Thursday, September 30, 2010

‘Deadly’ trip for Kempsey kids

Twenty teenagers from Mission Australia’s Kempsey Cultural Leadership Development Program recently travelled to Sydney to mingle with Indigenous Australia’s “best and brightest” at the 2010 Deadly Awards.

The Opera House event capped off three days of activities for the group. Among the highlights was a visit to Luna Park on Sunday 26 September.

The next day, the Year 9 and 10 students from Kempsey and Melville High Schools took part in a career orientation morning at AMP. Here they heard about career options and took in the spectacular views of Sydney Harbour from the top of the AMP Building.

The AMP Foundation-sponsored the Cultural Leadership Development Program, which rewards Aboriginal students with good attendance with activities such as rock-climbing, cultural camps and support in accessing traineeships. Students also learn practical skills such as first aid.

“Luna Park was a great experience,” said 15-year-old Shanaine on Monday night. “I had so much fun with everyone from the community.

“We went to AMP and had an amazing view of the Opera House and Harbour Bridge. I really enjoyed meeting the people there and hearing their stories.”

Later that day, three members of Mission Australia’s Volunteering Unit – Hailey Allen, Tanya Sarmiento and Sharnelle Magee – helped the Kempsey girls to glam up for the Deadlys.

Before entering the Opera House for the big night, the students – decked out in sharp suits and red-carpet dresses – lined up for harbourside photos. While waiting to collect their tickets some had the chance to meet Eels player Timana Tahu and George Rose from the Manly-Waringah Sea Eagles. However, Kempsey’s own Greg Inglis, who plays for the Melbourne Storm, was the man they were all there to see.

Fred Kelly is clearly another hero to the kids. ‘Uncle Fred’ coordinates the Kempsey Cultural Leadership Development Program and is assisted by Nathan Kelly, Mission Australia Kempsey Youth Worker.

“Uncle Fred helps me with my education,” said Brett. “He has also showed us history, taking us to see the canoe trees. He is also trying to help me get a job.”

Visit Mission Australia's Aboriginal & Torres Strait Island resources page for our Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP), the latest indigenous news, current affairs and policy updates.

Good luck, Roosters!

The Sydney Roosters have been great supporters of Mission Australia in 2010. Now clients and staff from our Sydney services are getting behind the team as they prepare for Sunday’s NRL Telstra Premiership Grand Final.

As charity partners in our Community Engagement Program, throughout the year Sydney Roosters players have mentored clients and visited our Community Services in the city and eastern suburbs.

Over winter the players donated their time to train Mission Australia clients from the Liverpool Centre, Harris Park Hostel and the Mission Australia Centre in Sydney’s inner city.

The Michael Project's Recreation Officer, Adam Bowden – who co-designed the City to Surf training schedule – said local support for the Roosters has been overwhelming.

“The interaction with the Roosters players our clients have had over the year has really endeared the team to our guys,” he said.

“This relationship, coupled with the generous gifts of Roosters paraphernalia provided by the club, has enabled our clients to feel a sense of inclusion in the festive build up to Sunday’s Grand Final.

“Strutting around in the team colours and boasting to all and sundry about them knowing the players, has really elevated the self-esteem of many of our clients. The sensitivity and compassion the Roosters players have displayed when interacting with our clients, has been nothing short of inspirational.

“What ever the outcome of Sunday’s game, the Roosters are all ready winners in my eyes.”

Mission Australia wishes the Sydney Roosters all the best for Sunday. Go Chooks!

Media Release: Mission Australia selected as Pin and Win charity partner for 150th Melbourne Cup

Mission Australia has been selected by the Victoria Racing Club’s Melbourne Cup Community Fund as its Pin & Win charity partner for this year’s Melbourne Cup Carnival.

Funds raised through Mission Australia’s association with the event and the popular Pin & Win promotion will go to two of the charity’s Melbourne services, Charcoal Lane and Urban Renewal, to help disadvantaged young Victorians.

Mission Australia’s CEO, Toby Hall, said being chosen as the event’s charity partner – particularly as it celebrates its 150th milestone – was a great honour.

“The Melbourne Cup is an Australian institution. Being selected as the event’s charity partner as it celebrates the 150th running of the iconic race is something we’re incredibly excited about,” said Mr Hall.

“The Melbourne Cup Community Fund has a proud history of supporting charities that seek to make long-term transformations in people’s lives and we’re grateful it has agreed to support our work.

“We hope all Melburnians will get behind Pin & Win and buy a lapel pin to help disadvantaged young Victorians during the Melbourne Cup Carnival.”

Victoria Racing Club’s CEO, Dale Monteith, announced that Mission Australia was selected as the official 2010 Pin & Win charity for its incredible work in transforming the lives of young people in need.

“Through the Melbourne Cup Community Fund, the VRC is committed to addressing social issues that exist in our local communities. Our partnership with Mission Australia will ensure its dedicated and visionary work continues to make a tangible difference to the lives of young Victorians,” said Mr. Monteith.

Based in Fitzroy, Mission Australia’s Charcoal Lane combines a restaurant offering a first class dining experience with a transitional labour market program designed to assist disadvantaged young people – mainly from Aboriginal backgrounds – develop the professional and life skills needed for a successful career in hospitality.

Mission Australia’s Urban Renewal provides employment and training opportunities across a range of trades to long-term unemployed people in Melbourne's south east and northern suburbs.

Pin & Win lapel pins can be purchased from October 1 to November 6 via www.missionaustralia.com.au/melbournecup or by visiting TAB outlets in Victoria. Pins will also be available on-course at Flemington on Melbourne Cup Carnival Preview Day (Sunday, 3 October) and all four days of the 2010 Melbourne Cup Carnival.

