Author: Neville

  • Fairfax Upgrades Technology with Population Growth

    Fairfax Upgrades Technology with Population Growth

    By Jill Kasparie, Reporter

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    Story Created: Feb 26, 2013 at 9:59 PM CST
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    Story Updated: Feb 26, 2013 at 10:33 PM CST )

    FAIRFAX, Iowa – City leaders are navigating through a high-tech computerized map of the city’s infrastructure.

    The city, which lies just west of Cedar Rapids, is using new technology to stay ahead of the booming population. The number of people living in Fairfax more than doubled from the 2000 to the 2010 census.

    “In the 2010 census, we were at 2,123, and we’ve continued to build houses since then,” said Fairfax Mayor Jason Rabe.

    City leaders know with that growth, the good ole days are over.

    “The old system you had ten drawers of maps and flipping to find the right map for the right thing you want, it’s a nightmare,” said City of Fairfax Maintenance Department’s Lynn Miller.

    Now those maps, some of which date to the early 1900’s, just aren’t enough.

    “The faster growth you have, the harder it is to keep up on those records and your infrastructure needs,” said Fairfax City Clerk Cynthia Stimson.

    The city is logging into the 21st century with a new computerized database system for the infrastructure. It’s a satellite image of the city with “layers” of different city systems. The technology maps out water, storm sewer and sanitary sewer utilities for the entire city.

    City worker can see everything from fire hydrants to valves within the map.

    “You can click on those different items, whether it’s a manhole or fire hydrant or water line and to see what it’s made of, what issues it has had [and] we can add video to that,” Mayor Rabe said.

    The mayor said the new technology is one way the city is adapting to its increase in population, especially as new housing developments pop up and as the city considers future annexations.

    “That great balloon in growth probably wasn’t expected, so we’ve had to somewhat be reactionary but now we can start planning for that growth,” Mayor Rabe said.

    City leaders made the move to spend about $40,000 of local option sales tax money on the upgrade, and they said it was just the beginning.

    “Eventually we will have people out there with tablets and they can get to the sites and just pull up the site map right then on the tablet, and they”ll be like, ‘okay there’s this here and that there’,” Mayor Rabe said.

    In the future, the new system will map out city streets, information for zoning and even trees

  • South Africa: Environmental Affairs Deputy Minister Mabudafhasi Led Severe Weather Awareness Road Show At the Disastrous Weather Prone Limpopo

    South Africa: Environmental Affairs Deputy Minister Mabudafhasi Led Severe Weather Awareness Road Show At the Disastrous Weather Prone Limpopo
    26 February 2013

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    press release

    Today, Water and Environmental Affairs Deputy Minister, Mme Rejoice Mabudafhasi together with the South African Weather Service, embarked on a severe weather awareness road show to engage all stakeholders on issues of weather, at Thohoyandou Town Hall, Vhembe District Municipality, in Limpopo.

    The Deputy Minister kick started the road show by visiting the Maluleke, Ramudzuli and Makhubele families in Mphego village who were left destitute by the catastrophic flooding which recently swept bridges, damaged properties and caused deaths and injuries in the Vhembe District Municipality.

    “Over the past years, South Africa has experienced an increase in severe weather such as flooding, lightning, thunder storms, tornadoes and in some areas excessive and unbearable heat, which caused damage to property and infrastructure as well as several incidences of loss of life. The climate records of the South African Weather Service show a growing trend in extreme weather events”, said Deputy Minister Mabudafhasi.

    During the Conference of the Parties (COP17) of the Framework Convention on Climate Change in Durban, experts again confirmed their predictions that extreme weather events are expected to continue to increase with time. We therefore need to be able to adapt where these weather hazards are experienced.

    Since government has elevated and prioritised warnings around weather related hazards, the South African Weather Service has reviewed its early warning system formally known as Severe Weather Warning System in collaboration with the Department of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs. Several steps were taken to put infrastructure in place to ensure better disaster preparedness.

    However, early warning systems are only effective when all role players are integrated. The purpose of this community outreach event will therefore be not only to educate the community in general, but also to engage the relevant structures in ensuring a more effective severe weather information dissemination and also to plan better for disasters.

    “We cannot prevent hazardous weather from happening, but we can take steps to prevent them from becoming disasters, or at least lessen the impact of these disasters. Members of the public need to take note of the daily weather forecasts and take steps for their safety when severe weather approaches”, said Mabudafhasi.

