• Ear-bashing

    Ear-bashing

    THANKS for highlighting the danger to public health caused by people deliberately modifying vehicles to emit ear-splitting levels of noise (“Roar Wounds,” Voice, November 5, 2022). 

    Members of the public have the right to go about their business without incurring actual damage to their hearing due to the ‘revving’ of vehicles which have had their exhaust mufflers removed – a ‘modification’ which should be banned. 

    I would appeal to the WA government to fund enough additional positions in an appropriate agency to identify offending vehicles and refer them to the Transport Department for examination. 

    Owners of vehicles found to be without mufflers or otherwise in breach of noise standards should be required to promptly make their vehicles compliant. A publicity campaign alerting the public to this problem would also be helpful. 

    Name and details supplied
    Maylands

    Not as bad

    LUMPING vape bans into Perth’s new smoke-free areas wrongly sends the message that vaping is as harmful as smoking (“Smoked out,” Voice, November 24, 2022). 

    This is patently untrue and will only serve to discourage smokers from switching to vaping.

    Contrary to what this policy indicates, there have been no identified health risks of passive or ‘second-hand’ vaping. 

    Most of the harmful chemicals in smoke are absent from second-hand vapour and those present are at extremely low levels, below the threshold for harm. 

    Furthermore, vapour consists of liquid droplets which dissipate quickly, especially outdoors, unlike the solid particles in cigarette smoke. 

    Allowing vapers to vape discretely in smoke-free areas would incentivise smokers to switch to a less harmful alternative to deadly cigarettes, without causing harm to bystanders.

    Should vapers be blowing vape clouds into the path of pedestrians? No. But this is simply good etiquette. 

    Official bans and fines are simply not appropriate.

    Our government needs to start acting seriously when it comes to helping smokers quit. Blanket bans and ill-advised policies are only clouding the problem for adult smokers.

    Dr Colin Mendelsohn
    Double Bay, NSW
    The Ed says:
    Recent research on vaping suggests second-hand vape is probably not as bad as cigarette smoke, but still likely to have risks for bystanders. 

  • Two lives of Jordan Peterson

    THIS week Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson, dubbed “dangerous” by WA media, was in Perth for two public lectures.

    The West Australian newspaper’s description of him as a “gateway to far-right extremism” was hard to reconcile with the mild, esoteric, and slightly flat performance Prof Peterson delivered at Tuesday night’s show at HBF Stadium. 

    Critics argue that his professorial veneer when talking about how people should get their lives together and improve themselves is one of the things that makes him dangerous. 

    When the quiet scholar logs in to Twitter, Peterson becomes a bitter combatant in the culture war against the ‘woke left’, lashing out against transgender people and complaining about having to listen to Qantas give a traditional land owner acknowledgement. 

    On the ground in Perth, he was mild, slightly rambling, and said nothing more controversial than what you might hear from an uncle at Christmas dinner this year. 

    He talked about the importance of working manual labour jobs, of not thinking ‘entry level’ positions are easy, or beneath you. A long story about his time as a dishwasher was one of the highlights of the night, and it was still only slightly entertaining. 

    It was some in the crowd (mostly male, Anglo, and millennial) who seemed to want Peterson to go further, to be more reactionary and controversial. 

    During the Q&A, someone asked how to keep children safe from indoctrination by the radical left. 

    It was the most provocative point of the night. Peterson’s utterly uncontroversial answer was to suggest that if people wanted to influence the way their society was going, they should engage in civic involvement and put in some work on school boards or local politics, AKA democracy. 

    I think the gulf between Peterson’s online and in-person personalities is an example of what happens to a lot of us online as we’re removed from the usual niceties required by face-to-face conversation and start giving in to social media’s perverse incentives that reward conflict with an audience. 

    This week a Gen-X friend, who’d heard about the article calling Peterson “dangerous”, asked “What’s wrong with JP? I read his book and it helped me a lot – it seemed fine”. 

