Schwarten promises shortchanged QBuild workers will be paid

Queensland Public Works Minister Robert Schwarten has promised to pay back QBuild workers who have not received overtime and allowances.

The State Government says 450 workers have been shortchanged over three pay cycles although unions say more than a thousand people have been affected over the past eight weeks.

Mr Schwarten says a glitch in the payroll system is to blame and it should not have happened.

“We won’t leave them adrift,” he said.

“Everybody’s entitled to get paid and we’ll make sure they do anybody owed more than $100 should have been contacted already.

“That money should have been put in their bank accounts so I don’t understand the claim that people are unable to pay their mortgages when in fact everybody’s got their base pay for a start.”

The Government has promised an independent review into unrelated pay problems at Queensland Health which have shortchanged almost 3,000 workers.

Qantas apologises for recent problems

Qantas boss Alan Joyce has defended the airline’s safety record after a string of mechanical problems.

Seven Qantas planes have suffered equipment failures over the past two weeks including a cracked windscreen, brake issues and wing flap defects.

Mr Joyce says he is sorry about the delays but safety is not an issue for the airline.

“The issues that occurred over Easter we apologise for – the inconvenience that would cause to customers,” he said.

“But they don’t signal a deterioration in Qantas safety and maintenance records because the statistics clearly indicate that this happens to every airline in the world.”

Flooding delays roads fix

The Carpentaria Shire Council in Queensland’s Gulf country says it has had to delay fixing the region’s roads for another few weeks until floodwaters recede.

Mayor Fred Pascoe says the council is still assessing how much damage has been done to roads so it can apply for funding to repair them.

He says last year’s damage bill was $24 million and this year’s flood damage has also been significant.

“Getting the roads open and safe will be a priority. Unfortunately we’ve just been left with a bit more flooding from ex-tropical cyclone Paul which has meant we’ve got to postpone getting our machines out for at least another week, possibly two,” he said.

“Obviously we’ve got to get opening grades on our roads network where the beef cattle industry is one of the major industries … and they’re all going to be looking to move cattle.”

Fishing competition

Meanwhile, a fishing competition at Karumba in the Gulf has been cancelled this weekend due to flooding but anglers in the town still have a chance to throw a line in.

The Karumba Community Anglers Classic has been postponed until May because most roads are still closed.

Councillor Pascoe says a “snap decision” local fishing competition will go ahead this weekend instead – with stranded anglers to take part.

“They will be running a mini-comp for those people in Karumba so they’ll still have something to do,” he said.

“Obviously the prize money won’t be as high but in recognition of those people stranded there the committee has gratefully agreed to a mini-comp but the big one, the $26,000 one, will be held in the first weekend of May.”

ICPA supports ag college shake-up

The Isolated Children’s Parents’ Association (ICPA) has welcomed the Queensland Government’s overhaul of agricultural training.

The State Government wants to expand the Australian Agricultural College Corporation from five campuses to 14 by selling farmland.

ICPA state president Lorraine McGinnis says it will mean less travel for some students.

“I think anything that brings courses to where people are looking for them – short courses in areas that people are interested in getting not only credentials but skills in – they’re important and if they can be delivered closer to the students and even the adults, well then it’s making good use of both the skills they have to offer the local facilities,” she said.

She says the overhaul means rural students will be able to achieve the education they desire.

“Most of our students now are going to year 12 and then often off to higher education and many of the children when they do go away to boarding school really enjoy being able to take horses and cattle with them,” she said.

“To handle those when they’re at schools that offer those programs currently are very popular, so I think this is an interesting initiative.”

Rate rise not needed, Qld business groups say

Queensland’s peak business lobby group says the latest interest rate rise may halt a full scale economic recovery.

The Reserve Bank increased official interest rates by 0.25 of a percentage point to 4.25 per cent yesterday.

But Chamber of Commerce and Industry Queensland (CCIQ) says the increase was not needed now.

