الثلاثاء، 31 يناير 2017

Labor continues to attack Turnbull on Medicare with new online portal


Labor’s 2016 Mediscare TV and YouTube ad featuring Bob Hawke. Pic: YouTube

 

 

Labor has launched an online portal encouraging Australians to submit their experiences of Medicare and the impact of healthcare cuts, in a sign that Opposition Leader Bill Shorten will continue to attack Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull on Medicare.

Mr Shorten said the new portal – mymedicarestory.com – was established in response to complaints from Australians about ‘serious delays in Medicare processing’ under the Turnbull government. He said some people had reported a six-week delay getting a refund.

“We know that because of this Government’s cuts to vital services some people are falling through the cracks,” Mr Shorten said. “We want to know when that happens, so we can help ensure our health care system is strengthened now and in the future.

“Labor will never stop fighting to protect Medicare from Malcolm Turnbull and the Liberals. Today there is a clear message for Malcolm Turnbull –  give Medicare the best  birthday present by dropping the savage cuts to health which will see bulk billing drop, every Australian pay more and Medicare undermined.”

Submissions using the portal are anonymous and can be confidential, if requested.

Mr Shorten’s Mediscare message – warning voters that Mr Turnbull was trying to sell off or privatise Medicare through the back door – became central to Labor’s campaign during the 2016 federal election.

The Opposition wheeled out former PM Bob Hawke to front the TV and YouTube advertising campaign, warning that the Liberals had set up “a Medicare privatisation taskforce” that would destroy the country’s healthcare system.

Mr Shorten used the fact that the government was exploring outsourcing Medicare payments as leverage to suggest that the whole kit and caboodle could follow suit.

Shortly afterwards, Mr Turnbull said Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, health, aged-care and related veterans’ payments would continue to be managed by the government and disbanded the $5 million Digital Payments Services Taskforce, which had been aided by PricewaterhouseCoopers.

The Department of Health is understood to have held market briefings with IT providers in Sydney and Melbourne last month in a bid to select potential partners to help replace Medicare’s 30-year-old system ahead of the Request For Proposal.

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Events in 2017 for public servants

 

 

Events in 2017

Gartner Data & Analytics Summit
February 19 to 21, Sydney

Highlights for public sector employees include: finding real nuggets in the public sector open data goldmine; Workshop: We can do it … with data! A roundtable on the opportunities and challenges for government chief data officers

Together, data and analytics are taking centre stage as the single most powerful catalyst for change in the enterprise. This year, the event embraces the full range of information and analytics challenges you face, including: Building and executing an effective, holistic data and analytics strategy; preparing for trends such as AI, Hadoop, IoT and Blockchain and establishing effective information governance for better quality, privacy and security.

Unbounded information. Limitless connections between enterprises, people and things. Pervasive technology capabilities. The opportunities to generate business value from data and analytics are infinite. 
ISSA Cleaning & Hygiene Expo Australia
May 9 and 10, Melbourne

ISSA Cleaning & Hygiene Expo Australia 2017 is the only dedicated event for the cleaning and hygiene industry in Australia. This two-day Expo will host the top tier Australian manufacturers and suppliers showcasing the latest in cleaning technology and creative innovation through product demonstration and expert presentations on their stands.

The ISSA Cleaning and Hygiene Expo education program will feature expert advice on business management and winning tenders for building service contractors; the important issues surrounding OH&S and the introduction of GHS when cleaning with chemicals; course-specific IICRC restoration training modules taught by a Master Trainer from the Restoration Industry Association (RIA); and the technological advancements in the FM sector with a guest speaker from Facilities Management Association (FMA).

There will be a robust seminar and workshop program; networking opportunities. Co-located events including the Safety First Conference & Expo and National Manufacturing Week.

 

Independent Living Expo
May 24, Brisbane

The Assisted Technology Suppliers Australasia Independent Living Expo will have over 100 exhibitors displaying a wide range of products and services in assistive technology, mobility solutions, pressure care, employment support, accessible recreation/holiday ideas, modified motor vehicles and a lot more.

ATSA Independent Living Expo is open to visitors of all ages, including those with a disability, seniors and their families, friends and carers.

A key feature of the Expo is the FREE Conference Program – run in rooms conveniently located next to the exhibition floor. Sessions include wheelchair design; mobile showers; deregulation and independent living; smart assisted technology and the NDIS.

Admission is free to therapists, the general public, end users & ATSA members.

 

Connect Expo
March 29 & 30, Melbourne

Connect Expo is a major trade show combined with multiple industry and technology tracks. Held at the Melbourne Convention & Exhibition Centre over 29 – 30 March 2017 – the Connect Expo is focused on how to stimulate innovation, increase collaboration and drive growth through investment in technology.

Connect Expo brings together 8000 attendees, 100+ speakers and 200+ exhibitors that makes this one big innovation festival.

Email connectexpo@acevents.com.au for any general enquiries regarding the event. Otherwise, contact John Hyland at johnh@acevents.com.au for sponsorship or exhibition enquiries.

 

Digital Earth Symposium & Locate17
April 3 to 6, Sydney

The International Symposium on Digital Earth is a flagship event of the International Society for Digital Earth. Founded in Beijing in 2006, ISDE is a non-political, non-governmental and not-for-profit international organisation principally promoting academic exchange, science and technology innovation, education, and international collaboration towards Digital Earth.