    JP probably does seem fine if you’re not chronically online. 

    JP himself probably would still be fine if he wasn’t chronically online. But he is addicted to Twitter, and he’s seemingly been pushed from what started as a middle-of-the-road stance in the mid-2010s further into extremism year after year, guided by a feedback loop of praise from the extreme right and damnation from progressives. 

    He’s tried to quit Twitter. 

    Earlier this year he swore off the platform, publicly announcing he would have his staff change his password so he would no longer be tempted to use it. He said the “endless flood” of insults and the way the platform’s incentive structure, providing the biggest audiences to the most controversial tweets, was “dangerously insane”. He resumed tweeting later that day.

    On the internet, the popular left is pretty unforgiving. They see the pain caused to victims of racism, homophobia, and transphobia, and feel justified in bullying the bullies. 

    And there is no point in apologising to them. Contrition and clarification has rarely helped offenders. 

    They can be hounded for years even after their apologies. It’s been nearly a decade since American media consultant Justine Sacco apologised for posting what was widely perceived as a racist joke on Twitter. Sacco was about to take off on a flight to Cape Town when she posted on Twitter “Going to Africa. Hope I don’t get AIDS. Just kidding. I’m white!” 

    By the time she’d landed, the outrage had spread far and wide online, and people had contacted her employer. She lost her job, and the next job she got after that, and several more after. Her apology meant nothing as campaigners hounded her from one employer to the next, certain they were doing the right thing in preventing a racist from spreading harm.

    She’s still called “racist” in much of the social media commentary about her in 2022. 

    Trouble

    In person, if she’d made those comments to real people in the real world, Sacco may have been able to explain to any objectors: No, sorry, I was clumsily trying to use an ironic joke to draw attention to the way diseases have disparate effects on different people. That was the thrust of the explanation she eventually gave, but it was too late. 

    As the old west cowboy singer Tom Russell put it: “Trouble rides a fast horse, forgiveness rides a mule.”

    That’s amplified when trouble’s brought on fibre optic cables, and the lightning speed of reactions that social media facilitates had ruined Sacco’s life before there was time for a right of reply. 

    And when everyone had already weighed in with their condemnation, and praised each other for standing up to Sacco’s racism, they had no interest in hearing an explanation. 

    That unforgiving, lightning quick method of justice might be an effective tactic. 

    It might deter some people from ever taking a step out of line, from ever thinking about saying something hurtful, or from ever even risking a joke that might be read as offensive. 

    But social media’s ruthless and rapid approach to ruination can also mean that once you’ve fallen out of favour, there is no path back to forgiveness.

    And even the psychology professor who told so many young men how to get their life in order can’t beat the social media addiction. 

    Peterson was still posting in Twitter’s culture wars at 7.37pm on Tuesday night, seven minutes after the show was supposed to start. 

    His uncontentious performance ended around 10pm, and then he logged back onto Twitter, and stayed up posting until 12.55am.

    By DAVID BELL

  • Sushi salvation

    IS convenience a euphemism for poor quality?

    Maybe in some quarters, but a lot of eateries are now managing to strike the balance between good quality food and everyday affordability.

    Under that category I would file Sushi Izu, which in 2011 brokered a deal with Woolworths to have outlets in their stores.

    I can picture the foodie hipsters reeling back in horror, clutching their Michelin Guide and tensing their skinny-jean buttocks at the thought of the Voice eating sushi from a supermarket.

    But all the sushi is freshly made in-store, it looks authentic and I’ve heard good reports, so I was keen to give it a try.

    The occasion was one that many parents experience on an annual basis – the kids’ Christmas School Concert.

    An event which swings wildly from pure joy (when your child is on-stage) to unadulterated torture (kindie kids singing the Minions song for 20 minutes straight).

    On a baking hot 37 degree day, super-strength lager and sushi was the only way forward.

