• Third time lucky

    THIS is the third time the Strategic Community Plan’s undergone a major revision in the past three years as each new regime at the City of Perth releases its own version.

    The plans are designed to look 10 years in the future, but should be reviewed after every lord mayoral election to check they’re not outdated.

    Never have so many been churned out so quickly.

    Before being suspended in March 2018, the elected council brought in the first “2019-2029” plan following the biggest community consultation campaign in the city’s history, stretching six months and just shy of 2000 responses.

    But the three commissioners appointed by the state government to run the council didn’t like the pie-in-the-sky plan, wanting a more “feasible and financed” plan; a recent staff report acknowledged it suffered from a lack of council oversight.

    The commissioners voted in a new SCP in May this year, but it lasted just six months. Chair commissioner Eric Lumsden retired and was replaced by Andrew Hammond, new commissioner Len Kosova came on board, and every senior director from the old regime had been replaced.

    A staff report noted they were asked for yet another review “to ensure the city had further clarity on the future direction”.

    The third iteration is half the size of the last two.

  • Clamp rage spreads
    • Bayswater mayor Dan Bull says wheel clamping is “unfair” but he’ll wait for a staff report before taking action.

    THE Bayswater community was brought together by a unanimous loathing of wheel clampers at its AGM of electors on December 10.

    Local activist and town planner Greg Smith put up a motion that Baysy follow Stirling council’s proposal and ban clamping on private property, claiming it was “basically the action of a totalitarian state”.

    He heard earlier this week of someone parking in an empty private carpark at 6.30am and getting their wheel clamped within minutes.

    His motion was unanimously endorsed by the crowd of electors, and will now be presented to Bayswater councillors for a vote at a meeting next year.

    Unfair

    Mayor Dan Bull told the Voice he’d have to wait and see the staff report before deciding how he’d vote but said: “I think predatory wheel clamping practices are completely unfair”.

    Stirling’s proposed clamp ban requires state government approval, but shortly after the council announced its plan both Labor premier Mark McGowan and Liberal leader Liza Harvey got stuck into wheel clampers.

    “I hate it,” Mr McGowan declared last week, saying his government would look into legislative options.

    Mr Smith also put up an unsuccessful motion calling on the council to lobby state and federal members to do more to free Julian Assange.

    “The council should show support for a great Australian journalist in the mould of John Pilger and Wilfred Burchett,” Mr Smith said.

    About 30 per cent of voters agreed with him.

    Cr Bull told us Bayswater’s powers to free Assange were “significantly limited”.

    by DAVID BELL

  • Rogues crackdown

    A LONG-AWAITED crackdown on scofflaws in Bayswater’s industrial zone could be on the way.

    With some bad apple businesses clogging the verges with wrecked cars, dumping rubbish and polluting, a motion at the city’s annual general meeting of electors called for more enforcement staff at Bayswater council council to deal with the problem.

    Along with the miscreant businesses, the area also suffers from graffiti, vandalism and roaming animals.

    One of the complaints the Voice has heard from locals is that it can be difficult getting a ranger down there.

    Elector Joshua Eveson put up a successful motion that the council hire more enforcement staff to deal with it, potentially paid for by fining perpetrators more often.

    That motion will now go to a council meeting next year for consideration.

    One of the area’s businesses attracted the attention of Consumer Protection WA in September.

    Complaints

    The car-clogged block belonging to The Force in Smash Repairs has long been a source of complaints and CPWA put out a public warning about the business in September.

    “Raymond John Goodall, trading as The Force in Smash Repairs (deregistered), has attracted numerous consumer complaints over many years and currently has dozens of vehicles that have been waiting for repair for a long period of time, with Consumer Protection now attempting to locate the owners of all the vehicles,” it said.

    “During a compliance visit to the business premises by Consumer Protection officers in May 2018, a total of 46 vehicles were observed awaiting repairs with only two full-time repairers employed. Mr Goodall stated at the time that three staff worked part-time and he was committed to completing outstanding jobs.”

