Labor will hire an additional 5,000 teachers

NSW Labor Leader, Michael Daley, has announced today that a Daley Labor Government, if elected this month, will hire an additional 5,000 teachers across NSW.
Mr Daley made the announcement in Lapstone today with Shadow Minister for Education Jihad Dib, Member for the Blue Mountains, Trish Doyle and Labor candidate for Penrith, Karen McKeown.
By 2036, it is estimated there will be one million students enrolled in NSW public schools. Only Labor will hire the additional teachers needed to keep up with demand and provide the best opportunities for our children.
Labor’s plan for an additional 5,065 teachers includes literary and numeracy teachers as well as specialised education teachers.
Mr Daley said: “This announcement is about more one-on-one time for students, to provide them their best chance. The current Liberal-National Government is denying them this fair chance.
“If State Government is not about good quality education for our children then what is it about?”
It follows yesterday’s announcement that a Daley Labor Government will inject $2.7 billion over the life of the current State and Federal Gonski funding agreement to become the first state in Australia to deliver 100 per cent of the standard level of funding for every student.
Once implemented it will mean more than $1,500 extra every year for every student in NSW public high schools and more than $1,200 for every public primary school student.
Currently, the NSW Liberals and Nationals are providing just 70.8 per cent of the standard level of funding each student needs, short-changing every NSW public school student.
Mr Dib, said: “Labor has a strong history of supporting teachers in NSW. Labor increased the number of school teachers by 23 per cent during its time in office.
“The Liberals and Nationals have only increased teacher numbers by just 11 per cent over the last eight years.”
This further builds on Labor’s previous education commitments, including to:

  • Replace 1,000 ageing demountables across the state
  • Make TAFE free for courses in skill shortage areas
  • Ensure every child can learn a second language
  • Allocate $5,000 to P&Cs
  • Give free glasses to disadvantaged school kids
  • Air condition every school in NSW

Ms McKeown, said: “Only Labor is putting schools and hospitals before knocking down and rebuilding stadiums.”
Background

  • There are approximately 66,000 public school teachers in NSW.
  • The Department of Education (DoE) has found that 33 per cent of NSW public school teachers are due to retire within five years.
  • The DoE also predicts 164,000 additional students are expected to enter public schools by 2031 (and 200,000 by 2036). This is the first major increase in the school-age population since the Baby Boom of the 1950s.

 

Kidnap charge as inquiries continue into fatal fight – Hamilton South

A man has been charged with kidnapping and affray as investigations continue into the death of one man and the serious injury of another in Newcastle last week.
About 3.30am on Friday (8 March 2019), officers from Newcastle City Police District were called to Donald Street, Hamilton, following reports of men fighting in the street.
When police arrived they were told the men had left.
A short time later, officers were called to a home unit on Cody Street, Hamilton South, where they found the body of a 51-year-old man, and a 23-year-old man unconscious, suffering head injuries.
The injured man was treated at the scene by paramedics before being taken to John Hunter Hospital, where he remains in a serious but stable condition.
A 25-year-old man, who was also in the unit, was taken to Newcastle Police Station but released pending further inquiries.
Crime scenes were established at the scene of the street fight and the home unit, with Strike Force Delline created to investigate the circumstances surrounding the incident.
Following extensive investigations, detectives yesterday (Sunday 10 March 2019), charged the 25-year-old man with aggravated take/detain person in company with the intention to obtain advantage. affray, and reckless grievous bodily harm.
The man, from Hamilton South, was refused bail to appear at Newcastle Local Court today (Monday 11 March 2019).
Inquiries continue.

Labor lights up community sports before stadiums

Michael Daley and Labor today released a $95 million ‘Community Sports First’ package to invest into local teams, local facilities, communities and programs.