    If you’re after some sushi for the kids, the dinky bite-size hoso rolls are the perfect size and great value at $7.50 for 12 pieces.

    In-between singing about world peace and love, my kids tucked into their trays of cooked tuna and avocado (both $7.50).

    They’re fine for adults too and the mixed version ($7.50) has some salmon in there.

    My wife can’t go past the chicken katsu rolls and for ($10) you get 10 chunky wheels of the go-to bogan classic.

    These were really enjoyable – crispy batter on the chicken and lots of sesame seeds dotted on the outside of the rice wheel, adding a nice texture.

    Thankfully they weren’t slathered in mayo and had just the right amount to keep things moist and interesting.

    As the fund-raising auction was about to start (my wife made me bid $200 for three papier-mâché Wise Men) I got stuck into the cooked tuna roll with avocado ($10).

    The lovely fresh avo didn’t disappoint and went perfectly with the tuna and sticky rice. Another winner that really hit the mark.

    Sushi Izu also do a range of hybrid “crunchy” rolls with fried onions sprinkled on top, as well as nigiri aburi, salads, summer rolls, gyoza and all the old favourites like teriyaki chicken, tempura prawn, Californian and veggie.

    A great option for parties or get-togethers in the summer is the platters, ranging from 28 to 65 pieces and covering all types of sushi.

    With the sun setting and the year 7s ushering a cardboard donkey off the stage, another Christmas concert was done and I had enjoyed a lovely feast of sushi in the sun.

    Sushi Izu
    Various locations across Perth metro including Adelaide Terrace, Murray Street Mall and the Galleria in Morley.

    by STEPHEN POLLOCK

  • Historic find  
    • John Curtin Gallery’s Carrolup manager Kathleen Toomath with Ross Jones’ located artwork. photo by Brad Coleman.

    THERE’S a touch of Indiana Jones to the tracking down of a Stolen Generation artwork that for seven decades had criss-crossed the globe from rural WA to London and back.

    Earlier this year, Curtin University launched an international campaign to find hundreds of ‘lost’ artworks created by the Stolen Generations at WA’s Carrolup Native Settlement.

    Back in the 1940s at the Settlement, teachers Noel and Lily White used art to connect with the Noongar children who’d been forcibly taken from their families. Many would go on to become prolific artists, recognised for their ability to depict a deep understanding of their land.

    In 1949 London Soroptimist Club president Florence Rutter visited Carrolup and was so impressed with the work she arranged for them to be exhibited in London, Manchester, Birmingham, Liverpool, Edinburgh and Glasgow. 

    Fast forward to 2022 – retired Perth paediatrician Dr Paddy Pemberton was relaxing in his home with a cup of tea when he realised that one of the artworks on the wall was a Stolen Generation piece.

    It turned out his father had purchased it from the London-based Foyles Art Gallery in 1951, when the artworks were on tour in the UK.

    Remarkably, Curtin University also had a photo in their archives of the actual artist, 13-year-old Ross Jones, holding the pastel drawing.

    John Curtin Gallery’s Carrolup manager Kathleen Toomath, whose late mother Alma was the last-known surviving Carrolup artist, said she was blown away to find another artwork created by a Carrolup child artist.

    “It’s truly wonderful to have located another missing artwork. What makes this discovery so remarkable is the fact that we already had a photo of the talented child artist with the very artwork that has now been found,” Ms Toomath said.

    “These artworks offer a window into a deeply traumatic time in the lives of children of the Stolen Generations. It’s an absolute honour to see the work of these bright and perceptive child artists.”

    John Curtin Gallery’s Australian First Nations art curator Michelle Broun said the exhibition where Dr Pemberton’s father bought Ross Jones’ work was opened by Dr Margaret Lowenfeld, a pioneering child psychotherapist who had an interest in how children survive traumatic experiences.

    “Our search for more of these precious works created by the children of Carrolup continues so we would love to hear from anyone who recognises a similar artwork that includes their signature use of chalk or pastel on paper and scenes of the Australian landscape including kangaroos,” she said.

