nsw – Michmutters
Categories
Australia

‘It’s a boys’ club’: Report lifts the lid on sexism, bullying and abuse in the NSW parliament

Confidential interviews with staff at the NSW parliament have lifted the lid on what a report has described as a boozy, predatory boys’ club.

Almost 450 people working at the parliament were interviewed as part of the review by former sex discrimination commissioner Elizabeth Broderick.

The report reveals how the offices of certain MPs and ministers are known to be “hotspots”, ruled by aggressive and abusive elected members who bully, micro-manage and gaslight staff, with devastating consequences.

Here are some of the findings detailed in the report:

‘It’s a bit of a boys’ club’

Some of the comments described a sexist culture pervading the parliament, where MPs are heard making lewd comments about female colleagues and staff.

“It’s a bit of a boys’ club. There’s sexting in the parliament,” one staff member said.

“Conversations in front of junior members of staff about which staff member the MPs would like to have sex with.

“Like locker room talk. I was shocked.”

Another woman surveyed said there was a power imbalance and it was commonplace for MPs to use their position to manipulate and abuse young staff.

“It’s very normalized, the MP and chief of staff sleeping with junior staff,” she said.

“I did not observe coercion but there was absolutely taking advantage.

“It felt like the 1970s, old rich white men employing these beautiful young women in their 20s.”

.

Categories
Business

‘Teething problems’ for NSW plastic bag ban as deadline looms for single-use cutlery and straws

More than two months after New South Wales banned lightweight plastic bags, not all small businesses have made the switch to paper, fabric or thicker plastic alternatives.

From takeaway outlets and convenience stores to school fetes and charity op shops, the entire retail sector is covered by the ban, introduced at the start of June.

NSW is the last state to ditch the disposable bags — a move supported by the state’s retail industry — but the plastic bag has not disappeared yet.

Why are some shops still using plastic bags?

The National Retail Association has been advising thousands of businesses on making the change.

Project manager Ebony Johnson told ABC Sydney most have embraced the change, but there were some “teething issues”.

.

Categories
Australia

Bureau of Meterology rejects suggestions it was unprepared for Northern Rivers NSW flood event

Australia’s national weather agency has issued a staunch defense of its handling of deadly flooding in New South Wales earlier this year, after a parliamentary report found it did not comprehend the scale of the threat.

Five people died in the first flood event in the Northern Rivers on February 28, with evacuation orders for towns such as Lismore issued through the night as flood waters tore through the region.

A NSW parliamentary committee found the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) was not prepared, that information used to make decisions was “incorrect and out of date”, and recommended it review its data processes.

The bureau declined to be interviewed by the ABC but in a statement a spokesperson said the agency “strongly refutes” the committee’s findings.

The statement outlined how the BOM warned governments, including national cabinet, and the community in 2021 of a likely La Niña event and above-average flooding risk across Australia’s north and east.

Specifically in relation to flooding in northern NSW, it said it told the State Emergency Service (SES) five days before the first event of “the potential for life-threatening flash-flooding over the NSW north coast” and that it issued flood watches and warnings “many days in advance”.

“The bureau also explicitly identified the risk for intense localized rain events, life threatening flash flooding and the potential for rapid river rises,” it said.

Aerial photo of Lismore in flood in 2017
The Northern Rivers flood event was the region’s worst on record.(ABC North Coast: Ruby Cornish)

The statement also addressed the report findings that some agencies treated it “as a nine-to-five business operation”, arguing it was instead a “365 days a year, 24/7 operation”.

The bureau said that for this event, a specialized meteorologist and a hydrologist were embedded with the SES at the Wollongong headquarters, and that the bureau supplied area-specific briefings to agencies.

It also noted that engagement with the parliamentary committee had been “limited”, and that a separate independent flood inquiry, which has handed its report to the government but was not yet public, was much more proactive with asking for information.

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.

Play Video.  Duration: 1 minute 50 seconds

Probe finds lead emergency agencies failed in flood response(Bruce MacKenzie)

‘more of the same’

Kyogle Shire Council general manager Graham Kennett said the report was missing recommendations to improve telecommunications, which were crucial for monitoring levels to make decisions.

“If we know what’s going on in this catchment and in that catchment, then we have warning times and we can predict flood levels to a degree of accuracy that is good enough to make informed decisions about when people need to leave,” he said.

