2000_02_february_bike paths

Bollards at Dairy flat.

Mid path bars on unlit path.. dings in every one of them. Then put reflector tape on them – more or less acknowledging they are a danger.

Path runs out.

Hospice.

Shclich Street maze. Too busy negotiating the maze to see traffic.

Crossing to boat shores – all should be zebra crossings with give way to pedestrians and cyclists. (it is not holding up traffic cos going to lake shore 25kms anyway and the danger is acknowledged by humps.

So close to perfection – why not make it so.

Would have been no cost – indeed less cost of done well…Public is paying for obstacles to be put on cycle paths. Dangerous obstacles which have caused costly prangs – us can see the marks.

Kerbs …

White line runs out.

2000_02_february_beazley’s speaking

In September 1998 I wrote a column saying, “”Opposition Leader Kim Beazley has trouble with language. And it could cost him the election.”

Last week’s events show that I should be able to recycle that column. Last week Beazley was confronted with his waffly language. He said people would just have to get used to him being prolix. The Macquarie defines prolix as “”speaking or writing at great or tedious length.”

Beazley’s defence is that the nation faces serious issues and he does not want to be glib. The defence is not satisfactory. You can be economical with language without being glib.

Beazley and Prime Minister John Howard approach the politician’s dilemma from opposite ends. The dilemma is that if you state something clearly and circumstances later change you can be accused of breaking promises. On the other hand, if you do not state something clearly you are accused of being devious or of leaving a way out.
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2000_02_february_airport

When the planners first sited Canberra Airport in the mid-1920s, they did a good job. The airport is at once close to the city and Parliament, but away from residential areas. The good planning then, is having some fall-out now, because the proximity to the city increases the site’s development value.

There will be some winners and some losers. They will be jockeying for position in the next few weeks because the National Cpaital Authority has just issued a Draft Amendment to the National Capital Plan for the airport. It will be open for public comment for eight weeks. After that the joint parlaimentary committee responsible for the territory might look at it.

The saga began in 1996 with the Federal Government’s $700 million plan to sell the major airports. Canberra was sold to Capital Airport Group for $66.5 million in 1998. Federal authorities wanted a competitive airline industry. That’s fine as far as it goes, but airports are more than places where aircraft land and takeoff. Huge numbers of people go through them and work at them. There are about two million passenger movements a year through Canberra, for example. That is a large potential market for lots of non-air-travel things: hotels, hair-dressers, books, indeed a large shopping mall and perhaps some IT light industry. If there is a very fast train hub at the airport, Capital Airport Group estimates there will be seven million passsenger movements a year.
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2000_02_february_addendum3 quake toll

Plane crash (in Canberra) kills four”, the banner headline read in 27mm-high type on Monday. Underneath was a piocture that ran across the page. In the bottom right in type 4mm high rant he headline, “”Indian quake toll rises to 15,000”.

It invites the comment that The Canberra Times thinks that one dead Canberrans is equal to about 4000 dead Indians. But, for a change, we were not innundated with that comment.

I hope it is not because readers have given up caring to make comments about the paper. I suspect not because readers were quick to point out the misspelling of practice (noun), the “”your” instead of “”you’re” in the cartoon and so on.

Rather, I hope that the conclusion was not drawn because it was not warranted. For a start the tragic Indian earthquake had been the main article on Page 1 on Saturday, the biggest circulation day, when the death toll was still in the hundreds. So the samller items on Sunday and Monday were follow-ups, up-dating the toll. However horrible an event, as time goes on, its impact lessens. It is not as newsworthy so gets less prominence.
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2000_02_february_act vote oped

Mal Meninga’s entrance into the local political fray invites a look at what might happen at the election due in October and some unintended weakness of the ACT’s version of the Hare-Clarke electoral system.

The ACT has three electorates: Molonglo (in the centre) with seven members; Brindabella (based on Tuggernaong) with 5 and Ginninderra (based on Belconnen) with 5.

The seven-member seat has a quota of 12.5 per cent (one-eighth of the vote). It means if you get 1.5 per cent of the first preference vote you get elected. Meninga is standing in Molonglo. In the two five-member seats the quota is 16.6 per cent one sixth of the vote). It means if you get 16.6 per cent of the first preference vote you get a seat.

In fact, minor-party candidates and independents rarely get a quota on first preference votes. Successful minor candidates (by minors I mena independents and minor parties) usually require preferences from eliminated candidates – both minors and major-party canidates. Bear in mind the majors always stand a full complement of five or seven in each seat and only two or three are successful.

A lot of the focus in the ACT is on the minor candidates — which ones of them will pick up enough vote to get a seat and hold the balance of power.

But when you look at the prospects for the major parties, you can see the Territory is at least two-thirds in a gridlock.
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2000_01_january_leader23jan defence

Former Liberal prime minister Malcolm Fraser has had an interesting change of thinking over defence. Formerly an ardent supporter of the American alliance, he now sees it as dangerous. He warns that it might get Australia into a dangerous war with China that it would not win.

Mr Fraser’s change of mind comes about through a change in the position of the US in the past decade rather than a change in his own core belief which presumably the best defence of Australia.

The reason for Mr Fraser’s rethink is that with the end of the Cold War, the strategic position has changed radically. We now have one super-power not two. And that super-power, the US, according to Mr Fraser is playing its hand in Asia in a way that could be contrary to Australia’s best interest.

That argument has some difficulty. True, the Cold War is over, but Russia is still a nuclear power. Moreover, its new president Vladimir Putin has recently issued a new policy on Russia’s nuclear arsenal. He says it must be kept in good shape. It is too easy to dismiss this as domestic grand-standing of no consequence. The trouble is that domestic grand-standing is most often the prime reason for leaders taking their nation to war. That is precisely what is happening in Chechnya now.