    Carrolup Elders Reference Group chair Tony Hansen said the children’s artworks held a special place in the country’s reconciliation journey.

     “These artworks show how young Aboriginal children – forcibly separated from their families, isolated, segregated, traumatised and living in an unknown place – still found beauty and connection to Country through their art,” Mr Hansen said.

    “They offer an enduring reminder that while racism seeks to destroy all that is good about a people, it never can.”

    John Curtin Gallery staff have been able to notify some members of Ross Jones’ family of the discovery.

    Staff are very keen to hear from other relatives and invite them to view the artwork, which is on loan to the Gallery until January 31.

    The process of reconnecting Carrolup artworks with families is at the heart of Curtin University’s Carrolup Centre for Truth-telling, an ambitious project to create a permanent home for the collection in Australia.

    If you own one of the historic Carrolup children’s artworks, email the Gallery at gallery@ curtin.edu.au.

    by STEPHEN POLLOCK

  • Kind production
    It’s 1796 and a farmer’s wife is reflecting on another eventful year in A Farmer’s Wife at Christmas.

    A TALENTED bunch of Perth actors, musicians and technicians have volunteered for a Christmas show to raise funds to buy 3000 festive hampers for the homeless in WA. 

    The annual Give a Feed appeal started in 2011 and this year’s will feature the costume radio play A Farmer’s Wife at Christmas by Jenny Davis in St George’s Cathedral. 

    Featuring eight actors from Theatre 180 and 25 singers from the Perth Undergraduate Choral Society, the play follows a farmer’s wife in rural England in 1796 as she prepares for Christmas and looks back over an eventful year, reflecting on village life and all the colourful characters that live there.

    Based on a real 18th century journal, it’s a joyful celebration of Christmas with St George’s Cathedral providing a stunning backdrop for the actors and amazing acoustics for the chorus.

    All ticket proceeds go directly to buy food hampers for the homeless at Christmas, through Give A Feed.

    A Farmer’s Wife at Christmas is on Friday December 16 7.30pm at St George’s Cathedral, St George’s Terrace, Perth. Tix at Trybooking.com/CDYXY.

  • Next level  

    EAST Perth has to be the most sophisticated enclave in the city.

    It has that European feel with restaurants overlooking the water at Claisebrook Cove, leafy streets, chic apartments and lots of ‘hidden’ inner-city parks.

    This two-bedroom, two-bathroom apartment on Brown Street is on the top floor (level 3) with great views of the city skyline.

    The first thing that strikes you on walking inside is the gorgeous timber-style floor, which has a glossy polished look.

    It really makes the white walls pop and enhances the sense of space.

    The large wrap-around kitchen makes good use of natural wood on the cupboards and drawers, nicely contrasting with the stainless steel appliances and black Miele oven.

    The open plan lounge/kitchen/dining area is spacious and there’s loads of room for a TV, couch, a decent-sized dinner table and even a computer for a makeshift-home office if need be.

    The carpets in the bedrooms are spot on, giving that soft feel underfoot and will be nice and toasty come winter.

    Both bedrooms have built-in robes and the main king-size is ensuite, while the second bathroom has a showe bath.

    And when you feel like some fresh air, there’s a double-door juliet balcony where you can enjoy a drink or two and watch the sunset.

    The apartment includes high 2.8m ceilings, ducted reverse-cycle air-con throughout, and a seperate laundry with additional storage.

    Situated on Brown Street, you are close to all the restaurants, cafes and pubs in Calisebrook Cove and Royal Street, and Bright Tank Brewing is right on your doorstep.

    This would make a great investment (rental appraisal is $525-$575 per week unfurnished) or a great home with an amazing East Perth lifestyle.