CCIQ president David Goodwin says the nation’s private sector needs a boost.

“Probably 75 per cent of the growth in GDP [gross domestic product] last year was stimulus-boosted, so really the Chamber’s sort of looking to see that the Reserve Bank stay on pause for a while, let some momentum pick up in the private sector, before pulling the wind out of the sails with interest rate rises,” he said.

No ‘breathing space’

Master Builders, the state’s peak body for housing and construction, also says an interest rate rise has taken away the breathing space that both industries needed.

Dwelling approvals rose in Queensland in February mainly because of public sector projects, but privately funded approvals fell.

Master Builders spokesman Paul Bidwell says yesterday’s rate rise is a setback.

“Our survey of members across the state reflects that the builders are optimistic at the latter part of this year, so the next few months are going to be tough,” he said.

“”What we need is some breathing space for the industry to stabilise and the interest rate rise, it just doesn’t help in that regard.”

Mr Bidwell says private sector approvals need to rise.

“What we are waiting for is the upgraders – those people who want to upgrade their homes, as well as the investors, to step back into the market,” he said.

“At the moment, conditions aren’t right for that to happen and unfortunately with the Reserve Bank increasing interest rates, that doesn’t help matters in that respect.”

Housing pressure

The Real Estate Institute of Queensland (REIQ) says the latest interest rate rise will put more pressure on the housing market.

It says the state’s housing market was already “correcting” before yesterday’s interest rate rise.

REIQ spokeswoman Pamela Bennett says the increase was not needed.

Ms Bennett says the decision will put more strain on first home buyers, investors, and people who want to upgrade their homes.

“There’s certain sectors of the market that just can’t take that pressure,” she said.

“I believe that small business operators will be even further impacted, which will affect employment and it has an ongoing effect.

“It also makes a considerable impact on small business – finance is already tight for them and having another 25 base points rise is just putting pressure on them.”

However, a University of Southern Queensland (USQ) academic says the latest interest rate rise should not affect employment in small and medium businesses.

Professor Allan Layton says the rate is still historically low and he does not expect it to lessen consumer confidence.

“Interest rates rises increase the cost of doing business but also if economic activity is quite buoyant, there’ll be a whole lot of reasons why businesses will want to retain their staff and maybe add to their staffing levels as the economy really starts to pick up again,” he said.

Retirees happy

But independent retirees say not everyone is unhappy with the Reserve Bank’s decision as they rely on income generated by investments.

The Association of Independent Retirees Gold Coast president, Bill Kendall, says members were severely affected by the global financial crisis and any rate rise is welcome.

“We look at it that it’s helping us to slowly get over the financial meltdown over the last two years,” he said.

“The independent retirees lost a lot of money in the meltdown and these increase in the interest rates are slowly going to help in getting over that problem.

“The problem is that we’re looking for income – everything seems to be going up in price nowadays so we’re looking for income all the time and also with some kind of capital growth to keep our capital, to preserve our capital, until actually we can carry on for another 20 years of retirement.”

Rudd, Roxon heckled by protesters in Cairns

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Health Minister Nicola Roxon have been heckled by a group of angry protesters in far north Queensland.

They had to be escorted into the Cairns Base hospital by security staff as about 50 people, angry about proposed public housing, waved placards and shouted abuse.

The Government is proposing to build public housing in the northern beach suburb of Palm Cove as well as Trinity Park, funded by the Federal Governments stimulus project.

Protest organiser Lisa Dunkerton says the Government has not consulted with residents.

“We want the Prime Minister to know that the location of public housing in Cairns is a major issue,” she said.

Mr Rudd was in Cairns to make a funding announcement for a local medical centre.

Artists net London showing

A program that makes artwork from discarded fishing nets found in northern Australia is about to go international.

Artists from the Torres Strait and Queensland’s Gulf of Carpentaria country create items like bags and baskets from the ‘ghost nets’ that are collected to stop them entangling marine life.

