Personal blog of Jane Clark, a member of The Greens, Alderman on Alice Springs Town Council and Executive member of Local Govt. Assoc. NT (LGANT)

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Let's Retain the Permit System

It concerns me that so many Territorians are eager to see the Permit System scrapped from remote communities. The reality of the situation is that, whilst the system can be abused to protect criminal behaviour within a community, on the whole, it serves other more useful purposes. As there are limited police services, low grade communications and technology services (no working public phones in come cases), the permit system represents one of the very few ways a community has of keeping trouble makers away.

To put the vulnerability of remote families into perspective, I think of the stories I was told about my grandfather who was first publican of the Barrow Creek pub many moons ago. He kept an array of firearms behind the bar and ensured that his wife and children were excellent marksmen. This was because there were no police or phone services available to them, so they had to keep the peace in the only way they knew.

Surely the permit system is the most civilised and appropriate way for communities to have some control over their communities until policing can be arranged? The permit system serves a relevant purpose and the NT and Australian governments are dragging their heels with the supply of dependable law enforcement and communications services.




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hot tags: federal government intervention removal of the permit system remote communities northern territory NT jane clark greens alderman
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Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Local Action for Environmental Sustainability

Click Here to download a copy of the Local Action Plan to Reduce Greenhouse Gas (June 2006) - as it is no longer available from the Town Council web site.



The Climate Action Group will present a deputation to Council on October 15 at 5.15pm regarding this Action plan.

A public meeting is planned for October 23 - contact me for details: jane@netgrrl.com.au .


Also, click here to download the CSAT 2005 Road to a Desert SMART Town.




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hot tags: alice springs 0870 NT green house gas emissions targets local action environment climate change

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Local%20Action%20Plan%20to%20Reduce%20Greenhouse%20Gas%20in%20Alice%20Springs%20.pdf

Monday, September 24, 2007

Reformed Local Government Act due to be rushed through in October

The Territory Government is set to debate the redrafted Local Government Act during the October sittings commencing Oct 9, 2007. This redrafting affects Municipal Councils as well as the new shires and has all sorts of implications.

LGANT will be meeting with the minister asking that this legislation not be passed at the October sittings but be delayed until February (which is when it was previously scheduled). In effect, this legislation -
  • negates the need for Local Government,
  • overrides the authority of CEO's and
  • imposes a ludicrous amount of additional administrative work which will be very expensive and cumbersome to maintain.

    At tonight's Council Meeting I will propose

    That Alice Springs Town Council writes to all members of the NT Government asking that the rewriting of the Local Government Act be deferred until the February sittings.



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hot tags local government reform northern territory jane clark greens october local government act martin labor government elliot mcadam minister


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Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Living in the middle of the Federal Government Intervention

Is it just me or do others feel like they are living in the middle of a social engineering experiment which is suddenly going horribly wrong?
Have you felt the anger of people around you as their rights and respect are taken, yet your own are unaffected? There is something very wrong about the Federal Government Intervention and Local Government Reform happening at the same time.

It's too much, way too much, and the pace is relentless, agressive and inflexible.





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hot tags federal government intervention alice springs central australia aboriginal human rights abuse
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Saturday, September 15, 2007

MAKE CYCLING HEARD THIS ELECTION

Vote4Cycling.com.au

I am planning to put the following motion before Council in October round of meetings. Any input from the local public would be appreciated.

That Council

A. Joins Local Government bodies across Australia who support the cycling community's Healthy and Active Transport (HEAT) policy proposal which seeks $50 million each year for four years from the next Federal Government for Local Government across Australia to build cycling and walking facilities

B. writes to the Federal Government, the Federal Opposition and Territory MLA's
seeking their support for the proposal.


The following excerpt is from the cycling community in NSW to marackville Council, and I believe every word is equally relevant to Alice Springs:

"Local Councils across Australia are faced with a number of issues that impact on the health, safety, economic development and liveability in their communities. Active transport (walking and cycling) offers practical solutions to some of the challenges faced by local government.Yet many councils lack the financial resources to implement walking and cycling improvements in their local area.

"The cycling community has developed a policy proposal, Health and Active Transport (HEAT), which marks a major step forward in assisting local governments to speed up progress in developing pedestrian and bicycle friendly communities.

"The HEAT program proposes that the Federal Government establish an infrastructure funding program of $50million each year for four years for local government to build cycling and walking facilities. The program would fund significant, high-quality cycling and walking infrastructure projects, providing health, transport, environment and community benefits across the urban, regional and rural areas.

