Author: Neville

  • Why Frank Sartor can’t even get a job in Gosford

    Why Frank Sartor can’t even get a job in Gosford

    EXCLUSIVE by Barclay Crawford
    The Sunday Telegraph
    March 10, 201312:00AM

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    Frank Sartor / Pic: Cameron Richardson Source: The Daily Telegraph

    HIS resume includes stints as state planning minister and Sydney lord mayor, but Gosford City Council has ruled out even considering Frank Sartor for a job.

    The former Labor MP was prepared to commute for five hours every day to work as the council’s general manager.

    Mr Sartor sounded out those on the Liberal-dominated council about whether he had a chance of getting the gig, which would have seen him travelling 180km a day from Beverley Park in Sydney’s south.

    But the stigma surrounding the former NSW Labor government is so great the council told him there was no way they would consider appointing him.

    Instead it went for Paul Anderson, who had been GM of Eurobodalla Shire Council on the south coast for five years.

    “It’s not like Frank’s tied to any of these corruption hearings, but he’s tarred with the same brush,” one senior Labor source said.

    “It’s tough at the best of times to leave politics and find work in the private sector, but it’s especially bad when your best credential becomes a big, very public millstone around your neck.”

    Members of the former Labor government are suffering from the adverse publicity surrounding the corruption allegations being publicly aired against former MPs Eddie Obeid and Ian Macdonald and incumbent Eric Roozendaal in the Independent Commission Against Corruption.

    While Mr Obeid is already worth millions, Mr Macdonald told ICAC he was now making a living as a cleaner in Orange.

    Mr Sartor did not return calls seeking comment about his employment situation, but he still enjoys a comfortable pension of more than $100,000 a year.

    The dire work situation facing Mr Sartor is being played out for many ministers from the former government.

    Previously, having held a position as a former minister within the NSW government was the perfect launching pad for a highly paid corporate career.

    Former Labor ministers Craig Knowles and Carl Scully have managed to forge successful careers within the private sector, as has former treasurer Michael Egan.

    Labor sources said former treasurer Eric Roozendaal had been hopeful of following other treasurers into lucrative private sector work but has so far failed to find any interest.

  • Liberal victory in WA.

    The WA runaway win by Lib/Nats is a wake up call for Federal Labor.
    What was noticeable was Greens Preferences flowing to Libs and Nats.
    The Labor/Greens marriage break-up could explain this;.
    The Green vote is down. which the Greens will need to work on.

  • Benedict oversaw slew of Bishop removals

    Benedict oversaw slew of Bishop removals
    By Noel Debien, ABC Radio Religion Unit
    Record number of Bishops culled under Benedict Photo: Pope Benedict oversaw the removal of two percent of the world’s bishops, the ABC has revealed. (AFP: Filippo Monteforte)
    External Link: Noel Debien’s blog on the Bishop removals
    Related Story: Date set for conclave to elect new pope
    Map: Holy See (Vatican City State)

    Pope Benedict oversaw the highest rate of removal of bishops for sexual misconduct ever recorded by the Catholic Church, the ABC’s religion unit has revealed.

    The former pontiff removed at least one bishop a month, accounting for 2 per cent of the world’s bishops.

    The list obtained by the ABC’s Religion Unit includes 50 bishops who lost their jobs over breaches of celibacy or alleged sexual assaults.

    Forty per cent of those bishops were forced to resign after having sexual relations with women – and many fathered children.

    A significant number were accused of rape and sexual assaults.

    Relations with boys and men, including other members of the clergy, make up the rest of the list.

    Two African priests were removed during Pope Benedict’s pontificate for allowing priests to live openly with their de-facto wives and their children.

    Cardinals begin their conclave to decide on a successor to Pope Benedict in Rome on Tuesday.

    Topics: catholic, sexual-offences, holy-see-vatican-city-state
    Search ABC News

  • Meteorologist On Climate Change: Viewers Are Less Skeptical, Forecasts Getting Fuzzier

    Meteorologist On Climate Change: Viewers Are Less Skeptical, Forecasts Getting Fuzzier

    Posted: 03/08/2013 1:47 pm EST | Updated: 03/08/2013 3:51 pm EST
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    Weathercasters who address climate change on air are facing less skepticism among their viewers, but their forecasts of weather events may soon suffer due to budget cuts.

    Dan Satterfield recently recalled the angry emails that used to flood his inbox whenever he brought up climate change on the air.

    “I don’t get very many at all now,” Satterfield, the chief meteorologist at WBOC-TV in Salisbury, Md., said this week. “The number of climate skeptics has really dropped. I think we are basically left with the conspiracy theory types.”

    New data supports his hunch. The number of American adults who are “very certain that global warming is not occurring” has dropped from 16 percent in 2010 to 8 percent in 2012, according to a survey released Wednesday by Yale University. But a recent poll still shows a nation split over questions of whether climate change is real, whether humans play a major role in it, and what can be done about it.

    “Fossil fuel interests are still spending big money on misinformation and it does work,” Satterfield added.

