Media Release.
Opposition Leader Annastacia
Palaszczuk says the LNP government’s sacking of catering staff at the
Tallebudgera Outdoor Education School destroys the Premier’s claim that he is
preserving frontline jobs and frontline services.
Ms Palaszczuk said in addition to the
jobs lost at Tallebudgera the LNP’s first State Budget took away more than it
gave to the Gold Coast including $154 million slashed from the region’s
infrastructure budget.
“I am not sure how the Premier argues
that the dedicated staff who plan, prepare and serve more than 200,000 meals a
year to the young Queenslanders at the Tallebudgera centre are not in frontline
jobs or are not delivering frontline services,” Ms Palaszczuk
said.
“Any reasonable person would agree the
27 staff whose jobs are going at Tallebudgera are on the frontline. They deliver
an essential service directly to students using the centre so in my view that
means they are on the frontline.
“Like 14,000 other Queenslanders, the
Tallebudgera catering staff have had their jobs cut at the stroke of the
Premier’s pen despite the promises he made before the election.
“I’m sure the LNP never letterboxed
election brochures saying their jobs would be going if the LNP won office. In
fact they had Mr Newman’s word that they had nothing to fear from him or an LNP
government.”
Ms Palaszczuk said she was appalled by
reports that the government had decided to cut the jobs of its own employees
before telling staff of its plans.
In August the LNP government called
tenders for catering services at Active Recreation Centres operated by the
Department of National Parks, Recreation, Sport and Racing including
Tallebudgera where Education Department staff operate the catering
service.
“The people being sacked are Gold
Coast residents who have mortgages or rent payments to make, children to put
through school and may have plans for family holidays,” she
said.
“Yet the Newman Government didn’t
think it necessary to tell them of its plans to sack them ahead of calling
tenders for a new catering supplier. Unfortunately it is typical of the LNP
government to treat its own employees in such an arrogant
manner.”
Ms Palaszczuk said while the former
Labor Government poured billions into the Gold Coast in the form of the new Gold
Coast University Hospital and the rapid transit project, the Newman Government
was determined to rip money out of the area.
“At the same time the LNP government
is sacking people, axing services and failing to provide funding for
infrastructure it tries to claim credit for projects already under construction
thanks to the former Labor Government,” Ms Palaszczuk
said.
“The $1.3 billion Gold Coast Rapid
Transit project was initiated and funded by state and federal Labor Governments
and the $1.76 billion, 750-bed Gold Coast University Hospital opening in
December was initiated and built by the former Labor
Government.
“By comparison the LNP’s first State
Budget takes the Gold Coast backwards. It provides $1.344 billion for the
region, compared to last year’s $1.498 billion – ripping $154 million away from
Gold Coast residents.
“At the same time this Premier managed
to find $3.5 million in the Budget to start planning his one new infrastructure
project for Queensland — a shiny new Executive Building for himself in the
Brisbane CBD.
“The Premier can find money for his
pet project but not for frontline jobs and services. It shows how twisted this
government’s priorities are.”
Ms Palaszczuk said the LNP had
already:
- cut 93 health staff from the Gold Coast Hospital and Health Service including 18 from the Robina and Gold Coast hospital emergency departments and 16 from surgical departments
- axed the coast’s share of the $1.2 million State Emergency Service Cadet Program
- slashed $2.15 million in employment programs in the Gold Coast region that were supporting 1,008 job seekers
- failed to deliver its promised $1.2 million police beat at Burleigh, and
- failed to deliver 100 extra police to the Gold Coast, instead spreading them across the Gold Coast, Coomera and Logan police districts.
Ms Palaszczuk said sacking 14,000
Queenslanders was a false economy.
“When you take away pay packets, you
also bring pain to the whole community – especially the small business
community,” she said.
“People stop going to the local coffee
shop, they no longer go to the local hairdresser and dry-cleaner, they are
forced to cut back spending on things like a night at the movies or dinner at
the local club.
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