Water for the Wimmera
I READ that GWMWater is pouring 5000Gl into Toolondo because it is good for fishing and the community.
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Yet I understand there is no plan to top up Green Lake, which is about half full and would take just over 2000ml to fill right up.
About 3000ml would also ensure water for Dock Lake, which is now recognised as a vital wetlands in our area.
Surely the logic of filling large lakes at the expense of maintaining vital community water resources shows big city thinking in this election year?
In the meantime we are able to keep our northern lakes full solely for domestic recreational use.
We need a system like the USA where all GWMWater senior staff would stand for election in this province.
What a difference that would make.
Rick Walker, Horsham
War battlefield tour
WE ARE seeking expressions of interest for a group of 10 to 20 people to join a tour of First World War battlefields at Gallipoli and the Western Front during August and September 2019.
Options include five days in Turkey with a visit to Gallipoli then approximately 12 days on the Western Front.
The tour will focus on western Victorian men and will be tailor-made for visits to particular battlefields and cemeteries associated with tour participants.
We will visit Ypres (Wipers), the Last Post Ceremony at Menin Gate, Passchendaele and the Somme and the John Monash Centre at Villers-Bretonneaux.
If you are interested, please phone me on 0429 260 466 for a no-obligation discussion.
Pam Cupper, Dimboola
Growth needs investment
IF THERE is one thing Australia’s major political parties agree on, it is the need for governments to focus on economic growth and job creation to provide opportunities for Australians. However, while growth is our shared aim, it is unfortunate that in the current political climate we are struggling to agree on how to create that growth.
If you listen to the rhetoric of the federal government, you might think the only way to drive growth is to cut taxes for huge corporations and high-income earners.
For years now, the government has pursued tax cuts for big companies and criticised Labor because we place a higher priority on investing in health and education.
The problem with the government’s approach is that it has placed all of its eggs in one basket – tax cuts – while ignoring other drivers of growth.
Take infrastructure investment. Good rail and road projects boost productivity, which also leads to economic growth and job creation.
If, for example, we were to improve access to ports by expanding rail capacity, businesses would save time and money by getting their products to their customers more swiftly.
They could then invest the resulting savings back into growing their businesses and creating more jobs.
But back in 2013, Prime Minister Tony Abbott dumped the former Labor Government’s sensible plan to duplicate rail access into Sydney’s Port Botany, which, if it had proceeded, would have been nearing completion by now.
Then there is the issue of traffic congestion. According to the Bureau of Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Economics, traffic congestion costs the economy more than $16 billion year in lost productivity.
The problem is getting worse each year and is now undermining the Australian quality of life and creating tension in our communities.
But the Coalition has failed to respond.
In 2013, Mr Abbott cancelled billions of dollars of planned Federal investment in public transport projects like the Melbourne Metro and Brisbane’s Cross River project.
Mr Abbott’s successor Malcolm Turnbull talked a lot about public transport, but failed to reverse Mr Abbott’s funding cuts.
Indeed, Mr Turnbull simply refused to invest in Cross River Rail, even though it will provide a significant boost to the capacity of the rail network right across South-East Queensland
The new Prime Minister, Scott Morrison, should press the reset button on growth.
Mr Morrison should abandon the Coalition’s previous one-dimensional approach and look at other growth strategies, including investing in productivity-enhancing infrastructure projects.
Judging by his record in drafting the 2018 Budget as Treasurer, the signs are not good.
In the lead-up to the Budget’s delivery, the government announced support for several public transport projects, including Western Sydney Rail, the Melbourne Airport Rail and the Perth METRONET.
It leaked the details to the media, which duly attracted front page newspaper coverage.
But when the Budget Papers finally hit the desk, we found that 85 per cent of money committed to infrastructure in the 2018 Budget won’t be invested until after the four-year Forward Estimates period.
Mr Morrison has pushed investment off into the Never Never.
This is bad for our economy. We need investment now, not years from now.
The independent Parliamentary Budget Office has already calculated that over the next decade, Federal infrastructure grants to the states will fall from 0.4% of GDP to 0.2 per cent.
Yet Mr Morrison has chosen to delay meaningful investment.
It is time for a rethink. Mr Morrison should get on with it.
Anthony Albanese, Shadow Minister for Infrastructure, Transport, Cities and Regional Development