Vocational Education and Training: the Northern Territory's History Of

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Vocational Education and Training: the Northern Territory's History Of VOCATIONAL EDUCATION & TRAINING The Northern Territory’s history of public philanthropy VOCATIONAL EDUCATION & TRAINING The Northern Territory’s history of public philanthropy DON ZOELLNER Published by ANU Press The Australian National University Acton ACT 2601, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at press.anu.edu.au National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Creator: Zoellner, Don, author. Title: Vocational education and training : the Northern Territory’s history of public philanthropy / Don Zoellner. ISBN: 9781760460990 (paperback) 9781760461003 (ebook) Subjects: Vocational education--Government policy--Northern Territory. Vocational education--Northern Territory--History. Occupational training--Government policy--Northern Territory. Occupational training--Northern Territory--History. Aboriginal Australians--Vocational education--Northern Territory. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Cover design and layout by ANU Press. Cover photograph: ‘Northern Territory Parliament House main entrance’ by Patrick Nelson. This edition © 2017 ANU Press Contents List of figures . vii Foreword . xi Acknowledgements . xiii 1 . Setting the scene . 1 2 . Philanthropic behaviour . 11 3 . Prior to 1911: European discovery and South Australian administration of the Northern Territory . 35 4 . Early Commonwealth control, 1911–46 . 45 5 . The post–World War Two period to 1978 . 57 6. TAFE in the era of self‑government, 1978–92 . 99 7. Vocational education and training in the era of self‑government, 1992–2014 . 161 8. Late 2015 and September 2016 postscript . 229 References . 243 List of figures Figure 1. Paul Henderson, minister, second from right, and guests on the fifth-floor balcony of the Northern Territory Parliament House, 2005. 17 Figure 2. Paul AE Everingham, Member of the Legislative Assembly ..................................23 Figure 3. Charlotte Waters Telegraph Station, near the South Australian border, included a store and post office ...........37 Figure 4. Finke River Mission, September 1905 .................39 Figure 5. Tiwi people on Bathurst Island, January 1941, with Bishop Gsell. .40 Figure 6. Transfer Ceremony, 2 January 1911 ...................46 Figure 7. Catholic Mission School at Arltunga, January 1947 .......49 Figure 8. Train (Commonwealth line) with new engines, Northern South Australia, January 1920 ..................51 Figure 9. The first Legislative Council, 16 February 1948 ..........59 Figure 10. First Legislative Assembly sitting, 19 March 1975, in the cyclone-damaged chamber. Corrugated iron sheets in right foreground were used to channel rainwater away from members’ desks .................................60 Figure 11. Mission Aboriginals [sic] working in a carpentry shop, May 1968 .........................................65 Figure 12. Alice Springs High School from Anzac Hill, October 1958. This was the site of the Adult Education Centre and it became the first home of the Alice Springs Community College in 1974. 70 Figure 13. Electrical experiments at Darwin High School adult training classes, 30 June 1967 ......................71 vii VocatioNAL EducatioN ANd TRAiNiNg Figure 14. Darwin Primary School in January 1957, it later became Darwin Higher Primary and then Darwin High School. This building in Woods Street became the Adult Education Centre under principal Harold Garner ...........74 Figure 15. Apprentice training in the former World War Two railway workshops in Katherine, February 1974. David Handley, first-year apprentice and Robert Scott, trades foreman ......................................78 Figure 16. Opening ceremony of the Darwin Community College by HRH Prince Philip; Prime Minister Gough Whitlam is on the right .......................................82 Figure 17. Goff Letts, former Chief Secretary of the Northern Territory ...................................87 Figure 18. Elizabeth Andrew, February 1974 ...................90 Figure 19. Jim Robertson, Member of the Legislative Assembly, February 1974 ......................................95 Figure 20. Ministers of the new Northern Territory Government, 1 July 1978, swearing-in ceremony. 