House of Assembly - Fifty-Third Parliament, Second Session (53-2)
2015-05-07 Daily Xml

Contents

Bills

Fire and Emergency Services (Volunteer Charters) Amendment Bill

Second Reading

Debate resumed.

Mr WHETSTONE (Chaffey) (11:10): Thank you, Deputy Speaker. I am finding it hard to concentrate with all those women up there. I too rise to support the member for Morphett's bill changes. What I would like to do is acknowledge his good work within the CFS. Many members on this side are members of the CFS, and I think that is demonstrated by the very good contributions we have heard today from a number of members on this side. I myself am a CFS volunteer and I am very proud to be a part of that volunteer organisation—we do a lot of training along the way to, in times of need, either save property or save life—but to be a great contributor in the volunteer sector is something that is often overlooked and it has been very evident that the current emergency services minister has done just that.

We have seen a number of speeches by the minister, a number of press releases by him and he has conducted roundtables around the state. As other members have said, he is doing a lot of fronting up to these meetings but he is obviously not doing a lot of listening. I think he needs to understand that he has two ears and one mouth: twice as much listening, half as much talking. That is obviously not the case with what his charter has been.

The member for Morphett has introduced the bill as a CFS volunteer. What is clear is that the member for Morphett has been out and consulted with the CFS. He understands the impacts of the minister's decision to announce and defend. He has demonstrated, by listening, that he has a good understanding of what a CFS volunteer means, the way it should work and the support that is needed.

Behind those volunteers, behind that support, there are a lot of businesses. Those businesses are, in many cases, small businesses that run on a skeleton staff, but they are prepared to let their staff be volunteers, be a part of the community, be a part of that much-needed CFS, particularly in times of need. When the pager goes off, in many cases, and in some cases in a lot of country towns when the siren goes off, they know their role. The community and the volunteers who sit alongside them understand that for them to give up their time, to put their expertise, to put their training, but also, in many instances, to put their life on the line to serve a great duty, a great volunteer exercise is critically important.

The bill seeks to formalise a relationship that should abide by the charter. We note that the government has obviously ignored it, particularly the minister, by amending part 2 of the Fire and Emergency Services Act. Also, by inserting in section 58A parliamentary recognition of the South Australian CFS Volunteer Charter and that:

The Parliament recognises that SACFS is first and foremost a volunteer-based organisation in which volunteer officers and members are supported by employees…

As I have said, it is supported by those employees. In many cases, small businesses are trying to run efficient businesses and to remain competitive and yet they are prepared to allow their staff, and in many cases, particularly in regional areas, many of their workforce, many of the men that are either at the shopfront or on the floor, whether it is sitting in a tractor or sitting in a truck, they are prepared to give up those valuable hours of those workplace people to go out and fight the fires, to go out and address the emergency that arises.

What I would also like to acknowledge with the member for Morphett's bill changes is that the bill seeks to recognise formally the CFS Volunteer Charter as well as the principles and relationships between volunteers, the government, the CFS and the CFS Volunteers Association. What the member for Morphett has demonstrated here today is that he has the capacity to go out and consult, but he has a greater capacity to go out and listen and understand what he is listening to and understand what the needs are. That is why we are here making a contribution on this bill today.

I would also like to acknowledge a friend of mine, Grant Lupton. I think his contribution to the MFS here in South Australia has been outstanding. He has moved on because he is frustrated. He has moved on because obviously this minister has ignored him. I think it is a bold decision for a long serving—

Dr McFetridge: The longest serving MFS chief.

Mr WHETSTONE: There you go; he is the longest serving MFS chief. I had quite a conversation with him and he was sad about the decision he had made. He decided that you can only bang your head against the wall for so long, so it was time to move on. I wish him good luck. That decision was not made lightly, but what it has also shown is that while he moves on, the United Firefighters Union (UFU) and the PSA have also shown no confidence in this current minister. I think it speaks volumes that one of your own has been given a vote of no confidence. I would suggest that his time as minister for emergency services is short lived.

Mr Pengilly: It's not long at all.

