31 May 2016

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Port ‘decades away’– if ever Keith Platt keith@mpnews.com.au THE first major publication by Infrastructure Victoria all but confirms that a new container port at Hastings is most likely decades away. An options paper released last week sees the state’s need for a new port as “a concept requiring further development”. “Currently the location and timing of a new port has not been assessed in detail and it will take time to do this evaluation,” the All things considered paper states. “The 30-year infrastructure strategy, which must be developed by the end of 2016, is being developed taking into account the uncertainty regarding the timing of when we will need a new port and its location.” A new port is one of 200 “ideas” in the options paper which seeks public input into “Victoria’s first ever state-wide, cross-sector infrastructure strategy”. Before being elected the state Labor government indicated its preference for the state’s next container port to be built at Baywest, in Port Phillip just north of Geelong. After its election the government effectively dismantled the Port of Hastings Development Authority by cutting funding, leading to job losses and an early end to several studies necessary for port development in Western Port. Infrastructure Victoria’s CEO Michel Masson said the options paper is not solely focused on building new things. “We want to find better ways to manage demand and get more out of our existing infrastructure before we build new infrastructure,” Mr Masson said. “At this stage, everything is on the table and up for consideration, so we haven’t shied away from options that might be controversial or unpopular.” The options paper itself says “a new port is

Shipping channels in Western Port may remain empty for years to come, according to a new options paper.

Watchful eye: Peninsula Health breast care Nurse Rhonda Barnes with a client.

Breast cancer rates soar

listed as a concept requiring further development. Currently the location and timing of a new port has not been assessed in detail and it will take time to do this evaluation”. Building a new port to “complement the Port of Melbourne and meet demand to import goods into Victoria” is seen as one of the options that “may have merit, but are either not well developed enough to undertake a full assessment or are sufficiently developed but have not yet been assessed against this need”. The paper addresses issues surrounding freight and traffic flows around the Port of Melbourne as well as the port’s capability to expand. The options paper suggests building a Port of Melbourne to metropolitan container shuttle “to move international containers … to hubs across the Melbourne metropolitan area”. Plans have previously been put forward for an “inland port” south of Dandenong as a distribution point for containers from the Port of Hastings. The options paper also suggests consideration “be given to building a Melbourne to Brisbane freight rail line, which would also link south-

east Queensland with Perth and Adelaide (via Parkes)”. The Port of Brisbane has undergone massive changes and freighting containers from there to Victoria could be cheaper than delivering them by ship. As reported in The News last week (“Hopes for port fading away” 17/5/16) Mornington MP David Morris said Ports Minister Luke Donellan had told the Public Accounts and Estimates Committee in May last year that the government would “seek independent advice from Infrastructure Victoria about Bay West as an alternative site to Hastings for Victoria’s second container port”. “Twelve months on and Infrastructure Victoria has spilt the beans that it has not looked at options for Hastings, Bay West, or indeed any other major project in the state,” Mr Morris said. He said not referring development of a container port to Infrastructure Victoria “means that not only might the development of a container port [at Hastings] be delayed for decades, there is a real risk that the port will be relegated to bulk status, reduced to handling the sort of cargo not acceptable to other ports”.

STAFF at Peninsula Health have seen a 69.9 per cent increase in the number of breast cancer cases treated since 2008. Breast care nurse Rhonda Barnes predicts the trend is “set to rise even further over the next several years”. Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in Australian women and has the second highest mortality rate after lung cancer. Cancer Australia estimates that there will be more than 16,000 new cases diagnosed this year. The breast surgery team at Peninsula Health treats more than 130 women a year. As a breast care nurse, Ms Barnes is the linchpin in the care of the patient. Her job is to support the family, coordinate the patient’s care and provide them with information. “Information is power,” she said. “Once we have power we feel in control, once we feel in control, we can cope. “A doctor will tell a patient, these are your results, this is what we’ve found and these are what the next best steps will be. “It’s a well-known fact that, when you’re receiving bad news, by the time you’ve left the consultation you’ve retained only about 50 per cent of the information and, by the time you get home, that probably goes down to about 25 per cent.” Peninsula Health has launched a campaign to raise money to expand breast care support services for all women on the peninsula. Details: peninsulahealth.org.au/give-gift-care/

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