Entering Pin & Win not only supports Mission Australia’s services but puts the pin-buyer into the running to win over $145,000 worth of prizes to be drawn on Emirates Stakes Day, 6 November 2010.

First Prize – The Lexus IS 350F Sports valued at $85,000.


Second Prize – 1 million Skywards Miles, equivalent to 5 return Business Class fares with Emirates Airline from Melbourne to Europe, with a value of $52,450.


Third Prize – Hilton Sydney Deluxe Accommodation package, including airfares and accommodation in a Master Suite, valued at $7,500.


Fourth Prize – TCL package comprising: 55” & 32” full HD LED TVs, BLU-RAY player and a 115-litre bar fridge, valued at $4,626

Media contact: Emily Lehmann, Fenton Communications, (03) 9600 0006 or 0421 852 501

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Ron Paul on Eliminating the Fed

Rep. Ron Paul, (R-Texas), breaks down why he believes the Federal Reserve is turning America into a welfare state.

Media Release: Mission Australia launches National Green Jobs Corps project in Gippsland

Mission Australia will officially launch a new National Green Jobs Corps (NGJC) project in Gippsland today.

The 26-week environmental training program – offered in partnership with the Australian Government – offers young people, aged 17 to 24 years, a combination of work experience, skill development and accredited training to equip them with the skills necessary for future employment in green and climate change industries.

During their time on the project, a group of 10 young Victorians will have the chance to work on riparian revegetation and river stabilisation works, land regeneration through tree and vegetation plantings and mosquito, weed and pest control.

These projects involve working with conservation and community groups, Parks Victoria and East Gippsland Shire. Participants will also work towards a Certificate II in Horticulture at the Community College East Gippsland Inc.

Anthony Moore, Mission Australia’s Gippsland Regional Manager, said the team is looking forward to making a difference to the local environment and picking up skills for the future.

“We’re excited to announce this project that will provide more opportunities for youths to get experience in on-ground projects and continue building on the success of earlier projects this year.

“We also look forward to officially commending our recent graduates, who successfully undertook the program at the beginning of 2010,” Mr Moore said.

Date:  Thursday, 30 September 2010
Time:  10:00 to 11:00am
Where:  Mission Australia Bairnsdale Office, 68 Macleod Street, Bairnsdale.

Interview and photo opportunities:
  • Anthony Moore, Gippsland Regional Manager, Mission Australia
  • John McAulay, NGJC Manager, Mission Australia
  • Yasmin Aly, Parks Victoria
  • Ed Brown, East Gippsland Shire Environmental Team Officer
  • National Green Jobs Corps participants

Media inquiries:

Ron Paul The Healthcare Reform: A Huge Misdiagnosis

Ron Paul
Campaign for Liberty
September 28, 2010
This week marked six months since Congress passed the healthcare reform bill in what has become all-too-typical legislative chicanery. Those in power crafted a mammoth piece of legislation and rammed it through Congress under a dire sense of emergency. Insisting on time enough to read the bill was dismissed as dangerous and crazy in a time of crisis. We were told that if we really wanted to see what was in the bill, we would have to pass it first. I cannot imagine the founding fathers intended for Congress to legislate in this manner. I would think if a Member is not absolutely certain the entire legislation meets Constitutional muster, the default vote should be “no” in accordance with our oath of office.
But now that Congress has had six months to read the new law, there is a significant amount of buyer’s remorse on Capitol Hill. The more constituents learn about the law, the more angry they become. 60% of Americans are now said to be in favor of repealing the entire thing. Unfortunately, it is much more difficult to repeal a law than to pass a bill.
read article >>>>

heading up the cost

crescent head here we come.....hoping for sunshine and surf

photos will  be available soon

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Triple Care Farm opens its ‘place of meeting people’


After many years of planning, Triple Care Farm has a new multipurpose facility to help students through their journey at the farm.

Ninety guests, students, staff, volunteers, project personnel and supporters attended the 20 September opening of the Buralga building.

Mission Australia's Triple Care Farm (TCF) has been helping young Australians overcome homelessness, substance abuse, mental illness or acute behavioural problems for more than 20 years.

Buralga's journey began almost four years ago when Triple Care Farm’s management realised that the growing demand for the service, and the increasing diversity within the program, would lead to a critical shortage of space.

The new purpose-built facility serves as a space for workshops, a training area for hospitality students, a reception area for families and carers on their first visit, and a consultation space for assessment interviews.

The name, Buralga, was chosen in honour of the traditional landowners – the Gundungurra. Meaning “place of meeting people” in the local language, Buralga was recommended by Adrian Shafer, a Gundungurra Elder and historical researcher into cultural identity.

Everyone at Triple Care Farm would like to thank the many people who have been involved in the building of Buralga over the past 18 months. The new centre would not be possible without your generous support.

Many thanks to the Project Management team:

Rosemary Smithson CEO of the Property Industry Foundation; Alec Horley, Property Industry Foundation Project Manager; Kirsty Bower and Karl Alderson, who are Project Managers from Turner & Townsend; Nic Skulander, Project Manger from Octavius; Jannine Jackson EO of the Sir David Martin Foundation; Leonie Green: NSW/ACT Community Services Director for Mission Australia; Wendy Hildebrand, Mission Australia Operations Manager; Max Ellet, our National Property Manager and Anika Ekholm, the architect who designed Buralga.