“It takes 45 minutes to an hour for the data to get online and in some cases that is too long for a decision-making process.”

In Lismore, a group of residents said the 37 recommendations did not go far enough, and wanted locals to be given the power to make decisions in future flood events

The parliamentary committee slammed the response of the SES during the flood crisis, accusing it of “issuing out of date, inaccurate and confusing messages”.

It has recommended that a restructure of the SES be conducted to harness local knowledge and increase the number of salaried staff and volunteers.

Man and woman sit at a long table in front of microphones
Beth Trevan (left) believes the recommendations do not afford local people enough autonomy.(ABC North Coast: Bruce MacKenzie)

Lismore Citizens Flood Review group coordinator Beth Trevan said while the inquiry findings mirrored the group’s submission, the recommendations were “disappointing” as they appeared to be “more of the same”.

Ms Trevan wants local people on the ground to have the power to make decisions.

“In the past we’ve had long term local people, who had been here for 30 or 40 years and were in senior positions at a regional level … and the knowledge of the entire area and the knowledge of all the agencies and the people who ran them was at their fingertips,” she said.

“By the time it gets transferred from here to Sydney and they have a chat with the bureau, the time is wasted, and we don’t have time.”

Catherine Cusack wearing a gray jacket and sitting in a park.
Catherine Cusack left parliament in protest of her party’s handling of the flood crisis.(abcnews)

Catherine Cusack represented the Liberal Party on the parliamentary committee, but no longer sits in parliament after letting her membership lapse in protest at her party’s handling of the crisis.

She fell short of backing the notion that local people should be making decisions but said they should be “more front and centre”.

“Of all the data that flows into them, there’s just no capacity for locals to say ‘I don’t know what it is in your gauges … but all I can tell you is the water is meters high up here in an unprecedented way’ ,” she said.

The SES said it is reviewing the report and will provide a response to parliament.

.

Categories
Australia

Sydney news: Illawarra South Coast Line commuters urged to take alternative transport due to industrial action

Here’s what you need to know this morning.

Illawarra rail line closed

From 10am to 4pm today there will be no trains running on the T4 Eastern Suburbs and Illawarra and South Coast rail lines due to ongoing industrial action.

Although the protected action does not officially start until 10am, the head of Sydney Trains predicts impacts from about 6am.

“We urge all our customers to plan ahead by catching alternative public transport or working from home on Wednesday if possible,” Matt Longland said.

He said the line, which runs from Bondi Junction to Bomaderry, would not be fully operational until about 8pm.

Rail, Tram and Bus Union (RTBU) secretary Alex Claassens said union members were fighting for a greater commitment from the government to fix the new intercity fleet.

The RTBU says the fleet, built in South Korea, has a safety flaw which means guards cannot monitor passengers getting on and off the train.

The government has agreed to the safety changes in an enterprise agreement but the union wants a deed of agreement.

Mr Claassens said the NSW government chose to inconvenience customers on the T4 line today by not bringing in trains from other areas.

“90 per cent of our train crews and trains are still available to go form the other regions into that region to provide a level of service,” he said.

“Unfortunately… [Sydney Trains] management made a decision that they weren’t going to run any additional trains on that Illawarra line.”

Monkeypox vaccine rollout goal

a health professional holding a vial of monkeypox dose
There are currently 33 cases of the virus in NSW, two of which were locally acquired.(Reuters: Given Ruvic/Illustration)

The government wants everyone in NSW who takes HIV-prevention medication to be vaccinated against monkeypox before WorldPride 2023.

Health Minister Brad Hazzard said the government was aiming to have the 22,000 people who currently took pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) inoculated before Sydney hosted the pride event next March.

“NSW Health has been working with community partners … including doctors who have a special interest in HIV and sexual health … to support the vaccine rollout,” Mr Hazzard said during Question Time in parliament yesterday.

“With monkeypox cases increasing internationally, it’s expected there will be further cases in NSW and local transmission may increase rapidly.”

Men who have sex with men are considered most at risk of contracting monkeypox, which spreads through skin to skin contact.

There are currently 33 cases of the virus in NSW, two of which were locally acquired.

Vaccines are already being distributed in Sydney and on the Far North Coast, with 5,500 doses being provided by the federal government.

