$81.5 million for New Cancer, Mental Health, and Heart Failure Services in Western Australia

The Morrison Government will provide $81.5 million to support Western Australians with cancer, mental health issues and chronic heart failure
These new initiatives will improve the lives of Western Australians in need, providing much needed support and hope.
Our strong economic management means we can provide record investment in these initiatives, Medicare, public hospitals and medicines, delivering more doctors, more nurses and more services to West Australians.
$44 million for West Australian cancer strategies
$25.1 million is being invested to help implement a cancer care strategy across rural WA.
This includes $9 million for new radiation oncology treatment services at Geraldton, WA.
The WA Country Health Service (WACHS) Cancer Strategy will be the first WA-wide coordinated approach to providing specialist cancer services in rural communities.
It is aimed at overcoming the inequity of access for country cancer patients in WA, increasing survival and improving the quality of life for country people diagnosed with cancer.
In addition, $19 million will be allocated for state wide genomic testing that will take the treatment of WA cancer patients to a new level.
This testing will benefit all WA patients diagnosed with cancer by using the patients DNA to personalise their cancer treatment plan.
It will enable earlier, more informed clinical decision-making, aligning patients with the best treatment for their disease from the start.
This funding is in addition to the Liberal National Governments $50 million investment in the Australian Genomics Cancer Medicine Program and the landmark $500 million Medical Research Future Fund Genomics Health Futures Mission.
$33.5 million for better mental health in Western Australia
The Morrison Government will invest $33.5 million in three new initiatives to support the mental health of Western Australians.
North Perth will be the location of a $14 million walk-in adult community mental health centre funded through the Morrison Government’s record-breaking $736 million mental health Budget measure.
This new centre, will provide much needed mental health support services particularly in times of crisis.
People will be able to walk in without a prior appointment and have access to treatment, advice, and support provided by a range of mental health professionals at any time of the day or night.
This is part of a $114.5 million trial of eight walk-in community centres around the country.
The Morrison Government is also providing an investment of $4.8 million to establish a new behavioural assessment unit at Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital Wanneroo to provide better support for people frequently presenting to the hospital’s emergency department with mental illness and drug and alcohol issues.
The funding will also support new comprehensive primary care hubs across existing general practices in the Wanneroo area.
Young West Australians with mental health issues will also get improved care and support in a new, dedicated 10-bed forensic mental health ward, through an investment of $14.8 million from the Morrison Government.
This new service will address a critical gap in mental health services in Western Australia – the need to ensure children and young people who are in trouble with the law and referred through the court system can get the mental health support they need.
The Liberal National Government was the first to designate mental health as one of the four key pillars of the health care system and is prioritising better mental health for all Australians by investing a record $4.8 billion in mental health this financial year alone and an expected $5.3 billion next year.
$3.8 million for new support for chronic heart failure patients
West Australians living with chronic heart failure will get improved support under a Morrison Government-funded trial of a new multidisciplinary care approach to this chronic disease.
The Morrison Government is providing $3.8 million to develop and implement models of multidisciplinary care for patients in two WA locations – one metropolitan, one country.
All of these initiatives are part of our plan to strengthen Australia’s world class health system.
We can deliver this record investment in health without raising taxes for hard-working West Australians.

New Mental Health Services for Young People and to Treat Eating Disorders

The Government will allocate $16.5 million to expand mental health services which will benefit the residents of Higgins.
A new headspace centre will be established in Glen Iris to support young people dealing with mental health challenges.
And a $13 million residential centre for treating eating disorders will be established through the South East Primary Health Network which covers the Higgins electorate.
One in four people aged 16 to 24 experiences some form of mental illness every year and three-quarters of all mental illness manifests in people under the age of 25.
“The new headspace centre will provide vital services and deliver innovative support for young Australians in Higgins,” Minister Hunt said.
Liberal candidate for Higgins, Katie Allen, said “I am committed to ensuring young Australians can get information, advice, counselling or treatment, when and where they need it.”
The headspace program aims to improve access for young people aged 12 to 25 years who have, or are at risk of, mental illness. headspace offers early intervention services across four key areas—mental health, related physical health, social and vocational support, and alcohol and other drug use.
Minister for Jobs and Industrial Relations, Kelly O’Dwyer, said “There are around 1 million Australians living with an eating disorder. Eating disorders are extremely complex illnesses, and have one of the highest mortality rates of any psychiatric illness – with anorexia by far the deadliest mental health condition in Australia and disproportionally impacting women.”
The Morrison Government has taken a leading role in tacking this issue and has guaranteed $63 million in funding for 7 residential eating disorders centres, and $7.2 million for the Butterfly Foundation and National Eating Disorders Collaboration to ensure the quality of care for those impacted by an eating disorder and their families.
As part of the national network, the Victorian centre will be established through the South East Primary Health Network.
The Government is prioritising better mental health for all Australians with a record $4.8 billion to be spent on mental health this financial year alone.
The Government’s strong economic management ensures the continued record investment of funding into vital health initiatives including mental health, life-saving medicines, Medicare and hospitals.