Rand Paul 15 Points Ahead In Kentucky

Rand Paul 15 Points Ahead In Kentucky

Healthcare Reform: A Huge Misdiagnosis

Congressman Paul's Texas Straight Talk

“This week marked six months since Congress passed the healthcare reform bill in what has become all-too-typical legislative chicanery.  Those in power crafted a mammoth piece of legislation and rammed it through Congress under a dire sense of emergency.  Insisting on time enough to read the bill was dismissed as dangerous and crazy in a time of crisis.  We were told that if we really wanted to see what was in the bill, we would have to pass it first.  I cannot imagine the founding fathers intended for Congress to legislate in this manner.  I would think if a Member is not absolutely certain the entire legislation meets Constitutional muster, the default vote should be “no” in accordance with our oath of office…” 

Click here to read the full article:  http://bit.ly/aoc0pC

Alternate link:  http://paul.house.gov/

holidays in north balgowlah

Actually we should be saying northern beaches - freshwater on Sunday, Palm Beach on Monday and Manly on Tuesday - sunshine, warmth and great swimming.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Triple Care Farm wins top international award

Senator Moore and Gabriella Holmes
Congratulations to the dedicated team at Mission Australia’s Triple Care Farm on winning silver last week at The Mental Health Services Conference 2010 Achievement Awards.

Triple Care Farm won the award for excellence in Infant, Child and Adolescent Services. It was given in recognition of a comprehensive residential treatment program that uses a positive whole-of-life approach for young people with drug and alcohol and mental health issues.

The award was announced on 15 September at the Annual Conference in Sydney. It was presented to Gabriella Holmes, Service Manager of Triple Care Farm, by Senator Claire Moore, who is Senator for Queensland and Chair of the Senate Community Affairs Committee.

Established in 1989, Triple Care Farm (TCF) is a unique and successful residential rehabilitation and treatment program for young people experiencing a problem with alcohol or other drug use. The young people assisted by Triple Care Farm are often homeless, have a mental illness, have family problems, and problems with education and getting work.

The facility covers 45 hectares of farmland in the Southern Highlands of New South Wales and offers young people the chance to develop emotionally, socially and vocationally in a safe and secure environment.

The Achievement Awards are presented every year by the Mental Health Services Conference of Australia and New Zealand to recognise and encourage best practice, excellence and innovation in mental health service delivery. The awards have been presented annually since 1992.

The Mental Health Services Conference is the largest mental health and addiction services conference in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific. The conference aims to promote positive attitudes about mental health and mental illness, and to stimulate debate that challenges the boundaries of knowledge and ideas about mental health care.

Obama in drag?



She's not so "honored" by the president usurper, the fraud and foreigner, since Obama/Soetoro/Obama abandoned her to welfare. Dishonesty apparently runs deep in that criminal family.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010


Visitors to the current exhibition at the Manly Art Gallery on the history of the Royal Far West Hospital may have seen that Prime Minister Robert Menzies visited Manly on 14th March 1964 to open the George Moncrieff Barron building at the Far West Hospital. It rained heavily on the day, and he made his speech from under an umbrella held over him by Norman Drummond, whose brother, Reverend Stanley Drummond, had founded the Far West scheme. Sir Robert gave a quick speech, saying “I don’t want to miss my bus – I declare this building open.” Afterwards he was given a civic reception, and it was stated at the time that this was the first time a Prime Minister had visited Manly.
However, it wasn't. PM Joseph Lyons had visited the Far West Hospital in September 1933. And Earle Page, later to be the caretaker Prime Minister in 1939, visited Manly in 1923 with a delegation of MPs in response to concerns about the Quarantine Station. In 1908, before he became PM, William Hughes came to Manly, with a group of MPs looking at how best to develop North Head; and Edmund Barton lived in Manly for a year or two before becoming Australia’s first Prime Minister. So Manly has had its share of Prime Ministerial notice.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Ron Paul on Government Reform

Rep. Ron Paul, (R-Texas), discusses whether the new faces of the GOP can change the ways of the old.

Landing a second chance in life

In the year it has been operating, Mission Australia’s Soft Landing mattress recycling program has provided 15 jobs for people in the Illawarra region of New South Wales.

Among them is Graeme, who works full-time at the Soft Landing warehouse in Bellambi. He uses pliers and an angle-grinder to strip old mattresses down to their raw materials, which are then put to good use rather than going into landfill.

For Graeme, the job is not just about earning a wage and helping the environment – it represents a second chance at life after many years of struggling with a drinking problem, unemployment and isolation.

“Twenty years ago I was injured in an underground mining accident and broke several bones in my back,” he said. “My marriage broke up and I was left to raise two kids. Then I was caring for my dad, who had bowel cancer. When he passed away I hit the grog badly – I was drinking four litres of wine a day.”

“Due to the drinking, the way I was feeling about myself, I wouldn’t even collect my mail unless I was drunk. I was drinking myself to death…

“To improve my life I did a warehousing course at the Mission Australia warehouse and haven’t looked back since.”

In 2009, Graeme was offered a casual position within the mattress recycling project pilot, which tested the viability of the business model. This year he was offered a full-time traineeship in waste management at Soft Landing, and has been passing his knowledge onto his new colleagues.

The bed springs he removes from the mattresses go to scrap-metal recyclers. The foam is used as carpet underlay. The pulp fibre is used by a sporting goods manufacturer for punching bags, and the timber frames are used for timber mulch or donated to a men’s shed program where they are turned into toys. The coconut husk used in some mattresses is currently being tested as weed matting.

“There’s much more to this than just cutting mattresses up,” Graeme said. “It’s good to help people in the community who are down on their luck. It keeps you connected with different types of people and you realise that people aren’t all bad. You’re happy to come into work every day.

“I’ve got my life back,” he added. “Life is improving day by day. I’ll be here until retirement – if they can put up with me!”