100 Figure 21. Darwin Community College looking towards Alawa, April 1979. .103 Figure 22. Geoff Chard (Left) ..............................105 Figure 23. Industry Training Commission, first meeting, 1 July 1980, Geoff Chard at far right ....................107 Figure 24. Jim Eedle .....................................108 Figure 25. Dhupuma College, February 1975 .................109 Figure 26. Training Centre, Stuart Park, September 1981 .........114 Figure 27. Ray McHenry .................................117 Figure 28. Training. Calf-tagging training for secondary school students. 121 Figure 29. Restaurant interior, Gillen House, Alice Springs .......122 Figure 30. Tom Harris ...................................133 Figure 31. Geoff Spring ..................................139 viii LiST oF FiguRES Figure 32. The Honourable Terry McCarthy ..................142 Figure 33. Former Minister for Education and Training, Shane Stone. 157 Figure 34. Ministers Fred Finch, Shane Stone and lecturer Kym Livesley celebrating the new course ‘Introduction to Mining Law’ at the Northern Territory University, April 1993 .......................................170 Figure 35. The Honourable Fred Finch handing over motorcycles for licensed training .......................172 Figure 36. Palmerston Campus .............................173 Figure 37. Peter Adamson, Member of the Legislative Assembly, January 2001. .179 Figure 38. The second Burke ministry, 1 August 2000 ...........183 Figure 39. Former Kargaru School, November 1996 ............189 Figure 40. Students with Minister Stirling at a government- sponsored breakfast in Alice Springs, May 2003 ............192 Figure 41. Peter Plummer, centre, served as the Chief Executive of three different Northern Territory Government agencies in addition to being the Principal of Batchelor College ......197 Figure 42. Batchelor Institute of Indigenous Tertiary Education, 2011 ...................................210 Figure 43. Marion Scrymgour (left) being sworn in as a member of the ninth Northern Territory Legislative Assembly on 16 October 2001. 215 Figure 44. Margaret Banks, the Chief Executive of the Department of Employment, Education and Training, introducing Minister Scrymgour, at the far left, during the January 2006 scholarships and bursaries awards ceremony held at Parliament House. 216 Figure 45. Minister Henderson preparing to present prizes at the Teaching Excellence Awards ceremony at Parliament House, October 2009 .....................................217 ix VocatioNAL EducatioN ANd TRAiNiNg Figure 46. Minister Burns, second from right, overseeing the celebration of a Charles Darwin University lecturer’s 40 years of teaching ........................................219 Figure 47. Robyn Lambley, Member of the Legislative Assembly, with the Mayor of Alice Springs, Damien Ryan, joining in the celebrations at the Alice Springs campus of Charles Darwin University recognising 25 years of university-level education in the Northern Territory, June 2014 ....................235 x Foreword This book represents a balancing act in drawing together the widely scattered elements of the history of vocational education and training in the Northern Territory—somewhat reminiscent of one of those circus performers with a series of plates spinning on the top of sticks. The first plate balances the temptation to offer a general critique of all government actions as opposed to the limitations of this specific research effort and the evidence associated with vocational training. It seems plausible that one might find that the large health and education agencies with thousands of public employees and large amounts of capital infrastructure might respond to ministerial direction quite differently from that discussed here. On the other hand, sport, recreation and land development might be more similar. Alternatively, there is an important, principled separation between the minister and the police and law courts that might suggest different explanations of Cabinet actions. Plate two in our analogy offsets presenting an accurate, accessible story against the mind-numbing suite of acronyms and systematic complexity for which the sector has become infamous. The third plate poises a theoretical explanation of government ministers behaving as wealthy philanthropists against the desire to create something more than a pure chronology of events. Finally, plate four seeks parallels between the relative roles of government agencies/public institutions/private concerns and the ambitions of those who are elected to public office. There is also an attempt to describe the tone and atmosphere surrounding many of the major events contributing to the story of vocational education and training since the early 1970s. These have been gathered from interviews with many of the key participants, verbal and written reports tabled in the ubiquitous meetings held to give direction to policy and practice, handwritten notations in the margins of archival materials and my personal participation in some of the major activities. xi VocatioNAL EducatioN ANd TRAiNiNg While every attempt has been made to carefully attribute as many