$14 million Adult Mental Health Hub to be Established in Townsville

Townsville will be the location of a $14 million walk-in adult community mental health centre funded through the Morrison Government’s record-breaking $736 million mental health Budget measure.
The new centre will provide much needed support individuals seeking help, particularly in times of crisis.
One in five Australians experience a common mental disorder each year and almost half of us will face some form of mental health problem during our lives. This is of particular importance to the Townsville community and its defence force personnel.
The Morrison Government will delver $114.5 million for eight walk-in community mental health centres, with one located in each state and territory to trial which model works best for the needs of their particular community.
Announcing Townsville as the location of Queensland’s centre, LNP candidate for Herbert, Phillip Thompson, said “I am delighted that our community’s advocacy for further mental health services has been acknowledged and rewarded by the Morrison Government.
As many people know, this is a very personal issue and I understand the importance of having easily accessible services.”
The centre will operate over extended hours. People will be able to walk in without a prior appointment and have access to treatment, advice, and support provided by a range of mental health professionals.
Minister for Health, Greg Hunt, said “In guaranteeing these centres through the Budget, we have recognised that Australia needs a comprehensive, inclusive mental health system that caters for everyone, regardless of their age, or needs. It’s part of our plan to deliver a comprehensive mental health system in Australia.”
The mental health centres will ensure that people are provided with appropriate immediate support, but are also connected to pathways of less urgent longer-term care by integrating with other local community services including GPs, local Primary Health Network (PHN) services, and state-operated services. The centres will also be able to assist people to access related health and social services.
Work on the design and branding of the national network is expected to begin later this year, with the first centres expected to begin operations in 2021.
The Liberal National Government was the first to designate mental health as one of the four key pillars of the health care system and is prioritising better mental health for all Australians by investing a record $4.8 billion in mental health this financial year alone.
This important announcement builds on several significant investment to support the health of people living in the Townsville region, including:

  • Greater hospital and health services and infrastructure, with $13 million for 33 additional beds at Townsville Hospital to help meet increasing demand and provide a new in-patient ward allowing for treatment closer to home and $9 million for a new Maternity and Neo-Natal unit at the Mater Hospital to improve important health services for residents and people in the surrounding Townsville region.
  • Better mental health support, for people living in Northern and Western Queensland impacted by the recent floods, including through telehealth, with an investment of $26.9 million.
  • More funding for preventative health, with $12 million for the Heart of Australia to support and expand mobile cardiology and other services, including a third mobile clinic to service Northern Queensland and the Cape.
  • Drug and alcohol services, including $700,000 for a new community residential withdrawal management service in Townsville and $5.9 million for the Salvation Army to build a 10 bed detox facility in Townsville and fund an additional 8 residential rehab beds.
  • Spinal cord injury, $24 million for a Queensland-wide program aimed at giving new hope and support to people living with brain and spinal cord injuries with a new rehabilitation centre developed in Townsville.

We are determined to keep Australians safe and well. But record investment in can only come from good economic management. Our Government’s strong economic management ensures that Australia can maintain its world-leading health system and maintain the vital services we need to protect and save lives.

