Rural communities fear 'data drought' for 18 months despite NBN satellite

Rural communities fear 'data drought' for 18 months despite launch of NBN satellite Sky Muster

Posted October 01, 2015 16:22:40

Frustrated rural internet customers fear it could be 18 months before their substandard services are improved by the National Broadband Network (NBN Co) satellite Sky Muster.

The new half-a-billion-dollar satellite was launched this morning, but due to months of testing will not be commercially available until mid-2016.

Central Queensland farmer Kristy Sparrow said the bush cannot wait that long.

"Businesses are closing and families are moving away from the bush in droves, because they can't access services they need to live there," Ms Sparrow said.

Ms Sparrow has called on NBN Co to do more to improve speeds and lift data limits for those struggling with the congested interim satellite service (ISS), which Sky Muster will replace.

"They oversubscribed it, [they should] come up with a solution to fix it, and fix it now," Ms Sparrow said.

Last year the mother of 13-year-old twins started the Better Internet for Rural Regional and Remote Australia Facebook page to lobby for better services.

"The drought's been catastrophic for most of central Queensland and other parts of Australia. The internet saga's been the straw that broke the camel's back," Ms Sparrow said.

"As far as I'm concerned, we're in a data drought."

Distance education students struggling with rationed gigabytes

Last month the then communications minister Malcolm Turnbull said the ISS, which was established by the previous Labor government, was a complete failure.

To address the congestion on the oversold system NBN Co introduced a fair use policy at the start of the year.

All ISS users had their data plans cut.

Megan Munchenberg from Gregory Downs station in far north Queensland has seen the impact on her two children, who study by school of the air.

In March the station schoolroom's 100 gigabyte plan was halved to 50 gigabytes, then three months later reduced to 45 gigabytes.

"Each child by standard has been recommended that they need 20 gigabytes month each. Currently we have 20 gigabytes for five children," she said.

Despite rationing, the schoolroom cannot make it through the month, and their internet is "shaped", or drastically slowed.

"It's pretty much just turn the computer off and walk away because the ability to do anything is impossible," Ms Munchenberg said.

Telstra Countrywide's decision to un-meter 38 education websites will help Telstra's mobile broadband customers but not those on the ISS.

Ms Munchenberg said families reliant on distance education should be exempt from data limits.

"They need to prioritise the areas where children are learning via distance education ... those families should be prioritised over anybody else," she said.

Families unable to send emails, banking transactions time out

NBN Co's general manager for fixed wireless and satellite, Gavin Williams, said he does not like to hear stories of hardship caused by the ISS.

"It's incredibly humbling when you hear the real world impacts of individuals in the bush just trying to do things that people in the city just take for granted," he said.

"When you can't do a banking transaction because it times out, that a kid has to get up at 5:00am to do a lesson, they're heartbreaking stories."

Mr Williams said there is not much NBN Co can do for rural customers until Sky Muster comes online.

He said when it does, it will be a game changer for 200,000 families.

"It is a revolution in capacity and capability for broadband in the bush," he said.

"It's a $1.8 million investment and it will deliver world class broadband with higher speeds, bigger allowances and a satellite designed from the ground up for people in regional and remote Australia."

National Farmers Federation chief executive Simon Talbot said Sky Muster will allow farmers to fully participate in the digital economy for the first time.

"It's a critical step in resolving the data drought," Mr Talbot said.

"People have been appalled by the Interim Satellite Solution offered by the NBN, which has left families unable to send e-mails, access online learning or manage their finances online."

He said the excitement is tempered with trepidation, as potential users wait for details on what services the new satellite will deliver.

"We users will be subject to lower download limits than those in metropolitan areas. Farmers will be keen to ensure that caps are reasonable, and don't place a handbrake on business or education usage."

Fears that ISS users won't be able to switch over for years

Ms Sparrow said rural people are sceptical.

"The NBN have effectively mismanaged the ISS, why should we be trusting?" she said.

Ms Sparrow said there is an information drought about the new long-term satellite service (LSS) and called on NBN Co to provide more information.

"How much are these families going to be able to access? What data limits? What costs? How long is it going to take to service every family?" she said.