NSW Health expects to receive between 24,500 and 30,000 doses in September and another 70,000 in early 2023.

The symptoms of monkeypox include headache, fever, chills, sore throat, body aches, rash, swollen lymph nodes and fatigue. The rash may initially look like pimples.

Resignation letter sought from building commissioner

The NSW Building Commissioner’s private resignation could be made public amid scrutiny over the conduct of sacked Fair Trading minister Eleni Petinos.

Commissioner David Chandler quit in late July.

The state opposition wants to see Mr Chandler’s resignation letter, amid reports the relationship between Mr Chandler and Ms Petinos had soured.

Debate on a motion to compel the state government to hand over a copy of the letter is expected today.

Ms Petinos was sacked from cabinet last month over bullying allegations.

Bill to ban Nazi symbols passes

A state government bill to ban displays of Nazi symbols in public has passed the lower house with unanimous support.

The bill criminalises knowingly displaying a Nazi symbol in public without a “reasonable excuse”, which includes artistic, academic or educational purposes.

Offenders can face 12 months’ imprisonment or fines of up to $11,000 for individuals and $55,000 for corporations.

Attorney-General Mark Speakman said the bill would provide additional safeguards against hate speech.

“The display of a Nazi symbol undermines our shared values ​​and causes harm and distress to others in the community, including those from the Jewish faith,” he said.

“This bill recognizes that the public display of Nazi symbols is abhorrent, except in very limited circumstances such as for educational purposes.”

The bill will ensure that use of a swastika by religious groups including Buddhists, Hindus and Jains will not be a criminal offence.

Mr Speakman said he expected the bill to pass the upper house and be enacted by next week.

.

Categories
Australia

Disability advocates call for better support for people in rural, regional and remote NSW

Pauline Follett has been struggling to get on the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) for three years and is “frustrated” with the health system.

The 54-year-old has been living with cerebral lupus for nearly 30 years and depends on her disability pension as her main source of income.

Lupus can damage nerves in the body through inflammation of nerves or the tissues surrounding them.

The condition affects Ms Follett’s balance, which makes it difficult for her to walk and do tasks such as cooking, cleaning and driving.

She lives by herself in Gol Gol, in far west New South Wales, and has limited support.

“It becomes very difficult when you become too unwell to stay in one’s home. You have to have support when you’re disabled,” Ms Follett said.

An older woman pouring a kettle in her kitchen with her walker in front of her.
Pauline Follett lives on the border between Victoria and New South Wales.(ABC NewsRichard Crabtree)

The first time she applied for NDIS, she said the assessors focused “on the wrong thing”, that she lives with osteoporosis rather than lupus.

The second time Ms Follett applied, she said she was told her specialists could do more for her.

The support she receives is from a local disability service provider, but only includes assistance with transportation and cleaning.

And that support is not guaranteed, as Ms Follett is reassessed for it every six weeks.

That has meant she has made nearly 30 applications over the past three years to maintain the help.

“It’s all up in the air, all the time … You’re not guaranteed, it’s very tiring,” she said.

“You have to be on the ball all the time, which is difficult when you’re ill.”

Uncertainty exacerbates condition

She likes living in her own home but without the right help, she believes she could be forced to leave and fears being unable to find stable aged care accommodation, which would put her at risk of homelessness.

An older woman standing with her walker outside her home.
Pauline Follett hopes to get NDIS support after being rejected twice.(ABC NewsRichard Crabtree)

“Item [aged care] is difficult to get here. It’s not as readily available to us, so to have something like that. It’d be very hard to access,” she said.

Ms Follett said the uncertainty of NDIS providing support had affected her mental health, which had taken a toll on her physically.

“I’m very stressed, and with my lupus, stress is something that exacerbates my condition, so it makes it worse,” she said.

Ms Follett is not alone in finding access to services difficult.

Calls on government to do more

Disability Advocacy NSW released The Aussie Battlers report to the ABC, detailing issues people living with disabilities face in rural, regional and remote (RRR) NSW.

It showed 61 per cent of cases in RRR areas had difficulties meeting evidence requirements due to limited accessibility of service providers.

In RRR NSW, 73 per cent of people reported their service accessibility as poor or very poor.

Disability Advocacy NSW policy officer Cherry Baylosis said the results were not surprising.

