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.”

Peabody boosts Macarthur takeover offer

United States-based Peabody Energy has asked Macarthur Coal to delay a meeting of shareholders next week so they can consider a revised takeover bid.

Peabody has increased its offer to $14 a share, up from the $13 rejected last week.

Macarthur operates two mines in Queensland’s Bowen Basin, which supplies the world’s leading steel producers.

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.”

Easter blitz nets 44 drink drivers

Authorities say 44 drink drivers were caught over the Easter weekend after a police crackdown on north Queensland roads.

Regional traffic coordinator Brian Cannon says 266 other drivers were issued with speeding fines and eight people were injured in seven car accidents in the region.

He says while the fatality-free Easter in the north is good news, police still have concerns about driver attitudes.

“There was disappointment that we had an L-plater detected above the limit; which you know is nil,” he said.

“That person will now have great difficulty getting their drivers licence when the time comes because there will be a period of time when they won’t be eligible to make that application.”

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.”

Funding snub sinks dive wreck plans

A proposal to create the first artificial dive wreck in the Whitsundays, off north Queensland, has failed to secure Federal Government funding.

The dive wreck steering committee applied for a $500,000 grant late last year to get the project off the ground.

The grant would have also paid the $100,000 fee to have the project assessed by the Great Barrier Marine Park Authority (GBRMPA).

Committee chairman Mark Turner says the Government’s decision is a setback.

“I think there’s still sufficient impetus and enthusiasm within the local diving community to see this happen,” he said.

“We know it’s going to take time, we know it’s going to be a long, hard process to get it up and running.

“The first problem is for us to find $100,000 worth of funding to get through the GBRMPA approval process. We think that if we can raise that money and at least get the wheels with this approvals process, that’ll set us on the way.”

Mr Turner says the group remains committed to the project.

“It was never ever going to be quick and it was never ever going to be easy but I think the benefits to the diving community and to Queensland are worthwhile persevering with it,” he said.

“In the Whitsundays we’ve got some magnificent coral reef diving. If we can augment that with two or three dive wreck sites, that makes diving opportunities here in the Whitsundays attractive to a world standard.”

Mr Turner says it is an important project for the region, but admits it will be hard to raise the money locally.

“With tourism the way it’s been travelling in more recent times, I think it wouldn’t be too hard to figure out that it would be a big ask for the local community to try and stump that up,” he said.

“We’ll be looking for support from wherever we can find it. Now that might be support over a number of different areas, but certainly the local dive community will support it where we can and we’ve shown that in the past.”

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.”

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.

New memorial to be ready for Anzac Day

The Moranbah Returned Services League (RSL), south of Mackay, says it is very happy with the town’s new cenotaph, which should be completed before this year’s Anzac Day services.

RSL spokesman Dennis Page says the old memorial is worn down and does not recognise all the personnel who served in conflicts and peacekeeping missions.

Mr Page says the new cenotaph, being built in the town square, is something the RSL wanted to give to the community

“Our membership is falling off now, a lot of people are retiring and moving away from Moranbah,” he said.

“We wanted to leave a monument that we could be proud of, for remembrance and all the veterans.

“Something that the council and hopefully the community and schools could take over and carry on the Anzac tradition with – a venue that the whole community could be proud of.”

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.

Townsville could be Queensland’s second capital: Bligh

Premier Anna Bligh has suggested Townsville or another regional city could become a second capital city to help Queensland deal with population increase.

Ms Bligh used her opening address of a two-day growth summit in Brisbane to suggest the state would benefit from another capital.

She says one of the ideas the summit may consider is identifying a regional city like Townsville to become a rival for Brisbane in economic, cultural and social terms.

The Townsville Chamber of Commerce (TCC) has welcomed Ms Bligh’s suggestion the city could become the state’s second capital.

TCC president John Carey says Townsville is already considered by many as the capital of north Queensland and he would support it becoming official.

“If by that she means it would be competing with the things in a similar manner as Sydney and Melbourne, I don’t think there’s much desirability in that prospect,” he said.