"A copy of the proposal can be downloaded at http://www.vote4cycling.com.au/

R Speidel - Cycling Promotion Fund
P Strang - Bicycle Federation of Australia
S Hodge - Cycling Australia"

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hot tags healthy active australia walking cycling alice springs NT town council.
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Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Post Carbon Cities

You might find this (U.S.-based) website interesting.

There's a guidebook available for download.

Post Carbon Cities: Planning for Energy and Climate Uncertainty is a guidebook on peak oil and global warming for people who work with and for local governments in the United States and Canada. It provides a sober look at how these phenomena are quickly creating new uncertainties and vulnerabilities for cities of all sizes, and explains what local decision-makers can do to address these challenges.

http://postcarboncities.net/guidebook



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tags greens jane clark alderman alice springs town council climate action group getup climate change post carbon cities

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Sunday, September 9, 2007

Alice Springs Speaks Out - Grass Roots Democracy


As the weather warms and the Federal election looms nearer, Alice Springs is alive with protest and action groups. People are demanding action from all levels of Government including the Australian, Territory and Local Governments.
The above photo was taken as part of a national day of action requesting that the Australian Government adopt genuine Carbon Emissions Targets - and what did we get? More rhetoric, no actual action.

I have attended meetings with citizens concerned about Climate Change and council's inability to act on their own Action Plan.

Other groups I have met with are hopping mad with the NT Governments inablity to act on the obvious inefficiencies of Power Water - reports have been requested by government BUT action has not taken place - 14% of the water for Alice Springs is lost through leaks alone!

Below are photo's I took at meetings I attended around town, one regarding the development of a community garden in Alice - interested? contact me.
Another meeting was to disuss the implications of Nuclear waste being dumped, mined and transported through the Territory. There is genuine concern about the danger of transport accidents. We in the Territory are responsible to speak out and not allow our fragile landscape be used as a nuclear dumping ground. Muckaty Station has been flagged as a potential dump but the consultation process has been seriously flawed. The Greens is the only true anti nuclear party.


Community consultation is paramount to understanding the views of people living and voting in the Territory. Make your voice heard by writing to politicians, engaging the media and exploring ways to improve life on a local, national and global level. Alice is alive with people fed up with inaction and rhetoric - if you feel that way, join your community and speak out.


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hot tags APEC climate action targets emissions getup jane clark blog town council australia community garden alice springs nuclear waste dump The Greens NT Greens muckaty station

Friday, September 7, 2007

The world demands binding Climate TARGETS at APEC 2007


Target Practice!

Wear red and join the Climate Action Target Protest in Todd Mall this Sunday Sept 9 at 10am. The nation is wearing red to signify human targets.

We need investment in renewable energy and a commitment to binding targets to cap our global greenhouse gas emissions. I want our governments to take sweeping action to dramatically cut greenhouse pollution, shift to clean energy and solve the climate crisis now.

91,666 have joined this campaign so far Australia wide and nearly half a million world wide.

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hot tags: kyoto protocol targets getup protest sunday sept 9 climate change action jane clark netgrrl web new media blog APEC aspirational target Sydney

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Design Riot


Design riot - reprinted from www.computerarts.co.uk

Design has become as vital a part of protest movements as the marchers themselves, asserts Graeme Aymer…

At no other time in history has the visual image, and in particular graphic design, been more important than it is today. Art is no stranger to protest, but the proliferation of both news and advertising means that graphic design’s place in the protest movement has become more important than the marches that used to define what we generally call ‘activism.’ Image is all, and knowing the precise language to subvert that is how graphic design is now changing the world, albeit in small, pointed, single-issue nibbles. Designers are taking Picasso to heart, when he said: “Painting is not done to decorate apartments. It is an instrument of war for attack and defence against the enemy.”

Peaceful protest
Perhaps the most straightforward application of graphic design to protest is the CND logo, known across the world as the peace sign. It came about in 1958 at an Easter anti-nuclear arms march organised by The Peace News, more specifically its Direct Action Committee Against Nuclear War. Its designer was Gerald Holtom, who consciously avoided the cross as a symbol, despite being a devout Christian, as well as the symbol of the dove, which had been co-opted by the Soviet Union’s nuclear armament programme. His design, a line schematic of himself, arms down and palms out in despair based on a work by Goya, also resembles the semaphore signals for ‘N’ and ‘D’: nuclear disarmament.

On the protest day it was mounted on 500 ‘lollipop sticks’ and countless ceramic badges (said to be capable of withstanding a nuclear attack themselves). The logo, free of affiliation, easy to draw and consciously not copyrighted or trademarked was copied and used for countless marches for peace, particularly against the Vietnam war worldwide, and in particular, in the US, through the 1960s.

