Young detainees plant community links

Detainees at Canberra’s Bimberi Youth Detention Centre are giving back to the community by growing vegetables.

A vegetable garden at the facility has been so fruitful the excess produce is being collected by charity group OzHarvest and distributed to disadvantaged Canberrans.

The project started 12 months ago when the detainees designed the garden which will soon include a greenhouse.

Horticulture teacher John Ellis says the program has given Bimberi residents a positive project to be involved in.

“You can see they gain a lot out of it, it’s about educating them but they’re also getting these skills that come in handy,” he said.

“Most days they come in and they’re keen to have a go.”

One detainee, Kieran, says the program gives them something to look forward to.

“It gives us something to do during education, teaches us life skills – if we get our own house or flat we can grow plants and vegetables,” he said.

“It’s not just good for me, it’s good for everyone, everyone gets to do it.”

Minister for Children and Young People Joy Burch says the program is an effective way to help the youth develop a connection with the community.

“These are real horticultural skills that they’re learning plus they get to see the fruits of their benefits … quite literally when the fruit garden gets going,” she said.

“To have a connection to the broader community, and for them knowing that they’re not only helping to feed the other residents here but to helping others who a less-advantaged in the community is a wonderful thing.”

The detainees will also be offered cooking and barista courses in the coming weeks to help develop their vocational skills.

Failure to eradicate polio worldwide is ”violation of ethical obligation”

Washington, April 16 (ANI): Experts have commented that failure to pursue eradication of polio worldwide, even with the capability and resources provided, is a violation of ethical principles.

According to ethicists, foremost among them is a “duty to rescue” those in distress.

Claudia Emerson, PhD, Program Leader in Ethics, and Peter A. Singer, MD, Director of the Canadian-based McLaughlin-Rotman Centre for Global Health (MRC) at the University Health Network and University of Toronto, present a series of compelling arguments that completing polio eradication is an ethical imperative.

They say the polio eradication agenda in recent years has largely centred on questions of economic and technical feasibility and has come under fire from opponents who strongly support an ”effective control” strategy.

However, it is estimated that this alternative to eradication would result in 4 million children contracting polio in the next 20 years.

The authors introduce a moral justification for eradication to the debate, asking: “How can we ethically justify this course of action when the opportunity and means to rescue are available?”

“Examining only economic aspects of eradication overlooks an important moral calculation: the human cost of failing to eradicate,” they said.

“This is the cost of lives not saved, the lives afflicted by polio (including those family members who care for paralysed children), and the impact of those lives on the future of the broader community.

“Obligations to future generations are difficult to define and may be limited, but if preventing harm is a moral duty, there may be a chain of obligation that persists through generations,” they stated.

The authors said that the eradication of smallpox, effectively accomplished in the late 1970s, has resulted in up to 2 million lives saved and 10-15 million smallpox infections prevented annually.

“No one is further threatened by this disease. The eradication of polio would similarly achieve global public good,” they said.

“The Global Polio Eradication Initiative has already made strides in this direction: since its launch in 1988, over 2 billion children have been immunized and a 99 percent reduction in polio has been achieved.

“Arguably, those who enjoy the benefits of public goods ought to be motivated to act in pursuit of such goods, thus the onus is on the global community to continue supporting polio eradication efforts,” they stated.

According to the authors, self-interest adds a strong reason to pursue polio eradication.

Although polio has been absent from the developed world for over 30 years, the threat of re-emergence looms in a world where people and viruses easily cross international borders.

Polio remains endemic in four countries – India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Nigeria – and over the years has been exported to previously polio-free countries in sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere.

“We are on the last kilometre of a marathon; surely it is worth crossing the finish line,” the authors concluded.

The article will be published by the Lancet online April 15 and in the print edition April 17, a month prior to the start of the 63rd session of the World Health Assembly in May in Geneva, at which the Global Polio Eradication Initiative will present its aggressive new strategy aimed at wiping out polio in the next 3 years.

The article also coincides with the 55th anniversary of the 1955 announcement by Jonas Salk of the world”s first polio vaccine. (ANI)

Council calls for pool tenders

The Bega Valley Shire Council in the New South Wales South East is calling for tenders to run its public swimming pools.

The Council owns six pools in the Shire, but the Sapphire Aquatic Centre at Pambula is closed for upgrading.

Private companies operate the facilities, and the contracts for the other five pools are in their last year.

The Council’s Civil Assets Manager, Mark Canaider, says pools are important facilities in the community.

“The fact that a community our size can operate five or six swimming pools, albeit for summer, is an indication of just how important that particular recreational opportunity is to our community,” he said.

“I can assure you that council is very mindful of the role swimming plays in our broader community.”

Applications close April 14, and it is expected the contracts will be finalised in May.

For more, go to the South East News blog at http://bit.ly/dgL1SN

Country road toll worries police

Police are concerned that a large proportion of the deaths on the state’s roads are happening in country Victoria.

The road toll stands at 65, which is seven more than the same time last year.

The figures for central and northern Victoria are also on the rise, with 18 people having lost their lives so far this year.

Deputy Police Commissioner Ken Lay says many of the deaths could have been prevented by people following the road rules.

“I think we work really hard in this area and I think we’ve got some really good strategies, but Victoria Police isn’t going to solve this problem alone,” he said.

“This is about the broader community saying that enough is enough.

“Every time someone gets on the road, every time someone gets behind the wheel of the car they need to take responsibility for their actions.”