Ballarat on track for Melbourne link

Ballarat will get a direct rail line to Melbourne as part of the Regional Rail Link being funded through the Victorian budget, which was announced yesterday.

A total of $4.3 billion has been allocated to the Regional Rail Link, which is the single biggest project in the state budget.

The project will create stand-alone tracks to Melbourne from Bendigo, Geelong and Ballarat.

Ballarat council’s chief executive, Anthony Schink, says the investment is needed to help Ballarat cope with population growth.

“The intention of linking the regional centres with Melbourne is clearly a recognition of the growth that we are experiencing,” he said.

Mr Schink says the line will help to make the fast-train service even quicker.

“What we’ve seen is investment in the fast train, investment in improving the infrastructure to get people to and from Melbourne quicker,” he said.

“But the blockage has always been the lack of dedicated lines when the trains hit the metro system.”

The budget also includes $2 million for intersection upgrades on the Ballarat to Buninyong Road at Mt Clear.

Health boost

Coleraine hospital in the state’s south-west has been secured in the budget and a new $25.2 million will be built in the town.

The Western District Health Service will contribute a further $600,000.

The health service’s chief executive, Jim Fletcher, says the hospital will include 10 new acute patient beds, 29 residential beds and a community health clinic.

“The tight-knit community will be over the moon with respect to this announcement,” he said.

“It is a great boost for Coleraine and what it does is ensure that they will have a health presence in their township for 50 years and beyond.”

Two western Victorian primary schools have also had their futures secured in the budget.

The Halls Gap and Woady Yaloak primary schools are two of six that will share in $10.5 million.

Woady Yaloak’s principal, Alan Campbell, says the money will help redevelop the ageing Smythesdale campus.

“In recent years the nature of teaching has changed – we’re much more flexible in the way we use space as part of our teaching methodology now,” he said.

“By adding these modern teaching spaces we’ll be able to provide a much more invigorating learning experience for our kids.”

A new police station at Daylesford has been allocated $2 million.

Highway loses out

But the Colac-Otway Council is shocked the budget contained no funding to upgrade the western section of the Princes Highway.

The G21 group of south-west Victorian councils had asked the Government to upgrade and duplicate the highway from Geelong to the South Australian border.

The budget included funding to upgrade the highway’s Gippsland section.

The Colac-Otway Mayor, Lyn Russell, says she expected the western part would be included.

“We were hoping it would be in this budget and we’ll be asking the question why it isn’t,” she said.

“It’s a very important transport link and we do need it.

“It’s not only for safety but the road has deteriorated over the years and so we’ll need to look at it and we’ll need to know why it wasn’t funded.”

More infrastructure sought to manage regional growth

The chief executive of the Ararat Rural City Council, Steven Chapple, says regional Victoria is well placed to absorb the growing population.

Australia’s population is tipped to boom to more than 30 million people during the coming decades.

Mr Chapple says governments need to invest more in infrastructure and services like roads, rail and health, to cope with the extra residents.

He says that with responsible action from the government, country Victoria is in an excellent position to grow.

Roxon defends no cancer centre funding

Federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon has defended the Government’s decision not to fund a cancer centre in Albury-Wodonga.

The Government instead announced $6.5 million for an accommodation facility and a diagnostic scanner.

But the Border Cancer Network wanted money to build a cancer centre that would give country people better access to treatment.

Ms Roxon says there could be funding opportunities under other health programs.

“Well certainly if they talk to communities in Ballarat or Gippsland or elsewhere, often work is done over many, many years to be able to put forward applications that might comply with future programs,” she said.

Bushfire royal commission told of understaffing

The Royal Commission into Black Saturday has heard there was a shortage of experienced incident controllers during the first catastrophic fire danger rating in the Wimmera in January.

The commission heard on the first code red day in the Wimmera, on January 11, Horsham’s control centre was found to be fully staffed and exceeding its required preparations.

But the Country Fire Authority’s (CFA) John Haynes told the hearing that Ararat’s centre was understaffed, reaching only six staff, despite requiring at least eight.

The commission heard Ararat, Casterton and Hamilton were under-prepared and without the most experienced controllers because upgrades to their facilities had not been completed.

The CFA said there was a general shortage of level three operators across the state, as many were tied up in lower regional roles.

The CFA will begin training more regional officers at the end of April, in order to free up more experienced controllers for leadership positions.

Barrister fined over false documents

A former Mildura barrister has avoided a conviction for forging his wife’s signature to make and use false documents.

Ballarat Magistrates Court, in central Victoria, heard Graeme Jackson, 56, set up a company in 1992 to act as a family trust.

He made his then wife Kerryn the director and secretary of the company but did not tell her.

Between 1994 and 2001 he received her tax returns, forged her signature and deposited them on the family home loan.

Jackson pleaded guilty to two counts of making a false document and five counts of using a false document.

The prosecution urged magistrate Peter Couzens to fine and convict Jackson, but his defence lawyer, Ian Hills QC, said his high profile client had already suffered enough through humiliation.

Mr Couzens fined Jackson $5,000 without conviction.

Uni to aid broadband push

The University of Ballarat will help in a push to get broadband internet rolled out in the Grampians region.

Moorabool Shire councillor Michael Tudball, who is also on the Grampians committee of Regional Development Australia, says a proposal will be put together.

He says the committee is creating a proposal to encourage the Federal Government to make the Grampians region one of the first to connect to the National Broadband Network.

Cr Tudball says the university will help the committee mount its case.

“It will be leveraging off some of the work that Moorabool Shire has put through to [the] central highlands region about getting us broadband ready and particularly having a strategy on how we can link in business, how we can link in education and of course how we can link in residences to the National Broadband Network,” he said.