Quick reactions
In fact, television enabled the world to live out war day by day in an unprecedented manner. In the United States, as discontent grew, a generation raised on post war prosperity and a strong sense of optimism was able to take to the streets with silk-screened placards in reaction to news the day before. Jay Belloli, currently director of publications for the Austin Val Verde Foundation, designed his poster ‘Amerika is Devouring its Children’ as just such a reaction.

“The poster was created in May 1970 in general response to the Vietnam war, but particularly in response to the Cambodian incursion – the bombing and deployment of troops into a country that was not involved in the war,” Belloli recalls. “When the incursion was announced in May 1970, the press, many colleges and universities in the US shut down in protest. After the campus closed at the University of California, Berkeley, where I was a student, there were many places on campus where anti-war silk screen posters were being made.”
As to the work’s graphical inspiration, he adds: “A large amount of counterculture art was inspired by late 19th century Art Nouveau, an earlier art movement related to youth and a new vision of the future.”

American television went on to further alarm anti-war activists the following year. In early 1971, American network CBS aired a programme called The Selling of the Pentagon, which asserted that the American military had spent millions on PR to ‘sell’ US armed intervention to its public, using everything from recruitment drives to staged and edited battle footage. The programme caused outrage in the US, partly because of its content and partly because the military disputed the network’s journalistic integrity.

Unselling the war
One Ira Nerken, then in his penultimate year studying political science at Yale University in Connecticut, decided that if the government could concertedly sell the US public the war, then surely it was possible to ‘unsell’ it. Thus he started something called the ‘Campaign to Unsell the War’ that year. Introduced by Yale teaching staff to David McCall, president of New York Ad agency LaRoche, McCaffrey & McCall, letters and invitations to participate were sent to 60 advertising companies.

This was to be a highly graphic campaign: according to the letter the campaign was “not interested in cheap, superficial, anti-American work”. The idea was to have “thoughtful and honest advertising, created by people who love their country. The Pentagon’s side of the story has been ably and massively told. Ours has not.”

The campaign’s call to action was to encourage Americans to vote for anti-war candidates in the upcoming election, and it used slick professional advertisements in print and on billboards, local television and radio to do so. Advertising creatives donated roughly $2m of time to bring the campaign to life. In one television advertisement, Uncle Sam was shown dividing a pie for a number of diners; the army general got the biggest slice. This ad went on to win a Clio advertising award. Some observers credit the Unsell campaign with the Nixon’s ceasefire announcement, days after being sworn in for his second term.

Culture jamming

A more modern application of the Unsell campaign’s methods can be found in the work of Adbusters. The Vancouver-based, advertising-free monthly magazine is based on similar principles, although the target of its direct action is an area which can be broadly defined as global consumer culture.

“We started Adbusters way back in 1989 with a bunch of burnt-out activists of all stripes,” says Kalle Lasn. “We were disillusioned with all the old activisms, and we felt that culture was going to be the next big battleground.” So its ‘culture jam campaign’ began; at its heart, says Lasn, “Tricks are visual tricks and aesthetic tricks not just tricks that are to do with the 26 letters of the alphabet.”

Adbusters has spotlighted a number of high-visibility brands, including campaigns focusing on Absolut Vodka, McDonalds and Nike. While legal challenges have been threatened in the past, it is often Adbusters that has maintained the upper hand.

“I remember one of our first targets was Absolut Vodka and they came after us in a big way,” Lasn recalls. “Eventually they just didn’t want to have a public debate with us. Legal action in the background started to fuel a debate as to whether there actually should be alcohol advertising.”

But today’s protests are nothing without the internet. Furthermore, it is the modern web – Web 2.0 with its user-generated content – that is leading all charges for direct action. Absolutely crucial to its success is well thought-out graphic design.

Activist groups campaigning on a range of issues now encourage submissions for online posters, or for images that can then be disseminated on users own sites or blogs. Significantly, the campaigns are usually highly specific, single issues from which there can be a measurable outcome. PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) is targeting KFC with a boycott, for instance. Similarly, Blood For Oil is a particular strand of the anti-war movement which has joined forces with the previously mentioned Campaign to Unsell the War.


Green campaigns

Perhaps the best example of this is Greenpeace’s ‘Green my Apple’ campaign. Auditing the technology industry’s use of toxic materials and use of recycling programs, Greenpeace found that Apple rated very low. Although Greenpeace had been in talks with Apple since 2004, in September 2006 it took a different tack.

