House of Assembly - Fifty-Fourth Parliament, Second Session (54-2)
2021-09-09 Daily Xml

Contents

Waite Electorate

Mr DULUK (Waite) (15:55): Earlier today, I announced that I will be running as an Independent at the next state election. My electors from across the entire community recognise the important role an Independent has in holding the government of the day to account, and that is what I have done and that is what I will continue to do.

What have we achieved to date as an Independent? We have saved the Mitcham Service SA centre. After multiple ambiguous announcements from the state government which created uncertainty around the future delivery of services at the Mitcham location, the electorate came together, fought and rallied and the government backtracked on their decision to close the centre in my community and also in Prospect and Modbury.

We protected our bus services and local public transport. Back in June 2020, when the state government foolishly announced that it would remove key Blackwood bus services from the electorate, we as a community mobilised, we ran campaigns, we got loud, we got heard and we defended the right of public bus users in my community. Once again, the government announced that they would no longer pursue these cutbacks to the bus network.

We have preserved the historic Waite Gatehouse. Once again, when the state government foolishly announced that it would be demolishing the state heritage listed gatehouse in late 2020, my office mobilised the community, which resulted in the government backflip on the decision of allocating over $1 million to move, reconstruct and repurpose the building as a community volunteer centre and a museum within the Urrbrae historic precinct.

Of course, my office and I were instrumental in expanding the Sports Vouchers scheme. We successfully lobbied the state government to expand the scheme not only to be accessible for families of primary school age students but also to include families of middle school students from 2022. Right now, hopefully all across this house will come together to unite on this important one, that is, to expand that Sports Vouchers scheme for Scouts and Girl Guides to be included in the sports and recreation subsidy program. There is no reason why many scouting families across our state are being denied access to the scheme.

It is not just what one just does in this place that is important, it is what one seeks to do and what one will do. We will continue to fight on many key local community infrastructure fronts. Since the state government scrapped its election promise on GlobeLink, I have continued to advocate for both rail and road freight to be diverted out of the Adelaide Hills and Mitcham Plains.

I was very pleased to see in the state budget this year that the joint state and federal governments are to deliver a $202 million bypass at Truro and, importantly, a $10 million planning study and bypass case for the Greater Adelaide freight bypass. We will continue to lobby against plans to increase freight usage on Cross Road and in our suburban communities, and I urge the members for Unley, Elder and Badcoe to join me in that fight to ensure that Cross Road does not become a freight corridor.

It is important to defend and look after civil liberties in this place and the strength of our economy, and I think many constituents in my area are tired of the underperforming economy and civil liberties being eroded. As an Independent, I will always challenge the need for some of the extreme measures that we have seen recently in relation to restrictions and lockdowns to ensure that we always get that right balance between appropriate health measures and the rights of individuals.

Many times in this parliament over my course here, I have expressed the need for sensible economic decisions to ensure that our budget always has the appropriate fiscal management. As outlined in an Auditor-General report from 2015, a sensible net debt fiscal target was set at a maximum ratio of 35 per cent to ensure that we are financially responsible and maintain our AAA credit rating. Today, that same measure is running at 129.6 per cent.

We always must be mindful of future generations' ability to repay debt. It is prudent we carefully control our deficit levels in the future and appropriately manage public debt. We have to look after our small business operators. We have to ensure that many people are not affected by regressive land tax changes and we must ensure that South Australia keeps its share of GST revenue.

I am focused on the real issues for South Australians that need to be addressed. Public schools and hospital funding, ramping, fruit fly outbreak and timber shortages have all been issues I have raised in this place. Since being in this place I have worked constructively for our community to ensure that we have fantastic community centres, well-funded sports grounds, ensuring that our health precincts remain vitally accessible, such as the Repat, which I have been so keen to see thrive. Of course, it is about listening to what the community needs and wants and how we can best deliver that, and I know that I can do that for my community.