Recommended publications
  • Australian Journal of Emergency Management
    Department of Home Affairs Australian Journal of Emergency Management VOLUME 36 NO. 1 JANUARY 2021 ISSN: 1324 1540 NEWS AND VIEWS REPORTS RESEARCH Forcasting and Using community voice Forecasting the impacts warnings to build a new national of severe weather warnings system Pages 11 – 21 Page 50 Page 76 SUPPORTING A DISASTER RESILIENT AUSTRALIA Changes to forcasting and warnings systems improve risk reduction About the journal Circulation The Australian Journal of Emergency Management is Australia’s Approximate circulation (print and electronic): 5500. premier journal in emergency management. Its format and content are developed with reference to peak emergency management Copyright organisations and the emergency management sectors—nationally and internationally. The journal focuses on both the academic Articles in the Australian Journal of Emergency Management are and practitioner reader. Its aim is to strengthen capabilities in the provided under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial sector by documenting, growing and disseminating an emergency (CC BY-NC 4.0) licence that allows reuse subject only to the use management body of knowledge. The journal strongly supports being non-commercial and to the article being fully attributed the role of the Australian Institute for Disaster Resilience as a (creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0). national centre of excellence for knowledge and skills development © Australian Institute for Disaster Resilience 2021. in the emergency management sector. Papers are published in Permissions information for use of AJEM content all areas of emergency management. The journal encourages can be found at http://knowledge.aidr.org.au/ajem empirical reports but may include specialised theoretical, methodological, case study and review papers and opinion pieces.
    [Show full text]
  • Darwin 5 • New Accessions – Alice Springs 6 • Spotlight on
    June 2005 No.29 ISSN 1039 - 5180 From the Director NT History Grants Welcome to Records Territory. In this edition we bring news of The Northern Territory History Grants for 2005 were advertised in lots of archives collecting activity and snapshots of the range of The Australian and local Northern Territory newspapers in mid- archives in our collections including a spotlight on Cyclone Tracy March this year. The grants scheme provides an annual series of following its 30th anniversary last December. Over the past few fi nancial grants to encourage and support the work of researchers months the NT Archives Service has been busily supporting who are recording and writing about Northern Territory history. research projects through both our public search room and the The closing date for applications was May 06 2005. NT History Grants program. Details of successful History Grant recipients for 2004 can be On the Government Recordkeeping front, we have passed found on page 10. the fi rst milestone of monitoring agency compliance with the We congratulate the following History Grants recipients for Information Act and have survived the fi rst full year of managing completion of their research projects for which they received part our responsibilities under the Act. Other initiatives have or total assistance from the N T History Grants Program. included the establishment of a records retention and disposal review committee and continued coordination of an upgrade of Robert Gosford – Annotated Chronological Bibliography – Northern the government’s records management system TRIM. Territory Ethnobiology 1874 to 2004 John Dargavel – Persistance and transition on the Wangites-Wagait We are currently celebrating the long awaited implementation reserves, 1892-1976 ( Journal of Northern Territory History Issue No of the archives management system, although there is a long 15, 2004, pp 5 – 19) journey ahead to load all of the relevant information to assist us and our researchers.
