Nothing succeeds like succession

ARRANGING a successful handover of the family farm to the next generation will be the subject of a workshop to be held in Ongerup on June 8.

Ellie Stone, whose family grows wheat, canola, barley, lupins, and merino and cross-bred sheep at Boxwood Hill, says succession planning regularly comes up in conversation in regional areas.

“Many family farming businesses have completely different structures to one another, but a lot of the issues remain the same – what’s going to happen in the future, when will it be my turn to take on the farm, how do I keep Dad happy, how do we keep the lines of communication open?,” she says.

“I think that marrying into a farm business, it can be quite hard coming into a family that has its own way of communication, and finding your place in the farming business.”

Ms Stone, who is president of the Ongerup branch of Women in Farming Enterprise – better known by its acronym, ‘WIFE’ – says there is no one-size-fits-all solution to farm succession.

“But I think the core values of how to communicate better and how to approach things, and how important planning for the future is, always stay the same across the board,” she says.

“We’ve got four sons, aged four, eight, and the twins are five, and they’re already mad-keen farmers.

“So, for my family, we’re looking for the future of how we can set ourselves up for our sons’ opportunities to work on the farm if they wish to, or in other avenues if they choose.”

WIFE will run a workshop on farm succession at Ongerup Sporting Complex from 9am to 2.30pm on June 8.

All comers, including blokes, are welcome to attend.

Farmer-cum-accountant Ben Thompson, from Ironbridge Group, and Michael Pyne from HPH Solutions, will talk on the day.

“I suspect a lot of the younger generations who potentially married in to farming families will participate on the day,” Mr Thompson says.

“A lot of the farmers who started farming in the ‘60s and ‘70s are now starting to get to the point of retiring and there is a big difference between that generation of farmers and these ones.

“The younger generations want to know what’s happening and how things are going to be structured, whereas you only have to step back a generation and it was pretty much: ‘You do what you’re told and you don’t ask questions, and we’ll tell you when it’s time to be told’.”

He says that especially when a farming enterprise is carrying a lot of debt, securing a comfortable life for retiring farmers and security for their families while ensuring the future viability of the farm is a challenge.

He says a particular concern for women is securing a future for their off-farm children.

“A lot of them are used to a huge proportion of assets ending up with a son coming home to the farm, and the off-farm children being left with not much,” he explains.

“I think a lot of women want to ensure there is a balance, that it’s not all about the farm and the pressure that comes with that.

“It can’t always be equitable – otherwise, in many cases, you’d have to sell the farm – but I think it can be fair.”

WIFE members can attend the workshop for $15, and non-WIFE members for $25.

RSVPs to [email protected] by June 1.

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Devil is in the detail for roundabout servo

TORTUOUS negotiations – including on a safe entry point and a $9000 piece of public art – continue over a fuel station planned for near the Chester Pass roundabout, despite a building permit having been issued for the contentious project.

City of Albany chief planner Paul Camins told The Weekender a building application was approved for the Albany Highway site in April.

He said the permit was valid for two years, and if the proponent, Peter D. Webb & Associates town planners, wished to extend it a standard application process would apply.

In August, the State Administrative Tribunal overturned the City’s February 2017 refusal of a development application for the project.

In her conditions of approval, Tribunal member Rosetta Petrucci ordered that access points and stormwater management to the highway be designed to the specification of Main Roads Western Australia.

Main Roads Great Southern regional manager Andrew Duffield said such a requirement was standard, and in “99.99 per cent of the cases never an issue”.

“This one’s been topical from Day 1,” he said.

“We have just been wanting to work with [the proponent] over safe access to the site and it’s taken quite some time to get them to the table.

“It’s very clear there’s a whole range of other things they need to get approval and endorsement of.”

Mr Duffield said stormwater was one.

“If they’re looking to tap into our network, then we need to know about it and we need to give approval of it,” he said.

He explained that drawings submitted with the development application were site layout plans only that “did not give any particular engineering detail”.

He said that for projects abutting a main road it was perfectly normal for discussions to ensue on technical details such as the type of paving, and a traffic management plan for the construction phase.

“It’s not as simple as: ‘SAT has given us approval, we can do whatever we want’,” he said.