    Mabudafhasi further said “Disaster preparedness is important in the case of severe weather events, therefore, the South African Weather Service, in cooperation with disaster management, Department of Rural Development and Land Reform, municipalities and other role players are reaching out to affected communities through a public awareness drive that will educate the public and empower them with the ability to act”.

    The severe weather road show will be rolled out in different provinces that were recently hit by weather disasters and at those areas that are forecast to be prone to excessive weather that may lead to disaster.

    Issued by: Department of Environmental Affairs

  • A LABOR frontbencher has joked about Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s visit to western Sydney next week, comparing it to a ribald British comedy series.

    Minister jokes about PM’s Sydney visit

    AAP
    February 27, 20131:30PM

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    Labor MP Mark Butler makes fun of Rooty Hill »

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    Labor MP Mark Butler makes fun of Rooty Hill

    Labor Minister Mark Butler, Federal Member for Port Adelaide, spoke on ABC radio in Adelaide, making fun of Rooty Hill RSL.

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    A LABOR frontbencher has joked about Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s visit to western Sydney next week, comparing it to a ribald British comedy series.

    Ms Gillard will be staying at Rooty Hill for a week as she and her cabinet team make a pitch for votes in some of Australia’s most marginal seats.

    “There are so many different sort of double entendres you can do with this place,” Mark Butler told ABC radio on Wednesday.

    Prime Minister

    Minister Mark Butler with Prime Minister Julia Gillard. Picture: Gary RamageSource: The Daily Telegraph

    “I stay at the Penrith Panthers when I’m in western Sydney because I’m not sure I could check into the Rooty Hill RSL with a straight face.

    “It just conjures up all these sort of Carry On films and Benny Hill episodes and Carry On Governing filmed at the Rooty Hill RSL.”

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    THE Prime Minister’s decision to move to western Sydney for a week has upset local voters, and drawn criticism from politicians.
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    IT’S too little, too late for many of the western Sydney residents and workers Prime Minister Julia Gillard will call her neighbours next week. ..
    – See more at: http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/minister-jokes-about-pms-sydney-visit/story-e6freuy9-1226586839859#sthash.btSYRzBy.dpuf

  • ‘Forgotten town’ wants asbestos wasteland gone

    ‘Forgotten town’ wants asbestos wasteland gone
    7.30
    By Vassil Malandris

    Updated 13 minutes ago
    Video: The town where asbestos lies around for decades (7.30)
    Map: Terowie 5421

    For decades an asbestos wasteland has stretched across a South Australian town, yet the body responsible for cleaning it up is in no hurry to press the panic button, leaving locals despairing for their health.

    The asbestos in the township of Terowie, 220 kilometres north of Adelaide, is not an illegal dump.

    It is the property of the South Australian Government and yet there is no fence, no warning signs and no hurry to clean it up despite fears it could be blowing particles straight into a nearby playground and school.

    Dave Perron came across the dump two years ago when he moved to Terowie.

    “I walked down to the southern rail yards and saw just the massive asbestos down there,” he said.

    “It blew me away that it had been there for so long and nobody had bothered to clean it up.

    “The ground is just covered with broken up fragments of asbestos. It extends for well over 200 metres from the bottom of the southern platform to up at the cemetery.”

    Mr Perron says the overall extent of the contamination stretches for up to three kilometres.

    Forty-year-old roof sheeting and broken pieces now line a popular walking trail belonging to a camping site.

    People have been complaining about this for years and the State Government has just forgotten us. Terowie is a forgotten town.
    Dave Perron

    Residents like Mr Perron fear many pieces are so small and indiscernible, someone could easily walk on the asbestos and not realise the risk.

    “I have young grandchildren who want to come over here and explore the buildings, the old train station and the old train line,” he said.

    “To do that they have to walk on this asbestos. I won’t allow them here because I don’t want my grandchildren in 30 years time to be diagnosed with mesothelioma.”

    Locals say Terowie has become a forgotten town.

    It was once a bustling railway stop and important staging camp for allied forces during World War II.

    Its most famous visitor, General Douglas MacArthur, came to Terowie in 1942 and declared “I shall return”.

    He never did.

    Terowie’s decline was sealed in the early 1970s when the train station was abandoned and dismantled leaving behind the asbestos wreckage.

    Mr Perron says locals have long been concerned about the threat.

    “People have been complaining about this for years and the State Government has just forgotten us. Terowie is a forgotten town,” he said.
    Poisoned water

    We’ve got the right to have water, we’ve got the right to breathe air that’s healthy and our kids to play without being sick.
    Terowie resident Donna

    Terowie’s contamination concerns are not limited to asbestos.

