Saturday, 5 July 2014

Hope & Nostalgia (2)





























Last week I participated in this Brisbane conference which was the first involving my specialty (physical impairment) for many years.

I've called this post Hope & Nostalgia (2) because it follows on a similar post in April 2009.

The difference with this one was that it was purely about education, and I was one of five people on the organising committee, which meant that I was torn between helping the running of the conference for the three days and attending and learning from the presentations.

On the second day, I chaired three sessions and was part of the presentation for one, so it was a busy day.

The nostalgia reference arises because two other members of the organising committee were part of my staff when I opened a new special school in Townsville in 1987, and it was gratifying to see them so deeply involved in this rewarding discipline nearly thirty years later.

Also on nostalgia, the closing address was given by a fellow with Cerebral Palsy who was a student at the state school for spastic children, New Farm, the year (1971) I was discharged from the army to begin teaching there.

He graduated from U of Q in Economics and has a very senior position in the ATO.

Now that was over forty years ago.

Much of the time I was the oldest person in the room, and certainly the oldest still working in the field.

Meanwhile our pig ignorant federal government has sacked the Disabilities Commissioner, whilst at the same time looking at attacking this particular vulnerable section of the community through restricted welfare support.

Somehow or another, the message simply hasn't got through that everyone can be productive, given the right kind of timely support.

Gavin King (LNP Cairns) parks where he likes. He is the local member after all. People with disabilities can make other arrangements..






















 These two actions (together with the pic above) provide a pretty fair commentary on the Coalition's real view of the importance of the disability sector.

But the NDIS is on the horizon, so hope springs eternal.


Sunday, 22 June 2014

Daughters






















I have the enormous privilege to have two daughters.

I also have sons, but that's a different matter.

For fathers, There's something mystical about daughters that trumps logic and common sense.

Last week my youngest went for her driving test. She had completed 120 hours (20 more than necessary) in her log book, learned the rules to the point where she was a pain as a passenger, as she constantly correctly pointed out all my minor infractions, and those of other drivers, and dragged me out numerous times to either supervise or take her through the various controls in the car.

Given that she lives 150 kms away, this was no small thing.

I learnt interesting things during this process - for example, you must always put your seat belt on before starting the engine.

There are ninjas that leap at you if you get the sequence wrong.

The great day came, and I drove her to the testing station. We sat waiting for the driving examiner in the station, and I remember wondering why testing stations smell bad. It's probably all those years of bottled up anxiety impregnating the walls.

Anyway, the examiner arrived, a middle aged gent with a gentle demeanor and an appearance that reminded me of Derek Jacobi (but not in I Claudius).

He said gidday, and I gave him a look which should have conveyed the meaning "If you fail her I'll beat you to a pulp", but I'm not sure he understood.

My daughter smiled at him - probably much more effective.

My older daughter had developed a nasty toothache, as a result of a lost filling.

She was studying for a uni exam, and toothache and exam preparation are an unwise combination.

So she made an appointment with one of those swish dental practices (with music) and I drove her in.

It was an emergency appointment, so the dentist met her at the door to the treatment room. He was a short chap of Middle Eastern appearance. I gave him the same look I had given the driving examiner. It was meant to convey the advice that if he hurt my daughter, I would beat him to a pulp.

I don't think he understood - probably cultural issues.....

My younger daughter passed the test and my older daughter came out of the dentist's rooms praising his patience and care.

Maybe there is something mystically powerful in a father's protective gaze.



Tuesday, 17 June 2014

Outlander




























 It must be time for another road test, even if it simply breaks the monotony of the political news cycle lately.

He who must be obeyed (the fleet manager is now of the male gender) has taken to hiring vehicles for recalcitrants like me who travel vast distances.

Last week the journey was 2000+ kms, and the vehicle a Mitsubishi Outlander.

This makes a change from a succession of Nissan X-Trails tested here.

Once I owned a Magna wagon, and we did have a later version in the fleet until a few years ago. It was a comfortable, refined and nimble vehicle. The Mitsubishi Outlander shares its DNA, and this heritage is notable in the driving.

You'll note I didn't include "nimble". It isn't, as the steering is vague, and the handling a bit ponderous. Having said that, it's an improvement on a previous hired Outlander which was outright scary on the Chinese tyres that had replaced the originals.

There are plenty of good points. It's well finished. The engine-transmission combination is refined and responsive, and it's comfortable.

