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Welfare agencies overrun

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 10 Agustus 2013 | 17.12

TASMANIA'S welfare and charity operators are overwhelmed with demand as more Tasmanians are pushed into poverty.

The need is so great agencies are turning people away.

Paying the power bill or even just putting food on the table is becoming a challenge for a growing a number of Tasmanians -- new data showing more than 21,000 people in the state are out of work.

Hobart City Mission has reported a 43 per cent increase in demand.

"The situation is dire. We have had to turn people away, which we have never had to do before," spokeswoman Sharn Hitchins said.

A national poverty survey last October, found up to 25 per cent of Tasmanians live in poverty or are on the brink.

Tasmanian Council of Social Service chief executive Tony Reidy said the effect of the unemployment and low employment rates combined with increased cost of living was worse than he had experienced in more than 30 years in the community welfare sector.

The cost of water, electricity and sewerage was beyond the means of thousands of Tasmanians, he said.

Hobart City Mission's crisis was exacerbated by a 20 per cent decrease in funding.

"The money is being channelled elsewhere by governments. We are not seeing as much cash but more goods, which was great but the people we are seeing need help to buy food," Mrs Hitchins said.

The Salvation Army also is turning away people in need.

"We have had a 30 per cent increase in the last financial year," spokesman Captain Craig Wood said.

alice.claridge@news.com.au


17.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

The rise and fall of John Gay

JOHN Gay first came to the public's attention when he fronted the Royal Commission into the Edmund Rouse bribery scandal in 1991.

The brash, no-nonsense boss of Gunns Kilndried Timber Industries was ordered to present his 1989 work diary, but turned up to the commission to explain he could not find it.

He instead provided his 1990 diary, which was next to useless for the commission's purposes.

Gay was mercilessly grilled by the commission's senior counsel Richard Chesterman over the diary, and about a phone call he took from then premier Robin Gray, two days before the bribery scandal broke in June, 1989.

The timber boss said he remembered little of the phone call, and so Mr Chesterman reeled off chapter and verse of the conversation.

"Obviously you've had my phone tapped," Gay retorted.

The phone bugging accusation made big news.

Gay had been ordered before the commission as a witness because Rouse's company had a stake in Gunns.

The commission built the case that Rouse feared a hung parliament, with Greens MPs in power, would threaten his timber interests, and so he posted Labor MP Jim Cox $10,000 in a bid to get him to cross the floor to the Liberals.

Rouse was jailed for two years for the bribery attempt.

Gray was found to have acted "deceitfully and dishonestly" and his conduct was described as grossly improper but not unlawful.

For Gay, the inquiry gave the public its first taste of a gruff timber boss who would become arguably the state's most powerful man.

Born in Deloraine, Gay is the son of a sawmiller. His first job on leaving Hobart private school Hutchins was as a benchman in his dad's mill.

Gay liked a beer and a round of golf but rarely indulged, preferring to work seven days a week. He was a hard man who called a spade a spade.

A Mercury reporter wrote in 2001: "Gay responds to questions more like a block splitter than a sawmiller's blade -- his style is blunt and direct."

He joined Gunns in 1973 as manager of its Waverley sawmill. The business was set up by John and Thomas Gunn, sons of a Scottish farmer who emigrated to Tasmania in 1840.

In the late 1980s, Gay oversaw the merger of Gunns with Kilndried Timber Industries, resulting in the company being listed on the Australian Stock Exchange, and the acquisition of Hobart sawmiller Kemp and Denning.

However, it was after the bribery scandal that Gay began an ambitious expansion strategy. With the state economy in the doldrums, and residential building at its lowest level in 10 years, he went hunting.

Gunns bought North-West hardwood producer Kauri Timber in 1993. The next year it paid $7 million for Tasmanian Veneers and $1.7 million for French's Pine World.

Then, in 1994, Gunns was granted a licence to export woodchips.

The massive expansion was reflected in the 1994 profit of $5.7 million, compared with $740,000 the year before.

Heads turned, and premier Ray Groom appointed Gay to the Tasmanian Development and Resources Board in 1995.

In 1996, ex-premier Gray joined Gay on Gunns' board.