Greens welcome Labor’s wage theft commitment, urge more action from Labor on minimum wage

Greens employment and industrial relations spokesperson Adam Bandt MP today welcomed Labor’s announcement that it would establish a new small claims tribunal to enforce orders for the payment of wages. Mr Bandt noted this announcement follows his own announcement that the Greens will establish and resource a $20 million dedicated Wage Theft Unit within the Fair Work Ombudsman tasked with identifying, investigating and prosecuting cases of underpayment and wage theft. Mr Bandt also called on Labor to go further in lifting the minimum wage.
“The systematic underpayment of hundreds of thousands of low paid workers has to stop,” said Mr Bandt.
“In the fast food sector alone, some estimates have placed yearly losses at more than $300 million.
“Labor’s announcement of a new body to tackle wage theft is an important step in the right direction, but we need to work out how the situation got so dire in the first place.
“We’re glad Labor accepts the minimum wage is too low, but the next government must back the Greens’ push to lift the minimum wage to at least 60% of the median wage.
“The Greens will move in the Senate to amend Labor’s IR laws to lift the minimum wage to 60% of the median wage.
“The Greens will ensure that when the next government’s industrial relations reforms reach the parliament, they tackle the critical issues, like wage theft and low pay, at the heart of our industrial relations laws.”

Homelessness – a rich country’s growing shame

It’s the social justice and equity issue the major parties aren’t talking about with their various marketing slogans featuring “a fair go”. And that is having a home, one of the most basic human needs.
While we talk about housing or shelter as a human right, as we should, people crave not just bricks and mortar but the sense of place and belonging. It’s why homeless people gather. Sure there’s safety in numbers when sleeping rough but we need each other and want to be together with others. Surely that is fundamental to a fair go.
These days we – and our governments – are increasingly failing each other and a crisis is upon us. More people than ever sleep rough, in train station tunnels, in parks and cars, on a revolving series of friends couches and floors even on beaches if they can. Over 120,000 Australians – the population of Darwin – are trapped in this needless hell. Increasingly these forgotten people are women and children. Youth homelessness is also on the rise. This escalating but largely invisible human tragedy has caught up significant numbers of military veterans. In this, one of the wealthiest countries on earth.
Disgracefully, Australia has no overarching program for preventing, reducing and dealing with the effects of youth homelessness. And we lag behind our global wealthy nation peers, many by some distance in addressing this tragedy of national neglect.
Once considered to be an inner city problem, homelessness is spreading into our outer suburbs and country towns. Homelessness is no longer rare but shamefully and sadly, close to it being a new, very wrong kind of normal.
The Together Party’s founder and Senate Candidate Mark Swivel grew up in inner Sydney and nearby beaches, familiar with homeless folk in Kings Cross, Woolloomooloo and at the backs of Eastern Suburbs beaches.
“These days I run Barefoot Law, a community legal clinic in Mullumbimby near Byron Bay, a town that now has the most expensive real estate in the country now with a median house price of $987,500,” he said. “Yet down the road we have a serious problem with housing affordability, rental stress and homelessness. For me homelessness is not abstract, I see it every week with our clients, many of whom have mental health challenges, little or no work, in lives torn about by on-going domestic violence. The results being that many of them have no home.”
Swivel singles out the chronic need for emergency housing for women escaping domestic violence and aggressive men, some of those with mental health issues
“One client Bill sleeps in his van in a car park on an isolated road. He has bi-polar disorder and struggles to keep a job or a spot in a share house going,” Swivel says. “He often smokes pot to manage his anxiety but ends up getting into minor scrapes around town. Nothing major but enough to see Bill in the local court and having regular run ins with the cops.”
“We got him back to the mental health team at the hospital who delivered proper treatment, and we helped keep him out of jail. But the fundamental problem is that Bill still didn’t have anywhere stable to live. In a competitive market for emergency accommodation, blokes can be a long way down the list. Bill still struggles and not having a home aggravates his condition.
“Homelessness is primarily related to poverty but not always,” Swivel said, noting that thousands of traumatised veterans come home to no home. “Yet we can find tens of millions of dollars to redevelop our National War Memorial.”
Homelessness should not be the new normal, or just part of somebody else’s life. The solution is not more CEO sleep-outs to raise awareness of the problem; while admirable, the problem has only increased since. It is government that must take an active role to build social and community housing.
Our governments have sold off housing commission properties en masse and not replaced them. We have half-baked under funded band-aids for the homeless when we really need major surgery in the form of an ongoing sustainable commitment to more public housing.
That’s why Together has earmarked $250 million in its Alternative Budget for social housing. The richest 10% of Australians who get tax breaks from negative gearing need to pay their share, countless millions that can be spend on social housing for our most vulnerable instead of beach houses for the well-heeled and inner-city high rises for middle class landlords to rent to young people who cannot afford a home.
The great Australian homeowner irony is that during the last generation property developers have grown rich, as have so many regular Australian homeowners due to the housing boom. Yet all the while the ranks of the homeless in our streets and towns have swelled. There is something very wrong with this picture.
Homelessness is a growing blight on our nation. Whoever is elected as the new government and must begin dealing with this issue from day one with policies to lead us back to an Australian when homelessness was rare and not the inevitable result of policy neglect an d bad decision making that has made poor use of our shared assets and resources.
Together is a new party but not a niche party and has a comprehensive policy manifesto https://thetogetherparty.org.au/manifesto.

