’s gas market through Gorgon and Wheatstone, yet not once in all the years of corporate tax data have they ever voluntarily paid any company tax or PRRT (Petroleum Resource Rent Tax). 

An aged care nurse in Karratha would have paid more tax in one month than Chevron has voluntarily paid in seven years from their $39,957,988,302 of income. 

Revenue raised through wiping tax credits and implementing royalties will fund urgent national priorities including hospitals and housing, as well as supporting national cost of living measures such as getting dental and mental health into Medicare, building affordable housing, making childcare free, fixing Centrelink including raising all rates and lowering the age pension back to 65 and wiping student debt. 

Qatar exports the same amount of LNG as Australia, they raise around $37 billion AUD a year from their gas companies, yet Australia couldn’t even manage to raise $2 billion from a broken super profits tax.

Australian Greens leader Adam Bandt MP said:

“In just one year, 27 big gas corporations brought in $77b in income but paid no tax. 

“When a nurse pays more tax than a multinational, something is seriously wrong.

“The Greens will make big gas corporations pay their fair share of tax to help get dental into Medicare.

“Australia’s natural resources belong to the people, but Liberal and Labor are giving away our gas for free, losing billions of dollars that should be funding hospitals and schools.

“The people of WA currently contribute more tax through car registrations than the multi-billion dollar gas industry pays for gas. 

“WA is being taken to the cleaners by big coal and gas corporations, and Australians are being ripped off.

“No other business gets their raw materials for free, but Woodside, Chevron and Exxon get free gas from this tax rort and then make obscene profits that they send offshore.

“Mining and burning coal and gas isn’t just driving the climate crisis, these big corporations are driving the cost of living crisis too.”

Senator Dorinda Cox, Australian Greens Senator for Western Australia said:

“Real climate action means phasing out gas and coal by 2030, and keeping new gas and coal in the ground. Both the Liberals and Labor back more gas and coal. They take millions in donations from gas and coal billionaires & big corporations.

“Western Australia is in a climate crisis caused by the mining and burning of gas and coal. Our state currently gets more revenue from car registrations than we do from the multi-billion dollar gas industry. At a time of climate crisis, Western Australia is the only state where climate polluting emissions are going up, not down.

“By making gas corporations pay their fair share of tax, the Greens will power a clean energy revolution that will create hundreds of thousands of well-paid, long-term jobs, enabling workers in fossil fuel industries to transition away from polluting industries and into the clean, green renewable energy jobs.

“By making every billionaire and corporation pay their fair share, we can build a safer future for all of us. We will use this money to deliver real climate action, build 118,000 new homes in WA to tackle the housing crisis and include dental and mental health care into Medicare.”

Young people betrayed on housing affordability

Australian Greens Housing spokesperson Senator Mehreen Faruqi has said that a new Resolve Strategic poll has told a sorry story about the Coalition and Labor’s abandonment of young people on housing security and affordability.

67 per cent of people aged 18-34 now agree that many younger people who haven’t already bought a home will never be able to do so.

Senator Faruqi said:

“Young people can see through the Coalition and Labor’s complete policy-fail on housing and the cost of living.

“The major parties have dropped the ball on this. They are condemning young people out of house and home.

“The Coalition and Labor are committed to entrenching the unfair status quo through initiatives like the Home Guarantee Scheme, which will further fuel the housing crisis.

“What we need is a big, bold plan to match the scale of the problem and this is what the Greens will deliver.

“We will push the next government to build one million new homes over 20 years, including 125,000 new homes for purchase through a shared equity arrangement with the Commonwealth.

“We have to wind back negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount, and strengthen renters’ rights, including by capping rent increases.

“Housing is a human right and solving the housing crisis should be a top priority for every party at this election.”

Greens call for Government-led compensation for First Nations funeral policyholders

“We struggle to survive in this Country, and we can’t even rest in peace,” said Greens Senator Lidia Thorpe. This comes as funeral funds at Youpla Group went into liquidation last month, leaving up to 15 000 First Nations people out of pocket for funeral expenses.

“My nan, Edna Brown, founded the Aboriginal Funeral Benefits Fund to stop First Nations people being buried as paupers in unmarked graves. That was in the 1960s. In 2022, our family members are being left in morgues while community saves for sorry business, or they face being buried as paupers! It’s devastating.”

“In 2019, the Royal Commission into Misconduct in the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry recommended urgent regulation of the funeral insurance industry, noting that it exploited First Nations communities. What has this Government done about it?”

“The Coalition allowed Youpla Group to continue to trade and target First Nations people. This Government’s failure to regulate the industry has caused these losses, they have a duty to compensate policyholders. This is about dignity. This is about respect.”

