Author: Jan Bowman

  • Kurilpa Peninsula Local Legends 2014 Awards

    For a relative newcomer to the West End, such as myself, the Kurilpa Peninsula Local Legends awards night held at Archive Beer Boutique on Saturday, May 10, could not have been a better introduction to the people and the spirit of the community.

    This was the second of the Local Legends events hosted by the Gabba Ward’s Councillor Helen Abrahams. Councillor Abrahams said that the awards, presented in four categories for Creativity, Youth, Environment, and Business, are by the community, recognising people they know in the community.

    The unique awards for the evening were designed by local artist and businessman, Mr Hiroaki Eba from Hanasho flower shop and art gallery and represent the river and the Kuripla Peninsula.

    Federal Member for Griffith, Ms Terri Butler, and Local State member for South Brisbane, Ms Jacki Trad joined Councillor Abrahams in presenting awards.

    Terri Butler MHR with Creative Award winner Litsa Stilianos
    Terri Butler MHR with Creative Award winner Litsa Stilianos

    Nominees for the Creativity Award were announced by Ms Butler. Reading from his nomination, Ms Butler said that first nominee Mr Chris Maver has “tenaciously and energetically promoted flamboyant entertainment in the genre of gay and allied gender in the arts.” Mr Maver has also authored and produced a documentary about local artists in the community which is available from the West End library.

    The second creative nominee was Debaran Wright. Ms Wright is an art teacher and therapist who has volunteered at West End Community House for more than 12 years.

    There were two group nominations for the creativity award which included the West End Making History Group the authors of the Streetwalker Guides of the West End. Ms Butler said the group members “are local heroes who exemplify the creative and sharing culture of our West End community”.

    Fiona Stager from Avid Reader (and a member of the Making History Group) nominated West End’s Kurilpa library for the creativity award. The library was established in 1929 and was the first purpose-built municipal library in Queensland. In her nomination, Ms Stager wrote, “I cannot imagine West End without the Kurilpa Library”.

    The winner’s award went to Ms Litsa Stilianos, Director of the Greek Orthodox Child-Care Centre in Browning Street, South Brisbane, a role she has held for 25 years. Her philosophy is that the child-care centre should be providing a service to the parents and the broader family as well as the children. Ms Stilianos has also been part of the organising committee for the Paniyiri Greek Festival for the last 10 years and presents and compares popular cooking demonstrations at the event.

    The youth award announced by Ms Abrahams went to Brisbane State high school student Anikah (Ani) Shah. Ms Shah was nominated for being an outstanding student who consistently displays “a heart for social Justice and compassion within our community”. Ms Shah has worked with the local community through Micah projects and with the Brisbane Homelessness Service Centre. She has also been involved with World Vision and is a key member of her school’s Peer Helper team.

    Young musician Louis Whelan was also nominated for the Youth Award. Louis plays in several West End bands, is the manager of the Mouldy Lovers and Rivermouth, as well as a volunteer for community radio 4ZZZ.

    There were two nominees for the local environment award. Entomologist Tim Heard was nominated for his work over 30 years with the Australian native stingless bee. Mr Heard who has helped introduce over 300 hives to residences across metropolitan areas, was represented at the awards by his partner Katina because he was off giving a native bee workshop in Ipswich. Anyone interested in having a native beehive in their garden should visit Tim’s website www.sugarbag.net.

    The winner of the Environment Award was the deserving Meg Kanowski, who is well-known for her work with the Jane Street Community Garden and more recently for establishing and maintaining the wonderful community garden at Paradise Street, Highgate Hill. Ms Kanowski, has been doing community garden work for the past 11 years, and Councillor Abrahams said she is a “much loved member of the local community often recognised for her razor sharp wit [who is] deeply caring and generous towards everyone she meets. Meg is the unsung hero that keeps the gardens as wonderful places to visit”.