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Mr Daley said while the Berejiklian Government’s top priority was to spend $2.2 billion on stadiums, Labor’s ‘Community Sports First’ package would fund initiatives that benefit local communities.
This includes $40 million to install and improve lighting at sporting fields across Sydney. This will open up ovals, fields and courts that currently lie empty at night and during winter – while others often just around the corner are at full capacity.
An audit by Football NSW has already identified a large number of fields where capacity could be increased with improved lighting.
Labor’s package also includes $20 million to upgrade access to facilities for those with a disability and the elderly. This is much needed funding for many places in regional NSW, where often a simple ramp or pool hoist can make a life changing difference.
Michael Daley and Labor will commit $10 million for a Basketball Centre of Excellence in Western Sydney.  While basketball is one of NSW’s fastest growing sports with 55,000 registered players, all basketball courts in the Sydney Metropolitan basin are at capacity.
Australian players are now regulars in national and overseas basketball Leagues, such as the NBA, and we want more NSW youngsters to follow in their footsteps.
This follows Labor’s commitment to cover all six courts for Merimbula Basketball.
A Daley Labor government will allocate $15 million to improve netball facilities in Sydney and Country NSW. This includes $5 million to Southern Districts Netball to build an indoor netball facility, $5 million to deliver a multi court facility in Ryde and $5 million to create the only regional 32-courts competition field in Maitland.
Michael Daley and Labor will also provide $1million to Surf Life Saving NSW for a groundbreaking Adult Swim Safe program. This comes in response to the tragic drowning of nearly 30 people in NSW since July 2018.
This unique program will take surf lifesavers to communities that are over-represented in drowning statistics. Surf safety and survival skills will be taught in local aquatic facilities to adults who are not experienced in the surf or with swimming.
“While the Berejiklian Government gives major stadiums a golden hand out, Labor will give local sports a helpful hand up,” Michael Daley said.
“At the moment we have kids and sporting teams who can’t find fields to train on because of shocking overcrowding. Parents are often stuck in traffic taking their kids across the city because their local oval is full.
“You have Netball and Basketball teams playing on courts that are outdated – some have been crumbling for years.”
“And our unsung heroes – NSW surf life savers – who want to do even more to make our beaches safer, aren’t getting that little bit of extra help to do so.
“Our 77,000 Surf Life Savers do a magnificent job. What this program does is bring them into communities that need the extra help,” Mr Daley said.
“We are about Footballers, Netballers, Basketballers and more. This government is obsessed by wrecking balls,” NSW Shadow Minister for Sport Lynda Voltz said.
As part of the Community Sport First package Michael Daley and Labor have also recommitted to:

  • $2 million to a Neuromuscular Training Program aimed at reducing the incidences of ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) injuries in 12-25 year olds.
  • $1 million to establish a ‘Gymnastics First’ Fund to provide assistance to Gymnastics Clubs across NSW.

Labor announces largest investment in early education in NSW history

Michael Daley and Labor will extend funding for early childhood education to benefit every three and four-year-old as part of the single largest investment in early childhood education in NSW history.
Mr Daley and Shadow Minister for Early Childhood Education, Kate Washington, made the announcement today as part of a $500 million package for early childhood education in NSW.
Mr Daley said that under the Liberals and Nationals fewer than 20 per cent of three-year-olds receive state government funding for early childhood education.
Mr Daley said: “The experts tell us that early childhood is one of the most crucial periods for a child’s learning and development. It is the time when teachers can assess a child’s learning difficulty or other issues.   Labor will ensure that young kids in these vital years are given the best chance of success.”

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Ms Washington said: “Participation in a preschool program, whether in a community preschool or long day care centre, is the strong foundation needed for success in school and in later life. We’ve consulted with the sector and with experts to develop these policies. We are focused on improving quality early learning outcomes, increasing access, driving greater participation and reducing fees for families.”
Labor’s package will be jointly funded with Federal Labor and will make early education and preschooling a priority by:

  • Immediately increasing three-year-old funding in community preschools – doubling the Berejiklian Government’s proposed funding for three-year-olds in 2019-20. This will reduce fees and support services. Currently, three-year-olds are only due to receive one quarter of the funding that four-year-olds receive in community preschools.
  • Funding three-year-olds in Long Day Care centres for the first time, and then doubling the current funding per three and four-year-olds in Long Day Care centres – allowing providers to reduce fees, increase wages, and improve quality learning outcomes.
  • Investing $292 million into a ‘Little Kids Big Futures’ fund – driving a massive increase in early childhood education access and participation across NSW. This fund will support communities with critical service gaps, improve access for disadvantaged students, boost mobile preschool services in rural and remote areas, and invest in Playgroups NSW services as a pathway to preschooling.
  • Launching an $18 million ‘Specialist Early Intervention’ trial program – ensuring young children receive the support they need. Increasingly, early education services are crucial to the identification of learning difficulties, disabilities and other health-related issues. This trial program will boost access to allied health professionals such as occupational therapists, speech pathologists, and psychologists for three and four-year-olds in early education.
  • Starting a $10 million ‘Early Childhood Education Professional Development’ program – providing support and training for early childhood education teachers and educators.
  • Establishing an additional $15 million capital grants fund to address critical service gaps throughout NSW – increasing access and participation through additional and expanded services.
  • Boosting funding for assessment and rating experts by $4 million – slashing the Liberal Government’s dangerous assessment and rating backlog. The Government’s failures have led to early childhood education providers waiting more than five years between assessment and rating. Labor will rebuild confidence in the assessment and rating scheme, and support centres to deliver high quality education for students.