ISDE also explores Digital Earth as an enabling technology to play key roles in economic and social sustainable development, environmental protection, disaster mitigation, natural resources conservation and improvement of living standards.

About Locate17

The Locate Conference (Locate17) is the national conference of the spatial and surveying industries of Australia and New Zealand. The event is an initiative of the Surveying & Spatial Sciences Institute (SSSI), Spatial Industries Business Association (SIBA) and Geospatial Information & Technology Association (GITA).

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CSIRO takes on Silicon Valley

CSIRO will set up its San Francisco office later this year. 

 

 

By Anthony Wallace

Australian Foreign Affairs Minister, Julie Bishop, recently announced a plan to boost innovation overseas with the landmark opening of a CSIRO office in the United States.

The new office to be known as CSIRO US will be strategically placed in San Francisco to promote Australian innovation and drive scientific and industrial engagement in the United States.

It is expected the new CSIRO office will open in the Bay Area of San Francisco, alongside the world’s most influential tech companies. The move aims to capitalise on the CSIRO’s existing strong relationships with science and industry leaders including NASA, Bayer LLP and Boeing.

CSIRO Chief Executive Dr Larry Marshall described the move as a ‘no brainer’: “To accelerate innovation rates in Australia we need to accelerate international engagement, especially in regions where there is a significant opportunity to return value to Australia. From this point of view the US is a no brainer,” he said.

 

Read more here

This story first appeared in Spatial Source. 

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Football's top 25 January transfers

The Chinese Super League is now making more big money signings than La Liga, Serie A, Ligue 1 and the Bundesliga. Meanwhile, one English second division club has spent more on new players this window than Real Madrid and Barcelona combined.

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MLB team punished in hacking scandal

Major League Baseball has ruled that the St. Louis Cardinals have to hand over their top two draft picks and pay the Houston Astros $2 million after Chris Correa, the team's former director of scouting was found guilty of hacking the rival team's player roster.

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29 amazing sports photos

Take a look at 29 amazing sports photos from January 24 through January 30.

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What happened to the NBA's great rivalries?

Two-time NBA champion Isiah Thomas reflects on how the NBA has changed in terms of tactics and technique, relationships and rivalries.

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Why tennis needs Federer and Nadal rivalry

It was only a few minutes after his Australian Open victory over Rafael Nadal, but already Roger Federer was thinking about the future of the game he loves so dearly.

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Super Bowl LI week kicks off with Opening Night

For the second consecutive year in front of a sold-out crowd, coaches and players from both Super Bowl teams will answer questions from the media in prime time.

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الاثنين، 30 يناير 2017

  Australian pollies tell Trump:  Hey, you nicked our Muslim ban


Bob Katter calling for a ban on people from the Middle East and North Africa from entering Australia. Pic: Facebook.

 
Australian politicians are falling over themselves to claim credit for US President Donald Trump’s immigration and travel ban on people from seven Muslim countries, saying they suggested it first.

Federal MP Bob Katter – not known for his reticence in blowing his own trumpet – has become the latest Australian politician to say that he had the idea ages ago.

Mr Katter claims Trump must have heard his ‘cooee for a ban on Middle Eastern peoples from entering the country’ all the way from his Innisfail office and obviously decided to act on it.

“Mr Katter didn’t expect the American President to take action before the Australian Government,” exclaimed the press release from the MP’s office.

“Trump is the most powerful man on the planet and the American people have made their decision. No more! 

“These people stay at home. If Saudi Arabia and Dubai won’t take them – why should Australia?”  

The outspoken Independent MP, whose grandfather was Lebanese, called for a ban on anyone travelling or immigrating to Australian from the Middle East or North Africa in August last year, after an Algerian-French backpacker murdered two British backpackers at backpacker’s hostel Home Hill, Queensland.

“The time has come now to stop people from those countries coming to Australia. And if that is an extremist position, is it an extremist position for Saudi Arabia and Dubai; they won’t let any of those people in,” Mr Katter told Sky News last year.

“There comes a point where I’m worried about Australians, not worried about people over there,” he said.

Mr Katter issued a press release today (Tuesday) saying he would keep campaigning for a similar ban to be introduced in Australia.

“We’ve been screaming for this, particularly since the attempted mass murder that took place in my backyard at Home Hill last year.

“As I’ve said on the public record many times, it is imperative the people from countries between Greece to India and in North Africa are barred from entering Australia. 

“There is an incident of this nature by people of Middle East origin intercepted far too regularly in Australia.”

Mr Katter said he would exempt persecuted Jews, Sikhs and Christians from his edict and also leave out Muslims who lived outside the Middle East, in countries such as Indonesia.

Treasurer and former Immigration Minister Scott Morrison entered the debate yesterday when he told radio host Ray Hadley that Trump and the rest of the world was “catching up” with Australia’s tough guy immigration stance which he said was “the envy of the world”.

“I remember when we came in in 2013 and I was implementing our border protection policy people threw their hands up – and I said I’m doing what I said I would do in the way I said I’d do it – and guess what, I’m now getting the results I said I’d get,” Morrison told Hadley.

“The rest of the world would love to have our borders and the way they are secured and the immigration arrangements we have put in place, particularly most recently, over the last three or four years.”