This week, with the help of the Soft Landing team, Graeme regained his car licence. “I have dreamed about this day for years. I am very grateful. This is a big deal for me.”

The participants working at Soft Landing were selected as they had multiple barriers preventing them from entering the labour market. Ninety per cent of the trainees are Indigenous, three have disabilities and all are long-term unemployed. The program will also offer 20 work experience positions for job seekers looking to gain skills in asset maintenance or waste management.

Over three years, the Soft Landing program will divert 78,260 mattresses – or 2,739 semi-trailer loads – from landfill. It is one of several social enterprises being housed in the new Mission Australia Bellambi warehouse.

You can find out more about the project at www.softlanding.com.au or for the warehouse location visit this link


A new video has been released today featuring the program, which can be viewed below or at our Youtube channel




Monday, September 20, 2010

And the beat goes on - new video features the Missionbeat Bike service in Sydney

Missionbeat's latest service is mobilised by mountain bikes, giving outreach workers a greater ability to provide critical support to homeless people while also reducing carbon emissions.

The Daily Telegraph's new video And the beat goes on features the staff at work as they ride the beat in Sydney - view it now at this link

“The new Missionbeat Bike service will allow us to help more people sleeping rough in more places around the Sydney CBD and shrink our ecological footprint at the same time,” said Leonie Green, Mission Australia’s NSW State Director when the service was launched in 2009.

“People sleeping rough are often tucked away out of site, not only to try to maintain a skerrick of privacy but also to avoid getting drenched when it rains or suffer blistering sunburn.

“By putting our outreach workers on bikes, we’re ensuring people living around the streets and stairwells, alcoves and doorways of Sydney will have access to services offering basic medical care and safe accommodation.

"We’ll also have a much better chance of knowing if they need urgent care and we’ll have faster response times than by simply driving around the streets.”

The bikes, helmets and uniforms were purchased with a grant from the Lord Mayor Clover Moore MP Salary Trust.

Cr Moore and the Deputy Lord Mayor, Cr Marcelle Hoff, donate their Lord Mayoral and Deputy Lord Mayoral fees to the Trust, which has provided grants worth more than $650,000 to charities that help people rebuild their lives, promote animal welfare and support community environmental and sustainability initiatives.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Opinion: Time for fresh thoughts on welfare reform

Eleven years after the last major report into reforming Australia’s welfare system it’s clear we’re still stuck with an approach that doesn’t work – for the country or the individuals and families it’s meant to help.

Sure, the past decade has seen some positive reforms, but we still have too many jobless families, too many people on disability support, too many long-term unemployed people wasting away without fulfilling their full potential.

Through the McClure Report, published in 1999, Australia had the chance for root and branch reform of Australia’s income support system – but we squibbed it.

It’s now time to re-apply ourselves to the challenge.

But let’s not be satisfied with simply tinkering around the edges.

Why not recast a radically different income support system that works for people instead of undermining them?

There is no doubt that a fair Australia must have an adequate safety net that provides unemployed, sick, disabled and vulnerable people with the support they need.

But let’s not kid ourselves that too long a time spent on welfare – particularly for people who are physically and intellectually able to work – doesn’t have a dramatic impact on a person’s health and well-being.

A report released last week by the Australasian Faculty of Occupational and Environmental Medicine stated that long-term joblessness significantly increases the risk of heart disease, lung cancer and suicide.

And that suicide among young men out of work for six months or more increases 40-fold.

An unproductive life destroys a person and can spread like a cancer through their family and community.

Witness the destruction and decay passive welfare has created in some Aboriginal communities and suburbs on our metro fringes.

We all know this – governments know it, community agencies know it, the public senses it…and yet it seems we’re determined to persist with the system as it stands.

Take the Disability Support Pension for example.

Between 1996 and 2007 the number of people receiving the Disability Support Pension (DSP) actually increased from 500,000 to more than 700,000.

Growth in the number of DSP recipients was greater than in any other pension category in the decade to 2007.

It’s estimated that 20 per cent of this total – 140,000 people – are thought to be capable of work.

We can’t let this situation go on.

Recently Mission Australia was asked to report on our experiences of job seekers complying with their obligations to look for work while receiving income support.

These obligations are known as a job seeker’s ‘activity test’.

Our frontline staff told us that a significant number of job seekers were using multiple occurrences of illness as a reason for not looking for work but failing to provide the required medical certificates to support their claims.

And if that wasn’t enough, in a large number of cases where we brought such behaviour to Centrelink’s attention for action the matter was overturned.

In the six months between July and December 2009, Mission Australia submitted more than 20,000 reports to Centrelink – known as Participation Reports – for issues of job seekers not living up to their obligations.

According to our figures, Centrelink overturned 45 per cent of these.

Now, on some occasions, having our reports overturned is to be expected.

But 45 per cent?

It is reasonable that unemployed people on income support should be required to follow a set of simple rules when seeking work.

But the rules must be applied – and at the moment it appears they’re not.

I was pleased to see during the election campaign Labor commit to a tightening of the compliance regime as well as the potential to suspend a jobseeker’s income support on their first failure to meet their obligations.

In essence a sharp message to say ‘This is a responsibility that needs to be taken seriously’.

The government should also consider moving all job seekers not exempt from the activity test into community service or work experience within three months of becoming unemployed – not 12 months as is currently the case.

This would help avoid the loss of productivity and engagement that comes from passive welfare. It’s as much about keeping an individual’s work skills up as it is about maintaining their self-esteem and avoiding isolation and depression.