A close up of a woman with brown hair wearing a patterned shirt.
Cherry Baylosis contributed to The Aussie Battlers report.(ABC Broken Hill: Youssef Saudie)

“It is concerning when I confirmed these experiences persist despite some of the efforts that were made,” Dr Baylosis said.

She is calling on the government to involve people with disabilities in policymaking.

“At the very least to have consultations with people with disabilities who live in remote areas for better engagement and participation, and then developing considerations within policy based off that,” she said.

“I would like policy to take into consideration the complexities of people with disability living in regional, rural and remote areas to consider the complications — such as the cost of living with a disability.”

Delays from service providers

There are 750 NDIS recipients in far west New South Wales as of June 30, but far west NSW Disability Advocacy district manager Eveleen May said there would be a “lot more” people who were in need of assistance.

.

Categories
Australia

Rare southern right whale calf sighting a thrilling start to NSW far south coast whale watching season

The sighting of a southern right whale and her calf along the NSW far south coast has excited locals, photographers and marine experts alike as the whale watching season in the region kicks off.

August marks the time of year when some whales were still heading north as part of their annual migration on Australia’s east coast, while others were heading south.

In that crossover came the unique sighting of what appeared to be a white southern right whale calf.

“Any white animal, like we’ve seen with Migaloo, does get the attention of many people around Australia if not the world,” said wildlife scientist Dr Vanessa Pirotta.

“A small percentage of southern right whales are born very white, and in this case, this animal is known as a gray morph.

“Unfortunately, it’s not likely to stay white its entire life and will most likely become darker as it gets to adulthood.”

white whale calf emerges from the water
Southern right whales reproduce slower than other species so sighting a calf is a rare event.(Supplied: Peter Harris)

The southern right whale reproduced at a slower rate compared to the humpback, and was vulnerable to a number of threats in the post-whaling era including entanglement in fishing gear, ship strikes, acoustic pollution and even Killer Whales.

Dr Pirotta said although the current “salt and peppery” appearance of the calf wouldn’t remain, its existence had buoyed many working to ensure the survival of the species.

a white whale calf swimming in the water
The whale watching season usually doesn’t start until mid-August on the NSW far south coast but this calf is proof the mammals have arrived early.(Supplied: Peter Harris)

“It’s also an opportunity to see other species such as the southern right whale which is unfortunately not recovering as well as the humpback whale population,” Dr Pirotta said.

“When we do see one it’s of great significance because any contribution or addition to the southern right whale population is a special one for all of us.”

pods on the move

Mid-August usually marked the start of whale watching season on the NSW far south coast, but cruise operators were organizing tours early off the coasts of Bermagui, Merimbula and Eden.

a whale jumping out of the ocean
Humpbacks are usually more “acrobatic” and “energetic”, according to Mr Millar.(Supplied: Sapphire Coastal Adventures)

“We’ve had a great stream of southbound whales for a few weeks now,” said Simon Millar, director of Sapphire Coastal Adventures.

“We didn’t use to start until the end of August… [but] we’ve had multiple pods off Merimbula.

“It looks like it’s going to be an amazing season.”

Last year’s whale watching season was thwarted by COVID-19 restrictions, and this year tourism operators hoped to make an uninterrupted comeback.

Mr Millar also found the sighting of the southern right whale and her white calf to be unique, after not having spotted the species in three years.

“The southern right whales aren’t as typically energetic or acrobatic on the surface as the humpback whales,” he said.

“We tend to watch the humpback whales more even when the southern rights are around, but it was still great to see that new-born calf.”

a man and woman sit on the railing of their boat with their dog sitting in front of them
Mr Millar and his wife Jessica had not seen a southern right whale in three years before spotting the white calf.(Supplied: David Rogers Photography)

The sighting occurred ahead of the Walawaani Muriyira-Waraga Bermagui Whale Event on August 13 which marked the official opening of the 2022 season.

The event would celebrate the cultural significance of the annual migration to the local Yuin people and would feature an ocean paddle out to welcome the whales.

a big whale in the water next to a smaller white whale
The southern right whale and her white calf traveling along the NSW far south coast.(Supplied: Richard Gonzalez, Insta @the.shot.father)

.

Categories
Australia

Two former NSW MPs interviewed at last minute for senior trade roles, leaked emails reveal

Two former NSW MPs were given “last-minute” interviews for overseas trade commissioner roles despite there already being preferred candidates, according to an email from inside Investment NSW.

