Showing posts with label Tony Abbott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tony Abbott. Show all posts

Wednesday, 16 September 2015

Premier Colin Barnett renews hope new PM Malcolm Turnbull will fund WA rail projects

source: abc news

Premier Colin Barnett renews hope new PM Malcolm Turnbull will fund WA rail projects


Federal funds hopes
Colin Barnett hopes the new Prime Minister will widen federal infrastructure to include
public transport rail projects.

WA Premier Colin Barnett hopes new Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull will expand the Federal Government's infrastructure funding to embrace rail as well as roads.
Former prime minister Tony Abbott had refused to fund public rail projects, arguing trains had traditionally been a state responsibility.
But with the change in leadership, Mr Barnett said he hoped Mr Turnbull would favourably consider reform to GST arrangements and help fund major rail projects in WA.
"They will be the two prime discussion points. GST, and where the Commonwealth wishes to go in terms of transport funding," Mr Barnett said.
"And I do hope Malcolm Turnbull changes the position and puts Commonwealth money both into road projects and public transport projects."
The Liberal Party went to the last state election promising two major rail projects — Max Light Rail and the Forrestfield-Airport Rail Link.
Both were touted as fully costed and fully funded, but both were initially heavily reliant on securing federal funding.
Faced with its deteriorating budget position, the Barnett Government had to choose which project to fund itself, and subsequently deferred its Max Light Rail project for at least three years.
Mr Barnett was asked if a change in the Federal Government's funding policy could be used to bring forward the Max Light Rail project from its revised 2022 completion date.
He said it was too early to tell.
"It could, but we'll wait and see because I haven't had that discussion," Mr Barnett said.
Yesterday, WA Opposition Leader Mark McGowan urged Mr Turnbull to redirect funding from the $1.6 billion Perth Freight Link project to public transport rail projects.
Mr Barnett scoffed at Mr McGowan's suggestion.
"Do you seriously think that Malcolm Turnbull is going to be listening to Mark McGowan on transport in Western Australia? Don't think so," he said.

Wednesday, 9 September 2015

Transcript from the House of Debates on Sept 7 2015 - Perth Freight Link

source: open australia

Transcript from the House of Debates
 on Sept 7 2015 - Perth Freight Link



Alannah Mactiernan
(Perth, Australian Labor Party)

I move:

That this House calls on the Australian Government to:

(1) suspend its commitment to funding the $1.6 billion Perth Freight Link until the
Western Australian Government is able to provide credible, substantiated evidence of:

(a) how and when the Western Australian Government is proposing to fund the missing bridge
link over the Swan River and the new proposed tunnel;

(b) the optimum capacity of the Fremantle container terminal and the projected timing of when
that capacity will be reached;

(c) the planning so far for the development of the new container terminal in Cockburn Sound;

(d) how the Western Australian Government proposes to increase the percentage of rail freight
into the Fremantle Port when it has failed to make any headway in its six years in office; and

(2) release all documents relating to the planning and cost benefit analysis of this project.

A big issue in the Canning by-election is the growing congestion on the roads in Perth's
south-eastern corridor where you see suburbs literally mushrooming along Armadale Road, pouring thousands of extra vehicles onto those roads each day. Quite frankly the road infrastructure is unable to cope with this. It has led to gridlock as residents seek to access the job-rich areas to the north and to the west of Armadale. Labor has committed $145 million to the cost of the Community Connect South project, which would alleviate these bottlenecks. But the Abbott and Barnett governments find themselves incapable of making the same commitment, because instead they are pouring almost $2 billion into the highly ideological and poorly planned Perth Freight Link.

