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Australia

Kowanyama’s takeaway liquor license has good and bad sides for remote Cape York community

To legally buy alcohol from this Queensland pub you must blow in the bag – and you must blow zero.

Kowanyama, a remote town on western Cape York, was one of seven Indigenous communities in Queensland where prohibition was introduced in 2008.

In 2014, the local canteen reopened serving restricted amounts of alcohol.

This year the community has gained more freedom regarding alcohol, successfully applying for a takeaway license.

But that freedom is restricted.

Each person is limited to buying 12 mid-strength drinks per evening, and only from Wednesday to Saturday between 5pm and 11pm.

To enter the canteen patrons you must sign in, take a breathalyser test, and return a zero blood alcohol reading—even to buy takeaways.

A laminated sign hangs from a fence warning people not to bring alcohol on a premises in Kowanyama.
Some Kowanyama residents register their homes as ‘dry places’, with penalties for anyone who brings alcohol in.(ABC Far North: Mark Rigby )

They can then, for example, have four drinks at the bar and take eight home.

Producing a members or visitors card at the bar allows staff to keep tabs on how many drinks people have had, while customers are kept informed of their limit by a flashing digital display on the cash register.

A similar canteen has this month opened on the opposite side of Cape York, at Lockhart River — another of the seven communities where prohibition was introduced in 2008.

Venues on Mornington Island and at Pormpuraaw, on western Cape York, are also in the process of applying for extensions of their existing liquor licences.

‘Hardly anyone here’

Many in Kowanyama gathered for the annual Rodeo Ball this month, hosted at the canteen.

Thomas Hudson, President of the Kowanyama Sport and Recreation Association which runs the canteen, said the aim of the ball was to bring the community together.

An Aboriginal man dressed in jeans and a plaid shirt stands under a string of balloons reading 'Rodeo Ball'.
Kowanyama Sport and Recreation Association president Thomas Hudson spearheads the annual Rodeo Ball.(ABC Far North: Mark Rigby)

“For people to dress up and be proud of themselves because we don’t do that every day here in our community,” Mr Hudson said.

Attendance at this year’s event, the first since its inception where takeaway alcohol has been available, was down on previous years.

The steady stream of people buying from the canteen takeaway counter before its 8pm closure confirmed what ball attendee Clive ‘Smokey’ Gilbert suspected – that many were choosing to drink at home.

“There’s hardly anyone in the canteen here,” Smokey said.

“When no takeaways were on this pub used to be crowded but you don’t see that now, they’re always going home now.”

Two Indigenous men stand side by side under fluorescent lights in a bar.
Clive ‘Smokey’ Gilbert (L) and Kowanyama Aboriginal Shire Mayor Robbie Sands (R) attended this year’s Rodeo Ball.(ABC Far North: Mark Rigby)

Fellow Kowanyama resident Gwendolyn Dick said despite the below average attendance, the ball did succeed in bringing the community together during an extended period of sorry business.

“We had four deaths just recently, and another one in the last week or so,” Ms Dick said.

“It’s good to see all the families from in the community come together all in one because we often can’t during the sorry business and the funeral.”

Return of rights and responsibilities

Most in Kowanyama welcome the return of the canteen and of takeaway alcohol sales, including the community’s women’s support group.

Security providers and canteen customers said the increase in takeaway sales had resulted in a reduction in fights and anti-social behavior at the pub.

“It’s something good for the community,” Smokey said.

“It keeps them out of trouble and people enjoy their beers at home watching the football.”

Silhouetted figures bathed in fluorescent light in an outdoor bar.
Rodeo Ball attendance was down in 2022, with takeaway sales meaning more people are choosing to drink at home instead.(ABC Far North: Mark Rigby)

For Michael Yam, a former mayor of the Kowanyama Aboriginal Shire Council the resumption of takeaway alcohol sales at the community’s canteen is a return of the rights and responsibilities of the townspeople.

“It’s about time they gave us something back,” he said.

“It’ll probably minimize the sly grogging because, as we know, in our community there’s always opportunists that are going to do it.”

And he said there were benefits to people choosing to drink at home, rather than at the canteen.

“Some families take their drinks home so that they can be home with their kids instead of drinking in the club all the time, away from their little ones.”

Lockhart River Aboriginal Shire Major Wayne Butcher said that community’s newly opened canteen had been “14 years in the making.”

