The Northern Rivers Times Edition 176

Page 20

The Northern Rivers Times

November 23, 2023

20 NEWS Lives spent working… by Nigel Dawe

OSCAR Wilde, the Irish grand master of nonchalant wit, once chided, “WORK is the curse of the drinking classes.” It is also arguably the cause of rampant consumption by those previously non-disposed to a tipple at their nearest pub on their way home from work. In 2017, Curtin University conducted a study that found around 12 million Australians worked an estimated 20 billion hours that year in paid employment. To put this numerical babble into perspective: there are 8,760 hours in a year, and the average life expectancy in Australia is 81 years; thus, the average life totals a mere 709,560 hours. To provide some additional context, according to the Curtin University study, apparently 1-in-4 workers are currently looking for a new job because they are unhappy with their present one. The leading causes for this were: stress (most of the time at work), general dissatisfaction with work, and not having a clear sense of purpose. In conclusion it stated, “pay matters, but only to an extent. More importantly, it’s what you do, how you are able to go about your work and who is alongside you that matters the most when it comes to job satisfaction.” Another Australian Workplace Happiness study conducted in 2022 found that a staggering 72% of Australian workers have felt unhappy at their work in the past 12 months. The leading causes were listed as: demanding workloads, poor communication, bad relationships (at work), long hours, and monotonous work. Nothing complex in themselves, but the implemented remedies for each one, are what

differentiates the workplaces you’d want to be a part of, and frankly, those you’d avoid at all costs. Additional to the typical gripes and snipes of your standard Australian workplace that generate such malaise, are the triplicate organisational spectres of talent identification, talent development, and talent retention. Each facet of this clear talent conundrum – that perennially needs addressing – is something an increasingly ‘removed’ managerial apex (intoxicated with notions like meritocratic accomplishment) fail time and time again to objectively see, let alone do anything about. Not that any of this is even remotely new, as the Nobel Prize-winning Czeslaw Milosz identified over 70-years ago, “Western economy squanders talent to an incredible degree; and the few who do succeed owe their success as often to pure luck as to native ability.” Thus, career success and the ‘Loch Ness monster’ of work satisfaction, might one day become not so much the result of what you can spruik in an interview; but how you can honestly convey, albeit activate by way of your own sincere sense of purpose, passion, and dare I say – talent. Deflatingly, for many, who are just trying to make ends meet, the comments of Philip Larkin reverberate like a thick whitewash through the soul, “How little our careers express what lies in us, and yet how much time they take up. It’s sad, really.” But that said, no one but our very own selves can pigeon hole us into lines of work that reflect nothing of who we are, or what we deem most worthwhile.

NEW BRUNSWICK HEADS COMMUNITY NEEDED TO HELP EASE HOUSING

Almost 7,000 new homes will need to be delivered across the Byron Shire over the next 20 years to keep pace with market demand, with Brunswick Heads earmarked as a priority development area, according to a recent report from Council. Byron Shire Council’s September 2023 Draft Housing Options Paper shows 6,695 new dwellings are needed for the shire over the next 20 years, with 1,990 of those homes - or 30 per cent of forecast requirement - earmarked for Brunswick Heads. Mullumbimby will target 24.5 per cent of the new housing requirement, with Byron Bay/Sunrise taking in 18.5 per cent. Council’s future housing strategy is for more than half of all new homes in the Byron Shire

to be created in ‘new release’ areas, including “sites identified in the Draft Northern Rivers Resilient Lands Strategy near Bangalow and Brunswick Heads which are on significant farmland.” With the housing crisis escalating in tandem with local population growth, the release of new land is welcome news for many young families according to Clarence Property General Manager Paul Rippon. Mr Rippon says demand continues to outpace supply and Clarence Property’s Wallum community - which is the only already-zoned and approved Brunswick Heads site included as part of the housing strategy - is a key project in helping address the problem. He says recent sales

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demonstrate the majority of locals support the project and want new land to be made available as soon as possible, to avoid being priced out of an already heated market. “We purchased the Wallum site in 2021 and sold the first 19 homesites in one of the most severe property shortages in the past 20 years, due to the lack of supply and pent-up demand for land in the Brunswick Heads region,” he said. “The Wallum site has been earmarked for residential development since 1988 and while waiting for this land to be released many locals have been priced out of the market.” Mr Rippon said purchasers in the first stage of Wallum were mostly local, young families.

