Author: Neville

  • A more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, methane emissions will leap as Earth warms

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    from universities, journals, and other organizations

    A more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, methane emissions will leap as Earth warms

    Date:
    March 27, 2014
    Source:
    Princeton University
    Summary:
    New research indicates that for each degree that the Earth’s temperature rises, the amount of methane entering the atmosphere from microorganisms dwelling in lake sediment and freshwater wetlands — the primary sources of the gas — will increase several times.

    New research in the journal Nature found that for each degree that the Earth’s temperature rises, the amount of methane entering the atmosphere …

    Credit: Image courtesy of Cristian Gudasz

    While carbon dioxide is typically painted as the bad boy of greenhouse gases, methane is roughly 30 times more potent as a heat-trapping gas. New research in the journal Nature indicates that for each degree that  Earth’s temperature rises, the amount of methane entering the atmosphere from microorganisms dwelling in lake sediment and freshwater wetlands — the primary sources of the gas — will increase several times. As temperatures rise, the relative increase of methane emissions will outpace that of carbon dioxide from these sources, the researchers report.

    The findings condense the complex and varied process by which methane — currently the third most prevalent greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide and water vapor — enters the atmosphere into a measurement scientists can use, explained co-author Cristian Gudasz, a visiting postdoctoral research associate in Princeton’s Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. In freshwater systems, methane is produced as microorganisms digest organic matter, a process known as “methanogenesis.” This process hinges on a slew of temperature, chemical, physical and ecological factors that can bedevil scientists working to model how Earth’s systems will contribute, and respond, to a hotter future.

    The researchers’ findings suggest that methane emissions from freshwater systems will likely rise with the global temperature, Gudasz said. But to not know the extent of methane contribution from such a widely dispersed ecosystem that includes lakes, swamps, marshes and rice paddies leaves a glaring hole in climate projections.

    “The freshwater systems we talk about in our paper are an important component to the climate system,” Gudasz said. “There is more and more evidence that they have a contribution to the methane emissions. Methane produced from natural or humanmade freshwater systems will increase with temperature.”

    To provide a simple and accurate way for climate modelers to account for methanogenesis, Gudasz and his co-authors analyzed nearly 1,600 measurements of temperature and methane emissions from 127 freshwater ecosystems across the globe.

    The researchers found that a common effect emerged from those studies: freshwater methane generation very much thrives on high temperatures. Methane emissions at 0 degrees Celsius would rise 57 times higher when the temperature reached 30 degrees Celsius, the researchers report. For those inclined to model it, the researchers’ results translated to a temperature dependence of 0.96 electron volts (eV), an indication of the temperature-sensitivity of the methane-emitting ecosystems.

    “We all want to make predictions about greenhouse gas emissions and their impact on global warming,” Gudasz said. “Looking across these scales and constraining them as we have in this paper will allow us to make better predictions.”


    Story Source:

    The above story is based on materials provided by Princeton University. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.


    Journal Reference:

    1. Gabriel Yvon-Durocher, Andrew P. Allen, David Bastviken, Ralf Conrad, Cristian Gudasz, Annick St-Pierre, Nguyen Thanh-Duc, Paul A. del Giorgio. Methane fluxes show consistent temperature dependence across microbial to ecosystem scales. Nature, 2014; 507 (7493): 488 DOI: 10.1038/nature13164

    Cite This Page:

    Princeton University. “A more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, methane emissions will leap as Earth warms.” ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 27 March 2014. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/03/140327111724.htm>.

  • Stop the biggest mass execution this century

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    Stop the biggest mass execution this century

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    Alice Jay – Avaaz.org

    11:06 PM (9 hours ago)

    to me

    Dear friends,

    A kangaroo court in Egypt just sentenced 528 people to death. This is likely the biggest mass execution ruling this century, but one man has 10 days to stop the killings. Let’s call on Grand Mufti Allam to use his moral authority to provide clemency and block this barbarous ruling. Join the urgent call to stop the executions:

    SIGN THE PETITION

    A kangaroo court in Egypt just sentenced 528 people to death. This is likely the biggest mass execution ruling this century, but one man can stop the killings.

    Egypt’s most important religious figure, Grand Mufti Allam has 10 days to reject the decision. Religious leaders are already condemning the ruling, and as the first Mufti to be elected by his peers, he has a legitimate mandate to be the nation’s moral leader. Let’s create a global plea from people of all religions to provide clemency and block this barbarous ruling.

