LABOR TO MAKE FURTHER INVESTMENTS IN CAIRNS HOSPITAL

A Shorten Labor Government will make further upgrades to Cairns Hospital so it can provide more life-saving endoscopies and better services to patients about to undergo surgery.
Labor will invest $2.3 million to build a third procedure room in the hospital’s endoscopy unit to keep up with rising demand for these important services.
Without this investment, waiting lists will continue to grow and people will be denied the timely care they need.
Labor will also invest $1.9 million to build a new Multidisciplinary Pre-admission Clinic – so that patients about to undergo elective surgery have all the services they need in one location.
Pre-admission services are currently provided from multiple interim locations around the hospital, resulting in a disjointed and inefficient service for patients during what is a stressful time.
These investments build upon Labor’s $60 million commitment to build a dedicated training facility at Cairns Hospital, and our $15 million plan to redevelop the emergency department.
Cairns residents will also benefit from improved cancer care under Labor, with new metastatic and lung cancer nurses to be based in the city as part of our $2.3 billion Medicare Cancer Plan.
As treasurer, Scott Morrison cut from health and hospitals in every budget he delivered, including $7.2 million cut from the Cairns Hospital. Last month as Prime Minister he locked in those cuts.
Labor knows that you don’t improve our hospitals by cutting them. We need real change – because more of the same isn’t good enough.
If you want better hospitals not more cuts – vote Labor.
If you want a fair go for all Australians – vote Labor.

LABOR'S PLAN FOR AUSTRALIA'S CREATIVE ECONOMY

A Shorten Labor Government will invest $85 million to boost Australia’s creative industries – supporting more jobs and more investment across our growing creative economy.
This election will be a choice between a united Shorten Labor Government which will grow jobs in our creative industries, or more of the Liberals’ cuts and chaos.
Australia’s creative industries are world-class – but more investment is needed to ensure that local industries get the investment they need to compete on the rapidly changing world stage.
The creative economy includes services across music and performing arts; web and software design; gaming; film and broadcasting; publishing and visual arts; architecture and design.
Creative skills are the backbone of many fast-growing industries, and creative employment includes employment in the creative industries, as well as creative jobs embedded outside the creative industries in the wider economy.
As the trend to automation continues, the demand for creative skills is expected to increase, so understanding the role and influence of the creative industries will be critical to positioning Australia to benefit fully from new technologies and sources of growth.
That is why Labor will invest $85 million in Australia’s Creative Economy to support start-ups, small and medium sized businesses and attract international investment to create the skilled jobs of the future in Australia’s creative industries.
Labor’s investment will include new investments of:

  • $60 million into the ABC and SBS for Australian screen content.
  • $25 million to reinstate the Australian Interactive Games Fund.

After six years of Liberal cuts and policy inertia, only a Labor Government will advance Australia’s Creative Economy.
Our creative industries have huge potential to deliver significant economic, employment, creative, cultural and other benefits for Australia and the world.
But there are worrying signs that our local sectors are missing out on the global expansion in the creative industries, which are projected to grow exponentially.
The Liberals have undermined and stalled Australia’s progress as a Creative Economy at every turn.
Under the Liberals, we have a copper broadband network that costs more and does less, our policy and regulatory frameworks have fallen out of date and key programs and services have been cut, including the ABC, SBS, Screen Australia and the Australian Interactive Games Fund.
Labor is proud that Australia has one of the most sophisticated creative sectors in the world, but we can’t afford to rest on our laurels as investment stalls, exports fall, our talent moves offshore and our neighbours outpace us.
Australia is well placed to benefit from the development of this job-generating sector, and Labor is taking a strategic and hands-on approach to ensure we do.
Labor will:

  • Convene a Creative Economy Summit to gather the best ideas to boost and accelerate Australia’s creative economy.
  • Formulate a Creative Economy Strategy 2030 to harness and facilitate the cultural and industrial benefits of Australia’s creative skills.
  • Reform the policy and regulatory framework for media and communications.
  • Convene a Taskforce to modernise Australia’s screen content settings.
  • Invest $60 million into the ABC and SBS for Australian screen content.
  • Invest $25 million to reinstate the Australian Interactive Games Fund.
  • Progress First Nations Media 9 Calls for Action in partnership with the sector.