    [Show full text]
  • In the Name of Failure: a Generational Revolution in Indigenous Affairs Will Sanders
    In the Name of Failure: A Generational Revolution in Indigenous Affairs Will Sanders Introduction In April 2004, towards the end of its third term, the Howard Government announced its intention to abolish the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC), the statutory centerpiece of Commonwealth Indigenous affairs administration over the previous fifteen years. In so doing Prime Minister Howard and his Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs, Senator Amanda Vanstone, referred to ATSIC as an ‘experiment in separate….elected representation, for Indigenous people’ which had been a ‘failure’ and which would not be replaced. Instead a group of ‘distinguished Indigenous people’ would be appointed to ‘advise’ the government and ATSIC’s former programs would be ‘mainstreamed’ to line government departments, though there would still be ‘a major policy role’ for the Minister for Indigenous Affairs (Howard and Vanstone 2004). In this essay, I will focus on the way in which the idea of past policy failure has become the driving motif of Australian Indigenous affairs during the fourth Howard Government and how, in the name of failure, the Government has argued repeatedly for significant organizational and policy change. The first section of the essay documents, in chronological style, this constant linking of the idea of failure with arguments for change. The second section asks, in a more analytic style, what sort of change is now occurring in Australian Indigenous affairs? I argue that the change is best thought of as a generational revolution, which combines a major disowning of the work of the previous generation in Indigenous affairs with a significant ideological swing to the right.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter Web: Fax: 08 89992089 Veterinary Board of the Northern Territory AUGUST 2016
    Goff Letts Building, Berrimah Farm, Berrimah NT GPO Box 3000, DARWIN, Northern Territory 0801 Email: [email protected] Phone: 08 89992028 Newsletter Web: www.vetboard.nt.gov.au Fax: 08 89992089 Veterinary Board of the Northern Territory AUGUST 2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS BOARD MEMBERSHIP BOARD MEMBERSHIP……………………………………………….1 Position Name NEW CHIEF VETERINARY OFFICER……………………………..1 President Dr Kevin de Witte VIRULENT SYSTEMIC FELINE CALICIVIRUS…………………..2 (ex-officio - Chief Inspector of Livestock) BAITS CONTAINING PAPP RELEASED…………………………..2 Vice President Dr Ian Gurry PLANTS POISINOUS TO HORSES……………………………….…4 (elected veterinarian) NATIONAL ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE STATEGY ….…4 Member Dr Shane Bartie AUSTRALIA VETERINARIANS & THE FRAWLEY (elected veterinarian) REVIEW ………………….……………………………………………………4 Member Dr Elizabeth Stedman 2016 AWA WORKFORCE SURVEY………………………………...4 (appointed Veterinarian) SMiS PROGRAM……………………………………………………………5 REGISTRATION STATISTICS……………………………………………5 Public Interest Member Marion Davey COMPLAINTS………………………………………………………………..6 (appointed non- ANNUAL REGISTRATION RENEWALS…………………………….6 veterinarian) Board Registrar Sue Gillis NEW CHIEF VETERINARY OFFICER/CHIEF INSPECTOR LIVESTOCK FOR THE NT The Veterinary Board of the Northern Territory wishes to welcome Dr Kevin de Witte to the position of Chief Veterinary Officer and Chief Inspector Livestock of the NT following the resignation of Dr Malcolm Anderson in December 2015. Dr de Witte graduated from the Queensland University in 1982 with a Batchelor Veterinary Science (hons 2A). He worked in various roles in Darwin and Alice Springs before commencing employment as a Veterinary Officer in Katherine in late 1984 with the Northern Territory Government. Kevin then resigned as Principal Veterinary Officer NT in March 2006 to take up employment with Animal Health Australia for the management of the national disease surveillance and welfare program and projects.