Today I have written to the Commonwealth Auditor-General asking him to conduct an audit of this project. I have referred the Auditor-General to the extraordinary statements of Premier Colin Barnett to his concerned constituents in a meeting in North Freemantle two weeks ago. In respect of the $935 million section 2 of the project he said, and he described this as the most fundamental point that people needed to have in mind, 'We haven’t even selected a route, haven't decided if it's going to be above ground or in a tunnel'—and tunnels are incredibly expensive—'haven’t decided yet whether it will be done at various interchanges, haven't designed it, haven't done the engineering work, haven't done the environmental work and haven't done the planning work. So the connection is still a long, long way away.' He said that trying to console them. And he said, 'I wish I could stand here and say I've got all the answers. I don’t. And I guess the only excuse I can make is that Roe 8 is ready to go. We have yet to do the work that is required on the connection to the port.' Here we have over 50 per cent of the cost of this project that quite clearly has not been planned. How can we possibly have a cost-benefit analysis done on a project where, as the Premier of Western Australia is telling us, we do not even know where it is going to go? We do not even know if it is going to be subterranean or above the ground. Simply, as he says, the work has not been done. So how can we be committing this $930 million of federal taxpayers' money to a project about which we know so very little?

The secrecy around this project has reached new heights. Members will be aware of my long-term battles against the Commonwealth in trying to collect documents. Late last week I received a request from Main Roads for the fourth extension of time for a mere 53 documents relating to this project. We know what the documents are—a confined number of documents—and they have asked for their fourth extension of time. They have used every lame excuse under the sun to try to justify not revealing these projects. Quite clearly this is a matter of enormous embarrassment. I also received a very interesting FOI today. We actually did get a couple of documents, diary entries out of Senator Cormann's office. It confirms that this was a deal stitched up with Treasurer Mike Nahan, Senator Cormann and the assistant minister for infrastructure at a federal level. They had their meeting in that office, and only two weeks later—we have now got evidence—the poor, hapless WA Minister for Transport went into the meeting expecting that he was going to be making his pitch for funding of the outer harbour and came out with this Perth Freight Link. But, as the Premier says, he has belled the cat. The Premier has said: 'We haven't done the work on this project. We don't know where it's going. It is a long way off.' Well, I say to you, let us withdraw that funding and fund the south connect project. Spend this money on roads where we have done planning and where we know what needs to be done to solve the congestion problems in Perth. (Time expired)



Dennis Jensen (Tangney, Liberal Party) Share this | Link to this | Hansard source

The gall and hypocrisy of the Labor Party and, in particular, the member for Perth is astounding. On this issue, she knows the actions to sell off earmarked lands at Fremantle prevented the highway from going from port to airport as originally envisaged by the Stephenson and Hepburn report in 1955.

I recall being on the transport committee and, quite frankly, asking the question: what analysis was conducted to recommend the deletion of Fremantle Eastern Bypass? The response was: it was a state government decision. I reiterated the question: what analysis? The response: it was a state government decision. In other words, politics writ large and no analysis. Since the deletion of Fremantle Eastern Bypass in 2004 from the metropolitan road scheme, Leach Highway has become the default Perth Freight Link. The only planning the member for Perth did while she was state minister for planning was on how to buy more votes from greenies from the loony left.

The case for the Perth Freight Link is strong. The most significant of the many reasons is the effect the Perth Freight Link will have in terms of community and road user safety. One of the statistics from the City of Melville's document Roe 8 Melville's position: the facts states that for crash rates on urban routes involving trucks—now this is significant—the metropolitan average is 5.4 per cent. So, 5.4 per cent of crashes with road users involved trucks. On Leach Highway, it is 11.1 per cent, and on Kwinana Freeway and Roe Highway—that spaghetti junction that the former minister and now member for Perth deliberately designed as a truncation which was going to cause problems—it is a staggering 31 per cent.

In Western Australia, the Liberal federal government is investing $4.7 billion over five years to build the roads of the 21st century. The extension of Roe Highway is something that I have campaigned long and hard on in the past. This project is tremendously popular and important in my electorate of Tangney. The freight link will remove 500 trucks a day from Leach Highway by 2031, bypass 14 sets of traffic lights, improve access to the Murdoch activity centre and the Fiona Stanley Hospital and create 2,400 jobs.