This builds upon and complements related Labor commitments, including:

  • $10 million to build a STEAM Innovations Centre.
  • $3 million to help establish a National Centre of AI Excellence.
  • $3 million for Augmented and Virtual Reality Equipment for Curtin University.

Over a decade ago, 1,000 Australians converged on Parliament House in Canberra to discuss ‘Towards a Creative Australia’ as part of Labor’s Australia 2020 Summit.
Now it’s time for Australia to look to 2030 and beyond and harness the transformations occurring in communications and the growth opportunities across our creative economy and the globe.
Only Labor has a Plan for Australia’s Creative Economy because we will make multinationals pay their fair share and close tax loopholes used by the top end of town.
End the cuts and chaos.  Vote for change.  Vote for Labor.
Funding for this commitment has been included in Labor’s Fair Go Budget Plan, available at http://www.alp.org.au/labors_fiscal_plan

FEDERAL LABOR COMMITS TO MAJOR MELBOURNE ROADS PACKAGE

A Shorten Labor Government will partner with the Andrews Labor Government to build Victoria’s first fully separated high-speed busway from Doncaster Road to Hoddle Street as part of a comprehensive $3.5 billion infrastructure plan that will ease traffic congestion across Melbourne’s northern and south-eastern suburbs.
This election will be a choice between a united Shorten Labor Government, which will build the transport infrastructure Melbourne needs, or more of the Liberals’ cuts and chaos. We need real change, because more of the same isn’t good enough.
Federal Labor will make a $250 million contribution towards constructing the busway. It will include two separated bus-only lanes running alongside a widened Eastern Freeway, commencing at Doncaster Park and Ride and ending at the existing bus lanes on Hoddle Street in the City.
Buses will be able to travel at up to 100km/h, cutting commute times by up to a third.
The Doncaster Park and Ride will be upgraded and a new Park and Ride at Bulleen built. These facilities will include additional bus platforms, multi-level parking, pedestrian and cycling access, and cycling storage cages.
In addition, a Shorten Labor Government will provide $1.75 billion to help deliver the North East Link, which will complete the ring road between the Eastern Freeway and the M80 and connect the city’s growing northern and south-eastern suburbs.
Widening the freeway and constructing the busway will accommodate current and future traffic volumes and ensure the North East Link achieves what it is designed to do: take trucks off local streets and return those streets to local residents.
The project will create more than 10,000 construction jobs.
Federal Labor will also invest $1.5 billion to deliver targeted upgrades to key arterial roads across Melbourne’s northern and south-eastern suburbs, further easing congestion, improving safety and slashing travel times.
Over six years of cuts and chaos, the Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison Government has denied Victoria its fair share of federal infrastructure funding. Despite being home to a quarter of Australians, Victoria’s share of the federal infrastructure budget has fallen to as low as 7 per cent.
In contrast with the Liberals and Nationals, Federal Labor has developed a comprehensive plan that will ensure Victoria, Australia’s fastest growing state, has the roads and public transport networks that are fit for purpose.
By tackling traffic congestion, our investments will boost productivity, thereby laying the foundations for future economic and jobs growth.
End the chaos. Vote for change. Vote for Labor.

LABOR DECLARES WAR ON HOSPITAL WAITING LISTS

A Shorten Labor Government will invest $250 million in a Better Care Fund – delivering healthcare sooner and safer, and reducing pressure on public hospital waiting lists.
This is all part of Labor’s war on hospital waiting lists.
Public hospital waiting lists have been stretched to breaking point because of Scott Morrison’s cuts.
If the Liberals’ are re-elected, Morrison will cut another $2.8 billion from public hospitals, putting more pressure on hospitals and putting lives at risk.
Australia’s doctors, nurses and hospital staff are heroes who provide life-saving care to millions of people a year. But they are being asked to do more with less because of the Liberals’ cuts. This puts pressure on the quality and safety of services they can provide.
Labor’s Better Care Fund will help our hospitals by providing incentives to:

  • Work with primary health care providers to deliver care in the community – preventing and treating chronic disease early and reducing pressure on our hospitals.
  • Reduce re-admissions – improving discharge and follow-up care so that unnecessary re-admissions are avoided.
  • Reduce waiting times for specialist visits – so people treated or referred sooner, before illness and injury become more serious.
  • Improve quality and safety – rewarding hospitals that provide exceptional care (not just increasing pressure by penalising poor care) and ensuring that data is collected and used to improve care in all hospitals.

As part of our war on waiting lists, Labor will also:

  1. Invest $250 million to slash elective surgery waiting lists
  2. Invest $500 million to slash waiting lists for cancer patients
  3. Invest $500 million for an emergency department waiting time blitz.

Around 600,000 Australians a year go to hospital and end up sicker from preventable complications from procedures or adverse reactions to drugs.
The Australian Medical Association says our public hospitals are under pressure, with “increased numbers of deaths for admitted patients, high levels [of] complications [and] delayed care”. It has called for the Government “to fund hospitals to be better, not just busier”.
Labor’s Better Care Fund will develop specific incentives in consultation with doctors, nurses and staff, and agree these incentives in a new National Partnership Agreement with the states.
Labor will also task the new Australian Health Reform Commission and the Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care with advising governments on how to improve hospital care under this agreement.
You don’t improve our hospitals by cutting them.
We need real change – because more of the same isn’t good enough.
If you want better hospitals not more cuts – vote Labor.
If you want a fair go for all Australians – vote Labor.

Woman dies after two-car crash – Belmont North

A woman has died following a two-car crash in Lake Macquarie this morning.
About 7.25am, emergency services were called to the intersection of Avonlea Street and the Pacific Highway, Belmont North following reports of a head-on crash.
It’s understood a Ford Falcon travelling southbound and a Mitsubishi Colt travelling northbound collided.
The 50-year-old female driver of the Mitsubishi died at the scene, while the female driver of the Ford Falcon was treated by NSW Ambulance paramedics before being taken to John Hunter Hospital, her condition is unknown.
The Pacific Highway was closed northbound, with local traffic diversions in place.
 

Hey! Streets of our Town on show at library

Late 19th and early 20th century subdivision plans of Hunter suburbs feature in a new Newcastle Library exhibition that offers a fascinating look at our early neighbourhoods.
Around 70 hand-drawn plans used to promote land sales will be displayed from the archives of auctioneers Creer and Berkeley, the surveyor Alfred Francis Hall and the Merewether Estate.
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“Subdivision plans are a very visual and colourful way to explore the history of our suburbs,” Lord Mayor Nuatali Nelmes, who will open Streets of Our Town tonight, said.
“This exhibition offers the chance to take a look at early Cooks Hill, Merewether, Hamilton and other suburbs across greater Newcastle.
“The plans were designed to advertise the sale of land to home buyers and help them select their special block on which to build the lives that would ultimately form modern-day Newcastle as we know it. The plans reveal the early evolution of our residential suburbs across the greater Newcastle area.”
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Some 2,500 subdivision plans from the library’s collection will be digitised this year, making them searchable online at the Library’s Newcastle Collections Online
The subdivisions were created on land owned by the Crown, coal companies, private interests and individuals. Some were designed for the convenience of workers, close to industries and other employment, while others offered a seaside or lakeside lifestyle.

“All offered the buyers the opportunity to build their dream home,” Manager Libraries and Learning Suzie Gately said. “Auctioneers offered incentives to prospective buyers to attract people to the sales, such as free trams, coaches and trains. This ensured that buyers were at the right place at the right time to purchase their preferred block of land.”

Another exhibition, Ten Years of Newcastle Productions: the art of Trevor Dickinson, is being launched Friday evening.

The exhibition includes drawings, murals and zines of Newcastle’s iconic buildings, houses and places, some of which have now disappeared.
Dickinson’s murals hold a special place in the heart of many Novocastrians. The murals at the tunnel at Merewether and the Newcastle Museum have featured in thousands of wedding, Instagram and family photos.