    This was a political show trial — the military regime is using the firing squad to wipe out the opposition. If the world does not speak up, the consequences for Egypt and the world are beyond dangerous. Sign now to save these lives and stop a spiral of violence — when one million of us have joined, religious leaders in Egypt will deliver our call for compassion directly to the Mufti:

    http://www.avaaz.org/en/stop_mass_execution_loc/?bhPqncb&v=37970

    After the hope of Tahrir Square, where hundreds of thousands took to the streets to overthrow decades of dictatorship, the Egyptian people democratically elected a Muslim Brotherhood government. But last summer the military staged a populist coup, Brotherhood supporters rioted, and then the military declared the party a terrorist organisation and violently cracked down — 16,000 democracy activists, journalists, and even teenage school girls have been arrested!

    The trial was a joke — on top of charges of rioting and destruction of property, the 528 are all accused of killing one police officer, and defense lawyers were barred from the sentencing session, which lasted less than an hour! But this is not a one off — the judiciary is repeatedly being used to crackdown on political dissent, while security forces accused of killing hundreds of protesters are rarely held to account. There are real security threats, but as the military authorities’ iron fist and intimidation grows, extremism is fuelled.

    This is the harshest mass conviction in modern Egyptian history, but what happens next in this case could have repercussions way beyond Egypt. Sign the urgent petition now asking the Grand Mufti not to rubber stamp state-sponsored murder and to provide the ethical leadership Egypt desperately needs:

    http://www.avaaz.org/en/stop_mass_execution_loc/?bhPqncb&v=37970

    The world has kept silent as this regime has launched an all out attack against an imperfect but elected government and brought democracy in Egypt to its knees. Global leaders trumpet democracy at every opportunity and strongly condemn anti-democratic plots from Crimea to Caracas. But not in Egypt. Now if the world looks away and allows this cruel mass execution to happen, a dangerous message will resonate across the globe that the world will stand by democracy, except for political Islam. That will empower one small but very dangerous group that can hurt us all: the extremists.

    Time and again the Avaaz community has forcefully advocated against brutal injustice and for peaceful, meaningful reconciliation between embittered communities. Right now Egypt’s future hangs in the balance, and a wildly unjust and provocative ruling like the one handed down in Minya could push it over the edge. Let’s bring the people’s voice to this precarious situation and ensure that these 528 lives are saved.

    With hope,

    Alice, Nick, Oli, Wissam, Bissan, Mais, Emily, Ari, Ricken and the whole Avaaz team

    MORE INFORMATION

    Hundreds of Egyptians Sentenced to Death in Killing of a Police Officer (New York Times)
    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/25/world/middleeast/529-egyptians-sentenced-to-death-in-killing-of-a-police-officer.html

    Egypt Opens Another Mass Trial of Islamists (AP)
    http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/egypt-sentences-529-death-police-attack-23036881

    ‘Fast’ death penalty for 529 Brotherhood supporters will be appealed: Defence (Ahram)
    http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/1/64/97456/Egypt/Politics-/Fast-and-bizarre-death-penalty-for–Brotherhood-su.aspx

    Egyptian court sentences 529 people to death (Washington Post)
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/egypt-sentences-529-to-death/2014/03/24/a4f95692-6992-461e-aaf1-9bc84908a429_story.html

  • Big Wave of Change Campaign

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    Drug and Alcohol Coursewww.seeklearning.com.au/Counselling – Alcohol And Drug Counselling Course Nationally Recognised & Accredited
    THIS IS AN ELECTION PITCH SENT TO ME. READERS CAN JUDGE  FOR THEMSELVES WHETHER OR NOT THEY SUPPORT  WHAT LOOKS TO BE A PROMISING NEW MOVEMENT. 
    NEVILLE

    Update

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    Joanne Stuart joanne@civilsociety.org.au

    6:53 PM (1 hour ago)

    to Colleagues

    Big Wave of Change Campaign
    Rebuilding Trust between People and Government
     

    Update

    National Press Club Address “Make It Mutual”, Kevin Andrews, Federal Minister for Family and Community Services
    WA Senate Election 5 April: Group M for Mutual
    The Mutual State: How local communities can run public services
    Community Leadership: Meet Julie Williams
    National Press Club Address “Make it Mutual”
    Kevin Andrews, Federal Minister for Family and Community Services
    17 March 2014
    http://kevinandrews.com.au/media/national-press-club-address-to-the-bccm-make-it-mutual-workshop-17-march-2014
    As you know there was a time in Australia when mutualism was the most dynamic social and economic movement.

