Liberal’s Leary up for ‘challenge’

THE WA Liberal Party’s sole nominee for pre-selection for the Seat of Albany has said it would be a “challenge” to unseat Labor, but is more than ready to give it a go.

Albany City Motors financial director and prominent sport volunteer Scott Leary was the only candidate to submit his nomination to the party before deadline last Friday.

If endorsed, the 53-year-old could see himself square off against Labor Party heavyweight Peter Watson, who has held the seat for nearly two decades but is yet to decide whether he will re-contest at the 2021 state election.

“It won’t be an easy path at all given that Labor has been an incumbent for so long,” Mr Leary said.

“Peter Watson is a great representative and has done an okay job for here but I think I can bring a bit more emphasis, a bit more direction to Albany.

“I’ve been civic-minded probably all of my working life so I think it’s now time to put something back into the community.”

Mr Leary moved to Albany in 1992 and has worked at the dealership for more than 20 years.

He said his experience in financial management, dealing with people and familiarity with long working weeks made him a worthwhile political candidate.

“The numbers are not scary to me … and I’ve got a great sense for budgeting and what needs to be happening,” he said.

“There are some great projects that the City of Albany has got and to be able to get funding to those and see those through to finishing is great.”

Mr Leary highlighted education and health as areas of interest but noted it was too early to announce policy or plans.

On Monday, he said he was yet to have official discussions with the WA Liberal Party or constituents.

The party’s State Council is expected to review his nomination in the coming weeks.

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Wheelchair taxis back

ALBANY has a wheelchair-accessible taxi service again after driver Stuart Hickson rescinded his decision last month to close and will continue operating, saying his rapport with his clients made that move untenable despite the financial pressures.

Mr Hickson closed for the past week and the only other wheelchair taxi in Albany stopped operating on Christmas Day.

He said he felt guilty that his long-term loyal clients he had built up friendships with over his 14 years of driving would lose their independence.

“I felt terrible so I made the decision to keep providing a service. I’m not sure I can even make it financially viable but I will battle on despite the Government,” Mr Hickson said.

“It’s harder to make money. Drivers get a lifting fee of $10 for every job, it’s $15 in the metropolitan region, so why is it not a level playing field?

“Also, we then have to fill in spreadsheets to record every lifting job at the end of each day to recoup money. It’s a time-consuming process.”

Despite the obstacles, paperwork and lack of Government assistance, Mr Hickson recently purchased another vehicle to broaden the service to cope with demand.

“There’s too much work for one vehicle so having two cars brings the service back to how it was,” he said.

“But potential drivers are put off by the amount of red tape involved with wheelchair taxis.”

Spencer Park resident Amanda Booth frequently utilises the wheelchair-friendly taxi service.

The 26-year-old has spina bifida, a birth defect in which the spinal cord fails to develop properly, leaving her wheelchair-bound.

Ms Booth cannot drive and requires assistance to get to work, meet her friends and go to appointments.

Jo Booth said her daughter used the service at least two or three times per week.

“We were very scared at the thought of Amanda not being able to get around to live her life,” she said.

“We had thoughts on other transport options at Christmas time when we learned it may be stopping, but the options to Amanda weren’t good – the buses weren’t any good due to limited service and there are no stops near her house or where she needs to go.”

She was thrilled to learn Mr Hickson was continuing his taxi service.

Relief Manager of Yakamia’s Ingenia Gardens Heather Edmondson said residents in the village depended on the specialised taxi service.

“It’s absolutely fantastic news,” she said about Mr Hickson’s decision.

“It gives our residents who need a bit of help and support the freedom to get out and about, and not be stuck at home.”

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Formal chinwag to last a lifetime

PERTH theatre platform Barefaced Stories is bringing a familiar yet new type of interactive experience to Albany this weekend for four days.

The Chin Wagon will roll into town on Sunday at the Albany Entertainment Centre and remain in situ until Wednesday, January 22.

It will offer people the chance to participate in The Story Exchange, a free interview session between two people that can last a lifetime – The Chin Wagon is a mobile story studio where people can interview a loved one and share a story with them, and it will be recorded.

Conversations will be based around love and loss.

“When we take the time to ask someone about their life, the things they’ve been through, highs and lows, and listen closely back to the stories they share, remarkable things can happen,” Producer Andrea Gibbs said.

“Sometimes they share stories we’ve never heard of before or we gain new insights into those we have, bringing us a greater understanding of who they really are.

