-
A
-
'a Safer Night Out'
-
30-Year Plan for Greater Adelaide
- 2010-05-26
-
2010-06-22
- 2010-07-20
-
2010-07-22
-
2010-09-14
-
2010-10-26
-
2010-10-27
- 2011-02-23
- Aboriginal Land Rights
-
Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee
-
Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Annual Report
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Annual Report 2010-11
- Aboriginal Lands Trust
- Aboriginal Sports Training Academy
-
Aboriginal Women's Gathering
- Accessible Cinema
- Accessible Taxi Services
-
Address in Reply
- Adelaide Casino
-
Adelaide Cemeteries Authority
-
2010-10-28
-
Questions & Answers (2)
-
-
2010-10-28
- 2011-02-08
-
-
Adelaide Festival Centre
-
2010-06-30
- 2011-06-21
-
-
Adelaide Motorplex
-
Adelaide Oval
-
2010-05-13
- 2010-05-25
-
2010-05-27
-
Ministerial Statement (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2010-06-22
- 2010-06-24
-
2010-06-30
-
-
Adelaide Oval Redevelopment and Management Bill
-
Adelaide Pacific International College
- Adelaide Parklands
- Adelaide Quality of Living
- Adelaide Shores
- Adelaide Showground
- Adelaide Thunderbirds
- Adelaide Women's Prison
- Advantage SA
-
Affordable Housing
- 2011-11-09
- 2011-11-10
-
2011-11-22
-
Personal Explanation (1)
-
Question Time (3)
-
-
Age Matters Project
- Aged Rights Advocacy Service
- Agribusiness Council
- Agriculture and Dairy Industries
-
Aircraft Contrails
- Alcohol and Drug Strategy
-
Alexandrides, Mr N.
-
Amnesty International
-
Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Land Rights Act
-
Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Land Rights Act General Regulations
- Angaston and Lyndoch Long Term Dry Areas
-
Animal Welfare (Jumps Racing) Amendment Bill
- Anna Stewart Memorial Project
-
Anti-Poverty Services
- 2010-10-26
- 2011-03-09
-
2011-05-17
-
Anti-Violence Community Awareness Campaigns
-
2010-05-26
- 2010-07-21
-
- Antibiotics
- Antisocial Behaviour Discussion Papers
- Anxious Bay Aquaculture
- ANZAC Day
- Appellation Control Scheme
- Apprenticeships
-
Appropriation Bill
- 2010-09-29
- 2010-10-14
-
2010-10-26
-
2010-10-28
-
2010-10-28
- 2010-10-29
- 2010-11-23
- 2011-06-23
- 2011-07-07
- 2011-07-26
-
2011-07-28
- 2011-07-29
- 2011-09-13
- APY Executive
-
APY Lands
- 2011-02-09
-
2011-10-18
-
Answers to Questions (2)
-
- APY Lands School Attendance
-
APY Lands, Child Sexual Abuse
-
2011-09-28
-
Ministerial Statement (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
APY Lands, Community Constables
- APY Lands, Court Facilities
- APY Lands, Domestic Violence
-
APY Lands, Electricity Supply
- APY Lands, Family Wellbeing Centres
-
APY Lands, Food Security
-
APY Lands, Housing
- APY Lands, Schools
- APY Lands, State Government Services
-
APY Lands, Substance Misuse Facility
- Aquaculture (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Arcade Game Machines
-
Arkaroola Protection Bill
-
Arkaroola Wilderness Sanctuary
- Artlab
- Asbestos Removal
- Asbestos Safety Display
- Ask Just Once Strategy
- Assisted Reproductive Treatment (Assistance for Lesbians and Single Women) Amendment Bill
- Associations Incorporation Act
-
Attorney-General's Department
-
2011-02-22
-
-
Auditor-General's Report
- Augusta Zadow Scholarship
- Australia Day Awards
- Australian Broadcasting Corporation
- Australian Chinese Medical Association
-
Australian Consumer Law
- Australian Marine Wildlife Research and Rescue Organisation
- Australian Milling Group
-
Australian Year of the Farmer
-
Autism Spectrum Disorder
-
-
B
- Baby Bottles
- Backpackers
-
Backyard Car Dealers
-
2010-05-27
- 2010-06-29
-
- Bail Proc
-
Barossa Valley Region
-
2010-11-23
- 2011-09-14
-
- Bay to Birdwood
- Bed Rail Safety
-
Biosecurity Cost Recovery
-
2011-11-09
-
Motions (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2011-11-30
-
- Birmingham Six
- Blessing of the Fleet
- Bonython, Mr H.R. (Kym)
- Bookstore Closures
-