    In the second half of the nineteenth century, Australians, imbued by an egalitarian spirit of pragmatism and independence, pioneered mutuals and friendly societies across the six colonies.Found in every community, these institutions were voluntary and self-regulating. They offered employment, health, funeral and other insurance by pooling small amounts of money or income to protect themselves from the vagaries of economics and happenstance.

     

    It was the height of Australia’s self-insurancing voluntary organisations, composed of committed citizens who came together to address their local community needs.

     


    By the eve of the First World War – precisely 100 years ago – around 400,000 friendly society members helped to fund benefits for over one million Australians. It’s interesting to note that during this same period fewer than 100,000 Australians were receiving benefits from the Commonwealth Government.

    However, a technocratic spirit began to take hold in Australia as the nation travelled through the traumas of the Depression and the Second World War.

     

    Typically in Australia, we took our cue from the United Kingdom. In 1941 the ‘Beveridge Report’, the Report of the Inter-Departmental Committee on Social Insurance and Allied Services laid the conceptual foundations for the modern welfare state…


    Rather than a confident assertion of supreme state authority, the ‘Beveridge Report’ reflected the virtues of limited government:

    “The state in organising security should not stifle incentive, opportunity, responsibility; In establishing a national minimum it should leave room and encouragement for each individual to provide more than that minimum for himself and his family.”

     

    In other words, Lord Beveridge made clear that any new initiatives by government were meant – not to supercede existing social institutions – but to complement and indeed utilise them.

    *                             *                             *

    Ladies and Gentlemen it pains me to say that over the past seven-plus decades we have strayed somewhat from that principle.

    In both Britain and Australia, the Beveridge ideals of a lighter-touch safety net was swept away by an ambitious but bureaucratic welfarism in which social insurance models were replaced by state-run entitlements programmes.

    [Above, photo: a mutually owned store in Colac, Victoria, in the 1880s]

    Ladies and gentlemen I’ve had a longstanding interest and involvement in civil society.

     

    I’ve served as an official with various sporting organisations, on hospital boards and with social service agencies. It’s this personal experience at the coalface of civil society that forged my views about the critical role of organisations that arise organically from the community in response to human need to the needs that people in local communities perceive.

    And those views have only been reinforced by what I’ve seen as a Parliamentarian and Minister over the past 20-plus years.

    Over those two decades I’ve seen communities – both Indigenous and non-Indigenous – where the basic structures of civilised society have eroded – and even collapsed:

    • Places afflicted by dire poverty where women and children are at constant risk of violence.
    • Places where dependency is the rule and self-sufficiency the exception.
    • Places where most people are employed are on the public or not-for-profit payroll;
    • Places where the last vestiges of individual initiative have evaporated, leaving behind the social residue of hopelessness and despair.

    It’s these cumulative observations that have forged my views about the capacity and limitations of government.

    And I’ve generally concluded that while certain core functions of government are indispensible, we should strive to minimise the institutional footprint of the state wherever and whenever possible.

    *                                             *                                             *

    Rather than a cumbersome ‘top-down’ ‘government-knows-best’ approach that smacks of patronising paternalism, we believe in bottom-up, grass roots enterprise…

    We believe in adept and adroit not-for-profit organisations that can adapt to changing circumstances and evolving needs.

    We believe that no-one knows local communities better than local community members.

    They have the best grasp on the problems in their backyard and how to best address them.

    *                                             *                                             *

     

    The co-operative and mutual sector has tremendous potential to foster innovative modes and methods of addressing the unmet needs of our society.

     

    They also have untapped reserves to help Australian society arising from the challenges we face today including:

    • An ageing population
    • The delivery of advanced health services
    • The social and economic exclusion of people with disabilities
    • Addressing housing supply
    • The imbalance between taxpayers and welfare recipients; and
    • Building a more dynamic economy as well as greater community capacity.


    So I look forward to working with you as we seek to develop the most effective and efficient ways of meeting the social and economic challenges of Australia in the 21st century.


    *                                             *                                             *

    Ladies and Gentlemen our governing philosophy is informed by a few humble truths:

    • First that Government is NOT the fount of all wisdom;
    • Secondly that a vibrant, dynamic economy and business community are essential to fund the social services we need, expect and deserve; and
    • Thirdly that voluntary mutual co-operation is crucial force to building a responsive and vibrant civil society.