Carpentaria Ghost Net Program coordinator Sue Ryan is looking for more of the works for an exhibition in a London gallery.

“We need as many wonderful pieces, all different examples of different types of work for that. It’s booked for 2012, so we need to get a move on,” she said.

She says the artwork is now being exhibited in Victoria and South Australia.

“It will be interesting to have those two cultures represented in art exhibitions so we’ve had quite a lot of interest from curators and collectors, so far so all we need is the work now,” she said.

Burketown braces for flood peak

A council in Queensland’s Gulf of Carpentaria country says it is well prepared for a possible record flood peak today.

The Nicholson River at Escott Station in the Gulf peaked yesterday at a record 12 metres and the Albert River at Burketown is expected to peak today.

Some homes in parts of the Gulf have been evacuated and roads have been closed due to flooding over the weekend.

Acting Burke Mayor Ernie Camp says authorities are closely monitoring the situation at Burketown and an emergency food drop is being planned.

“Yesterday afternoon the Albert River at Burketown was still rising even though it had slowed … the level at the Burketown airport was closing in on seven metres,” he said.

“A flood level of seven metres in Burketown would make it approximately 300 millimetres higher than the previous record height in living memory.”

The Bureau of Meteorology says the flooding has reached a peak on the Nicholson River.

Burketown Hotel owner Greg Watt says an emergency food drop will be needed.

“We’re right in the throes now of organising an emergency food drop, hopefully we can have that plane in on Friday,” he said.

“The local store is getting pretty low and we’re getting fairly low. Obviously quite a few people come to the pub for their meals and we’re starting to struggle, but we won’t see people go hungry.”

Meanwhile, Gulf grazier Ian Kennedy, from Escott Station, says he has lost thousands of dollars in property due to a record flood on his station and the damage is significant.

Mr Kennedy says the Nicholson River peaked at a record 12 metres at his property yesterday and he is now assessing losses.

“Cows, especially calves and all sorts of losses, they’re just swimming up to their necks and there’s not really much you can do at the moment,” he said.

“The only thing you can do really is I’ve been flying around myself and just cutting fences and trying to get cattle to higher ground, but there’s actually no higher ground, you can’t even really see the fences, it’s quite amazing.”

Downpour delays cane crop planting

Cane farmers in north Queensland say they will have to wait a few more weeks before they can start replanting crops after recent heavy rain.

Canegrowers Association chairman, Alf Cristaudo, says steady rain in the Herbert and Burdekin since tropical cyclone Ului is preventing an early planting season.

But he says the rain should provide confidence to the sugar industry, after what is expected to be a bumper season from the current crops.

“We’re trying to recover a bit from the 2009 crop, which was down in tonnage,” he said.

“So while we were in the growth period over the hotter months, it would be good to get some more rain and hopefully enhance our growth prospect.”

Online ID scheme to help people reunite

CrimeStoppers Queensland has launched an initiative to help reunite people who become separated in public places.

The Reunite Service aims to reduce the time it takes police to find a child or a person in care who becomes lost during an outing through an online identification system.

As part of of the initiative, the child or person in care is issued with a wristband with an identification number and their parents, guardians or carers receive an identification card.

CrimeStoppers Queensland chief executive Trevor O’Hara says people can sign up through the Reunite Service website.

“On that website you can actually register your loved ones or persons in your care you want to have looked after in case something like this happens to you,” he said.

“You just need to upload a photo and there’s a small cost involved for an annual service so we can keep the information up-to-date.”

Railway still closed after derailment

Queensland Rail (QR) says the Kuranda Scenic Railway in Cairns, in far north Queensland, will remain closed until at least Thursday.

The train derailed near Cairns after a landslide 11 days ago, injuring five passengers.

Constant rain is hampering clean-up operations at the site.

A QR spokeswoman says engineers are expected to make a decision on Thursday about whether it is safe to resume services.