Boston Consulting Group
-
2011-03-24
-
-
Bowden Village
-
Branched Broomrape
-
2011-11-10
-
2011-11-30
-
- Bressington, Hon. A., Naming
- Bressington, Hon. A., Suspension
- Brickworks Market
-
British Atomic Testing
- Buckland Park
-
Budget and Finance Committee
-
Budget and Finance Committee: Annual Report
- Budget and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2010-11
- Budget Papers
-
Builder Licensing
-
2011-06-07
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Building and Construction Industry Security of Payment Act
-
Building Indemnity Insurance
- 2010-05-13
-
2010-06-30
- 2010-07-21
-
2010-11-11
-
Answers to Questions (2)
-
-
Building Safety
-
2011-05-18
-
-
Building the Education Revolution
- Building Work Contractors
- Bulky Goods Retail Outlets
-
Burnside Council
-
2010-05-11
-
2010-05-12
-
2010-05-13
-
2010-05-26
-
2010-05-27
- 2010-06-22
- 2010-06-23
-
2010-07-01
- 2010-07-20
-
2010-07-22
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2010-09-14
-
2010-09-29
- 2010-09-30
-
2010-10-27
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2010-10-29
- 2010-11-10
-
2010-11-11
-
Answers to Questions (1)
-
Question Time (3)
-
-
2010-11-23
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2011-02-22
-
2011-02-23
- 2011-03-08
- 2011-06-21
-
2011-07-06
-
Ministerial Statement (1)
-
Question Time (10)
- The Hon. S.G. WADE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. S.G. WADE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. S.G. WADE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. J.A. DARLEY, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. J.A. DARLEY, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
-
-
2011-07-07
-
Question Time (8)
- The Hon. D.W. RIDGWAY, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. J.M.A. LENSINK, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. J.M.A. LENSINK, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. J.M.A. LENSINK, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.L. BROKENSHIRE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. S.G. WADE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. A. BRESSINGTON, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
-
-
2011-07-26
-
Personal Explanation (1)
-
Question Time (19)
- The Hon. D.W. RIDGWAY, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. D.W. RIDGWAY, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. D.W. RIDGWAY, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. S.G. WADE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. S.G. WADE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. T.J. STEPHENS
- The Hon. T.J. STEPHENS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. S.G. WADE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. A. BRESSINGTON, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. J.M.A. LENSINK, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. S.G. WADE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. J.A. DARLEY, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. T.J. STEPHENS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. S.G. WADE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
-
-
2011-07-27
-
Question Time (20)
- The Hon. D.W. RIDGWAY, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. D.W. RIDGWAY, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. D.W. RIDGWAY, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. D.W. RIDGWAY, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. A. BRESSINGTON, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. J.M.A. LENSINK, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. J.M.A. LENSINK, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. S.G. WADE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. S.G. WADE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. T.J. STEPHENS
- The Hon. T.J. STEPHENS