Arts funding needs doubling to $3 billion a year to protect and enhance the national narrative – crucial for Australia’s future together

Australia has regularly styled itself as a creative nation. Yet it ironically turns to a well-worn sporting metaphor to make the point that as a country it “punches above its weight” in film, visual arts, literature, any number of musical genres including rock and roll, opera and even country.
Australia spends precious little on the arts: less than $1.5 billion per year. It’s a pittance and is the result of poor government, poor finance and poor business. Together believes the arts must play a leading role in our society and not be an underfunded policy extra.
Australia’s artists shine on the world stage thanks to the likes of Bangarra Dance and Back to Back Theatre. We have a growing role call of Hollywood royalty both in front of and behind the camera. Our opera singers perform at the world’s most storied opera houses. Several Australians are nominated for this year’s Tony (Broadway) awards. Our rock and pop artists top charts and sell out stadia Then there is ­­­Circus Oz, Circa and their soaring offshoots, multiple Booker Prize winners. It continues…
Most of these artists benefited from public funding for development, production, touring, education and support. Arts funding is an investment in the health of our society, in our culture and a national sanity check.
Together welcomes and supports Labor’s new arts policy. Its aims are laudable, especially in supporting indigenous art, companies and artists, diversity in the arts and by restoring much needed funding to the Australia Council after thoughtless, or even deliberately damaging cuts.
But Labor’s answers are too pat with too little extra funding and muted, timid ambition. Together believes that in the context of responsible budgeting Australia can and must be bold by doubling the annual allocation to the budget to $3 billion per year. Anything less is tinkering around the edges of a worn and outdated model.
Our key investments would include:
$500m per year in small arts organisations and individual artists, to overcome the bias towards funding established institutions and artists
$250m per year in touring capacity so Australian artists can connect with audiences here and overseas
$250m in infrastructure for indigenous visual artists and indigenous arts administration
Reinvestment of $250m in film for kids because that is where culture and identity take root – we must tell our own stories to our children.
$250m to support our music industry and festivals. We need to keep not just our cities and venues open, but our music culture in the regions
Significant investment in the brave new world of digital arts both for digital creation techniques and emerging art forms, and using technology to enable distribution for audience expansion.
Together’s initiatives are not unfunded pipe dreams. They can be fully funded by trimming our expenditure on submarines and other major defence contracts that has seen this country’s military spend go close to doubling the GSP percentage outlaid by Japan, Germany and New Zealand, as well as an overdue audit of massive outsourcing contracts for consultants in the public sector. An additional $1.5 billion per annum is more than manageable in a federal budget of $500 billion.
It has never been more important to support the arts as our social fabric is tearing, yet it has never been harder for artists to establish a career. The debate around arts policy and funding must be informed by an understanding of how little we invest in the arts, how narrow the spectrum of arts and artist we fund and how much we have to gain by being much more ambitious to promote and engender a collective celebration of who we actually are as a nation – who lives here, how they live and dream and the industries they work in. The rewards will be almost immediate and resonate for generations.
Listening to the current Prime Minister speak, landing on our shores for the first time or watching our election campaign, you would assess that sport in fact is culture. Sport is a big business and pulls in the big bucks in Australia.
Together loves its sport, we admire talented people pushing themselves and their teammates to impressive heights and it is very much part of the complex fabric of our young nation.
The creative arts are also big business and big bucks and most of those benefitting were once small companies or unknown performers who received a boost from the Whitlam government onwards. The arts are terrific for business generally, because the arts create jobs, supports families and communities of artists and there is further economic benefit for businesses that support them.
Yet the context and conversations around the arts has matured and so we say again, its time for the government to step up and meet the challenge that so many of Australia’s competitor nations in the west have been doing for some time now.
The arts collectively provide a pitiless mirror into which a nation can gaze – it helps us understand whether we are heading on the right road or have become lost on a byway to nowhere or worse; whether we are compassionate and encompassing of who we are collectively or whether we have left some of us out of the national narrative.
This is done, as it has been through the course of human history, through theatre of many kinds, film, television, painting, an ever-growing collection of musical genres, sculpture, multimedia performances, games etc. It’s time Australia recognised this history and stepped up to make the arts an integral and non-negotiable part of our journey to a better Australia.
A final observation is worthwhile: nations which are on a solid core of metrics above or at least slightly better than average have a collective tendency to have a vibrant, challenging and throbbing arts sector. This is no coincidence. It’s time for government in Australia to recognise that and act with speed and purpose.
Together is a new party but not a niche party and has a comprehensive policy manifesto https://thetogetherparty.org.au/manifesto.