Mr Duffield said he sat down with the proponent on May 7 to help improve the project’s on-site traffic circulation, which would lead to fewer cars backing up out onto the highway.

The planned exit on to Albany Highway is about five car lengths from the entrance to the roundabout, the worst intersection in regional WA in terms of frequency and cost of crashes.

“I hope [the proponent] come[s] back to us fairly quickly with their modifications, and if things are looking okay we’ll tick it off, and away they’ll go,” Mr Duffield said.

He said Main Roads was dealing with Peter D. Webb & Associates on “a number of other” projects in Perth.

“We’re very happy to see development, but there are some sites that are more challenging than others,” he said.

“Whilst [a fuel station] might be allowed under that zoning, so were a number of other options which had a lower traffic generation [and] traffic impact capacity.

“For example, a showroom would have been within those zonings and we would have been much happier with a showroom than a high traffic generating site.”

Mr Duffield said road safety was his paramount concern.

Ms Petrucci also ordered the developer to either erect a piece of public art worth 0.5 per cent of the $1.8 million project cost, or contribute 0.3 per cent of the project cost if additional landscape and building treatments were proposed to the satisfaction of the City.

Mr Camins said Peter D. Webb & Associates was yet to advise if art, or the extra landscaping and building work, would be chosen.

The company’s Managing Director, Nik Hidding, said his “client” had instructed him not to comment to the media.

The owner of the site is Victorian-based Procon Developments, which has arranged for at least two Coles Express and one BP servo to be built in WA.

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Royal nod for teacher

GOODE Beach resident Charles Pierce was so nervous before meeting the Queen earlier this month, he was suited up and ready to leave for Buckingham Palace five hours early.

His visit to the palace was no ordinary tourist trip – he flew halfway across the world to receive a medal from Queen Elizabeth II and be granted the title of ‘MBE’ at The Queen’s Birthday 2017 Honours List ceremony on May 4.

Mr Pierce was recognised for four decades of education services to Vanuatu, the country he called home for more than half his life.

The 77-year-old Englishman said after travelling throughout Asia in his younger days, he discovered the Baha’i faith, and it was through this faith he began his journey of teaching abroad.

He now calls Albany home and has done so for the past five years, in-between trips to Vanuatu.

“I’m a teacher by trade, and I heard through my Baha’i faith that people were needed in the Pacific, to help develop and grow the Baha’i people in the community,” he said.

“So I lived and worked for a year in Vanuatu, married my wife in Australia a year later in 1968, then in 1971 went back to Vanuatu and stayed there for 42 years.”

Mr Pierce said his work in Vanuatu focused on promoting unity and education within the Baha’i faith, building greater community cohesion and empowering people.

“One of the two questions the Queen asked me was what kind of education I was involved in,” Mr Pierce said.

“I told her I was principal of a secondary and tertiary school, was involved in training teachers, taught a Baha’i moral education program, and was involved in developing, producing and delivering a course in climate change.

“She thought it was wonderful.”

The other question the Queen asked Mr Pierce during the MBE ceremony was whether he lived in Vanuatu.

“I told her that I did, and that I remembered her visiting years ago, and that she wore a yellow dress,” Mr Pierce said.

“I think she was quite moved when I said that, she was smiling.”

Despite speaking with relative ease during his few moments with the Queen, Mr Pierce was a bundle of nerves in the hours leading up to his royal encounter.

He said he took an hour to carefully put on his suit, a piece of attire he hadn’t donned in 50 years.

“I was terrified,” he laughed.

“The night before the ceremony, I didn’t get to bed until after midnight and I was up at 4am.

“I just could not sleep.

“We had to be there at 9.45am but I was ready by 5am!”

After keeping it a secret from his family for two months, and finally receiving his medallion, Mr Pierce said the reality of being awarded MBE finally sunk in.

“It wasn’t real until I got the medal,” he said.

“I feel very privileged and honoured.

“But it’s not about the medal, it’s about what you have done to receive it.”

 

Photo: British Ceremonial Arts

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Top cop moves on

GREAT Southern Police Superintendent Dom Wood will return to Perth where he is set to become the state’s top traffic cop.

“I’ve done my tenure, so I’m off in July, August,” he told The Weekender.

He said that, come July, he will have been in Albany for three years.

“It’s gone very quickly,” he said.

