2021-22 Accreditation Terms and Conditions Please Note: the Part A

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2021-22 Accreditation Terms and Conditions Please Note: the Part A 2021-22 Accreditation Terms and Conditions Please note: The Part A – General Terms apply to all applicants (excluding signatories to the Code of Practice of Sports News Reporting). The Part B – Code Terms apply to representatives of signatories to the Code of Practice of Sports News Reporting (see page 8). The signatories are as follows: 1. Agence France-Presse (AFP) 2. APN News & Media 3. Associated Press 4. Australian Assoc. Press 5. Fairfax Media (SMH, Age, Fin Review, Brisbane Times) 6. Getty Images 7. News International (Sun, Sunday Times, The Times, News of the World) 8. News Corp (The Australian, The Daily Telegraph, The Courier Mail, Herald Sun, The Advertiser, The Mercury, Townsville Bulletin, NT News, Daily Mercury, The Observer, The Morning Bulletin, Fraser Coast Chronicle, News - Mail, Gympie Times, Sunshine Coast Daily, Queensland Times, The Chronicle, Warwick Daily News, Northern Star, Daily Examiner) 9. Perform 10. The Daily Mail 11. The Daily Telegraph 12. The Guardian 13. The Independent 14. The Independent on Sunday 15. The Observer 16. The Sunday Telegraph 17. WA Newspapers Limited (The West Australian and The Sunday Times) 18. Thomson Reuters (i.e. English Regionals) 2021-22 Accreditation Terms and Conditions PART A – General Terms (e) not breach the intellectual property rights of any person involved in the staging of a Match; Accreditation – Venue Access (f) not at any time permit, encourage or allow any Cricket Australia (CA) is a not-for-profit body with person under the age of eighteen (18) to enter into any responsibility for the development of the game of cricket media facility areas at the Venue without the prior written in Australia. CA has the exclusive right to determine the consent of CA; terms on which access is granted to the Venues. (g) conduct themselves in a manner that will not bring These Cricket Australia Accreditation Terms and the Match, CA and/or the game of cricket into disrepute; Conditions (Terms) set out the terms on which CA grants and the Applicant with accreditation for access to a Venue. These Terms apply to all Venue accreditation other than (h) comply with all directions issued by CA with respect applicants for Media Accreditation for signatories to the to appropriate workplace behaviour while in and around Code of Practice of Sports News Reporting (for whom the Venue; and separate terms apply). (i) conduct themselves in a way that will not cause Nothing in these Terms limits the rights of the Applicant offence to, or otherwise inhibit the enjoyment of, any under the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth) and CA reserves its other person, including other accredited personnel, right to take any action under the Copyright Act 1968 media, rights holders, players, teams or patrons at the (Cth). Venue. 1.1A Australian Cricket Biosecurity Requirements 1. General Obligations (a) The Applicant must comply with all applicable 1.1 Conduct Australian Cricket Biosecurity Requirements including (but not limited to): The Applicant will: (i) complying with Australian Cricket requirements regarding social gathering, (a) comply with, and agrees to, these Terms, the Ticket social distancing and the wearing of and Entry Conditions (available at cricket.com.au/tickets) personal protective equipment while in and and any other conditions of entry applicable to the around the Venue; Venues as prescribed from time to time by CA, to the (ii) completing all biosecurity and other related extent those terms of entry do not directly and materially training as required by CA; conflict with the rights set out in these Terms; (iii) complying with all directions regarding undertaking daily medical protocols or daily (b) abide by all lawful directions from a CA Authorised illness monitoring (as applicable); Person while in the Venue, including but not limited to the (iv) complying with protocols for responding to a times and areas of access to the Venue, and will not case (or suspected case) of COVID-19; enter the field of play at the Venue whether before, (v) remaining within applicable designated during or after the conduct of a Match at the Venue zones at all times while in the Venue; and without prior written approval of a CA Authorised Person; (vi) abiding by all lawful and reasonable directions of CA relating to minimising the (c) at all times while within the Venue: risk of transmission of COVID-19 or (i) wear such identifying badge, pass and/or otherwise related to the biosecurity of the vest as may be provided by CA and ensure that Venue. such badge, pass and/or vest is visible at all times; (b) The Applicant acknowledges that there remains an (ii) not tamper with or obscure any items unquantifiable risk of transmission of viral illness described in (c)(i) above and return such items to including COVID-19 and that COVID-19 may have CA immediately upon request; very serious health consequences for certain people. By attending the Venue, the Applicant (d) if a holder of Media