Interchange Respite Care Open Day
Northern Rivers Echo 17 August 2006
Interchange Respite Care Open Day
I enjoyed once again visiting Lismore's Interchange Respite Care last week
during their open day. Margo Sten and her team do an excellent job assisting
local disabled people and their families and I congratulate them on their hard
work.
Submissions Needed from Local Private Native Forestry Landholders
After attending a meeting recently regarding proposed changes to NSW's private
native forestry industry, I have confirmed my concerns about the State
Governments proposals and failure to consult with stakeholders. This areas
landholders have been given only until 22 August 2006 to respond to the State
Government's Draft Code of Practice for Private Native Forestry.
If the Draft Code were implemented as it stands, it is estimated that well over
1 million hectares of private land will be placed into reserve and Timber
Communities Australia calculate that assets worth $2.5 million will be stripped
from private landowners.
The Far North Coast sawmills alone use an estimated 267,000 metres of sawlogs
from private native forests. These mills employ 476 people and return and
estimated $125 million to our communities.
To date, no regional impact statements, either social or economic, have been
done on this Draft Code of Practice and many people are not even aware the Code
is in the public arena. More than 1.3 million hectares of State Forests has been
turned into National Park and now the Government is wishing to lock up private
land.
The Government has already invested million of dollars under a Forestry Industry
Structural Adjustment package to assist saw millers to continue in the industry
following the withdrawal of resources from State Forests. The proposed Draft
Code of Practice will mean that many of the mills remaining will go out of
business because they are relying heavily on private property resource as a
result of Government policy. It is therefore vital that affected stakeholders
make a submission before the closing date.
My office also has a Petition calling on the Minister for Natural Resources to;
review the conditions of the Code, consult appropriately with stakeholders,
include an analysis of the social and economic benefit of the Code and finalise
the review by 1 December 2006. Copies of the Petition are available on request.
Area Assistance Scheme Grant Applications Now Open
Community based organisations seeking grants are being encouraged to apply for
the 2006 funding round for the Area Assistance Scheme (AAS).
The Area Assistance Scheme (AAS) provides grants to community based
organisations for community development projects that connect communities
through partnerships, build community leadership and capacity or promote safer
communities.
The 2006 funding round opens on 5 August 2006 and closes on 6 September 2006.
You can check eligibility and obtain further information and contact details
from the AAS website at www.communitybuilders.nsw.gov.au/aas.
Setting Up Local Health Boards
The NSW Coalition has announced a plan to give rural hospitals more say in the
way they are run and make health services more responsive to the local community
by setting up District Health Boards whose directors will be local community
members.
Under Labor, the NSW health system has ballooned into a massive bureaucracy run
from Sydney. This is a big issue for people in the Lismore area who rightly feel
health is imposed on them from the city with little understanding of what
smaller, rural hospitals need to deliver good service. Replacing Labor's
centralised health structure with a local district boards will free up money to
go to frontline services.
Having more community involvement in local hospitals will ensure a fairer
distribution of resources between larger city hospitals and smaller country
hospitals. The plan allows local communities to 'take back' their hospitals and
health services and should be warmly welcomed in this area.
$28 million for Libraries
Under a plan to boost funding for public libraries by 21 per cent each year for
four years, the Coalition has announced it will provide an extra $28 million for
public libraries across NSW. Public libraries play a very important role in our
regional communities, providing a vital, economic and social function and an
increase in funding will be of great benefit to the community.