    “Many of the complainants are taxi or Uber drivers who are losing money every day their vehicle is not on the road, creating even more stress and financial detriment due to loss of income,” Consumer Protection’s Penny Lipscombe said

    The deregistered business got in more trouble last month when Bayswater council took the owner to court for breaching its “Environmental Protection (Unauthorised Discharge) Regulations”; he’d been spraypainting cars outdoors and fumigating the neighbours.

    by DAVID BELL

  • Mental health is in the mouths of babes

    ANN MCRAE was a journalist with the West Australian and the ABC from 1966-2014, a counsellor with the Nursing Mothers Association for 25 years, and a member of the King Edward Memorial Hospital Community Advisory Council for 12 years.

    EVERY day there are news reports of a pandemic of mental health problems that is crippling our world with suicides, domestic violence episodes, mass shootings, addiction and plain old debilitating depression.

    The latest report indicates Australia is losing $500 million dollars a day in mental health costs and that even toddlers are not free of the affliction.

    A seemingly endless drought that is destroying our farmlands and burning up our bushland adds to our mental distress, but it is a drought of another kind that I believe is at the heart of our mental health problems.

    Where has all the breastmilk gone?

    Fewer and fewer Australian babies are being breastfed every year and this drought at the breastfront holds the key to our mental health.

    Mantra

    The old mantra: Give me a child till he is seven and I will give you the man, has never been more true.

    How we birth our babies, how we love those babies at the breast and in our arms and the caring parental environment within which we raise them is the key to a better future for us all.

    Modern Australian hospitals continue to boast that they are “Breastfeeding Friendly”, but in reality new mothers spend only a few hours in hospital after birthing their babies and breastfeeding blossoms or dries up on the homefront.

    Newborn babies may be ‘put to the breast’ in 95 per cent of births, but the sad fact is that by six weeks less than 20 per cent are still being fully breastfed and even that number diminishes rapidly in the early months as mothers return to the workforce in droves.

    World Heath promotes breast feeding alone for the first six months of life and continuing access to the mother’s breast for two years.   

    Try fitting that into our western society where the pursuit of the mighty dollar pushes mothers back into the workforce and rewards them with platitudes and subsidised childcare services.

    Maternity hospitals contribute further to our ‘sad society’ with most births listed as induced, caesarean, forceps delivery or drug-assisted.

    Something as natural as breastfeeding will struggle to succeed after a difficult birth.

    Governments throwing around millions of dollars to fix the ‘mental health’ problem is bound to be the same failure as throwing billions at indigenous people in the hope of making them feel better about being colonised.

    How do I dare to say that mothers must work towards more natural births, breastfeed for two years, sleep with their babies as mothers have done for centuries, focus on loving their children and especially work on having a happy marriage?

    I dare because happy babies from happy families become happy adults.

    Despite all our claims at being better educated and wealthier than previous generations we have lost what we once knew as a universal truth – Mother knows best.

    Nature tells us that unless a sapling is cared for with water, good soil and a support to help it grow straight there will not be a strong healthy tree.

    Pedigree and thoroughbred animals are never given another animal’s milk and yet few hesitate to give cow’s milk to human babies.

    None will argue against Breast Is Best and the scientific evidence in favour is mountainous and yet a fully-breastfed baby more than a few weeks of age has become an endangered species in many parts of the world.

    The latest science promoting the wonders of breast milk has been discovered at our own University of WA, where stem cells found in breast milk have been proven to repair damaged organs in babies.

    Not only organs but mental health, like autism, is now believed to be helped by these breast milk stem cells.

    I have spent decades counselling mothers who need help with the mechanics and emotions of breastfeeding, and my four children were all breastfed for four years, and my eight grandchildren were long term breastfeeders.

    My children and my grandchildren seem to be happy, well adjusted people.

    My husband and I have been together for 52 years and we openly love each other and our families.

    Luck? Not from what I see in the world around us and the knowledge of what happens in other families that break down, bottlefeed their babies and have separated sleeping arrangements.