Accreditation, not be prohibited acknowledges that they have considered those risks from wearing standard-sized insignia on their clothing and their own personal circumstances, including any solely for identification; health condition or vulnerability that Applicant may 2021-22 Accreditation Terms and Conditions have, and the circumstances of persons with whom terms and conditions as it determines are necessary in its the Applicant will be in close contact following absolute discretion (including during a Match). Once attendance at the Venue. granted, CA may revoke the accreditation at any time in its absolute discretion without providing reasons and 1.2 Indemnity, Risk and Access without being liable to compensate the Applicant or any other person. (a) The Applicant agrees to indemnify and hold harmless CA, the State/Territory Associations, the (c) All accreditation devices (including passes, badges Venue, the League Teams and each of their employees, and vests) remain the property of CA. In the event of a contractors, officers and agents against any loss, claim, breach of any of these Terms, accreditation devices expense or damage to CA, the State/Territory shall, on request by a CA Authorised Person, be returned Associations, the Venue, the League Teams or any of immediately to CA. their employees, contractors officers and agents resulting from a breach of these Terms by the Applicant (whether 1.5 Minimum Age Requirement or not the Applicant is acting within the scope of any employment or contract) or resulting from the revocation Unless the following requirement is otherwise permitted of accreditation by CA. or waived by CA in its absolute discretion, the Applicant warrants and represents to CA that the Applicant is or will (b) The Applicant acknowledges and agrees that the be over the age of eighteen (18) prior to attending any Applicant shall move in and around the Venue at their Venue under these Terms and the Applicant agrees that own risk. CA may revoke the accreditation at any time in its absolute discretion if the Applicant is not over the age of (c) Access to the Venue will be refused and/or eighteen (18) at the time of attending any Venue. accreditation will be revoked if the Applicant, in the opinion of CA, is noticeably under the influence of 1.6 Anti-Corruption alcohol, narcotics, stimulants or any behaviour- modifying substance, is behaving or is likely to behave violently, The Applicant acknowledges that CA and the harmfully or in a manner contrary to public order, or if the International Cricket Council (ICC) have policies and Applicant’s appearance or behaviour negatively affects procedures in place to guard against conduct of a corrupt the public standing of the Match or CA. nature in relation to cricket. (d) The Applicant is strictly prohibited from using, In respect of all accreditation, the Applicant: possessing or holding promotional or commercial, political, religious or racist objects and materials, offering (a) agrees that any information the Applicant obtains by to sell, selling or possessing with intent to sell goods virtue of their accreditation will only be used for bona fide such as drinks, food, souvenirs, clothes, promotional news editorial reporting and will not be used by the and/or commercial items at any time in or at the Venue. Applicant for betting on the outcome of a Match or any All such items may be removed or temporarily element of a Match or to induce any other person to do confiscated by stewards and/or any other duly authorised the same; and persons. (b) consents to CA disclosing the Personal Information 1.3 Accreditation Not Transferable (as defined in the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth)) of the Applicant to third parties (including sports betting providers) for the The Applicant acknowledges and agrees that any rights purpose of monitoring compliance with their obligations in connection with the accreditation granted to the under these Terms or for any other purpose permitted by Applicant cannot, without the prior consent of CA, be law. loaned, transferred, licensed or in any other way assigned to another person or entity for any purpose 1.7 Use of Attributes whatsoever. The Applicant agrees that use may be made by CA, the 1.4 Grant of Request State/Territory Associations, the League Teams and CA’s commercial partners (including the ICC and any official (a) Failure to abide by these Terms and/or any request sponsor, official supplier, broadcaster or licensee) by a CA Authorised Person will result in the Applicant’s without compensation to the Applicant of any kind, of the accreditation being revoked. Applicant’s name, voice, image and/or likeness (including but not limited to video, audio and audio-visual (b) CA may grant or reject the request for accreditation recordings): in its absolute discretion and may impose such further 2021-22 Accreditation Terms and Conditions (a) at the Venue (including on vision screens throughout recordings or sound recordings) without the prior written the Match); and/or consent of CA (which may be withheld in its absolute discretion); and (b) commercially, throughout the world and in perpetuity, by any means.