“So much can be learned by the stories we have and the relationships we have shared.”

The Story Exchange interview is 40 minutes of conversation with someone you know and care about – a partner, a friend, a family member, a teacher or even a work colleague.

The Chin Wagon team will guide you through how to interview them, ask the right questions and listen closely so that your partner will respond in the best way possible, speaking from the heart.

The final conversation will be sent to participants in an audio package.

“Ask your grandfather, ‘What was the happiest moment of your life, Pop?’, or your mother, ‘Mum, what do you remember about the day I was born?’, or your brother, ‘Was there a time when you didn’t like me?’,” Ms Gibbs said.

“Choose just one person to come along with you and we’ll help you figure out a great list of questions for them.”

To take part in The Story Exchange inside The Chin Wagon, interviewers need to be available to attend a free workshop this Saturday, 10.30am to 12.30pm at the Albany Entertainment Centre, then book in for a recording session and attend at your designated time.

Sessions are offered on the hour between 11am and 6pm.

Bookings can be made online at barefacedstories.com.au/the-chin-wagon/2020-albany-stop

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Cafe dream comes true

TWO chefs who travelled the world and worked together for 10 years on cruise ships have settled in Albany to open their own cafe.

Carlo Nagac and Dexter Mahinay are the owners of D&C Grill – Taste of Albany and had their first day of trade on December 2.

They are located within the Beryl Grant Community Centre in Lockyer and the pair could not be happier with how things are progressing.

Endless reviews on the cafe’s Facebook page describe it as having “the most amazing feed I’ve had in Albany in a long time”, customers love the “vibrancy of the folk operating this little treasure” and say the desserts “to die for”.

“I’d planned this for a very long time,” Mr Mahinay said, of owning a cafe.

“We thought Albany was a very nice place and we are very happy to serve the community.”

The pair are already enthusiastically looking to what’s next.

“Hopefully in the future we can open a fine dining restaurant, because this setup is a cafe,” Mr Nagac said.

“We’d love to open on York Street and in town one day.”

The cafe serves up contemporary cuisine including Asian fusion and twists on Australian.

It operates Wednesday to Monday for lunch and dinner and serves dine-in and takeaway.

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CBH sets sales record

THE CBH Group has released their full 2019 Annual Report following the release of our Financial Report in mid-December and finish to the harvest season.

This season the Albany Zone reported 2,629,000 tonnes of grain harvested from across the region.

Last season the Albany Zone reported a smaller harvest with 2,614,000 tonnes of grain harvested due to mixed weather conditions.

Some of the key highlights in the report showed a strong operational performance in a number of areas, including record-breaking rail movements and strong growth in fertiliser sales.

Driven by a near record harvest of 16.4 million tonnes, the CBH rail infrastructure moved the largest amount on record with 8.9 million tonnes of grain sent by rail to port terminals during the 12 months to the end of September 2019.

This included six million tonnes moved within the Kwinana Zone to the Kwinana Grain Terminal for bulk export.

A total of 13.8 million tonnes were shipped from four grain terminals, with the Kwinana Grain Terminal shipping 6.2 million tonnes of grain.

This was only 30,000 tonnes shy of the shipping record set in 2016-17.

CBH Fertiliser achieved its biggest year so far as sales continued to grow in 2018-19, with 103,000 tonnes sold, up from 90,000 in 2017-18. The business remains profitable and has retained surplus capital to expand the business further across the network.

During the reporting period, the co-operative invested more than $1.6 million into regional grain growing communities in Western Australia through the Community Investment Fund.

This included the Grass Roots Leadership Short Course, which was introduced for the first time in 2019 with a total of 76 participants, and more than $300,000 was provided to community groups as part of the Grass Roots grants program.

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TV show stars Albany

DON’T miss Albany’s latest time in the spotlight – the first season of children’s adventure show Itch is now online on ABC iview and the episodes will only be available for another month.

Itch is based on the book series of the same name by British author Simon Mayo and tells the story of a teenage boy who discovers a new element of the periodic table; he must defend it from the clutches of evil, secret organisations.

It was filmed in Albany and includes the iconic locations of Middleton Beach, Albany Senior High School (ASHS), Albany Town Hall and the University of WA Albany campus in multiple scenes.

The ASHS school logo was altered for all school scenes but the uniform is otherwise easily recognisable as the one worn by students today.

Episodes 1-10 were published online two weeks ago and will be available until February 23.

The Behind the Scenes videos will stay online until March 28.