    Meg Kanowski winner of the Environment Award
    Meg Kanowski winner of the Environment Award

    I don’t know if Ms Kanowski is also known for her eloquence, but her acceptance speech was the highlight of the night for me. Acknowledging the traditional owners of Paradise Street, Ms Kanowski said of the garden that ”it is a greeting place, a meeting place, a place for argument, joy and despair ….we don’t only share food, we share stories, we share fire, we share beauty and sanctuary…”

    South Brisbane MP, Ms Jacki Trad presented the Local Business award. The West End library was again a nominee along with Ms Brenda Fawdon of Mondo Organics. Ms Trad, said that Ms Fawdon has been a restaurateur and chef in Brisbane for 22 years. Inspired by a concern for the increasing use of pesticides, preservatives and genetically modified additives in everyday foods, Ms Fawdon opened Mondo Organics restaurant in 2000. People come to West End from all over Brisbane to eat at Mondo and to attend its cooking classes. Ms Fawdon’s cookbook, ‘Wholehearted Food’ was published in 2013.

    The winner of the Local Business award was former president of the West End Traders’ Association, Mr Peter Marinelli. Ms Trad said that Mr Marinelli is a well-known West End business icon. He lives in the West End and with his wife Maria runs the local Swiss Deli famous for its Portuguese custard tarts among other wonderful delicacies. A sponsor said of him, and that Mr Marinelli is a “tireless community worker and benefactor who during the 2011 flood emergency delivered food and refreshments to residents and flood workers”.

    Peter Marinelli and wife Maria - winner of the Local Business Award
    Peter Marinelli and wife Maria – winner of the Local Business Award

    The climax of the night was The Westender award (although Councillor Abrahams was at pains to point out that there was not a hierarchy of awards). Nominees included many of those previously nominated. Additional nominees were the Paniyiri Organising Committee, Mr Jeff Lam, Owner and Manager of the Health Works West End, and local window cleaner Mr Charley Lay and his little dog Tubsie.

    Reading from his nomination, Ms Abrahams said that Mr Lam had been operating the Health Works in West End for almost five years and that he has an emphasis on fitness for everyone, no matter what age or social situation. She said that Mr Lam had consciously kept membership fees low to enable people to access a safe and friendly environment in which to exercise.

    Charlie Lay and Tubsie nominee for The Westender Award
    Charlie Lay and Tubsie nominee for The Westender Award

    Ms Abrahams said that the first Paniyiri festival held 37 years ago had attracted a few thousand people and now it is a nationally recognised two-day extravaganza, attracting more than 60,000 people. This year the Paniyiri will be held in South Brisbane’s Musgrave Park on May 24 and 25.

    The Westender award went to Mr Joe Hurley whom his sponsor said has been “a guiding light in the West End community for nearly 20 years as team leader, coordinator and now manager of the West End Family Care Services”. His nomination said that under Mr Hurley’s leadership, “the organisation has delivered free breakfasts drop-in advice information referrals housing support and provided a refuge of hope and opportunity for thousands of residents. Mr Hurley has recently been instrumental in expanding services Annerley and Yeronga under the banner of community plus”.

    Joe Hurley - winner of The Westender Award for 2014
    Joe Hurley – winner of The Westender Award for 2014 plus”.

    “Mr Hurley is a fiercely loyal and local legend who deserves our recognition”, Councillor Abrahams said.

    Far too often lately we have seen protests and complaint, often for good reason, so it was wonderfully refreshing to spend an evening celebrating the ordinary and the extraordinary people who make a real and lasting difference in our community, I felt privileged to be there.

  • G20 Community Forum

    Community ForumOn Friday May 2, the organisers of the Brisbane G20 provided a moderately well attended community information forum at Brisbane Town Hall. Bernadette Welch head of operations from the Department Premier Cabinet, Terry Crane, Executive Director of the G20 state coordination unit in the Department of Premier and Cabinet, and Peter Rule, Executive Manager for the Coordination Unit with the Brisbane City Council, were at pains to sell the positive benefits of the G20.

    The G20 summit will be held in Brisbane on the 15th and 16th of November and it is expected that as well as the leaders of the 25 most influential economies, it will attract 4000 delegates and some 3000 media.

    In addition to the immediate benefits to accommodation and hospitality businesses, the organisers anticipate some long-term benefits for Brisbane due to the enormous amount of publicity it will generate. According to Peter Rule, for that one weekend in November 2014, Brisbane will be the “capital city of the world”.