With specific reference to the member's motion, I note that Fremantle's harbour is forecast, in the next decade, to double to 1.2 million containers per annum. About 20 per cent of Western Australia's economy is linked to trade going in and out of Fremantle. Heavy vehicles and other road freight transport account for around 22 per cent of traffic on key access routes to the Fremantle port inner harbour. This corridor turns over some $16 billion and employs 15,000 people and will double in the next five years. Both the export and import volumes through Fremantle port will continue to grow for years to come. More trade, in particular more exports from WA, means more growth, more jobs and more opportunity for people in WA to get ahead. Without the Perth Freight Link as a productivity-enhancing piece of strategic road infrastructure, this worsening congestion will increasingly act as a handbrake on our economy.

Some people have suggested the Perth Freight Link will not be necessary once we build the second port further south. This is just wrong. Even when a second port is eventually built, it will complement, not replace, Fremantle port. Also, the Perth Freight Link will contribute to more efficient freight movements not just to Fremantle port but to any future second port as well. Indeed, the long-overdue Roe Highway extension will also service any outer harbour in the future.

Today, the member for Perth is campaigning against the strategic road infrastructure in the same way that she campaigned against the construction of Northbridge Tunnel and Graham Farmer Freeway about 15 years ago. In the same way that she was not able to stop the Northbridge Tunnel, which today is used by more than 100,000 cars per day, she will not be able to stand in the way of the Perth Freight Link project.

Ms MacTiernan interjecting

It is the same sad old story and the same member for Perth screaming out because she does not have any answers.



Melissa Parke
(Fremantle, Australian Labor Party, Shadow Assistant Minister for Health)

I was glad to second this motion. I thank my colleague the member for Perth and shadow parliamentary secretary for Western Australia for providing this opportunity to debate an issue that defines the wastefulness and environmental ignorance and locked-in-the-past approach of the Abbott government. It also exemplifies the complacency and hubris of the coalition when it comes to Western Australia. There can be no doubt that the Abbott and Barnett governments take WA for granted. How else but through complacency and hubris would we see a proposition to spend $2 billion on a road that the WA government never asked for—a road that flies in the face of 20 years of bipartisan port and freight planning around the creation of container capacity in the outer harbour; a road that utterly abandons the opportunity to get significantly more freight on rail; a road that goes nowhere; and a road that ignores the clear evidence of unacceptable harm to environmental and Indigenous heritage values?

As the member for Perth's motion outlines, this is a project that reared up out of nowhere. The transport and logistic bases for the road have clearly been developed after the project was announced, and the belated cost-benefit ratio analysis is highly unconvincing, not least because it does not include analysis of some logical alternatives.

One thing the Perth Freight Link has managed to achieve is a determined and unified community response. In the past few weeks we have seen a number of significant events in which people from both sides of the Swan River have questioned the project's waver-thin justification and its raft of harmful impacts. On 17 August, more than 250 people attended an electors' meeting in the City of Melville that was prompted by widespread disappointment in the lack of scrutiny the council was providing to the project, especially with regard to a number of serious concerns identified by residents. Remember that it was residents in Palmyra and Willagee who, without warning, had received letters suggesting their homes could be subject to compulsory acquisition. The residents and ratepayers expressed their dismay that virtually no account had been taken of the opposition to the destruction of the Beeliar Wetlands, the loss of 500 jobs through the closure of businesses along Stock Road and the impact of diesel particulates throughout the community as a result of a freight transport approach that is sanguine to increasing truck numbers by three or four times. Not surprisingly, a motion was passed at this meeting that called on Melville Council to reverse its unexamined support for Roe 8 and the Perth Freight Link. It should be noted that it was the outcry by residents in Palmyra and Willagee that prompted the WA Minister for Transport to float the possibility that High Street and Stock Road could be cut out of the Perth Freight Link altogether in favour of a tunnel or trench through White Gum Valley in Beaconsfield. This thought bubble has simply inflicted the government's confusion further afield, shifting the alarm onto yet another neighbourhood.

