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Most house fires start in kitchen Charged twice for drink driving
Budgewoi Fire and Rescue has issued a timely reminder that more than 50 per cent of house fires start in the kitchen.
On Sunday, June 11, firefighters were called out to a local house fire.
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Luckily the occupants were home to extinguish the stovetop fire and minimise the damage.
After establishing there was no fire extension, the fire crews ventilated and checked the kitchen with a thermal imaging camera and used a gas detector so the occupants could regain entry.
Source: Fire and Rescue NSW Budgewoi
A woman has been charged twice for drink driving following two incidents on the same day on the Central Coast.
Traffic and Highway Patrol officers stopped a Suzuki Alto on the Central Coast Hwy at Bateau Bay at about 9pm on Saturday, June 10.
The driver, a 48-year-old woman, was subjected to a roadside breath test, returning a positive result. She was taken to The
Entrance Police Station and underwent a breath analysis, returning an alleged reading of 0.191.
She was charged with highrange PCA and her licence was suspended.
At about 10.40pm, the same woman was again stopped after allegedly being seen driving on the Central Coast Hwy.
She was taken to Gosford
Police Station after a positive roadside breath test.
She underwent a breath analysis, returning an alleged reading of 0.152.
She was again charged with high-range PCA and driving while suspended.
Her vehicle was also impounded for three months. She is due to appear before Wyong Local Court on Monday, July 3.
Source: NSW Police
I write to correct a number of errors of fact contained Linda Telisman’s published letter (CCN392).
The 11 Aboriginal MPs in Federal Parliament representing different political parties have been elected by all voters in their area to stand up for their rights and interests at a national level.
These MPs and Senators do not just represent Aboriginal people – they act on behalf of all their constituents.
Aboriginal representative and advisory bodies have been in constant change for decades.
They form, re-form or are abolished at the whim of the party in government, causing immense confusion and frustration amongst Indigenous peoples.
The NIAA, established in May 2019, is the latest of these bodies.
We need a longer-term presence that can’t disappear at the stroke of a pen.
Indigenous people recognise this.
The Voice is a culmination of many years of dedicated work by Indigenous people consulting and talking, then eventually deciding how best to resolve the fundamental issue of constitutional recognition and Indigneous disadvantage and disempowerment.
The ‘secret government documents’ Telisman references are not that.
They were individual views expressed during the 2016 National Indigenous Dialogue; some of many thousands of comments and views expressed by the 1,200 people in forums across the country leading up to the National Constitutional Convention at Uluru.
In fact, 97 per cent of the Convention delegates endorsed the Uluru Statement from the Heart, calling for a First Nations Voice to be enshrined in the Constitution.
Telisman’s falsely-named ‘secret government documents’ did not make the Statement.
What Telisman failed to note was that many other countries already successfully recognise their Indigenous people in their constitutions, including Canada, the UK, NZ, the USA, Finland, Sweden and Norway. State and Territory governments in SA, Victoria and Queensland are already negotiating Treaties with First Nations people.
The new NSW Labor government is in early discussions with Indigenous groups.
A truth-telling commission in Victoria is currently holding hearings.
The states are not shying away from this process.
They have recognised it’s fair and just.
Right here on the Central Coast, the Barang Regional Alliance (one of 10 Empowered Community regions around Australia) has been working with the Australian (and NSW) Government on a new business model for delivering local policies, programs and investment.
Barang works closely with seven other Central Coast Aboriginal organisations and two other partners to collectively advocate and improve services being delivered to the Darkinjung community.
Barang represents the Aboriginal people on the Central Coast.
We need a Voice at the national level with a focus on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities.
The Voice is about inclusion and unity.
Constitutional recognition will acknowledge this fact.
The Voice doesn’t give anyone or any group more powers or rights than another.
I encourage any person or group to reach out to Barang if you would like to know more. We are more than happy to share our story and success, and how the Voice will make a real and lasting difference to Indigenous peoples, and to a unified Australia.
Email, Jun 13 Gary Field, Barang Regional Alliance