"Is it going to be mid-2016? Late 2016?"

She said she fears it could be several years before all current ISS users are able to switch over.

"They have to actually go and physically put new software and installations on properties. We're talking several years to do that," she said.

NBN Co's corporate affairs manager for Queensland, Kylie Lindsay, dismissed fears it will take that long.

"We're actually planning to migrate all current ISS users across within a year from the service being commercially available," she said.

Ms Sparrow said rural families struggling to do basic farm business banking and educate their children cannot wait until the middle of 2017.

"People deserve to be connected to the internet," she said.

"It's a digital world and there's a digital divide. The interim satellite at least deserves to be fixed until then."

Pip Courtney's full story on the Data Drought is on Landline Sunday at noon.

Source: http://news.sky.com/

Fight between NT businessmen over $5 million loan to head to trial

Legal fight continues between NT developers John 'Foxy' Robinson and Osborne brothers over $5 million loan

Posted October 01, 2015 16:18:46

Three high-profile Darwin developers are in a Northern Territory Supreme Court battle over a multi-million-dollar loan.

Court documents show Centoid Pty Ltd and Trepang Services Pty Ltd, companies associated with developer John 'Foxy' Robinson, lent $5 million to the Osborne Family Holdings, the company of brothers Kerry and Dean Osborne.

The documents show the loan was guaranteed by the Osbornes, who were called upon to pay the loan because Osborne Family Holdings had made no repayments.

Osborne Family Holdings, a company involved in one of Darwin's largest apartment complexes, The Avenue, went into liquidation in August.

Mr Robinson's business ventures include the Wickham Point immigration detention centre, as well as tourism and hotel developments.

Court documents indicate Centoid and Trepang Services demanded the Osbornes pay more than $11 million, which was the original loan amount plus interest.

The documents show interest on the loan was 25 per cent per annum during the first two years, increasing to 35 per cent per year thereafter.

It is also alleged the loan was to be paid back by January 12 this year.

In his summary judgement, Judge Vince Luppino said "there does not appear to be any dispute that the debtor has not paid any amounts to the plaintiffs by way of repayment, whether for principal or interest".

The Northern Territory Supreme Court has ordered the Osborne brothers pay the $5 million to Centoid and Trepang Services, with a trial to be held on the outstanding interest amount of $6 million.

Mr Robinson referred the ABC to his lawyer.

Kerry Osborne told the ABC he was "trying to resolve a few issues with the developer".

Source: http://news.sky.com/

New wave of federally-funded Antarctic scientists begin work in Hobart

New wave of federally-funded Antarctic scientists begin work in Hobart

Updated October 01, 2015 16:17:44

The first wave of a batch of 40 federally-funded Antarctic scientists have begun working in Hobart.

The scientists will eventually be employed under the $24 million Antarctic Gateway Partnership, announced in November last year.

The partnership, a collaboration between the University of Tasmania, the Australian Antarctic Division and the CSIRO, was officially launched in Hobart.

The Director of the Antarctic Division, Nick Gales, said a range of projects were now possible through the three-year funding program.

He said there have already been successes.

"Things like being in front of the Totten Glacier, the largest of East Antarctica's glaciers," Dr Gales said.

"We know it's changing but we don't know why and how much, so by getting a ship down there, and all of the right scientists, we're able to work out that there is warm water coming up from the deepest parts of the ocean that gets underneath the front of the glacier.

"That's really important, to help us model how the glacier might melt in the future, how that interacts with sea level rise."

We have this critical mass, we have all these scientists here, we have all the expertise, we have all the know-how

Dr Steven Phipps, Antarctic Gateway Partnership

Dr Gales said collaboration was the key to research success.

"It's a really important initiative by the Government, because in the end, our ability to understand and research in Antarctica is built on collaborations.

"It's built on being able to do large ambitious projects."

Dr Steven Phipps moved to Tasmania on Monday.

He's a paleo-ice sheet modeller and his position was created under the partnership.

"I'm going to be looking at the history of the Antarctic ice sheet," Dr Phipps said.

"I'm going to look at how it evolves over time.