Meanwhile, on Twitter,  One Nation Leader Pauline Hanson praised the Trump travel ban but said it didn’t go far enough. She tweeted that Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia should also be included.  

Citizens from Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen are all on Trump’s banned list.

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Councils sell aged care facilities but keep planning role   


Port Augusta City Council has sold its two nursing homes. 

 

 

Local government agencies throughout Australia are asking if aged care is their core business, writes Cam Ansell.

While many community projects for older people originated from municipalities, the reform process is creating a highly competitive and attractive market for the private sector. Given the broad set of responsibilities already managed by local government, many are concerned that these services create a disproportionate burden and draw on ratepayer resources. If the private sector can do it better and more efficiently, why continue?

Over the past 12 months, our firm has supported the City of West Torrens in South Australia with their nursing home divestment, and similar processes are now taking place in the Cities of Bayswater and Canning in Western Australia. In October, the Port Augusta City Council in South Australia announced the sale of its two nursing homes by public tender.

All of these organisations did some serious soul searching and concluded that the market had changed and so should their role. Under the Living Longer, Living Better reforms introduced in 2012, consumers will be in a position to demand more responsive, cost effective and innovative services.

In this environment, organisations that are created to deliver on this objective will be better placed than those which must manage a myriad of services. As a result, we can expect the representation of local government in the aged care sector to decline further in future years.

However, the role of local government in planning facilitation is absolutely critical. The Georges River Council in New South Wales recognised the importance of promoting aged care development in their communities. They have preserved a prime piece of real estate in Oatley for the provision of aged care services. The City of Swan in Western Australia has made similar allocations, recognising the need for greater services levels in their municipality.

Our consultation with aged care and retirement village operators revealed a high level of frustration in relation to the planning approval process for new and expanded developments. The importance placed on seniors’ accommodation and aged care services varies substantially between local government agencies and planning authorities.

Across Australia, seniors’ housing and aged care projects have been stalled or terminated because of misunderstanding and prejudices among community members. While some of this sentiment can be attributed to a natural fear of ageing, others misconceive that the expansion of seniors’ accommodation results in an influx of ageing people in their community.

In fact, the opposite is true. The provision of age appropriate accommodation makes larger homes available for young families, while helping the elderly remain in their own community. 

By 2020, around eight million Australians will be aged over 70 years. This cohort currently owns around 21 per cent of all residences and almost 90 per cent of these seniors have surplus capacity within their homes. In the absence of appropriate planning and investment in suitable housing and community infrastructure for seniors, this demographic shift will have a major negative impact on housing affordability and the wider economy.

The local government participation and facilitation of the planning process will be critical to addressing this emerging issue.

Australia’s not-for-profit aged care peak bodies have outlined nine principles that should underpin the new financial model being developed as an alternative to the existing Aged Care Funding Instrument.

As Australian Ageing Agenda reported first reported in October, the Department of Health has commissioned the University of Wollongong to identify alternatives to ACFI.

The university’s work will include a review of international models, as well as methods used in related sectors such as the health and hospital system.

The seven NFP peak bodies said that the recent funding changes and court challenges have “highlighted the urgent need for a more sustainable, efficient and effective model to fund aged care services.”

The new funding model should be underpinned by principles that enable equitable access to high quality care, support consumer choice and control, maximise health and wellbeing and support reablement and preventative approaches, the groups said.

“Funding should support all consumers based on their assessed needs, and ensure that all consumer groups, including CALD, LGBTI, indigenous Australians, older people living with disability, people suffering mental ill health or those who may be socially or geographically isolated, have access to appropriate support, care and services as they require them.

“The model should also be flexible and adaptable across the continuum of care (home care and support through to residential care). It should be efficient, transparent and financially sustainable. It should encourage, not stifle, innovation, investment and growth,” the peaks said.

NFP aged care providers deliver about 60 per cent of residential aged care services and 85 per cent of all community aged care services in Australia.

 

This story first appeared in Australian Ageing Agenda

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 Mum’s grief worse after bureaucratic nightmare with Births, Deaths and Marriages

 

 

It took Victoria’s Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages more than a year to give a grieving mum birth and death certificates for her son who died when he was 18 weeks old.

A Victorian Ombudsman investigation into the Registry’s behaviour, published yesterday (Monday), found that its actions had likely prolonged the mother’s distress and grief and pointed to “serious service delivery problems” in the organisation, reflected in the growing number of complaints the Ombudsman had received.

Ms X gave birth to twins in 14 weeks prematurely in March 2015. One of the boys survived but the other died 4.5 months later.  She battled for more than a year to get the Registry to issue birth certificates for both boys and death certificates for Twin A.

Victorian Ombudsman Deborah Glass uncovered a litany of failures in the way the Registry dealt with Ms X.

“A grieving parent, having lost an infant twin child seeking basic documentation about his very existence – found herself immersed in a bureaucratic netherworld,” said Ms Glass.

“Over 20 contacts with the Registry, with concerns still not resolved over 12 months, unanswered and unreturned phone calls, discovering the Registry had lost certified documents.”

Ms X had made a mistake on the form and had registered the births two months late but the Ombudsman chided the Registry for showing no understanding of the “intense sadness and despair” that Ms X had been going through.

Unfortunately, Ms X’s case was not an isolated one, said Ms Glass. Complaints about the Registry shot up from 14 cases in January 2016 to 34 cases in April 2016.