On August 14, 2021, Investment NSW CEO Amy Brown said she had been “asked” to include the two candidates in interviews for the India and Singapore-based roles.

The email, sent to Ms Brown’s assistant and the recruiter, shows the candidates were included despite the recruitment process already being well underway.

“We’ve been asked to interview two last-minute candidates for the Senior Trade and Investment commissioner roles … Jodi McKay — India/Middle East (and) Pru Goward — India/Middle East or Singapore,” she wrote.

The release of the email is likely to place more pressure on NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet over whether there was political interference in the recruitment of trade commissioner roles, after sustained scrutiny over a similar job based in New York which was given to former deputy premier and Nationals leader John Barilaro.

The Premier has launched an independent inquiry into the New-York-based role, which is expected to be finished within days.

Mr Barilaro will appear on Monday before a parliamentary inquiry, where he is expected to be questioned about his involvement in the recruitment of trade commissioners, and his appointment to the New York position.

Former NSW deputy premier John Barilaro
John Barilaro successfully applied for the New York job after leaving politics last year.(AAP: Joel Carrett)

He has since withdrawn from the role, and much of the focus has turned to how involved he and another minister, Stuart Ayres, were in the hiring process.

Last week, Mr Ayres stood down as trade minister and deputy leader of the NSW Liberal party, after a draft review raised concerns about his involvement in the recruitment process for the Americas role and whether he might have breached the ministerial code of conduct.

Mr Ayres denies any wrongdoing.

“However, I agree it is important that this matter is investigated appropriately and support the Premier’s decision to do so,” he said in a statement.

Mr Barilaro has maintained he always followed the proper process.

.

Categories
Australia

Labor selects former journalist Katelin McInerney to challenge Gareth Ward in Kiama at 2023 NSW election

The New South Wales Labor party has announced its first candidate ahead of the 2023 election to take on the embattled high-profile Kiama MP Gareth Ward.

Former journalist, unionist and life-long Kiama resident Katelin McInerney is hoping to unseat Mr Ward, who was suspended from parliament after he was accused of historic indecent and sexual assault offences.

The former government minister, who denies the charges has refused to resign in the wake of his suspension and recently defended his right to stay on as MP.

His matter returns to court later this month.

On Saturday, Ms McInerney said she would not ignore Mr Ward’s absence from Macquarie Street during her eight-month campaign.

“As a resident here, I can’t ignore the fact that we do not have a voice on the floor of parliament,” she said.

“We have an MP who is not allowed to take our concerns and to represent our interests in the room where it happens.

“We deserve a real voice in parliament and a local member who is able to not just be a member of parliament but a member in the parliament of NSW,” Ms McInerney said.

A young couple with a child
Katelin McInerney says she and partner Brian want a better future for their two-year-old son William. (Supplied: Katelin McInerney)

‘A tough seat to win’

She said she was “deeply concerned” about her two-year-old son William’s future and it was a driving influence behind her decision to stand.

“Because of that I will work tirelessly to move the needle on the things that matter most to the people that work here.

“Fixing our hospitals, fixing our schools, reducing the congestion on our roads, ensuring that development in this beautiful region is not only sustainable but that it reflects our community,” Ms McInerney said.

Labor leader Chris Minns said Mr Ward’s strong hold over the seat was the reason the party had named his candidate eight months out from the election.

“That’s recognition of the fact that it will be a tough seat to win,” he said.

“Katelin knows that, we all know that. We will fight for every vote.”

Mr Ward won the seat from Labor’s Matt Brown in 2011, who controversially resigned from his role as Police Minister after allegedly hosting a wild post-budget election party in his parliamentary office.

Members expelled, resign

Just days before Ms McInerney’s selection was announced, the New South Wales Branch of the Labor Party announced it had expelled Mr Brown from the party.

A spokesperson said he was due to his decision to run against an endorsed party candidate at the Kiama local government elections in December.

Mr Brown declined to comment.

A man sits near a playground in his yellow campaign hat and t-shirt with posters.
Kiama Councilor Matt Brown. (ABC Illawarra: Ainslie Drewitt Smith)

His expulsion came a fortnight after party stalwart, former Shellharbour Mayor Marianne Saliba had her 35-year membership revoked, on the same grounds.