80yo dies after being hit by ute

A man has died in a Queensland hospital on Saturday morning from injuries sustained in a crash in north Queensland last month.

The 80-year-old man was talking to the driver of a utility parked partially in a lane on the Bruce Highway south of Cairns on March 20.

A prime mover clipped the back of the ute, which then hit the man, who was thrown about ten metres.

He died in the Cairns Base Hospital this morning.

Meanwhile, a woman has been taken flown to a Brisbane hospital with serious injuries after being dragged under a car.

Police say the 31-year-old got out of a slowly moving car on Friday night near Murgon north-west of Brisbane, before the car sped off and dragged her underneath.

She was taken to Murgon hospital before being flown to Brisbane, where she’s in a critical but stable condition.

The woman driving the car’s been given a notice to appear for driving under the influence of liquor.

Population summit concludes with recommendations

Participants in the growth management summit in Brisbane have called for more affordable housing, better public transport and another summit.

Representatives from seven workshop groups have summarised the ideas put forward during the two-day meeting.

The suggestions include encouraging growth in regional areas, minimum numbers of affordable houses in new developments, and an annual pass for public transport users.

One person suggested a follow-up summit in a year’s time.

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says a lot of ideas and enthusiasm were generated.

The government will provide a summary in a fortnight and a preliminary response in six weeks.

Ms Bligh says another summit will be considered later.

Another giant LNG contract signed

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says another major deal has been signed to export liquefied natural gas (LNG), this time to Japan.

The BG Group has signed a 20-year contract worth $20 billion from 2015.

Last week, the same company signed a $60 billion export deal with a Chinese firm to export gas produced in the Surat Basin and processed near Gladstone in central Queensland.

Ms Bligh says it is another boost for regional Queensland.

“This is a Queensland first to send liquid natural gas into japan,” she said.

“It means even further growth, opportunity – real jobs in the regions.”

Blainey tells population summit another state is possible

Leading historian Professor Geoffrey Blainey says the idea of a separate northern Australian state should not be ruled out in light of rapid population growth.

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh has told a summit in Brisbane a city such as Townsville in north Queensland may come to rival Brisbane as the state grows.

But Professor Blainey says there cannot be two capital cities in the one state.

“If we said the present state system in Australia is right, how come 1859 – that was the last time the state was created in Australia, that was Queensland – how come the people of 1859, when Australia had only a million people, when very little was known about the resources, how come they got it right and got the right boundaries?” he said.

Coroner proposes limits to police pursuits

Queensland coroner Michael Barnes has handed down 13 recommendations aimed at making police pursuits safer.

The recommendations follow 10 fatal police chases in Queensland between 2005 and 2008.

In handing down his findings, Mr Barnes said in seven of the crashes someone other than the driver was killed, four were members of the public who were not involved in the chase, and the other three were passengers.

Mr Barnes said his recommendations are designed to reduce the risk of further deaths without compromising reasonable law enforcements.

The recommendations include a focus on community safety, that officers do not pursue alcohol or drug affected drivers, tougher penalties for people convicted of evading police and the adoption of new technology to reduce the need for pursuits.

Police reaction

The Queensland Police Union (QPU) says it has concerns about one of the coroner’s recommendations – that officers should not chase alcohol or drug-affected drivers.

QPU president Ian Leavers says that recommendation changes the way police approach their duties.

“Often these people who are drunk or drugged are on their way to commit acts of domestic violence,” he said.

“We have a duty to protect people out there in the community.

“Police still need to be able to make a conscious decision on when to pursue or not to pursue, for the fact is police don’t start police chases, criminals are the ones who start police chases.”

Queensland Police Commissioner Bob Atkinson says he will carefully consider the report.

“This is an extremely difficult and complex area of policing, what some would say is the most difficult in terms of judgement,” he said.

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says the Government will respond to the recommendations after they have been reviewed by Cabinet and Commissioner Atkinson.

