Wednesday, August 31, 2011

REALITY CHECK: Organisational Values


Every now and then it is a good idea to look at what is promised against what outcomes have been delivered. If the promise is published –
and it is in Launceston even if somewhat buried within the website – that is as good a starting point as one might get. Imagine that an audit of the 'values' articulated below was undertaken point by point. Clearly, the reality would fall short of the promisethat is almost a given and something to be expected.

However, we are approaching 'audit time' – the 2011 Local Govt. elections – and it is timely that an audit is done now – even if you do keep the results to yourself. The very fact that elections are held as frequently as they are reflects a 'civic strategic intention' that we, ratepayers and residents, do an audit at an election. However we need to remember that when we do we our audits there is a difference between the elected Aldermen and Council's Officers.

The Aldermen are accountable to their constituency and the Officers are accountable to the Aldermen – well that's the theory. Albeit that 'accountability' is rarely tested, it needs to be more often than it has been. Interestingly, when things like 'Organisational Values' those who write them down open themselves up to what is too often regarded as unwelcomed scrutiny.

It is probably time that Council initiated a public consultation process that is aimed at measuring outcomes against performance. Before the election would be good but after the election woulds be good too.

The 'VALUES' are written in stone and a beginning has been made on surveying ratepayers and residents in regard to their perceptions of Council's delivery on promise. Thus far the results are not all that complimentary.

PLEASE READ THE VALUES AND FORM AN OPINION


LCC: Organisational values

Integrity

  • We behave ethically
  • We tell the truth
  • We keep our commitments
  • We meet both the spirit and intent of the law.
Stewardship
  • We care about people and the community in which we live
  • We operate safely
  • We are environmentally responsible
  • We strengthen the community.
Inclusion
  • We value diversity and respect the dignity of each person
  • We value differences in people and perspectives
  • We build relationships based on mutual trust
  • We recognise the contributions of every individual.
Initiative
  • We lead the way
  • We have the courage and creativity to shape the future
  • We have the discipline to manage risk
  • We act decisively in a timely manner.
Teamwork
  • We work together to achieve superior results
  • We share ideas and talents to develop solutions
  • We support and rely on each other
  • We value clear and open communication.
Accountability
  • We take responsibility for our actions
  • We live our values
  • We set clear goals, measure results and seek to improve
  • We build and protect the Launceston brand and reputation.

Monday, August 29, 2011

Non-Australian Citizens ARE Eligible to Vote in the Tasmanian Local Govt Elections

PLEASE CLICK ON AN IMAGE TO ENLARGE IT

The Examiner Advertisement's text
"Council elections 2011 - General Manager’s Electoral Roll

The General Manger’s Electoral Roll for the 2011 election will close on
Thursday 15 September 2011 at 6.00pm.
The General Manager’s Electoral Roll provides eligibility to vote to:
• Residents of the Launceston municipal area who are non-Australian citizens
• Owners/ratepayers of land in the Launceston municipal area who are residents of another municipal area
• Nominees of a corporate body, which owns/occupies land within the Launceston municipal area.

Those who believe they qualify for the General Manager’s roll must complete the prescribed application form and submit it to the General Manager. These forms are available from the Council’s Customer Service Centre or can be downloaded from www.launceston.tas.gov.au
(click on Council, then Council elections).
Those who require further information to determine whether they are eligible for enrolment, please call the Council’s Corporate Secretary on 03 6323 3121."

Depending on who you talk to you may get conflicting advice about who is eligible to vote in Tasmania's upcoming Local Govt. elections. The advertisements copied here can be taken as forensic evidence that you DO NOT need to be an Australian citizen to be eligible to vote in Tasmania's Local Govt. elections. And, neither do you ALWAYS need to be a resident in a jurisdiction to be eligible to vote either – read the advertisements very carefully.

If you hear different, then check and check again as it seems that there are those who do not understand the provision and others still, for reasons of their own, who it seems may well be handing out shonky advice.

The Tasmanian Electoral Commission is the most reliable source of advice Remember check and then check again
Ideally call the TEC on 1800 801 701
OR
Check the Website www.tec.tas.gov.au


Please circulate this information

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Art Culture & the CBD ... Not to metion tourism!

GEEWIZZ ... Hobart is leading the way and taking advantage of MONA. Launceston could take some advice here but one artist told me today that he was waiting for "hell to freeze over." Perhaps someone on the Council might want to take a blowtorch to work on someone?

OOOPZ I think that is a mixed metaphor ... SO BE IT

Petar Hill

Monday, August 15, 2011

A Council Worth Voting For


When you ask Tamlin and Derek MacKenzie why they are attending the Lismore Community Planning Forum in a few weeks time, the answer is simple.

“Because of these guys,” Tamlin says, gesturing to her two young children.