“Given the sensitive nature of much of its caseload, we would expect the Registry to fulfil its statutory obligations with efficiency and accuracy. But as this investigation demonstrates, far too often, this did not happen,” Ms Glass said.

“Sadly, Ms X’s experience with the Registry was not unique. My office had received an increasing number of complaints about the Registry and its delays in issuing certificates or responding to complaints.” 

She said complaints were most often about long waits on the telephone that failed to resolve issues, sloppy or non-existent record keeping, poor communication and confusing policies.

Some people said they had waited more than two hours on the phone before having their calls cut off without speaking to Registry staff.

The Victorian Ombudsman recommended that there be an external audit of the Registry’s performance and business practices in 18 months’ time; that it consider the particular circumstances of each individual case and ensure applicants who have paid a fee are told if their application is non-compliant. 

Ms Glass welcomed the response of the Department of Justice and Regulation in accepting the recommendations: 

“The Department has acknowledged that the Registry has been experiencing serious service delivery problems, and happily, matters are improving with more staff engaged, improved technology and the adoption of complaint handling procedures. The further recommendations contained in this report will help the Registry do what all Victorians should reasonably expect from this key public service. ” 

A restructure of the Registry between 2012 and 2015  cut the number of employees in back office roles. Registry employees fell from 111 FTE staff to 85 FTE and roles and responsibilities substantially changed.

Ms Glass mentioned in her report that agency cuts were at least partly responsible for the Registry’s poor performance.

But the report mentions that the Registry has been trying to clean up its act by hiring more staff, making IT improvements and adopting complaint handling procedures.

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Super Bowl: Will 'Deflategate' haunt NFL chief?

The Patriots are back in the Super Bowl, and that means NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell can't hide from them anymore. Or at least that's what it feels like.

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Federer savors 'extra special' Aussie Open win

No male tennis player in history has won as many grand slam titles as Roger Federer, but the Swiss star has dubbed his record-extending 18th major -- won at the Australian Open Sunday -- as "extra special."

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Gut wins downhill as Vonn crashes out



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الأحد، 29 يناير 2017

Upton takes Local Government, Toole reincarnated in NSW cabinet


NSW Local Government Minister Gabrielle Upton speaking at a 2015  anti-council merger rally in Double Bay.
Pic: YouTube

 
Former NSW Local Government Minister Paul Toole has escaped being dumped from Premier Gladys Berejiklian’s Cabinet and instead been handed two new portfolios.

The Bathurst MP dodged a bullet that many thought was heading straight for him and scooped up two new ministries, while relinquishing his local government role, being allocated Minister for Racing and Minister for Lands and Forestry.

His position as Local Government Minister would likely have become untenable after new Nationals Leader and Deputy NSW Premier John Barilaro came out publicly and said he would block some regional council amalgamations that are still hanging in the balance, something which would have clashed with Toole’s role as one of the main cheerleaders of forced council amalgamations in the former Baird government.

Two of the most hotly contested merger proposals still on the table are at least partly in Mr Toole’s Bathurst electorate: the proposed union of Bathurst and Oberon Councils and a merger between Blayney, Cabonne and Orange Councils.

Council mergers, along with the greyhound industry ban and hospital funding has been one of the main reasons cited for the Nationals shock loss to the Shooting Fishers and Farmers Party at the Orange by-election last year.

Now removed from the rough and tumble of local government mergers, Mr Toole’s new duties as Minister for Lands and Forestry will still bring him into contact with councils, most notably through the review of Crown Lands and roads and the infrastructure backlog.

Mr Toole will also need to oversee the new conditions for the greyhound racing industry following the overturned greyhound racing ban, especially in the light of recent reports alleging that dog owners are still doping their dogs.

Mr Toole, who was sworn into Cabinet today (Monday), told Fairfax local newspapers that his two new portfolios reflected the concerns of people in rural and regional areas.

“Forestry is quite big in rural areas, obviously, and also a strongly innovative industry and a big employer so it’s important that we keep that industry alive,” Mr Toole said.

He vowed to oppose any future greyhound racing ban in NSW, as that state’s Racing Minister.

“Racing is very big in Bathurst with harness racing, thoroughbred racing and greyhound racing so I think I was seen as an MP that had experience with all three,” he said.

Mr Toole said his three year stint as Local Government Minister had not all been about council mergers but had also been about improving the integrity and standards in local government and creating a State Borrowing Authority for councils.

And what of his replacement, the incoming Local Government Minister, former Attorney General Gabrielle Upton, who has also been handed the Environment and Heritage portfolios?

Ms Upton already has already had a rocky ride as far as NSW council amalgamations and the tension between her, local residents and her party goes.

The Vaucluse MP spoke at an anti-council merger rally in Double Bay in October 2015 where she encouraged residents to sign a petition against the merger of Woollahra, Randwick and Waverley Councils.

She told the anti-merger rally at the time: “I believe there is no perfect size for a council and what works here may not work for those that are three streets to our south. I do believe small can be effective.”

“Let me be clear about my position on this issue: my position is that Woollahra Council should not be merged with other councils if it has the community support and the numbers stack up.”

A few days later the Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal  ruled Woollahra Council unfit for the future and recommended it be merged with its neighbours.