“They look to me like very carefully considered and thoughtful recommendations and if they help to save a life then we have an obligation to implement them.” she said.

Victim reaction

The sister of a schoolgirl who was killed by a car being chased by Queensland police says the new recommendations about pursuits are not strong enough.

Caitlin Hanrick, 13, was hit by a stolen car outside a Redcliffe high school in December 2006.

Tegan Hanrick says she is disappointed.

“While the coroner’s recommendations are a step in the right direction, we still feel that he missed an opportunity here to ban the pursuits of stolen vehicles,” she said.

Hunting for underweight Easter eggs

The Queensland Government is investigating three chocolate manufacturers for underweight Easter eggs.

The Office of Fair Trading says it tested 150 chocolates this month to make sure they were the correct weight and volume.

Fair Trading Minister Peter Lawlor says the maximum penalty for “short measuring” is $20,000 for an individual business and $100,000 for a corporation.

Good news

Meanwhile, some good news heading into Easter.

A new study has found that chocolate reduces blood pressure and the risk of heart disease.

Researchers in Germany followed almost 20,000 people for ten years.

They found those who ate the most chocolate had lower blood pressure and that dark chocolate had the most health benefits.

Cairns students fall ill from fumes

Authorities are investigating an incident in which more than 20 students were overcome by fumes at a Cairns school laboratory in far north Queensland.

The year seven students were taking part in a lesson in their science classroom at Redlynch College when they began suffering from breathing difficulties and skin irritations.

21 children were taken to Cairns Base Hospital.

Education Queensland spokesman Colin Allen-Waters says the students were not conducting any experiments.

“No chemicals were being used in the classroom so we’re not sure what was the cause,” he said.

The area was cordoned off while Queensland Fire and Rescue Service (QFRS) conducted air tests.

Superintendent Darren Walsh says police will also investigate the incident.

Remote medical trainees get housing boost

The Federal Government is allocating more than $2 million to student accommodation on Thursday Island, off far north Queensland.

The James Cook University’s School of Medicine and Dentistry will use the funds to buy four two-bedroom units on the island.

The federal Member for Leichhardt, Jim Turnour, says the property will provide accommodation for students taking part in clinical placements.

“We know if we want to get doctors, dentists [and] allied health professionals working in rural and remote settings then we need to provide them with opportunities to train in these places,” he said.

“To actually get training on the ground up there with Indigenous people and people in a remote location means they’re much more likely to work there in the longer term.”

Covert speed cameras on roads by Easter

Police Minister Neil Roberts says covert speed cameras will be rolled out on Queensland roads in time for the Easter break.

Three cameras fitted to different unidentified vehicles will be used across southern and central Queensland starting on Thursday.

Mr Roberts says two unmarked police motorbikes will start operating at the same time.

“There’s clear evidence which shows that increasing uncertainty does change driver behaviour,” he said.

“If we can simply get people to make a simple decision to abide by the speed limit we can save around 80 lives per year.

“So the deployment of these covert vehicles and motorcycles is all about changing driver behaviour, getting people to stick to the speed limit.”

Mr Roberts says the introduction of covert speed cameras is not a sign that existing fixed and mobile cameras do not work.

He says it is important to have a combination of covert and visible cameras on the roads.

“High visibility policing, high visibility enforcement does have an impact, but it is important to add that additional element of uncertainty and chances of detection to try to change driver behaviour,” he said.

Queensland Police Commissioner Bob Atkinson says the covert speed cameras will be deployed in high-crash zones and areas where speeding and hooning are reported.

He says they are intended to target serious offenders.

“That’s not for your average law abiding motorist who if they get caught speeding, it’s because of error or accident,” he said.

“We’re really after those high-end people.

“We think those high-end people, the ones who just have a total disregard for the law, are enormously disproportionately represented in the road toll.”

The covert cameras will be rolled out in north Queensland at a later date.