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. A. BRESSINGTON, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. A. BRESSINGTON, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. R.I. LUCAS
- The Hon. J.S. LEE, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. T.J. STEPHENS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
- The Hon. T.J. STEPHENS, The Hon. R.P. WORTLEY
-
-
2011-07-29
- 2011-09-13
-
2011-09-14
-
Petitions (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2011-09-15
-
2011-11-08
-
-
Burnside Council Inquiry
- Burra Hospital
-
Burra Monster Mine Reserve
- 2010-06-24
-
2010-07-01
-
Bushfire Bunkers
- Bushfire Task Force
-
Business Confidence Index
- Business Enterprise Centre
- Business Regulation
-
Business Scams
-
C
- Cabaret Fringe Festival
- Campbelltown Leisure Centre
- Cape Bauer Ecotourism Resort
- Capital City Committee
-
Carbon Tax
- Carers
- Carnegie Mellon University
- Caroline Clark Memorial Garden
-
Casino (Enclosed Areas) Amendment Bill
- Casino Expansion
-
Ceduna Quarantine Station
-
2011-11-22
-
- Cellar Door Subsidies
- Cement, Concrete and Aggregate Industries
-
Cemetery Regulations
-
2010-10-14
-
- Central Hills Natural Resources Management Group
- Centre for Economic Studies
- Cerebral Palsy Australia
- Chamber
- Charity Red Tape
-
Charles Sturt Council
-
2010-06-24
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2010-10-27
- 2011-11-09
-
- Cheltenham Park
- Chief Scientist
-
Child Abuse and Neglect
-
Child Employment Bill
-
Child Protection
-
Child Protection Restraining Orders
- 2010-09-28
-
2011-03-09
- 2011-10-20
- Child's Death
-
Children in State Care
- Children with Disabilities
- Children's Protection (Grandparents and Family Care) Amendment Bill
-
Children's Protection (Lawful Surrender of Newborn Child) Amendment Bill
- Children's Protection (Privacy Issues) Amendment Bill
-
Children's Protection (Recording of Meetings) Amendment Bill
-
Children's Protection (Reporting of Suspected Criminal Offence) Amendment Bill
-
Children's Protection (Right to Record Certain Conversations) Amendment Bill
- China Mining Conference
- Chinese New Year
- Chiverton, Mr J. and Mrs A.
-
Christchurch Earthquake
- Christian Pastoral Support Workers
-
Christmas Day Public Holiday
-
2010-11-23
-
-
Citizen's Right of Reply
- Citrus Industry
- City-Wide Land Audits
- Civil Train SA
-
Classification (Publications, Films and Computer Games) (Exemptions and Approvals) Amendment Bill
- 2010-10-26
- 2010-11-09
- 2010-11-11
- 2010-11-24
-
2010-11-25
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2011-02-08
- 2011-02-09
- 2011-02-10
- 2011-02-22
- 2011-02-23
-
2011-02-24
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2011-03-08
-
Classification (Publications, Films and Computer Games) (Parental Guidance) Amendment Bill
-
Classification (Publications, Films and Computer Games) Act
-
Clean Energy Future
-
2011-11-22
-
- Clean Energy Supplement
-
Climate Change
-
Co-Morbidity
-
Coles Campaign
-
2011-09-15
-
-
Commencement
- 2010-05-06
- 2010-05-11
- 2010-05-12
- 2010-05-13
- 2010-05-25
- 2010-05-26
- 2010-05-27
- 2010-06-22
- 2010-06-23
- 2010-06-24
- 2010-06-29
- 2010-06-30
- 2010-07-01
- 2010-07-20
- 2010-07-21
- 2010-07-22
- 2010-09-14
- 2010-09-15
- 2010-09-16
- 2010-09-28
- 2010-09-29
- 2010-09-30
- 2010-10-14
- 2010-10-26
- 2010-10-27
- 2010-10-28
- 2010-10-29
- 2010-11-09
- 2010-11-10
- 2010-11-11
- 2010-11-23
- 2010-11-24
- 2010-11-25
- 2011-02-08
- 2011-02-09
- 2011-02-10
- 2011-02-22
- 2011-02-23
- 2011-02-24
- 2011-03-08
- 2011-03-09
- 2011-03-10
- 2011-03-22
- 2011-03-23
- 2011-03-24
- 2011-04-05
- 2011-04-06
- 2011-04-07
- 2011-05-03
- 2011-05-04
- 2011-05-05
- 2011-05-17
- 2011-05-18
- 2011-05-19
- 2011-06-07
- 2011-06-08
- 2011-06-09
- 2011-06-21
- 2011-06-22
- 2011-06-23
- 2011-07-06
- 2011-07-07
- 2011-07-26
- 2011-07-27
- 2011-07-28
- 2011-07-29
- 2011-09-13
- 2011-09-14
- 2011-09-15
- 2011-09-27