“It’s created 10 new jobs in the community overnight so it’s great to see a lot of young people working as crowd controllers, security or people serving alcohol behind the bar and preparing food,” he said.

“That’s the other side of the coin that we don’t get to look at too much or focus on.”

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Categories
Australia

Iris Capital awaits decision over push to expand its pokies empire in Alice Springs

In the backroom of an outback pub, a group of about 100 concerned locals have gathered to perform a rendition of the smash hit Blow Up the Pokies by The Whitlams.

Assisted by the local choir, community members are making their voices heard over plans to roll out dozens of new poker machines in pubs and hotels across Alice Springs.

“I’ve turned up because… I work at the hospital here in Alice Springs and I see every day how many problems our people have,” one attendee said.

“We don’t need any more gambling in our community.”

Hospitality giant Iris Capital has applications in for 60 new pokies to be installed in four of its newly purchased Alice Springs venues, including several where there currently are none.

The Sydney-based company has already expanded its gaming machine empire, having added at least 115 new pokies at Lasseter’s Casino since purchasing the Alice Springs venue for $105 million last October.

Two women stand side by side singing in a pub
Close to 100 community members attended the local pub to sing a rendition of “Blow Up the Pokies”.(ABC News: Xavier Martin)

Locals have taken up the fight, expressing concerns that adding more pokies will disproportionately affect some of the region’s most vulnerable residents.

A ‘perfect storm’

Anti-pokies campaigners have said the timing of the applications makes for the “perfect storm”.

In July, long-term alcohol bans introduced during the NT intervention in dozens of remote communities and town camps surrounding Alice Springs came to an end.

Frontline organisations, including the Central Australian Aboriginal Congress and the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons, have said they have seen a spike in alcohol-related serious injuries in the weeks that have followed.

Empty liquor bottles and cans lay in the dry Todd River.
Frontline organizations have said the ending of long-term alcohol bans makes for the “perfect storm.”(ABC News: Xavier Martin.)

Meanwhile, the use of the cashless debit card, which limits welfare payments being spent on alcohol and gambling, is set to be scrapped by the Labor government.

Campaigner and former gambling addict Roxanne Highfold said there were already too many machines in Alice Springs, a town which grapples with some of the highest rates of poverty, alcohol abuse and violence in the nation.

“To be honest, I worry about my people using the poker machines and falling even into more debt, and also what the long-term impact that will have on the community,” she said.

A woman talks into a microphone in front of a crowd.
Roxanne Highfold speaking at a community meeting about poker machines.(ABC News: Sam Jonscher)

“I would hate to see Alice Springs get to a point that every single pub has got poker machines, and that it takes away the recreational activities from the pubs, where families can go to enjoy a meal or enjoy other recreational activities.”

The decision on whether to approve Iris Capital’s applications rests with the NT’s Director of Gaming Machines, who, the government says, operates at an arm’s length from cabinet.

Gaming Minister Chansey Paech has been accused of “sitting on the fence” over the pokies plan, and has refused to comment directly on whether he has held concerns about the potential expansion.

Chansey Paech standing in front of microphones, with pokies in the background
Northern Territory Gaming Minister Chansey Paech is facing questions about more poker machines being installed in Alice Springs.(ABC News: Matt Garrick)

‘Cashed up’ companies in the gambling industry

There have long been concerns about the gambling industry’s ability to influence government decision-making through well-documented tactics such as political donations and lobbying.

Researcher Tony Brown has been providing legal assistance to members of the Casula community in south-west Sydney, where Iris Capital is in court making a similar push to expand its pokies empire despite pushback.

dr tony brown (1)
Tony Brown says the investment companies are opportunistic.(Supplied)

“We see these organizations moving in and their priority is unmistakably in terms of maximizing their profits, but we see very little government and legislative attention to the harm and consequences associated with the proliferation of pokies and alcohol outlets,” said Dr Brown.

Dr Brown, who has recently completed a PhD examining the regulation of alcohol and pokies across the country, said companies operating in the industry were typically powerful and politically connected, and tended to target low socio-economic communities.

“What we’re finding is that these cashed up, opportunistic corporations are really taking advantage of these desperate communities,” he said.

“They really are being made ripe for plucking.”