    Local MP Dan van Holst Pellekaan says the town’s water supply has high levels of lead and e-coli.

    “Towns on the Barrier Highway from Terowie to Cockburn receive water from SA Water that is way, way below the quality that anybody else in the state would expect,” he said.

    “In many cases you can’t drink it. We’ve actually uncovered cases where people have been told they can drink it if they boil it but it has unacceptable levels of lead in it.”

    The water, which is pumped from a nearby dam through asbestos pipes, is four times more expensive than Adelaide’s supply but deemed unfit for human consumption, with tests often showing high levels of e-coli.

    But not everyone is turning their back on Terowie.

    Geoff Maul suffers from asbestosis after 27 years of exposure to the deadly dust.

    He now spends much of his retirement fighting to clean up sites like the one in Terowie.

    “I’ve never seen nothing like it. It’s totally disgraceful,” he said.

    Residents say they have received assurances in the past from authorities that the asbestos pieces are safe and non-friable, which means they cannot be broken up or crumbled.

    But at a town meeting, Mr Maul felt compelled to deliver a different message to locals.

    “It’s sweeping it off, it’s vibrating like sand paper and it’s putting those asbestos fibres into the atmosphere that is coming over your town,” he said.

    The Environment Protection Authority and SA Environment Department issued statements telling 7.30 they are meeting later in the week but will not commit to a time frame for the clean-up.

    It appears a 40-year-old problem is not going away any time soon.

    For some, like local Donna, it is too much to cope with.

    “It doesn’t matter what it is, whether it’s the water or the asbestos anything, they don’t care about Terowie,” she said.

    “We’ve got the right to have water, we’ve got the right to breathe air that’s healthy and our kids to play without being sick.”

    Topics: asbestos, health, states-and-territories, community-and-society, terowie-5421, sa, renmark-5341, port-pirie-5540

    First posted Tue Feb 26, 2013 8:38pm AEDT
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  • State funding cuts to slash Murray-Darling work

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    State funding cuts to slash Murray-Darling work

    Date February 27, 2013 15 reading now

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    Tom Arup

    Environment editor, The Age

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    The head of the Murray-Darling Basin Authority will write to state ministers warning them that potential budget cuts will see environmental programs for the rivers axed and maintenance work threatened.

    The authority – the independent body that oversees the Murray-Darling system – says if the Victorian government follows recently announced budget cuts to the body by New South Wales and South Australia it will have to further slash its operations.

    Programs in the gun could include salinity monitoring and managing, water quality monitoring, and environmental site restoration.

    In a speech last Friday in Sydney, authority chairman Craig Knowles said in a worst case budget scenario there could also be insufficient funds to carry out maintenance and renewal programs on key river infrastructure such as dams, weirs, locks and barrages.

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    He said the ability to deliver water to irrigators and towns could be threatened, adding: ”In the long term, this will mean the key assets will deteriorate and will pose a greatly increased risk to downstream populations.”

    The NSW government cut its annual funding to the authority from $32 million to $12 million in July last year. Mr Knowles said it would make a further cut from July 1 to $8.9 million a year, all up reducing its contribution by over 70 per cent.

    As a result, state governments have already agreed to axe a popular native fish strategy and a river health audit program overseen by the authority.

    South Australia has also flagged that it will cut its contribution to the authority in half from July 2014, which would strip a further $14.3 million.

    Victoria has given no indication that it would cut its contribution. A spokeswoman for Victorian Water Minister Peter Walsh said his views had not changed since previously questioning whether the authority should continue to fund some assets in South Australia in light of their cuts.

    He has also said: ”It is important that the operational side of the MDBA [authority] is run as efficiently as possible.”

    In his speech, Mr Knowles said the authority was yet to hear how Victoria would respond. But he added that as Victoria would be cross-subsiding NSW and South Australia, it could not be long before it also made cuts.

    Mr Knowles said if other states followed SA’s lead and cut funding by 50 per cent, all programs beyond maintenance and operation of dams and weirs would go. Those to be cut would include the long-standing Living Murray works and indigenous programs.

    If other states follow NSW’s 70 per cent cut, he said there would be insufficient funds to even carry out planned maintenance and renewals program of weirs and dams.

    Federal Water Minister Tony Burke said: ”There is no way of dressing it up, the cuts are irresponsible. There is essential infrastructure which needs to be maintained and at some point in time these cuts will need to be turned around.”