- 2011-09-28
- 2011-09-29
- 2011-10-18
- 2011-10-19
- 2011-10-20
- 2011-11-08
- 2011-11-09
- 2011-11-10
- 2011-11-22
- 2011-11-23
- 2011-11-24
- 2011-11-29
- 2011-11-30
- 2011-12-01
-
Commercial Arbitration Bill
- Commercial Vehicle Drivers
- Commissioner for Water Security
-
Committee Stage
-
Common Ground
- Community Affairs Reference Committee Report
-
Community Hospital Funding
-
Community Response to Eliminating Suicide
- Compulsory Acquisitions
- Compulsory Third Party Premiums
- Concession Schemes
- Confucius Institute
-
Consent to Medical Treatment and Palliative Care (End of Life Arrangements) Amendment Bill
- 2010-09-29
- 2010-11-10
-
2010-11-24
-
Bills (2)
- The Hon. CARMEL ZOLLO, The Hon. T.J. STEPHENS, The Hon. J.M. GAZZOLA, The Hon. I.K. HUNTER, The Hon. G.E. GAGO, The Hon. D.W. RIDGWAY
- The Hon. T.A. FRANKS, The Hon. R.L. BROKENSHIRE, The Hon. J.M.A. LENSINK, The Hon. S.G. WADE, The Hon. A. BRESSINGTON, The Hon. J.S. LEE, The Hon. J.A. DARLEY, The Hon. K.L. VINCENT, The Hon. B.V. FINNIGAN, The Hon. R.I. LUCAS, The Hon. J.S.L. DAWKINS, The President, The Hon. M. PARNELL
-
- 2010-11-25
- Consent to Medical Treatment and Palliative Care (Parental Consent) Amendment Bill
-
Consent to Medical Treatment and Palliative Care (Termination of Pregnancy) Amendment Bill
-
Constitution (Government Advertising) Amendment Bill
- Constitution (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Construction Industry Training Fund
- Consumer Affairs Questions
-
Consumer Protection
-
Consumer Protection, Regional Monitoring
-
Contact Sports
-
Contamination Notification Protocols
-
Controlled Substances (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- 2010-07-20
- 2010-09-16
- 2010-09-28
-
2010-09-30
- 2010-10-26
-
Controlled Substances (Offences Relating to Instructions) Amendment Bill
-
Controlled Substances (Simple Cannabis Offences) Amendment Bill
-
Controlled Substances (Therapeutic Goods and Other Matters) Amendment Bill
- Controlled Substances Act (Offences Relating to Instructions) Amendment Bill
- Cooper Basin Gas Project
- Coorong and South-East Shacks
-
Copper Coast District Council
- Coroner's Annual Report
-
Coroners (Recommendations) Amendment Bill
-
Coroners (Reportable Death) Amendment Bill
-
Corporations (Commonwealth Powers) (Termination Day) Amendment Bill
-
Correctional Services
-
Correctional Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- 2011-10-19
- 2011-10-20
- 2011-11-08
- 2011-11-10
- 2011-11-23
-
2011-11-30
- 2011-12-01
-
Correctional Services Department
-
Correctional Services, People with Disabilities
- Corruption, Local Government
- Cossey Review
-
Council Cameras
-
2011-02-24
-
- Council for International Trade and Commerce South Australia
-
Country Fire Service
-
Country Health Services
-
Country Press SA Awards
-
Court Delays
-
2010-06-24
- 2010-09-14
-
-
Court Facilities
-
2011-10-20
- 2011-11-09
-
- Court Statistics
- Courts Administration Authority
-
Credit (Commonwealth Powers) Bill
-
Credit (Transitional Arrangements) Bill
- Crime and Public Safety
- Criminal Arrest Warrants
-
Criminal Assets Confiscation (Prescribed Drug Offenders) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Cases Review Commission
-
Criminal Cases Review Commission Bill
-
Criminal Intelligence
- Criminal Investigation (Covert Operations) Act
- Criminal Law (Sentencing) (Mandatory Imprisonment of Child Sex Offenders) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Law (Sentencing) (Sentencing Considerations) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Law (Sentencing) (Sentencing Powers of Magistrates Court) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Child Pornography) Amendment
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Child Pornography) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Looting) Amendment Bill
- Cross-Border Justice Act
- Cruise Liners
- Cundell, Capt. R.G.