“This could be resolved by a Government, who seem to have no trouble bailing out their mining and corporate mates. The hypocrisy of this Government, to facilitate the ongoing loss and pain in our communities is a national shame,” said Thorpe.

“They built trust with their name and then took money from vulnerable people. We’re not talking about people with big incomes, they were taking money from some policyholders that would have been equal to about 25% of their small income,”  said Ngemba woman and Greens candidate for Parkes Trish Frail.

NSW Greens senate candidate David Shoebridge said the Morrison government’s failure to protect policyholders means it now has a responsibility to compensate them.

“Vulnerable people were preyed on under the Morrison government’s watch, it’s time to ensure that First Nations policyholders are protected financially while they are grieving,” Mr Shoebridge said.

Wiradjuri woman, Beverly Roberts joined one of Youpla’s funds in 1994, soon after she’d lost 4 family members in the space of a year. She covered herself and close family members, most recently paying the funeral fund up to $87 a fortnight.

“When I joined twenty eight years ago I wasn’t a diabetic, and I didn’t have leukemia. Now that I have those diseases, what are my chances of another funeral fund covering me? None!”

“Who’s going to pay for my funeral now? All that money is gone and I’m so wild about it.”

The Greens are proposing two forms of relief: 

  • For the Government to honour the policies to cover funeral expenses for any death of a First Nations policyholder of the Youpla Group.
  • To repay insurance premiums paid by all other First Nations policyholders over the past decade so that they can have a reserve available to meet funeral expenses.

Labor Will Back Veterans’ Organisation Disaster Relief Australia

An Albanese Labor Government will provide more support to Australians rebuilding their lives after natural disasters by boosting funding for a Veteran-led disaster response organisation.  
 
Disaster Relief Australia (DRA), a fully-Veteran led organisation, has been working since 2016 to provide relief to communities in the wake of natural disasters, deploying hundreds of veteran volunteers across Australia and the world.  
  
Under an Albanese Labor Government, Disaster Relief Australia will receive $38.1 million over three years to expand this program. 
  
The funding will allow DRA to add another 5,200 volunteer veterans to its ranks – a total of 6,700 veteran volunteers able to provide over 13,600 volunteer days per annum. 
  
The funding covers costs relating to deployment, recruitment, equipment, and training. 
  
Over the last three years, Australia has watched Scott Morrison refuse to take responsibility and go missing in action when natural disasters have struck. 
  
Now, as communities recover from devastating floods, Scott Morrison has politicised flood recovery, caring more about who flood victims voted for than what help they need. 
  
An Albanese Labor Government will put Australians first. We will increase support for organisations like the DRA assisting on the ground and never use recovery funding as a political football.

$50 million to turbocharge South Australian defence jobs

The Morrison Government will invest $50 million to create a new business and research partnership with the University of Adelaide to help build new defence technologies and products, creating 1,000 new jobs.

The University of Adelaide will work with 52 business partners – including 35 small businesses, and the University of New South Wales – to develop and build Australia’s sovereign defence industry in increasingly uncertain times.

The project aims to develop 100 new defence products and the University of Adelaide estimates it will create 1,000 new jobs over the next four years.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the University of Adelaide is the second Australian university to receive funding through the Trailblazer program which is designed to focus Australia’s considerable research power on Australia’s National Manufacturing Priorities.

“Our national economic plan is supercharging Australia’s research and development, creating more jobs and helping build a stronger economy for a stronger future,” the Prime Minister said.

“We are investing $270 billion in building our sovereign defence capability, creating jobs right around the country, and through our Trailblazer program we will now back in Australia’s brightest and best to develop new defence industry technology and products.”

Acting Minister for Education and Youth Stuart Robert said the University of Adelaide and its industry partners have promised $188 million in co-investment, matching public funding by more than 3 to 1.

“The investment of industry partners, and especially by the 35 partner small businesses, shows that our homegrown defence firms are hungry to innovate and to help secure Australia in the increasingly uncertain Indo-Pacific strategic environment,” Minister Robert said.

“This project will help harness the cutting-edge defence research being done in our top universities, and ensure that our defence forces have access to defence technology at the global cutting-edge, including applications of quantum materials, hypersonics and robotics.

“This Trailblazer funding means more jobs right here in Australia, a stronger economy and stronger national defence.”

The University of Adelaide is the second successful Trailblazer to be announced, with further announcements expected in coming weeks.

Curtin University was selected as a Trailblazer from a two-stage competitive assessment process where universities were required to submit expressions of interest and then more detailed business cases.

The Morrison Government has invested $362 million in the Trailblazer Universities program – an initial $243 million announced in November last year and an additional $119 million through our Regional Accelerator Program announced on Budget night. This is part of the Government’s $2.2 billion University Research Commercialisation Action Plan, which will focus the considerable research power of our universities on Australia’s National Manufacturing Priorities.