    Between tweeting and broadcasting reports of a winter storm bearing down on Salisbury Wednesday evening, Satterfield shared with The Huffington Post his concerns about a nation moving too slowly on both mitigating and adapting to climate change. In addition to the ongoing challenge of instilling a sense of understanding and urgency among his viewers, he said he’s frustrated that budget cuts may soon hinder his ability to provide accurate and timely forecasts before major storms — which climatologists expect will increase in frequency and severity.

    Individual weather events cannot be pinned on climate change, of course. Storms happen, and always have with some regularity. Still, Satterfield suggested that superstorm Sandy was a “watershed” moment for raising the public’s climate consciousness. He’s noticed that his meteorologist peers seem to be coming along as well. As HuffPost reported last year, skepticism has long-run rampant among weathercasters, who tend to base their denial on their own inability to forecast more than seven days out. If they can’t forecast the weather a week from now, how then, the deniers argue, could scientists try to tell us what the climate might be like in 70 years?

    To convince the climate change deniers, climate experts often say that climate and weather are not the same thing — weather tells you what to wear that day and climate tells you what wardrobe to buy. And forecasting tools used by the two professions differ significantly.

    Although more weathercasters seem to be on board than in the past, Satterfield said, the realization that their tools are becoming outdated and aging is now leading many to fear a future of fuzzier forecasting.

    “Our satellites are getting past their lifetime and are going to start dying,” Satterfield said. “People don’t realize that without them we wouldn’t make reliable forecasts beyond four or five days.”

    Across-the-board federal spending cuts that affect the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration satellite program may be patched by legislation approved by the House on Wednesday. Yet widespread concern remains, as the help needed to maintain and upgrade the satellites may not survive the Senate or go far enough to prevent a gap in key weather data. A Government Accountability Office report warned in February that the potential gap in coverage could last anywhere from 17 to 53 months.

    In the same report, the GAO also highlighted the growing threat of climate change. And the compounded costs could be high.

    Both polar-orbiting and geostationary satellites are threatened by the budget squeeze. The fleets work together to keep close watch of short- and long-term weather patterns across the globe. Without the polar-orbiting satellites, models would have shown superstorm Sandy missing landfall on the coast. Similarly, the amount of snow that fell during the “Snowmageddon” blizzard that hit the East Coast in 2010 would have been underestimated by nearly half.

    Meanwhile, just as Europe generally leads the U.S. in addressing climate change, it is also well ahead in terms of weather forecasting — wielding more sophisticated satellites and more powerful computers.

    Cliff Mass, a professor of atmospheric sciences at the University of Washington in Seattle, calls it a “national embarrassment.”

    “Weather prediction is critical for the U.S. economy and for public safety,” Mass wrote in his blog in February. “The number one thing one needs to encourage resilience in a changing climate is to have good weather prediction!”

    Satterfield considers this problem to be part of the U.S.’ larger scientific illiteracy crisis, which he is trying to address via education campaigns and an informative blog he keeps regularly updated. He’s also taken opportunities to discuss climate change on air in Salisbury. The seaside city is situated at low elevation and is vulnerable to rising sea levels projected with climate change.

    “I recently pointed out that storms like [the one that struck this week] will cause tides to be about a foot higher in just 40 to 50 years. Another Sandy in 50 years will do far more damage and in 75 years the water level from the same storm will be 2 feet higher still,” he said.

    More and more of Satterfield’s peers are doing the same, thanks in part to outreach efforts from organizations such as the National Environmental Education Foundation. Jim Gandy of WLTX in Columbia, S.C., is a case in point. He now has frequent on-air segments devoted to the subject. In one segment, he made his case clear to his viewers in what he calls a “dark red” state: “It’s pretty unmistakable that climate change is taking place, the earth is warming and we’re seeing the effects here in South Carolina. Evidence for global warming is undeniable.”

    Gandy told NPR in February that the station has received surprisingly few cranky calls in response to the series.

    Nevertheless, Satterfield noted, some weathercasters remain “forbidden” by their stations to mention climate change on air. Until recently, the same seemed to be true of leaders in Washington, including those who decide how much money to devote to weather forecasting.

    “I still don’t think most politicians on both sides of the aisle get that we’re looking at a major dramatic change,” he said. “If the models are right, then we’re looking at inability for this nation to grow corn and wheat where we’re growing them now.”

    “If we can get the science message out and dispel the myths, then hopefully something will be done by the political leaders,” Satterfield added. “But I do not envy them. Some hard choices are coming, and the longer we wait before taking action, the harder the choices and the less options we will have.”

    Also on HuffPost:

    What Climate Change Just Might Ruin


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  • Earth on track to be hottest in human history: study

    Earth on track to be hottest in human history: study

    Posted Fri Mar 8, 2013 8:54pm AEDT

    Photo:Scientists have determined that the past 10 years have been hotter than 80 per cent of the past 11,300 years. (user submitted)

    Related Story: Ice core drill gives insight into climate future

    Related Story: UN group links heatwave to climate change

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    Related Story: Bureau says 2012 a year of climatic extremes

    Map: Australia
    Earth is on track to becoming the hottest it has been at any time in the past 11.3 millennia, a period spanning the history of human civilisation, a new study says.

