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  • Kelvin Thomson’s Letter to the Editor re: Age article on Melbourne Population Growth

    Kelvin Thomson’s Letter to the Editor re: Age article on Melbourne Population Growth

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    Cianflone, Anthony (K. Thomson, MP) Anthony.Cianflone@aph.gov.au
    2:58 PM (26 minutes ago)

    to Tim

    Tim Colebatch’s report on the rapid growth of Melbourne raises the question, is this growth good for Melbourne? As he points out, during the last decade Melbourne’s population grew by much more than any other Australian city. Melbourne grew by over 647,000 people, with Sydney the next largest with an increase of 477,000.

    It is clear that the pace of this growth has been way too rapid for State and local governments, as well as public and private infrastructure providers, to cope with. The consequences have been severe, with travel times to and from work blowing out, electricity and council rates skyrocketing, residents losing their ability to preserve their street scape and neighbourhood character, and young people unable to afford a house with a backyard anywhere near where they grew up.

    It doesn’t have to be this way. As Tim Colebatch reports, 60 per cent of this growth came from overseas migration. Both our permanent and temporary migrant worker programs were greatly increased during the last decade, supposedly to deal with the mining boom, but instead many migrant workers end up in Melbourne. The migrant worker programs should be returned to the level of the 1990s and 1980s, and Melbourne would be able to cope much better than it is at present.

    This is first and foremost the responsibility of the Federal Government, but it would help if State and local government started calling for it, instead of behaving like drivers of the getaway car, which is what they have done all too often during the past decade.

    Kelvin Thomson MP

    Tim Colebatch article:http://www.theage.com.au/national/growth-pains-on-the-citys-fringe-20120731-23d73.html

    Letters to The Age (You can forward your thoughts & response here):letters@theage.com.au

  • Drought strains U.S. oil production

    Drought strains U.S. oil production

    @CNNMoneyJuly 31, 2012: 4:55 AM ET

    Excavators prepare water for the oil industry in Kansas. The drought is restricting water available for fracking, which could harm U.S. oil production.

    Excavators prepare water for the oil industry in Kansas. The drought is restricting water available for fracking, which could harm U.S. oil production.

    NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — One of the worst droughts in U.S. history is hampering oil production, pitting farmers against oilmen and highlighting just how dependent on water modern U.S. energy development has become.

    Over 60% of the nation is in some form of drought. Areas affected include West Texas, North Dakota, Kansas, Colorado and Pennsylvania, all of which are part of the recent boom in North American energy production.

    That boom is possible partly by hydraulic fracturing. Known as fracking for short, the controversial practice gets oil and natural gas to flow by cracking shale rock with sand, chemicals, pressure and water.

    Lots of water. Each shale well takes between two and 12 million gallons of water to frack. That’s 18 Olympic-sized swimming pools worth of water per well.

    “We’re having difficulty acquiring water,” said Chris Faulkner, CEO of Breitling Oil and Gas, an oil company with operations in many of the new shale regions including Bakken in North Dakota and Marcellus in Pennsylvania.

    Faulkner said officials in two Pennsylvania counties have stopped issuing permits for oil companies to draw water from rivers, forcing them to go further afield to obtain the crucial resource.

    In Kansas, he said much of the industry’s water comes from wells owned by farmers. Farmers used to sell him water for 35 cents a barrel. Now, he said, they are turning down offers of 75 cents or more.

    As a result, between 10% and 12% of the wells Breitling planned on fracking have been put on hold.

    “As the drought continues, those numbers will rise,” said Faulkner.

    Similar problems are happening at companies industry-wide, said Neal Dingmann, an analyst SunTrust Robinson Humphrey in Houston who covers many of the smaller and mid-sized companies that operate in the new shale plays.

    Dingmann said he expects to see maybe a 5% reduction in new wells by the companies he covers.

    Those numbers aren’t expected to have a meaningful impact on oil or gasoline prices.

    Oil from shale rock is just a small portion of overall U.S. oil production, which in turn contributes just a fraction to global oil supplies, the main determinant in prices.

    Plus, the drought is not expected to continue forever.

    But shale oil is playing an important part in new U.S. supply growth, and the drought illustrates how vulnerable that production is to disruptions in the availability of water.

