Tuesday, September 08, 2009

New State for North Qld - 69% support

In a glaring indictment of Premier Bligh's metrocentric governance, a Brisbane radio poll has shown overwhelming support for a new state for North Queensland. Brisbane talkback radio 4BC ran the poll on 4th September 2009 and at 2.00pm Thursday 10th September, support for the new state option was running at 69% in favour to 30% against. See http://www.4bc.com.au/

Radio 4BC online staff advised that "this is by far the largest response they have had for a poll in a long time". Responses also included a lot of text messages suggesting that the metropolitan SE corner of the state should be given back to NSW with the border of the "real Queensland" placed just above Noosa.

This poll demonstrates how more and more voters, including those in SEQ, now recognise that the government they elected is over extended just in dealing with urban SEQ issues, let alone those of the rest of Queensland. The government's bungling of regional issues, especially regional health services, has produced the extraordinary situation where half of all new settlers in the SE corner of the state now come from regional Queensland, not from interstate. This was not the case in the past when regional drift to the South East was less pronounced and was offset by interstate and overseas migrants who settled in the regions. This new settlement pattern can no longer be characterised as healthy or sustainable growth. It is clearly "cancerous growth", at the expense of more balanced regional growth.

Many take the view that this is a logical consequence of an urban electoral majority, electing an urban centred government to deliver the narrow centralised, governance that conforms to their limited urban perspective. The remaining 1/3rd of the states 4 million people must now put up with this "one-size-fits-all" approach and wear the associated costs. They are constantly reminded of the need to avoid "duplication" of services but no-one ever mentions the futile waste involved when an MP from Cooktown, Townsville or Mt Isa has to travel all the way to Brisbane and sit through endless parliamentary debate about the Tugun Bypass (on the NSW Border) or Brisbane's second Gateway Bridge. Don't tell me there is no better use for their time.

SEQ residents are starting to understand that it is the very rapid pace of population growth that is driving the congestion based decline in their quality of life and the explosion in government debt. If only 200,000 new settlers in the state had been diverted to a new state capital region in the north over the past two decades then the second gateway bridge and a whole raft of other expensive infrastructure would not be needed for another five years. And the cost of providing services and infrastructure to those 200,000 diverted settlers in the new capital would be a small fraction of the compounded costs involved when they are added to an existing metropolitan region. From the moment governments start considering hugely expensive tunnels as the only alternative to traffic grid lock it is clear that serious diseconomies of scale have set in. The point when costs no longer increase by addition is long past. From here on they will only multiply, and compound exponentially.

There would have been no so-called "water crisis" if effective decentralisation through devolution had already been in place because the existing system would easily have coped with a more balanced pace of growth. The hugely unpopular Traveston Crossing Dam, the expensive folly of the desalination plant, the tunnels, the bridges and the vast expanses of concrete are all monuments to an almost pathological centralism. Each new cohort of 200,000 settlers in the SE corner means another 10% of Moreton Bay is closed for fishing.

But they just don't get it. The dominant aim of government has never been to create an ever bigger, uglier and less liveable metropolis. No mandate has ever been given for this option but it pervades and perverts every major policy. And to give the appearance of addressing the issue the government has implemented a regional plan that manipulates the symptoms while exacerbating the causes.

And to anyone who might still hold doubts as to the viability of one, or two new, states in regional Queensland it is worth reflecting that we already have a working example. There is one region in Australia that is not run by a distant metropolitan elite. It has a population less than 500,000 people. And because most of its people live within 3 hours drive of the seat of government the tax money circulates through the entire economy, not just the capital district. It does not have a doctors shortage because it has its own medical school and the supply of trainees is matched to local needs, not those of a distant city. Its government has full control over its fair share of federal GST funds and they set their own spending priorities rather than make the best of priorities set by a distant elite. And their political parties adopt policies that differ from those of their metropolitan counterparts to better serve the interests of their local community.

We refer to that independent "regional state" as Tasmania. And you would spend a very long time there trying to find some sad, lonely soul who yearns to be governed by supposedly more enlightened folks in Melbourne. True, Tasmania gets some additional federal fiscal subsidy but this is to compensate for the additional costs imposed by Bass Straight. A similar self governing region on the mainland would not need as much budget support because of their existing road and rail links.

And it is also worth noting that the absence of major metropolitan congestion costs in Tasmania’s budget framework ensures that the purchasing power of their tax revenue is higher than in other states. Greater Hobart’s population of 195,000 is only 40% of the state population. The difference in the cost of office space between Hobart and Sydney, or between Townsville and Brisbane, for example, has a major bearing on the capacity to deliver real government services. Add to that the huge advantages of implementing policy down a shorter, leaner chain of command and the oft repeated ‘duplication’ bogeyman slinks away.

Regional states were always intended by our nation's founders. Prior to federation, the British Crown ensured that each region had the right to decide its own self determination as a new colony within the Empire. This was done in the interests of the same "peace, order and good governance" that were enshrined in the objects of the Queensland Constitution. Indeed, it was this very principle that allowed Queensland to obtain self governance over the objections and active sabotage of NSW just 40 years earlier.

Ironically, it was only after the blatant blackmail by Brisbane interests at federation, who threatened to torpedo the new nation itself, that a States veto over the formation of new states within its boundaries was added to the Commonwealth Constitution. This affront to democratic principles was driven by then Qld Governor Griffiths who was clearly acting in breach of his oath to serve all Queenslanders equally, not just Brisbane interests. This “improper exercise of power” by way of “callous disregard for the rights and liberties of regional Queenslanders”, can hardly fall within the meaning of his oath to “well and truly serve”. Prior to this the Crown could disregard the fact that such a clause may be present in the constitution of an existing colony, as it does in the Queensland one.

It is also worth noting that just 48 years later the Commonwealth ratified the UN Charter which also reaffirmed the people of any regions right to determine its own status free of any veto by an existing authority.

This clearly establishes that the major stumbling block to the formation of new states, the veto of the existing metropolitan power, has no moral authority in either historical Westminster principles or under the United Nations covenants. A State Premier who would disregard the legitimate aspirations of a region for their own state within the commonwealth, and exercise a veto power that was obtained under duress, would place themselves among some of the most infamous, ruthless and undemocratic lowlife that history has ever served up.

The interesting question is whether urban Queensland and their first female Premier has the gall and hypocrisy to veto a new state for North Queensland. For in doing so she would commit the political and moral equivalent of denying a battered wife her right to a just, fair and timely divorce. In both cases there was once a time when such vetos were acceptable but, hopefully, we have come a long way since then.

Copyright, Ian Mott 08/09/09

2 Comments:

At July 08, 2010 4:33 pm, Blogger Jim Belshaw said...

Hi Ian and thanks for the comment on my blog. I couldn't find the poll. If you email me at ndarala(at)optusnet(dot)com(dot)au I will put you in touch with the new state group

 
At October 18, 2010 11:39 am, Blogger Ian Mott said...

Analysis of comments on more recent media articles on the North Qld new state issue can be seen at http://regionalstates.wordpress.com/2010/08/12/feedback-reveals-why-bligh-rejected-new-state-referendum/

It tells a similar story but with much more understanding of why people support it and where they live.

 

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