Man dies following shooting at Bingleburra

A man who suffered a gunshot wound following a domestic incident in the Hunter region has died in hospital.
About midday (Sunday 12 May 2019), emergency services were called to Bingleburra Road, Bingleburra, following reports two men had been shot.
Police have been told two men – aged 35 and 28 – were involved in an altercation, where the older man sustained a gunshot wound to the chest.
The younger man fled the property and was located nearby, suffering a gunshot wound to the head, which is believed to be self-inflicted.
Both men were treated at the scene by NSW Ambulance paramedics, before they were airlifted to John Hunter Hospital, with the younger man in a critical condition and the older man in a serious but stable condition.
Yesterday afternoon (Monday 13 May 2019), the younger man died in John Hunter Hospital.
The older man remains in the same hospital in a stable condition.
Officers from Port Stephens-Hunter Police District continue to investigate the incident and a report will be prepared for the Coroner.

LABOR TO INVEST $750,000 TO DRIVE UNI PARTICIPATION

A Shorten Labor Government will invest $750,000 in two University of Newcastle projects that will drive greater participation in higher education, both regionally and nationally.

This election will be a choice between a united Shorten Labor Government which will reverse the Liberals’ education cuts and give young Australians the education they deserve, or more of the Liberals’ cuts and chaos.
Ms Claydon said a $500,000 investment would allow the University of Newcastle to develop a self-paced national program designed to provide a taste of enabling programs to prospective students.
“The University of Newcastle is a national leader in enabling programs, having provided more than 60,000 students with an experience of university, resulting in many becoming the first in their family to go to university,” Ms Claydon said.
“This four-week online navigator resource will be available nationally to give prospective students from a diverse range of backgrounds information about these alternate pathways to university.
“It will allow people considering higher education to understand the pathways available in order to improve the access, retention and educational outcomes of diverse cohorts of people.”
Ms Claydon said a further $250,000 commitment would support a pilot program offering important time with staff and support for regional enabling students at community centres in the Upper Hunter, Central Coast and mid-north Coast regions.
“It can be hard for students in rural and regional communities to manage the challenges of study, work and family life when they live so far from campus.
“This funding will boost student outcomes by allowing them to engage face-to-face with university staff closer to home.”
University of Newcastle Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Professor Darrell Evans, said the funding would create lasting opportunities.
“A university degree opens the door to so many opportunities in life, so the more we can do to improve access to higher education and provide the right support to students when they do go to university, the better the impact on our communities,” said Professor Evans.
“We need to ensure that we continue to provide opportunities and support all people to develop their capabilities, beyond schooling. These initiatives will help give those who may otherwise have thought university was not for them the knowledge to further their education.
“Additionally, this funding will also ensure that when people do enrol at our university, they are given the support they need to fulfil their potential.”
A Shorten Labor Government will also uncap university places and invest $3.2 billion into TAFE, university and skills training.
We need real change, because more of the same isn’t good enough. 
End the chaos. Vote for change. Vote for Labor.

