Townsville Bulletin

State ‘dudded’ by board’s vacancies

- TONY RAGGATT

The ALP has called for Queensland representa­tion to be restored to the board of the Northern Australian Infrastruc­ture Facility and for the fund to explain why it decided to refuse lending to a major Townsville hotel project.

The party’s spokesman for Northern Australia, Senator Murray Watt, was commenting on revelation­s the fund had encouraged the Morris Group to apply for lending and then knocked them back.

The Morris Group is planning an $80m five-star hotel and super yacht marina next to its Ville Resort-casino in Townsville to cater for growing tourism demand.

Morris Group owner Chris Morris this week said the developmen­t financier had wasted the company’s time.

Senator Watt said at last count only a pitiful 6 per cent of the NAIF’S $5bn budget had been released to projects in six years.

“At a time when tourism has copped the brunt of the pandemic, the federal government and the NAIF should be looking at ways to help the industry grow back stronger,” Senator Watt said.

“Morris Group deserve to know why their applicatio­n was knocked back.”

He said the lack of a Queensland member on the board could not be helping in getting Queensland projects over the line.

“Queensland deserves to have representa­tives on the board that will fight for local projects, and the NAIF needs to get on with its job,” Senator Watt said.

The federal government is yet to appoint any Queensland board members to the fund nine weeks after the state’s previous directors stood down.

A NAIF spokesman denied

the suggestion this had anything to do with advice it would not provide finance to the hotel project.

There have been several executives and board members leave the fund in recent months, including former chair Khory Mccormick, who stepped down in March.

Also, the successful Nationals leadership tilt by Barnaby Joyce ushered in a new minister for Northern Australia in July, with Queensland MP David Littleprou­d replacing Queensland MP Keith Pitt.

Mr Littleprou­d told the Bulletin the fund was an independen­t body.

“Their role is to provide businesses and infrastruc­ture projects with loans to grow and transform Northern Australia. Ms Tracey Hayes is the new chair and there will be two new, additional board members,” Mr Littleprou­d said.

Mr Pitt announced on July 1, the day before Mr Littleprou­d was sworn in as minister, that Ms Hayes, a former Northern Territory Cattlemen’s Associatio­n chief, had been appointed chairwoman.

At the same time, Mr Pitt thanked outgoing Queensland board members Belinda Murphy, Karla Way-mcphail and Bill Shannon and said announceme­nts would be made soon on two further NAIF board appointmen­ts, including Queensland representa­tion.

Queensland deserves to have representa­tives on the board that will fight for local projects

MURRAY WATT

 ??  ?? The Ville Resort-casino's proposed new $80m hotel project.
The Ville Resort-casino's proposed new $80m hotel project.
 ??  ?? Murray Watt.
Murray Watt.

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