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“A number of purchasers are young people who have grown up in and around Brunswick Heads who want to buy a home and raise their family in the community they know and love, but the opportunity to do so has been limited,” he said. “When stage one of Wallum was released, local owner occupiers seized the chance. We even had a duplex lot bought by two young families who plan to build a house each, so it’s providing new pathways for people to enter the property market and is being delivered with the Brunswick Heads community front of mind.” To review a fact sheet about the Wallum development, please visit wallumbrunswick.com. au

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Easts scrambles to win over Harwood

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page 55

SYDNEY SPRINTCAR DRIVERS DOMINATE AT LISMORE SPEEDWAY

1min
page 55

Budget Gardening: Cultivating Joy Amidst Australia’s Cost of Living Crisis

9min
pages 46-51, 53-54

Ryobi One+ 18V Cordless Garden Vacuum and Sweeper

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page 46

Sonia Barton & Auralia Rose

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page 45

Virtual reality is helping brain injury survivors regain use of their arms and hands

1min
page 45

5 ways to cool cities as temperatures soar

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page 44

Burner phones balm to business blackout blues.

2min
page 42

AMERICAN LUXURY SET TO ARRIVE DOWN UNDER: GM’S YUKON SUV CONFIRMED FOR AUSTRALIA

1min
page 40

Rental affordability hitting all time lows across the nation: new report

2min
pages 38-39

Deepening crisis: Rental Affordability Index reveals rental calamity for people on low incomes in regional NSW

1min
page 38

The Benefts of Travelling in Your 20s

3min
page 37

Algae’s next for trade success

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page 36

Australian states set to battle it out for the 2023 IXOM Best Tasting Tap Water in Australia title

2min
page 36

Ammonia for fertilisers without the giant carbon footprint

2min
page 35

What are you really feeding Supporting fexible early childhood education and care for rural and regional NSW

3min
page 34

Farmers make 11th hour plea to maintain live sheep trade

1min
page 33

SafeWork inspectors targeting safety standards at oyster farms

1min
page 33

THE ANGELS ANNOUNCE 50 YEARS IN THE MAKING NATIONAL TOUR

2min
page 32

BEST ON THE BOX

3min
page 27

RECENT CATTLE MARKET REPORTS LISMORE

9min
pages 24-26

SETTING OUR INFRASTRUCTURE PRIORITIES

2min
pages 22-23

New $18M partnership building digital tech for safer workplaces

1min
page 22

Australian Food Safety Week encouraging food safety on a budget

1min
page 21

NEW BRUNSWICK HEADS COMMUNITY NEEDED TO HELP EASE HOUSING

4min
page 20

THINK TWICE ABOUT ASBESTOS

1min
pages 19-20

Used Car Safety Ratings 2023

2min
page 19

Enhanced Support Amplifes Impact of Rural Landholder Initiative

5min
page 18

Need for speed? Why some speedometers lag behind reality

6min
page 17

ADOPT-A-FAMILY

2min
page 16

RELIEF AS ST JOSEPH’S PRIMARY SCHOOL AT WOODBURN ESCAPES THE CHOP

2min
page 14

From Crisis to Courageous

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page 14

Iconic ice cream and lolly shop turns 10

3min
page 13

HOT SHOWERS INSTALLED AT BRUNSWICK HEADS PARK FOR THOSE SLEEPING ROUGH

1min
page 12

DRAWING AT THE GRAFTON REGIONAL GALLERY

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page 12

Kerbside EV charging comes to Byron Bay

3min
page 11

Kevin Hogan

2min
page 10

Business Lismore announces new Board of Directors

0
page 10

Lennox Head para surfer Joel Taylor wins world title

3min
page 9

Sign up for next year’s Tweed Seniors Festival

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page 8

Diary of a Flood Survivor

1min
page 8

Summerville Solar Farm

1min
pages 7-8

City landmark falls to start $29.5 mil project

2min
page 7

Specialist mental health service for new parents opens in Lismore

2min
page 6

Friday

0
page 3

Turning the town purple to fight for respectful relationships

0
page 3

Schoolies about to descend on Byron Bay

2min
pages 2-3
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