Recommended publications
  • Newsletter April 2012
    Newsletter April 2012 President’s Report The first quarter of 2012 has gone very quickly, and been launched for nurses to tell of their experiences. already there has been one Market Day, and one In particular we are interested in stories about the major tour of the Hospital Museum. The Museum experience of living in Nurses’ Quarters, and the ex- tends to increase in popularity each Market Day. periences of student nurses who were the pioneers The first major tour to the Museum occurred in March of the University based system. We are calling for when Members of the University of the Third Age nurses to take time to write to us of their experi- arranged for their routine monthly outing to be a guid- ences. These stories after editing will be collated into ed tour through the Museum. U3A Members met at a book to be launched at next year’s IND Celebra- Arnolds, and while enjoying morning tea, Yvonne gave tions. Some examples of such stories will be available a much appreciated overview of the Museum’s origins. for reading at the IND Function. Morning tea was followed by guided tours through the Information concerning the program for International Museum and its archive area. Nurses’ Day is on a small flyer included with this As part of the Committee’s endeavours to make each newsletter. Please send anecdotal stories to ACHHA, repeat visit by the public to the Museum of continued PO Box 4035, Rockhampton Qld 4700 or email to interest and in keeping with the strategic plan, pro- [email protected].
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter December 2011
    Newsletter December 2011 President’s Report Elections for the positions on the ACHHA Manage- be an invitation for nurses to write short anecdotal ment committee were held in October, and the new stories of experiences they may have had with re- committee structure can be found elsewhere in this gards hospital training or experiences of living in newsletter. My congratulations and welcome to Nurses’ Quarters. Relevant stories will appear in members of the new committee. this Newsletter, and copies will be kept at the Mu- seum. I continue as President, and I thank members for again electing me for a further year. It is more School tours continued through out this quarter, fulfilling if belonging to an organisation, to be in- guided by members of the committee. There is a volved in the overall management, and I appreciate need for more volunteers to help on these days, as this ongoing opportunity afforded me. the groups can be large, and at least three people are needed for the guiding. Please let me, or anoth- Through personal and work commitments, Debbie er member know if able to assist. has elected not to seek nomination again this year. I thank Debbie for her input over the past years, and The favourable and enthusiastic Comments in our welcome her offer to continue in the role of Cura- Visitors Book indicate that the Hospital Museum is tor, and to continue working on the school tour pro- more than appreciated by the Visitors, and adds to ject. With Debbie and Lorraine as Curators and the satisfaction of all that are involved in its Yvonne as Archivist, the collection is in safe hands.
    [Show full text]
  • Address-In-Reply 6 Sep 2018
    2380 Address-in-Reply 6 Sep 2018 this consultation draft now so that the parliament, the waste and recycling industry, councils and the community can consider the full package of proposed amendments to legislation to implement the waste levy. Information about consultation will be provided on the Department of Environment and Science’s website. Since March this year, when the government announced our intention to accept the recommendation of the Lyons report and introduce a waste levy to underpin our waste strategy, we have been undertaking comprehensive consultation with a range of stakeholders to ensure we hear everyone’s voices. I look forward to continuing consultation as the bill progresses through parliament, and as the regulations are discussed. Queenslanders are increasingly conscious of waste as an economic and environmental issue. This bill delivers a key enabler of change. The waste levy will provide an incentive for people to reduce the waste they create and find more productive and job-creating uses for their waste. Importantly, the bill also ensures that it will not cost Queenslanders any more to put out their wheelie bin. It is not hard to see the long-term economic and environmental benefits that this levy will bring to Queensland. Through the introduction of a waste levy and a new waste strategy, we can work towards a more sustainable future for generations of Queenslanders to come. I commend the bill to the House. First Reading Hon. LM ENOCH (Algester—ALP) (Minister for Environment and the Great Barrier Reef, Minister for Science and Minister for the Arts) (11.29 am): I move— That the bill be now read a first time.
    [Show full text]
  • How to Write a Good Letter to the Editor: QLD a Guide to Writing Awesome, Powerful Letters
    How to write a good letter to the editor: QLD A Guide to writing awesome, powerful letters Letters to the editor of local papers are an excellent way for politicians to gauge what the public is thinking. This is a how-to guide for writing powerful and useful letters that can inform the public debate around Adani’s coal project. What makes a good letter? Some tips: ● The best letters are short, snappy and succinct - never longer than 200 ​ ​ words. ● Try to limit your letter to one central idea so it is clear and easy to read. Don’t ​ ​ be afraid to use humour if it suits! ● Good letters are timely if they are in response to a big announcement or ​ ​ event. This means written and sent on the same day. ● Back-up your claims with facts where appropriate. There are many ​ resources on our website (see below for links). ● Try to weave in a personal story if you can and it is fitting. For example: ​ ​ ○ I’m a tourist operator on the Reef and Adani’s coal mine will put my business in jeopardy. ○ I am a teacher and see school students are very attuned to the impact of climate change on the Reef and Adani’s role in this. ○ I went to visit the Reef last year and am saddened by the fact the QLD Government is ignoring coral bleaching events in favour of more coal mining. ○ I’m a Townsville resident who has experienced the mining industry’s boom-bust cycles and I think the future of Townsville should be solar.
