Marissa DuBois in Slow Motion Full Fashion Week 2023, Fashion Channel Vlog,

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Clover Moore's council policies are sending businesses away

On Monday night, Sydney City councillors controversially voted to use the term "invasion" in the council's Aboriginal policy.

Ms Moore said on Thursday that the word accurately described the impact of colonisation on indigenous communities.

"They (the Aboriginal community) told us very strongly that the word described the impact on the community," she told reporters in Sydney.

Owner of CBD lingerie store Arianne, Douglas Reedy, pays thousands of dollars in rent but cannot vote for the council as a business.

He said Ms Moore's council was "killing" Sydney with controversial policies such as the bike lanes.

"The little people are going broke everywhere over the (CBD). She's disrupting traffic and trying to get people out of the city," Mr Reedy said.



He said this year was a "shocker" for revenue - the worst in 25 years: "She's just driving money out. All the developers have left."

Urban Taskforce CEO Aaron Gadiel blasted the council for driving business to despair with red tape, preventing development, and failing to represent all the community.

"People want to invest in other places to save themselves the difficulty in dealing with the City of Sydney."

Parramatta Economic Development Forum CEO Christopher Brown said business realised the encumbrance of working in the CBD.

"Parramatta is a willing player. It's not only laying out the welcome mat, it's knocking on people's doors," Mr Brown said. "Gone are the days if you didn't have your office in Martin Place it wasn't a real office."

Meriton managing director Harry Triguboff said Sydney's councils had a reputation for stalling projects.

Luring Sydney families with a $7000 grant

Forbes’ population could be set to swell under the state government’s new relocation scheme.
As of tomorrow, the government’s Regional Relocation Grants scheme will provide payments to Sydney families who move to regional NSW.

Families will receive $7000 in a one-off grant if they leave Sydney, Newcastle or Wollongong for regional NSW on the condition they don’t spend more than $600,000 on a home.

By moving to places like Glen Innes, Inverell, Armidale, Guyra, Uralla and Tenterfield families can escape the high cost of living and congestion of life in the big smoke,” Mr Stoner said.

“The NSW Government is determined to kick-start regional NSW by supporting growth, creating jobs and improving infrastructure.”

Northern Tablelands MP Richard Torbay said any initiative to relocate people from Sydney to regional areas had his support and the financial incentive being offered by the government was a positive first step.

“As the scheme rolls out it should be carefully monitored and reviewed to see what the take up is, where people are choosing to move to and whether further incentives might assist in making them consider areas where population growth is required,” he said.

“What it shows is that families with young children are willing to move to rural areas if the incentives are sufficiently compelling.”

Mr Torbay said the government should also reconsider zone taxation measures supported by the NSW Farmers Association and the Chartered Accountants Association.

“This would see tax cuts for businesses that relocate to regional areas,” he said.

However, Mr Torbay said the scheme should be more specific about the location.

“While I applaud the initiative to counterbalance the overdevelopment of Sydney, I would also like to see some positive discrimination towards areas in this state that need extra population,” Mr Torbay said.

“Many parts of the coast, the Hunter and Illawarra where these incentive grants also apply are already overpopulated. Attracting more people would place too much stress on local infrastructure.

Man jailed for killing gay housemate

Aaron James Johnstone, 29, said he lost control after his drunk housemate Phillip Higgins, 46, propositioned him in September 2006.

He told police he kicked and punched Mr Higgins before dropping the platypus statue on him. He also struck him with a chair.

Johnstone was today sentenced to 18 years' jail with a minimum term of 14 years at the Victorian Supreme Court.

Justice Robert Osborn described the injuries suffered by Mr Higgins, which included six broken ribs and a battered face, as horrific.

He said Johnstone moved into the rented flat of Mr Higgins and was his friend for some years.

"Your attack was a savage betrayal of his trust and generosity," Justice Osborn said.

He said that even if Mr Higgins made advances towards his friend, his reaction was outside of what an ordinary person would do.

"I do not accept that even if Mr Higgins had made homosexual advances to you in the terms you now assert, the ordinary person might be so provoked to totally lose control and do what you did.

Justice Osborn said Mr Higgins' injuries, which included six broken ribs and a battered face, were horrific.

The court heard Johnstone moved into the rented flat of Mr Higgins and was his friend for some years.

"Your attack was a savage betrayal of his trust and generosity," Justice Osborn said.

The judge said he took into account that Johnstone was affected by alcohol at the time of the bashing, his conduct was followed by some degree of remorse and he was relatively co-operative with police.

Justice Osborn said Mr Higgins, a disability pensioner, was described to the court as having a kindly and generous nature and his bloody and violent death had a deep impact on his family.

"Phillip Higgins' family has lost a dearly loved member in circumstances which will leave them with a permanent sense of overwhelming hurt and loss," he said.

