NCA review is due, but praise must go with criticism
Your editorial (May 18) has finally given
some balance to the biased reporting
and inflammatory statements made
against the National Capital Authority
over the past two months.
Chief executive Annabelle Pegrum is
an outstanding Canberran and the very
personal attacks on anyone who holds
public office should be soundly condemned:
we have sadly seen the
consequences of such vindictiveness
before.
The chairman of the NCA, Michael
Ball, admitted at the recent inquiry,
and Pegrum concurred, that the NCA
had made mistakes. There has, however,
been much the NCA has produced
that deserves high praise, from the
brilliance of the Griffin Legacy Plan to
the running of the Australia Day
Concert each year.
Most people wouldn't deny a review
of the NCA's role was due, however,
many Canberrans have benefited from
the experience of its staff, the guidance
of an eminent board and the enthusiasm
of its chief executive.
Many decisions of the NCA in the
past have stimulated much debate, and
such animated discussions, particularly
in the area of planning, should be
encouraged. We now await the outcome
of the parliamentary inquiry into
the NCA with much anticipation.
David Marshall, chairman Canberra
Business Council Tourism Sports and Arts
Taskforce (briefly consulted to the NCA
previously)
Neil Savery (Letters, May 17) has finally
revealed the reason behind the poor
standard of building construction in
the ACT. Buildings that cannot stand a
good hailstorm, buildings that leak,
buildings that have constantly flooding
basements, buildings that crack and
become unsightly after a couple of
years, buildings in which the services
do not function as they should,
buildings that have been incorrectly
constructed and buildings that are
environmentally unsustainable.
These faults, none of which is mere
opinion or conjecture, are commonplace
in both residential, non-
residential and mixed-use buildings
throughout Canberra, and current
owners find that the planning rules are
so loose it is nearly impossible for any
redress to be taken against the builders
or developers. We now know why.
According to Savery, ''planning laws
are not always black and white and in
fact the development industry often
prefers it that way as it offers scope for
flexibility''.
What an indictment of the ACT
Planning and Land Authority. Of course
the developers like it that way, it allows
them almost free rein to do what they
want at the expense of ''all current and
future Canberrans'' the best interests
of whom Savery claims ACTPLA is
safeguarding.
The time has surely come for the ACT
Government to reinstate properly
qualified building certifiers employed
by the Government and not by the very
builders whose work they have to
certify. An admission that this system
was a genuine mistake would be a good
start.
Murray S. Upton, Kingston.
Reform and change
Hear! Hear! to David Bastin's letter
about the media's acceptance of government
jargon (Letters, May 16). I
have, for some time, wondered why the
media accepts unquestioningly that
government changes are ''reforms''
merely because the government of the
day deems them to be so.
Not only does the media's acceptance
of government terminology
inherently portray any changes with
the ''reforms'' label in a positive light,
regardless of the actual merits of those
changes, we now often witness the
farcical spectacle of the media debating
whether or not so-called ''reforms'' are
changes for the better.
Gordon Fyfe, Kambah
Hours dividend
The Community and Public Sector
Union my union is thinking of ways
to convince agencies to cut workloads
to counterbalance the 3.25per cent
''efficiency'' dividend.
It has asked agency heads and other
senior leaders to specify what work
will not be done in the light of
reducing staff levels by 3200 across the
public service. No agency head will tell
the union that the whole idea of the
dividend is to force us to do more work
with less staff.
I have a suggestion for the union.
Let's campaign to cut working hours
by 3.25per cent without loss of pay.
That guarantees less work out of us.
By my calculations, the normal day
would fall from 7 hours 21 minutes to
7hr 5min. Let's make it an even seven
hours to catch up for just one of John
Howard's ''efficiency'' dividends.
Then we can begin to move to a six-
hour day without loss of pay to catch
up with the rest of what we lost under
Howard and offset the marked
decrease in labour's share of gross
domestic product that has occurred
over the last 30 years.
John Passant, Kambah
Assembly absence
Zed Seselja has finally admitted he was
not in the Legislative Assembly
chamber on Thursday night, May 8 as
he was attending a Liberal Party fund-
raising dinner.
Apparently, despite the Assembly
only having to sit for three days this
month and having known for a number
of days that it would sit late that
night, Seselja made no attempt to
negotiate a pair, but simply absented
himself without explanation. It was
not until 10.30pm that Thursday that
the Opposition Whip, Jacqui Bourke,
advised the Government Whip, Karen
MacDonald, that the Opposition
Leader would not be returning.
What does it say about Seselja's
priorities that he considers having
dinner with influential business
people more important than
representing his constituents in the
Assembly?
Many might think, including his
colleagues, that it says a great deal
about Seselja's suitability to become
our next chief minister.
John Bonnett, Nicholls
Nurses' memorial
The Royal College of Nursing, having
been heavily involved with the fund-
raising and tender for the Australian
Service Nurses National Memorial, has
a vested interest in seeing it repaired
and taken care of in the future
(''Action call as nurses' war memorial
left in disrepair'', April 28, p5).
It is certainly distressing that the site
sustained such damage, and that it
was closed on Anzac Day this year.
However, the college maintains a
good working relationship with the
National Capital Authority and does
not in any way hold it responsible.
Both organisations continue to work
closely in ascertaining a solution for
the current issue affecting the site.
The memorial did not ''languish in
disrepair'' for two successive Anzac
Days. After being vandalised early last
year, temporary repairs were made to
the site so that it could be open for
Anzac Day 2007.
Further repairs were carried out
after the day.
If the investigation and repairs to
the current damage appear lengthy, it
is because both the college and the
NCA are seeking a long-term solution
to repair the memorial, not a quick fix.