In the days prior to her expulsion, she was accused of reversing over the foot of a rival candidate, and stepson of sitting Shellharbour MP Anna Watson.

Several local branch members who supported Ms Saliba’s tilt at the recent fresh election in Shellharbour Ward A, have since resigned from the party concerned over her treatment.

sticking to the rules

Mr Minns has played down the exits and infighting plaguing the local branches and said it was not akin to the “scandals” impacting the Perrottet government.

“We’ve got long established principles in relation to the suspension and disciplinary matters in relation to people who run against endorsed candidates.

“It’s been that way inside the Labor party for 130 years. Nothing has changed about our internal rules of management of candidate selection.”

Voters in NSW will go to the polls on March 25, 2023.

.

Categories
Australia

Splendor in the Grass attendees are being urged to be alert for meningococcal. Here are the symptoms to watch for

NSW Health has put out a public health alert after meningococcal disease was identified in two people who attended the Splendor in the Grass music festival a fortnight ago.

One of those cases, a man in his 40s, has died with the disease.

NSW Health says the disease is uncommon, but it’s urging people who went to Splendor in the Grass at the North Byron Parklands to watch for symptoms and act immediately if they appear.

What are the symptoms of meningococcal?

Perhaps one of the best-known symptoms is a rash with dark red and purple spots, but the Department of Health says that comes at the later stages of infection.

The meningococcal rash doesn’t disappear with gentle pressure on the skin like other rashes might, NSW Health says.

Not everyone with meningococcal disease gets a rash.

NSW Health says meningococcal symptoms are non-specific and may not all be present at once.

People with the disease might notice leg pain, cold hands and abnormal skin color before the onset of the typical symptoms, which may include:

  • sudden onset of fever
  • headache
  • neck stiffness
  • joint pain
  • a rash of red-purple spots or bruises
  • dislike of bright lights
  • nausea and vomiting

Symptoms for young children may be less specific.

Here’s what to watch out for:

  • irritability
  • difficulty waking
  • high pitched crying
  • refuse to eat
A lopsided SITG logo in the mud at Splendor In The Grass.
Splendor in the Grass was held at the North Byron Parklands a fortnight ago. (Russell Privett/triple j )

What is meningococcal?

It’s a serious bacterial infection that can be fatal.

People with the disease can become severely unwell quite quickly, with the Department of Health urging people with a suspected infection to see a doctor immediately.

“It can kill within hours, so early diagnosis and treatment is vital,” the Department of Health website says.

“Do not wait for the purple rash to appear as that is a late stage of the disease.”

Usually, meningococcal causes blood poisoning and/or meningitis — which is inflammation of the brain and spinal cord.

It can also result in severe scarring, loss of limbs and brain damage.

What is the meningococcal fatality rate?

Between five and 10 per cent of patients with the disease die.

How does meningococcal spread?

Meningococcal bacteria is passed on through secretions from the back of the nose and throat.

Typically, it needs close and prolonged contact to be passed from one person to another.

Meningococcal bacteria don’t survive well outside the human body, with NSW Health saying the disease isn’t easily spread by sharing food, drinks or cigarettes.

NSW Health says people in the following groups are at higher risk of contracting the disease:

  • household contacts of patients with meningococcal disease
  • infants, small children, adolescents and young adults
  • people who smoke or are exposed to tobacco smoke
  • people who practice intimate (deep mouth) kissing, especially with more than one partner
  • people who have recently had a viral upper respiratory tract illness
  • travelers to countries with high rates of meningococcal disease
  • people with no working spleen or who have certain other rare medical conditions

Is there a meningococcal vaccine?

And it is.

A vial of a Meningococcal polysaccharide vaccine on a desk with a stethoscope and a pen.
NSW Health says people should watch for symptoms even if they’re vaccinated against meningococcal.(AFP: Science Photo Library)

The Department of Health says meningococcal vaccines are recommended for:

  • infants, children, adolescents and young adults
  • special risk groups, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, individuals with certain medical conditions, laboratory workers who frequently handle Neisseria meningitidis, travellers, and young adults who live in close quarters or who are current smokers

But anyone who wants to protect themselves against meningococcal should talk to their doctor.

Adolescents are offered the shot via school vaccination programs.

