1993_09_september_alpseat

What a delight to see politicians thinking more than three years ahead.

When the federal executive dumped on the ACT branch of the ALP yesterday it had little to do with the pre-selection of sitting members of the ACT Legislative Assembly. And little, indeed, to do with sitting Federal Members. The real issue was pre-selection for the third ACT federal seat which, according to present population trends, must be created before the next election.

Now the third seat will almost inevitably an ALP one. Mr Gerry Mander himself would have difficulty weaving a boundary line through Red Hill, Forest and Weetangera to form a Tory seat. John Haslem won Canberra for the Liberals in 1975 in the anti-Gough landslide and then retained it having proved himself the local Member par excellence in 1977. But it was a two-election wonder. The ACT is a Labor stronghold.
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1993_09_september_appoint

Tppointments to all boards, statutory authorities and councils would have to be made by Assembly committees under legislation proposed by Independent MLA Michael Moore.

He said yesterday that he was confident he had the numbers in the Assembly to get the law through.

The move comes after the Opposition criticised two appointments of prominent Labor Party members to statutory offices by Labor Ministers.
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1993_09_september_auct3

The Department of Administrative Services had not referred the Australian Capital Auctions matter to Australian Securities Commission, an ASC spokesman said yesterday.

A departmental officer told the Senate Estimates committee, “”The matter has also been referred to the fraud people in the AFP and the Australian Securities Commission”.

Australian Capital Auctions was the trade name of Sale-O Pty Ltd which went into liquidation owing the Federal Government and others more than $1 million.
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1993_09_september_better15

Betterment charges on lease-purpose changes were substantially increased yesterday.

Betterment is charged according to the change in the value of a lease from the old use to the new, for example when someone wants to build a block of units where there was a single house.

Under the old rules, when calculating the “”before value”, some consideration could be given to its potential for redevelopment.

Under the change announced yesterday by the Minister for Environment, Land and Environment, Bill Wood, no consideration will be allowed for redevelopment potential when assessing the “”before value”. He said that when areas were flagged for redevelopment the “”before value” rose almost to the same as the “”after value”, thus resulting in very little betterment charge.
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1993_09_september_bud16

The blame for Canberra’s high petrol prices “”quite clearly lies with the oil companies”, the Chief Minister, Rosemary Follett, said yesterday.

“”They are milking the Territory for all they can get,” she said.

Ms Follett was addressing a post-Budget business breakfast. She said the Government intended to put pressure on the oil companies by ensuring an independent operator opened in Canberra to promote competition. She defended the half-cent-a-litre rise in petrol franchise tax, saying it would bring it in to line with NSW. It would protect the revenue base. The earlier aim of having a lower tax than NSW was to produce lower petrol prices. That had failed.

The Government’s move to bring an independent operator would help local service-station operators.
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1993_09_september_bud17

The ACT Budget put looking after mates before good financial management, the Leader of the Opposition, Kate Carnell, told the Assembly yesterday.

She called for smarter thinking in the public sector as was happening elsewhere in Australia. She said, however, that Labor was too scared to take on the unions to create more efficient government. The inefficiency and looking after mates were affecting Canberrans’ standard of living.

“”To the majority of Canberrans, this budget represents all that was odious about self-government,” she said. “”The fears of the people in 1989, of ending up with an inefficient government that continues to cost more and more, with no direction, and without the guts to make the hard decisions, is exactly what the people have got.”

The budget was about more spending, more taxes, more borrowing and more tinkering at the edges.
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1993_09_september_bud92

The actual outcome for 1992-93 was better than Budget estimates. On the receipts side, recurrent receipts were $12.4 million or 1.1 per cent above estimate. Capital receipts were $18.8 million (14.7 per cent) above estimate. Tax revenue was $19.7 million (4.5 per cent) above estimate due to higher rates and stamp-duty collection. Other tax measures were also above estimate: gaming, petrol, liquor and tobacco.

Commonwealth general grants were down $6.8 million (1.7 per cent) due to CPI and population recalculations.

Expenditure was $31.3 million (2.4 per cent) below estimate. Most was because of a deferral of expenditure to 1993-94 and 1994-95.
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1993_09_september_budprev

Treasurer and Chief Minister, Rosemary Follett brings down the ACT Budget at 3pm today, (Tuesday) facing further cuts from the Federal Government and threats from teachers to take industrial action if they are not satisfied.

About $70 million has been pruned off Federal grants to the ACT. The ACT now receives almost exactly the Australian per-head average of state and territory grants. None the less that is $70 million less than last year when the ACT continued to get substantial self-government transition funds.

This means today’s Budget will mean service cuts, extra revenue, efficiency measures, extra borrowing, capital run-downs or a combination from among the five. Alternatively, there could be some plain over-estimations of revenue and under-estimations of expenditure.
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1993_09_september_budtop

The ACT Government cut public-sector employment and increased petrol taxes, and spent the proceeds on social justice for the poorest in the community in the Budget brought down yesterday.

In Education, 90 jobs will go, 80 of them school-based. The bulk of the cuts will be in the colleges, where Ms Follett says the diversity of courses and small classes give more opportunity for cuts.

Petrol will go up by half a cent a litre through an increase in the fuel franchise fee. It will raise $1 million a year.

The Treasurer and Chief Minister, Rosemary Follett, announced in the Budget speech the immediate setting up of the Voluntary Separation Scheme. It provides $17 million for redundancies, twice that of last year. Unlike usual public-sector redundancy schemes, redundancy packages will not be available to all who volunteer.
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