Gay's expansion strategy exploded in 1999 with Gunns' first overseas acquisition, buying the New Zealand wood-veneer industry for $6.5 million.

It also bought Boral's Tassie sawmill interests for $23 million, with mills at Austins Ferry, Western Junction and Killafaddy, and Luck Brothers Investments, and its Mitre 10 stores in Devonport, Ulverstone and Port Sorell.

In 2000, it bought Boral's forestry assets in a $72 million deal, including a woodchip export facility at Long Reach.

Gunns' profit for the year was $8.7 million.

But it was in 2001 when Gay made his most audacious move, outbidding Kerry Packer to grab control of Tassie's biggest chip exporter, North Forest Products, for $335 million. North once held more than 40 per cent of Gunns.

With the acquisition came chip mills in Burnie, Triabunna and the Tamar Valley, and 175,000ha of land.

Gay was now driving one of the world's largest hardwood chip exporters.

In 2001, it made $18 million profit, and was in the ASX's top 200 companies.

In 2002, with $53 million profit, Gunns was named the nation's second-best performing company in a survey that showed it returned 577 per cent over the past three years.

The spoils were great and Gay's salary rose to $686,000 in 2002, from $364,000 the year before --prime minister John Howard was on $284,000.

But Gay's empire was under attack.

Acclaimed Tasmanian author Richard Flanagan said Gay was selling Tasmania's soul and Planet Ark spokeswoman Olivia Newton-John said Gunns was "cruel and evil" to poison animals.

Critics fumed when Gay, interviewed on Jana Wendt's Sunday, agreed Gunns poisoned protected species, saying there were "too many".

Nine Network's A Current Affair and the ABC's Four Corners aired damning exposes of Gay and Gunns.

Gay, under pressure to drop one of his roles as chairman and CEO, was compelled to write to shareholders to defend the firm's logging.

But Gay fought on and in 2003 Gunns bought Tamar Ridge Wines for $14 million, and three WA sawmills for $11 million.

Gay was now seriously rich, worth $51 million on paper.

In June 2003, he was seen with deputy premier Paul Lennon at Sisco's restaurant in Hobart. On the table was a document, "Gunns Pulp Mill".

So began Gay's bid build a Tamar Valley pulp mill.

As Gay was being named an Australian Export Hero at an awards ceremony at Government House in Melbourne, British MP Norman Baker urged tourists to boycott Tasmania for logging old-growth forests.

Tasmanians also had concerns. Tasmania Together, a social program based on the aspirations of locals, tried unsuccesfully to stop old-growth logging by 2001. It wanted to phase out old-growth logging by 2010.

Gay was furious, saying it would cut Gunns' sawmilling operations by half.

Mitsubishi Corporation, a Japanese firm that imported 400,000 tonnes of woodchips a year, condemned Gunns' old-growth logging.

But the money kept flowing and in 2004, Gunns unveiled a profit of $105 million -- earning Gay a $1.3 million dividend windfall. Gunns was exporting more than five million tonnes of chips a year.

However, contractors -- log truck drivers and forest workers -- were unhappy with their share of the spoils.

Gay then went to war with sawmillers Auspine and French Enterprises after they suggested more jobs could be created by stopping old-growth logging to focus on plantations.

Gay fired back: "Their comments have been extremely damaging to themselves and their future in Tasmania."

Gunns then took legal action against protesters and environmentalists, claiming $6.3 million in damages.

Known as the Gunns 20, the group included Greens MPs, a doctor and members of the Wilderness Society.

But a rising Australian dollar was a tougher opponent and, to compound matters, Mitsubishi Paper Mills stopped buying old-growth chips.

In 2005 contractors' harvest quotas were cut by 20 per cent, just before Gunns announced an annual profit of $101 million.

Gay raised concern about the high dollar and called for Forestry Tasmania to drop its prices. Woodchips from Ecuador, Uruguay, Vietnam and Brazil were winning market share, and Gay was forced to temporarily shut chip mills.

By 2006, most contractors had business cut by 40 per cent. They complained they had subsidised Gunns' $87 million profit. Woodchip sales fell from 4.4 million tonnes to 3.5 million.