Mr Fraser argued that US policy in Eastern Europe had de-stabilised relations with Moscow because at the behest of the US, the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation had extended its coverage to the border with Russia and bombed the former Yugoslavia without permission from the United Nations.

As to the former, it was the Eastern European nations that wanted to join NATO. They begged to join. The US just welcomed them. As to the latter, what was NATO to do, sit on its hands allowing China to veto any action in the former Yugoslavia while innocent civilians were murdered?

On the Asian front, Mr Fraser is far too supplicant to China. He argues that the US position on Taiwan could lead to a nuclear war in which Australia would become involved. That is fanciful. China will continue to posture on Taiwan, but will not attack precisely because of the US position.

He argues that the US should reduce its role in north-east Asia. That would allow the Chinese-back North Korean regime breathing space if not licence to attack South Korea. It is because of the continued US presence that South Korea has prospered enabling the communist system in the north to be exposed as a misery-creating dictatorship.

It is fortunate that Mr Fraser argues that any Australian distancing itself from the US alliance should be seen as a long-term prospect. He argues, perhaps correctly, that it would be possible for the US to withdraw and leave the nations of the region to sort out their own relationships in a more trust-filled environment. Maybe that is an ideal goal in the long-term.

But that is not going to happen while China remains undemocratic and hostile to the democratic reforms that have made Taiwan prosper and while North Korea continues to pose such a threat to peace.

In the meantime, the US pressure and presence remains essential to Australia’s interest which is a peaceful Asia.

Mr Fraser’s argument that the US should withdraw over 10 to 20 years and let Australia and other countries in the region sort out their own security arrangements puts the cart before the horse. When nations in the region sort out security with arrangements that can be based on trust, which ultimately means dealing with stable democracies, then the US can start withdrawing.

Mr Fraser’s order puts far too much unwarranted trust in China. Without a US presence and without an alliance with the US, in the current environment and for the foreseeable future, Australia would have to increase its defence effort substantially.

Mr Fraser’s dove-like calls would only give local hawks ammunition.

2000_01_january_woolcott

Changed policy on Indonesia and East Timor would cost Australia dearly, according to a former Ambassador to Indonesia, Richard Woolcott.

Mr Woolcott cited several costs. Much of the recently announced defence spending of $23 billion could be put down to the changed landscape – money that could otherwise have been spent on health, education and scientific research, he said. Australian would have to renegotiate the Timor Gap treaty with respect to oil and other resources. This could be very costly.

Australia would have to spend are large amount supporting an independent Eat Timor. Australia had already spent $4 billion on the INTERFET and UNTAET mission to East Timor.

Our standing with South-East Asian neighbours had been adversely affected with Australia now shut out of a number of regional security and economic groupings.
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2000_01_january_tax comment

ACT taxpayers pay a higher proportion of their total income in federal income tax than people from other states and territories.

For every $10,000 in income tax the average Canberran pays, Northern Territorians are paying $7735 and Western Australians are paying $7970 and the average Australian is paying $8632.

This is revealed when you match yesterday’s Tax Office figures against Australian Bureau of Statistics figures on Gross State Product.

It is another indication that PAYE taxpayers are paying more than their fair share. The ACT has a higher proportion of people on PAYE than other states and territories.

The matching of both bureau’s figures makes the PAYE burden more stark.

When you use just the tax figures, you compare tax burden against (ital) stated (end ital) gross income. When you use gross state product figures you match income tax against (ital) all (end ital) income.
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2000_01_january_road toll forum

It has been a fairly good Christmas-New Year on the roads this season, comparatively speaking.

What! Surely, there has been “”carnage” on the roads. It has been horrific, etc.

Well, perception is different from reality. In recent years about 1900 people die on the roads in Australia each year. That is an average of 5.2 per day. The holiday period runs for 17 days from the first minute of December 24 till the last minute of January 9 – this Tuesday at midnight.

At time of writing it is Friday evening 13 days in. We should have had 68 dead, on average. We had had 70. This is the same as the ordinary death rate. Yet this was at Christmas-New Year when everyone is travelling great distances away from home or driving around half tanked. If you take NSW out of the equation, every state and territory had lower per-day death rates on the roads over the Christmas-New Year holiday than during the year as a whole.

Yet this year the message seems to have been that the toll was horrific and beyond acceptable limits. There are several reasons for this perception. The first is that the NSW toll was way above average. An disproportionately large amount of media comes out of Sydney and is NSW-centric. The ABC, SBS, The Australian, The Australian Financial Review and the Sydney Morning Herald mostly come out of Sydney. These are opinion-leading mouthpieces. So despite the fact that every other state and territory had death tolls well below the ordinary daily rate, the perception is one of mayhem.
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2000_01_january_nation capital forum

Parkinson’s law about work expanding to fill the time available applies especially to government. The tasks will fill up to take whatever time, money and space is available.

It is certainly true of overseas visits. When the Australian Prime Minister goes overseas about a hundred public servants, attendants, journalists, photographers and television camera people go too.

So if 55 heads of government come to Australia for a Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting we might expect 5000 people. These meetings seem to grow in inverse proportion to the importance of the work at hand. More Heads of Government are using their own aircraft — and therefore fill them up. There was a time the Australian Prime Minister went on commercial aircraft and there is no reason why that should not happen now.

Canberra should be able to house a Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting. But it cannot. This is not because Canberra is too small, but because CHOGM is too big.
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