Boats slower since Malaysia proposal

Deal to send 800 boat people from Australia to Malaysia will be signed within weeks - and includes a plan to give each refugee a barcode for indentification as soon as they arrive.
Senior Home Affairs officials said the refugees who arrive in the country will not be given special treatment.
During a one-hour meeting with opposition immigration spokesman Scott Morrison, Malaysian Home Affairs senior deputy secretary-general Dato Alwi bin Haji Ibrahim detailed how the refugee swap would work. The deal is set to be signed in early July.
The only remaining "sticking point" is which country would be responsible for sending immigrants back to their country if they did not meet the refugee criteria. Each of the 800 boat people who arrive in Malaysia will be screened by national security and tested for communicable diseases.
They would be issued with a special barcode, which only immigration officials - not police or RELA - can scan with mobile phones.

Our number of boat arrivals is about a third of that, way down, so it is a very significant reduction."

Seven boats carrying more than 300 asylum seekers have arrived since the government's announcement.

Mr Bowen maintained the recent arrivals would be processed in "a third country".

He said Australia and Malaysia were still working through "one or two operational issues" to finalise the deal.

The government was still talking with Papua New Guinea about the possibility of reopening the Manus Island detention centre despite that country's political upheaval.

Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare this week stepped down to battle illness.

"They have had a change of prime minister, a considerable Cabinet reshuffle; they have had some issues to work through and that is perfectly appropriate," Mr Bowen said.

"We continue to talk to PNG of course but it is also appropriate that we give them time to sort through their domestic political situation.

Bush mailman dies aged 96

Esmond Gerald (Tom) Kruse, MBE 28 August 1914 – 30 June 2011 was a former mailman on the Birdsville Track in the border area between South Australia and Queensland. He became known as the result of John Heyer's 1954 film The Back of Beyond, and in the year after the film's release, in the 1955 New Year Honours, Kruse was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) for "services to the community in the outback".

Early life
Kruse was born at Waterloo in South Australia to Harry (Heinrich) and Ida Kruse. He was the tenth of their twelve children. He left school when he was 14 years old, and worked as a casual labourer on local farms. However, due to the Depression, he "went 'bush'" around 1934 to work in John Penna's haulage business which ran out of Yunta in the mid-north of South Australia. 
Kruse married Audrey Valma Fuller (known as Val) on 24 January 1942 in Adelaide, South Australia. They had four children: Pauline, Helen, Phillip and Jeffery.

The Birdsville Track and The Back of Beyond
In 1936 Harry Ding bought the mail contract from John Penna and Kruse began his first run on 1 January of that year. Kruse bought the mail contract in 1947. He sold the contract in 1963.
Kruse worked the Birdsville Track mail run from 1936 to 1957, driving his Leyland Badger truck. He delivered mail and other supplies including general stores, fuel and medicine to remote stations from Marree in north-west South Australia to Birdsville in central Queensland, some 325 miles (523 kilometres) away. Each trip would take two weeks and Tom regularly had to manage break-downs, flooding creeks and rivers, and getting bogged in desert dunes.
Tom Kruse came to fame with the release of John Heyer's documentary The Back of Beyond in 1954. While the film follows a "typical" journey made by Kruse, showing the various people he met along the Track and the sorts of obstacles he faced, this particular journey was closely scripted and includes a number of re-enactments and a 'lost children' story. John Heyer had undertaken a research trip with Kruse earlier. Shooting on the film began in late 1952. He was appointed MBE in 1955.

The Leyland Badger
Kruse abandoned the truck on Pandie Pandie Station near Birdsville in 1957. It was located in the desert in 1986 during the Jubilee Mail Run re-enactment, and retrieved in 1993. A group of enthusiasts led by Neil Weidenbach, with the help of Tom, fully restored the Badger between 1996 and 1999. The truck is now kept at the National Motor Museum, at Birdwood in the Adelaide Hills.

Later life
Tom retired in 1984, and moved to Cumberland Park in Adelaide. In May 1986, South Australia's 150th Jubilee, Tom re-enacted his run, with 80 vehicles joining in the northbound convoy. There was a second re-enactment In 1999, and in October of that year the Leyland was trucked to a few kilometres out of Birdsville so Tom could drive it into the township for celebrations. The next morning it was loaded with mail for "The Mail Truck's Last Run" to Marree. A major reason for the event was to raise funds for the Royal Flying Doctor Service. This run resulted in another documentary, Last Mail from Birdsville - the Story of Tom Kruse. As well as this a book written by Kristin Weidenback entitled Mailman of the Birdville Track was also written about Tom's life.
In 2000 Tom was inducted into the National Transport Hall of Fame in Alice Springs, and in 2003 he was officially recognised as an Outback Legend by Australian Geographic magazine. Also in 2003, Tom and his truck, the Badger, were nominated South Australian icons by the National Trust of Australia.
In 2008, bronze busts of Tom were placed in the National Motor Museum at Birdwood, at Waterloo (his birthplace), and at Birdsville and Marree.
He died in Adelaide, aged 96, on 30 June 2011.