- Customer Service
-
D
- Darwin Defenders
- Daylight Saving
-
Deep Exploration Technology
-
2010-11-09
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Deepak Fertilisers and Petrochemicals Corporation Limited
- Departmental Reorganisation
-
Desalination Plant
-
2010-11-09
-
2010-11-10
-
2011-02-09
- 2011-07-29
-
2011-10-19
-
- Desalination Plant Fatality
-
Desalination Plant Project
- 2010-10-27
-
2010-11-24
-
Development (Advisory Committee Advice) Amendment Bill
-
Development (Building Rules Consent—Disability Access) Amendment Bill
- Development (Crown Development) Amendment Bill
- Development (Principles of Development Control—Mining Operations—Flinders) Amendment Bill
- Development Act
-
Development Act Regulations
- Development Approvals
- Development Codes and Standards
- Development Planning
-
Disability (Mandatory Reporting) Bill
- Disability Access
-
Disability Advocacy Services
-
Disability Carers
-
Disability Data
- Disability Employment Services Deed
-
Disability Equipment and Services
-
Disability Pension
- Disability Reform
-
Disability SA Client Trust Account
- Disability Sector Awards
-
Disability Self-Managed Funding
-
Disability Services
-
Disability Services Act
-
Disability Vacation Care
- Disability Works Australia
-
Disability, Unmet Needs
- Disabled Inpatients
- Disadvantaged Youth
- Discover Australia
- Diversity@Work Awards
-
Dock 1 Redevelopment
-
2010-11-09
-
- Dog Management
-
Domestic Violence
- 2010-05-06
- 2010-11-11
- 2010-11-25
- 2011-02-09
-
2011-03-22
- 2011-06-08
-
2011-07-07
-
2011-07-27
-
Matters of Interest (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
-
Don't Cross the Line
- 2010-06-22
- 2010-06-23
-
2010-06-29
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2010-09-16
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2011-04-07
- 2011-06-23
- Draft Water Industry Bill
- Dragon Boat Festival
-
Drink Safe Precinct Trial
- Drink Spiking
- Driver's Licences
- Drought Recovery Program
- Drug Addicted Babies
-
Drug Paraphernalia
-
Dubbo
-
2010-06-30
-
- Duck and Quail Shooting
- Dunstan, Sir Donald
-
E
- E
- Earthquake and Tsunami, Japan
- Easling Judgement Costs
-
Eastern Mount Lofty Ranges Draft Water Allocation Plan
-
Eating Disorder Services
-
Eating Disorder Unit
-
2011-02-09
- 2011-04-05
- 2011-09-14
-
-
Education (Closure and Amalgamation of Government Schools) Amendment Bill
- Education and Care Services National Law Act
-
Education and Early Childhood Services (Registration and Standards) Bill
- 2011-10-19
- 2011-11-08
-
2011-11-10
- 2011-11-22
- 2011-11-23
- Education Dispute
-
Edwardstown Groundwater Contamination
- 2011-02-23
-
2011-02-24
-
2011-09-13
-
Answers to Questions (2)
-
- Elective Surgery
-
Electoral (Cost of By-Elections) Amendment Bill
-
Electoral (Publication of Electoral Material) Amendment Bill
- Electoral (Voting Age) Amendment Bill
-
Electoral (Voting) Amendment Bill
- Electoral Act
-
Electoral Process
- Electrical Appliance Safety
-
Electrical Products (Energy Products) Amendment Bill
-
Electricity (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- 2011-05-19
- 2011-06-07
- 2011-06-09
- 2011-06-22
-
2011-06-23
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2011-07-06
- Electricity (Renewable Energy) Amendment Bill
-
Electricity Prices, Coober Pedy
-
Electronic Transactions (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Ellis, Mr B.
- Emergency Services Computer Aided Dispatch System
- Employment Figures
-
Energy Efficiency Ratings
- 2010-05-06
- 2010-07-20
-
2010-09-15
- Energy-Saving Light Globes
- Enterprise Zone Fund
-
Environment and Natural Resources Department
-
Environment Protection (Access to Information) Amendment Bill
- Environment Protection (Right to Farm) Amendment Bill
-
Environment, Resources and Development Committee
- Environment, Resources and Development Committee: Annual Report
-
Equal Opportunity Commission
- Equality Marriage Bill
- Euthanasia and Palliative Care
- Evans, Mr C.