    [Show full text]
  • Report X Terminology Xi Acknowledgments Xii
    Senate Legal and Constitutional Legislation Committee Consideration of Legislation Referred to the Committee Euthanasia Laws Bill 1996 March 1997 The Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia Senate Legal and Constitutional Legislation Committee Consideration of Legislation Referred to the Committee Euthanasia Laws Bill 1996 March 1997 © Commonwealth of Australia 1997 ISSN 1326-9364 This document was produced from camera-ready copy prepared by the Senate Legal and Constitutional Legislation Committee, and printed by the Senate Printing Unit, Department of the Senate, Parliament House, Canberra. Members of the Legislation Committee Members Senator E Abetz, Tasmania, Chair (Chair from 3 March 1997) Senator J McKiernan, Western Australia, Deputy Chair Senator the Hon N Bolkus, South Australia Senator H Coonan, New South Wales (from 26 February 1997: previously a Participating Member) Senator V Bourne, New South Wales (to 3 March 1997) Senator A Murray, Western Australia (from 3 March 1997) Senator W O’Chee, Queensland Participating Members All members of the Opposition: and Senator B Brown, Tasmania Senator M Colston, Queensland Senator the Hon C Ellison, Western Australia (from 26 February 1997: previously the Chair) Senator J Ferris, South Australia Senator B Harradine, Tasmania Senator W Heffernan, New South Wales Senator D Margetts, Western Australia Senator J McGauran, Victoria Senator the Hon N Minchin, South Australia Senator the Hon G Tambling, Northern Territory Senator J Woodley, Queensland Secretariat Mr Neil Bessell (Secretary
    [Show full text]
  • Maurice Blackburn Oration an Issue of Equity: Is It Fair and Just That There
    1 Maurice Blackburn Oration An Issue of Equity: Is it fair and just that there are 230,000 second-class citizens in the Northern Territory? Professor Clare Martin. It’s a great privilege to be invited to give the Maurice Blackburn Oration and to be the first from the Northern Territory to do so. My thanks to the Moreland City Council for the invitation and I pay my respects to the Wurundjeri people on whose land we meet tonight. Being the first Northern Territorian to deliver this prestigious oration, I thought it only appropriate to bring a Northern Territory perspective with me – a perspective that comes from living and working in the north for nearly 30 years and being a member of the Territory Parliament for 13 of those years, including six as Chief Minister. So my choice of subject tonight and one that I hope would be thoroughly approved of by both Maurice and Doris Blackburn is: An Issue of Equity: Is it fair and just that Northern Territorians, all 230,000 of us, are second-class citizens? And if, as I contend, we are second- class citizens, what does that actually mean? How have those lesser rights affected the course of Territory history; what affect has there been on our political institutions, our political effectiveness and engagement and importantly what effect on our community, especially Aboriginal Territorians who make up a third of our population? So some context about the Northern Territory to start For much of our history since European settlement the Territory has been unloved: a bit of an orphan.
    [Show full text]
  • Northern Territory Election 19 August 2020
    Barton Deakin Brief: Northern Territory Election 19 August 2020 Overview The Northern Territory election is scheduled to be held on Saturday 22 August 2020. This election will see the incumbent Labor Party Government led by Michael Gunner seeking to win a second term against the Country Liberal Party Opposition, which lost at the 2016 election. Nearly 40 per cent of Territorians have already cast their vote in pre-polling ahead of the ballot. The ABC’s election analyst Antony Green said that a swing of 3 per cent would deprive the Government of its majority. However, it is not possible to calculate how large the swing against the Government would need to be to prevent a minority government. This Barton Deakin brief provides a snapshot of what to watch in this Territory election on Saturday. Current composition of the Legislative Assembly The Territory has a single Chamber, the Legislative Assembly, which is composed of 25 members. Currently, the Labor Government holds 16 seats (64 per cent), the Country Liberal Party Opposition holds two seats (8 per cent), the Territory Alliance holds three seats (12 per cent), and there are four independents (16 per cent). In late 2018, three members of the Parliamentary Labor Party were dismissed for publicly criticising the Government’s economic management after a report finding that the budget was in “structural deficit”. Former Aboriginal Affairs Minister Ken Vowles, Jeff Collins, and Scott McConnell were dismissed. Mr Vowles later resigned from Parliament and was replaced at a by-election in February 2020 by former Richmond footballer Joel Bowden (Australian Labor Party).