When Mr Mayo caught up with the Weekender at Middleton Beach during filming in February last year, he said changing the story’s location from Cornwall to an Australian coastal town “made sense”.

He described the similarities between Cornwall and Albany as “remarkable”.

“Cornwall has a rich mining heritage,” Mr Mayo said.

“So switching to here makes perfect sense, with Albany’s connection to mining.”

Mayo scored a brief cameo in a scene shot at Middleton – he’s hiding in the Ellen Cove picnic area, typing on a laptop.

Itch star and Perth product Samuel Ireland visited The Gap, Emu Point, Middleton Beach, Boston Brewery and Greens Pool on his days off during filming.

He said scoring the lead role of Itchingham Lofte was a dream come true.

“When I saw the Itch auditions, I thought, this is my childhood,” Mr Ireland said.

Blue Water High, Parallax…kids’ dramas are what Aussies do best.

“So getting that first callback was a wonderful feeling.”

Albany’s Dragon Martial Arts owner and instructor Mark Burridge was hired to teach actors and choreograph various fight scenes for the production.

A few of his students assisted him in teaching the actors and one student appeared as a stunt double in a scene.

“Teaching the moves and scenes and working with the stunt coordinator has been so much fun and I can’t wait to see the end product and the TV series,” Mr Burridge told the Weekender in April.

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Hunt for CEO set to begin

A NATIONWIDE search for the Shire of Denmark’s new Chief Executive Officer will begin soon, several months after former CEO Bill Parker resigned from the top job.

Shire President Ceinwen Gearon told the Weekender Council would begin looking for a CEO “shortly” and expected to have the role filled prior to June 30.

Currently acting CEO David Schober is administering the duties of CEO.

“Under the Local Government Act, a Council may appoint an acting CEO for up to 12 months,” Cr Gearon said.

“Council will be looking to commence a national search for a CEO shortly and can offer up to a five year contract to the successful candidate.

“The process will involve advertising nation- ally and appointing a sub-delegation of councillors to conduct the recruitment process.”

Mr Schober took on the job on September 30 after Mr Parker left to take on a leadership position as General Manager of the Corporate Services Alliance at the City of Perth.

Previously he has worked as the Shire’s Manager of Community Services and has held executive positions at the City of Albany and St John Ambulance.

He said he would consider whether to apply for the substantive position once it was officially advertised.

“I have found the job to be incredibly rewarding and have thoroughly enjoyed working with Shire staff and Council,” Mr Schober added.

“I am enjoying the opportunity to develop new opportunities for Denmark whilst building on a solid foundation left by the previous Shire CEO Bill Parker.

“The projects identified in the Long Term Financial Plan will, over the next few years, add enormous value to Denmark as a place to both live and visit.”

In August, Cr Gearon said the decision to appoint an interim acting CEO was influenced by a number of factors, including the 2019 Local Government Election held on October 19.

“Council felt that it would be unfair for an outgoing Council to appoint a permanent CEO,” she said at the time.

“For the position to be successful, the group felt the new Council should have ownership over the CEO recruitment and appointment process.”

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Daycare centre unveiled

A NEW early learning and daycare centre is opening next week in Albany and it has an open day this afternoon.

SmartPlay Albany will offer long day care, before and after school care, and vacation care between 7am and 6pm five days per week, 50 weeks per year.

During school hours, it will also operate as a kindergarten and pre-kindergarten centre.

Centre Director and Educator Jane Gibbons-Eyre said kindergarten students attending Australian Christian College would now have classes in the next-door SmartPlay Albany building instead of within the main campus.

“The Christian Education Ministries saw a particular need in Albany and decided to expand to the long daycare model with a kindy and pre-kindy program,” she said.

“Our particular focuses will be specialist music, literacy, numeracy, languages other than English, physical education, and high-quality relationships – Australian Christian College’s motto is for a student to be well taught, well known and well loved.”

Children aged three and four are eligible for the pre-kindergarten and kindergarten program, and children aged five to 12 are eligible to attend the out-of-school care.

There are seven staff rostered to work at the new centre and Ms Gibbons-Eyres says she is very proud of it.

“We have such a big outdoor area with real grass, and there’s space for kids to ride and dig and build and run…the first five years of a child’s life are so important, so it’s an amazing privilege to be part of that.”

Ms Gibbons-Eyre has worked with children since she finished high school and said she adores the work she does.

“This will be a loving environment where children can feel like they belong,” she said.

