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Speech to Parliament: Turnbull Government's Climate Change Inaction

Posted on Media Releases & Speeches by Nick Moncrieff-Hill · November 25, 2017 11:45 AM

The people of Kingsford Smith are deeply concerned about the Turnbull government's lack of action on climate change and lack of support for renewable energy policy.

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Speech to Parliament: Requirements for Citizenship Amendment

Posted on Media Releases & Speeches by Nick Moncrieff-Hill · August 15, 2017 11:52 AM

I'm opposed to this bill. It's a lousy and disrespectful piece of legislation from a desperate government. Really, that's what's behind this; the government are desperate. They are falling in the polls and they are desperate to lurch further to the right to try and garner Australian people's attention.

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Remarks at the unveiling of the Stolen Generations Memorial

Posted on Media Releases & Speeches by Nick Moncrieff-Hill · May 26, 2017 4:25 PM

I acknowledge the traditional owners of the land on which we meet today, the Bidjigal people, and pay my respects to elders both past and present.

Last year for Harmony Day I wanted to make a video, so I asked people of different backgrounds to deliver a message of unity, peace and respect in their ancestral language.

 

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Speech to Parliament: National Swimming & Water Safety Framework

Posted on Media Releases & Speeches by Nick Moncrieff-Hill · February 15, 2017 6:00 PM

At 8.30 pm on 27 December 2016, two teenage boys, Tui Gallaher and George Lopeti, decided to go for a swim at Maroubra Beach. Almost immediately, the pair were swept into a powerful rip. A passer-by saw the boys in distress and went to rescue them. Seeing his cousin in trouble, Tui told the rescuer to rescue George first. The rescuer did that, and when he went back out to retrieve Tui, he was gone, swept away by one of the most powerful bodies of water in Sydney.

In the ensuing days, I was at the beach, and I met with the rescuers—the police and the surf lifesavers—as they searched, ultimately in vain, for the young boy. I saw his mother collapse in despair on the beach as time ran out for her son. Two days later, Tui's body was discovered by a young surfer. The sad fact of Tui's drowning, and almost every drowning, is that they are preventable with the right training and education.

Already this summer in Australia, 69 people have drowned on our coastline, in our pools and in our waterways. In 2015-16, 280 people drowned in Australia, representing a five per cent increase on drownings in 2014-15. The increase in drownings that we have seen over summer is sure to see another spike this season and is a worrying trend. Australians live by the water. Being in and around water is part of our nation's culture and our identity, but this regular exposure to water brings risks that can be fatal. The challenge is not to avoid being around water but to learn how to live safely around it.

Government has an obligation to ensure Australians are educated in water safety. The statistics indicate we as a nation are not doing enough to prevent drownings in Australia. Every child has the right to learn to swim and be safe around water, but alarmingly, Australia has no national approach to swimming or water safety education. The water safety education that Australian kids receive depends on where they live and, in many cases, on their parents' income. Not every Australian child is receiving the necessary instruction in swimming and water safety. In some states and territories, there is no school-delivered swimming and water safety program, while in others, swimming is an essential part of the school curriculum.

Studies have consistently shown a concerning trend of children starting secondary school without the ability to swim. Research shows that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students are less likely to achieve identified benchmarks for water safety competence, compared to non-Indigenous students. This is also the case for kids who are not born in Australia. For children engaged in formal swimming lessons, there is much emphasis on stroke technique and a better stroke, but little on teaching water safety survival and basic rescue skills. Quite simply, we are letting our kids down when it comes to teaching swimming and water safety and reducing the rate of drowning.

We do not have a national strategy to teach swimming and water safety. Historically, the Commonwealth has just left the issue to the states. It is time for a national approach to swimming and water safety education. It is time for the Commonwealth government to show leadership and to work with the states to ensure that every Australian child gets the necessary training and education to be safe in and around water.

Every child should undertake swimming and water safety education and training by the time they complete primary school. This training should be provided by accredited trainers. The Australian Water Safety Council, made up of organisations like the Royal Life Saving Society, Surf Life Saving Australia, AUSTSWIM and Swimming Australia, recommend that children should receive training consistent with level 4 of the National Swimming and Water Safety Framework, commonly known as Swim and Survive. This is not currently the case.

I am calling on a parliamentary inquiry to be established to inquire into why drownings in Australia are increasing and why we are not implementing the National Swimming and Water Safety Framework. Teaching Australian children to swim and be safe around water is an essential life skill, and no child should miss out on the opportunity to learn to be safe around water.

The Commonwealth should also establish a national water safety education fund which would provide additional funding to states and territories to support schools to ensure students have access to swimming pools and accredited AUSTSWIM trainers. Teaching swimming and water safety is a vital life skill. The Commonwealth must show leadership and work with the states on this important issue.


Celebrate Modern Australia with an Australian Head of State

Posted on Blog by Nick Moncrieff-Hill · January 30, 2017 2:28 PM

My wife’s family is a mix of Italian and English heritage.

Her mother was born in Oxford England and migrated to Australia as a 10 pound Pom.

Her father’s parents were Italian post–war migrants from the island of Salina off Sicily.

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Speech to Parliament: Vale John & Margaret Lemarseny

Posted on Media Releases & Speeches by Nick Moncrieff-Hill · December 02, 2016 4:06 PM

I wish to pay tribute to two giants of the Coogee community and surf life saving, John and Margaret Lemarseny, who passed away recently.

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Speech to Parliament: Sophie Smith named Vi Robbins Volunteer of the Award

Posted on Media Releases & Speeches by Nick Moncrieff-Hill · November 29, 2016 4:21 PM

On 16 November, local volunteers came together in November for the third annual Kingsford Smith Community Service and Vi Robbins Volunteer of the Year awards.

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Turnbull Cuts Dirty Deal With Shooters

Posted on Media Releases & Speeches by Nick Moncrieff-Hill · May 06, 2016 3:01 PM

The Turnbull Government has done a dodgy backroom deal with the shooters to lock the community out of Malabar Headland for 50 years.

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An Open Letter to Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull

Posted by Nick Moncrieff-Hill · March 29, 2016 4:57 PM
1,647 signatures

29 March 2016

An Open Letter to Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull


Our community needs your help.

On 28 December 2015 the Baird Liberal Government began removing century old fig trees from Alison Road in Randwick and Anzac Parade in Moore Park to facilitate their Eastern Sydney Light Rail project.

These trees are historic and form part of Sydney’s heritage and character.

In 1914, when troops marched from Kensington Racecourse down to the docks at Circular Quay, to get on boats to go and serve in Gallipoli, they walked past these trees.

These trees did not need to be removed and further removal of trees along Anzac Parade need not occur to allow the light rail project to proceed.  We can have light rail and preserve these majestic trees.

Despite community outrage and the opposition of both Sydney City and Randwick City Council, and local state and federal members of parliament, more trees have been marked for destruction by the Baird Liberal Government.

We ask that you as the Local Federal Member of Parliament intervene and ask the New South Wales Government to halt the destruction of more trees and work with Sydney City Council and Randwick City Council on alternate routes that preserve these trees.

We can have the light rail and keep our historic trees.

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Speech to Parliament: Close the Gap

Posted on Media Releases & Speeches by Nick Moncrieff-Hill · February 11, 2016 3:57 PM

I represent the land of the Bidjigal and Gadigal people in the south-east of Sydney. I recognise and respect that the land and water around Botany Bay and the beautiful coastline of Sydney's south-east has been their home for tens of thousands of years.

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