    So, on the plus side they told the audience that parts of the CBD are getting a facelift: you can already see the work being done in Queen Street for example; and free Wi-Fi in the mall and in other areas of the city will be an ongoing legacy of the event.

    To make the event more attractive for us locals, and to showcase the arts in Brisbane, associated cultural events are planned. What’s not clear, with the projected transport and access restrictions, is just who will be able to attend these events.

    A number of audience members showed up to hear more about the summit volunteer program. The program is looking for up to 700 members of the public to provide assistance at various venues providing advice on transport assisting the media and providing information at host hotel accommodation venues. Those interested in volunteering can call Volunteering Queensland on (07) 3002 7600 or go to the summit website www.G20.org.

    The not so good news was left to Katarina Carroll, Assistant Commissioner with the G20 group from the Queensland Police Service (QPS). Assistant Commissioner Carroll reminded us that there will be considerable restrictions on our movements and access to the city during the summit.

    When advised that organisers are considering giving free public transport passes to summit delegates, one audience member asked if organisers would also consider providing free transport access to Brisbane residents. There was some hesitation from the panel, but the reality is they do not want locals travelling to the city during summit, and to this end there will be a Brisbane-only public holiday on Friday November 14.

    So oddly, while the world’s media will be focused on Brisbane, it will be a city empty of its usual inhabitants.

    Ms Carroll said the summit will be the largest peace-time security operation in Australia’s history with around 3500 QPS Officers and 1500 officers from New Zealand and interstate deployed to Brisbane.

    The motorcades for heads of state will create the greatest restrictions to transport and access during the summit. 25 world leaders and 8 heads of international organisations will transported by motorcade throughout the event, with up to 35 vehicles in each. No traffic will be permitted on the routes while motorcades are travelling.

    Only limited detail was provided on transport and access restrictions. Nevertheless, people were encouraged to talk with the QPS G20 External Engagement Team. A number of QPS members were available at the forum and several of us took the opportunity to speak with them separately.

    The concerns of people living in the CBD and South Brisbane and the West End were both business-related, and related to residential access.

    These access concerns do not just relate to transport restrictions but to the probable effects of protest action. The QPS is already working with activist groups and acknowledges that there could be significant associated disruption. It is urging anyone wishing to mount a protest to talk to them about what they want to achieve and how they want to achieve it.

    QPS representatives said that while there are no officially designated protest sites, Musgrave Park in South Brisbane is likely to be a strategic rallying point for activists groups.

    In response to concerns about the potential for violence, and the mismanagement of protests, Assistant Commissioner Carroll said that the QPS has closely studied and learnt from the G20 event held in Toronto in 2010. Violent clashes between police and protesters in Toronto resulted in injuries to both protestors and police, as well as considerable property damage. It should also be noted that in Toronto, protests commenced 10 days before the start of the summit itself.

    A QPS representative was unable to tell me exactly what restrictions will be in place for those of us wanting to access the South Brisbane and West End during the summit. For example, no decisions have yet been made about which bridges will be closed.

    While none has been planned yet, he agreed that a public forum in the West End could be a constructive option for those wanting to ask more detailed questions about the impacts of the forum, and how they can contribute to any plans to manage the impacts.

    The QPS External Engagement Team is currently working directly with the West End Community Association, so stay tuned for updates.

    Details of the declared and restricted area maps are on-line here: Brisbane’s Restricted Areas

    If you think you may be affected by the 2014 G20 events you can use the G20 Group Contact Form to ask your questions, or you can email g20.info@police.qld.gov.au or call the QPS on 07 3015 3460.

  • Ain’t nothing like the real thing – Westender candidates forum

    Video by Mark Doyle @ffrickenstein

    By Jan Bowman @GriffithElects

    7 February 2014

    Both Bill Glasson and Terri Butler held virtual ‘town-hall’ meetings in recent days, using new technology which enabled them to talk simultaneously with audiences of 10,000 and more.

    These virtual meetings gave all the control to the candidates and their teams, allowed them to target particular sections of the electorate and run polls on voter intentions and priorities.

    They selected the questions, determined the options offered for the polls, while the audience got to listen passively, unless of course you were one of the few selected to ask a question.