Charity sinks ferry purchase plan

The Sale Rotary Club has decided not to buy a paddleboat from Ballarat after receiving a marine surveyor’s report.

The club was considering buying the Begonia Princess ferry to operate from the port of Sale.

But spokesman Alan Lewis says the boat has been grounded since 2002 and regulations to register boats with the marine board have changed since then.

“Regulations with respect to survey of boats have changed and there was some doubt expressed whether – even if we did refurbish it – we could in fact get it back into survey,” he said.

“In light of that we considered it inappropriate to proceed.”

Police blitz targets alcohol violence

A crackdown on alcohol-fuelled violence saw 47 people being arrested for being drunk in Ballarat at the weekend.

Twelve members of the new Operational Response Unit were brought from Melbourne to Ballarat for the blitz and police filled the streets.

Senior Sergeant Gary Pilmore says 500 people were spoken to by police, with six drivers found to be above the legal blood alcohol limit.

He says despite the results of the blitz, it was a fairly normal weekend on Ballarat’s streets.

“We had more police there to be able to deal with it and it’s quite simple, it takes time to take people off the street,” he said.

“While that happens normally, there’s no-one else there to lock up the rest that can be locked up.”

Sick teen told to wait 8 hours for treatment

The Geelong Hospital has been asked to explain why a young girl with acute appendicitis was refused immediate treatment.

Madison Stevens, 13, was told she would have to wait up to eight hours for treatment by staff of Barwon Health.

The girl’s mother then drove her nearly 100 kilometres to the Ballarat Hospital.

Health Minister Daniel Andrews has asked for a full explanation.

“There are obviously a whole range of issues that need to be worked through,” he said.

“That’s why I’ve asked my department to speak directly with Barwon Health. Those discussions are occurring now.”

Opposition health spokesman David Davis said the Government has been promising to fix the hospital system for years.

“It is unacceptable that a young patient with vomiting and severe stomach cramps was unable to get early attention,” he said.

“The number of patients transferred from the Geelong Hospital emergency department to a bed in eight hours was 66 per cent, well short of John Brumby’s own target of 80 per cent.”

Geelong Hospital is investigating the claims.

Emergency department physician, Dr Bruce Bartley, says Madison Stevens was seen by a triage nurse when she arrived at the hospital, and her temperature and pulse were recorded.

He says she was called by a doctor just over an hour later, but she and her mother had already left for Ballarat hospital.

Dr Bartley says staff at Barwon Health has launched an internal investigation and has offered to meet with the family.

“The whole process of the investigation isn’t a witch hunt,” he said.

“It’s aimed at improving and educating our staff so they do the right thing by the patients and community that we serve.”

Shires meet over wind farm approvals

A group of south-west Victorian shires will meet today to discuss how wind farm approvals should be handled in the future.

The Pyrenees, Ballarat and Moyne shires have collaborated on a plan recommending wind farm approvals be handled by the Planning Department.

The plan also suggests establishing a regional compliance unit to help monitor wind farms.

Pyrenees Shire Mayor David Clarke says the plan will be discussed with the Glenelg, Corangamite, Moorabool and Southern Grampians shires today.

He says it is important the shires present a united front.

“I think it’s very important to give the Government a consistent message from the sector, from those of us dealing with wind farms,” councillor Clarke said.

“That’s what we’re trying to do, that’s why the meeting’s at the MAV [Municipal Association of Victoria].

“So the MAV is also part of that message, to say that as a sector, this is how we want to see these projects managed.”

Council vetos shutting saleyards

The Warrnambool council last night voted against closing the city’s saleyards.

Only Mayor Micheal Neoh voted in favour of the proposal which would have closed the saleyards and seen the Victorian Livestock Exchange (VLE) build a regional saleyards facility at Cudgee.

A motion by councillor Jennifer Lowe to set up a reference group which will consider all options and report to council in three months was adopted.

VLE director Greg Walsh says the company is unlikely to make another proposal to the council.

“Council have decided to go the same way that the Ballarat council went two years ago. We don’t want to be part of that process,” he said.

The president of the Warrnambool Stock Agents Association, Kieran Johnstone, says the decision validates its campaign against closing the saleyards.

Cr Neoh says it may be hard to select who will make up the reference group.

“One would imagine that the planning needs to be done by the municipality where the proposal will go, so that’s another debate, how much funding we put into this process and whether councils want to develop a position or a policy before they even set up the reference group,” he said.

More than 500 people attended the meeting.

Houses to remain affordable despite price rise: institute

The Real Estate Institute of Victoria says an increase in Ballarat’s median house price will not threaten affordability in the city.

Ballarat’s median house price increased by 6.1 per cent last year, to about $247,000.

John McMahon of the institute’s Ballarat division says prices will keep pace with people’s incomes if they continue to rise at that rate.

He says most people will not be pushed out of the city’s housing market.

“It might be a $30,000 rise over a two year period but people’s savings ability, their income … would probably rise in accordance with that growth because of the rise in the CPI,” he said.

“Housing affordability is still within the means of most people.”

Grog crackdown delayed

Tougher bans on the serving of alcohol in Ballarat have been delayed.

Earlier this month, all of Ballarat’s licensees, except one, agreed to stop serving alcoholic shots after 1:00am (AEDT).

They also decided to trial a 2:30am lockout for six months.

The measures were due to be introduced this weekend but the Liquor Accord has called another meeting on Wednesday to finalise the details.

Ballarat Community Safety Advisory Committee spokesman John Fitzgibbon says he hopes the bans will be introduced soon.

“If there’s venues that aren’t going to get involved in that, that’s disappointing to see that they’re placing other interests ahead of their patrons and their community,” Mr Fitzgibbon said.

“Anything of this magnitude that they’re trying to pull together takes time and I’m sure that they’ll work through that.”