Mr WHETSTONE: Not long at all. Without going on, I fully support the member for Morphett's private member's bill. I think that members on the government side of this chamber need to look very seriously at supporting it. If they really look at the worth of this bill it should get support on both sides of the house.

Mr PEDERICK (Hammond) (11:17): I too rise to support my good friend the member for Morphett's amendment bill, which is the Fire and Emergency Services (Volunteer Charters) Amendment Bill 2015. I would just like to acknowledge my colleagues who are members of the CFS: the members for Morphett, Stuart, Finniss, MacKillop and Chaffey. My apologies if I have missed anyone.

Certainly I have been a long-term member of the CFS, the Country Fire Service, and their volunteers. They do great work in this state. Certainly in the time that I have to be away from home, which is obviously quite often in this job, my local CFS unit, the Coomandook CFS, do a fantastic job. They have a 3,000 litre fire truck, a four-wheel drive of course, and also a 9,000 litre tanker sitting in the shed, so we are very well resourced to assist not just in fires and bushfires but also road accidents, where Coonalpyn and Tailem Bend are the lead units. Certainly Coomandook plays its part in either traffic management or other work around incidents on the Dukes Highway especially, where sadly there are too many. I salute all of my colleagues in the whole of the CFS, all 13,000-odd, but especially my friends and colleagues at Coomandook.

My farming property is dissected by both a railway line and a highway, so it is vital to have that protection and to know that those people are there if anything happens. Certainly one thing that has come into use that I really commend is the CFS app. It goes off too many times, I must say, which means there is another callout, one of probably 300,000 callouts annually I think it is, telling you when things are on. It was especially alarming when, on the southern island of Australia, Tasmania, as I was over the Christmas period, the CFS app lit up that there was a fire at Coomandook. Thankfully it was only a small shed fire and they had that out fairly quickly.

Getting back to the issue around having a property dissected by a railway line and a highway, off the highway there is plenty of opportunity for wheel bearings to collapse, whether it be on light trailers or semitrailers. We had one recently in the past few months. Thankfully, because of the close proximity of our property to the CFS shed and volunteers—I was not home at the time—that was contained very quickly and only burnt about 150 metres of fence line and just a little bit of the growth on the property, so I salute the CFS everywhere for what they do.

Where I really take my hat off to all the Country Fire Service volunteers is the teamwork that is displayed. When everyone was called to help in 2007 on Kangaroo Island, in the member for Finniss's electorate, either to fight the fire or mop up the big fire that was there, I went over as a volunteer for a couple of days and it was a massive effort through all the agencies with that incident.

With respect to fires closer to home, when I see the strike teams either come down from northern areas closer to the River Murray or further north or the South-East brigades come up, even when you see a South-East brigade member, the leading figure at this time—and I remember one which was first thing in the morning with a gentleman from Avenue Range. The fire had burnt through some of our property, and I am glad I caught up with him because I think they were about to cut a fence to let a bulldozer through. I said, 'If you do not cut straight through to the scrub and you come down to this other fence line for about half a kilometre, there is a double gate.' In the light of day we managed to effect that.

They do so much great work, and so do our State Emergency Service volunteers, and there is plenty of that work in my electorate. Whether it is in a coastal town like Goolwa, an end-of-the-river town, or in Murray Bridge, there are water rescues, cleaning up after storms. We have had some significant storms over the years, and, talking of storms, even before I got elected, in Karoonda there was a massive storm that tore the place apart, and there was one at Pinnaroo not long after I came to this place.

I was trying to get some extra money to assist the local council, the Southern Mallee District Council, with some of the clean-up costs. I must say that Kevin Foley, former member for Port Adelaide, did not do me too many favours in my time here, but he did me one then. I approached him one day to see about getting the $70,000 needed for a one-off grant to the local council and, true to his word, he came up with the money. I certainly thanked him the next time I saw him in this chamber. With the hard politics that Labor plays, generally they did not have to do that, so I certainly thought that was a great contribution to a local council.