The exhibitions will be launched at Newcastle Library on Friday 10 May at 6pm and be open until 20 July.

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$30 Million Program to Protect Indigenous Children's Hearing

The Morrison Government is providing $30 million over four years to protect the hearing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children through its comprehensive Hearing Assessment Program.
“Poor hearing has profound effects on a child’s ability to learn from and interact with others and can leave them isolated, disengaged and facing challenges at home,” said Indigenous Health Minister Ken Wyatt.
“Our Indigenous children have much higher rates of hearing loss than other Australian children, largely due to complications from middle ear infection, otitis media.
“Children with undiagnosed hearing loss tend to fall behind in school due to delayed speech and language development, which can have a devastating effect on their future employment opportunities and their chance of living happy, successful lives.”
The program will provide ear health checks and diagnostic hearing assessments, as well as follow-up treatment for children in the years before they start school so that they are able to hear in the classroom.
Minister Wyatt said that he has asked the Department of Health to work with Australian Hearing to develop delivery arrangements for the diagnostic hearing services.
Consultation with stakeholders during co-design for the program has identified Australian Hearing as the organisation best placed to provide the scale and quality of diagnostic audiology services required for this important program.
“Involving Australian Hearing in the program will streamline hearing service delivery for children and their families by providing timely fitting of hearing devices for those children who need them,” said Minister Wyatt.
“At the same time, other Morrison Government funded ear health campaigns will be strengthened to support the Hearing Assessment Program by providing follow-up specialist and allied health services.”
The Minister said that in some areas, primary health workers needed more training and experience in providing ear and hearing assessments, especially for very young children.
“As part of their duties, Australian Hearing audiologists working with the new program will provide on the job training to health workers employed in primary care clinics,” Minister Wyatt said.
“Over time, this will build health workers’ skills and help embed ear health checks in everyday health service delivery for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children.”
In addition, the Morrison Government is providing up to $200,000 in funding in 2018-19 to train health professionals in delivering tympanometry to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children.
The Hearing Assessment Program will support Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children to grow up with good hearing and the advantages this brings.
The program will be targeted at rural and remote communities.
This new investment brings Morrison Government funding for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander ear and hearing health activities to over $95 million (2018-19 to 2021-22).
Thanks to our Government’s strong economic management, $160 million has also been committed to the Indigenous Health Research Fund which includes a commitment to end avoidable deafness.

Investing in the Future of Sport

Female athletes across Australia will be the major beneficiaries of a new $70 million sports package from the Morrison Government.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the package would secure the future of Australian netball, establish a permanent home and high performance centre for the Matildas in Melbourne, add support for South East Queensland’s bid for the 2032 Olympic Games and improve nationwide facilities for aspiring Olympians and Paralympians.
The Prime Minister said the further investment in sport was on top of his Government’s previous commitment to upgrade hundreds of change rooms across the country.
“We know that participating in sport and physical activity improves the health and well-being of millions of Australians,” the Prime Minister said.
“But sport also brings communities together and when our athletes are on the world stage it brings our nation together.
“This is about backing netball as a sport that brings young women in and keeps them engaged and active, often for decades. Our support for the first ever International Netball Hub highlights what can be done with our plan for a stronger economy and it recognises Melbourne’s reputation as a sporting city.
“More and more women are playing sport and my Government has made a deliberate investment to provide better and more equitable facilities at our playing fields. We need to make sure women are supported from entry level as young girls all the way through to elite level competition, including in once male dominated sports.
“The Matildas’ new home in Melbourne shows we’re getting behind one of Australia’s fastest growing and most popular women’s sports. Melbourne is one of the world’s great sporting cities and our support for the Matildas’ new home shows Victoria is kicking goals.
“An Olympics has the potential to be a game-changer for South East Queensland and our government will be there every step of the way. A Queensland Olympics wouldn’t just take Australian sport to a new level, it’d mean showing off the Sunshine State to the world and an economic and jobs boom.
“We are the party best able to deliver a stronger economy which is the only way to deliver the investment in sport to support ever higher levels of participation and success.”
Under the new $70 million package, the Morrison Government would deliver:

  • $30 million to boost the number of young athletes playing netball, as well as providing the first ever International Netball Hub in Melbourne;
  • $15 million to establish a home for the Matildas in Melbourne;
  • Up to $10 million as an Australian Government contribution to support South East Queensland’s bid for the 2032 Olympic Games;
  • $11.5 million to support infrastructure upgrades at high-performance facilities across Australia to benefit our Olympic and Paralympic hopefuls;
  • $2 million to establish a Regional Events Fund which will support the staging of new elite-level sporting events in regional Australia; and
  • $1.5 million to improve our capability in finding our best para-athletes to compete on the world stage.

Minister for Sport Bridget McKenzie said the investment in netball, football, and our future Olympians and Paralympians was critical to Australia’s sporting future.
She said the Morrison Government was already rolling out the first ever National Sports Plan, Sport 2030, which outlines a vision for Australia to be the most active and healthy sporting nation known for its integrity and sporting success.
“The success of our Diamonds, Matildas and other national female athletes has encouraged a tsunami of young girls across the country to get more active,” Minister McKenzie said.
“We want to support these women in sport, from the grassroots level up to elite representatives – you can’t be what you can’t see.
“Women often don’t have access to appropriate change room facilities resulting in them having to get changed behind towels on the side of fields or in cars, and having to go home for showers.
“This is a major deterrent for women wanting to participate and to feel like they are welcome in clubs across many sports.
“That’s why in the past 12 months we have provided funding for more than 650 projects across the country including new change rooms, netball courts, upgraded playing fields and flood lighting.
“Regardless of whether you’re playing at the highest level or a grassroots level, we want all Australians to have the opportunity to be engaged in sport and physical activity.
“Our Government is committed to reducing physical inactivity among Australians by 15 per cent by 2030 – and we are determined to bring the health, social, cultural and inclusion benefits of sport and physical activity to all Australians.”
The additional $70 million investment builds on more than $2.5 billion which the Morrison Government has delivered for sport since being elected 2013.

2019 Supporting Women in Work

Thousands of women across Australia are set for a boost with a $75 million commitment from the Morrison Government for new mid-career checks to help them pick up the work they want or to work more.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison said many Australians in their thirties and forties were part of the ‘sandwich generation’ that had taken time out of their careers to start families, care for children and were often worrying about their ageing parents.
The Prime Minister said the Coalition was focused on getting more people the work they wanted with the new Mid-Career Checkpoint initiative set to support up to 40,000 Australians, particularly women, looking to return from time out of the workforce for caring responsibilities.
“Our new Mid-Career Checkpoint program is about backing the women and men who have taken family time and want to work or work more,” the Prime Minister said.
“Giving more people the choice and skills to get back into the workforce is key to our plan for a stronger economy.
“We’ve already overseen 1.3 million new jobs but backing women who have left their careers to take up the job of looking after their family, and who want to return to work, is key to achieving our ambitious target of creating an extra 1.25 million new jobs over the next five years.
“Many women in particular take a career break to start a family or care for older family members and are looking for that bit of extra help to get them back into the workforce.
“The skills and experience gained in those unpaid family roles is often not properly acknowledged, and women in these caring roles can sometimes lose confidence, as others have gone ahead at work and technology has changed roles.
“For those wanting the choice to return to work, we want to help them because tapping into their skills and talents is good for them, their families and the economy.”
The new initiative would start with a ‘checkpoint session’ to help people step back in to or step up their careers after two or more years out of the workforce to care for family:

  • Stepping back in: women returning to the workforce will be able to have an initial discussion with a professional who can help assess their needs and steer them in the right direction (for example, they might need assistance with interview skills, polishing up computer skills, professional development or advice on where and how to undertake specific longer-term skills training)
  • Stepping up: eligible women who have returned to the workforce for up to 18 months and are now at a point where they are ready to step up their career, but need a little extra advice to do so.