    Talk to any woman who has breastfed and bonded with her baby boys and she will assure you that her sons would never hit a female. Likewise her daughters learn the power of good mothering at her breast and go on to mother their own children in the same way.

    Governments struggle to come to terms with the loving lifestyle I am promoting because the mighty dollar and the looming ballot box control their actions.   

    Billions of dollars could be saved by governments if all babies were long-term breast feeders within caring home environments.

    Unfortunately such a government would not be there to see the benefits decades later.

    In this modern, money-driven world probably the best a government can do to turn mental health around is to pay women the basic wage for as long as they stay home and breastfeed.

    Only by giving breast milk a financial value will parents be swung in the right direction.

    Expensive you say? Nothing compared to the cost blow-out Australia is facing for mental health.

    If breast is best why are we letting it dry up?

  • Tasty veteran

    IN the fickle world of dining it’s good to see an eatery that has survived for 20 years and keeps getting better.

    Rifo’s Cafe opened in Maylands in 1999 and quickly became part of the Eighth Avenue renaissance.

    The mercury was hitting 41 when the D’Angers dropped in for lunch recently, but we still appreciated the warm welcome.

    Grana padano cheese

    Our helpful waiter quickly found us a table and some ice-cold water.

    As we perused the menu, he told us about the specials on offer.

    I’d been tossing up between a risotto Fremantle ($29), with its medley of local seafood, or a chilli gamberi (fettuccini with king prawns $27).

    But the special fettuccini al pesto won the day, and not just for its ridiculously low price ($15).

    The fresh pasta strands were coated with a wonderfully oily, house-made pesto, and topped with shavings of sharp, tangy grana padano cheese.

    A liberal serving of piping-hot cherry tomatoes exploded with flavour as I bit down on them, adding a pleasant sharpness to the rich and garlicky pasta.

    D’Angerous Dave quickly got stuck into his wood-fired calzone pizza, southern style ($22).

    Calzone is Italy’s answer to the Cornish pasty, or maybe the Cornish tin miners stole the idea from the Italians.

    Whoever come up with it, the pastry on this Calzone was perfect – just the right thickness with a good crunch.

    It was filled with a delicious mix of mushrooms, kalamata olives, pesto and ricotta cheese.

    “It’s great,” Dave said, pausing briefly between mouthfuls.

    We finished our meal with a hazelnut triangle ($8.95), a decadently rich and creamy slice of heaven.

    By JENNY D’ANGER

    Rifo’s Cafe
    Corner Guildford Road and Eighth Avenue, Maylands
    open 7 days 7am-10pm
    9271 1811

  • Never forgotten
    • Dylan and Kylie Wilkie (top), Dave Wilkie playing with baby Dylan.

    DYLAN didn’t get to know her dad, but her “memories” of him have inspired a book of poems helping children to deal with loss.

    Memories Are Forever was written by Kylie Wilkie, after her 34-year-old husband Dave died when their daughter Dylan was just six months old.

    “The circumstances that led me to write this book are common to us all – tragedy, love, hope and life,” Wilkie says.

    “Post-traumatic growth is real if we share our stories and insight.”

    Her husband was a seemingly healthy young man who put his tiredness down to a heavy workload, but he was diagnosed with bowel cancer when she was 14-weeks pregnant.

    “He died at 35, almost 12 months to the day following his diagnosis,” she said.

    Although she had to deal with crippling grief and a six-month-old baby, Wilkie ensured Dylan knew as much as possible about her dad.

    “The things she can tell you about him will warm your heart and they are a testament to the importance and power of memories.

    They include small things like a shared dislike of olives. Olives are yucky, we both can agree. Why people eat them we simply can’t see.”

    The book is brimming with heart-breaking poems:

    My good friend once told me, dad makes the sky pink

    Each night when the sun sets, I stop, look and think.