Ms Upton got into hot water later in the year when Woollahra Mayor Toni Zeltzer arrived at Ms Upton’s office to hand her a petition against the merger, which Ms Upton refused to take, having apparently been warned not to by her party.

Ms Berejiklian’s new, expanded Cabinet – 23 ministers in all – also includes two new portfolios:  Minister for Counter Terrorism and Minister for WestConnex.

Major losers in the reshuffle were Education Minister Andrew Piccoli; Roads Minister Duncan Gay (who is set to quit Parliament ‘sooner rather than later’); Disability Minister John Ajaka – who got upper house president as a consolation prize and Health Minister Jillian Skinner, who reportedly refused an alternative Cabinet role and decided to leave politics altogether.

The winners included NSW Treasurer and former Finance Minister Dominic Perrottet, Attorney-General Mark Speakman; Roads Minister Melinda Pavey; Early Childhood Education and Aboriginal affairs minister Sarah Mitchell; Innovation and better regulation minister Matt Kean and Niall Blair, who now has the trade and industry portfolio.

 

List of NSW ministers:

Premier – Gladys Berejiklian MP – Premier
Deputy Premier, Minister for Regional New South Wales, Minister for Skills, and Minister for Small Business – (John) Giovanni Domenic Barilaro MP
Treasurer, and Minister for Industrial Relations – Dominic Francis Perrottet MP 
Minister for Primary Industries, Minister for Regional Water, and Minister for Trade and Industry – Niall Mark Blair MLC  
Minister for Resources, Minister for Energy and Utilities, Minister for the Arts, and Vice-President of the Executive Council-  Donald Thomas Harwin MLC  
Minister for Planning, Minister for Housing, and Special Minister of State – Anthony John Roberts MP 
Minister for Transport and Infrastructure –  Andrew James Constance MP
Minister for Health, and Minister for Medical Research – Bradley Ronald Hazzard MP
Minister for Education – Robert Gordon Stokes MP
Attorney General – Mark Raymond Speakman SC MP
Minister for Police, and Minister for Emergency Services –  Troy Wayne Grant MP 
Minister for Finance, Services and Property –  Victor Michael Dominello MP
Minister for Family and Community Services, Minister for Social Housing, and Minister for the Prevention of Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault –  Prudence Jane Goward MP 
Minister for Lands and Forestry, and Minister for Racing –  Paul Lawrence Toole MP 
 Minister for Counter Terrorism, Minister for Corrections, and Minister for Veterans Affairs – David Andrew Elliott MP
 Minister for the Environment, Minister for Local Government, and Minister for Heritage – Gabrielle Cecilia Upton MP 
Minister for Western Sydney, Minister for WestConnex, and Minister for Sport –  Stuart Laurence Ayres MP
Minister for Roads, Maritime and Freight – Melinda Jane Pavey MP
Minister for Innovation and Better Regulation – Matthew John Kean MP
Minister for Tourism and Major Events, and Assistant Minister for Skills – Adam John Marshall MP 
Minister for Mental Health, Minister for Women, and Minister for Ageing – Tanya Davies MP
Minister for Early Childhood Education, Minister for Aboriginal Affairs, and Assistant Minister for Education – Sarah Mitchell MLC 
Minister for Multiculturalism, and Minister for Disability Services –  Raymond Craig Williams MP 

Parliamentary office holders 

President of the Legislative Council (elect) – John Ajaka MLC
Speaker of the Legislative Assembly –  Shelley Elizabeth Hancock MP
Deputy President and Chair of Committees – Trevor John Khan MLC
Deputy Speaker – Thomas George MP
Assistant Speaker – Mr Andrew Raymond Gordon Fraser MP
Leader of the Government in the Legislative Council –  Donald Thomas Harwin MLC
Leader of the House – Anthony John Roberts MP
Deputy Leader of the Government in the Legislative Council – Niall Mark Blair MLC
Government Whip – Mr Christopher Stewart Patterson MP
Government Whip in the Legislative Council –  Natasha Maclaren-Jones MLC

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AFCON 2017: Ayew brothers seal Ghana's passage

Brothers Jordan and Andre Ayew were the heroes for Ghana as the Black Stars edged Democratic Republic of Congo 2-1 to reach the semifinals of the Africa Cup of Nations Sunday.

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'Phenomenal' Blitzboks thrash sevens giant Fiji

South Africa's Blitzboks thrashed Olympic champion Fiji 26-5 to win the Wellington Sevens Sunday and extend its lead in the HSBC World Series.

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Federer triumphant as he claims 18th grand slam title

Even for the legendary Roger Federer, this was — nearly — unbelievable.

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Arrogate wins world's richest horse race

Arrogate powered through the final stages of the initial Pegasus World Cup on Saturday, easily winning the $7 million first prize.

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السبت، 28 يناير 2017

The most important match in grand slam history?



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Afcon 2017: Burkina Faso advances to semis

Tunisia's quarterfinal curse at the Africa Cup of Nations continued in Libreville on Saturday as Burkina Faso sealed a 2-0 victory to clinch a place in the last four.

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Serena beats sister Venus for record 23rd major

Serena Williams rewrote tennis' history books once again, this time with sister Venus across the net and her fiance Alexis Ohanian watching from the stands.

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الجمعة، 27 يناير 2017

Federer vs. Nadal: Key stats

They've reached 237 ATP finals between them, winning 157 titles and 31 grand slams.