You can check to see if you’re vaccinated by viewing your immunization history statement through Medicare.

But NSW Health says routine childhood vaccines don’t protect against all strains of the disease, so even vaccinated people should still be alert for symptoms.

.

Categories
Australia

Public Service Commissioner would not have endorsed Barilaro appointment had she known of ministerial interventions

The NSW Public Service Commissioner has told an inquiry she would never have signed off on former deputy premier John Barilaro’s appointment as New York trade commissioner had she known of the level of ministerial involvement.

Kathrina Lo was on the selection panel but said she was unaware that then-minister Stuart Ayres had played a role in deciding which candidates should be shortlisted and that he had provided an informal reference for his former colleague, Mr Barilaro.

Ms Lo said she had only learned of these interventions through evidence given to the inquiry and media reports.

She said she’d also been unaware that Mr Ayres had held a Zoom meeting with the other leading candidate, businesswoman Kimberley Cole.

“Had I known on 15th June what I know now, I would not have endorsed the report,” she said, referring to the final report of the selection panel.

The other independent member of the selection panel was former Liberal MP Warwick Smith.

He has not been called as a witness but Ms Lo said he would like it placed on the record that he would not have endorsed the report had he known the full picture.

The commissioner said no pressure had been placed on her personally to achieve a particular outcome but she expressed her displeasure at the way the process had been conducted.

“As Public Service Commissioner, I should not be viewed as cover for a recruitment process or a way for other panel members or the hiring agency to avoid accountability,” Ms Lo said.

Earlier today, Mr Barilaro’s former chief of staff Siobhan Hamblin told the inquiry that she had been given no reason to believe that he stood to benefit personally from any changes to the way the trade commissioners were appointed.

In the days before Mr Barilaro announced his plans to leave politics, emails show bureaucrats discussing changing the rules for the recruitment of new trade commissioners, then deciding the plum US role would be handled “as an internal matter”.

Ms Hamblin today said Mr Barilaro “never raised with me any personal interest in these roles”.

If he had, she said, she would have had no hesitation in flagging it as a concern.

Siobhan Hamblin wearing a pink jacket
Siobhan Hamblin today gave evidence to the inquiry.(AAP: James Gourley)

Ms Hamblin told the inquiry that in September last year, Mr Barilaro spoke to her about his intention to resign from politics.

She agreed that those conversations took place around the same time as he had asked his staff to prepare an urgent submission to cabinet seeking to change the trade jobs into ministerial appointments.

Ms Hamblin said the discussions were not unusual and were not confined to that period as he had been talking about leaving parliament since he took a month of mental health leave the previous year.

“Sometimes it was quite a flippant and at other times it was more serious,” Ms Hamblin told the hearing.

A close up picture of John Barilaro's face
Former deputy premier John Barilaro resigned from politics last year.(AAP: Joel Carrett)

Labor’s Daniel Mookhey pressed Ms Hamblin on the timing of Mr Barilaro’s request for his staff to prepare an urgent submission to cabinet to turn the New York-based role into a ministerial appointment.

“Was it the case that the reason why Mr Barilaro wanted this cabinet submission produced ASAP and considered urgently was because at that point of time he had already started contemplating a resignation?” Mr Mookhey asked.

“That is a question for him, Mr Mookhey,” Ms Hamblin replied.

Mr Barilaro is due to appear before the inquiry on Monday.

The acting managing director of Investment NSW Kylie Bell gave evidence that the position of New York trade commissioner has been placed on hold pending the conclusion of the hearings.

She told MPs that there were currently four people working in the NSW government’s New York trade office, earning a total of $900,000 in salaries.

In addition, there are two staff based in San Francisco and one other in Washington, who is employed through Austrade.

A woman with blonde hair and glasses smiles while sitting behind a microphone
Chief executive of Investment NSW Amy Brown gave evidence earlier this week for a second time. (AAP: Bianca de Marchi)

Labor has said it would scrap the international trade roles, saying revelations in recent weeks have raised questions about whether they are delivering value for money for taxpayers.

“With our hospitals overstretched and teachers under-resourced, the Government has failed dismally to demonstrate value for money of its senior trade commissioners,” NSW Labor Leader Chris Minns said.

Mr Barilaro’s appointment has been put under the microscope for several weeks and is the subject of two separate inquiries.

He has since withdrawn from the position.

.