Clean and Safe Water for Palm Island

A re-elected Liberal Nationals Government will invest up to $2 million to urgently address the unsafe water quality impacting Palm Island and examine options for a permanent solution to the issue.
Liberal National Party candidate for Herbert Phillip Thompson said that no Australian deserved to live without access to clean and safe water such as what Palm Island is experiencing right now.
“The water quality issue plaguing Palm Island has been the result of complete and utter neglect and incompetence by the Queensland Labor Government and needs to be urgently addressed.
“Today I am announcing that the LNP will deliver funds to the Palm Island Aboriginal Shire Council for urgent repairs and ongoing maintenance to identify and fix the immediate water quality issue and we will also examine a permanent solution to secure Palm Island’s water.
“This is a solution we have developed in partnership with the Palm Island Aboriginal Shire Council.
“Today’s announcement follows the deafening silence from Bill Shorten’s candidate, Cathy O’toole, who had the audacity to announce a $1.1 million water park for Palm Island but had nothing to say about the water quality issue.
“If Aboriginal people in Herbert needed any evidence of how out of touch Labor is then this is it,” Mr Thompson said today.
Minister Nigel Scullion said that it was extremely disappointing but not surprising that the Morrison Government has to step up to fix this Queensland Labor mess.
“Phillip Thompson is an absolute champion for the Palm Island community – as soon as this issue arose he was on the phone to me immediately to work up an urgent response so that Palm Islanders could have clean and safe water restored.
“Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Queenslanders know they have a genuine partner in the LNP who will listen to them, work with them and deliver for them.
Funding for this critical project will be delivered out of existing resources within the $5.2 billion Indigenous Advancement Strategy.
The funding will be provided to Palm Island Aboriginal Shire Council to engage a suitably qualified Indigenous and local firm to deliver the repairs in a timely manner on a value for money basis.

$40 million to Fix the Cooee Crawl on Bass Highway

The Morrison Government will commit a further $40 million to improving road safety and traffic congestion on the Bass Highway between Cooee and Wynyard.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison said people were sick of sitting in traffic and these local, practical measures would help people get home sooner and safer.
“By managing money and running a strong economy, we are able to invest record funding in road projects which improve the lives of so many Tasmanians in the North-West,” Mr Morrison said.
“We want to end the ‘Cooee Crawl’ by adding new overtaking lanes, upgrading key sections of the Bass Highway while ensuring the future safety of the Cam River Bridge.
“This funding will help North-West Tasmanians gets home sooner and safer.”
Deputy Prime Minister and Infrastructure Minister Michael McCormack said the Coalition Government had previously funded a $500,000 planning study in response to community concerns about increased travel time and crashes during peak times.
“The Bass Highway between Cooee and Wynyard serves as an important freight route carrying heavy vehicles to and from the Circular Head Municipality, the West Coast, the Port of Burnie and beyond,” Mr McCormack said.
“We will provide $40 million to fund improvements identified in the Study which bust the congestion being experienced by commuters and to guarantee the future safety of the Cam River Bridge.
“In partnership with the Hodgman Government we will implement these improvements to fix the ‘Cooee Crawl’ and deliver relief to motorists who have experienced the growth in congestion on the Highway.”
Tasmanian Infrastructure Minister Jeremy Rockliff has welcomed the Morrison Government’s new funding commitment.
“The Study provides a corridor strategy to deliver these much-needed improvements including better traffic signalisation, new overtaking lanes and junction and bridge upgrades to make the Highway safer and to reduce travel times,” Mr Rockliff said.
“Thanks to the Liberals’ strong economic management, we have seen development in our region and the expansion in the dairy, beef and other agricultural industries.
“This has also brought with it more heavy vehicles on the Highway and the Study has recognised the need for changes and upgrades, so this funding is vital to keep traffic moving.
“Our next step will be to fully brief the two key local councils, Burnie City and Waratah-Wynyard on the Report’s findings and to develop a program to work collaboratively with them to implement the corridor improvements.”
The $40 million investment in the Bass Highway is in addition to the $60 million investment that the Morrison Government has made to the stretch of highway between Wynyard and Marrawah.
In total, the Morrison Government has committed more than $110 million into the Bass Highway.