    [Show full text]
  • Debates Part II-Questions Part III-Minutes
    NORTHERN TERRITORY OF AUSTRALIA LEGISLA TIVE ASSEMBLY Second Assembly Second Sessjon Parliamentary Record Tuesday 12 February 1980 VVednesday 13 February 1980 Thursday 14 February 1980 Tuesday 19 February 1980 VVednesday 20 February 1980 Thursday 21 February 1980 Part I-Debates Part II-Questions Part III-Minutes 18990.803-1 PART I DEBATES DEBATES - Tuesday 12 February 1980 Mr Speaker MacFarlane took the Chair at 10 am. KATHERINE HOSPITAL ADVISORY BOARD ANNUAL REPORT Mr TUXWORTH (Health): Mr Speaker, I table the Katherine Hospital Advisory Board report for the year ended 30 June 1979. This is tabled pursuant to section 15 of the Hospital Advisory Boards Act. Section 14 of the act requires the board to submit an annual report each July while section 15 requires such a report to be tabled on the first sitting day thereafter. The current report was not received until November and today is the first opportun­ ity to table the report. DRC REPORT and COMMONWEALTH OMBUDSMAN REPORT Mr EVERINGHAM (Chief Minister): Mr Speaker, I table 2 documents. The first one is the final report of the Darwin Reconstruction Commission and the second is a report of the Commonwealth Ombudsman. Section 19(1) of the Ombudsman Act 1976 of the Commonwealth requires the presentation of this report by the Prime Minister in the Legislative Assembly. He was not able to get here because he is on his way back from America and he has asked me to do it for him. PERSONAL EXPLANATION Mr EVERINGHAM (Chief Minister) (by leave): Mr Speaker, in the NT News of Saturday 9 February,an article appeared which, amongst other things, stated that the Chief Minister hit back with 2 points.
    [Show full text]
  • Legislative Assembly Results Summary of Legislative Assembly Election
    2001 NORTHERN TERRITORY ELECTION 18 August 2001 CONTENTS Page Introduction ................................................................................................................ 1 Legislative Assembly Results Summary of Legislative Assembly Election ..................................................... 3 Legislative Assembly Results by Electoral Division ......................................... 6 Summary of Two-Party Preferred Results ..................................................... 11 Regional Summaries ..................................................................................... 12 By-elections 1997-2001 ............................................................................................ 14 Antony Green ABC Election Unit Symbols .. Nil or rounded to zero * Sitting MPs .… „Ghost‟ candidate, where a party contesting the previous election did not nominate for the current election Party Abbreviations (blank) Non-affiliated candidates CLP Country Liberal Party DEM Australian Democrats GRN Green IND Independent LAB Territory Labor ONP One Nation SAP Socialist Alliance Party TAP Territory Alliance Party 2001 Northern Territory Election INTRODUCTION This paper contains a summary of the 2001 Northern Territory election. For each Legislative Assembly electorate, details of the total primary and two-candidate preferred vote are provided. Where appropriate, a two-party preferred count is also included. The format for the results is as follows: First Count: For each candidate, the total primary vote received is shown.
    [Show full text]
  • Does the Media Fail Aboriginal Political Aspirations?
    DOES THE MEDIA 45 years of news media reporting of FAIL ABORIGINAL key political moments POLITICAL Amy Thomas Andrew Jakubowicz ASPIRATIONS? Heidi Norman AIATSIS Research Publications DOES THE MEDIA FAIL ABORIGINAL POLITICAL ASPIRATIONS? 45 years of news media reporting of key political moments Amy Thomas Andrew Jakubowicz Heidi Norman DOES THE MEDIA FAIL ABORIGINAL POLITICAL ASPIRATIONS? First published in 2019 by Aboriginal Studies Press Copyright @ New South Wales Government All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by an information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing form the publisher. The Australian Copyright Act 1968 (the Act) allows a maximum of one chapter or 10 per cent of this book, which ever is the greater, to be photocopied by any educational institution for its education purposes provided that the educational institution (or body that administers it) has given a remuneration notice to Copyright Agency Limited (CAL) under the Act. The opinions expressed in this book are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the view of AIATSIS or ASP. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are respectfully advised that this publication contains names and images of deceased persons and culturally sensitive information. ISBN: 9780855750848 (pb) ISBN: 9780855750855 (ePub) ISBN: 9780855750862 (kindle) ISBN: 9780855750930 (ebook PDF) Printed in Australia by Ligare Design and Typsetting by 33 Creative Cover image: Tessa Ferguson and Edwin Jangalaros presenting the Larrakia petition outside Government House, Darwin. The petition was 3.3 metres long, featuring one thousand signatures and thumbprints collected by Gwalwa Daraniki.