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Serena vs. Venus Williams: The coaches have their say

Two sisters. One final.

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UFC champ gets naked - why?

UFC fighter Conor McGregor reveals his passion for horses and winning money at the races -- and gets naked -- as he promotes the $12 million Pegasus World Cup.

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Serena vs. Venus: 'I can't lose, she can't lose'

Serena and Venus Williams will meet in a grand slam final for the ninth time Saturday, and both sisters are eying historic feats at Australian Open.

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Nadal to play Federer in Australian Open final

The Australian Open men's final is one everyone hoped for — but few expected.

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Chapecoense returns to competitive action for first time since plane crash

Chapecoense played its first comeptitive match since the plane crash which wiped out the majority of its team, taking on Joinville in the first match of the Primeira Liga.

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Basketball player's eyeball pops out of its socket during game

Akil Mitchell, a basketball player for the New Zealand Breakers, said it was "just a weird sensation" having his eyeball pop out of its socket.

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Tiger Woods toils in PGA Tour comeback

The wheels fell off for Tiger Woods as he suffered a back-nine breakdown in his first competitive round of 2017.

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Cancer survivor sets up $12M race



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الخميس، 26 يناير 2017

The writing’s on the wall for Toole as Skinner quits

 

 


NSW Local Government Minister Paul Toole must feel like a man condemned as State Health Minister Jillian Skinner retires from politics today (Friday), ahead of next week’s cabinet reshuffle.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian confirmed that while she was not about to dump the veteran North Shore MP from her Cabinet she would have lost her Health portfolio, something that Ms Skinner had vowed would trigger her resignation from politics altogether.

 “I made it clear to her she would be welcome on the team but obviously we had a difference of opinion as to what that job should be,” Ms Berejiklian said, soon after Ms Skinner announced her retirement.

“I offered her a position on the team moving forward but she obviously had a position that she wanted to take and I respect that decision.”

Keeping Health was becoming increasingly untenable for the Minister as each new wave of scandal hit: chemotherapy underdosing in hospitals;  a newborn dead and another left with permanent brain damage after a hospital error and a number of hospitals under pressure with long waits in emergency departments and long elective surgery waiting lists.

Ms Skinner said in a statement announcing her retirement: “I am naturally sad to be leaving the portfolio I love. However, a new chapter beckons and I am looking forward to the challenges of life outside politics.”

She spent eight years as Shadow NSW Health Minister before winning the top job in April 2011 and 22 years in Parliament.

Her resignation means that there will now be two by-elections: Ms Skinner’s Sydney seat of North Shore and former Premier Mike Baird’s Sydney seat of Manly.

Ms Skinner’s electorate takes in Mosman and parts of Lane Cove, Willoughby and North Sydney: long a hot bed of resistance against forced council amalgamations.

Mr Baird’s seat also includes the new Northern Beaches Council, which caused fierce protests when it was created. Both seats have a history of electing independent MPs too.

 

Meanwhile, NSW Local Government Minister Paul Toole, who is also Nationals MP for Bathurst, must be feeling like a dead man walking and is likely to be ejected from Cabinet in the reshuffle.

Mr Toole has been one of the key players driving forced council mergers in the state. Unfortunately for him, new Nationals Leader and Deputy NSW Premier John Barilaro has made blocking a select number of regional council mergers his cause celebre.  

NSW Labour Leader Luke Foley told Sky News on Sunday last week that it was ironic Mr Toole had spearheaded forced council mergers while his new leader was tryingto stop them.

 “(Mr Toole) surely can have no future in Gladys Berejiklian’s cabinet, given his own leader has dumped the policy he’s been implementing for the last 12 months,” Mr Foley said.

Community groups opposing council mergers have also called for Mr Toole’s head on a plate and the peak body for NSW local councils, Local Government NSW (LGNSW), has made it displeasure known with the Local Government Minister over the years, coming to a head when mayors and councillors were sacked last year.

LGNSW has been contacted for comment. 

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Homeless: Why making it a crime won’t fix the problem


 

 

By James Petty, University of Melbourne

Melbourne Lord Mayor Robert Doyle has announced a plan to ban sleeping rough in the city. He did so last week amid significant pressure from both Victoria Police and the media.

When Chief Commissioner Graham Ashton called on the State Government to extend police powers, Doyle at first seemed to reject the idea. But he later said he would propose a new bylaw to the city council.

Ashton and Herald Sun columnist Rita Panahi have claimed that the people living on Flinders St, in Melbourne’s CBD, are not really homeless. They say new laws and powers are needed to “clean up the city”. Critics from the homelessness and community sectors argue this would effectively criminalise being homeless.

 

Read more here.

This story first appeared in Melbourne University’s Pursuit and was co-published with The Conversation. 

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Queensland Cabinet vows to reject lockout laws

 

By Andy Young

The Queensland Government has voted against the introduction of 1am lockouts, which were part of the second phase of liquor reforms to be introduced on February 1.

Cabinet Ministers voted after an interim report into the first six months of the restrictions the Government put in place on July 1 last year. The report found that while there was no noticeable reduction in alcohol-related assaults, the number of common assaults and ambulance call outs between 8pm and 6am had continued its downward trend. The report went on to suggest that evidence points to lockouts being unlikely to change those downward trends.