Finally, we need to focus on income support obligations that bolster families and children. Despite the naysayers, I believe linking the receipt of benefits to basic things like school attendance or the payment of rent can make sense.

To this end I think Jenny Macklin’s efforts with income quarantining should be supported.

But we also need to make sure such measures are complemented by well-resourced intensive case management and access to incentives such as matched savings and financial counselling.

A fair and well-managed income support system offers hope for people in need.

An income support system that continues to let people capable of social, economic and community participation avoid such contact does them – and all of us – a grave disservice.

Welfare reform is undoubtedly one of the most difficult areas of policy to address – but address it we must – not for my sake, or the sake of taxpayers, but the sake of the individuals, families and communities at the mercy of a system that seems determined to let them down.


Toby Hall is the Chief Executive Officer of Mission Australia

This piece was published in the Sydney Morning Herald on 20th September 2010


Ron Paul Texas Straight Talk 09/20/10 - Credit Czar



Are Consumers Finally Winning in Washington?

Congressman Paul's Texas Straight Talk

“This past week the administration announced its choice for the first credit czar at the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.  This bureau was created as part of the supposed Wall Street reform bill recently passed by Congress.  This new bureau, which represents nothing more than another layer of useless Washington bureaucracy, will be housed within the Federal Reserve-- one of the most anti-consumer institutions in Washington…”  

Click here to read the full article:  http://bit.ly/9Rpc9v

Alternate link:  http://paul.house.gov/

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Lee’s new enterprise

Two years ago, just walking to the letterbox was a huge challenge for Lee. She had spent five years suffering from brain lesions that caused MS-like symptoms such as blurred vision and fatigue.

“Some days I couldn’t walk, other days I couldn’t talk,” she said. “But I didn’t give up.”

When her illness went into remission in April 2009 it heralded a fresh start for the single mother of three.

“I turned 40 and decided to take a risk and do something with my life,” she said.

In August 2009 Lee started an eight-week New Enterprise Initiative Scheme (NEIS) Program through Mission Australia Employment Solutions. NEIS helps participants gain TAFE-level small business qualifications free of charge while receiving a government allowance.

After conducting market research, Lee identified a need for an eatery in Adelaide’s Modbury Heights that sold affordable, healthy food. With the help of one of our NEIS business mentors, Megan, she created a business plan and by December had opened the doors of Spud-a-licious.

Lee now employs her eldest daughter and is doing a great trade.

“NEIS gave me an overview of what I had to do,” Lee said. “It’s given me a new lease on life.”

Lee was recently nominated for the ‘NEIS Change’ award in the 2010 National NEIS Association Awards. This award recognises the achievements of an individual who has experienced the biggest turnaround in their life thanks to the NEIS program.

While Lee did not win this award, Mission Australia’s South Australian NEIS Manager, Warren Silverston, said the small business owner was certainly worthy of recognition.

“Lee has worked so hard to get her small business up and running. She’s faced some enormous obstacles in her life and to see her achieve success in her enterprise is terrific,” he said.

In 2009-10, 945 people took part in our NEIS programs. Of these, 700 started their own business.

Ron Paul : Christine ODonnell Can Win

Ron Paul talks about the chances of Tea Party candidates, including Delaware's Christine O'Donnell.

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Ron Paul is America's leading voice for limited, constitutional government, low taxes, free markets, a return to sound monetary policies, and a sensible foreign policy that puts America first.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

On More Stimulus Spending : A Bailout for the Public Sector?

09/13/2010 - http://www.RonPaul.com

On More Stimulus Spending


by Ron Paul

Faced with continuing economic decline and an impending election, the administration, predictably, is entertaining the idea of another stimulus package. To explain why the last one didn't work, adherents to the Keynesian economic philosophy are claiming that they actually did work - it just looks like they didn't because we don't realize how much worse off we would be right now without trillions of dollars of public spending. The last administration bought into Keynesianism just as much as this one does, unfortunately. Until we have leaders who understand that debt is not the way to prosperity, there will be no stopping runaway government spending.

While it is nice to hear about business tax breaks, the positive results of these tax cuts will be dwarfed by its negative effects. First of all, $200 billion or so in temporary tax cuts and credits to businesses are nothing compared to the $3.8 trillion in tax hikes that will hit the economy like a ton of bricks on January 1, 2011 if the Bush tax cuts are not extended by Congress.

Second of all, businesses are reluctant to hire and invest, not because they are looking for temporary credits, but because of future uncertainty; they simply don't know what the government is going to do next and how future government policies will affect decisions they make now. What new costs and regulations will be placed on them with healthcare reform and financial services reform? Will Congress convene a lame-duck session this winter to pass cap-and-trade and other destructive legislation? What will the cost of compliance be for hiring new employees, and will that force them to simply lay off anyone they hire now? Worse, will the government come up with fines or additional costs if businesses have to lay people off in the future? Right now, the safest thing for businesses to do is nothing. Until we regain respect for the rule of law and remove some of this uncertainty, I'm afraid none of these temporary promises, made right before an election, will do much towards any economic improvement.

The other glaring problem with this proposed stimulus package is that it couples tax cuts with spending increases, which makes no sense when we are already heavily indebted to foreign countries. We should be cutting taxes and slashing government spending dramatically. The private sector simply cannot bear the burden of our engorged public sector. In fact, one reason earlier stimulus programs did not result in any private sector growth is because large amounts went to the public sector. Indeed, the spending that the administration is now proposing arguably constitutes a bailout of the public sector and various union allies of the administration.

This administration is falling into the same dangerous trap we fell into during the Great Depression, as did the Germans leading into their hyperinflation of the 1920's. The temptation is to do something, anything, proactive to attempt to stimulate the economy, but history has shown us that governments cannot spend their way into prosperity. The best thing government could do is get back to its Constitutional limitations and let the economy stabilize, heal and recover without the crushing burden of government holding it back.

