Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

ATTEMPT TO BURY WATER PRICE HIKE AN OFF-SIDE MOVE

- PAUL MURRAY

THE Queensland Government are cowards for the way they announced a plan to jack up water prices. They chose to use this week’s State of Origin rugby league clash to hide a planned $90 hike for households over the next three years.

We all know politician­s love to put bad news out on long weekends, or when no matter the news, the front page will be a big event in sport or pop culture. But to use the cover of a football game to hide an announceme­nt that effects hundreds of thousands of people is a disgrace.

It’s just another hit to Queensland­ers who, we learnt this week, are paying the most for petrol in the country and a billion dollars is being spent on a giant wind farm.

While renewables are all the rage with government­s, they are just not up to doing the job coal-fired power stations have done for decades.

Buried in the announceme­nt was the detail, a billion dollars of wind-farms will only add 3 per cent to the state’s power needs.

This is the bit always missing from those who claim renewables are the answer. In the long run they may produce power for less cost than coal, but the billions needed to build enough wind farms and solar to power a state, let alone a country, is tens of billions.

Who pays that? If companies decide to build wind farms first, customers pay with higher bills. If government­s force them to do it, the taxpayer will fund them with endless subsidies.

At the coming election Bill Shorten will travel the country long and wide saying we should get 50 per cent of our power from renewables by 2030.

He’ll say the cost of coal isn’t worth it. I’d suggest billions to replace it without the reliabilit­y isn’t either. FOR the past couple of years people in prison in Victoria have been banned from writing letters to people they don’t know. It followed a similar ban in New South Wales after serial killers were caught correspond­ing with strangers from behind bars.

The idea is obvious, jail is a place of punishment, and the only contact prisoners should have with the outside world is with family who visit them.

But the Andrews Government is thinking of getting rid of the ban after prisoner advocates and lawyers claim the bans are unfair.

It should be in no government’s interests to make it comfortabl­e for inmates who have lost their liberty by their own actions.

Victoria has huge problems with judges giving weak sentences, the parole board letting people out too early and uncontroll­ed gang violence in Melbourne.

Perhaps the state would be better served by a government focused on those problems than one even willing to entertain a pen pal for prisoners.

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