In regard to this bill, which is to see parliamentary recognition of the South Australian CFS volunteer charter and the SES charter, the CFS clauses include that the parliament recognises that the SA CFS is first and foremost a volunteer based organisation in which volunteer officers and members are supported by employees in a fully integrated manner, and the parliament recognises that the SA CFS volunteer charter is a statement of the commitment of principles that apply to the relationship between the government of South Australia, the commission, SA CFS and volunteer officers and members, and requires that the government of South Australia, the commission and SA CFS recognise, value, respect and promote the contribution of volunteer officers and members to the wellbeing and safety of the community, and there are some extra clauses there. Certainly in regard to the SES, there are similar clauses that include that:

(1) The Parliament recognises that SASES is first and foremost a volunteer-based organisation, in which volunteer officers and members are supported by employees in a fully integrated manner—

and that—

(2) The Parliament recognises that the SASES Volunteer Charter—

(a) is a statement of the commitment and principles that apply to the relationship between the Government of South Australia, the Commission, the SASES and volunteer officers and members;

and there are some other clauses supporting that.

In regard to the restructure, I think the only genesis in this restructure was just the fact that the current Minister for Emergency Services needed to get his name up in lights because, certainly, my information is he was not first in line for that ministry and someone else was more than pencilled in, but the heavy eraser came out at the last minute and he was given the job and he had better prove himself. He has proved himself to be completely incapable of getting anyone onside. Anyone who has commented on this (whether it was someone from the United Firefighters Union in the MFS or members of the CFS or, certainly the SES) has absolutely no confidence in this minister.

Losing a man like Grant Lupton from the Metropolitan Fire Service and the fire services of this state is a real tragedy. He sat with me at an awards ceremony in Murray Bridge not long before his time was up and he presented some awards to local firefighters, and Riverland firefighters from the seat of Chaffey. We had a very good discussion about where things were going, and he was not a happy man. He was accepting his fate. His fate was determined by other people further up the chain, people who do not recognise the true talents we have in this state and the opportunities we have had.

I think the main thing we want here, and the principle of the Volunteer Charter, is that we do not see what some of us, or most of us (if not all of us, I think, on this side) think is going on with this so-called reform of the emergency services in this state, that is, the minister wants everyone to join the United Firefighters Union. I think that is where he really wants to go. That certainly will not happen. It certainly did not happen when I was back in the shearing shed days and the AWU was trying to get me to buy a ticket. I agree with this bill of the member for Morphett and fully support it. Let us hope the government gets right behind this bill that supports our many thousands of volunteers in this state.

Mr TARZIA (Hartley) (11:27): I also rise today to support the Fire and Emergency Services (Volunteer Charters) Amendment Bill 2015. I absolutely commend the member for Morphett for the strong interest he takes in this area and the strong advocate that he has been for many years for the volunteer community.

There would not be more worthy people who are due for our praise than volunteers—also nurses. Volunteers are the backbone of our community. It is wonderful that the member for Morphett has taken it upon himself to introduce a bill of this nature. He is a gentleman who has been in the CFS longer than I have been alive, who takes these things to heart and is a very strong advocate for the community. I would encourage all members on both sides of the chamber to consider supporting this bill. It is about their dignity and their respect, so do it for the volunteers.

The member for Light, with all respect, probably has not had the best few months. I would also send a clear message to probably the next minister in this area. My mail says it will be the member for Little Para. If he is listening, he should also be aware of how to handle such issues. The way it has been handled has not been good. It has not been good for the government. It is hurting the government. I only acknowledged the extent to which it was hurting just through reading the newspapers and hearing from the volunteers themselves.

At my weekly coffee meeting—most Mondays at 9am, residents can come and see me at Cafe Va Bene at Campbelltown (supplied by Cafe Va Bene)—a member of the Labor Party one morning rocked up and exclaimed her sincere discontent with the way that this issue was being handled. She threatened to actually resign from the party because of the way this issue is being handled—true facts.

This issue has not been handled well, and I commend the member for Morphett for bringing the government to account. This bill goes to the strong opposition to the proposed restructure that the government has considered. This is an opportune time to reintroduce a bill which demonstrates our strong support for all our emergency services volunteers. I seek leave to continue my remarks.

Leave granted; debate adjourned.