- Every Generation Positive Ageing Awards
-
Evidence (Discreditable Conduct) Amendment Bill
-
Evidence (Identification) Amendment Bill
-
Evidence Act Review
- 2011-05-17
-
2011-09-13
- 2011-11-30
-
Expect Respect Program
-
2010-10-26
-
- Eyre Peninsula
-
EzyReg
-
F
- Facilities Fund
-
Fair Trade Certified Chocolate
- Fair Work System
- Families and Communities Report
-
Families SA
-
Family and Community Development Program
- 2011-05-03
- 2011-09-14
-
2011-09-28
- 2011-10-19
-
Family Relationships (Parentage) Amendment Bill
-
Family Safety Framework
- Far North Regional Development
-
Fast Food Labelling
- Fathers
- Federal Leader of the Opposition
- Federated Gas Employees Industrial Union
- Female Genital Mutilation
-
Female Legal Practitioners
- Fenner, Prof. F.
- Final Stages
-
Financial Advice Changes
- Financial Assistance Grants
- Fines Payment Unit
- Firearms Act
- Firearms Prohibition Orders
- Firefighting Tanks
-
First Home Owners Grant
- Fisheries Compliance
-
Fisheries Management Act
-
2011-11-23
-
Motions (2)
-
-
- Fishing Possession Limits
- Flood Damage
- Flood Insurance
- Flood Levy
- Flood Management
- Flood Warnings
- Food Producers and Landowners Action Group of South Australia
- Food Production
- Food Security and Sustainability
- Food Waste
- Foodbank SA
- Foreign Workers
-
ForestrySA
- 2010-11-11
-
2011-02-08
- 2011-03-10
- 2011-03-23
- 2011-04-06
- 2011-04-07
- 2011-05-03
-
2011-05-04
-
2011-11-08
-
2011-11-23
- Forklift Safety
-
Foster Care
- Franklin Harbour District Council
-
Freedom of Information
-
2011-05-18
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2011-11-29
- 2011-12-01
-
-
Freedom of Information Act
- Freight Trains
- Frome Park
-
G
-
Gambling and Racing Ministries
-
2011-11-22
-
-
Gambling Sector Reform
-
2011-02-24
- 2011-03-08
- 2011-03-22
- 2011-05-17
- 2011-06-07
-
-
Gaming Machines
- 2011-02-08
-
2011-02-09
- 2011-02-10
-
Gaming Machines (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Gateways Training Camp
-
Gawler Council
-
2011-03-09
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2011-03-24
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Gawler East Development
-
2010-11-25
-
Personal Explanation (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
-
-
Gawler Racecourse
- Gawler Substitute Bus Service
- Gender Equity, Local Government
- Gender Identity
- Gene Patents
- Geothermal Energy Exploration
- Gepps Cross Intersection
- Gestational Surrogacy
- Gifford, Mr Dun
-
Gilbert, Mr R.
- Giorno Del Ricordo
- Gladstone
- Glenside Hospital
- Glenside Hospital Redevelopment
- Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation
- Global SHARE Markets
-
Globe Derby Park
-
Government Appointments
- Government Buildings
-
Government Business
-
2011-05-03
-
2011-05-04
-
Matters of Interest (1)
-
Question Time (7)
-
-
- Government Contact Centre Awards
- Government Media Releases
-
Government Performance
-
Government Waste
- Governor's Commission
- Governor's Speech
- Goyder Institute for Water Research
- Graffiti Control (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Grain Industry
-
Grandparents for Grandchildren
- Greater Edinburgh Parks
- Green Grid Plan
- Griffiths, Mr D.c.
- Group Buying Websites
-
-
H
-
Hampstead Rehabilitation Centre
- Hanson Road
- Harbison, Mr M.
-
Health and Community Services Complaints (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Health and Community Services Complaints Commissioner
- Health and Hospital Reforms
- Health Care (Country Health Guarantee) Amendment Bill
-
Health Care for Immigrants
- Health Performance Council
-
Health Practitioner Regulation National Law (South Australia) Bill
- 2010-05-26
- 2010-06-22
- 2010-06-23
-
2010-06-24
-
2010-06-29
- 2010-07-20
-
Health Services Charitable Gifts Bill
- 2011-02-23
-
2011-03-08
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2011-03-10
- 2011-03-22
- 2011-05-05
- 2011-05-17
- 2011-06-07
-
Hearing Loops
-
Heritage
-
2011-02-23
-
- High Court Decision, Totani
- High-Risk Work
-
Highbury Aqueduct Land
-
2010-09-16
- 2010-11-11
-
- Holiday Explorers Travel Service
- Holloway, Hon. P.