On Sunday, 29 August in the Rally at the Valley, some 300 White Gum Valley residents gathered in a local park to make it clear that they reject this kind of chaotic scattergun planning and the proposal to carve a trench of diesel fumes through residential streets, past schools, and childcare centres. Earlier that week, on 25 August, Premier Barnett attended a North Fremantle community forum in his own electorate, along with transport and urban planning expert, Professor Peter Newman. Premier made a number of interesting statements. He initially claimed that trucks might be forced to use the Perth Freight Link but then backed away from that statement. He also said that Roe 8 would cost less than $500 million, contradicting both his own Treasurer and his Minister for Transport, who, at a joint appearance on 12 August, said Roe 8 would cost $741 million.

On 1 September there was a public forum in Cottesloe which Premier Barnett declined to attend, saying it was too political, at which John Hammond, Peter Newman and Labor opposition leader, Mark McGowan, spoke. Residents expressed their fears that the massive increase in the number of trucks to the inner harbour would inevitably result in substantially more trucks on Curtain Avenue and expressed their disbelief that the WA government was not pushing forward with the long-held plans for the container capacity through the outer harbour.

Finally, on 2 September, a public forum in the town of East Fremantle featured Mayor Jim O'Neill, Cole Hendrigan from Curtin University's Sustainability Policy Institute, and Kate Kelly from Save Beeliar Wetlands. Again, a motion was passed on the basis of overwhelming opposition to both the process and the substance of the Perth Freight Link. At the same time as the Abbott and Barnett governments prepare to spend $2 billion on a truck freeway and private toll road that will ensure rising truck numbers throughout the Perth metro area, there are real congestion problems that go unaddressed in WA. The Barnett government should be only too aware that it has broken a number of promises when it comes to key public transport projects, that freight on rail has dropped steeply on its watch, and that it has failed to advance the development of the outer harbour. That is the tragedy of the Perth Freight Link. Not only is it a dud in itself but also it proposes to waste taxpayers' money that should be applied to infrastructure projects of real merit and urgency, including the Community Connect South project to reduce chronic congestion.

Debate adjourned.
Original article is HERE

MacTiernan calls on Auditor General to investigate 'flawed' Perth Link project

source: WA today

MacTiernan calls on Auditor General to investigate

'flawed' Perth Link project


Alannah MacTiernan says Colin Barnett's admissions bordered on scandalous.
Alannah MacTiernan says Colin Barnett's admissions bordered on scandalous. Photo: Megan Powell
Federal Member for Perth Alannah MacTiernan called on the Auditor General on Wednesday to investigate the controversial Perth Freight Link after a series of admissions made by WA Premier Colin Barnett at a recent community forum.

At the North Fremantle Community Association Perth Freight Link forum on August 25, Mr Barnett appeared to admit not much was known about the construction of Section 2 of the Perth Freight Link.
Federal Member for Perth Alannah MacTiernan said there was a clear difference between the level of commitment from the State and Federal Governments to the Perth Freight Link.
Federal Member for Perth Alannah MacTiernan said there was a clear difference between the level of commitment from the State and Federal Governments to the Perth Freight Link. Photo: Glen McCurtayne GPM
That section aims to connect the extended Roe Highway - the project known as Roe 8 - to the Stirling Bridge and the Fremantle Port.
Ms MacTiernan said the admissions bordered on scandalous.
In a series of comments the premier Mr Barnett candidly confessed:
  • "[We] haven't even selected a route."
  • "Haven't decided if it's going to be above ground or in a tunnel – and tunnels are incredibly expensive."
  • "Haven't decided yet what will be done at various interchanges."
  • "Haven't designed it."
  • "Haven't done the engineering work."
  • "Haven't done the environmental work."
  • "Haven't done the planning work."
  • "That connection is still a long, long way away."

Mr Barnett did come close to a mea culpa.

"I do not have an elegant solution for connecting Fremantle Port, as it is, to what would be the end of Roe 8," he said.
"I wish I could stand here and say I've got all the answers. I don't and I guess the only excuse I can make is that Roe 8 is ready to go. We're yet to do the work that is required on the connection to the port."