The restrictions introduced last year saw the cessation of drinks at 3am for venues in entertainment areas as well as the banning of rapid consumption drinks after midnight.

 

Read more here.

This story first appeared in The Shout. 

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Crack down on politicians’ entitlements now, say academics

 

Liberal MP Bronwyn Bishop’s cash splash on helicopters, chauffered cars and European tours
launched a thousand memes on social media. 

 

 

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull needs to urgently act on his promise to reform politicians’ work expenses before another one gets busted, say academics.

Parliamentary expenses have been under the spotlight again recently, with the high profile resignation of federal Health Minister Sussan Ley earlier this month.

Ms Ley quit after it emerged that she had purchased a $795,000 Gold Coast apartment ‘on impulse’ during a taxpayer-funded trip. News of her chartering and flying planes to attend work meetings back in 2015 delivered the coup de grace.

During the ensuing storm of negative public opinion and media commentary, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull committed to creating a new independent parliamentary standards authority to vet politicians’ expenses claims, similar to that established in the UK after the 2009 MP’s expenses scandal exploded.

It is understood that the new body’s board would include the President of the Renumeration Tribunal, as well as former public servants, judges and politicians and an auditing expert; probably taking over from the Department of Finance, which currently administers the system of complex laws and rules around politicians’ expense claims.

Mr Turnbull has also pledged to address the 36 recommendations contained in a February 2016 Renumeration Tribunal Review into politicians’ work expenses led by Tribunal President John Conde and former Finance secretary David Tune.

The review was commissioned by former Prime Minister Tony Abbott following Liberal MP Bronwyn Bishop’s notorious Choppergate scandal the previous year.

The Reviews’ 36 recommendations included making the distinction clearer between official and personal business and defining whether duties are party political, electorate or office duties.

Prof Rodney Smith, who teaches Australian politics and public sector ethics at Sydney University’s Department of Government and International Relations, said immediate action was needed to dispel the ‘widespread public suspicion’ that politicians fiddled their expense claims, overlaid by the general idea that politicians were in it for themselves.

“I think it’s probably at a point where if nothing happens or there are only superficial reforms, the government is only really going to be making a rod for its own back further down the track if someone else has been embroiled in another scandal,” Prof Smith said.

But he said the public sometimes lacked understanding about what the job entailed.

“[Australia’s] geography is very big. It’s inevitable that you’re going to need some kind of reasonable scheme for travel and associated costs for doing your job as minister.”

AJ Brown, Professor of Public Policy and Law at Griffith University’s Public Integrity and Anti-Corruption in the Centre for Governance, said the task of reforming the system “really is very urgent” and creating an independent regulatory body was a good start.

At the moment it was a system “that’s still fundamentally under the control of those who would stick their noses in the trough” leaving MPs to their own devices – and consciences.

But despite the positive move to take expenses away from the purview of politicians, he said the new body should also adjudicate on broader corruption issues such as conflict of interest, code of conduct and interest registers.

“I think they can get this moving but the pressure will mount for them to broaden its jurisdiction,” Prof Brown said. “It links in with having a stronger federal anti-corruption body generally because some of these issues are even more serious.

“My big fear is that this new authority won’t have the jurisdiction to cover all of these things that are sometimes more important and controversial, in terms of parliamentary ethics and standards: issues of public confidence.”

Prof Brown also backs creating a new role of Parliamentary Integrity Commissioner, one originally suggested by former PM Julia Gillard and the Independents, to cover all areas of parliamentary standards.


Self-regulation has failed

Whatever occurs, it is clear that MPs regulating their own expenses’ claims has manifestly failed.

Prof Brown said that the independence of auditing and compliance needed to be upgraded because politicians had not been subject to sufficient checks and balances.

The rules that exist are too complex and have been built up ad hoc over many years, “The Finance Department have had a terrible time trying to administer it”, he added.

“I don’t think they’re [politicians] any more venal than the rest of the world and much of them are less venal but they have been the victims of weak systems.

“Just the assumption they don’t need some extra policing to help them keep in line like the rest of the world,” he said.

Australia had dropped the ball a bit when it came to clamping down on corruption.

“Australia has been very complacent about allowing these issues about corruption generally, both small and large scale. We’re really just catching up with the rest of the world,” Prof Brown said.

“We need to make sure we’ve got our act together and our systems in place, especially because of how much more competiti­ve the world is and how much faster we are operating.”

Both men said that some politicians failed the pub test but still acted within the rules, partly because they belonged to a kind of insider community where what was viewed as convenient and acceptable to getting the job done could be at odds with broader public experience.

Prof Brown said: “It’s so easy for people in positions of power to confuse what they’re doing in the public interest with what they want to do in their own personal or political interest. It’s not about individuals, it’s about human nature.

“People set their standards on what they see other people do and think it’s ok or they see other people get away with it. The risk of people in high office losing their connection to the community is high.”

Prof Smith said that, for the most part, politicians did the right thing but sometimes just got sucked in to what appeared to be the ‘rules of the game’ and slipped up.

The big three areas of expense claims that need to be addressed by Mr Turnbull’s government are probably: travel expenses, the definition of official business and family reunion allowances.


Travel

Prof Smith said parliamentary travel entitlements had long been one of the most problematic areas in Australian politics due to the sheer number of politicians caught up in questionable travel claims and because public opinion was often fierce around such debates.