     *                             *                             *

    We also intend to abolish the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC), a body that simply generates precisely the sort of useless red tape that this Government is trying to eliminate – as promised… We see no reason for this Government to reinvent an already smoothly turning wheel.

    And this same ‘bottom-up’ principle is also the motivating force behind our decision to set up a National Centre for Excellence for Civil Society.

     

    The Centre will support the wide range of organisations that make up civil society – regardless of size, type or their mission. Its ambit will include charities, clubs and associations that focus on social welfare, the arts, environment, health, medical research, animal welfare, education and so on. And the Centre’s mandate will encompass both organisations that receive government funding and smaller local community groups that get little or no direct government support.

     

    A one-size-fits-all attitude can never work because the needs in the tiny rural hamlet of Fitzroy Falls, New South Wales are vastly different from the needs in inner-urban Fitzroy, Victoria.”

    For the full text of this address go to http://kevinandrews.com.au/media/national-press-club-address-to-the-bccm-make-it-mutual-workshop-17-march-2014

    WA Senate Election 5 April: Group M for Mutual

    Anthony Fels will be our WA Senate candidate in the re-run of the Senate election on 5 April.

    Anthony is a former Liberal MP in the WA Parliament, elected in 2005. He was a spokeperson for small business and consumer affairs. He left the Liberal Party in 2007 and sat as an independent until 2009. He was a moderate within the Liberal Party, who parted over the influence of the hard right.Anthony grew up on a family farm east of Esperance. He attended Castletown Primary School and Esperance Senior High School, before studying agriculture at the University of WA. His interests are in the area of small business, agriculture, and the future of rural communities.

    Anthony is keen to hear from WA people who want to be involved in establishing our WA branch of the Mutual Party to participate in future state and local government elections.

    http://www.mutualparty.com.au/wa

    About 1% of the vote will be enough to have Anthony elected to the Senate. This is because we have secured good preference arrangements with other groups (there are 34 groups participating), based on Anthony’s broad networks and our positioning as a centrist party in the middle of  the spectrum.

    We want the support of conservative people who value communities and strong values, and we want the support of left-leaning people who support the disadvantaged and battlers. Anthony’s networks include both groups, across the traditional spectrum.

    To support Anthony and become involved in WA,  please contact Adrian Bradley at adrian@andana.net.au

    To make a donation to support Anthony’s election, go to https://mutual.nationbuilder.com/donate

    The Mutual Party’s website is at http://www.mutualparty.com.au/wa The Mutual State. How local communities can run public services
    Ed Mayo and Henrietta Moore
    New Economics Foundation UK
    http://www.neweconomics.org/publications/entry/the-mutual-state

    “The debate between public and private ownership is going nowhere fast. But there is real energy and innovation in what we call social ownership, non-profit co-operative and voluntary sector models for running public services. They show how to put the public back into public services.Public service reform is top of the political agenda. Without fresh ideas, the obituary for the welfare state will read, “Fondly remembered – Failed to deliver”. There will be nowhere for the public sector to go except the corrosive route of break-up, privatisation, confusion and citizens’ distrust.  There is, however, a new vision for government, based not on serving citizens but on co-operating with them.

    The idea is simple. Citizens, on their own or coming together at a neighbourhood or some other level, play a key role in the design and delivery of public services.

    We call this the Mutual State. It draws on a long history of mutual approaches that enlist people as partners rather than users. But it recreates a new form of mutuality focused on participation and social entrepreneurship rather than conventional ownership.

    This pocketbook describes the new mutuality and sets out the vision of government it embodies.

    A full programme of mutualisation, the report says, would start with public services that have clearly failed. It would focus on smaller-scale organisations, such as schools or hospitals, with ‘populations’ of 400-600 people. The National Health Service (NHS) could be ‘de-merged’ into a MHS (Mutual Health Service) built on smaller, more manageable self-governing mutuals. The exceptional record of tenant-owned or managed housing should be recognised. Local education authorities should be reformed as ‘secondary mutuals’.

    Contents

    1 The Battle for Public Services
    2 The Mutual Idea
    3 Pioneering a New Model
    4 Participation, Decentralisation, Professionalism
    5 The New Mutualism in Practice
    6 Mutualising The State – A Summary

    “Five key elements should form part of the “mutualisation” of public services:

     

    A participation audit.