    Low-mid $500,000’s
    11/39 Brown St, East Perth
    Home open today (Saturday December 3) 10am-10:30am and tomorrow 12pm-12:30pm
    RealEstate88 9200 6168
    Agents
    Joel Cooper 0488 242 283
    Peter Wright 0438 727 476

  • Pride returns to Northbridge

    THE Pride Parade returns to the streets of Northbridge today (Saturday November 26) after a two-year absence.

    The parade was cancelled due to a pandemic in 2020, and moved to more spacious grounds at Gloucester Park in 2021 so people could spread out in line with WA Health Department advice.

    The parade’s return to Northbridge coincides with Perth council offering Pride WA a home for its HQ in Northbridge Piazza, where they moved in this month.

    The free procession starts at Russell Square at 7.30pm running down Aberdeen, William and James Street before heading for the afterparty back at Russell Square.

  • Wheels fall off e-scooter plan
    • Councillor Ashley Wallace has been riding an e-scooter for a year.

    A PLAN for five inner-city councils to collaborate on an e-scooter share scheme has fallen apart after the City of Perth got cold feet.

    Originally Perth was meant to be part of a five-way collaboration to trial e-scooters between Vincent, South Perth, Subiaco, and Victoria Park councils, taking in UWA and Kings Park.

    But Perth council got worried that agreeing on an operator amongst themselves could get complicated. It was also concerned the scheme could risk triggering anti-competitive laws, given they could be up against private operators without a ratepayer-funded workforce. 

    It decided to advertise its own expressions of interest last month.

    Vincent CEO David MacLennan told councillors at November’s briefing “that wasn’t a concern that I had, or that the City of Vincent shared”.

    Cr Ashley Wallace said: “It’s really disappointing that the City of Perth has essentially chosen to go it alone.”  

    Stuck

    It means Vincent will likely be either stuck with going with the same provider Perth chooses, or have to make sure its own choice is cross-company compatible. 

    It’s not an auspicious bookend to the first three years of the so-called “Inner City Group” of councils, which signed a memorandum of understanding in 2019 to work together on a range of projects like creating ‘smart cities’, cooperating on delivering services, and working on planning reform together. 

    The MoU has been extended for another three years after ending on November 2 with much of that work incomplete.

    “It is still early days in the formation of the Inner City Group,” an apologetic line read in a Vincent council staff report about the MoU. 

    “Some of the planned initiatives were not prioritised during the past two years due to the impacts of COVID-19.”

    E-scooter hire trial

    AN e-scooter hire scheme is coming to Vincent for a 12-month trial in the hope of luring some of the 67 per cent of residents who drive to work away from their gas-guzzlers.

    Vincent’s had a longstanding problem that going east-west between its neighbourhoods isn’t easy without a car; there’s almost no public transport serving those directions.

    The council reckons electric scooters might fill the gap, with estimates hiring an escooter to get across town would cost about 80 cents for a 10 minute trip, and hopes it’ll make for less traffic congestion.

    Cr Ashley Wallace is an e-scooter enthusiast who’s been riding one for a year, and said at the November 15 council meeting: “I’m personally quite lazy, I was never going to ride a bike. 

    But his e-scooter is “the one thing that’s got me out of the car and I hope that’s something that happens across our community”. 

    Stirling council has been trialling an e-scooter hire scheme along its coastal suburbs since February. 

    It’s currently consulting on whether to continue the scheme beyond the one-year trial. 

    About 65 per cent of people who responded to Stirling’s last round of consultation were favourable, though some complained of late night e-hoons getting rowdy on their rides. 

    In winter the council tried a one-month curfew that remotely locked down the scooters between 10pm and 5am, and it will now consider whether to bring back the curfew if the trial’s made permanent. 

    Vincent will now seek an e-scooter company to run the scheme, who would have to pay for any infrastructure. 

    Schemes 

    There’s two main e-scooter hire schemes; ones with ‘docks’ where scooters are returned to a hub, and the free-range types which have sometimes led to them being tossed all over the place. 