Unfortunately, my spine (partly stuffed after jumping in and out of choppers carrying beaucoup gear forty years ago, and constantly lifting kids with disabilities thirty years ago) did not like the seats. This happens sometimes, and it can preclude the use of certain vehicles. I was able to deal with it by constantly changing the backrest angle, but it was literally a pain.

Don't get me wrong. People with uninjured spines would probably not have an issue.

On the long straight roads we were using (Toowoomba - Roma, Roma - Charleville, and Charleville - Quilpie) the ponderous handling wasn't a problem.

Most of the roads were like this (Quilpie - Charleville)































You just pointed it in the general direction of "straight ahead" and it was OK.

It's not especially economical (8 lit/100kms average) and the range is not in the same class as say, a Hyundai Santa Fe, but it overtakes well. The CVT transmission seems to avoid the drone that is often heard with this kind of gearbox.

Apart from the back issue, I was able to jump out of it after three hours generally bright eyed and bushy tailed, ready for work. This was a product of the quiet ride. Noise is tiring.

Monday, 9 June 2014

John Shaw Neilson






Most readers will have heard of Henry Lawson and Banjo Paterson, at school, and encountered their works in popular culture, but mentioning the name of John Shaw Neilson would likely generate a blank look.

Yet this poet, a contemporary of Lawson and Paterson, wrote some exquisite material.

When you consider the life he lived, and the area he was brought up in – always marginal country, and often in the grip of drought, the lyrical intensity of his work is breathtaking.

It begs to be put to music, and Paul Kelly did just that.

Hence the clip above.

Jimmy Little also covered it.

I saw Kelly perform it live in the Empire Theatre in Toowoomba during the Foggy Highway tour, and he did Neilson and this work justice.

The Poem - 

Surely God was a lover
When He bade the day begin
Soft as a woman’s eyelid
Fine as a woman’s skin
Surely God was a lover
All burning with desire
When He called the night to come down
And set the day on fire
Surely God is a lover
Surely God is a lover
Surely God was a lover
When He made the driving rain
A woman must have left Him
Weeping in a waste of shame
Surely God was a lover
With the madness love will bring
He wrought while His love was singing
And put her soul in the spring
Surely God was a lover
When He made the trees so fair
In every leaf a glory
Caught from a woman’s hair
Surely God was a lover
You can see it in the flowers He grows
His love’s eyes in the violet
Her sweetness in the rose
Surely God was a lover

Friday, 6 June 2014

Privatisation





















Those of you not living in Queensland may not have heard of the LNP government's push for asset sales.

A very expensive PR campaign seems not to have convinced Queensland voters that it is the way to go.

Like many other locals, I completed the "Strong Choices" survey, and despite its architecture, which was designed to produce asset sales as the best outcome, I had little trouble in fixing the deficit without resorting to the favoured strategy.

Unfortunately for the government, the survey did not produce the required result.

Which brings me to the images posted here.

The first one compares energy tariffs in the states on the basis of privatised and state owned utilities.

The second one examines consumer complaints related to when the privatisation occurred.



















These pictures tell a thousand words.

For me, bottom line is, along with millions of other Queenslanders, I take a dim view of someone selling my property, and then allowing the new owners to rip me off in favour of their shareholders.

And for those of you interested in data rather than anecdote, here is an abstract from a British study* into costs and benefits of privitisation -

 We report a social cost-benefit analysis of the privatisation and restructuring of the Central Electricity Generating Board which generated and transmitted all public electricity in England and Wales until 1990. The main benefits came from generator efficiency gains, switching from nuclear power, and lower emissions. The main costs came from higher prices for imported French electricity, the cost of restructuring and premature investment in the gas-fired generating plant. Our central estimate is a permanent cost reduction of 5% per year, equivalent to an extra 40% return on assets. Consumers and government lose, and producers gain more than the cost reduction.

* The Journal of Industrial Economics
Volume 45, Issue 3, pages 269–303, September 1997


Tuesday, 3 June 2014

From the Other Side



Last Week Tonight with John Oliver is an American late-night talk show airing Sundays.

Oliver is a comedian, so the show is tongue-in-cheek.

What 's the old saying - Many a true word is spoken in jest?

Sunday, 1 June 2014

Gosford Anglican Church





























The Priest at Gosford Anglican Church has a dab hand with signage.

Here are a few examples.





























More power to his elbow.






















There aren't too many real Christians about, and none in federal politics.






















These signs make that state of affairs abundantly clear.


Groundhog Day

M109 at the Horseshoe Back in May 1970, I was a reluctant member of 5 platoon, B Coy, 7 RAR, and about one third into my sojourn in South Vi...