    [Show full text]
  • The Great Debate: ‘Income Tax Should Be Increased to Assist with Australia’S Economic Recovery’
    The Great Debate: ‘Income Tax Should be Increased to Assist with Australia’s Economic Recovery’ Communities in Control Conference Melbourne, 16 June, 2009 Adjudicated by The Honourable Joan Kirner AM Victorian Community Ambassador, former Premier of Victoria And featuring Clare Martin CEO of ACOSS (Australian Council of Social Service) Brett de Hoedt showman, media trainer and Mayor, Hootville Communications Joan Hughes CEO, Carers Australia Lesley Hall CEO, Australian Federation of Disability Organisations Please Note: This was a light‐hearted debate. The views expressed in this transcript do not necessarily reflect those held by the speakers Page 2 Joan Kirner: Thank you very much, Joe. Thank you everyone for your welcome but it wasn’t really loud enough. [Applause] That’s better. You can say that when you’re no longer in power. You can’t say it when you’re in power. This is my one opportunity to exercise power for the year,l rea power. I’ve got the time and I’ve got some control, although having Clare over there worries me a bit. And we’re going to have our usual great debate. But I’ll first acknowledge that I’m standing on the land of the Kulin Nation and thank them for their custodianship of this land and pledge to work with them, their current Elders and their communities, to get the kind of community in control that Mick was talking about. And, you know, I can never resist interfering with a motion, so if you’re going to send a letter to Jenny Macklin, I think that’s a terrific idea but it’s an even better to ask for a deputation of many of the organisations represented here.
    [Show full text]
  • Associated Minutes of Proceedings Report on Statehood Reference
    M LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF THE NORTHERN TERRITORY Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee Associated Minutes of Proceedings Report on Statehood Reference May 2016 LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF THE NORTHERN TERRITORY 12th Assembly Legal & Constitutional Affairs Committee Minutes of Proceedings Meeting No. 1 12pm, Wednesday, 31 October 2012 Litchfield Room Present: Ms Lia Finocchiaro (Chair), Member for Drysdale Ms Kezia Purick, Member for Goyder Mrs Bess Price, Member for Stuart Mr Michael Gunner, Member for Fannie Bay Mr Gerald Mccarthy, Member for Barkly In attendance: Julia Knight, Committee Secretary Russell Keith, Clerk Assistant Committees Lauren Copley Orrock, Administration/Research Officer 1. ELECTION OF CHAIR The Secretary called for nominations for Chair. Ms Purick nominated Ms Finocchiaro as Chair of the Legal & Constitutional Affairs Committee. The motion was seconded by Mrs Price and carried. 2. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF FORMER COMMITTEE MEMBERS The Chair placed on the record her thanks and appreciation to the former Legal & Constitutional Affairs Committee Members, especially the Member for Nightcliff, for their efforts. 3. COIVIMITTEE PROCEDURES (a) Secretariat Support The Committee agreed that hard copies of meeting papers be distributed in the Chamber the morning of future meetings. All papers will also be provided electronically and saved in the LCAC Member's Access folder. It was further agreed that large reports and documents are not to be included in the meeting papers, and can be printed by Members as required. (b) Statements to the Media Mr Gunner moved and Mrs Price seconded That pursuant to Standing Order 274(9d), the Committee authorises the Chair of the Committee to issue media releases and give briefings on matters relating to Legal and Constitutional Affairs and Subordinate Legislation and Publications.
    [Show full text]