“But if she means that it’s going to be a regional capital – which I think it is – then making that official isn’t going to hurt anyone.”

Townsville Mayor Les Tyrell also welcomes Ms Bligh’s idea.

“The people in Townsville have been referring to the city as the capital of north Queensland,” he said.

But Ms Bligh’s suggestion has been rejected by leading business group, the Chamber of Commerce and Industry Queensland (CCIQ).

CCIQ spokesman David Goodwin says opening up affordable land in regional centres is the best way to encourage people to move away from the south-east.

“Creating a second Brisbane is going to create a second lot of problems and it’s going to increase the size of government,” he said.

“It’ll increase the cost on the private sector and I think essentially you are looking at government solutions for what are essentially private sector problems.”

Ms Bligh has also called on banks to help developers meet the needs of a growing population.

She told the growth summit that multi-unit developments are needed in parts of Brisbane to deal with population increase, but she says banks tightened their lending during the global financial crisis.

“It’s time for all banks to start reassessing their activity in this area,” she said.

Ms Bligh has also flagged new laws to speed up the development of land in south-east Queensland.

She says the state is struggling to bring major sites in identified growth areas to market.

ms Bligh says the time it takes to get land to market in Victoria is up to two years shorter.

“It’s time I think to reconsider some parts of the approval process and the government architecture that oversees those processes,” she said.

“I challenge the summit here over the next two days to consider the practical ideas that could deliver that.

“If that requires an overhaul of government structures and processes, if it requires changes to legislation then so be it.”

- Reporting by Chris O’Brien, Penny Timms and Kim Lyell

Bligh wants ‘certainty’ from Commonwealth on future population

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh says the states need more certainty from the Commonwealth about future population to plan for infrastructure.

She says it is hard for the states to plan for growth when they do not know how many people to expect.

Ms Bligh says a national population policy would help.

“Giving states and local government more certainty about the sort of numbers we could expect to be catering for,” she said.

She says the Commonwealth should also have a federal infrastructure plan.

“It would be a very powerful tool for national prosperity, good planning and certainty for other levels of government,” she said.

A two-day summit will start on Tuesday morning in Brisbane to discuss the pressures facing south-east Queensland.

Opposition Leader John-Paul Langbroek says it is just the latest in a series of forums hosted by the State Government.

“So far we’ve seen an obesity summit, a 20-20 summit, a reef summit,” he said.

“The Premier loves having summits and then moving on to the next target.”

More rangers needed for national parks: conservationists

Conservationists says more rangers are needed to manage Queensland’s expanding national park estate.

Over the weekend, 60,000 hectares of land were added to the estate in the form of four new parks and the expansion of six others.

National Parks Association (NPA) spokesman Paul Donatiu says the management of the parks is as important as the area being added.

“Without the additional resources to manage those places those parks will suffer, so any investment in new national parks really does require a commensurate investment in the management resources to look after those new areas,” he said.

Fears hospital closure to leave specialists stranded

The Mackay Division of General Practice says tenants at the Pioneer Valley Hospital in north Queensland have nowhere to go when they move out of the facility.

The hospital was forced to close last week after a Workplace Health and Safety report commissioned by the receivers found it was unsafe.

The practice’s chief executive, Christian Grieves, says many of the health specialists say they cannot find alternative accommodation.

He says he has tried contacting the receivers to negotiate, but has not had a response.

“I guess because they’re just the receiver, they aren’t really interested in having in-depth discussions, or they’re not really interested in how difficult it might be,” he said.

“We’ve found out that what they’re saying is at close of business on Thursday the first of April, ‘we’re going to change all the locks whether you like it or not, you can’t get back in after that’.”

A spokesman for the receiver, Ferrier Hodgeson, says the tenants have not been evicted and no time frame has been given for them to move out.

Mayor defends cyclone green waste move

The Whitsundays Regional Council in north Queensland is defending its decision to clear green waste created by ex-Cyclone Ului from residential blocks only.

Council crews and volunteers are continuing to clean up from the cyclone more than a week after it made landfall.