"Most importantly I'm going to be looking at how changes in the ice sheet affect global sea level."

Dr Phipps said it was critically important for him to be based in Hobart.

"We have this critical mass, we have all these scientists here, we have all the expertise, we have all the know-how."

It was a sentiment shared by the organisations making up the partnership.

"There are more, globally more, scientists who look at marine and Antarctic issues here than anywhere else in the world," Dr Gales said.

"It's on our doorstep, we're part of the Southern Ocean."

Funding 'solidifies' Hobart's reputation for Antarctic research

More than 40 per cent of Australia's marine and Antarctic scientists are based in Tasmania.

Dr Gales said the funding would help solidify Hobart's global reputation for Antarctic research.

"It's a funding initiative that came in at a critically important time.

"It enabled us to continue on through this three-year period, to do the kind of work that's most important to do."

The same Federal Budget that awarded $24 million to the Antarctic Gateway Partnership, cut $111 million from the CSIRO budget and $100 million from the Federal Environment Department, which is responsible for the Australian Antarctic Division.

Source: http://news.sky.com/

High cost, long wait times put rural Australians off going to the doctor: survey

National Health Performance survey: High cost, long wait times put rural Australians off going to the doctor

Posted October 01, 2015 15:58:38

Health experts are concerned that people in regional and rural areas are putting off seeing the doctor due to high costs and long wait times.

More than a third of people in some parts of Australia - mostly in remote and regional parts of Australia - believe they are being forced to wait too long to see a doctor, according to the National Health Performance survey.

That was more than two to three times the rate seen in other parts of the country.

In south-western and south-eastern New South Wales, Tasmania, and the ACT, close to 10 per cent of patients said they delayed going to the doctor because of the cost.

The survey looked at how the Federal Government's 31 Primary Health Networks are coping.

People in the bush tend to be very selfless and [don't] want to get in the way, sometimes to their detriment.

Dr Gerard Carroll, cardiologist

Rural Doctors Association chief executive Jenny Johnson said a trip to the doctor can be very expensive for people in remote areas.

"There's a couple of factors: One is actually driving [a long way] to see their GP, and getting access to their GP in a timely fashion," she said.

"That's problematic, particularly in times of drought where people are financially challenged."

Dr Gerard Carroll, a cardiologist in Wagga Wagga in the Riverina region of southern New South Wales, said some of his rural patients admit to delaying making an appointment.

"People in the bush tend to be very selfless and [don't] want to get in the way, sometimes to their detriment," he said.

"The number of times I see someone and they say, 'Look I didn't want to bother you, I'm sure there are sicker people around'."

Lower ratio of doctors contributes to delay: doctor

A third of people in western New South Wales, country Western Australia and country areas in South Australia, said believe they have to wait too long.

Dr Carroll said increased wait times occur because there are less doctors in regional Australia.

"There have generally been a lower per capita ratio of doctors to patients in rural Australia to metro Australia," he said.

Dr Carroll said that disparity has not been fully addressed by governments.

The Australian Medical Association (AMA) said doctors were doing their best to keep costs and delays to a minimum.

AMA vice president Dr Stephen Parnis said he believes the figures are pretty positive, given that nine out of 10 people say they can afford to go to the doctor.

"When you're talking about single-digit figures for people who say that they are getting in to see a GP, or affording it, that's genuinely a positive thing," Dr Parnis said.

The figures also show that between 10-13 per cent of residents in Brisbane north, northern Queensland, Perth north and south-western Sydney avoided picking up a prescription because they are too expensive.

Source: http://news.sky.com/

Reza Barati murder trial to be reopened to hear from more witnesses

Reza Barati: Judge reopens murder trial to hear from defence witnesses in asylum seeker's death

Updated October 01, 2015 15:58:38

A Papua New Guinea judge has allowed the murder trial of two men accused of killing asylum seeker Reza Barati to be reopened to hear from more witnesses.

Justice Nicholas Kirriwom had reserved his decision in the wilful murder trial of Joshua Kaluvia and Louie Efi on Manus Island after hearing closing submissions on September 29.

They are accused of hitting Mr Barati, causing him to die from a serious head wound on February 17 last year.