Labor has already committed to saving parents from the “double drop off” by ensuring all new public primary schools have preschool, long day care or out-of-school-hours services on site.

“Labor will always prioritise education, from preschool to school to TAFE. We won’t splurge billions on Sydney stadiums,” Mr Daley said.

The current Liberal-National Government has a long list of failures in the early education sector, with NSW having the highest fees and lowest participation rates in the country.
Labor will also:

  • Establish a Ministerial Advisory Panel with broad sector representation to meet at least quarterly;
  • Review and improving Before-and After-School Care and mobile preschool tender processes; and
  • Develop a long-term early childhood education sector road-map in consultation with the sector.

Labor will invest $395 million for St George Hospital upgrade with robotic precision surgery

NSW Labor Leader Michael Daley has announced that Labor will invest $395 million to upgrade St George Hospital and give it the capacity to perform state-of-the-art robotic precision surgery.

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Mr Daley made the commitment today alongside Shadow Minister for Health, Walt Secord, Kogarah MP, Chris Minns, Rockdale MP, Steve Kamper and Labor candidate for Oatley, Lucy Mannering.
As part of the hospital upgrade, the major trauma centre at Kogarah will receive a new ambulatory care unit, outpatient and day surgery services, a new day rehabilitation unit and additional subacute inpatient beds Mr Daley said:
“If Labor is elected in March, St George Hospital will get a full hospital upgrade with robotic surgery. Unlike the Liberals, we’re putting hospitals and patients before stadiums.”
In addition to the $385 million announcement, Labor will allocate an additional $10 million for robotic precision surgery at St George Hospital. The robotic surgery will focus on urology, general surgery, gynaecology, thoracic and ear, nose and throat surgery.

  • Benefits of robotic precision surgery include:
  • The required length of stay for patients is reduced;
  •  Studies have identified better overall health improvements;
  • Patients suffer less bleeding during surgery; and
  • Reductions in complications and infection rates.

The robotic surgery facilities would establish St George Hospital as the referral hospital for specific surgeries within the South Eastern Sydney Local Health District.
Mr Minns said: “Labor can invest more money into St George Hospital because we aren’t proceeding with the Liberals $2.2 billion stadium splurge.”
Mr Kamper said: “St George Hospital is under enormous pressure and that’s why we need innovative solutions like robotic surgery to help improve healthcare for local patients.”
Ms Mannering said: “Bringing robotic surgery to St George Hospital will improve patient outcomes, save money in the long term and help bring our hospital into the 21st century.”
St George Hospital facts St George Hospital has one of the State’s busiest emergency departments seeing more than 81,000 patients a year, with 37 per cent of patients waiting longer than four hours. As of September 31, there are 1,459 patients on the official elective surgery waiting list.
In the last reported quarter, St George Hospital is performing 12.7 per cent more surgery than at the same time the year before (1,317 surgeries in the third quarter 2018 compared to 1,168 in the same period in 2017). In the last year, there were 1,117 urology elective surgery procedures completed at St George Hospital and it is expected a portion of these would be completed through robotic surgery in an attempt to improve outcomes, reduce complications and reduce the length of hospital stays.
Currently, the median wait for elective surgery is 188 days with 10 per cent of patients waiting longer than a year. Emergency department patients at St George Hospital also face long waits, with 37 per cent of patients still in the emergency after waiting four hours or more.

Massive early education investment for regions

Michael Daley and Labor will extend funding for early childhood education in regional NSW to benefit every three and four-year-old as part of the single largest investment in early childhood education in NSW history.

This will include $292 million for programs such as mobile preschools in rural and remote areas and $15 million in grants to plug critical services gaps across regional NSW. Mr Daley and Shadow Minister for Early Childhood Education, Kate Washington, made the announcement yesterday as part of a $500 million package for early childhood education in NSW.
Mr Daley said that under the Liberals and Nationals fewer than 20 per cent of three-year-olds receive state government funding for early childhood education.

“Labor will always prioritise education, from preschool to school to TAFE. We won’t splurge billions on Sydney stadiums,” Mr Daley said.