Whitsundays Mayor Mike Brunker says some rural ratepayers are unhappy with the council’s decision.

“We’ve had a lot of people in rural blocks saying ‘are you coming to get me’, ‘are we discriminating against rural blocks?’” he said.

“It would be a sheer impossibility – we would just fill our landfills up with green waste if we had to go and get [waste from] someone that’s been living in a mini rainforest on a four or five acre block [with] a lot of their trees down.

“I think it’s unacceptable that council would have to come out and pick those up.”

Councillor Brunker says it is not viable for council to collect green waste from its rural ratepayers.

“First of all it would cost an absolute fortune and then we’d be there for the next six months,” he said.

“What we’re saying to the people in the bigger rural blocks [is to] gather or push it … to the corner of your block and then we’ll get some fire permits so that you can burn it.

“I think to do rural blocks would just be an absolute nightmare.”

New youth crime laws ‘toughest in Australia’

The Queensland Government says it is cracking down on youth crime but the Opposition says new laws will make little difference.

Community Services Minister Karen Struthers says from today, Queensland courts have new powers to name serious juvenile offenders and impose curfews.

Ms Struthers says she is still reviewing whether 17-year-olds will continue to be treated as adults in the criminal justice system.

Queensland is the only Australian jurisdiction with that policy and advocacy groups have repeatedly called for change.

The changes were an election promise last year, but the Opposition says they were first flagged in 2001.

Ms Struthers says young offenders who do not change their ways will feel the full force of the law.

“We’ve got the toughest laws in Australia and we’re getting tougher – people are feeling unsafe and we’re not going to cop this any longer,” he said.

“Young people need to know that there is help available – we are trying to put young people back on track early and intervene early.

“But for those who don’t take up those opportunities at jobs and to get off drugs and those sort of things that are impacting their offending behaviour, they’ll certainly feel the full force of the law.”

Ms Struthers says she has visited the youth centre that is part of a Brisbane adult prison and 17-year-olds are involved in education and other programs.

“But the youth detention centre offers a more fulsome range of programs, vocational education and training, and that certainly seems to be a very important part of the rehabilitation for young people,” she said.

“Those sorts of things are the things I’m looking at to see which system is the better system.”

But Opposition spokesman Rosemary Menkens says the new laws will have little impact, because young offenders are not being rehabilitated.

“I don’t believe that these new changes are going to make much difference at all,” she said.

“We supported the changes but this Government is soft on crime – this Government’s approach is not improving youth crime at all.

“We’re seeing a revolving door with youth crime and no matter how tough they talk. it is not working.”

Tens of thousands of construction jobs ‘at risk’

Access Economics says up to 37,000 construction jobs in Queensland could be lost if development does not improve in the state.

Two industry reports released today show there has been a 60 per cent drop in commercial finance to developers in the last two years.

Access economics director Chris Richardson says action is needed.

“The population growth isn’t going to go away,” he said.

“Something needs to free up the supply of housing – the number of new homes getting built in Queensland.”

Urban Development Institute of Australia (UDIA) spokesman Warren Harris says there is no time to waste.

“This problem is so dire and so immediate, we need an immediate response,” he said.

“The form of that we are proposing is for an industry recovery taskforce to be established that has members from the State Government, local government, the development industry – and if necessary the federal government.”

Canegrowers up-beat about cyclone recovery

Canegrowers’ chief executive Ian Ballantyne says it is optimistic the industry in north Queensland will recover after Cyclone Ului.

Mr Ballantyne is touring the Mackay region after meeting growers in Proserpine yesterday.

He says Canegrowers is preparing a submission for the State Government about how relief resources would be best used.

He says the industry in Proserpine may have lost about $20 million from the cyclone.

“I think we’re remarkably fortunate that this cyclone wasn’t a lot worse,” he said.

“There’s certainly damage done to crops but it’s the sort of damage that we’re going to recover from.

“The upshot at the moment would appear to be a loss of about 10 per cent of production is likely and there’ll be consequent losses of sugar productivity and more costs involved in harvesting and so on later.”