The defendants wrote to Justice Kirriwom saying their constitutional right to a fair defence had been breached, because their state-appointed defence lawyer had not called any witnesses other than the defendants themselves.

Justice Kirriwom has ruled that the defence may reopen its case to hear from more witnesses when he returns to Manus Island on November 30.

Kaluvia and Efi both deny allegations they were part of a group of men who attacked Barati during violent protests at the Manus Island detention centre last year.

Kaluvia is alleged to have hit Mr Barati in the head with a piece of wood and Efi to have dropped a large rock on his head.

The PNG police investigator for the case told the court he had evidence implicating expatriate guards, one Australian man and one New Zealander, in Mr Barati's death, but had been unable to secure their return to PNG for questioning.

Source: http://news.sky.com/

Broncos and Cowboys keen to play down grand final pressure ahead of decider

NRL grand final: Brisbane Broncos coach Wayne Bennett and North Queensland coach Paul Green show mutual respect ahead of decider

Updated October 01, 2015 16:21:40

Rival NRL grand final coaches Wayne Bennett and Paul Green have both tried to keep a lid on the hype ahead of Sunday's decider between the Broncos and the Cowboys.

Bennett maintained a business-as-usual approach would be the best way for his Brisbane side to prepare for the all-Queensland grand final, while Green promised to keep things simple in the build-up.

In a jovial joint grand final press conference, mutual respect was traded instead of the usual pre-game barbs as Maroon camaraderie came to the fore.

Aside from the coaches, Queensland representatives Johnathan Thurston, Michael Morgan and Matt Scott were in attendance for the Cowboys, while Justin Hodges, Sam Thaiday and Corey Parker fronted up for Brisbane.

Bennett refused to reveal any of the secrets to his seven consecutive grand final victories, but did say his team just needed to do what it had been doing all season.

"We're playing pretty good football. There'll be pressure out there, it'll be tough for both teams," he said.

"We'll rely on the fact we've been a pretty good team all season."

Bennett did give a nod to the age-old rugby league adage that it is the big boppers up front who decide grand finals.

"The forwards will determine the outcome of the game - the halves can't play without the forwards. We are all in the same boat," he said.

Cowboys coach Green may have vastly less experience than his counterpart, but he denied he or his players would be overwhelmed by the occasion.

"Our experienced blokes have got plenty of big game experience, particularly rep footy," Green said.

"Not grand finals, obviously, but there's not a lot of difference.

"The biggest thing is to keep it simple. what works for you over the years is going to work for you in the big game."

Green said North Queensland had learnt a lot from its 16-12 loss to the Broncos in an intense battle in week one of the finals.

"You take as much from a loss as you do from a win sometimes," he said.

Parker promises a respectful game

Broncos stalwart Parker said friendships would be put on hold for the duration of the game, but the respect would remain.

"We're all good mates, we all respect each other and very close during that Origin period," he said.

"Only difference is we've got different coloured jerseys on."

We're all good mates, we all respect each other and very close during that Origin period.

Corey Parker

Thurston and Hodges have injury concerns ahead of the match, but both waved away any suggestions they would not take part.

Thurston said the Cowboys are well-drilled at travelling large distances to play, even if this week involved the extra distraction of a Dally M Medal win for the brilliant playmaker.

"It's just business as usual for myself and just doing the best part I can for the team," Thurston said.

"We've got structures in place and people around me who do their job and know their role and it's the same for me.

"The club's put things in place for me to recover well along with the rest of the players as well.

"The travel is different for us, the club's really good at making sure we factor all those things in."

Source: http://news.sky.com/

Two people burned in explosion at Adelaide house

Two people with burns after explosion at Dudley Park house, Adelaide emergency authorities say

Updated October 01, 2015 16:02:04

Two people are being treated for burns after an explosion at a house at Dudley Park in Adelaide's inner northern suburbs.

Emergency crews rushed to the premises in Young Street just after 2:00pm.

The Metropolitan Fire Service said a fire was out when crews arrived.

A 23-year-old man and a 20-year-old woman are being treated for burns.

More to come

Source: http://news.sky.com/