Labor’s package will be jointly funded with Federal Labor and will make early education and preschooling a priority by:

• Immediately doubling the funding for three-year-olds in community preschools in 2019-20 – reducing fees and increasing support services.
• Funding three-year-olds in Long Day Care centres for the first time, and doubling current funding per three and four-year-olds in Long Day Care centres – allowing providers to reduce fees, increase wages, and improve quality learning outcomes.
• Investing $292 million into a ‘Little Kids Big Futures’ fund – supporting communities with critical service gaps, improve access for disadvantaged students, boost mobile preschool services in rural and remote areas, and invest in Playgroups NSW services as a pathway to preschooling.
• Launching an $18 million ‘Specialist Early Intervention’ trial program – boosting access to allied health professionals such as occupational therapists, speech pathologists, and psychologists.
• Starting a $10 million ‘Early Childhood Education Professional Development’ program – providing support and training for early childhood education teachers and educators.
• Establishing an additional $15 million capital grants fund to address critical service gaps throughout NSW – increasing access and participation through additional and expanded services.
• Boosting funding for assessment and rating experts by $4 million – slashing the Liberal Government’s dangerous assessment and rating backlog. The Government’s failures have led to early childhood education providers waiting more than five years between assessment and rating.

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Labor will appoint a new board of the SCG Trust

Michael Daley and Labor will require a better range of expertise and representation on the board of the SCG Trust and will replace the current board.
Labor wants to bring the Board from the 19th century into the 21st century and ensure it acts in the interests of all of the people of NSW and those that follow their respective codes.
A Daley Labor Government will replace the unelected members of the SCG Trust Board and appoint a new board that will better reflect the diversity of the sports loving people of NSW.
The board’s current plan to knock down and rebuild Allianz stadium is not in line with the expectations of the people of NSW and is not in the best interest of sporting fans.
The trust has colluded with the NSW government to spend $730 million of taxpayers’ money on an unnecessary stadium instead of schools and hospitals for the people of NSW.
The two board members who were elected by the SCG Members, Phil Waugh and David Gilbert will remain, as will former test cricketer Stuart MacGill.

Labor will hire 150 additional specialised education teachers and support staff

NSW Labor Leader, Michael Daley, has announced Labor’s plan to better support students with specific learning needs, including hiring an additional 150 support education teachers and frontline professional support staff.
Mr Daley was joined by Shadow Minister for Education, Jihad Dib, Labor’s candidate for Coogee, Marjorie O’Neill, as well as Delta Society General Manager, Hollee James, at Clovelly today.
“I want all kids in NSW to have the same chance at school and to have access to the support they may need,” Mr Daley said.
There are more than 134,000 students in NSW who require personalised learning and support because of a disability or other specific learning need. They make up approximately 14 per cent of the public school population.
Mr Dib said: “Whilst teachers will always try their best to teach and to ensure every student has the best education possible, a large proportion aren’t trained on how to best support a student with a disability or specific need.”

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Labor’s Every Child Counts policy will include additional training for teachers as well as improvements to the school travel program, a trial of therapy dogs in Schools for Specific Purposes (SSPs) and a dedicated team to support students with specific learning needs and disability to transition into post-school employment or further study.
If elected later this month, Labor will:

  • Employ an additional 100 Specialist Teachers to support students with a disability or specific education need while in mainstream schooling – allowing schools to run additional integrated and support model classrooms.
  • Employ an additional 30 Disability and Specific Learning Support Staff to work with teachers in schools – to further develop and support customised teaching and learning programs for students with a disability or specific needs.
  • Employ 20 additional Support Teachers Transition (specialists to assist students with disability and additional learning and support needs) in Department of Education District Offices – to work with students and families in SSPs to guide students into post-school employment and/or further study.
  • Pilot a program of therapy animals in SSPs – animal-assisted therapy has been proven to help students physically and emotionally and has been found to improve physical mobility, reduce anxiety, and improve social and emotional literacy.
  • Expand teacher training – so that all teachers have additional skills to better support students with specific needs.
  • Improve access to the Assisted School Travel Program (ASTP) – to reduce the unreasonable financial burden currently experienced by families of children with disabilities.

Acting Shadow Minister for Disability Services, Kate Washington, said: “A consistent message I’ve heard from families and schools, is that children with disabilities desperately need more support – Labor will ensure they have the support they need to thrive at school.
Mr Daley said: “Labor will put students and families first instead of spending $2.2 billion on stadiums.
Mr Dib added: “Today’s announcement is a Daley Labor Government starting point. Our long term commitment is to ensure every child has the opportunity to learn in the most inclusive education system we build.”