It’s a case of out of the mouths of babes when Derek asks his five-year-old, “Hey Bodhi, why should we be caretakers?”

“To take care of the world,” Bodhi says with a serious look on his face.

The young family, who live at The Channon, are fed up with waiting for someone else to do something about the state of the planet.

“Energy is not getting any cheaper, the price of petrol is rising, climate change is real – we need to start living within our means ... And I think a lot of Lismore feels that way,” Derek says. “This is a chance to get together and reach some common ground and develop a bit of an action plan. Things are changing and we can be part of that. A lot of the media that’s out there is negative and quite hopeless, and I think this will give people some hope. We can do things together – we don’t have to wait for the federal government to come and save us.”

The Lismore Community Planning Forum will be a day of creating projects and policy to transition Lismore to a sustainable economy, with the community invited to join Lismore City Council and the Department of Industry & Investment to nut out the plan ... NOW THERE'S A NOVEL IDEA "COMMUNITY CONSULTATION"

Convenor Gordon Fraser-Quick said to his knowledge this is the first time that community, council and state government have worked together on a whole-of-council area economic development plan.

“The community will develop ideas and projects which they see as needed to achieve a more sustainable future. We will end up with an outline of a Community Economic Development Plan for the city of Lismore and surrounds which will form one of the key governance and policy documents for Council going forwards,” Gordon explained. “Community ideas and suggested projects will be presented to Council and the State for consideration for funding and action ... Effectively it’s the community defining what they would like the economy of the city to look like into the future.”

Gordon said there are a number of key elements that underpin a workable, sustainable economy including clean water, good food, transport, energy and good governance processes.

In looking at each of these aspects of community life and developing plans to sustainably provide these services, Gordon believes Lismore can be at the forefront of how new economies must operate in the future. And he believes Lismore has the thinkers and the doers needed to achieve it.

“I have faith that we have a depth of knowledge and a commitment to community – if it’s going to work anywhere it’s going to work in Lismore ... We have a reputation, well earned, of a city of innovation and a city willing to try new things,he said. “It’s a diverse community, a passionate community, an energetic community and a well-educated community… and a community full of innovative technology and new ideas ... Any transition to a new economy for the world will mean using new and untested technologies as well as proven ones.”

Gordon explained that Lismore has several flagship projects that can be built on but asked people to think deeply in the lead-up to the forum about innovative and achievable ways of moving towards sustainability.

“In terms of transport we have great carpooling and perhaps we can build on that; we already have land-sharing in Lismore – something that could change the way food is produced in urban Australian; and maybe we can encourage a bigger uptake of onsite sewerage management or effluent management,” he said. “We want to gain the benefit of the experience and wisdom of the community and take advantage of that ... This is not a talk-fest – this is about people thinking of real solutions and preparing plans that will be able to be implemented by council, by state government and by community groups straight away to start our city moving faster towards sustainability. The sky’s the limit.”

Gordon referred to a recent visit to the Northern Rivers by Paul Gilding, author of The Great Disruption, which points out if you do things the same way you’ve always done them, things will stay the same. While he doesn’t deny that it’s a complex problem, change is the only way
forward, says Gordon.

“We’re not talking about becoming lentil-eating cave dwellers but unless we become pre-emptive about changing our lifestyle it will be changed in a way that cannot be managed. We can learn how to manage change by becoming prepared… we can learn how to produce biochar for carbon sequestration, how to grow our own vegies, how to fix a wheelbarrow or a bike ... These are all skills we will need when peak oil and economic collapse occurs… and it’s just around the corner. The logic is patent… in the next 30 years the World Bank is saying there will be an almost 50% increase in the world population and a 350% increase in the economy. Something’s got to give. We have a finite resource base and we have to change the way we extract value from the planet.”

The Lismore Community Planning Forum is on Saturday, August 20, and the entire community is encouraged to come along – old, young, working, unemployed, tradie, hippie, conservative or none of the above. This is your chance to help shape Lismore’s future. The forum is free and runs from 1-5pm at Lismore City Hall ... SOMEONE FROM LAUNCESTON SHOULD GO AND FIND OUT HOW TO DO THIS KIND OF THING!

WHEN THEY ARE THERE THEY MIGHT VISIT THE WORM FARM TO SEE HOW YOU CAN REDUCE LANDFILL AND MORE STILL


THEY HAVE A WORM FARM IN LISMORE: To think: anything once living in Lismore has ended up here, in this multi-million dollar complex of climate-controlled greenhouses: a simmering shed of broken down fruit, vegetables, paper, bread, meat, human hair, tea bags, vacuum cleaner dust… YUM!

To give you an idea of the size of this thing - the sheds occupy an area larger than a football field.