Ms MacTiernan said that the admissions were quite extraordinary and reinforced her commitment to continue to try to access at least 10 further Freedom of Information documents relating to the project.

"The Premier's comments confirm what we have suspected all along - that nothing has been planned for Section 2."
Ms MacTiernan said Freedom of Information documents showed that planning for the Perth Freight Link only began in March 2014, two months before funding was committed in the Federal Budget.

"Infrastructure Australia's assessment, done a year later, was highly qualified – and the stated cost-benefit analysis lacks credibility given the uncertainty around Section 2 of the project," she said.

"I mean the Premier has now come out and said they haven't even done any planning for it - so how can you cost it?"
Mr Barnett said that the Auditor General could look into any aspect of Commonwealth expenditure but that would have little or no effect on the state's decisions.

"We hope to have construction contracts in place for Roe 8 by the end of the year and for construction to begin early in 2016," he said.

Ms MacTiernan said that Mr Barnett's comments showed there was a clear difference between the level of commitment from the State and Federal Governments to the project.

"Those comments prove a disconnect between the Federal and State governments. The Abbott government believes it has provided funding for both projects. The Barnett government has only funded Roe 8, not Section 2," she said.

Before the 2013 election, the Coalition committed to testing all Commonwealth funded infrastructure projects exceeding $100 million to Infrastructure Australia analysis, assessing projects based on cost-benefit analysis and improving infrastructure coordination with the States and Territories.

"Given that $925 million in Commonwealth taxpayer funds were allocated without due process, the Auditor General must conduct an inquiry into this fatally flawed project," Ms MacTiernan said.

Once Roe 8 and Section 2 are complete the road from Perth Airport to Fremantle will have no traffic lights meaning freight trucks can get in and out of the port city faster.

It is being touted as a congestion-buster, removing up to 500 trucks a day from the busy Leach Highway.

Sunday, 30 August 2015

IRRESPONSIBLE FREIGHT LINK THREATENS WA’S GROWTH

THE HON ALANNAH MACTIERNAN MP
SHADOW PARLIAMENTARY SECRETARY FOR WESTERN AUSTRALIA
SHADOW PARLIAMENTARY SECRETARY FOR REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND INFRASTRUCTURE
MEMBER FOR PERTH

IRRESPONSIBLE FREIGHT LINK T
HREATENS WA’S GROWTH


The $1.76 billion Perth Freight Link lobbed like a UFO onto the Abbott Government’s first Budget in May 2014.

The sorry genesis of this project tells us a lot about the absurdly partisan way the Abbott Government does business. 

At the beginning of 2014 the Federal Government had a problem. It was about to take $500 million out of the Budget promised to Perth rail project, because Tony Abbott had declared he would never fund urban rail. 

The Abbott Government knew it had to fill that hole to stop an uprising in WA, a state already suffering from a plummeting GST share.

So Assistant Infrastructure Minister Jamie Briggs and Finance Minister Mathias Cormann flew across the Nullarbor in February to sit down with our Transport Minister Dean Nalder.

Mr Nalder went in to pitch for funds for an outer harbour at Kwinana – a plan developed over 20 years by successive governments, both Liberal and Labor, to keep WA’s economy growing once Fremantle port reached its capacity around 2022.

Even the Barnett Government had continued this planning – its 2008 ‘Vision for the Port of Fremantle’ committed the Liberal Party to progressing the outer harbour, and right up until mid-2014, WA Government agencies were still assessing the project.

But 45 minutes into the meeting, Mr Nalder walked out with a cobbled together mix of the Roe Highway Stage 8 extension and upgrades to Fremantle roads in his hand – rebranded as the Perth Freight Link. 

In fact, Freedom of Information searches have shown us that the first contact between Commonwealth and State agencies to provide advice on the cost-benefit and design of the project occurred in mid-March 2014, just two months before it was announced. There was no careful planning and no Infrastructure Australia assessment prior to the announcement.