Minister for Women and Jobs and Industrial Relations Kelly O’Dwyer said the mid-career checks would give working women options based on their needs, interests and objectives.
“We want to help women to build their financial security by helping them to get the job they want,” Minister O’Dwyer said.
“Nothing gives someone more confidence, choices, independence and economic security than a job they love and thrive in.
“We want to ensure women with an interest in returning to the workforce have the advice they need to make that happen.”
The Mid-Career Checkpoint initiative will be targeted at women aged 30 to 45, but men aged 30-45 who have undertaken leave to care for family members will also have the opportunity to participate.
The Mid-Career Checkpoint initiative complements the Coalition’s:

  • Reforms to child care and early learning saving a typical family around $1300 each year
  • Extended access and flexibility for parental leave pay
  • Expansion of the no interest loans scheme to assist 45,000 additional women escaping family and domestic violence.
  • Career Revive initiative – a program working assist regional employers to develop action plans for their businesses to attract and retain women.
  • $18 million in grants through a women’s start-up fund, Boosting Female Founders, to increase entrepreneurship opportunities for women
  • Changes to superannuation rules, including concessional catch-up contributions, to boost super after taking time from the workforce for family responsibilities.
  • Capping fees and charges for low-balance superannuation accounts to ensure women retire with more savings and reuniting Australians with their lost superannuation savings through the ATO.

$9.6 million for Children’s Cancer

A re-elected Morrison Government will commit $9.6 million to ensure children with cancer have the best chance in survival through a range of clinical trials and research projects.
The funding from the Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) Emerging Priorities and Consumer Driven Research (EPCD) initiative will be provided to the Children’s Cancer Foundation to ensure that every Australian child has access to the world’s best childhood cancer treatments and to establish both Melbourne and Australia as global leaders in childhood cancer research.
$4.8 million will fund the Hudson Monash Paediatric Precision Medicine Program, which involves the establishment of a living biobank of paediatric brain tumours and solid cancers.
This includes lab-grown ‘mini-tumours’ which replicate the patient’s original tumour – to develop personalised treatments which improve survival rates and limit side-effects for childhood cancer patients.
Through this program 150 children diagnosed with brain and central nervous system tumours will also have their tumours analysed to identify clinically relevant molecular alterations and participate in clinical trials to identify the biomarkers and best treatments for each tumour type.
The remaining $4.7 million will fund the following research projects:

  • $637,500 for a research project to improve the effectiveness of treatment in children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia who respond poorly to or relapse following standard-of-care therapy
  • $1,177,055 for 2-year clinical research fellowships that will retain the next generation of oncologists in translational research skills and retaining Australian clinical research talent in this country
  • $176,927 for a project that will use human pluripotent stem cells to model the initiation and transformation of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia
  • $879,750 for clinical trial that will provide access to a new drug currently unavailable to Australian children, even on compassionate grounds, to improve survival rates.
  • $283,328 for brain cancer medicine trials
  • $180,066 for clinical trials that may allow safe and effective stem cell transplant from a patient’s parent and for paediatric and adolescent patients with high-risk malignancies
  • $200,000 to develop a rapid and cost-effective clinical tool to determine the medulloblastoma molecular subtype
  • $1,205,705 for a study that aims to understand relapse, improve residual disease detection and develop pre-clinical testing models to identify better therapies for high-risk neuroblastoma patients

Brain cancer kills more children in Australia than any other disease and, despite improvements in patient care and support, survival rates for brain cancer have remained relatively unchanged for the past 30 years.
Clinical trials are the gold standard in treating children with brain cancer. New therapies tested in clinical trials will, over time, contribute to improvements in survival rates.
This commitment complements the work done by the Australian Brain Cancer Mission.
The Mission was established in 2017 by our Government with the goal of doubling survival rates and improving the quality of life of people living with brain cancer over the next decade to 2027, with the longer term aim of defeating brain cancer.
This Mission is a true partnership between the Australian Government, philanthropists, researchers and clinicians, patients and their families and has to date achieved $124.7 million in funding.