    Follow the National Times on Twitter

    Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/political-news/state-funding-cuts-to-slash-murraydarling-work-20130226-2f47v.html#ixzz2M333rXfQ

  • The west puts up a Do Not Disturb sign to Prime Minister Julia Gillard

    The west puts up a Do Not Disturb sign to Prime Minister Julia Gillard

    Gemma Jones
    The Daily Telegraph
    February 27, 201312:00AM

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    Julia Gillard … from Kirribilli to the Novotel, Rooty Hill. Source: The Daily Telegraph

    Source: The Daily Telegraph

    THE week-long prime ministerial sleepover in Sydney’s west has been labelled a stunt and a desperate bid by Julia Gillard to regain the Labor party’s heartland.

    But one Sydney Labor MP said campaigning in the west with Opposition Leader Tony Abbott would be preferable.

    Ms Gillard will trade her Sydney digs – Harbourside Kirribilli House – for the Novotel at Rooty Hill RSL after a rally in Parramatta on Sunday night.

    It takes more than 90 minutes by public transport from her Kirribilli House home to the Novotel in the heart of the Chifley electorate.

    The Daily Telegraph revealed this month internal polling showed the seat, plus a dozen others, was under threat. Government whip Ed Husic holds Chifley by 12 per cent. Ms Gillard will visit at least eight seats – Chifley, Parramatta, Lindsay, Banks, Werriwa, Fowler, Greenway and Macarthur – during her stay.

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    However, Parramatta Labor councillor Pierre Esber yesterday said it was time western Sydney MPs considered a leadership change.”Western Sydney MPs have got to look at themselves in the mirror and ask, ‘How can we save seats, who is the best person to lead us to save seats?’,” the former deputy mayor said.

    He said Ms Gillard’s “heart is in the right place” and western Sydney would welcome her with respect – but he said the carbon tax and the influx of asylum-seeker boats arrivals had damaged Labor’s vote and credibility.

    “She is the PM, she is responsible for it,” he said.

    He said Labor had failed to sell the things it had done for western Sydney residents, such as tripling the tax-free threshold to $18,000 and building school halls.

    Meanwhile, an unnamed western Sydney MP said Ms Gillard’s attack on Mr Abbott over claims of misogyny had fallen flat there.

    “While Abbott is unpopular with the inner city intelligentsia, if I had to go out and campaign in western Sydney and I had a choice of him by my side or the PM, I know who I would pick,” the MP said.

    The MP predicted the election result in western Sydney would come close to the wipeout Labor suffered in the NSW state election, with the Eddie Obeid ICAC scandal also affecting the vote.

    “It is going to be a flaying,” the MP said.

    Another Labor MP also questioned the sleepover, after Ms Gillard said – when she announced the September 14 election eight months out – that she was committed to governing. “We were meant to be about governing, this looks like campaigning,” the MP said.

    Blacktown Labor councillor Leo Kelly yesterday said the western Sydney sleep-out was “a bit late”.

    He said voters would expect Ms Gillard to be able to help them with cost-of-living pressures and with education and transport needs.

    “I think people will respond to that and, if not, they (Labor) could be in more trouble than they think they are,” he said. “People will be keen to indicate their concerns and the opportunity to do it is well overdue.”

    Labor lost power on Blacktown council last September and Mr Kelly’s councillor colleague Alan Pendleton blamed the “stench” of NSW Labor and he said Ms Gillard, whom he praised, would also be unfairly punished.

    Many Labor MPs contacted The Daily Telegraph yesterday to promote the tour.

    Assistant Treasurer David Bradbury, who holds Lindsay, blamed uncertainty in the world economy for voters becoming “grumpy” with the government, but he said Ms Gillard’s visit was a chance to sell Labor’s message.

    “Every day the PM visits western Sydney is a good day for everyone,” he said.

    When asked what issues Ms Gillard would find Lindsay voters most commended and most complained about, Mr Bradbury conceded that the carbon tax had not been popular while saying the national broadband network was the most praised initiative in his electorate.

    Parramatta MP Julie Owens said that based on her door-knocking she believed Labor’s fortunes were more positive than polls suggested.

    Greenway’s Michelle Rowland said it was a chance for Ms Gillard to hear from the community.

    Rooty Hill RSL CEO Richard Errington said it was “an outstanding honour” that Ms Gillard was to stay.

    – See more at: http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/the-west-puts-up-a-do-not-disturb-sign-to-prime-minister-julia-gillard/story-e6freuy9-1226586385021#sthash.wpZK4RnJ.dpuf