Rosemary Bryant, executive director,
Royal College of Nursing, Australia
Room to move
I have attended concerts in the Llewellyn
Hall since the School of Music
opened in 1976 and I attended the very
first concert in the revamped hall on
May 4.
One's knees still touch the back of
the seat in front and most people still
have to stand to allow other audience
members to reach their seats.
There are no aisles with the much-
vaunted ''continental'' seating plan
and this increases the inconvenience.
Was the entire concrete tiering of
the hall demolished to allow for wider
tiers, more space between rows and
more leg room?
Suzanne Vidler, O'Malley
CSIRO funding bid
The article, ''CSIRO in grab for bigger
slice of funding'' (May 13, p3) and its
inappropriate and erroneous headline
is disappointing and, at best,
misrepresents the constructive spirit
of the submissions of both the CSIRO
and the Cooperative Research Council
Committee.
The CSIRO has proposed that the
CRC program should not continue in
its current form and the committee
has also argued that a number of
changes to the program are needed to
improve its impact and attractiveness
to all organisations.
Rosslyn Beeby failed to report that
CSIRO's submission also noted the
value of the centres in ''promoting
collaboration in the NIS'' and having
''produced fundamental change in the
way that Australian institutions,
including industry, interact''.
CSIRO's perspectives are based on
its extensive engagement with the CRC
program since its beginnings; CSIRO
has been involved in more than 120 of
the 167 centres.
The suggestion that ''the [CRC]
Committee has fired back ...'' is
wrong. Both submissions were written
and submitted independently without
knowledge of the content of the
respective submissions.
No shots have been fired by the
CSIRO or the committee, and our
submissions, while naturally having
differing points of view, provide
suggestions for the new Government
to improve the National Innovation
System, and the roles and
contributions of both the CSIRO and
the CRC program.
The article states that the CRC
Committee submission accuses the
CSIRO of being ''difficult, obstructive,
overly competitive, elitist and unwilling
to 'work as peers'''. These words
are not included in the submission nor
are they sentiments of the committee.
The committee, as stated in its
submission, believes the ''CSIRO has
developed a strong domestic and
international reputation over many
years''.
The current inquiry into Australia's
National Innovation System is crucial.
Through harnessing different
perspectives and experiences, the
CSIRO and the committee believe we
can greatly improve Australia's results
as an innovative nation. We are
committed to working together to
achieve the best possible outcomes.
Dr Geoff Garrett, chief executive, CSIRO,
Dr Peter Jonson, chairman, CRC Committee
Share role between home and school for better child health
Gwyneth Bray (Letters, May 15) makes
the point that primary school teachers
should not be expected to take over
parents' responsibilities to ensure
pupils have sufficient physical activity
and a sensible food intake.
I agree that they should not be taken
over, but feel that responsibilities for
our children's education and health are
best shared by home and school.
The Canberra Times reported on the
submission I made to the federal
parliamentary inquiry on obesity on
behalf of the Lifestyle of our Kids, or
LOOK, research project (''Veggie rebate
would fight fat'', May 13, p1).
That article's title, though, was one I
would not have used, as Bray and
others, I assume, would have got the
impression that my attention at the
inquiry was directed solely at removing
''childhood obesity''.
This was certainly not the case.
At the inquiry, I asked the 10 MPs to
adopt a paradigm shift in their thinking.
Rather than focusing on a perceived
widespread community problem of
childhood obesity, l suggested we focus
our attention on the main primary
causes of metabolic dysfunction and
Type 2 diabetes; these being physical
inactivity and poor quality of diet
(especially excessive intake of saturated
fats and concentrated sugars).
We have a normal distribution of
body types in the Australian community,
and there will always be
thinner and fatter children.
What's more, there is little evidence
that a child classified as overweight by
the commonly used body mass index,
or BMI, charts is at increased risk of
developing Type 2 diabetes, provided
the child is sufficiently physically
active.
Indeed, there is evidence that
''dieting'' in young children can evoke
negative physiological and psychological
effects, which may make it more
difficult for a child to control the
balance of energy intake and output
later in life.
In any case, the notion of children
attempting to achieve some sort of
''ideal body weight'' is even more
frivolous when we consider that the
commonly used body mass index-
based classification system is flawed
and potentially misleading.
Let's concentrate, instead, on positive
approaches that can be readily
achieved and enjoyed by children.
Let's develop physical activity
opportunities designed so that they are
fun for everyone, without exception,
and promote consumption of
nutritious food that also tastes really
good to children.
If we get this right for our growing
children, then it is very likely that the
largely symptomatic but visibly obvious
state we call overweight will take
care of itself.
Dick Telford, research director,
LOOK project
Praise for Pegrum
The National Capital Authority is not
perfect, but retiring chief executive
Annabelle Pegrum deserves high praise
for many things achieved for Canberra
during her almost 10 years.
Commonwealth Place, Magna Carta
Place, Reconciliation Place, Acton Peninsula
and the restoration of the beautiful
gardens of Old Parliament House
have all occurred under her leadership.
The redevelopment of the National
Capital Exhibition from an embarrassment
to a world-class interpretative
centre was also her doing.
Fair judges must accept the
constraints on ACT planning that the
unwieldy duplicated system imposes,
within which both the NCA and the
ACT Government must work.
But that is the fault of the laws, not
the professional planners. Hundreds of
thousands of people come to our
beautiful national capital each year,
and we should thank Pegrum and the
NCA for helping to make visitors
experience what it is.
Don Morris, South Hobart, Tas
As a volunteer guide for 20 years with
ex-service colleagues to ''Make the
mute monuments talk'' in Anzac Parade,
I had occasional discussions with
Annabelle Pegrum.
I feel I should thank her publicly for
her understanding and courtesy.
I found her extremely informative
and a great Canberra supporter.
Her departure is a loss to important
developments in the ACT.
Ron Metcalfe, Hughes