    [Show full text]
  • Workshop on the Impacts of Flooding
    Workshop on the Impacts of Flooding Proceed/rigs of a Workshop held in Rockhamptori, Australia, 27 Septeinber 1991. , Edited by G.T. Byron Queensland Department of. ti Environment tand Heritage ’ Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority ‘, , ,’ @ Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority ISSN 0156-5842 ISBN 0 624 12044 7 Published by GBRMPA April 1992 The opinions expressed in th.is document are not necessarily those of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority or the Queensland Department of Env/ionment an!d Heritage. Great Barrier Reef Environment and P.O. Box 155 P.O. Box1379 North Quay , Townsville Queens’land 4002 Queensland 48 TABLE OF CONTENTS : PREFACE iv 1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY V PART A: FORUM PAPERS Jim Pearce MLA Opening Address 1 Peter Baddiley Fitzroy River Basin 3 Rainfalls and The 1991 Flood Event Mike Keane Assessment of the 1991 16 Fitzroy River Flood How much water? J.P. O’Neill, G.T.Byron and Some Physical Characteristics 36 S.C.Wright and Movement of 1991 Fitzroy River flood plume PART B: WORKSHOP PAPERS GROUP A - WATER RELATED’ISSUES Jon E. Brodie and Nutrient Composition of 56 Alan Mitchell the January 1991 Fitzroy River Plume Myriam Preker The Effects of the 1991 75 Central Queensland Floodwaters around Heron Island, Great Barrier Reef i > d.T.Byron and J.P.O’Neill Flood Induced Coral Mortality 76 on Fringing Reefs in Keppel Bay J.S. Giazebrook and Effects of low salinity on 90 R. Van Woesik the tissues of hard corals Acropora spp., Pocillopora sp and Seriatopra sp from the Great Keppel region M.
    [Show full text]
  • POST WAR LINK with the LOCAL AREA Ruth Allan Ida Maria Axelsen
    POST WAR LINK with THE LOCAL AREA Ruth Allan Ida Maria Axelsen Ruby Davina May Brown Annie Eveline Clarkson Marianne Dowling Elizabeth Kenny Margaret Ellen Mitchell May Scully Daisy Wharton Squire Ruth ALLAN Born: 1877 in Cooktown, North Queensland General Nursing Training: Cairns Hospital Enlistment Details: Aged 38 years Detail from Embarkation Roll shows: Enlisted 3 November 1915 Rank on Enlistment – AANS Staff Nurse Service Details: Embarked 4 November 1915 Served Egypt, London and France Returned to Australia 1 January 1920 on “Marathon” Discharged as medically unfit Post War: After the war she continued nursing and was at the Rosemount Military Hospital for some time and became acting Matron of the Cairns District Hospital Miss Allan was appointed Matron at the Emu Park Convalescent Home for 12 years until it closed in 1941 and the Rockhampton Benevolent Home for 18 month and was at one time Vice- President Emu Park C.W.A. Several articles appearing in the Rockhampton Morning Bulletin make mention of Matron Allan of the Emu Parl Convalescent Home The Central Queensland Herald, Thursday 2 May 1935, Page 20 reported her attendance at a function held by the Citizen’s ANZAC Day Dinner Committee for 600 returned nurses, sailors and soldiers at the Palais Royal in Rockhampton Miss Allan did not marry and died 12 August 1943 at Rockhampton and is buried at the South Brisbane Cemetery Ida Maria AXELSON Born: 1878 in Maryborough Queensland Ida Axelson‘s five sisters were all trained nurses General Nursing Training: Maryborough General Hospital Women’s Hospital Melbourne Pre War; The Queensland Electoral Roll 1903 Records her as a nurse living in Walker Street.