    A Vincent council report says that the main companies interested in a rollout in Perth are the dockless types, but notes that remote-control technology has gotten better to allow the scheme operators to “ensure parking compliance” and prevent riders taking a scooter miles out of the trial zone. 

    The council will also write into any contract that the operator must “maintain a good level of service” so they can pull the plug on the scheme if the company starts leaving bikes around. 

    by DAVID BELL

  • Smoked out!
    • Mayor Emma Cole launches smoke-free town centres. Photo by Travis Hayto

    SMOKING and vaping are officially outlawed in the five town centres in Vincent as of November 22.

    For the first six months smokers will be ‘educated’ rather than fined for lighting up. 

    The main strips affected include Angove and Fitzgerald Street in North Perth, Scarborough Beach Road in Mount Hawthorn, Oxford Street in Leederville, and the main strips of William Street and Beaufort Street. 

    Mayor Emma Cole launched the new policy this week: “I am excited to see residents and visitors enjoy fresh air, free from smoking and vaping in our entertainment precincts.

    “Vaping levels across the country are rising, especially among younger people, so the smoke-free areas will include no smoking and no vaping signage.

    “We want to encourage people to quit, and young people not to start smoking and vaping. At the same time, it makes for much more inviting town centres, where we enjoy our alfresco dining and outdoor culture. 

    During consultation last year 345 submissions were received, with 61 per cent in favour of the smoke ban. 

    The bulk of the submissions opposed came from smokers and vapers or from bar-owners concerned it’d drive away customers. The council’s countered with research from other cities that’ve tried smoking bans and found no negative impact on businesses. 

    The ban was initially scheduled for 2025 but has come in three years ahead of schedule. 

    Libby Jardine from the Cancer Council WA congratulated Vincent on the move and said in a statement: “We hope that other local governments will be inspired to prioritise tobacco control and expand smoke-free public places for the benefit of their communities.” 

    Vincent’s also bringing in tough rules that all but prevent smoking-focussed businesses like vape shops or cigar stores to open up in its town centres, and Bayswater is likewise investigating whether such shops shouldn’t be allowed near schools or parks after seeing an uptick in youth vaping. 

    by DAVID BELL

  • Orana House tackles myths
    Orana outreach workers celebrate the milestone.

    BAYSWATER-BASED women’s refuge Orana House has marked a milestone of helping 10 families escape violence and get into rental housing.

    Housing the families was an uphill battle against a lack of affordable housing and landlords who are reluctant to take on tenants who’ve fled family domestic violence. 

    Orana House has operated as a shelter and support service for 30 years but last year started a pilot “Housing Families Project” to get landlords and property managers to take on domestic violence survivors as tenants. 

    The lack of affordable rental properties has led to a bottleneck in the refuge system across Perth, and women and children are spending a year in Orana’s refuge and transitional homes while waiting for housing.

    Orana’s run extensive surveys which found their clients faced constant discrimination in the rental market; 88 per cent of landlords admitted they didn’t want family domestic violence survivors. Many fear the perpetrator might locate the survivor and damage the property. 

    Orana’s research showed that was “highly unlikely”, but the project offers $1000 grants to cover rental arrears and property damage to give landlords peace of mind.  

    “These women make dream tenants; They are houseproud and meticulously clean,” Orana House’s housing project officer Erin Hegarty said in an announcement this week, issued to mark news the state government would allocate 

    $150,000 from a Commonwealth partnership so the project could continue for another 12 months. 

    Cherished

    “How do we know? Because they’ve lived in our properties for extended periods and we see how they live. We know how much they cherish a safe place to call home.”

    Family and domestic violence, minister Simone McGurk said “family and domestic violence takes a profound and long-term toll on women’s health and wellbeing, on families and communities, and on society as a whole”.

    The Housing Families Project still has 20 families waiting on its registry, with hopes that once word spreads that the pilot’s worked out well more property owners will come forward to register their rental via orana.net. au/housing-families