Prof Smith said the rules need to be tightened up in some instances and clarified in others.

“They are much more specific than they used to be but there are still some fairly broad limits in the rules. An example is [the definition of] official business,” he said.

Travel expenses have generated some of the most egregious and colourful scandals over the years.

Federal MP Bronwyn Bishop famously fell foul of public opinion in July 2015.

Choppergate put paid to her time in the Speaker’s chair in the House of Representatives and launched a thousand memes on social media after she charged the taxpayer more than $5,000 for a cheeky 80-km helicopter trip from Melbourne to a Liberal Party function in Geelong, rather than drive.

Neither did it help when Ms Bishop blew $88,000 on a European trip, part of which included her campaigning for the presidency of Inter-Parliamentary Union; or charging taxpayers $600 for a return flight to fellow Liberal MP Sophie Mirabella’s wedding, an expense that Mr Abbott himself paid back and advised other pollies to do the same.


What counts as official?

A common argument from politicians is that their expenses claims – often relating to travel – are within the rules but later admitting that they would not have passed the ‘pub test’.

The problem is, of course, that travel claims like these appear [in Labor Leader Bill Shorten’s words] ‘colossally arrogant’ and out of touch to the general populace, particularly when the government is in the middle of a highly flawed benefits crackdown and gearing up to reduce maternity leave.

These stories feed the public perception that says politicians are ‘all the same’ and have their snouts in the trough, leading rarefied lives compared with the rest of us. It is not a good look; neither does it foster much public confidence in the political system or the people elected to serve inside it.

Deciding on what constitutes official business clearly needs to be addressed and this is one of the recommendations of the Conde Review.

Few things raise the hackles of ordinary folk more than politicians charging taxpayers when they attend major sporting or cultural events as guests of a private company.

Tasmanian Senator David Bushby, Finance Minister Mathias Cormann and Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasurer, Steve Ciobo stirred up a hornet’s nest of controversy after they charged taxpayers thousands of dollars to attend the 2013 AFL Grand Final, dubiously excusing themselves by saying they had important work chats with the companies that invited them.

Foreign Minister Julie Bishop charged taxpayers $2716 to attend a polo match in the Mornington Peninsula last year as guest of beer maker Peroni and car company Jeep. Ms Bishop defended her expenses claim, saying she was attending in her official capacity.


I miss my family

Family reunion travel – designed to reduce the isolation many politicians experience from being on the road a lot – has also attracted a fair amount of negative attention.

Labor’s Tony Burke spent nearly $13,000 on flights, a hire car and other allowances when his family joined him on a four-day trip to Uluru in 2012 when he was federal Environment Minister. Even the kids flew business class, which Mr Burke later admitted was ‘indefensible’.

While Mr Burke claimed the taxpayer bill was legitimate because he was on official business and visiting aboriginal communities, others did not see it the same way. 

The $90 Comcar to travel to a Robbie Williams concert also failed to endear him to a critical public.

It is another area that the Review suggests needs changing, reiterating that family reunion travel can only be funded if the politician is at the location for work, underlining that it should not be used to sneak in a taxpayer-funded family holiday.

How should reform proceed?

Prof Smith said making data transparent is critical to good reform because it will increase public confidence in the system and keep MPs on their toes.

At the moment, expenses are published every six months. The Review has recommended this reporting be narrowed to monthly to help open up and demystify the process, as well as to give the public a better understanding of politicians’ jobs.

He said that abuses often came to light accidentally or through freedom of information requests from journalists. Many never came to light.

“Politicians would be more careful just as they are more careful about accepting political donations or ministers having meetings with lobbyists, because they know there is greater transparency and greater understanding of what’s legitimate and what’s not,” Prof Smith said.


The Conde Review’s key recommendations

  • Define ‘parliamentary business’ to determine legitimate expenses claims
  • ‘Entitlements’ or ‘benefits’ now to be referred to as ‘work expenses’
  • Create a single legal framework to deal with work expenses and guide politicians
  • Publish rules and details of work expenses on data.gov.au, quarterly and then monthly
  • Principle of value for money to be central
  • Helicopters cannot be chartered to cover short distances ‘in the absence of compelling reasons’
  • A 25 per cent penalty to be paid where expenses claims are ruled invalid, not just those relating to travel
  • Prohibit the use of car and driver, including COMCAR, for journeys that are primarily personal
  • Abolish the $10 per night travelling allowance for partners accompanying ministers or office holders
  • Explore the option of leasing vehicles, rather than buying private plated vehicles
  • Tighten family reunion eligibility – only fund trips for partners and children when they join the MP or Senator who is there for the parliamentary business
  • Reduced provision for former parliamentarians who don’t qualify for a Life Gold Pass
  • Provide politicians from the Big Six electorates (over 500,000sq km) with a third staff office, second vehicle offset and extra travel allowance for stopovers on official business

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Is the secret to success really THIS simple?

Since Fiji's historic Olympic rugby sevens gold, everyone wants to know Ben Ryan's coaching secrets. How did he take a tiny island nation to such a pinnacle of achievement?

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WATCH: The first snowmobile double backflip

Daniel Bodin makes history by landing the world's first double backflip on a snowmobile.

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Federer steps back in time on Throwback Thursday

It was throwback Thursday in Melbourne Park at the Australian Open, a step back to a different decade.

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