Sydney woman faces $1.3m fraud allegations

Woman has been charged with fraud after police discovered she had allegedly obtained more than $1.3 million in fraudulent motor claims and loans.

Between September 2010 and December 2010, police will allege the woman lodged 46 motor equity insurance claims which had a combined total of $509,000.

The woman allegedly set up a bank account under a false name which she used when lodging the claims.

It is further alleged that in December 2010, the woman applied for, and was granted, a home loan of $720,000. Again it is alleged the woman used the false bank account to apply for the loan.

Following exhaustive inquiries, City Central Detectives today arrested the woman at a home in Gladesville.

She was taken to Ryde Police Station where she was subsequently charged with 10 counts of fraud.

Between September and December 2010 the 31-year-old filed 46 motor equity insurance claims worth $509,000, using a bank account set up under a false name, NSW police allege.

Around the same period she also obtained a home loan worth $720,000, using the same false bank account, it is claimed.

Detectives arrested the woman at a home in Gladesville, on Sydney's north shore, today.

She was taken to Ryde police station and charged with 10 counts of fraud.

She's due to appear at Sydney's Downing Centre Local Court on July 20.

New Schapelle Corby theory emerges

Baggage handler stashed four kilograms of cannabis into Schapelle Corby's bag so he would not be caught with the drugs, a woman has claimed on Nine News tonight.

Corby is serving a 20-year term for smuggling more than four kilograms of marijuana to Bali in October 2004.

The woman, going by the name of "Sue", gave a sworn statement that a baggage handler "hid" a large bag of marijuana at the time Corby went through Brisbane Airport.

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Sue, a clinical counsellor with a remote area health service, told Nine she had been in a relationship with a baggage handler in October, 2004 - the month Corby went to Bali.

She said her boyfriend told her about the day a fellow employee came to work with a "big bag" of cannabis.

"When the supervisor came down, he got the shakes," she said.

"The first thing he did was look for somewhere to hide it and he grabbed one of the bags that was behind him and hid it in there."

Sue said she had come forward after all these years because her conscience had weighed heavily on her.

Corby's Australian lawyer, Kerry Smith-Douglas, told Nine Sue's statement should trigger another judicial review of the case in Indonesia.

And the first thing he did was look for somewhere to hide it. And he grabbed one of the bags that was behind him and hid it there.

"When he was talking about a big bag, he meant a big bag."

It remains unclear if Indonesian or Australian authorities will pay any attention to the claim.

Sue said she had come forward now because of her conscience.

"What if she is really innocent and she has to do 20 years? What if she doesn't make the 20 years?" she added.

Sue said she used to work as a clinical counsellor in north Queensland and signed a statutory declaration regarding her claims for the Nine Network.

She said she was happy to co-operate with police and could give them the name of one of the men allegedly involved.

Corby's Australian lawyer Kerry Smith-Douglas described Sue's statutory declaration as "extremely important".

It's not the first time claims have emerged about baggage handlers planting marijuana in Corby's bags.

In 2008 unionists demanded a public apology over an "outrageous allegation" that Australian baggage handlers tampered with Corby's luggage.

Government to look at building north Queensland abattoir

Indonesia will delay the granting of new import permits for Australian cattle while negotiations continue in an attempt to resolve the ban on live exports.

The permits, once issued, are expected to be increased to make up for a shortfall in the number of cattle imported from Australia in the first six months of the year, according to an official with Indonesia's Ministry of Agriculture.

The official, who asked not to be identified, said on Thursday that live cattle import permits for the next three months had not been issued and would be delayed because of the ban on exports from Australia.

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The current tranche of permits, which are issued every three months, expired on Thursday.

But in a positive sign for Australian cattle producers, the Indonesian official said it was also unlikely Jakarta would issue more import permits to other countries for the next quarter.

Indonesia does source a small amount of live cattle from other countries, but the official said that number had "already been fixed".

Joni Liano, from the Indonesian Meat Importers' Association, confirmed on Thursday that import permits for the next three months had not yet been issued.

An enormous swathe of Australian cattle country currently isn't served by local meat processing facilities," he said.

"If you draw a line diagonally from just above Townsville to Perth, you would find no abattoirs north of this line."

He said a new abattoir would provide an alternative market for producers and reduce the costs associated with trucking cattle large distances to southern processing plants.

The recent ban on live exports to Indonesia has highlighted the problems facing the industry and put more than 60,000 tonnes of beef a year at risk, he said.

Mr Mulherin said abattoirs placed strategically across the region would have access to more than three million head of cattle. But other export markets should also be explored, he said.

Mr Ludwig was politely received as he told the audience he was working hard to re-open trade by improving conditions in Indonesian abattoirs.

Robert Walker from Agforce has said he hopes the minister has a plan to resume the trade with some Indonesian abattoirs.

"We're confident that there are at least 11, if not 25 abattoirs that meet Australian standards and that the trade, in some form, can open up immediately.