    This would look at the lessons from community involvement and draw up guidelines for the future. New initiatives could include elections to hospital trusts, user panels for local authority services and designating individual, named, policemen as contacts for streets or neighbourhoods.


    Decentralisation
    .


    Local authorities should be recast as smaller, strategic units, overseeing the co-ordination and accountability of local services. They would use their powers to “build capacity” for public workers and citizens, enabling them to run services mutually. Public institutions such as schools and prisons should be given greater autonomy – more direct funding, greater freedom of financial management – within a framework which sets down standards on quality.

     

    A recognised status for mutuals.

     

    This would mean creating a clearer and stronger legal framework for “social enterprises, including limits on demutualization and new powers to raise finance such as local bonds, and a quality mark”, which sets out ways of involving stakeholders and ensuring accountability. In Italy, social enterprises of this form have grown in number by 40% since a new status was launched.

     

    Conversion of public services.


    Selected state services should “migrate” to the new mutual status through a recognised approval process. One important ingredient of this is a staff ballot.

     

    Re-imagining the state.

     

    The state would act as guarantor, funding and regulating the mutual service providers. The National Audit Office role would shift from straightforward inspection to enabling – equipping stakeholders with the skills to “self-audit”. Tax funding for the new mutuals would be supplemented by social investment from citizens.”

    Community leadership: Meet Julie Williams

    Julie Williams is the emerging face of community leadership in Australia.Julie is Deputy Mayor of the City of Darebin. She has been a Councillor since 2012. She decided to stand for her local council after winning a major Victorian Civic and Administrative Tribunal court hearing which stopped six and seven storeys becoming the benchmark for development along Plenty Road in Melbourne’s congested northern suburbs.

    She is committed to setting new standards in community representation and providing a voice for communities.


    Julie lives in Preston and is a parent of a four year old daughter with autism. She is passionate about representing children and families and wants to be a voice for the 20% of people with a disability and their families and carers, some of the most invisible and disadvantaged people in the community.

    Julie will stand as a candidate for the MutualParty in the lower house seat of Preston in Victoria’s state election in November 2014.

    To support Julie go to http://www.mutualparty.com.au/preston

     

    We want community people like Julie to stand as parliamentary candidates in coming Victorian, NSW and Queensland state elections as part of a Big Wave of Change in Australian politics.

     

    Further information http://www.mutualparty.com.au

    Like us at Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/MutualParty
    Throughout March, we want your help to create a Big Wave of Change. Join us here.

    _____

  • JOIN: Australians for Climate Action

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    EsuperfundSMSF Special Offer – Stop paying high fees to manage your SMSF. Find out our special offer today. Offer ends soon!

    Oops!

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    Linda Samera via CommunityRun ljrsamera@gmail.com via sendgrid.info

    6:11 PM (11 minutes ago)

    to me

    Oops!

    You probably just received an email with no links in it! I’m so sorry about that. Here’s the email you were meant to receive and the working link to our survey:

    Click here to take the survey.

    —-

    Dear Supporters,

    Despite our best efforts, country patients are still out in the cold. The NSW Government has yet to take steps to ensure country patients have accessible and affordable accommodation at all major hospitals in NSW

    During my meeting with Sue Shilbury (General Manager of Royal North Shore Hospital), it was pointed out that there is no data on the experience of patients who have to travel and stay near a major hospital to receive healthcare. This data is not kept by NSW Health.

    Knowing more specifics about how many people require accommodation and for how long, would be invaluable evidence to take to decision makers who want figures and facts before they act to fix the problem. We also want to tell the stories of the people who have been affected by the closure of patient accommodation.

    Each of you has some experience of the lack of accommodation near a major hospital and your stories can help make an emotional connection with decision makers and persuade them to fix the problem.

    We have put together a survey to collect the facts that tell us how big this problem is and tell the stories of the people it’s affected. Can you take ten minutes now to complete a survey on your experience with country patient accommodation?

    Click here to take the survey.

    Your story could be a personal experience or thatof a family member, friend, or a patient you have known. Every story counts and will help create a strong argument for the need for this accommodation at all NSW major hospitals. Your survey answers will form the largest and only data source on this problem in NSWIt will also strengthen this petition as your stories are a powerful tool in communicating a clear message to decision makers in NSW.

    Many of you have already heard my own story. I was a remote area GP and saw first hand my patients choosing not to get treatment or struggling with crippling debts from travelling to major hospitals to receive healthcare. Later as a patient myself requiring regular treatment in Sydney more than 500km from home, I was forced to make the same difficult decision when Blue Gum Lodge closed. But my decision to share my own story has already led to thousands of people across NSW signing my Community Run Petition and writing to the Minister.

