Test the pollies too
Our holier than thou politicians consider welfare recipients should be drug tested to justify their continued (below the poverty line) benefits but apparently it’s OK for our well-paid politicians to turn up for work too drunk to perform their duties.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
If it’s fair to drug test one class of taxpayer-funded recipient, surely it’s fair to test all recipients.
Obviously it’s time to introduce drug testing for all recipients of taxpayer funds, including our illustrious pollies. I won’t however be holding my breath.
Frank Smith, Oaklands
Let’s talk water
It was pleasing to see Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull paying a visit to Sussan Ley’s Farrer electorate this week. However, from the media coverage I have seen there does not appear to have been a lot of discussion about issues faced by the many food and fibre producers across the electorate.
I agree that issues on Mr Turnbull’s radar, such as energy prices and inland rail, are important topics which need to be openly discussed because they can benefit our economy and create jobs. So, too, can our food and fibre producers, especially if Mr Turnbull is able to get a better grasp on what they need to increase production.
There are so many wonderful possibilities and opportunities across our region, which boasts impressive agricultural assets, gravity feed irrigation systems, processing plants like the largest rice mill in the Southern Hemisphere … the list goes on.
Unfortunately, when Mr Turnbull was Water Minister a decade ago he introduced a Water Act which has been an unmitigated disaster, at huge cost to the Australian taxpayer.
What is even more unfortunate is that Mr Turnbull seems reluctant to acknowledge its failings and appears to be frightened of taking proactive steps to improve our use of water, possibly because he fears a political backlash from influential environmental groups.
If Mr Turnbull had taken time during his visit to the area he could have visited regions like the Murray, Murrumbidgee and Goulburn Valleys which have the capacity to feed people domestically and throughout the world, provide endless job opportunities and help get the nation’s debt back on track.
I hope that during his visit Ms Ley spoke to him about the failings of the Murray-Darling Basin Plan, and reiterated comments she recently made about how it has battered and bruised towns in her electorate.
Hopefully she also took the opportunity to tell him about the environmental damage that this plan is causing as it tries to force huge volumes of water through her ‘neck of the woods’, causing the collapse of the Barmah Choke, river bank slumping and erosion.
With political commitment we can protect our precious Murray River environment, as well as the food and fibre producers on whom the nation relies. At present that commitment is lacking. I hope that message was reinforced to Prime Minister Turnbull while he was in our region.
Alastair Starritt, Moama
Here’s a bright idea
Taking the position that an accident is more important than an act of running a red light, I would like to suggest a possible solution to prevent accidents. I believe this idea was tested and accepted several years ago but I'm not sure that it was in Australia.
Basically an intersection would need to be clear to prevent accidents. From data collected it was found that red light running was made generally within three to five seconds following the lights turning red.
The decision was to regulate all lights to be held on red for a further five seconds to create a “dead zone”, making an allowance for any possible accident to happen.
The addition of a camera could then be treated as a separate issue, and might not be required but could remain an option.