    Well, on Wednesday night in the Griffith inner-city suburb of West End, we got the real thing.

    Not a contrived and sterile virtual meeting, but a messy, sometimes raucous public meeting sponsored by the independent Westender online journal. It started late and went far too long, but it was real and exhilarating because we got to hear each other’s cheers and the jeers and sighs of exasperation.

    And we watched, sometimes in embarrassment for them, as candidates were put on the spot or fumbled their words.

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/430988136055701504

    Most importantly, we got to ask our own questions. It gave control back to the voters, and they loved it. This is what it means for candidates to be on the hustings.

    And we got to hear, finally, not just from the Labor, Coalition and Greens candidates, but from the independents and the minor parties who rarely get a public stage.

    Ten of the eleven candidates fronted the standing-room only crowd.

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/430982719502176257

    In a gesture of thanks to organisers, Secular Party candidate Anne Reid posted on her Facebook page the next day: “Candidates like myself for the minor parties don’t always get the airtime and exposure the big parties get, so it is a privilege and an honour when organisations like the Westender show their support for real democracy by providing forums like Meet the Candidates tonight.”

    Spencer Howson on ABC 612, following the ALP’s virtual ‘town-hall’ meeting, observed that a number of questions seemed to be about local issues, such as public transport and overdevelopment. Where were the questions, he wondered, on gay marriage, Medicare, climate change and asylum seekers?

    Well, all of those questions and more were canvassed on Wednesday night.

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/430997340099313664

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/431000788916117505

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/430995979668439040

    The West End is Labor heartland and Terri Butler got the biggest cheers for the night. It must have felt like being amongst friends, an upbeat way to end the campaigning week for her.

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/431000052023062529

    It is not so easy for those who were less warmly embraced. It’s a brave thing to stand before an audience and convince them to vote for you, especially when it is hostile to your position. Family First candidate Christopher Williams felt the brunt of it when he declared his position against same-sex marriage, and Independent Travis Windsor won little favour with his bullish attitude towards the major party candidates.

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/430993983309746177

    https://twitter.com/CameronAtfield/status/431003536638230528

    The story of the night was the early departure of Dr Glasson to some accompanying jeers. My understanding of events is that Dr Glasson’s office had advised the organisers the day before the event that he would have to leave early. He was moved forward on the agenda to enable this, and at a suitable time, after each candidate had provided a 3-minute introduction, and after giving answers to some questions that had been submitted on-line, a 5-minute break was announced and Dr Glasson left.

    The great disappointment for many was that they did not get their opportunity to ask their questions of Dr Glasson. Others wondered about Dr Glasson’s political jugdement, and one commented to me privately that it seemed an odd decision to leave a full house forum that was being covered by live TV and radio. ‘What could be so important?’ people mused.

    Geoff Ebbs’ campaign team summed it up in a Facebook post.

    geoff ebbs

    Geoff Ebbs himself said from the floor “It’s a pity that we gave Dr Glasson such a hard time. I know as a candidate sometimes it is hard to be in two places at once”

    Dr Glasson’s early departure reminded me of his own widely reported disappointment when his then opponent Kevin Rudd had pulled out of a candidate’s forum in the last week of the September election.

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/431012760021786624

    No one could have been more disappointed by Dr Glasson’s departure than the Doctors’ Reform Society vice president, Dr Tracy Schrader, who early in the campaign had issued a challenge to Dr Glasson for a public debate on Medicare. She rose from her seat anyway and addressed her question to Dr Glasson’s empty chair.

    Dr Schrader issued a statement on Thursday outlining her issues and her disappointment.

    drs

    Questions (and some statements) continued on issues ranging from euthanasia to funding for the ABC, and the Trans Pacific Partnership agreement.

    https://twitter.com/CameronAtfield/status/431009646447321088

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/431017334174535680

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/431013184892198912

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/431013584546447360

    With a live audience there is often humour, and we weren’t disappointed.

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/431021761312739328

    https://twitter.com/CameronAtfield/status/430965131019694080

    https://twitter.com/GriffithElects/status/431015972082679808

    https://twitter.com/CameronAtfield/status/431018479693475840

    It was a very long night for many. I was tired and I felt for the candidates, most of whom stayed on to be interviewed by ABC 612 or other media.