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Ron Paul is America's leading voice for limited, constitutional government, low taxes, free markets, a return to sound monetary policies, and a sensible foreign policy that puts America first.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Mission Australia launches new 'butterfly' campaign television commercial

Mission Australia's 2010 'butterfly' campaign TV advert has been released by Leo Burnett Sydney, the agency responsible for the previous ‘transform’ campaigns that also feature lovingly crafted butterfly wings.

The video will air in late September, but you can view it early at www.youtube/missionaust or here:



Picture a young man in well-worn jeans, sneakers and an army jacket wading across an urban creek, struggling to hold a boxy old PC monitor above the water. Next, we see him kicking-in a heavily graffitied warehouse door. Once inside the abandoned warehouse, he rummages through a mound of garbage formed over decades of neglect and picks up a twisted metal pipe.

It’s now night-time and the young man is foraging through a bin in an inner-city laneway. He inspects a crushed green soft drink can, before stowing it in his pocket. Next, at the abandoned warehouse, he perches on a high ledge then hurls the monitor to the littered ground.

A voice-over announces that over 44,000 young Australians under 25 are homeless.

Up to this point, the viewer may assume that the young man is a vandal or a vagrant until it becomes obvious that he is welding the metal scraps to complete a design. The final shot reveals the reason for his frenzied wandering – gleaming green butterfly wings he has created from the collected copper wiring, aluminium cans and PC. As the young man turns and walks away from his artwork, he is framed angelically by the wings.

The newfound brilliance of the wings represents the inherent potential of the young man (and the thousands like him) and that lives can be transformed with some help from Mission Australia.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Lottie Fevyer, a Manly champion







Historians of swimming in NSW may be interested in a recent donation to our collection of material relating to Miss Lottie Fevyer.
Charlotte Elizabeth Fevyer (Lottie), born 1898
[1], was a talented young swimmer who was the schoolgirl champion of NSW over 50 yards in 1914-15. She was an early female recipient of the Bronze Medallion of the Royal Life Saving Society in 1914. She was good enough to be mentioned in the same breath as Mina Wylie and Fanny Durack (pictured above), and frequently swam against them. She swam for NSW in matches against Queensland, and visited Queensland with the NSW team. Lottie was a member of the champion ladies team, Metropolitan, in the NSW championships, which beat off the challenge of Mina Wylie’s team (Sydney) and Fanny Durack’s (Eastern Suburbs).

Sadly, she was too young to attend the 1912 Olympics, and by the time of the 1920 Olympics, she had lost her edge, although she was still good enough to race against the then-world champion, America’s Ethelda Bleibtrey. She switched her interest to diving, and in February 1918 she came second in the Australian diving championships, behind Miss Lily Beaurepaire, (sister of Frank), at Brunswick Baths, Melbourne. In 1920 she went one better and became diving champion of Australia.[2] Her speciality was the ‘neat dive’, as in the photograph here, taken at Manly Baths. From time to time she took part in diving exhibitions as one of a troupe of talented divers coached by Len McCarthy.
She married Mr Arthur Wigney in 1922
[3], whose family had a well-known jeweller’s business on the Corso, but she died suddenly in February 1926. She is buried in Manly Cemetery plot H.398, close to her parents’ plot.[4] Her funeral was attended by many notable local sporting figures.
Two stained glass windows in St Matthew’s Church, Manly, dedicated in 1942, commemorate her father, Edward Fevyer.
Lottie’s brother, Edward William Fevyer was a keen amateur film-maker, and his home movies of life on Sydney Harbour have been deposited with the National Museum of Australia and the Maritime Museum.

[1] NSW BDM 13500/1898
[2] SMH 11 February 1918; 12 February 1920.
[3] NSW BDM 7853/1922
[4] Buried 18 February 1926, aged 27. There is a headstone.

Triple Care Farm enters Play Now Act Now arts competition


Play Now Act Now, the youth arts competition that uses creative mediums to discuss the issue of drug and alcohol addiction, has received a Short Film entry from the residents of Mission Australia's Triple Care Farm.

Their film, The Farm, sheds light on the journey of residents before, during and after their stay as they take refuge from drug and alcohol addiction while building the skills they need to transition into a safe, stable lifestyle.

View The Farm from this link, or read on about Play Now Act Now here.

Rand Paul : I oppose Obamas Tax Increase

Rand Paul on NwsMax TV September 13, 2010

On More Stimulus Spending

 Congressman Paul's Texas Straight Talk

“Faced with continuing economic decline and an impending election, the administration, predictably, is entertaining the idea of another stimulus package.  To explain why the last one didn’t work, adherents to the Keynesian economic philosophy are claiming that they actually did work - it just looks like they didn’t because we don’t realize how much worse off we would be right now without trillions of dollars of public spending.  The last administration bought into Keynesianism just as much as this one does, unfortunately.  Until we have leaders who understand that debt is not the way to prosperity, there will be no stopping runaway government spending…”



Click here to read the full article:  http://bit.ly/b1SQww

Alternate link:  http://paul.house.gov/

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Know an inspirational NSW volunteer? Annual award nominations now open!

The NSW Volunteer of the Year Award recognises the outstanding efforts of the 2.4 million volunteers in NSW and promotes the importance of volunteering to the community, and this year the Award is proudly supported by Westpac.