    We all have a story worth sharing. Can you take ten minutes now to complete this survey and tell me about your own experiences? I invite you to be a part of the building of this first and only resource and a valuable tool in this campaign.

    Click here to take the survey.

    Thank you so much for taking this time. I deeply appreciate your support and know there are many more people out there who appreciate all that is being done to see this problem turned around.

    Thanks again!

     

  • Help with your stories

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    Help with your stories

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    Linda Samera via CommunityRun ljrsamera@gmail.com via sendgrid.info

    5:54 PM (8 minutes ago)

    to me

    Dear Supporters,

    Despite our best efforts, country patients are still out ion the cold. The NSW Government has yet to take steps to ensure country patients have accessible and affordable accommodation at all major hospitals in NSW

    During my meeting with Sue Shilbury (General Manager of Royal North Shore Hospital), it was pointed out that there is no data on the experience of patients who have to travel and stay near a major hospital to receive healthcare. This data is not kept by NSW Health.

    Knowing kore specifics about how many people require accommodation and for how long, would be invaluable evidence to take to decision makers who want figures and facts before they act to fix the problem. We also want to tell the stories of the people who have been affected by the closure of patient accommodation.

    Each of you has some experience of the lack of accommodation near a major hospital and your stories can help make an emotional connection with decision makers and persuade them to fix the problem.

    We have put together a survey to collect the facts that tell us how big this problem is and tell the stories of the people it’s affected. Can you take ten minutes now to complete a survey on your experience with country patient accommodation?

    Click here to take the survey.

    Your story could be a personal experience or thatof a family member, friend, or a patient you have known. Every story counts and will help create a strong argument for the need for this accommodation at all NSW major hospitals. Your survey answers will form the largest and only data source on this problem in NSW. It will also strengthen this petition as your stories are a powerful tool in communicating a clear message to decision makers in NSW.

    Many of you have already heard my own story. I was a remote area GP and saw first hand my patients choosing not to get treatment or struggling with crippling debts from travelling to major hospitals to receive healthcare. Later as a patient myself requiring regular treatment in Sydney more than 500km from home, I was forced to make the same difficult decision when Blue Gum Lodge closed. But my decision to share my own story has already led to thousands of people across NSW signing my Community Run Petition and writing to the Minister.

    We all have a story worth sharing. Can you take ten minutes now to complete this survey and tell me about your own experiences? I invite you to be a part of the building of this first and only resource and a valuable tool in this campaign.

    Click here to take the survey.

    Thank you so much for taking this time. I deeply appreciate your support and know there are many more people out there who appreciate all that is being done to see this problem turned around.

    Thanks again!

    Linda Samera

  • Lifeline’s urgent petition

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    Lifeline’s urgent petition

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    Chris Meaney via Change.org mail@change.org

    2:00 PM (1 hour ago)

    to me
    Change.org
    NEVILLE –

     

     

    I was in a devastating darkness. One that led me to attempt taking my own life – and seeking help through pathways including Lifeline pulled me out of it.

    Thousands like me make a call to Lifeline every day.

    For me, things were snowballing: I’d been bullied for years because of my disability, my weight, I was the “loner” – and I slipped into depression.

    But unbelievably, I’ve just found out that Lifeline’s funding is falling short. Some calls – from potentially suicidal people like I was – are going unanswered.

    Without Lifeline, many of us wouldn’t be here today.

    Lifeline have just started a petition on change.org asking Tony Abbott to give Lifeline enough funding to make sure every call is answered. It’s desperately needed.

    Will you add your name to Lifeline’s urgent petition?

    It’s shocking the government would let this happen. Each day, six Australians take their own life. A figure 50 per cent greater than our annual road toll, a statistic that is even more tragic given suicide is preventable.

    Lifeline is a critical service to putting an end to suicide. Many people like me relied on it – still do for the odd call when help is needed – and it’s just horrible to imagine the consequences if people aren’t able to get through.

    Tony Abbott himself has said mental health and suicide is an issue he wants to tackle as Prime Minister – so I hope he’ll listen to Lifeline’s plea for more funding.

    The Australian Government needs to ensure that Lifeline is properly funded to answer calls from people in trouble. Can you help by adding your name to Lifeline’s petition now?

    Thanks so much for your support.