$30 in million leadership, research and training grants to reduce suicides

Australia’s leading suicide prevention and mental health organisations are among the recipients of $30 million in funding for workforce training, research and national leadership initiatives aiming to reduce the tragic toll of suicide in Australia.

Funded through the 2021-21 Budget’s expansion of the National Suicide Prevention Leadership Support grant programme, leading mental health groups will receive funding for national advocacy, research translation, and evidence-based training for communities and organisations, with programs to be delivered across Australia.

Minister for Health, Greg Hunt, said the program was an important part of the Government’s commitment to suicide prevention.

“In 2020, there was a 5.4 per cent reduction in the number of suicides compared to 2019, with the national rate of 12.1 per 100,000 being the lowest recorded since 2016.

“While the reduction in the rate is encouraging, still far too many people die by suicide every year. Our Government is committed to working towards zero suicides, recognising the immense value of each and every life.”

The funding includes investment in Suicide Prevention Australia’s work to deliver national leadership by informing, influencing and building capacity in the suicide prevention sector.

The University of Melbourne will receive funding to strengthen the evidence of suicide prevention models and translate it into policy and practice.

Training is an important focus of the new investments. headspace National will receive funding to help university staff identify mental health issues, and Mental Health First Aid International and Wesley Community Services – Lifeforce Suicide Prevention Training will receive support to increase the reach of their respective training programs.

Wesley Lifeforce will also continue their work through the Wesley LifeForce Suicide Prevention network, building the capacity of communities to respond to and support those at risk within their region. Black Dog Institute will deliver evidence-based suicide prevention support services to Primary Health Networks, to increase reach and support for at-risk communities.

Assistant Minister to the Prime Minister for Mental Health and Suicide Prevention, David Coleman, said the new funding ensures the future of existing and successful programs and invests in innovative, new and emerging projects or strategies.

“Through record investments, the Morrison Government continues to transform the mental health and suicide prevention system to ensure that it delivers innovative, effective and person-centered care when and where it is needed,” Assistant Minister Coleman said.

“The program reflects our multifaceted approach to suicide prevention which aims to ensure that every Australian can be supported in the way that works best for them,” Assistant Minister Coleman said.

Funding for these projects forms part of the Morrison Government’s latest round of the newly expanded National Suicide Prevention Leadership and Support Program, an investment of over $114 million through the 2021-22 Budget.

Suicide prevention is a key pillar of the Government’s landmark National Mental Health and Suicide Prevention Plan.

The Plan recognises Australians deserve a system that acts early to help people before mental health conditions and suicidal distress worsen, and that whole-of-government and whole-of-community changes are needed to deliver preventative, effective and compassionate care.

Since 2012–13, the Coalition Government’s investment through the Health portfolio in mental health and suicide prevention has more than doubled, growing from $3.3 billion to an estimated $6.8 billion in the 2022–23 Budget.

This is in stark contrast to Mr Albanese’s time in Cabinet, where Labor cut funding for mental health.

In the 2011-12 Budget, Labor announced a $580 million cut to Medicare subsidised mental health services, including a reduction in the number of Medicare sessions available under Better Access from 18 to 10 per year and a reduction in Medicare rebate for preparation of mental health treatment plans by GPs.

Anyone experiencing distress can seek immediate advice and support through Lifeline

(13 11 14), Kids Helpline (1800 55 1800), or the Government’s digital mental health gateway, Head to Health.

If you are concerned about suicide, living with someone who is considering suicide, or bereaved by suicide, the Suicide Call Back Service is available at 1300 659 467 or www.suicidecallbackservice.org.au.

Joint Statement on Solomon Islands

Australia is deeply disappointed by the signing of a security cooperation agreement between Solomon Islands and China, announced by the Chinese Government.

We respect Solomon Islands’ right to make sovereign decisions about its national security.

Our consistently stated view, including from the perspective of Australia’s national interests, remains that the Pacific family is best placed to meet the security needs of the region.

We are concerned about the lack of transparency with which this agreement has been developed, noting its potential to undermine stability in our region. We continue to seek further clarity on the terms of the agreement, and its consequences for the Pacific region.

We welcome recent statements from Prime Minister Sogavare that Australia is Solomon Islands security partner of choice, and his commitment that Solomon Islands will never be used for military bases or other military institutions of foreign powers.

Australia is consulting the Pacific family in the spirit of regional openness and transparency in a manner consistent with our regional security frameworks.

Through RAMSI and again in response to the recent unrest, the Pacific family has always supported the Solomon Islands to address their security needs. We will continue to strongly encourage the Solomon Islands to engage in regional dialogue and to work with the Pacific family first, including prior to seeking security assistance from China under this arrangement.