    Other segments of the energy chain are also being hit by the drought.

    Much of the country’s natural gas is produced by fracking. Unlike oil, natural gas can’t be easily shipped around the world, so its price is more closely tied to local conditions.

    Natural gas prices have surged some 70% over the last couple of months. The runup is mostly due to increased demand for air conditioning during the heat wave and a switch to natural gas from coal by many utilities. But at least one analyst puts part of the blame on drought-induced production problems.

    “Another rally in natural gas as drought concerns may lead to a cessation of non-conventional shale production,” Stephen Schork, an energy trader and publisher of the industry newsletter the Schork Report, wrote in a note last week.

    Corn-based ethanol prices have jumped roughly 30% since the start of June, in step with corn prices that have reached record highs. Ethanol makes up about 10% of a gallon of gas in most parts of the country.

    The recent rise in gasoline prices has more to do with rising oil prices, which are being driven by the standoff with Iran and hopes for a looser monetary policy rather than drought conditions the United States. But the higher ethanol prices are probably playing a small part, said Brian Milne, refined fuels editor at the information provider DTN.

    Another water-dependent link in the nation’s energy supply chain is transport — specifically, barges on the nation’s canals and rivers.

    Andrew Lebow, an broker at Jefferies Bache in New York, said people are concerned that some energy terminals will have a hard time getting supplies if low water levels make routes impassable.

    “I don’t think the impact will be widespread,” said Lebow. “But you could see prices rise in some areas.” To top of page

  • Nuclear power is too dangerous to continue

    Nuclear power is too dangerous to continue
    Post-Bulletin
    Nuclear weapons production is joined at the hip to nuclear power plantsNuclear weapons useplutonium (produced as high-level radioactive waste at these power plants). Nuclear weapons proliferation around the world relies first and foremost on a country 
    See all stories on this topic »
    Fukushima disaster tour visits Ukiah
    Ukiah Daily Journal
    Yamada’s monthlong, U.S. tour includes stops in Northern California, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C. and New York City and is intended to raise awareness about the ongoing danger at the FukushimaNuclear Power Plant, the offer of retired 
    See all stories on this topic »
    Are Fast-Breeder ReactorsNuclear Power Panacea?
    CounterCurrents.org
    technology to burn plutonium in a new generation of “fast” reactors. That could dispose of the waste problem, reducing the threat of radiation and nuclear proliferation, and at the same time generate vast amounts of low-carbon energy.  Fast reactors could do the same for the U.S. Under the presidency of George W. Bush, the U.S. launched a Global Nuclear Energy Partnership aimed at developing technologies to consume plutonium in spent fuel. But President Obama drastically cut the partnership’s funding, while 
    See all stories on this topic »


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  • Damning HSU report handed to fraud squad

    Damning HSU report handed to fraud squad

    Posted August 02, 2012 06:59:24

    A damning report which details widespread rorting within the East branch of the Health Services Union has been forwarded to New South Wales Police.

    The report, by lawyer Ian Temby and accountant Dennis Robertson, outlines allegations of multi-million dollar instances of nepotism, maladministration and cronyism.

    Fraud Squad detectives with Strike Force Carnarvon, which was set up to investigate allegations of inappropriate practices within the union, are now considering the contents of the report.

    Many of the allegations involve the branch’s former national president Michael Williamson, who quit via text message this week.

    Mr Williamson stood aside last September when investigations into allegations of misuse of funds began, though he still formally held the position.

    He has declined to comment about the report and was not interviewed by its authors.

    HSU East is now in administration.

    View the full report in four parts: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 and Part 4

    Topics:unions, fraud-and-corporate-crime, law-crime-and-justice, nsw, australia

  • Citizens to wield power in the city

    Citizens to wield power in the city

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    Angela Vithoulkas

    Small business owner, entrepreneur and broadcaster, Angela Vithoulkas, is Living Sydney’s Lord Mayoral candidate in the upcoming City of Sydney council elections. Picture: Cameron Richardson Source: The Daily Telegraph

    RESIDENTS and ratepayers will be paid up to $100 a day to sit on a citizens’ jury and provide their views on major City of Sydney projects under a radical plan to hand decision-making back to the community.

