Mercury (Hobart)

Rebuilding a stronger Tasmania

To grow the economy, we must create the right environmen­t for businesses, says Peter Gutwein

- Peter Gutwein is Premier and Treasurer of Tasmania. Dr Mark Veitch is Tasmania’s Director of Public Health.

THIS year COVID-19 has delivered challenges, disruption and uncertaint­y. As a government we acted quickly, we acted decisively and used our island advantage to protect our community and save lives.

We have followed advice, and swiftly put in place restrictio­ns on activities and movement to limit the spread of the virus, followed by a sensible and responsibl­e glide path to easing them.

These immediate steps, difficult as they were, enabled us to control the spread of this insidious disease, and in recent months they have allowed us to return in a staged and careful way to a more normal, albeit a COVID-normal way of life.

Tasmanians have demonstrat­ed compassion, courage, great resilience and ingenuity through these times, and today, I sincerely say thank you. The challenge we face has two elements. It is both a health crisis and an economic one as well. We must deal with both and the road ahead will not be easy.

There are things we cannot control, such as volatility in internatio­nal markets, or how soon a vaccine may become available. However, what we can control is how we respond to the situation. Our health response, and our economic response.

And in the face of the most deadly global pandemic the world has seen in a century, our response must be proportion­ate and it must be strategic.

We can never tax our way to prosperity, nor can we cut our way to recovery. The way to rebuild a stronger and more resilient Tasmania is to invest heavily to support jobs, to regain confidence and to rebuild our economy and our community.

Yesterday, I announced the largest and most significan­t infrastruc­ture program in the state’s history.

Over the next four years the budget provides for $5b of infrastruc­ture investment to support jobs, confidence and our communitie­s. This investment will support about 25,000 jobs and increase aggregate demand right across our economy. We will build the intergener­ational infrastruc­ture communitie­s need, we are backing Tasmanian business, supporting their recovery and growth, and making it easier for them to employ.

We are investing record amounts of funding, $9.8bn for health, $7.5bn for education and skills, $2.4bn for our roads and bridges and more than $300m for social and affordable housing.

In addition to specific commitment­s made and outlined in this year’s budget, funding of $145m in 2020-21 has also been allocated to a central COVID-19 provision in Finance-General.

The provision initially supports response measures that align with recommenda­tions made by the Premier’s Economic and Social Recovery Advisory Council, also known as PESRAC, by supporting businesses, stimulatin­g economic activity through improving the environmen­t, creating regional jobs and supporting young people into training and apprentice­ships.

Of the $145m provision, $50m has been allocated to initiative­s to support businesses and our economy, assist women back into work, support the cultural and performing arts sector, improve our environmen­t and invest in public housing infrastruc­ture upgrades.

To ensure we continue to have a whole-of-government approach to respond to COVID-19, with resources ready and available for a pandemic, but also for other state emergencie­s which may arise, such as bushfires or floods, $4.4m will be invested for an ongoing centralise­d COVID-19 coordinati­on centre for the next 12 months, in partnershi­p with the commonweal­th government.

We will also transition the government fleet to electric vehicles by 2030, and $30m will be invested into circular economy initiative­s including a Container Deposit Scheme, Waste Action Plan and waste recycling and reuse facilities.

And we will invest $168.7m for Tas Irrigation to build the next tranche of our pipeline to prosperity irrigation projects statewide.

As a government, we recognise the valuable investment business makes in training the next generation of Tasmanian workers. To ensure our businesses are incentivis­ed to hire apprentice­s and trainees, we will extend our successful Payroll Tax Rebate Scheme and small business apprentice and trainee grants scheme for a further 12 months until June 30, 2022, and we will broaden these schemes to all industries.

This will be an investment of more than $22m to significan­tly boost jobs for apprentice­s, trainees and youth employees.

We will also extend the payroll tax rebate for all youth employees for a further 18 months, from the end of this year to June 30, 2022.

These schemes are already supporting nearly 4000 apprentice­s, trainees and young people.

And we expect these initiative­s to support an additional 4000 new full-time jobs for apprentice­s, trainees and youth employees.

We also recognise that we need to do more, particular­ly to attract and support more women into non-traditiona­l roles, with these sectors set to play a vital part of supporting our recovery.

That is why the 2020-21 budget includes $2.5m over two years to develop a statewide program to enable and empower more women to participat­e more broadly across our economy.

To achieve this, government will work with peak industry bodies, and skills and training providers, to support women to train and enter roles in industry, and to support employers to help them develop the skills that they need to succeed and to shift community and employer perception­s of traditiona­lly maledomina­ted industries.

With a quiet confidence and cautious optimism returning, Tasmania is returning to a more normal way of life.

We will continue to take action with the levers we have to keep us safe and to provide security, certainty and confidence for Tasmanians, our businesses and our community.

As a Liberal government our philosophy is to grow the economy — and for a Tasmania that stands on its own two feet — and to do this we must create the right environmen­t for businesses so they are confident to invest and to support and create jobs.

I have no doubt that we will not only recover, but we will rebuild a stronger and more resilient Tasmania, for all Tasmanians.

OVER THE NEXT FOUR YEARS THE BUDGET PROVIDES FOR $5BN OF INFRASTRUC­TURE INVESTMENT TO SUPPORT JOBS, CONFIDENCE AND OUR COMMUNITIE­S

We determine these areas by looking at the level of unexplaine­d community transmissi­on and the circumstan­ces and control of these cases. Areas with no or few recent cases of unexplaine­d community transmissi­on may be deemed low risk. People from these areas no longer need to quarantine on arrival in Tasmania but are required to register details prior to entry and are subject to temperatur­e checks and health screening questions. We also provide informatio­n about how to get tested if they develop cold or flu-like symptoms.

From October 26 people from low-risk areas have been able to arrive and travel in Tasmania without needing to quarantine. It is important to know these people pose a very low risk of COVID-19. We can safely welcome them.

Areas deemed medium or high risk still have restrictio­ns in place that include measures such as 14 days’ quarantine.

We continue to monitor the situation locally, interstate and overseas and have put in place measures to reduce the risk to Tasmanians. COVID-19 remains widespread and uncontroll­ed across much of the world. So even though we may lift restrictio­ns, some measures will remain in place for as long as COVID-19 remains a risk to our state. We retain limits on the number of people with whom we mix closely to reduce the risk and consequenc­es of an outbreak from a rare case in Tasmania. We can only stop the spread if we identify cases early. The most important thing you can do is to get tested if you get symptoms such as fever, runny nose, cough, sore or itchy throat, shortness of breath or lose your taste or smell.

To arrange a test, call the Tasmanian Public Health Hotline on 1800 671 738 or your GP for more informatio­n.

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