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Hansard
- Start of Business
- COMMITTEES
- MAIN COMMITTEE
- COMMITTEES
- REGISTRAR OF MEMBERS’ INTERESTS
- DELEGATION REPORTS
- EVIDENCE AMENDMENT (JOURNALISTS’ PRIVILEGE) BILL 2010
- COMMISSION OF INQUIRY INTO THE BUILDING THE EDUCATION REVOLUTION PROGRAM BILL 2010
- BUSINESS
- PRIVATE MEMBERS’ BUSINESS
- GOVERNOR-GENERAL’S SPEECH
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- MINISTERIAL ARRANGEMENTS
- ST MARY OF THE CROSS
- DAME JOAN SUTHERLAND
- MAIN COMMITTEE
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QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
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Asylum Seekers
(Abbott, Tony, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Economy
(Symon, Mike, MP, Swan, Wayne, MP) -
Murray-Darling Basin
(Abbott, Tony, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Economy
(Rowland, Michelle, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Murray-Darling Basin
(Truss, Warren, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Climate Change
(Murphy, John, MP, Combet, Greg, MP) -
Murray-Darling Basin
(Briggs, Jamie, MP, Burke, Tony, MP) -
Murray-Darling Basin
(Rishworth, Amanda, MP, Burke, Tony, MP) -
Murray-Darling Basin
(Scott, Bruce, MP, Swan, Wayne, MP) -
Murray-Darling Basin
(Zappia, Tony, MP, Crean, Simon, MP) -
Murray-Darling Basin
(Ley, Sussan, MP, Burke, Tony, MP) -
Delhi Commonwealth Games
(Lyons, Geoff, MP, Ellis, Kate, MP) -
Murray-Darling Basin
(Mirabella, Sophie, MP, Burke, Tony, MP) -
Health
(Bird, Sharon, MP, Roxon, Nicola, MP) -
Afghanistan
(Bandt, Adam, MP, Smith, Stephen, MP) -
Infrastructure
(Champion, Nick, MP, Albanese, Anthony, MP) -
Murray-Darling Basin
(Abbott, Tony, MP, Burke, Tony, MP) -
Military Discipline
(Melham, Daryl, MP, Smith, Stephen, MP) -
Home Insulation Program
(Hunt, Gregory, MP, Gillard, Julia, MP) -
Carers
(Adams, Dick, MP, Butler, Mark, MP)
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Asylum Seekers
- AUDITOR-GENERAL’S REPORTS
- DOCUMENTS
- LEAVE OF ABSENCE
- MINISTERIAL STATEMENTS
- GOVERNOR-GENERAL’S SPEECH
- NATIONAL HEALTH AMENDMENT (PHARMACEUTICAL BENEFITS SCHEME) BILL 2010
- TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (CONFIDENTIALITY OF TAXPAYER INFORMATION) BILL 2010
- NATIONAL HEALTH AMENDMENT (PHARMACEUTICAL BENEFITS SCHEME) BILL 2010
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INTERNATIONAL TAX AGREEMENTS AMENDMENT BILL (NO. 2) 2010
PROTECTION OF THE SEA LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2010
PRIMARY INDUSTRIES (EXCISE) LEVIES AMENDMENT BILL 2010
NATIONAL SECURITY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2010
PARLIAMENTARY JOINT COMMITTEE ON LAW ENFORCEMENT BILL 2010
OZONE PROTECTION AND SYNTHETIC GREENHOUSE GAS MANAGEMENT AMENDMENT BILL 2010 - PRIVATE MEMBERS’ BUSINESS
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ADJOURNMENT
- Mental Health
- Blair Electorate: Infrastructure
- Malu Sara
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Ms Heather Weston
Doveton and Eumemmerring Neighbourhood Renewal - Infrastructure
- Building the Education Revolution Program
- Serrated Tussock
- Murray-Darling Basin
- Western Australian Department of Environment and Conservation
- Chisholm Electorate: Clayton Road
- Middle East
- North-East Tasmania: Development
- Adjournment
- NOTICES
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Main Committee
- Start of Business
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CONSTITUENCY STATEMENTS
- Taxation
- Mr Phil Tolhurst
- Forrest Electorate: Tassell Park Wines
- Hindmarsh Electorate: Ascot Park Bowling Club
- Gilmore Electorate: Dunn and Lewis Memorial in Ulladulla
- Werriwa Electorate: 24-Hour Fight Against Cancer
- Ryan Electorate: Broadband
- Moreton Electorate: Moorooka Community Hub
- Cowan Electorate: Postal Services
- Page Electorate: Clarence River
- PRIVATE MEMBERS’ BUSINESS
- CONDOLENCES
- PRIVATE MEMBERS’ BUSINESS
- PRIVATE MEMBERS’ BUSINESS
- GRIEVANCE DEBATE
- Adjournment
Page: 628
Mr GEORGANAS (7:27 PM)
—I would like to commend the member for Maranoa for his interest in and promotion of good health care and a sound health workforce throughout Australia, particularly in regional and rural Australia. Parts of Australia continue to cry out for additional professionals. Doctors and other health professionals are one such group. This group is naturally central to the ongoing health and function of every community. It is well and good that this Labor government has moved to integrate state based labour markets, each with its own registration processes and lists of professionals eligible to practice, into a seamless national labour market.
Instead of a health professional working in Perth, for instance, being able to freely move interstate and take up a position in regional New South Wales, rural Queensland or rural South Australia, medical professionals have long suffered the inconvenience of having to register in each and every state in which they want to practice their profession. It would be ridiculous in this day and age to continue down that track. When people reminisce about the great economic structural and social reforms of the past—for example, the floating of the dollar in the eighties, enterprise bargaining and productivity increases of the early nineties—it is really quite odd to think that until only a couple of years ago we had seven quite distinct economies and workforces. They were partitioned by state regulation, constitutional limitation and, at least to a certain extent, by professional confinement or restriction.
It is only in the last couple of years that the obvious has been undertaken—that is, to make Australia one country, one seamless national economy. Nothing could be more obvious than the removal of marginally significant parochial borders to facilitate smooth economic activity. A mobile workforce is essential to the smooth allocation of resources to where they are most in demand, where they are most needed. Before I finish on a seamless national economy, I would like to congratulate Dr Craig Emerson and the Hon. Chris Bowen for their work in this area in the last parliament. It might not be a sexy area of public policy for most people but I rank it up there with the best. They are the most sound and most obvious examples of national leadership that we may have seen in this place for many a year.
Going back to the motion before us, let me say that it was a Labor government that brought the nation together, developed and nurtured the requisite goodwill amongst interested parties and forged the agreement to nationalise the professional accreditation boards of the various health professions. The responsible minister, Nicola Roxon, should also be congratulated for this milestone in Australia’s economic and social development.
The DEPUTY SPEAKER
(Hon. DGH Adams)—Order! The time allotted for this debate has expired. The debate is adjourned and the resumption of the debate will be made an order of the day for the next sitting.
A division having been called in the House of Representatives—
Sitting suspended from 7.31 pm to 7.47 pm