

- Title
ADJOURNMENT
Latrobe Valley: State Electricity Commission of Victoria
- Database
Senate Hansard
- Date
02-11-2011
- Source
Senate
- Parl No.
43
- Electorate
- Interjector
- Page
8049
- Party
DLP
- Presenter
- Status
Final
- Question No.
- Questioner
- Responder
- Speaker
Madigan, Sen John
- Stage
- Type
- Context
ADJOURNMENT
- System Id
chamber/hansards/d1ade727-9b49-4626-a51f-8c56924ec888/0186
Previous Fragment Next Fragment
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Hansard
- Start of Business
- BUDGET
- COMMITTEES
- MATTERS OF PUBLIC INTEREST
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE: ADDITIONAL ANSWERS
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE: TAKE NOTE OF ANSWERS
- NOTICES
- COMMITTEES
- MOTIONS
- DOCUMENTS
- MOTIONS
- MATTERS OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE
- COMMITTEES
- DOCUMENTS
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BILLS
- Territories Self-Government Legislation Amendment (Disallowance and Amendment of Laws) Bill 2011
- Deterring People Smuggling Bill 2011, Higher Education Support Amendment Bill (No. 2) 2011, National Health Reform Amendment (Independent Hospital Pricing Authority) Bill 2011
- Australian Renewable Energy Agency Bill 2011, Australian Renewable Energy Agency (Consequential Amendments and Transitional Provisions) Bill 2011
- COMMITTEES
- BILLS
- DOCUMENTS
- DOCUMENTS
- ADJOURNMENT
- DOCUMENTS
-
QUESTIONS ON NOTICE
-
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (Question No. 950)
(Johnston, Sen David, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (Question No. 951)
(Johnston, Sen David, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (Question No. 952)
(Johnston, Sen David, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (Question No. 953)
(Johnston, Sen David, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (Question No. 954)
(Johnston, Sen David, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (Question No. 955)
(Johnston, Sen David, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (Question No. 956)
(Johnston, Sen David, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (Question No. 957)
(Johnston, Sen David, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (Question No. 958)
(Johnston, Sen David, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (Question No. 959)
(Johnston, Sen David, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (Question No. 960)
(Johnston, Sen David, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Social Inclusion (Question No. 1180)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Arbib, Sen Mark) -
Privacy and Freedom of Information (Question No. 1182)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Ludwig, Sen Joe) -
Status of Women (Question No. 1186)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Sport (Question No. 1187)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Arbib, Sen Mark) -
Social Housing and Homelessness (Question No. 1189)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Arbib, Sen Mark) -
Innovation, Industry, Science and Research (Question No. 1190)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Sherry, Sen Nick) -
Veterans' Affairs (Question No. 1191)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Special Minister of State for the Public Service and Integrity (Question No. 1197)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Australian Electoral Commission (Question No. 1202)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Special Minister of State (Question No. 1209)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Immigration and Citizenship (Question No. 1211)
(Brown, Sen Bob, Carr, Sen Kim) -
Natural Disaster Relief and Recovery Arrangements (Question No. 1212)
(Humphries, Sen Gary, Ludwig, Sen Joe) -
Fair Work Australia (Question No. 1214)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Treasury (Question No. 1224)
(Ludlam, Sen Scott, Wong, Sen Penny) -
Chronic Disease Dental Scheme (Question No. 1227)
(Bushby, Sen David, Arbib, Sen Mark) -
Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (Question No. 1229)
(Rhiannon, Sen Lee, Carr, Sen Kim) -
Prime Minister and Cabinet: Media Staffing (Question No. 1240)
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Evans, Sen Christopher) -
Infrastructure and Transport (Question No. 1262)
(Brown, Sen Bob, Carr, Sen Kim) -
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (Question No. 1263)
(Boswell, Sen Ronald, Wong, Sen Penny)
-
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy (Question No. 950)
Page: 8049
Senator MADIGAN (Victoria) (19:35): I would like to speak tonight in support of a number of motions I have before the Senate that are directly connected with the concerns of the workers, small business men, union officials, pensioners, single people, married people, families and the community in the Latrobe Valley. These people have been and continue to be forgotten. These people have suffered for 16 years continually after the privatisation of the State Electricity Commission of Victoria and the Latrobe Valley. Having visited there last week, in the towns of Moe, Morwell and Traralgon I fear that our greatest growth industries have been Centrelink, mental health and opportunity shops, providing food vouchers to people, to families, and help with the cost of their rising utility prices.
Privatisation has dismally failed the people. The SEC came about in the 1920s and 1930s because of the myriad of council and smaller generators that all did their own thing but, in all, failed to deliver equality of access to the basic utility of electricity. We know from history that the SEC provided many jobs to people and to many families. It provided apprenticeships, it provided people with a sense of self-worth through gainful employment and a sense of dignity that comes from work. The economy is there to serve the people; the people are not there to serve the economy. I note the sense of despondency that you see on people's faces in towns all over the Latrobe Valley. When you meet and speak to these people, you find they speak about their workmates, friends or family members who, unfortunately, have committed suicide or whose children are now going into their first, second or third generation of unemployment.
How can we not think of these people? They are not just in the Latrobe Valley. They are across the length and breadth of Australia in industries that have been devastated. Privatisation continues to cost the taxpayer because a lot of these companies, whether they are in public transport or the power industry or the green industry, do receive subsidies. While we often hear in government and in industry about the evils of subsidies, do we actually look at what the social benefits of subsidies are? While we talk about the mental health costs, about the costs of youth suicide and about the loss of life, do we weigh up the true cost? At the end of the day you cannot put a price on people. The people of Gippsland, particularly the people in these towns of the Latrobe Valley, have a very proud history. They want to work—they are not frightened of work—and yet a lot of them cannot work. We do not see from privatisation the same outcomes that we had when it was government controlled.
There is no doubt that privatisation remains the policy of the state government and the federal government today. To me what beggars belief is that we are setting up the NBN, which is funded by the government, yet we do not want to have a power industry that is funded by the government when we know that the SEC consistently delivered economically and socially to the community and that it did pay enormous dividends into consolidated revenue. Once again today we hear that privatisation continues and that we are hostage to ideologies, yet they are ideologies that do not serve the people. I would encourage all members, no matter where they come from, to visit the Latrobe Valley, to visit these towns and to talk to these people and give them some hope that we are listening to them and to their concerns. Ultimately what are we here for? We are elected by people; we are not elected by parties.