A hotel with palm trees eclipsed by a setting sun.
The Mercure Resort in Alice Springs is one of several venues Iris Capital has made new gaming machine applications.(ABC News: Xavier Martin)

Dr Brown said large gambling and liquor companies had over the decades “hijacked” law-making and regulatory processes across much of the country, flying in the face of politicians’ responsibility to work in the public interest.

“The role of government is to protect communities from outside threats and influences” he said.

“What we’re finding instead is that those industries effectively captured our democratically elected politicians and those institutions that they control.”

Across the Northern Territory, there is a cap of 1,699 pokies in operation for licensed venues, as well as caps for each venue.

However, no such caps exist in the NT’s two licensed casinos: Lasseters and Mindil Beach Casino Resort in Darwin.

A man stands in by a pool at a resort.
Iris Capital chief executive Sam Arnaout says Alice Springs is “undiscovered from a business perspective.”(ABC: Samantha Jonscher)

As the overall cap edges closer to its limit, there has been a spike in the number of gaming machine applications made to Licensing NT from just one in the 2021–22 financial year to eight since July (four of which are from Iris Capital).

As a nation, Australia has more pokies per person outside of casinos than anywhere else in the world, and holds the title as the country with the world’s worst average gambling losses at about $1,000 per adult each year.

Investment in the Territory ‘welcomed’

The NT’s hospitality industry peak body has thrown its support behind Iris Capital’s applications, arguing the company was being unfairly targeted.

“We welcome investment in food, beverage, accommodation, upgrades right across the Territory, and yes, gaming services is part of that,” said Alex Bruce, the chief executive of Hospitality NT.

posed headshot of man standing on a pub veranda smiling.  Top button open
Alex Bruce has staunchly defended a plan to install 60 new pokies in Alice Springs.(ABC News: Terry McDonald)

“There’s a lot of problem gambling that goes on in unregulated community card game houses, in the streets, in the public parks.

“People can sit at home and bet online and lose their house – we never see any focus on that, it’s always on the pub with the light on.”

Mr Bruce said the Territory had some of the best gambling regulations, pointing to a number of recent changes to the NT government’s Code of Practice for Responsible Gambling, including a mandatory online course for staff working in the industry.

Iris Capital did not respond directly to questions about its business strategy or the potential impact of its plan for Alice Springs, but said in a statement the company sought to use its newly purchased venues to their full “capacity”.

“Iris will look to spend significant monies to reposition and activate the venues to operate to their capacity in all areas. This includes gaming,” the spokesperson said.

A sign that calls for no more poker machines is taped to a pole
Alice Springs locals have organized several community events to push back against a plan to install 60 additional pokies in town.(ABC News: Xavier Martin)

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Categories
US

Jury in Alex Jones defamation case begins hearing testimony on punitive damages

Aug 5 (Reuters) – Lawyers for parents of a child killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook mass shooting began presenting evidence on Alex Jones’s wealth as they seek punitive damages on top of $4.1 million awarded by a Texas jury for the US conspiracy theorist’s false claims that the massacre was a hoax.

Forensic economist Bernard Pettingill on Friday testified on behalf of the parents of slain 6-year-old Jesse Lewis, who say they suffered years of harassment after Jones spread falsehoods about the killing of 20 children and six staff at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., on Dec. 14, 2012.

“He promulgated some hate speech and some misinformation but he made a lot of money and he monetized that,” Pettingill said, describing Jones as a “very successful man.”

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A 12-person jury on Thursday said Jones must pay the parents $4.1 million in compensatory damages for spreading conspiracy theories about the massacre. That verdict followed a two-week trial in Austin, Texas, where Jones’ radio show and webcast Infowars are based.

Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis testified that Jones’ followers harassed them for years in the false belief that the parents lied about their son’s death.

Jones sought to distance himself from the conspiracy theories during his testimony, apologizing to the parents and acknowledging that Sandy Hook was “100% real.”

Jones’ company, Free Speech Systems LLC, declared bankruptcy last week. Jones said during a Monday broadcast that the filing will help the company stay on the air while it appeals.

The bankruptcy declaration paused a similar defamation suit by Sandy Hook parents in Connecticut where, as in Texas, he has already been found liable.

