*THE
WORKER*
BRISBANE
APRIL 27, 1895.
The
Editorial Mill.
The
City Council of Melbourne have carried a resolution to supply the
electric light to private houses and have ordered an additional plant
for the purpose. In view of the fact that some of the members of the
council are interested in the notorious Melbourne Gas Company (up to
the present one of the most carefully-nursed monopolies in the
southern hemisphere) and that others are mixed up in the several
electric light companies, this must be considered a signal victory
for the collective interests as against private profit. A salutary
clause in the Act preventing councillors from voting on public
matters in which they may be interested privately can certainly be
credited as the means by which the victory was secured. The following
figures, extracted principally by W. Blissard, M.A., in his work on
“The Ethic of Usury and Interest,” from official records for
1892, will show the advance that has been made in England on the
question of the municipalisation of the gas industry:
Sixty
million of capital were invested in gas works, of which two thirds
were in private and one-third in municipal ownership.
The
private companies supply 60,000,000,000 cubic feet; those under
municipal control supply 30,000,000,000 cubic feet.
The
gas supplied by private companies companies costs the consumers 8s.
71/2d. per thousand; that supplied by public corporations 3s. 31/2d.,
including receipts for bye products.
Private
companies supply 1,128,836 consumers, with an average of 53,000 cubic
feet per annum. Corporation have 1,115,267 consumers, averaging
28,000 cubic feet.
The
capitalists who advanced the £40,000,000
for the private companies divided amongst them £3,143,641,
while those who supplied the £21,000,000
for the municipalities received only £971,755.
If those who lent money to the corporations had been paid at the same
rate as those who advanced to the private companies it would have
taken £630,000
more than the £971,755
mentioned. In reality, the corporations did not pay the whole of the
£971,755
for interest-a considerable portion of the amount went to a sinking
fund to pay off the capital account.
*
* *
Several
things are apparent from the above figures, amongst which are; That
£3
under the corporation gas supply system will go about as far as £5
under the “freedom of contract” system of the capitalistic
wage-sweater. That the small consumers prefer the municipal
ownership. That the capitalists, notwithstanding their objections to
collective control, tumble over one another in their anxiety to lend
to any security which is backed by the whole people, while they sniff
dubiously at, and sweat heartlessly, the private enterprise they
confess to desire to encourage. That there is over 10 per cent
difference in the price of gas in favour of that supplied by the
corporations. That municipal gas works do not require to make a
profit, and the fact that the gas is 10 per cent cheaper than
companies' gas, reduces the amount that is required from a lighting
rate.
*
* *
In
addition we may fairly assume from easily-acquired knowledge; That
municipal workmen are better paid, work shorter hours, and have few
grievances which are not immediately rectified. That the gas is of
better quality, because there is no gain in supplying an inferior
article-the people will not rob themselves. That the initiation of
the municipalisation of the gas industry has altered the relationship
between the private gas companies and their consumers, whereby the
latter are placed in a much more favourable condition than they were
previously.
The
Queensland Aboriginals.
THE
WORKER has received a copy of Mr. Archibald Meston's open letter to
Mr. Horace Tozer on the question of the preservation and improvement
of the Queensland aboriginals. The letter takes the form of a
pamphlet, and contains much information. The most eloquent and
telling paragraph in the letter is the following:- “It seems well
to consider here our 'debtor' account with the aboriginals.
Queensland has, so far, alienated about 10,000,000 acres of freehold
land, and and leased about 300,000,000 acres for pastoral occupation.
For the first we have received about £6,250,000in
cash, and for leased land we receive £332,800
annual rental. Since the year of separation, 1859, or ever since
1842, we have not expended £50,000
for the benefit of the aboriginals, and have never since then, or
before, paid them a single shilling in cash, clothes, or food, for
even one acre of land. And why? Because they are too weak to
compel justice, and we are too unjust to accord it without
compulsion.”
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