    Hear the candidates for yourself in this excellent and comprehensive report on the forum by Steve Austin of ABC 612.

     

     

    – See more at: http://nofibs.com.au/2014/02/07/aint-nothing-like-real-thing-griffithvotes-candidates-forum-griffithelects-reports/#sthash.9nvbMFxa.dpuf

  • Family First runs against same-sex marriage

    Christopher Williams from Family First
    Christopher Williams from Family First

    The new face of Family First (FF) in 2014 is Christopher Williams, 24, unmarried and resident outside the electorate at Mt Gravatt East.

    A committed christian, he is interested in music and is currently studying for a Bachelor of Ministry.

    Mr Williams said that Family First is not a one-issue party.

    It is concerned about issues such as schools, jobs, and securing local funding for community groups.

    He is one of only two candidates of the eleven standing in this by-election who is opposed to same-sex marriage, and underlined that the LNP and the ALP are in agreement on what he sees as the “controversial issues” of same-sex marriage and abortion.

    I asked Mr Williams why he would characterise these issues as controversial when the majority of Australians are in support. He responded that, “they are controversial because of the level of feeling involved. People feel quite strongly one way or the other,” he said.

    He said that FF looks through the lens of putting families first, and when it comes to same-sex marriage, he is interested in “protecting the rights and interests of children”.

    “Children are harmed when they are not raised by a mother and a father.”

    While he understands that for various reasons there are single-parent families, and that “single parents do their best for their children”, they are, “not ideal.”

    As to his personal credentials as a candidate, Mr Williams said the he has proven himself in his studies and in his church service, “To be loyal, to be dependable, to be driven … if I told people I will do something, I will do it,” he said, “I will achieve what I set out to do for the people of Griffith.”

    On the Medicare co-payment, he said it initially sounded reasonable, but he agreed with concerns about shutting-off access for people who need to go to the GP more often than others: “They could be negatively affected by it,” he said.

    On education, he said he would like to see more power handed to schools and to parents and less central control. He thinks that would be more productive than the current ‘culture wars’ around a national curriculum.

    Mr Williams said that a lot of focus in this election seems to be on “minor issues” concerning Mr Abbott or Mr Newman, and not on substantive issues about which candidates could have some impact: “Protecting the institution of marriage and protecting unborn rights.”

    On preferences, Mr Williams said he is very disappointed that Dr Glasson preferenced Labor candidate Terri Butler ahead of Family First.

    “I don’t know why they (the LNP) expect the conservative parties to stick with them when they show that level of disrespect,” he said.

    Mr Williams does not expect party leader Bob Day to make it to the electorate during the campaign.

    Mr Williams has a Facebook site, and tweets using the handle @FFP4Griffith

    Reprinted with permission from No Fibs

  • Population is the problem: SPP

    Timothy Lawrence
    Timothy Lawrence of the soon to be Sustainable Population Party

    In 2013, Jan McNichol stood for the Stable Population Party (SPP) and polled 0.19 per cent of the primary vote. This time around the party has selected a new and young face in Timothy Lawrence. The party hopes that their name change before this by-election, to the Sustainable Population Party, will more accurately describe its purpose.

    The SPP has said it did not actively campaign in 2013. Now, they are getting behind their candidate and are particularly active on social media. Mr Lawrence told No Fibs that he intends to engage at a local level as much as possible, and he was out and about in Griffith last weekend.

    Mr Lawrence is a newly married 23-year-old software designer. He told No Fibs that his interest in politics and the SPP came about because of his interest in “social systems, and how they interact with our ecological systems.”

    Population, he said, is the “everything issue”.

    In conversations with people in the Griffith electorate, Mr Lawrence said they have expressed concerns about over-development, housing affordability, aircraft noise and the cost of living.

    All of these issues, he said, relate back to the issue of a growing population, as does the impact on rising health costs and access.

    “According to the AMA, we have gone from 6 hospital beds per 1000 (public and private) in 1970-71, down to 3.8 per 1000 in 2010-11”, he said.