Sydney businessman Geoff Cousins slammed Tasmanian logging practices, and Gay hit back, threatening to review any business he had with any board on which Cousins sat.

Cousins suggested Gay was unfit to be a CEO.

Gay's personal fortune continued to grow, receiving a $200,000 increase in salary in 2007 to take it to $1.4 million.

His shares, worth $66 million, kept him entrenched in the BRW Executive Rich List.

After a profit of $67 million in 2008, Gunns shed 129 jobs, closed a sawmill and put plantations on the market.

The company's shares took a belting and by 2009 it was looking at redundancies.

Gay sold 3,404,178 shares in December 2009, yielding $3.09 million, before the shares fell dramatically after the half-year result was released in February 2010.

The Crown alleged Gay knew the profit would fall radically as a result of a downturn in chip prices in 2009 -- Gunns' profit fell from $56 million in 2009 to $28.5 million in 2010.

Under intense market pressure, Gay was forced to cut all ties to Gunns in May, 2010.

Gunns went into receivership in September last year.

After pleading guilty to insider trading last week, Gay is now waiting to be sentenced.

simon.bevilacqua@news.com.au


17.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Fair trade to help our farmers

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 09 Agustus 2013 | 17.12

THE push for a shift from free trade to fair trade has been given the nod of approval from Australia's peak body for vegetable growers.

AusVeg public affairs manager William Churchill said all new trade negotiations should contain mechanisms that reflect costs Australian farmers incur in meeting.

"In comparison to many of our trading partners, Australian farmers must meet some of the highest environmental and labour standards in the world, and because of this, mechanisms that reflect these costs," Mr Churchill said.

AusVeg has welcomed several initiatives outlined in the Greens' Plan for Australia's Food Security, released by Senator Christine Milne.

The Leader of the Greens launched the plan via an interactive online release, the first of its type undertaken in Australia.

"The plan contains several initiatives which would allow Australian growers to remain productive and competitive in what is becoming an increasingly challenging global market," Mr Churchill said.

The Greens' plan also outlines an increase of 7 per cent a year for Commonwealth funding into agricultural research and development.

The plan features a $300 million boost for agricultural research and development and other measures designed to keep farmers on the land, put good food on every table and protect land and water.

The Greens' also call for reforms to food labelling to provide clearer information on Country of Origin labelling by making origin and manufacturing claims clearer.

"When you see a tin of tomatoes on a supermarket shelf, which has come all the way from Italy, being sold for less than 70 cents, it is easy to see why the local industry is struggling to compete."


17.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Greens predict gas conflict

THE Greens are warning of a new environmental conflict in Tasmania over shale gas and oil exploration.

Energy company Petratherm has applied for a licence to explore 3900 square kilometres of central Tasmania.

"It's a very bad idea for this company to parachute into Tasmania and start what will be a major conflict," Greens leader Christine Milne said.

Senator Milne delivered her warning alongside livestock farmer Brett Hall, who said details about how the company would proceed were scarce.

Mr Hall said he feared for his water supply if aquifers were affected.

"I'd like people to imagine if a mining company came along to their home, their land, and decided to do some mining," he said.

"And there was absolutely nothing you could do about it."

The Greens say Tasmania should be aiming to increase its 86 per cent renewable energy use to 100 per cent, rather than turning towards more use of fossil fuels.

Petratherm subsidiary PetraGas says it will consult extensively with local communities if a licence is granted.

But Senator Milne said farmers should be able to veto exploration on their land.

It's the second pitch the Greens leader has made to rural voters in as many days after the online launch of her $600 million food security policy yesterday.

"Farmers are under enough pressure as it is, rural communities are under enough pressure," Senator Milne said.

"Why would you want to add to that?"

The company says it expects a decision on its application within three months.

Its proposed 3900sq km tenement extends from the Oatlands and Orielton areas, to Bothwell, Hamilton and Westerway.

Petratherm has been contacted for comment.


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MyState drops interest rates

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 07 Agustus 2013 | 17.12

MYSTATE will pass on the Reserve Bank's 0.25 per cent rate cut in full across its variable lending products.