    [Show full text]
  • Regional Arts Development Fund Assessment Panel
    Regional Arts Development Fund Assessment Panel Cr Rhodes Watson Cr Rhodes Watson is a Livingstone Shire local, living in Kinka Beach, Emu Park, Bangalee and Rockhampton since 1976. He is currently the portfolion holder of Vibrant Community which entails Tourism, Arts and Culture in the Shire. He has worked many jobs in the creative field including; chief photographer at the Capricorn Coast Mirror and signwriting. He has also previously photography at Central Queensland University. Cr Watson is passionate about turning ideas into reality, with one of his most recent ventures aimed at removing disposable plastic bags by designing a canvas bag which features the name of every locality in Livingstone, highlighting the Shire’s region’s diversity and unique charm. Leanne Smith Leanne Smith has been a member of the Livingstone Shire RADF panel since 2015 and also served on the Rockhampton Regional Council RADF panel prior to deamalgamation. She is a long time member of local community arts organisation, Keppel Coast Arts and is currently KCA President. Leanne is not a practicing artist, however she has some experience in event organisation and is always an enthusiastic member of the audience at creative activities. Carmel Knowles I have been a resident of Yeppoon for nearly 40 years. After teaching secondary school Art for 25 years in the Torres Strait, Rockhampton and Yeppoon, I resigned in 2011 to devote time to my own art practice. I have been a member at the Emu Park Gallery since 2012, and also a member of The Capricorn Printmakers. In 2014, I was fortunate to win the Baton Award at the Rockhampton Regional Art Gallery.
    [Show full text]
  • Local Knowledge and Global Power by Steve Butler
    ISSN 1444­3775 2006 Issue No. 13 — Making Badlands Making Badlands All Over the World: Local Knowledge and Global Power By Steve Butler “And so a remote backwater on the Central Queensland coast finds itself in the sights of the Pentagon’s new global strategy” (Dirty War ). In Seven Versions of an Australian Badland Ross Gibson suggests that badlands are constitutive of community, a necessary evil enabling good to flourish elsewhere. Bob Hawke’s recent proposal for turning Australia’s “dead heart” into the world’s nuclear waste dump (AM. ABC. 27 Sept. 2005) is a classic example of badland making and a timely reminder of the relevance of Gibson’s book. Closer to my home, on the Capricorn Coast of Central Queensland, several controversies are brewing about the uses to which our lands are put. [1] According to Gibson “Life in Central Queensland is a direct continuation of the systems that formed a new society during the frontier era” (54). He argues: “conflict, coercion and dissimulation defined the ‘community’ . rather than the integration and stewardship of the land” (106). The more things change, the more they stay the same: several examples of neo-colonialism threatening to turn more of the Capricorn region into a badland will be cited in this essay to show how “the past produces the present” (2-3). I intend to engage with some of the environmental issues facing the region through a prism of texts circulating in the local culture: films, newspaper articles, letters to the editor, web sites and journal articles, in an attempt to foreground the way that social realities are discursively constructed.
    [Show full text]
  • Use of Theses
    THESES SIS/LIBRARY TELEPHONE: +61 2 6125 4631 R.G. MENZIES LIBRARY BUILDING NO:2 FACSIMILE: +61 2 6125 4063 THE AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY EMAIL: [email protected] CANBERRA ACT 0200 AUSTRALIA USE OF THESES This copy is supplied for purposes of private study and research only. Passages from the thesis may not be copied or closely paraphrased without the written consent of the author. DISEASE, HEAL TH AND HEALING: aspects of indigenous health in Western Australia and Queensland, 1900-1940 Gordon Briscoe A thesis submitted to History Program, Research School of Social Sciences The Australian National University for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy September 1996 This thesis is all my own work except where otherwise acknowledged Dedication This thesis is dedicated to my late mother, Eileen Briscoe, who gave me my Aboriginal identity, to my wife Norma who kept body and soul together while the thesis was created, developed and nurtured and, finally, to the late Professor Fred Hollows who gave me the inspiration to believe in my~lf and to accept that self-doubt was the road to scholarship. (i) Acknowledgments I have gathered many debts during the development, progress and completion of this thesis. To the supervisory committee of Dr Alan Gray, Dr Leonard R. Smith, Professor F.B. Smith and Professor Donald Denoon, who have all helped me in various ways to bring this task to its conclusion. To Emeritus Professor Ken Inglis who supported me in the topic I chose, and in reading some written work of mine in the planning stages, to Dr Ian Howie-Willis for his textual advice and encouragement and to our family doctor, Dr Tom Gavranic, for his interest in the thesis and for looking after my health.