    Wilkie, a former lawyer, had writer’s block when she asked Dylan what she knew about her father. The youngster’s response became the basis for the lyrical prose, and her drawings the inspiration for North Perth illustrator Pauline Murphy, who drew colourful depictions of Dylan and her dad. The book is relevant to someone moving away, a marriage breakdown or a death, Wilkie says.

    “We want to use the book as a tool. Kids can ask questions and we have an opportunity to have that dialogue.”

    Dylan has the last word:

    Whether we’re family, or friends passing though.

    You’ll impact me and I’ll affect you.

    Memories are forever, that’s why they’re really cool

    My dad and I are quite alike, I only wish he knew.

    You can buy Memories Are Forever at booksbykyliewilkie.com.au

    by JENNY D’ANGER

  • Santa in the city
    • Some of the festive fun on offer in Perth during Christmas.

    THE BIGGEST Christmas lights trail ever seen in Perth is one of the highlights of this year’s festive celebrations.

    The 2019 trail features 27 dazzling installations along two routes in Northbridge and the CBD. There’s also a Lotterywest trail and a new mini trail in East Perth.

    After you’ve enjoyed the enchanting lights make sure you check out the gingerbread house at Perth Cultural Centre, the hot air balloon in Stirling Gardens and the musical lights tunnel in Yagan Square.

    Roving performers including stilt walkers and musicians will keep late-night shoppers entertained on Friday and Saturday nights in the Hay and Murray Street Malls, Perth Cultural Centre, Forrest Chase, Raine Square and Kings Square.

    If you’re doing your Christmas shopping during the day, you can take advantage of bag-minding and gift-wrapping services, free comfy chairs and entertainment at the Summer Backyard in Forrest Place.

    Parking is always stressful around Christmas, but there’s free three-hour parking on weekends and public holidays at selected CPP carparks at Pier Street, Murray Street and Perth Cultural Centre, and on some streets. For more details go to cityofperthparking.com.au

    And it wouldn’t be Christmas without the WA symphony orchestra’s free Christmas concert at Langley Park today (December 14). See over the page for more details.

    The concert starts at 7pm and is a family favourite, featuring singalong carols and WASO performing classics from ballet, opera and the big screen.

    Perth council commissioner Andrew Hammond says there’s something for everyone in the city this Christmas.

    “With brightly lit streets, boundless entertainment and unique shopping and dining experiences, you’ll find all you want for Christmas in the city,” he says.

    Christmas in the city runs until Boxing Day.

    For more details go to visitperth.com.au

    Free festive concert

    THE WA Symphony Orchestra’s free Christmas concert returns to Langley Park tonight (Saturday December 14) after 30,000 people attended last year’s debut show.

    Led by conductor Guy Noble and soprano Emma Pettemerides, Christmas Symphony will feature Christmas classics from ballet, opera and the big screen.

    Families can sing-along to Jingle Bells while also enjoying classical favourites like Tchaikovsky’s ever-popular 1812 Overture, with spectacular fireworks. The magical evening features more than 150 performers and special guests, including the one and only Santa. Picnicking starts at 5pm and the show is on at 7pm.

  • Relaxing time of life

    Seniors can live an independent lifestyle in apartments at Bethanie on the Park, while still having all the benefits of a retirement village on their doorstep.

    Bethanie, a not-for-profit retirement and aged-care provider, is targeting baby boomers with one- and two-bedroom, independent-living apartments at its Menora complex.

    All have balconies overlooking Yokine Reserve, Yokine Golf Course or the city skyline.

    Each has floating timber floors in a spacious open plan, and carpet in the bedrooms.

    Stone benches in the well-designed kitchen makes cooking a breeze, but there’s a restaurant in the main reception or you can sign up for the flexible cooking, cleaning and linen package.

    Currently it’s free for the first three months.

    “To see what suits your needs and your lifestyle, and if you find you don’t need any of them you can simply cancel,” Bethanie’s Amanda McLearie says.

    The floor-to-ceiling windows ensure plenty of natural light and the balconies are large enough for an outdoor setting and barbecue.

    The bedrooms have built-in-robes, and in the two-bedroom/two-bathroom apartments the main is ensuite.