Nominations are now open for the:
  • 2010 NSW Volunteer of the Year (with special Awards for Youth and Senior of the Year)
  • 2010 NSW Volunteer Team of the Year
  • 2010 NSW Employee Volunteer of the Year

Nominate online or download a nomination form from www.nswvolunteerawards.com before midnight Thursday, 30 September!

Read more Mission Australia Volunteering news here.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Ron Paul on Social Security, Quran Burning, Rand Paul Poll

Ron Paul appeared on CNN's Situation Room today to discuss his positions on tax credits, Social Security privatization, the planned Quran burning, and the latest Rand Paul poll.
Ron Paul is America's leading voice for limited, constitutional government, low taxes, free markets, a return to sound monetary policies, and a sensible foreign policy that puts America first.

It's none of the government's business!

"It is not the business of government to make men virtuous or religious, or to preserve the fool from the consequences of his own folly. Government should be repressive no further than is necessary to secure liberty by protecting the equal rights of each from aggression on the part of others, and the moment governmental prohibitions extend beyond this line they are in danger of defeating the very ends they are intended to serve."
-- Henry George
(1839-1897) American political economist
http://quotes.liberty-tree.ca/quote_blog/Henry.George.Quote.3F9B

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

New video discusses Michael Project report - the most comprehensive snapshot into homeless men in Australia

Mission Australia regularly publishes snapshots, policy submissions and major reports on key social issues.

The latest report, Increasing our understanding of homeless men: The Michael Project is "the most in-depth and comprehensive snapshot of homeless men in Australia available" according to Anne Hampshire, National Manager of Mission Australia's Research & Social Policy unit.

"Getting an accurate picture of the men involved in The Michael Project – their homelessness history, their physical and mental health, their education and employment backgrounds, how many times they'd had contact with the justice system – was essential if we were going to be able to chart their progress," said Ms Hampshire recently.

In our latest video, Anne is interviewed about the findings in the new report and discusses the details behind the project - good viewing for anyone interested in the reality of life for homeless men in Australia.



View this video above or browse Mission Australia videos at our Youtube channel: youtube.com/missionaust

First woman surfer


Who was the first Australian woman surfer? Credit is generally given to Freshwater's Isabel Letham, who was introduced to the sport by Duke Kahanamoku, when the great Hawaiian visited Australia in the summer of 1914-15, and who persisted with the sport for many years after. But Kahanamoku showed other local girls the trick on the same tour, among them a young Manly girl named Isma Amor. Not only that, it appears Miss Amor had been surfing well before the Duke’s visit.
Isma Amor was born in 1898. Her father owned a thriving business engraving medals, and the family lived at well-to-do Addison Road, Manly. From a young age she was a keen swimmer.
Reg Harris, in his 1959 history of Manly Surf Life Saving Club, Heroes of the Surf states: “In the 1912-13 season a number of Manly L S club members decided to persevere and master the art [of surfing]. They included Jack Reynolds and Norman Roberts, Geoff Wyld, Tom Walker, a 13-year old boy named Claude West... and an outstanding woman surfer, Miss Esma [sic] Amor”
[1] (at which time she would have been 14 or 15 years old). The evidence is that surfing was established at Manly by 1912, and it would have been surprising if some of the bolder girls had not given it a try.
A press article from 1918 states: “When Duke Kahanamoku visited Australia two years ago [sic] he introduced the exciting sport of surfing on a plank, and among those he initiated into this trick was Miss Amor. The young swimmer represented NSW in a carnival in Brisbane several years ago, and was schools champion of NSW two years in succession.”
[2] The article notes that Miss Amor was in Melbourne accompanying the NSW Ladies’ team to compete in the National Ladies Swimming Championships.
In 1920, she married Angus MacPhillamy, who had been a Flight-Lieutenant in WWI, and had been severely injured in a crash in 1917. Their son Owen was born in 1922. The family later moved to Forbes, NSW, where Mr MacPhillamy was able to fly his own plane over the family property. Isma’s swimming and surfing career came to an end after her marriage.
She died in 1985.

The photograph shown here is from the Herald (Melbourne), 9 February 1918.


[1] Harris, Reg S, Heroes of the Surf, p53-54.
[2] Herald (Melbourne) 9 February 1918.

Ron Paul in San Francisco - Amazing Speech!

Ron Paul is America's leading voice for limited, constitutional government, low taxes, free markets, a return to sound monetary policies, and a sensible foreign policy that puts America first.

Successful Economic Policies? For Whom?

 Congressman Paul's Texas Straight Talk

“Last week, in the wake of another uptick in the official unemployment rate, the administration continued to claim that their economic policies were working, just not fast enough.  This administration inherited an unemployment rate of 7.7% and promised a peak of no higher than 8% if their policies were followed.  Not only does the administration have a funny way of ending a war, but now they claim their economic policies are successful.  For whom, I wonder?”



Alternate link:  http://paul.house.gov/

Nigel Farage shows EU's Barroso 'True State of the Union'

Ron Paul Texas Straight Talk 9/6/10: For a Strong Economy, Follow the Constitution!

Congressman Ron Paul stresses that to a return to fiscal sanity and strong economy, Congress must once again follow the Constitution!

Monday, September 6, 2010

Are you a grandparent raising children? University of NSW wants to hear from you!

In partnership with the University of NSW's Social Policy Research Centre (SPRC), and four government agencies, Mission Australia is seeking to learn more about the experiences of grandparents who are primary carers of their grandchildren.

In the last major count by the Australian Bureau of Statistics in 2003, Australia had over 31,000 children being raised by their grandparents, and the SPRC and Mission Australia are keen to find out how grandparent carers are faring now.

It is hoped this information will contribute to policies and programs that better support grandparents who are caring for their grandchildren.