    Strategies proposed by the SPP to sustain current population levels in Australia include the removal of “government birth payments (the Family Tax Benefit A and paid parental leave) beyond a woman’s first two children”, and, “zero net migration,” such that “permanent immigration is equivalent to permanent emigration.”

    Mr Lawrence said that up to 70 per cent of Australians do not want a bigger Australia by 2050, but the major parties are not listening.

    The SPP has an open ticket when it comes to preferences, which encourages voters to select the SPP as number one, and whomever they like after that. Mr Lawrence said that people who vote for the SPP are not wasting their votes because they will be sending an important message to the major parties.

    The SPP has a Facebook site, a website, and is very active on Twitter using the handle @PopulationParty.

    – See more at: http://nofibs.com.au/2014/02/01/familiar-faces-join-griffithvotes-party-griffithelects-reports/#sthash.blp7AQNO.dpuf

  • Sawyer represents Katter for Griffith

    Ray Sawyer in West End
    Ray Sawyer ran against Clive Palmer in the seat of Fairfax

    In something of a surprise for the upcoming Griffith by-election, Katter’s Australian Party (KAP) is standing a candidate new to Griffith, but not new to the KAP.

    Ray Sawyer stood for the KAP in the division of Fairfax in 2013, a seat that was won by Clive Palmer, with Sawyer managing just 1.92 per cent of the vote.

    While he does not live in the region, Mr Sawyer described himself as someone who has “strong connections with the Griffith electorate.”

    His campaign literature revealed that he has operated a dance school for a number of years, which has given him “the opportunity to meet many locals and work with businesses and charities in the area.”

    Mr Sawyer entered politics due to disenchantment.

    “I became disillusioned by the major parties, realising they are in it to win and be in power, which is not representative of the local bloke or our democratic political system.”

    Mr Sawyer told No Fibs that he and his wife run a wedding dance business, teaching couples how to dance the bridal waltz, for example. As Mr Sawyer has already been reported in the press as an opponent of same-sex marriage, I asked if he would be willing to teach a same-sex couple how to dance.

    “If a couple came to me”, he said, “and they were the same sex and they wanted to learn to dance, I would have no problem teaching them to dance whatsoever.”

    However, he said that a core principle of the party is that marriage is between a man and a woman. Mr Sawyer is a churchgoer and Sunday school teacher, and said: “You could say my upbringing has influenced my beliefs and that’s what attracted me to the Katter Australia Party.”

    Among the issues of concern for the KAP in Griffith, Mr Sawyer listed the new runway at Brisbane airport.

    “Air traffic is increasing and to some degree, while that is good for Brisbane tourism, it brings not only noise, it brings air pollution too,” he said, then added he would like to see a review commissioned on the airport noise issue, and would support ALP candidate Terri Butler’s idea of trialling a curfew.

    He said that he is getting a good response from his recent door-knocking efforts. “A lot of people say they are worried about the way this country is going. They have issues with the 457 visas and the number of people coming to our country and taking good jobs that everyday Australians could no doubt do.”

    He said that people are raising concerns about Australian industries closing and are worried about keeping their jobs and being able to support their families.

    A key personal issue is the sale of public assets: “The government should be providing basic essential services, infrastructure, water, electricity, communications, health and transport. It is about providing affordable services for the community. Selling these public assets only promotes price gouging from private investors, and high costs are then unavoidable.”

    He added that, “governments should provide suitable communications for us all, and that includes broadband.”

    Like Labor and the Greens, Mr Sawyer is opposed to the idea of introducing a new Medicare fee. “I think a lot of people will take the attitude that they can’t afford to go to the doctor. It’s very important to encourage people to go the doctor when they need to,” he said.

    I noted that apart from same-sex marriage, a number of his views seem to be consistent with his Labor Party opponent, and I asked whether the KAP had received any reaction to the preference deal which saw it list Mr Rudd last in 2013.

    Mr Sawyer said the party “took a bit of a hammering” in the last election and that this time it would give supporters the option of preferencing either of the two major parties. He has listed independent candidate Travis Windsor at number two on this how-to-vote card.

    The Katter’s Australian Party has a Facebook site and a website, and Mr Sawyer is new to Twitter, using the handle @RayWSawyer.

    Reprinted with permission of No Fibs