    The complex is part of Bethanie Village and there’s access to its bowling green, resort clubhouse, ballroom, bar and entertainment area.

    There’s also a gym, library, hair salon and wellness centre, with podiatry, physio and allied health services. There’s secure parking for one car, plus storage.

    But with so much on the doorstep, and a bus taking residents to the local shopping centre twice a week, the car may gather dust.

    For those unsure about apartment living, there’s a five-day trial.

    “To get a feeling of what it’s like,” Ms McLearie says.

    Some of the apartments are for rent, with the rent paid back if people enjoy their new lifestyle so much they decide to buy.

    Apartments are priced from $420,000, even for a 2×2, and there’s a guaranteed buy-back option within 45 days.

    For more information call Bethanie on 13 11 51 or go to bethanie.com.au

    By JENNY D’ANGER

    Bethanie on the Park
    2 Plantation Road, Menora

  • The common touch

    A “COMMON GROUND” centre to give homeless people a semi-permanent roof over their head is to be set up in Perth.

    The innovative new housing model links accommodation that’s available until the client no longer needs it with support services to address the root causes of their homelessness.

    Support

    Perth Labor MLA John Carey says the centre will be the first in Perth to target chronic homelessness and rough sleepers.

    “It’s not just about providing accommodation; it’s about providing wraparound, intensive support 24 hours a day,” Mr Carey said.

    He says people often suggest opening up carparks or empty offices for homeless people, but because many have issues like alcoholism, drug dependance or mental health problems, they can’t just be left to sleep in an unsupported building.

    Shortlisted

    The centre will be one of two constructed in the metropolitan area over the next three years. A shortlist of locations isn’t hammered out yet and Mr Carey says they’ll be cautious about where it goes.

    “The City of Perth has been looking at locations, but of course there’s got to be consultation,” said.

    Announced at Foyer Oxford – an at-risk youth centre that’s not had a peep of trouble since being launched – the centre is modelled on eastern states examples.

    “These common ground facilities in other states are in very central locations, you wouldn’t know they’re there,” Mr Carey says.

    The McGowan government also announced a $1.7 million expansion of East Perth’s Tranby House this week.

    UnitingCare West runs the Aberdeen Street centre and in October the state government paid for it to extend its daily opening hours until 7pm.

    This week’s funding will pay for upgrades to cope with the extra demand, including a fit-out of spaces for financial counselling and family support.

    Premier Mark McGowan said the extra funding helps providers like UnitingCare West continue to deliver immediate, on-the-ground assistance.

    “UnitingCare West is at the coalface of supporting rough sleepers and those in financial crisis across Perth, and I commend the work they do,” he said.

    When Perth council was looking at a “designated site” for homeless service providers, a carpark near Tranby was one of the shortlisted options.

    But it was shot down by nearby businesses who complained of problems linked to homeless people.

    by DAVID BELL

  • Indoor Manna

    MANNA INC may move to an indoor home after 11 years of serving meals to people in Weld Square park.

    Since 2008 Vincent council has given Manna yearly licenses to operate, sometimes under pressure from nearby businesses and residents who claim the service contributes to trouble at the square and want it kicked out.

    Previous attempts to find a new venue haven’t turned up anything, but with the McGowan government about to plough millions into a Tranby House upgrade, Manna is in talks with UnitingCare West and Vincent council about possibly relocating there.

    In July Vincent council gave an $85,000 grant to UCW to hire an outreach worker for Weld Square for five days a week to link needy people to services.

    A council report says the worker will stay if Manna moves: “Any relocation of Manna’s meal service  at Weld Square is unlikely to resolve the need for outreach services in this area, given the large number of support services located within close proximity to Weld Square, and its long history as a meeting place for Aboriginal people in particular.”

    Once a fertile wetland and meeting site, Weld Square borders the curfew line which Aboriginal people weren’t allowed to cross without permission from 1927 to 1957 so it continued to be a popular meeting spot.

    by DAVID BELL