    [Show full text]
  • Website: Editor: K.Smith Cfc
    ISSUE NUMBER 56 December 2017 Phone: 07 4939 9444 0407 621 486 E-mail: [email protected] Website: www.stbrendans.qld.edu.au Editor: K.Smith cfc. Nick Scully Principal St Brendan’s College I am shortly leaving St Brendan’s as Principal, but would like to leave you with a challenge in the form of a Christmas wish. I’m not sure whether I will offend anyone. I hope not and I apologise if I do. I guess I can get away with it because I am leaving to go back to Melbourne as Principal of Kolbe Catholic College, Greenvale Lakes. While it does feel quite distant, Christmas Day will be upon us very soon. I ask you to visualise a Nativity scene. We may pull a set out of a box each year and place it under a Christmas tree. With this image in our minds, here is my Christmas wish: God’s Son could have arrived in power, glory and wealth; instead he came in weakness, vulnerability and poverty. By coming in weakness, he made us aware of our own power. By coming in poverty, he made us aware of our own richness. This is the great paradox and we celebrate the same paradox at Easter by coming to new life through suffering and death. Part of the paradox is that the God who’s born into our world at Christmas is always being born into a world that doesn’t have room for him; into our crazy world he has come uninvited. Because he’s so much out of place, even though he must be here, his place is with those others for whom there is no room.
    [Show full text]
  • Mt Thompson Crematorium/Former
    - Draft History - Mt Thompson Crematorium/former Brisbane Crematorium The former Brisbane Crematorium at Nursery Road, Holland Park, comprising a brick chapel, mortuary, retort room, offices, columbarium garden, caretaker‟s house and landscaped gardens, was designed by Melbourne architects, Charles and Frank Heath and executed by Addison and Macdonald architects. It opened on 10 September 1934 as Queensland‟s first crematorium and incorporates artwork by noted Queensland sculptor Daphne Mayo. Although cremation has been used for the disposal of the dead in many societies for millennia, its use in the Western world, dates from the second half of the nineteenth century. Before it was accepted as an appropriate means of disposal of the dead, theological arguments and tradition needed to be overcome. An early step in this process was the exhibition of a cremation chamber at the Vienna Exposition in 1873. In the following year the Cremation Society of England was formed by Queen Victoria‟s surgeon and other medical practitioners. Subsequently, the first crematoria were built in 1878 at Woking in England and Gotha in Germany. However, the first cremation in Britain in this period took place in 1884 when William Price cremated his son‟s body and subsequently won a court case establishing cremation as legal. Woking Crematorium conducted its first cremation on 26 March 1886.1 In Australia, the cremation movement began in the late nineteenth century but only slowly gained favour. It campaigned for cremation on the basis of public health benefits, and economic and aesthetic grounds. In 1891 South Australia became the first colony to legalise cremation.
    [Show full text]
  • Confirmed CRC Advisory Committee Meeting Minutes 2 July 2020.Pdf
    Banana Shire Council PO Box 412 Biloela QLD 4715 ● 62 Valentine Plains Road, Biloela Ph: 07 4992 9500 ● Fax: 07 4992 3493 Email: [email protected] ● Web: www.banana.qld.gov.au BSC-CA-04-009 Document Version: 11 November 2019 Page 1 of 3 MINUTES COMMUNITY RESOURCE CENTRE ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEETING Meeting Date: Thursday 2nd July 2020 Venue: Callide Room at Council Time: 9.00am 1.0 Acknowledgement of Country Council recognizes that meetings held in Banana Shire include land of the Gaangalu Nation, Iman People, Wuli Wuli People, Wadja People, Wakka Wakka People and Darumbal People. 2.0 Attendance • Cr Judy Pender (Portfolio Councillor, BSC) • Simon Graham (Manager Administration and • Marion Meissner (CDSNSG) Community Services – BSC) • Pam Semple (Snr Program Advisor – CRC) • Coleen Kitching (Admin Officer – CRC) 3.0 Apologies • Venkat Peteti (Director, Corporate & Community • Anita Williams (Health) • Glen McIntyre (Health) • Claire Larsen (Parent) • Kirsty Curtis (Community) • Judy Mazzer (Business • Nev Ferrier (Mayor) 4.0 Welcome Committee Members 5.0 Safety Moment • If you cannot be hands-free on your phone, it is preferred that you will be “legally parked” to take a call or carry out a phone conversation. Penalites if caught breaking the law are severe and apply to the driver individually 6.0 Confirmation of Previous Minutes – (30.4.2020) Motion: That the minutes of the April 30 meeting be confirmed as accurate. Moved: Simon Graham Seconded: Judy Pender Carried: Yes 7.0 Business arising from previous minutes 7.1 OT Position – At present Pam is having conversations with CQU regarding students doing placements at the CRC.
    [Show full text]