    Based on fossil samples and other data collected from 73 sites around the world, scientists have been able to reconstruct the history of the planet’s temperature from the end of the last Ice Age around 11,000 years ago to the present.

    They have determined the past 10 years have been hotter than 80 per cent of the past 11,300 years.

    But virtually all the climate models evaluated by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change predict Earth’s atmosphere will be hotter in the coming decades than at any time since the end of the Ice Age, no matter what greenhouse gas emission scenario is used, the study found.

    “We already knew that on a global scale, Earth is warmer today than it was over much of the past 2,000 years,” said Shaun Marcott, the lead author of the study, which was published in Science.

    “Now we know that it is warmer than most of the past 11,300 years.

    “This is of particular interest because the Holocene spans the entire period of human civilisation.”

    The data show that temperatures cooled by 0.8 degrees Celsius over the past 5,000 years, but have been rising again in the past 100 years, particularly in the northern hemisphere where land masses and population centres are larger.

    The climate models project that average global temperatures will rise by 1.1 to 6.3 degrees Celsius by the end of the century, depending on the level of C02 emissions resulting from human activities, the researchers found.

    “What is most troubling is that this warming will be significantly greater than at any time during the past 11,300 years,” said Peter Clark, a paleoclimatologist at Oregon State University.

    Earth’s position with respect to the Sun is the main natural factor affecting temperatures during that time, the scientists said.

    “During the warmest period of the Holocene, the Earth was positioned such that northern hemisphere summers warmed more,” Mr Marcott said.

    “As the Earth’s orientation changed, northern hemisphere summers became cooler, and we should now be near the bottom of this long-term cooling trend – but obviously, we are not.”

    Other studies have concluded that human activities – not natural causes – have been responsible for the warming experienced over the past 50 years.

    Video ABC News has uncovered details of a secret Victoria Police operation targeting young African-Australians.

  • Woman who went missing allegedly helped Moses Obeid secure debt vote

    Woman who went missing allegedly helped Moses Obeid secure debt vote

    Date
    March 9, 2013

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    Kate McClymont
    Kate McClymont
    Senior Reporter

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    Belinda Burcham, also known as Belinda Sheehan, who has gone missing after leaving St Vincent’s Hospital 30 December 2012

    Belinda Burcham … alleged to have pursued proxy votes. Photo: Supplied

    Belinda Burcham, the 40-year-old whose week-long disappearance from St Vincent’s Hospital earlier this year sparked a massive social media campaign, is alleged to have procured crucial proxy votes which helped Moses Obeid avoid paying a $16.6 million debt to the City of Sydney council.

    On August 9 last year, the Herald revealed Moses Obeid, the son of ALP kingpin Eddie, had his debt to the council wiped out after smaller creditors – who included family, friends and associates – voted to accept a Deed of Company Arrangement which meant they would receive only between 1¢ and 3¢ in the dollar for the debts owed to them by his company Streetscape Projects.

    The council is seeking to have the arrangement overturned, claiming it is neither fair nor reasonable. At a hearing in the Supreme Court this week it was alleged that Ms Burcham contacted Streetscape’s former cleaner, Mary Kit, the day before Streetscape’s creditors met to vote on whether the company would be put into liquidation, the preferred choice of the council, which was the major creditor.

    Peter Gosnell, from website Sydney Insolvency News, who attended the hearing before Justice Paul Brereton, reported that the council contended Ms Burcham advised the former cleaner that the $690 debt owed to her by Streetscape would be paid in full if the cleaner agreed to direct her proxy to vote for the deed of arrangement.
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    The court also heard that before the meeting Ms Burcham also met creditor Maria Costa, who was told by Ms Burcham that Costa Enterprises’ $1000 debt would also be paid in full, rather than the $30 she might receive as a creditor, if she agreed to direct her proxy in favour of the arrangement, Mr Gosnell reported.

    Moses Obeid has disputed the council’s claims in documents filed with the court.

    Ms Burcham, a long-time friend of Mr Moses and his wife, Nikki, has been employed as the office manager at the Obeid headquarters in Birkenhead Point. Ms Burcham will face Waverley court on Monday charged with several break and enter offences.

    One of the council’s arguments to have the arrangement overturned is that some of the creditors had an association with Mr Obeid.

    Among the unsecured creditors are Mr Obeid’s sister, Gemma Vrana, and several associates including the Obeid family accountant, Sid Sassine, and developer Rocco Triulcio. Both gave evidence in the long-running corruption inquiry which is investigating claims that the Obeid family made $30 million from a rigged government tender. Another creditor listed was law firm Colin Biggers & Paisley. Two partners from the firm were also grilled last year by the Independent Commission Against Corruption about their association with the Obeid family.

    At the August creditors’ meeting, administrators Ozem Kassem and Robert Kite, of the accountancy firm Cor Cordis, used their casting vote to side with the small creditors rather than put the company into liquidation. Streetscape had a licence from the council to manufacture multifunction poles, which hold banners, street lights and traffic lights.

    Describing Mr Obeid’s conduct as ”dishonest and fraudulent”

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/woman-who-went-missing-allegedly-helped-moses-obeid-secure-debt-vote-20130308-2fr2o.html#ixzz2MzSZZmmX