If you or a loved one are a grandparent carer then why not participate in the survey confidentially online and let us learn more about your experience?  It takes no longer than 30 minutes and can be started from this link.

Alternatively you can have the survey sent to you to be completed at home. To order a copy please contact Christiane Purcal at the Social Policy Research Centre.  Contact details are provided below...

Christiane Purcal
Social Policy Research Centre, University of New South Wales
Sydney NSW 2052
Email:  c.purcal@unsw.edu.au
Phone:  02 9385 7830

Little Manly again


This photo makes an interesting comparison with the one posted a few days ago. It shows Little Manly in April 1965, from the same vantage point as the 1920 photograph. How much change has taken place. Subdivision has resulted in blocks of units being built, and the Eastern Hill is now a mass of housing. The boatshed at Little Manly is approaching 50 years old here. Still visible are the roof-line of Elim in Addison Road, and the large house on the right hand side, with its verandahs enclosed.

Why Big Bankers and Corporations Love Obama

Ron Paul : Why Big Bankers and Corporations Love Obama

Ron Paul is America's leading voice for limited, constitutional government, low taxes, free markets, a return to sound monetary policies, and a sensible foreign policy that puts America first.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Kelly's story

Aged only four years old Kelly* was diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder, a behavioural condition characterised by social isolation and eccentric behaviour.

By the time she was 17 Kelly had been hospitalised for anorexia and her agoraphobia – an anxiety disorder associated with fear of public places – became worse.

Diagnosed with depression, she began to self-harm and attempted suicide three times. She then turned to alcohol and developed an addiction.

But Kelly’s life took a turn for the better when she completed an intensive 12-week program at Triple Care Farm. With professional treatment from a psychologist, Kelly began to address each of her problems.

Since completing the program in May 2010 Kelly has learnt to manage her multiple mental health issues and has conquered her reliance on alcohol.

She is taking regular medication to control her conditions and receives ongoing counselling from a mental-health service in her home town.


Spring Appeal

Mission Australia launched the Spring Appeal in August to help raise funds for services that assist young people like Kelly who are battling mental health issues and substance abuse.

How do donations help?

spring-30

spring-60

spring-90



* Name and image have been changed to protect client's privacy

Obama dogs Ohio!

"Liberty cannot be preserved without a general knowledge among the people, who have...a right, an indisputable, unalienable, indefeasible, divine right to that most dreaded and envied kind of knowledge, I mean the characters and conduct of their rulers."
-- John Adams
(1735-1826) Founding Father, 2nd US President
http://quotes.liberty-tree.ca/quote_blog/John.Adams.Quote.9C15

Obama dogs America.

"Where's the Birth Certificate?" dogs Obama

The President usurper, the fraud and foreigner, the bastard from Africa, the con man from Kenya, reveals his shady character by refusing to be transparent with many important documents from his educational records to long form birth certificate. Emperor Obama must go!

Saturday, September 4, 2010

sunday afternoon in sydney

life this sunday began with breakfast at the wonderful blue water cafe in manly - on a sunny but windy sydney day - some of the family have gone to the manly rugby game - tonight off to collaroy cinemas to see 24/7 -
happy fathers day to R - hope you are all having a great day - make sure you check out the 24/7 blog site for a great new recipe! we are making it now!!!
xxx

Dr Rand Paul no more Stimulus

Rand Paul on Fox News Channel 9/4/2010 with Stuart Varney

Dr. Rand Paul discusses the potential of new stimulus from the Obama administration, possible alternatives, and the upcoming Election in November.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

WWI verse


Recently we were given a copy of a leather-bound edition of the poems of Longfellow. The book was inscribed “Jack Hardie, Manly, 9th April 1919”. Inside the volume there was a slip of paper with a drawing of violets and a poem, which runs as follows:

Scottish Australians

What are ye daein’, ma buirdly Scotch callants
Say what are ye daein’ sae far frae the front
Why are ye no getting’ honour an’ glory
Amang the brave lads wha are bearin’ the brunt.

Why should they fecht, while you’re playin’ fitba’
An’ hangin’ on trams like toads to a tree
I ken yer feet’s cauld; yer herts maun be frozen
Ye ca’ yersels Scots, but I doot me ye lee.

Scotland, I ween, ne’er gaed birth tae a coward
Her ladies were aye ‘mang the first in a fray
Het feet or cauld feet be sure never fashed them
Naethin’ but death ever kept them away.

Why are ye shrinkin’ this danger sae deadly?
Why are ye shamin’ the land ye ca’ Hame?
Oh! Could I rouse in yer bosom some manhood
Would that my pen could awake ye tae shame.

Dinna ye prize what yer forefathers focht for?
Are ye no Britons, the sons o’ the free?
Why dae ye dally? Yer country is callin’
“Come tae my help, boys, I’m waitin’ for ye.

Gang up tae the Barracks, nor wait tae be driven
We’ll send you away wi’ a gallant hurrah.
Yer name be inscribed on the roll call o’ honour
Belov’d if ye live, and bewail’d if ye fa’.

It’s likely that the poem was addressed to Jack Hardie. Australian War Memorial records reveal that a Jack William Hardy of 28 Sydney Road, Manly, enlisted on 9 May 1915. He was a carpenter, aged 21, and he entered the 19th Battalion AIF. He was wounded at Gallipoli, and subsequently lost his left leg, but survived the war.
The bad verse is typical of many of the patriotic poems published in the press in the early years of the War. It’s the work of someone for whom Scots was not the natural idiom. “Buirdly Scotch callants” smacks of the worst of the 19th century poetess. It’s lamentable to think that doggerel such as this in any way could have persuaded someone to join up.