The problems with this project have been well documented; the destruction of wetlands, the threat to homes and businesses, the ludicrous fact that it stops 1.5km short of the port, forcing a bottleneck at Stirling Bridge. Dealing with the latter two problems will add at least $700 million to the project. 
But the real threat to WA’s future is throwing billions of dollars at a short-term solution that does not address the need for a new port in less than 10 years. 

That’s why infrastructure projects need extensive and transparent planning: to ensure the dollars are being spent in the most effective places.

In 2002 the WA Labor Government undertook an exhaustive freight network review to work out how best to deal with WA’s growing freight needs. 

We knew back then that smashing a highway through suburban Fremantle to reach a port that was nearing capacity wasn’t the answer – that’s why we removed the Fremantle Eastern Bypass from Perth’s planning schemes. 

So we developed a six-point plan for freight. Part of that did involve road upgrades through Fremantle – but critically, it involved planning on the outer harbour as a matter of urgency. 
So much so that Labor committed to building the outer harbour in 2005.

The Perth Freight Link is an irresponsible, ill-planned project that will worsen the congestion problems around Fremantle and threaten WA’s future freight trade growth by leaving us short of critical port capacity. 

If the Barnett and Abbott Governments are serious about future proofing WA’s industries they should get on with planning and developing the outer harbour, and avoid wasting scarce taxpayer money on outdated roads to a constrained port. 

This article was first published in The Sunday Times on Sunday, 30 August 2015.

Saturday, 22 August 2015

Nationals call on the State Government to not sell the Fremantle Port.

source: news.com.au - joe spagnolo
original title: Joe Spagnolo: WA Liberal, National party have strange relationship 

Nationals call on the State Government
to not sell the Fremantle Port.

Premier Colin Barnett and Nationals leader Terry Redman
Premier Colin Barnett and Nationals leader Terry Redman Source: Supplied

PARTNERS in government, the National and Liberal Parties continue to have a strange relationship indeed.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott will be in Perth next weekend for the WA Liberal Party’s annual conference.

Given the death of longtime Canning MHR Don Randall and the official launch of the Liberal Party’s candidate to contest the by-election later this year, this event will get significant amounts of media coverage.

But also on next weekend is the WA National Party’s state conference. Surely, if you had to bet your house on which conference will get top billing on the 6pm news you would go for the Liberal’s event.
Political Editor Joe Spagnolo Source: News Corp Australia
Senior Liberals tell me they pencilled in this date for the state conference well ahead of the Nationals announcing their date.

But what this “double booking” again highlights is how dysfunctional this marriage of convenience sometimes is.

Why schedule the National and Liberal conferences on the same weekend? Surely you get a better bang for your buck if you hold them a few weeks apart.

The agenda of the National Party conference, the motions to be debated, gives us further insight into how these two conservative parties are on different pages – possibly different planets – when it comes to the aspirations of this government.

Motion No. 1: “That this state convention ... re-affirms the party’s independent political stance as the only party that represents the country regions of Western Australia, now and in the lead-up to the next election.”

DON'T MISS THE BEST PART - Continue Reading HERE

Thursday, 13 August 2015

Senate will hold inquiry into Perth Freight Link debacle - Scott Ludlam Greens MP

source: scott ludlam greens mp

Senate will hold inquiry into
Perth Freight Link debacle

The Greens, ALP and all eight Senate crossbenchers have successfully moved to establish a Senate Inquiry into the Perth Freight Link, increasing the pressure on the besieged Barnett Government.
"The inquiry has been made necessary by the continued refusal of the Barnett and Abbott governments to publish basic information about the toll highway," Australian Greens Senator Scott Ludlam said today.

"Whatever your views on whether this project is a good idea or not, the public is owed an explanation as to how an open-ended funding commitment of up to $2.5 billion was made in the absence of basic information.

"I will propose to the committee that hearings are held in Perth, and that, among others, Minister Dean Nalder and Main Roads are asked to attend. It's time they provided factual evidence to back up their claims that the project is worth torching billions of dollars of taxpayers money."