    Up to 40 people from a cross-section of the city community will be randomly selected to join the juries, funded from council coffers, and will have real power to decide large projects such as cycleways.

    The plan will be launched today by cafe owner Angela Vithoulkas, who is standing against Clover Moore for the lord mayoralty, and heads the seven-member Living Sydney ticket in next month’s local government elections.

    Citizens’ juries already are used at Canada Bay and have been proposed to guide major state infrastructure projects.

    Ms Vithoulkas, 46, said yesterday the juries would be selected and run – at arm’s length from council – by the newDemocracy Foundation, started by Transfield director Luca Belgiorno-Nettis with the aim of improving the democratic process.

    “The jury system is a community engagement plan we will implement immediately (on election),” Ms Vithoulkas said.

    “We want to give power back to the community, to assess and make decisions and choices on the issues that affect them.

    “The community is unhappy about the present consultation process, where decisions have a pre-determined outcome.”

    Ms Vithoulkas, who has run Vivo Cafe in George St for the past 10 years, said she believed the city cycleways would never have been built if citizens’ juries had been in operation. “We would want to hear voices from all parts of the community,” she said.

    “And that could be on a development application, a transport issue, or cycleways.”

    Under the plan it is expected jury members would attend five to seven meetings and have access to council staff, documents and external experts.

    A citizens’ jury is likely to cost $10,000 to $12,000 for each project, with an annual budget of several hundred thousand dollars factored in.

    Ms Vithoulkas said a council controlled by Living Sydney would pledge to act on the views and findings of the community juries.

    “We need a more open and transparent system … we need to bust open the Clover club,” she said.

    “People should be a lot more involved in decision-making before problems arise.

    “We will apply the jury model to some public decisions and people will get involved when they see we are passing to them genuine authority.”

    Living Sydney claims the City of Sydney has $530 million available in its bank account and yet more money could be freed up by eliminating waste and inefficiency.

     

    6 comments on this story

  • Rush for one-way tickets for RailCorp workers

    Rush for one-way tickets for RailCorp workers

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    MORE than 1000 RailCorp middle managers and back office workers have applied for redundancies in a rush of applications since Transport Minister Gladys Berejiklian signalled she wanted to get rid of 750 bureaucrats.

    A “reform team” is now determining which positions are most appropriate to make redundant “without impacting day-to-day operations”.

    It is the first tranche in 3000 to 4000 redundancies the minister is hoping to create in the 15,000-employee organisation. A Booz and Company report for the government found that, compared with other rail systems around the world, RailCorp was mass- ively overstaffed.

    The government believes RailCorp has four times as many senior bureaucrats for the size of its workforce than the former RTA, and 20 times more than the Department of Education.

    “There have been more than 1000 formal expressions of interest received for redundancies,” a Transport for NSW spokesman said.

    “The RailCorp reform team is determining which positions are the most appropriate to be made redundant.

    “The government is pleased with progress to date and is committed to driving real improvements for customers and eliminating back office inefficiencies. RailCorp costs $10 million a day to run, with costs rising three times as fast as the number of passenger journeys. That is unsustainable.

    “Each of these 1000 are from the sector that we mentioned will be targeted – back office middle management.”

    Ms Berejiklian announced the redundancies in May and said at the time the move was about “fixing the trains”.

    The minister predicted there would be a “scare campaign” from unions warning of further job cuts but said she was determined to carry out her agenda. Cuts to mainstream RailCorp staff are expected to begin when the government negotiates an enterprise bargaining agreement it has with the unions which the former Labor government put in place until 2014.

    Under that agreement, the minister is not permitted to summarily sack staff.

    Earlier this year Ms Berejiklian said: “We are a global city, we need a 21st century rail organisation. Unfortunately a lot of practices have been around 50 to 60 years or longer. We want to turn RailCorp into a modern organisation. One example is there are restrictions as to what train staff can do versus what platform staff can do.

    “What we keep getting told is guards aren’t allowed to get on the platform.”

    In the June budget the government foreshadowed 15,000 public service job cuts over four years through natural attrition or redundancies on top of the RailCorp cuts.