“I love the region, I love the people.”

Mr Wood said Superintendent Ian Clarke, who currently works in the police professional standards unit in Perth, would fill his shoes.

“He’s a really nice fella, a good bloke,” he said.

“He’s got a good background, in traffic for a while as a superintendent, and done some crime work, and worked country as well.

“He was an OIC up in Kununurra, and also in Dunsborough, and has some detective background as well.”

After a handover to Mr Clarke in July, Mr Wood will become Superintendent, State Traffic.

“You can, if all the stars line up, try to push [your tenure] out to maybe four [years], which I was kind of thinking, maybe [until] Christmas, but they said ‘no’, they want me to take over and do the State traffic role up at Midland,” he said.

Immediately before coming to Albany from Perth, Superintendent Wood was the police force’s Manager, Media and Communications.

“We’ve got a couple of older kids back up in Perth, and we always knew I was never going to retire down here,” he said.

“I’m too young to retire, so I always knew this was about a three-year tenure.

“I’ll still get the chance to come back down here with a booze bus, maybe.”

He said he’d miss Albany’s bush walks and coffee shops.

“My wife and I were out on the boat on the weekend, the Vancouver Street Festival became a bit hot, and I said: ‘C’mon, let’s get the boat out’,” he said.

“We went out with a couple of friends of ours, and we were followed by dolphins in the harbour.

“So, I’ll miss the town, and the community is a very good community, a very friendly community.”

In other policing news, Mr Wood said a drug detection police dog was on the cards for the Great Southern (Drug dog for GS police, p.5 of today’s Weekender).

Mr Wood said one priority he would pass on to Mr Clarke would be to “keep pushing” for a canine to join the ranks of the local constabulary.

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Goon guzzler stabbed

AN ALBANY woman confronted by another who admitted she was “completely and utterly paralytic” after consuming “four litres of goon” has pleaded guilty to one count of unlawful wounding.

On May 3, police prosecutor Mike Russell told Albany Magistrates Court that Elicitor May Roberts, then 49, was intoxicated when between 8.35am and 9.48am on November 14 another woman approached her in her Orana home.

Sergeant Russell said Roberts slashed the visitor in the left forearm and upper arm with a 30cm carving knife, before cutting the woman’s forehead, leaving a two-centimetre-long gash.

The visitor fell to the ground, Roberts left her house with the knife, and police later found her walking along South Coast Highway.

Defence lawyer Richard Hickson said the stabbed visitor later admitted she had “consumed four litres of goon” and was “completely and utterly paralytic”.

He said the woman had been “completely obnoxious” and Roberts “felt threatened by her”.

Magistrate Raelene Johnston told Roberts she was “very lucky that something more serious did not happen”, as picking up the knife created “potential for greater injury or death”.

Roberts told Magistrate Johnston she was no longer drinking.

“Good,” the Magistrate said.

“Continue on that path.”

Roberts was ordered to report to community corrections staff for the next 12 months and not to reoffend during that time lest she breach the order.

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Horror show crowd in stitches

DON’T feed the plants was the lesson theatre-goers took home on Friday night after the opening of Albany Light Opera and Theatre Company’s rendition of Little Shop of Horrors.

Based on the off-Broadway musical and subsequent 1986 horror comedy film, the storyline followed young florist assistant Seymour, who discovered a mysterious plant demanding human blood in order to grow.

After bending to the plant’s will and feeding him, Seymour battles his inner self and is forced to face the reality of the fame and fortune the plant gives him, while killing people to feed the plant.

Theatre debutant Graham Ayres was a stand-out element of the show voicing Audrey II, the killer plant.

His singing and dialogue made Audrey II come to life and become a powerful character in the show, despite only piping up for a couple of songs.

Tom Croucher proved his acting repertoire abilities playing young, bumbling Seymour, having previously played the more sombre Mr Banks in ALOTCo’s Mary Poppins production.

The knowing grin of Darian Le Page made him tick all the boxes playing cheeky dirtbag Orin Scrivello DDS, and his skit with Todd McGregor (Bernstein) left the crowd in stitches.

As usual, the ALOTCo crew ran a tight ship and performed a seemingly faultless night of entertainment.

Director Airell Hodgkinson and his team should be commended for their work in bringing Little Shop of Horrors to life.