NSW Labor to deliver more than 4,900 extra health and hospital workers

A Daley Labor Government deliver an additional 4,900 health and hospital workers – including paramedics, allied health workers, security staff, cleaning and support staff – to support existing staff so they can provide the best patient care.
NSW Labor Leader Michael Daley made the announcement alongside Shadow Health Minister Walt Secord and Health Services Union NSW Secretary Gerard Hayes.
The more than 4,900 additional health workers will include:

  • 1,500 additional paramedics;
  • 2,240 additional cleaning and support personnel – and allied health workers including audiologists, nutritionists, occupational therapists, orthoptics and radiographers;
  • Filling 900 vacant staff positions;
  • 250 additional hospital security staff with special powers to detain and equipment including handcuffs; and
  • 15 allied health directors – one in every local health district – to coordinate health workers.

In addition, Labor committed to:

  • Keeping all public health services in public hands – and no privatisations;
  • Capping hospital parking fees for hospital staff at $10 per week – after current contracts end;
  • Removing the salary-packaging fee for health and hospital workers with a salary under $70,000;
  • Establishing an independent review to examine issues affecting health workers; and
  • Reviewing and examining NSW health and local health district purchasing practices to identify opportunities to improve patient care.

Under the Liberals and Nationals, the health and hospital system has lurched from crisis to crisis. It has been plagued with staff shortages, unfilled positions and dangerously low staffing levels across suburban and regional NSW.
In this term, the Liberals and Nationals have tried unsuccessfully to privatise five regional hospitals – including Wyong, Goulburn, Shellharbour, Bowral and Maitland. They only shelved the plans due to pressure from the local community, unions and local Labor MPs.
NSW Labor leader Michael Daley said that NSW Labor will be delivering the largest increase to hospital staffing in a generation.
“After eight years of misplaced priorities and neglect by the Liberal-National Government, our hospitals are under enormous pressure”, Mr Daley said.
“Only Labor will deliver enough health and hospital staff to fix the chronic under-staffing and under-resourcing of the state’s hospitals.”
The 1,500 paramedics will be deployed across the State – over the next eight years –to bring down emergency response times which have become the second slowest in Australia – after Tasmania.
Mr Secord said: “Make no mistake, the Liberals and Nationals are scrambling to undo the damage of their eight years of neglect of the health and hospital system.”
“While the Liberals and National splurge $2.2 billion on stadiums, Labor will invest in the health and hospital system. Labor will support doctors, nurses and health and hospital workers rather than splurging on stadiums.”
Today’s announcement builds on:

  • New hospitals in Sydney’s North West, Eurobodalla; and the Tweed;
  • Various hospital upgrades and expanded services across the State including St George, Wollongong, Nepean, Bankstown, Taree, Bathurst, Yass, Cooma, Goulburn, Milton-Ulladulla, Children’s Hospital Randwick, Delegate and Bombala;
  • A plan to fix Northern Beaches Hospital;
  • 5,500 extra nurses – under Labor’s nurse-to-patient ratios;
  • A drug summit;
  • 24 hour pharmacies;  and
  • Q Fever vaccinations.

Developers reheat Western Sydney Incinerator

Because Tanya Davies and the Liberals refused to act, Western Sydney is once again under threat from the developer of the toxic Western Sydney Incinerator

Next Generation, the developer of the toxic Western Sydney Incinerator is taking the Government to Court to get the incinerator approved.

Because of the NSW Liberal’s broken planning laws, the developer can continually reapply for approval, meaning under the Liberals this toxic incinerator will eventually be built.

Labor’s candidate for Mulgoa, Todd Carney slammed Liberal politician Tanya Davies for doing nothing to protect our community from this toxic incinerator.

“Western Sydney is not a dumping ground. But the Liberals are treating us this way. Why won’t Liberal politician Tanya Davies do anything to stop this toxic incinerator?”

Three weeks ago Liberal politician Tanya Davies accused Labor of scaremongering after their Leader Michael Daley visited Western Sydney to commit to an incinerator ban.

“Tanya Davies is the worst kind of politician, she doesn’t even fight for Western Sydney when there’s an election on.” Mr Carney said.

“If Tania Davies had any self-respect, she would apologise to locals doing nothing and finally get off her backside and act.”

If elected, A Daley Labor Government will introduce legislation within its first 100 days to once and for all ban the proposed Western Sydney Incinerator. Labor is the only major party at this election committed to stopping an incinerator being built.

“No incinerator means no incinerator. Labor will ban this project.” Mr Carney said.