“Apple does listen to its users and the users do support each other. So, we thought the only way to get through to Apple was to reach out to the Mac users and have them as a voice saying what they want from Apple, where they want Apple to go and what they want Apple to do,” explains Greenpeace campaign coordinator Zeina Alhajj.

Greenpeace set up a website that directly mimicked Apple’s. Cleverly, rather than alienating notoriously defensive Mac devotees, the site declared, “We love Apple”, thereby declaring its solidarity with fellow users.

Having established the campaign was not about Mac-bashing, it then exposed the toxicity of the products used by Apple’s hardware and the impact of Apple waste, especially in dumping grounds in China. As well as urging Mac fans to write to famously recalcitrant CEO Steve Jobs, Greenpeace encouraged the general public to create their own campaign artwork to bring pressure to bear on the Cupertino computer maker. Greenpeace even provided assets: pictures of Chinese children picking through piles of Apple branded computer waste as well as a Green My Apple logo and product shots. Some submissions were pastiches of Apple advertising drives, particularly its most current iPod campaign. And as many Mac users are in the creative industries, many of the submissions had a high level of slickness and polish.

Greenpeace didn’t stop there. It linked to blogs and set up a Flickr album. Less graphically led but equally intrinsic to Green My Apple was the iBuzz, a feed from del.icio.us sites tagged ‘GreenMyApple’.

“We had about 45,000 people writing to Steve Jobs through the system, sending him letters,” says Alhajj. “For us, the most impressive thing was the contribution from the Mac fans to the artwork of the website itself. We had hundreds of designs and photos of people hugging their Macs and sending their photos to the Green My Apple Flickr pool.”

In May 2007 the campaign began to bear fruit. Steve Jobs issued a statement of clarification about Apple’s green credentials. He referred to “some environmental organisations” that had criticised the company, and he used the statement to announce Apple would eliminate two toxic materials – polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and brominated flame retardants (BFRs) by 2008, a year ahead of Dell and Lenovo. It would also enable its US customers to return their Apple products for recycling. It’s not all that Greenpeace wanted, but it was certainly a step in the right direction.

“One of our web editors calls it Greenpeace 2.0,” Alhajj chuckles. “It’s the new way of campaigning.”

The power of design

When conflict or natural disaster arises, nobody sends for the graphic designers. But that doesn’t mean that designers have no power. In fact, they may have more power than they themselves realise. As Kalle Lasn says: “They don’t have to think of themselves as these corporate arse-kissers. They do have a lot of power in the feel and the tone and mood of our culture, and if there is going to be some kind of movement to upset the applecart and come up with a sustainable culture for the future, then designers will have to play a huge part in creating it.”


YOU NEED THIS!

Five technologies and techniques essential to activist art

1 Silk screening

American counterculture in the 1960s thrived on this technique, which is similar to the 1,000-year-old Japanese art of stencilling. Silk screening was popular because it enabled the artist to create and replicate art relatively quickly. In the 1960s, that meant overnight. It is responsible for much of the anti-war poster culture that thrived in US universities in the late 1960s.


2 Aldus Pagemaker
Prior to its purchase by Adobe in 1994, Aldus Pagemaker was part of the new and exciting world of desktop publishing. During and after the miners’ strike in the mid 1980s, many miners’ wives self-published stories and accounts using Pagemaker, thanks to help from community organisations like Art Circus in Castleford, West Yorkshire.


3 Photoshop
Photoshop debuted in 1990, broadening the scale of what was possible in terms of photo-manipulation and undercutting all competition by price. It is currently the most important software package for the would-be activist, enabling the combining and recombining of images in ways inconceivable to the counterculture movement of the late 1960s.


4 XML/CSS
HTML rolled form and content into one initially simple but eventually fragmented language: if you wanted to create sites, you either had to know it yourself or put up with a pretty appalling, pre-cooked web presence. CSS and XML have enabled the proliferation of online blogs and user-generated content, now crucial to any protest movement.


5 Flash video
Flash itself is a handy tool for making motion graphics, but now that it supports video, it’s a whole new ball game. Unlike QuickTime, RealPlayer or Windows Media, it’s the one online video viewing tool that just about every computer in the western world supports: combined with community video sites and the most rudimentary video capture device (mobile phone), it’s the perfect protest tool.


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hot tags new media protest activism art graphic design web development greens alice springs jane clark alderman councillor alice springs town council NT government

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Second Life Town Meeting Location

ABC Island Amphitheatre:
http://slurl.com/secondlife/ABC%20Island/127/72/75

2pm-4pm Sunday Sept 2 CST

Watch this space for next online meeting and also training sessions


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