House debates

Thursday, 4 December 2008

Adjournment

Murray-Darling Basin

11:55 am

Photo of Fran BaileyFran Bailey (McEwen, Liberal Party) Share this | | Hansard source

I rise on what perhaps will be the last opportunity to raise an issue which I feel passionately about, as do the people of my electorate—one that I think that anyone who cares about the future of the Murray-Darling Basin, anyone throughout the country, would feel passionate about. I rise on this opportunity to speak because it probably will be my last opportunity before the parliament rises for the end of the year.

Let me begin, Madam Deputy Speaker, by describing this to you. A couple of weeks ago I was driving from the township of Yea in my electorate of McEwen down to Healesville. This is an area that both of the government members in the chamber at the moment would know well because they participated in the Pollie Pedal. They rode up the Melba Highway, so they will be very familiar with this part of my electorate that I want to describe to you.

I noticed several police cars on the side of the road and a number of four-wheel drive vehicles. Guessing that it had something to do with the north-south pipeline that is being constructed, almost running parallel for virtually all of the Melba Highway from Yea right down to Yarra Glen in my electorate, I pulled over to the side of the road. I know the local police—I know them all very well—and I said, ‘What’s going on here?’ To my utter dismay what was being perpetrated was—and it was being perpetrated by Melbourne Water officials, of whom, by the way, one of the police in attendance said to me, ‘They have more power in Victoria today than the Victoria Police’—that these Melbourne Water officials were dragging drilling equipment and heavy vehicles, without firstly doing the biosecurity checks on those vehicles, onto private property.

This farmer had had his pastures locked up to make hay. The only opportunity he has to earn money over the summer months is from the hay that he makes that he can sell and, of course, use on his property. But Melbourne Water would not wait another couple of days to enable this farmer to make his hay. I asked the Melbourne Water official on the spot, ‘Would you please ring your boss and just get permission; wait another couple of days.’ ‘Oh,’ he said, ‘mobile phones don’t work here’. I said, ‘Well, actually, mine does; use mine.’ He rang his boss at Melbourne Water and the ruling came back: ‘We are on a deadline here; you have to continue work.’

This is the sort of activity that is happening the length and breadth of the Melba Highway in my electorate: Melbourne Water officials are gaining access to private property—

Photo of Jamie BriggsJamie Briggs (Mayo, Liberal Party) Share this | | Hansard source

You’re joking.

Photo of Fran BaileyFran Bailey (McEwen, Liberal Party) Share this | | Hansard source

I have, believe it or not, my constituents being arrested on their own property for trying to defend their own properties. I sometimes have to stop and say: ‘Well, what is it? Isn’t this Australia?Is this really Australia that these grossly undemocratic actions are taking place in?’ This is of terrible concern to my constituents, but this of course is also of national concern. It is good that the member for Mayo is sitting here in the chamber with me today, because it affects the people in his electorate and the people of South Australia, because the purpose of this pipeline is to take unaudited water, saved, which is meant to be going into the Living Murray initiative for the benefit of all Australians. It is being taken, by the rogue action of the Victorian government, and sent down this pipeline to the Sugarloaf dam. It is just so difficult to try to convey the degree of hurt that my constituents are experiencing. But a much bigger issue is the degree of hurt that all Australians are going to feel as a result of these absolutely rogue actions by Premier Brumby and the Victorian Labor government.