“The staff here strive for the highest quality in absolutely everything…we want to provide everything so the children can be the best they can be.”

The open day is today, January 16 from 4-7pm at the 26 Brewster Road location.

The centre will then officially open on January 20.

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Road rage assault

A ROAD rage incident that saw a teenage boy dragged from his mother’s car and bashed in the head in October is evidence of a worsening problem in the community, an Albany court has been told.

Magistrate Raelene Johnston said road rage violence was “far more prevalent than it used to be” when she fined Albany man Stephen Murphy more than $1700 for the common assault in Albany Magistrates Court last Thursday.

Mr Murphy, a former combat engineer, attacked the 17-year-old victim after the boy made “rude gestures” at him from the front passenger seat of his mother’s Ford Falcon.

The 50-year-old was about to enter an Albany Highway roundabout from Sanford Road when the Ford Falcon allegedly cut him off at around 3.50pm on October 18.

Prosecuting Sergeant Alan Dean said the two vehicles then pulled over on the highway before Mr Murphy engaged in a “verbal argument” with the victim, pulled him from the car “by his hair” and punched him five times in the back of the head.

In an interview with police two days later, Mr Murphy said he had “snapped” and “was ashamed of what he’d done”.

He added he did not realise the victim was a juvenile at the time.

“It’s an awful thing that occurred,” Magistrate Johnston said prior to sentencing.

“It’s entirely understandable that people get upset about other people’s driving on the road … it used to be the case that people would generally honk their horn. This obviously went beyond that.

“It got out of hand the moment you got out of the car and deteriorated from there.”

Mr Murphy’s defence lawyer Graeme Payne said his client was a father of three children, including one aged 17, and had worked as a truck driver for 15 years before he was made redundant 18 months ago.

He said Mr Murphy had had right of way when the Ford Falcon “flashed past” and left him feeling “frightened” and “startled”.

“He asked the driver what she thought she was doing and the victim chipped in … the victim was using abusive language,” Mr Payne said.

“[Mr Murphy] was very remorseful for his response.”

Magistrate Johnston accepted the incident was not something Mr Murphy would usually be involved in and granted him a spent conviction.

In Western Australia, common assault can attract a maximum penalty of 18 months imprisonment and a fine of $18,000.

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Grants to create jobs

MINISTER for Regional Development Alannah MacTiernan was given a tour around the Himac Attachments facilities yesterday after announcing the recipients of the second round of the Regional Economic Development Grants program.

The RED Grants program is a State Government initiative to promote community-driven projects that will create jobs and boost economic growth.

In the last round $6.38m was distributed across 70 projects in nine different regions.

This round eight projects in the Great Southern will share $797,995 with Albany based Himac Attachments receiving $47,148.

Minister MacTiernan said the government was investing in a diverse range of projects this round.

“Particularly those which will create jobs and training opportunities for young people and support the long-term growth of manufacturing and business development in the Great Southern,” she said.

“Boosting our local manufacturing capability is vital to the future economic growth and sustainability of our regional communities.

“Projects such as the construction of modular housing and local machinery fabrication will provide wide community benefits, supporting other local businesses in the region like steel suppliers, electricians, tilers and plumbers.”

In Himac Attachments’ application they stated that they would use their funding to develop and construct a fully interactive platform for fabrication and welding processes, which would in turn create more job opportunities for young people and school leavers.

Also on the recipients list was South Coast Natural Resource Management Inc. who received $149,860 for their Seeding Great southern Noongar Enterprises program.

The program will provide training, equipment and mentoring for Tambellup and Gnowangerup Aboriginal communities to establish seed and seedling propagation businesses.

The Shire of Cranbrook received $150,000 for their Frankland River Accommodation Project, West Coast Analytical Services received $150,000 for a new laboratory project, and Woodlands Distillery Pty Ltd received $98,660 for the development of a micro-distillery near the Porongurups.

The award winning Dellendale Creamery received $76,177 for the construction of a new ripening cellar for cheese, Albany Seafoods Pty Ltd received $75,000 for a factory extension and restoration, and Monty’s Leap winery received $51,150 for their Monty’s Leap Winery Boardwalk and Rustic Wedding Venue project.

Member for Albany Peter Watson said the RED Grants program was a prime example of the “McGowan Government investing in the regions, promoting small businesses and creating jobs”.

“With more jobs on offer, the Great Southern becomes even more attractive for people to live and work in this stunning part of the world.”

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