The Bribie Islander Issue 123 September 112020

Page 72

COMMUNITY NOTICES

LETTERS

DEAR EDITOR, Off-Line and tearing out what's left of my hair! Our NBN crashed without warning last Thursday. Hours on the phone followed with our provider who insisted it was the routers fault, which fixed nothing, other than a complete reset of the router. Despite my insistence, it wasn’t the router as all internal connections worked. The telephone was down… it had to be the line. So eventually we were advised that it would be referred to Telstra as it was now their fault. So our providers sent us several emails to tell us when the tech would come, gave us a fault number to follow up with Telstra – all via email- even though the damn internet was down! Four days later the tech arrived and once again attacked the router. Finally, he agreed that it was not the router, it was the telephone cable. He was a patient chap and tried to follow the cable through the house and up the road but could find no signal. Eventually, he ended up at the “Telstra Pillar”. About a block away and found that “Some dumb tech had switched off our service”. He switched it back on. But this was not the end of it, Oh no. As a result of all the mucking about, resetting of the router, it was back at factory default and we/he did not have the authentication code. This took another hour of frustrating talks with three different people buried somewhere in Vic or NSW until someone eventually got off their lazy backside and begrudgingly gave the tech the code. The internet came online and I received all the emails sent to me by the provider giving all the info I needed when the internet was down. I don’t think they see the irony in this.

It was a complete mess around caused by a negligent NBN tech last Thursday, who, without a care in the world, switched off our connection. And still, he goes on, the unknown warrior, without a care in the world, continuing his dodgy ways, leaving a trail of destruction and broken bodies behind him. Al Finegan, Bongaree DEAR EDITOR, I am deeply offended by a letter written about the wonderful place Bugger Me Designs. I have had this letter on the computer for a number of weeks waiting on my estate agent who has been actively chasing a property in the vicinity. I am going to pursue my hobby of chainsaw sculptures. There has not been a lot of interest shown in this and once settled, I will be holding demonstrations from 7am to 8am and 4 pm to 5pm so people can see it before or after work. J. South DEAR EDITOR, Thank you for printing our letter regarding 1080 poison and thank you to H Beneke for her pertinent comments regarding same. Unfortunately H. Beneke, we are probably more cynical than you and we don’t believe the blurb put out about 1080 poison by the people with vested interests (i.e. the manufacturers, councils, state governments, pest control boards, National Parks and Wildlife and the like). Yes, monofluoroacetate does naturally occur in some "Australian plant species especially in northern and western areas" and yes some native animals are not affected by it. However we live on the East Coast and it is interesting to note that in Tasmania the Government subsidises farmers and the woodchip industry to poison possums and wallabies with 1080.

72 www.thebribieislander.com.au

The Bribie Islander

The Queensland Government have had major 1080 campaigns to poison dingoes which have been in Australia for between 3000 and 8000 years. Dingoes are the sole non-human land based top predator on the mainland and their importance to the ecological health and resilience of Australian ecosystems cannot be overstated. They regulate wild herbivore overabundance (e.g. various kangaroo species) and reduce the impact of feral cats and foxes on native marsupials. Unfortunately there are videos in existence of dogs (of which the dingo is one) who have ingested 1080 and the effects of it on non-herbivores is quite horrific. Yes domestic dogs and cats should be under control and confined however accidents happen even in the best regulated conditions and yes accidents do happen regarding placement of the baits, just as they happen when back burning. No we are not trying to panic the populace (many of whom have no interest at all regarding the environment if the amount of fast food wrappers etc. thrown out vehicle windows is any indication) and no, we are not going off "half-cocked", we are just expressing our opinion which was formed by researching information .that wasn't sponsored by vested interests, regarding the use of 1080 in what is widely advertised as a flora and fauna sanctuary, i.e. the beautiful Bribie Island. Also giving domestic pet owners a little warning that not all is perfect in paradise. We would refer people who have an interest regarding the facts about 1080 to go to the website www.ban1080.org.au Yours in compassion, C. & A. Schnack.

DEAR EDITOR, I write as we are in the "vulnerable" category of Queenslanders. My wife and I now 70s and I have a pacemaker, our daughter-in-law has stage IV cancer, so we are all at risk. As a result, we are careful, we do not go out unnecessarily and we wear masks where appropriate and research the best advice available. We look after ourselves. We are well aware that over 98% of all deaths associated with coronavirus involve people with comorbidity, people just like us who already know that there are issues and limitations with our health. We understand this and we thank all those people who are helping. However, we are devastated by the loss of jobs, the destruction of small business, in fact, the destruction to entire industries, caused by the political reaction to the virus. We do not want a single person to suffer because a politician wants to keep us "safe". The psychological damage being wrought is causing much greater suffering than virus ever has. Please, open the borders, remove the restrictions on life living and loving and bring back the freedoms that we enjoyed just nine months ago. In closing, some statistics from various government departments as a perspective. In 2019, there were 312,970 confirmed cases of influenza A, over 260 deaths in Queensland. In the last 10 years, around 10,000 deaths Australia wide. We did not close a single event or a border. Since January 22 this year, around 820 people have died with or from Covid 19, in the same period, over 100,000 Australians have died from something else. Last year, 1,195 people died in road accidents, we have not banned the motor vehicle and we just do the best we can and try and stay safe. Let's do that. ANON


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.