MyState's standard variable rate will reduce to 5.89 per cent with the discounted Special Residential Home Loan rate reducing to 4.94 per cent for loans over $100,000 and with a maximum loan to valuation ratio of 80 per cent.

Chief operating officer Tim Rutherford said the decision had taken into account funding costs and other economic factors.

"We believe that in this economic climate, passing on these rate cuts is not only in the interest of our customers, but the local economy in general," he said.

"Following these latest rate reductions from MyState, a borrower with a $300,000 mortgage will be paying around $2700 per annum less in interest on a standard variable home loan compared to this time 12 months ago."

MyState joins a wide range of banks and financial institutions to pass on the cut including NAB, CBA and the Bank of Queensland.

Westpac exceeded the official drop with 0.28 per cent decrease to 5.98 per cent.

The new interest rate takes effect from August 14 for new loans and August 30 for existing loans.


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Body find 'not suspicious'

A MAN'S body found in the Launceston suburb of Mowbray displayed no signs of foul play, Tasmania Police said today.

Inspector Mick Johnston said the man's body was found about 5.15pm on Monday about 20 metres off a well-formed walking track.

He said police would consult families before speculating on the identity of the missing person.

There were a couple of missing persons who may fit the timeline.

The body would be delivered to the State Pathologist today who would look for a cause of death and use dental records to identify the body.


17.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

Volcano Land blog, week 1

Written By Unknown on Senin, 05 Agustus 2013 | 17.13

Sulphurous gasses billow from Garabuna volcano in Papua New Guinea. Picture: ANDREW HUGHES

A NARROW isthmus joins two equally small outcrops of tropically draped rock to form Wulai Island, Papua New Guinea.

From my tent doors I can see out both sides to the ocean just a few metres away. The south-easterly trade wind is blowing in a storm, and we're off and paddling for the seventh expeditionclass.com program, Volcano Land.

The week began with a very soft landing at Walindi Resort, just outside Kimbe, West New Britain. A renowned scuba diving location, I flew in to skim above the water - not below it.

Cheyne Benjamin, a friend who filmed part of the 2010 Tassie Tiger Hunt in remote PNG, has tentatively put down the camera and taken on the family business at Walindi. His Australian-born parents, Cecilie and Max, came to New Britain before independence as agricultural field officers and have been here since.

I had good reason to linger in the waterfront bungalow for a few extra nights. Apart from buying supplies, there is an active volcano, Garbuna, right behind the resort.

A local landowner guide took us steeply through gardens that quickly gave way to pure rainforest. The dense canopy hid a wild assortment of bird life. Two that we spotted among the screeching were the whooshing thornbill and a deftly camouflaged male (green) eclectus parrot.

The whiff of sulphur preceded a dead band of trees and then we were standing before a barren moonscape of hissing vents and bubbling thermal springs. Garbuna exploded unexpectedly in October 2005 and shows potential to be a growing feature of the local landscape.

With our first volcano inspected I've now hit the water. After two days of blighted headwinds I'm sporting some new blisters and have random sun burns where the I missed with the zinc and cream.

Students have been piling into the online adventure portal, especially the interactive forum. Over the next week I'm aiming to paddle to Ulawun, a towering strato volcano. Along the way we'll drop in at villages and maybe a few more deserted islands too.

• Expedition Class is a program of the Bookend Trust. This project is supported by the Tasmanian Department of Education, Pennicott Foundation, UTAS SET, Mercury NIE, IMAS, Sea to Summit and friends. Follow Andrew's daily reports at www.expeditionclass.com


17.13 | 0 komentar | Read More

Robbery at TOTE

A 38-YEAR-OLD Moonah man is currently assisting police with their inquiries in relation to a robbery that occurred at the TOTE, Main Road, Moonah, earlier today.

Police say the man threatened a female attendant at 10.40am before fleeing with an undisclosed amount of cash.

The man was captured on CCTV footage as he conducted the daylight robbery.

Police say no weapons were seen or threatened to be used during the hold-up.

Anyone with information about the hold-up is asked to call Glenorchy CIB on 6230 2881 or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.


17.12 | 0 komentar | Read More
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