“This facility converts domestic food and garden recyclables into valuable composts and extracts for sale back to the farming community,” says worm farm tour conductor, Leo McLean


Tryton Waste Services: Tryton Waste Services Pty Ltd is located in Lismore, New South Wales, Australia. It is the largest vermicomposting facility in the Southern Hemisphere. It was constructed during 2000/2001 and officially opened in October 2001.

TIDAL POWER: What about us?


There is nothing really new about tidal energy. The idea has been around for over 80 years and it has been in use for about 40 years. Tidal Mills set a historical precedence and possibly the earliest example was in London in Roman times.

SOME QUESTIONS ARISING:

  1. What could be achieved on the Tamar with Tidal Energy?
  2. Is anyone in Tasmania seriously looking at this opportunity or are there too many detractors talking it down?
  3. Might there be an application in Launceston's Gorge?
  4. Might there be an application under or near the Batman Bridge?
  5. Might there be an application at the Tamar's mouth?
JUST 5 QUESTIONS TO BE GOING ON WITH

Friday, August 5, 2011

Letter to the Editor – Branding Launceston

EDITORS' NOTE: This letter has come to us and it is being published in full

Sir,
Tourism investors and business hopefuls must have read this headline “Launceston defined for the world through branding,” with some hope.

Well now that they have they seen the “branding” there are a lot of people with their fingers crossed that Launceston’s latest effort isn’t going to brand them for life.

The sentiment "Start Something Special" is okay so far as it goes but sadly the city’s aldermen were sold a pup. A lame pup at that! Excuse the cliché’s but someone must have seen them coming and they made some hay while the sun shone on this opportunity.

For this bit $7,000, who knows what for the rest of it and for what is likely to come. Has anyone, an alderman even, asked about any of this? My bet is NO!

This “brand” puts Launceston in a time warp. It has all the attributes of a faded postcard printed in The Depression. It is very depressing!

It has been charactorised as “ looking like a dirty smudge on a brown paper bag with a pin in it” and there is a bit of truth in that.

General Manager, Robert Dobrzynski, has been quoted as saying that this Depression imagery “sends a clear message.” It sure does! They are loaded messages and none of them all that encouraging and most rather depressing.

For anyone for whom Launceston’s “brand” matters, it must be a worry to read that Mr. Dobrzynski thinks that Launceston now has “a clear corporate brand and style guide to support it.” If that is this dirty brown stain we need to worry.

However Mr. Dobrzynski is dead right when he says Launceston “lacks a destination branding tool”, its just a shame that his, one assumes that it’s his given his enthusiasm for it, first attempt is so depressing and relatively speaking, so bloody expensive. It’s also a pity that the city’s aldermen support this stuff almost without question. Are they snoozing?

That old, old saying that “I know nothing about art but I know what I like”springs to mind here. Someone, preferably a bunch of aldermen, needs to get educated in the “art of branding” as it's just not possible to put a glossy spin on crap, and that goes for dirty brown stains too.

Bruce Mountford
Launceston

LET US KNOW WHAT YOU THINK

Thursday, August 4, 2011

MORE MONEY IN YOUR POCKET UNDER LABOR’S PLAN TO TACKLE CLIMATE CHANGE


GOVERNMENT STATEMENT & LINKS

The Gillard Labor Government has a plan to build a Clean Energy Future for our children and grandchildren by charging our biggest polluters - and return every cent to assist households, support jobs and tackle climate change.

A carbon price is paid by our biggest polluters – not ordinary older Australians.

Because some of these big polluters may choose to pass on these costs to households, we have announced a comprehensive household assistance package, aimed at those who need it the most.

This assistance will mean that both pensioners and self-funded retirees that hold a commonwealth seniors health card will $338 extra per year if single, and $510 per year for couples, combined.

On top of this, all older people with an annual taxable income of under $80,000 will get a tax cut, with most receiving $300 a year. This means a self-funded retiree couple with a single taxable private income of $50,000 will get assistance that provides $524 per year more than their expected average price impact.

Self-funded retirees who do not pay tax and do not receive a pension may be eligible for an annual $300 Low Income Supplement.

And older people will not face a price rise on fuel for their cars and light commercial vehicles, as a result of a carbon price.

I am proud of our record in supporting older people as they retire or while they are still working. Pensions are already $128 higher a fortnight for maximum rate singles and $116 higher for couples combined on the maximum rate since Labor’s pension reforms took effect.

And our new Pensioner Work Bonus will mean pensioners can keep more of their pension while working part-time.

If you would like to find out more about Labor’s household assistance package, or our plan to build a clean energy future, please call my Electorate Office on 03 6334 7033.

Yours Sincerely,

Geoff Lyons MP
Federal Member for Bass

USEFUL LINKS