1994_06_june_points

The design study has come up with about 20 major concepts for the Central National Area.

1. The completion of the Russell corner. It would be a new gateway as the entry point from Sydney, Melbourne and the airport. And would be an exchange with bus and rail terminal.

2. Constitution Avenue would be a high street, an avenue of commerce and apartments.

3. An indigenous park between Kings Avenue and Commonwealth park, contrasting with the formal Commonwealth Park.
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1994_06_june_plan

Australians are to be asked what to they want from their capital under a project launched yesterday by the National Capital Planning Authority.

The authority says it is “”time to reassess the vision of Canberra to take the National Capital into the next century.

That would be done through the central national area design study, the acting chief executive of the NCPA, Gary Prattley, said yesterday.

It would be the third major vision step in the continuous development of the capital. The first was the gazettal of the Griffin Plan in 1925 and the second of was the adoption of the Holford Plan in 1958.
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1994_06_june_addtele

The old rules said that the telecommunications companies could ignore “”state and territory” planning laws, which meant they could build mobile-phone towers wherever they wanted in any state or the Northern Territory, but not the ACT.

The ACT is unique in Australia because it contains the National Capital and has Commonwealth planning laws. A Federal Act of Parliament called the Australian Capital Territory (Planning and Land Management) Act puts in train the National Capital Plan which has the force of law, and because it is specific over-rides the general telecommunications provisions. The National Capital Plan requires that before major telecommunications facilities can be built in the ACT a plan must be drawn up by the National Capital Planning Authority jointly with the ACT Government and the in consultation with telecommunications industry.

That process is now in train. The ACT Minister for Planning, Bill Wood, met senior telecommunications executives a week ago to set the process in motion.
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1994_06_june_pirate

The Business Software Association of Australia announced last week that it had caught a pirate.

It got an injunction, costs and unspecified damages from Adelaide bulletin board operator Jarrad Webb in the Federal Court.

Webb was offering Aldus, Microsoft and Autodesk programs over his bulletin board. This means people with a computer and modem can dial a phone number and download the files on to their computer. People pay for the use of the bulletin board, typically sending money and receiving a password.

Some of these programs cost up to $1000 in the shops. Sure, you get a manual if you buy from the shop, but there are so many guides to major programs available in the shops that this does not matter.
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1994_06_june_pearce

The Chief Minister, Rosemary Follett, reopened the way for Wayne Berry to return to the Ministry after the next election yesterday, following the tabling of the Pearce report into the Vitab affair.

The report put the bulk of the blame over the Vitab affair on the ACT TAB, and the ACT Government has responded by ordering a Cabinet process for future important decisions by statutory authorities.

Professor Pearce found that the then Sports Minister, Wayne Berry, his advisers and TAB and department officers had all acted in good faith.

He also found that the involvement of former Prime Minister Bob Hawke in VITAB had made ACTTAB feel less need to check out the VITAB principals.
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1994_06_june_nswtab

The ACT TAB would be barred from a link with NSW unless it met several conditions, the NSW Minister for Sport, Chris Downy, said yesterday.

“”Any prospect of a link between ACTTAB and NSW is simply not on at this stage,” he said.

The ACT would have to met at least four conditions: to demonstrate that all link with the controversial Vanuatu-based VITAB were severed; controls to ensure ACTTAB did not induce NSW punters away from the NSW TAB; to ensure the interests of surrounding NSW race clubs were protected; and to ensure controls were in place to protect the integrity of the NSW computer system.

The ACT Minister for Sport, David Lamont, said he would met Mr Downy on Tuesday and he was sure the remaining issues could be sorted out and a NSW link put in place.

Mr Downy was responsibly looking after the interests of NSW punters, “”just as I am looking after the interests of ACT punters”.
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1994_06_june_actps

The separate ACT Government Service will come into effect on July 1 after legislation was passed in a special sitting of the ACT Legislative Assembly last night.

The special sitting dealt with some 250 amendments to the original Bill. A move by the Opposition to postpone the Bill for more consideration was defeated when the Independents voted with the Government.

The Chief Minister, Rosemary Follett, said extra rights and equity would be granted to 14,000 ACT public-sector employees who to date had not been given the status of “”officer” in the Commonwealth service.

The new Act brings virtually all public-sector employees into the service as “”officers”, unlike the Commonwealth which excluded many blue-collar employees and employees in business enterprises.
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1994_06_june_nswtab23

The ACT TAB would go it alone and if necessary undercut other TABs if it could not get a link with NSW, the Minister for Sport, David Lamont, said yesterday.

Mr Lamont was reporting on discussions he had the day before with the NSW Minister for Sport, Chris Downy, and responding to a press statement put out by Mr Downy headed “”NSW TAB door stays shut”.

Mr Lamont said it would be best for the ACT, NSW and the racing industry in both places if a pooling arrangement could be established following Victoria giving notice to the ACT that the ACT could no longer share in its TAB pool which is also linked with South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania.
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1994_06_june_nswcomm

The ACT is the big loser from the VITAB affair, as the statements from the NSW Minister for Sport, Chris Downy, yesterday and last week show.

It shows that the NSW TAB has the ACT over the barrel. It can drive a very hard bargain because the ACT has nowhere else to turn.

The ACT must severe the VITAB link, leaving it open to a claim for damages or ugly retrospective legislation. It is already open to a damages claim from former ACTATB chief executive Philip Neck.

The NSW action shows also how concerned NSW is to cut off any possibility of an off-shore leak of clients of the Australian TAB monopoly, after all VITAB presented a golden opportunity for big NSW punters to use Asian agents to bet through the Vanuatu-based VITAB and get better returns because VITAB’s overheads and government taxes and levies come to about seven per cent of turnover, whereas the Australian equivalent is 15 per cent. The TAB computers would not show the returns in dividends, which would be the same as everywhere else, but they can be paid in other ways.
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1994_06_june_neck

The sacked chief executive of ACT TAB board, Philip Neck, is to take legal action against the ACT Government for unfair dismissal and denounced the gutless way in which he was dismissed.

Mr Neck said yesterday that he had been denied natural justice and was angered that he had found the dismissal notice under his door on his return from interstate on Sunday evening which he described as gutless.

Mr Neck was dismissed on the direction of the Minister for Sport and Deputy Chief Minister, David Lamont, after Mr Lamont had received the Pearce report into the Vitab affair.

Professor Pearce inquired into the contract with the Vanuatu-based Vitab and ACTTAB under which ACTTAB gave computer access to the multi-state super-pool and other services in return for a percentage of turnover, enabling Vitab to run phone and other betting on Australian races. He also inquired into why the Victorian TAB terminated it super-pool arrangements with the ACT.
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