Read more of this story HERE

Wednesday, 12 August 2015

Victory at the AAT! - Alannah MacTiernan

Victory at the AAT! 

The Federal Government has been ordered to waive charges it had tried to impose on attempts to gain access to information on the $1.6 billion Perth Freight Link as part of a cone of silence imposed on the project.

The Department of Infrastructure and Regional Development had demanded more than $2400 for a mere 88 documents on the grounds that the documents requested were “primarily of interest to [me] and not of a general public interest”.

The Administrative Appeals Tribunal’s Senior Member Walsh handed down a decision late yesterday, finding that given the $1 billion-plus scale of the project, “giving of access to the documents is in the general public interest, or at the very least, in the interest of a substantial section of the public”.

The Federal Government had refused to negotiate on the fee, choosing instead to spend thousands of dollars on engaging black label commercial law firm Clayton Utz to defend the case after we launched an appeal.

In the past 18 months, the Abbott and Barnett Governments have used every measure to stop the public from learning about the genesis of this discredited project.

The Perth Freight Link is likely to end up costing more than $2 billion, once the cost of a new bridge is added – all to build a road to a port that will need to be relocated in the next seven to 10 years.

We are now moving to challenge the attempts to use ‘Commonwealth-State relations’ as an excuse to block the release of any documents about the costs and benefits of this project.

Labor backed a Senate motion this week ordering the Abbott Government to table further documents on this project, which it has, unsurprisingly, refused.

We will keep on fighting to shed light on this ill-conceived and highly flawed project.

A big thanks to our pro bono legal team Tim Hammond, Simon Millman and David Scaife - an unbeatable team.

Sunday, 19 July 2015

Roe 8: WRONG WAY, GO BACK - Scott Ludlam

source: Greens Senator Scott Ludlam

Roe 8: WRONG WAY, GO BACK

 Despite the so called budget emergency, Tony Abbott has committed $925 million to build a 'freight' freeway that includes the Roe 8 extension through the Beeliar Wetlands.

FOLLOW THE LINK TO READ MORE - INCLUDES A LINK TO WRITE TO YOUR LOCAL WA MP

Perth Freight Link hits a rock - Green Left Weekly

source: Green Left Weekly

Perth Freight Link hits a rock

Sam Wainwright from Rethink The Link has written eloquently about the Perth Freight Link and the community resistance that is standing in the way of 'the "freeways equal shiny progress" land of Abbott's imagination'.

Community resistance to the Perth Freight Link, a $1.6 billion freeway project proposed by the state and federal governments for the south-west region of Perth is growing at an explosive pace. The strength and depth of this opposition is now so strong that the issue will almost certainly dominate the next federal and state election campaigns. Read the full store HERE

CITY OF MELVILLE MOTION TO SPEND $50,000 SUPPORTING ROE 8 - Rethink The Link

source: rethink the link

CALL TO ARMS! (WELL, TO PHONES. AND EMAILS. AND THE COUNCIL MEETING)

CITY OF MELVILLE MOTION TO SPEND $50,000 SUPPORTING ROE 8

The talk is that there will be a late NOTICE OF MOTION put to the council of the City of Melville THIS TUESDAY NIGHT, by Councillor Cameron Schuster, that they endorse Roe 8 and spend $50,000 on an advertising campaign supporting Roe 8 (Section 1 of the Perth Freight Link).

The motion text will not be published until the meeting (CoM councillors seem to do that a lot.)

The way the CoM rolls, if this motion gets up, then the individual councillors will be precluded from speaking publicly in opposition to Roe 8! (They're not really into free speech in Local Government.)

SO, CAN YOU:

1. PHONE your Melville Councillors before Tuesday night to:
A) ask them not to support any motion for the PFL or Roe 8; and
B) ask/demand they have a PUBLIC DEBATE on this first before committing ratepayer funds to any campaign.
2. EMAIL them too.
3. TURN UP at the City of Melville council meeting to show your opposition to the motion! If you do, ASK A QUESTION in writing beforehand. And if you do, ask that the Notice of Motion be dealt with at the beginning of the meeting.