Performances are running throughout May and tickets can be purchased online or in-store through Paperbark Merchants.

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Entries open for Wavefest

ALBANY Boardriders Club will celebrate the 21st birthday of its Wavefest surfing competition this June long weekend.

The South Coast’s premier surfing event attracts competitors from throughout the state for two days of surfing before they let their hair down for the presentation party.

Club president Peter Bolt said the competition will run the same as in previous years, but the presentation party will feature something a little different.

“We’ll have our usual presentation for the winners, but we’ll also have a raffle for the door prize,” he said.

“Adrian Shepherd from Aido’s Boardroom has made a custom-made surfboard to be raffled off.

“All people have to do is pay for their entrance and they’ll be entered into the raffle.

“The event is open to anyone in the surfing community that wants to attend.”

Nominations close on May 23, which is 10 days earlier than last year so the Wavefest shirts have a chance to be printed and distributed to competitors.

“For the men’s and women’s open competition the prize money is a $1000 each,” Bolt said.

“We also encourage our juniors to have a go. They’re definitely not exempt from competing in Wavefest.”

For entry forms and more information on the 21st annual Wavefest visit www.albanysurf.com.

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Albany Sinfonia plays with fire

ALBANY Sinfonia instrumentalists are bringing fiery energy to their upcoming concert hitting Albany and Denmark next week.

Fire will be performed at Wesley Uniting Church on May 18 and at Denmark Civic Centre on May 19. An additional children’s concert and a Meet the Orchestra event will also take place earlier in the afternoon at Denmark Civic Centre.

Musical director Neville Talbot said the performance would include the likes of the Firebird Suite, Mendel and the Royal Fireworks Music composition.

“There’s fun, serious and eclectic music, and a bit of dance music,” he said.

“By being in a more intimate setting like Wesley Church, it will create a more immersive performance with less bells and whistles; we’ll be more exposed to the audience.”

Mr Talbot said the concert would cover nearly 360 years of orchestral music, and there should be something for everyone to enjoy.

Tickets can be purchased online via trybooking.com or at the door if they are available.

The next major concert for Albany Sinfonia will be a combined effort with the Philharmonic South West from Bunbury and the City of Fremantle Symphony Orchestra in September.

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Birds head to the mountain

TICKETS are now on sale for Albany vocal ensemble Bird on a Wire’s latest concert, Up to the Mountain.

The group will perform on May 23 and 24 at the Museum of the Great Southern’s Co-Op Building, and musical director Teresa Hughes says the show will feature an eclectic repertoire of music.

“We’ve got jazz, gospel, sacred music and contemporary,” she said.

“We are working on a Queen number at the moment.”

The all-adult performance choir plays for their fans at least four times a year at concerts and charity events, with their latest calendar update including the Denmark Festival of Voice set for June.

Ms Hughes says Up To The Mountain will feature arrangements in both acapella and piano accompaniment settings.

“We have a rich sound,” she said.

“We’ve got a varied repertoire and the singers just have fun.

“We are a very joyful group.”

Tickets are just $20 and can be purchased at Uptown Music.

The ticket proceeds will go towards a Youth Scholarship Fund Ms Hughes is starting, which she says will help young, up-and-coming singers pursue vocal training.

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Double date with magistrate

A KOJONUP worker has had his car seized and received a second date with a Katanning magistrate after allegedly driving to Kojonup police station on Tuesday to check an initial court date after he was charged with drink driving and served with a disqualification notice.

New officer in charge at Kojonup cop shop Rik Lok told The Weekender that, like him, the man was new to town but working in Kojonup.

Sgt Lok said the man allegedly parked across the road from the police station behind some buildings.

Asked how the man was nabbed, Sgt Lok said “our public is very helpful”.

He advised anyone else thinking of driving while disqualified to think again.

“It gets expensive, because you lose your car,” he said.

“It gets seized, so he’s lost his car for a period of time.

“It’s gonna cost him money and all those flow-on things for a moment of stupidity.”

On Monday, Sgt Lok took over from Sgt Phil Cartledge, who is the new officer in charge of Rottnest Island.

Sgt Lok has come across from Augusta.

“I’ve looked for the ocean around Kojonup but I can’t find it,” he quipped.

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