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Reporting by Jack Queen; Editing by Howard Goller and Mark Porter

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Categories
Business

Australians have the chance to own an entire town and their own pub in East Gippsland just like popular show Schitt’s Creek

Australians have been given a once in a lifetime opportunity to own an entire town, including a charming historical pub nestled in Victoria’s East Gippsland region.

Coopers Creek was settled in the 1860s and has since been the site of copper and lime mining after not striking much luck digging for gold during Victoria’s gold rush.

The small town is set on 11 acres on the Thomas River and consists of 21 lots, all of which are up for grabs to potential buyers.

The peculiar listing has drawn parallels with popular tv show Schitt’s Creek.

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The show follows the adventures of the Rose Family who loses their fortune and takes up residence in the small town of Schitt’s Creek, which they bought as a joke during wealthier times.

Fans of the show or Australians wanting to own a piece of history now have the chance to buy the town of Coopers Creek, which at its height had a population of 250 people.

Mason White McDougall Real Estate expects the town may sell for around $2.5 to $3million, similar to the price of a single home in Melbourne’s Kew or Hawthorn.

Ian Mason, the Director of Mason White McDougal, said the town is the perfect place to live out the dream of starting a business or living off the grid.

“If you have ever wanted to own your own town or be the mayor of your own domain, this is the place for you,” Mr Mason said.

“Whether it’s setting up a tourism business or a desire to live off grid immersed in nature.”

The East Gippsland region is known for its stunning mountain ranges and is surrounded by beautiful bushland.

The town is a haven for outdoor adventures and therefore the region attracts bushwalkers, fishermen, kayakers and campers alike.

Mr Mason also advertised the towns stunning scenery and pristine natural environment as the perfect escape for the right buyer.

“Coopers Creek offers endless opportunities including a break from city life and a change of scenery in one of Victoria’s most pristine natural environments,” he said.

“Like the Rose family in Schitt’s Creek, Coopers Creek could be a life-changing move for the right buyer.”

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Categories
US

Mistrial denied as jury weighs damages against Alex Jones in Sandy Hook defamation trial

Aug 4 (Reuters) – A Texas judge denied Alex Jones’s motion for a mistrial on Thursday as jury deliberations summarized in a defamation case over the US conspiracy theorist’s false claims about the Sandy Hook mass shooting.

The mistrial request followed the disclosure during the two-week-long trial that Jones’s lawyer accidentally sent two years of the US conspiracy theorist’s text messages to the plaintiffs.

Federico Andino Reynal, an attorney for Jones, told Judge Maya Guerra Gamble that attorneys for the plaintiffs should have immediately destroyed the records. An attorney for the parents, Mark Bankston, used the texts to undercut Jones’ testimony during cross-examination on Wednesday.

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Jones, founder of the Infowars radio show and webcast, is on trial to determine the amount of damages he owes for spreading falsehoods about the killing of 20 children and six staff at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, on Dec. 14, 2012 .

Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, the parents of slain six-year-old Jesse Lewis, are seeking as much as $150 million from Jones and his company, Free Speech Systems LLC, for what their lawyer has called a “vile campaign of defamation.”

Heslin told jurors on Tuesday that Jones’ falsehoods had made his life “hell” and led to a campaign of harassment and death threats against him by people who believed he lied about his son’s death.

Jones previously claimed that the mainstream media and gun-control activists conspired to fabricate the Sandy Hook tragedy and that the shooting was staged using crisis actors.

Jones, who later acknowledged that the shooting took place, told the Austin jury on Wednesday that it was “100% real.”

Gamble issued a rare default judgment against Jones in the case in 2021.

Free Speech Systems declared bankruptcy last week. Jones said during a Monday broadcast of Infowars that the filing will help the company stay on the air while it appeals.

Jones faces a similar defamation suit in Connecticut state court, where he has also been found liable in a default judgment.

The Sandy Hook gunman, Adam Lanza, 20, used a Remington Bushmaster rifle to carry out the massacre. It ended when Lanza killed himself with the approaching sound of police sirens.

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Reporting by Jack Queen; Editing by Noeleen Walder, Amy Stevens and Howard Goller

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Categories
Technology

Apple drops mask requirements for most of its corporate workers – The Verge

People await the start of a product launch event at Apple’s new campus in Cupertino, California, US September 12, 2017. REUTERS/Stephen Lam

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Aug 1 (Reuters) – Apple Inc is dropping its mask mandate for corporate employees at most locations, the Verge reported on Monday, citing an internal memo. (https://bit.ly/3oJ3EQN)

This comes even as COVID-19 infections in the United States have been on the rise with the BA.4 and BA.5 subvariants of the Omicron variant accounting for more than 90% of infections, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention .

These subvariants have significant mutations from the earliest versions of Omicron and protection from vaccines wanes over time.

“Don’t hesitate to continue wearing a face mask if you feel more comfortable doing so,” the report quoted Apple as saying in the internal email. “Also, please respect every individual’s decision to wear a mask or not.”

Apple did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment outside regular business hours.

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Reporting by Kanjyik Ghosh in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu

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Categories
Australia

Kalgoorlie’s skimpy barmaids featured in new photographic exhibition

A photographer has shed some light on Kalgoorlie-Boulder’s famous skimpy barmaids in a new exhibition, which was 18 months in the making as she documented the nightlife in pubs in the historic gold mining city.

Known as Mellen, a pseudonym of her real name, the photographer originally from Sydney shares her anonymity in common with skimpies who typically work under an alias.

The scantily clad barmaids arrived on Kalgoorlie-Boulder’s pub scene in the 1970s and have since become part of the hard-working, hard-drinking culture of mining towns across Western Australia.

While one Kalgoorlie pub briefly flirted with the concept of male skimpies, or so-called himpies in 2018, the job has predominantly been the domain of young women working on a fly-in fly-out basis.

Most wear lingerie or bikinis and sometimes go topless, but all of the skimpies pull beers and chat to patrons to keep the amber fluid flowing.

As Mellen explains, the idea for her skimpy exhibition was born when she was hired as the house photographer for Kalgoorlie’s aptly named Gold Bar nightclub where she befriended many of the skimpy barmaids.

“It just gave me a license to photograph the girls working … with their consent of course,” she says.

“Then I started going to some of the other venues once I started to get to know the girls, follow them around and take their photos… I hadn’t seen many pictures of them around.

“It’s behind closed doors yet such a widely known thing about Kalgoorlie that I thought, why not meet some of the girls and see if they’d be interested in having their portraits taken?”

A woman pasting a black and white poster of a girl in lingerie to the wall
Photographer Mellen set out to tell the stories of some of Kalgoorlie-Boulder’s skimpy barmaids.(Supplied: Mellen)

More than money

Her photography work has garnered her hundreds of followers on Instagram, where her handle @nophotosofthegirls reflects the signs that typically hang behind the bar of every pub with skimpies on duty.

More than a dozen skimpies gave their permission to be included in the photographic exhibition, underlining the trust Mellen built over more than a year.

Each image in the exhibit has a QR code linking to interviews she recorded with the skimpies that detail some of their personal experiences on the job.

“There’s a lot of different stories to how the women have gotten into this profession,” Mellen says.

“The common themes were the camaraderie between the women, and of course the money, but there’s a lot of jobs where you can make a lot of money, so it’s got to be more than that, especially these days.

“Maybe back in the 70s when women weren’t allowed to work in the mines, but these days there are so many other elements — the self-confidence was another common trait.”

Authentic portrayal of skimpies

The exhibition is a mixture of documentary photography and portraiture.

Mellen says she did not want to portray the industry as glamorous, but as authentically as possible.

“I try and get a balance of what is real, not too glam, but also a nice portrait,” she says.

A woman in denim cut off shorts holding a dog against a white background.
Photographer Mellen says she set out to tell the stories of the women as authentically as possible.(Supplied: Mellen)

“I love the one-on-one interaction of taking a formal portrait, but to be able to capture what’s going on is also a pretty amazing privilege.”

The project has also sparked Mellen’s interest in the history surrounding skimpies in a city that was home to Australia’s biggest gold rush in 1893.

“I have been looking at the history while doing the project, just to try and get a bit more depth of my understanding so I could represent it in a well-rounded way,” she says.

“I am from Sydney and we don’t have skimpies over there, so it was just something that stuck out as a bit unusual for so many venues to have skimpy barmaids here.

“I had been living here a year before I stepped foot in a pub … we have rough and tumble pubs in Sydney, but I didn’t find it [skimpies] jarring at all.”

The exhibition at Kalgoorlie’s Black Crow Studios is open until August 14.

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