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Tuesday 25 May 2021
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Calls to end gas cash splash
Picture: Yanni
ABOUT 200 school students, parents and supporters at Mornington joined others across Australia in the first national school strike since COVID-19, Friday 21 May. Meeting at Mornington Park they demanded the federal government stop financing gas and coal projects, and instead invest in clean, renewable energy, secure jobs and “implement First Nations’ solutions to protect Country”. The strike was organised by the School Strike 4 Climate network to push the federal government to protect climate, land and water, and create new jobs by growing Australia’s renewable energy sector and “stop throwing money at gas”. Speakers included year 6 students Adele, from Mount Martha Primary, and Signe, from Toorak College, year 7 students Leroy and Brett, from Woodleigh, and Dr Jacqui Salter from Mornington Peninsula Shire. An Acknowledgement of Country was delivered by year 6 student Sarah, from Sandringham East Primary. Adele, 11, said: “After COVID -19 the government is promoting a ‘gas-led recovery’ supporting these industries to get them back up and running after the pandemic. We protest that the money they give to the gas and coal should be invested in renewables which provide more jobs and a better planet.” Signe, also 11, said: “Spending on renewables actually provides more jobs than the gas and coal industries, which is appalling, because that is the government's excuse for keeping them alive.” Groups attending included XR Mornington Peninsula, Mornington Peninsula Climate Action Network, Voices of Mornington Peninsula, Peninsula Rail Link and Save Arthurs Seat.
Questions over shire’s ‘promised’ $50,000 Keith Platt keith@mpnews.com.au PUBLIC hearings into Mornington Peninsula Shire Council’s proposed 2020/21 budget has exposed a clash of expectations between the shire and a business lobby group. Included in the Committee for Mornington Peninsula’s detailed submission was its gratitude for the shire’s “$50,000 commitment” towards a study into whether the shire should be seen as a region or remain in the Melbourne metropolitan area. However, the money was not included in the draft budget and has left councillors wondering how the committee could have thought they were
its “partners” in such an investigation. Cr Steve Holland said he had “not been privy” to conversations that led to the committee believing the shire would pay $50,000 towards the study. “I believe they were with the CEO [John Baker.” Cr Holland told The News that “all parties have different stories … I don’t know who to believe”. He said the $50,000 had never been in the draft budget and the shire would “do its own work” on being regional. He said Geelong had once been part of metropolitan Melbourne and could provide a good case study. He believed the peninsula would benefit by being seen as regional and said the state government sometimes recognised it as such “when it suits”.
Cr David Gill warnedf that regional status would see large areas of the peninsula opened up for exploitation as they would lose the “protection” of being zoned green wedge. “It’s ridiculous [being regional], we don’t want to be a city”. Cr Gill said that no officer or councillor could have committed the shire to spending $50,000 on the study. “Officers can’t promise money like that, although they can refer it to the budget for consideration by councillors.” He did not regard the committee, with just 45 members, as being representative of the peninsula’s “huge numbers of businesses”. “They [committee members] are unelected and I’d like it if they came out and described themselves as lobbyists,
so everybody knows who they are. “If they represent all businesses, they should be elected and not a selfappointed committee. “There is a role for groups to forward cases on issues - such as business or the environment - but we need to know who they are and who they represent.” In her written budget submission the committee’s executive officer Briony Hutton said “Australian Unity Funds Management” was also partnering with the shire “to undertake the regional investigation report by Deloitte Access Economics”. When asked by The News who gave assurances that the shire would pay $50,000 towards the report, Ms Hutton said the committee “hopes to work with council among other local stakeholders
to undertake the regional investigation report ... Although regional by nature, the Mornington Peninsula forms part of metropolitan Melbourne, which means our residents face all the challenges of a regional community with none of the regionally-specific supports”. The Labor MP for Nepean Chris Brayne has also questioned why the committee was asking the shire to “cough up $50,000 on more studies and consultants”. “The business lobby’s executive officer, Briony Hutton, says they have ‘large corporations’ as members. Why are they begging peninsula ratepayers for money?” The committee’s written submission was one of 85 received by the shire.
“Business group wants more spending to cope with growth” Page 7
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