- Home Birthing
-
Home Insulation Scheme
-
2010-05-11
- 2010-06-24
-
2011-02-08
- 2011-02-09
-
2011-05-17
-
- Homelessness
- Homeopathy
- Homophobia, Africa
-
Horseracing
-
Hospital Parking
- 2011-09-14
-
2011-09-15
- 2011-09-29
-
2011-10-20
-
Petitions (2)
-
- 2011-11-24
- Hospital Parking Fees
- House Building and Renovating
- Housing and Employment Land Supply Program
- Housing SA Access Project
- Housing SA Anniversary
-
Housing SA Annual Report
-
2011-11-29
-
- Housing SA Hot-Water Systems
-
Housing SA Rental Increases
-
Housing SA Solar Credits Scheme
-
2011-11-29
-
-
Housing SA Water Policy
- Housing Trust Regulations
- How-To-Vote Cards
-
Human Rights, Burma
- Hunt, Mr D.
-
-
I
- Ifould Street Housing Development
-
Illicit Drug Use
- 2010-09-29
- 2011-02-10
-
2011-02-24
-
Independent Commission Against Corruption
-
Independent Commission Against Corruption Bill
-
Independent Gambling Authority Code of Practice Review
-
2011-10-18
-
-
Independent Medical Examiners
- Independent Service Stations
- Indigenous Consumer Strategy
- Indigenous Women, Business Advice
- Industrial Manslaughter Legislation
-
Injured Worker Suicide
-
2011-05-04
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Innamincka Regional Reserve
- 2010-11-23
-
2010-11-25
-
Integrated Design Commissioner
- Integrated Design Strategy
-
Integrated Waste Strategy
-
2010-10-28
-
Questions & Answers (2)
-
-
2010-10-28
-
-
International Day Against Homophobia
- 2011-05-04
-
2011-05-17
-
2011-09-15
-
Answers to Questions (2)
-
-
International Day of People with Disability
-
2011-11-30
-
- International Humanitarian Law
- International Safe Communities
-
International Students
-
International Women's Day
- International Workers Memorial Day
- International Workers' Day
- International Year of Youth
- Internet Safety
- Inverbrackie Detention Facility
- Iron Knob
-
Islington Development Plan Amendment
- Italian Heritage
- Italo-Australian Aged Care
-
J
- Jacobs, Mr S.J.
- Johnston, Mr E.f.
-
Joint Parliamentary Service Committee
- Junior Youth Empowerment Program
-
Justice for the Disabled
-
Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation
-
K
- Kandelaars, Hon. G.a.
- Kangaroo Island
- Kangaroo Island Boat Facilities
-
Kangaroo Island Development
-
2011-07-26
-
Personal Explanation (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Kangaroo Island Foreshores
- Kangaroo Island Helicopter Flights
- Kangaroo Island Local Government Land
- Kangaroo Island, Cats
- Kangaroo Island, Dogs
- Keeping Them Safe on the Adelaide Plains Workshop
- Keith and District Hospital
- Kemppainen, Ms Pirjo
- Kent Town Development
- Kimberly-Clark Australia
- King, Hon. L.J.
- Klemzig Groundwater Testing
- Korean War
-
L
-
Labor Government
- Labor Party
- Labor Party Infighting
-
Labor Party Leadership
- Land Management Corporation
- Land Tax
-
Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- 2010-05-26
- 2010-05-27
- 2010-06-22
- 2010-06-23
- 2010-06-24
-
2010-06-30
- 2010-07-20
- Land Tax Concessions
-
Landfill
- Le Cordon Bleu Australia
- Le Cornu Site
-
Lee, Prof. L.
-
LeFevre Peninsula
- Legal Practitioners
-
Legal Services Commission (Charges on Land) Amendment Bill
- Legislative Council
- Legislative Council Vacancy
-
Legislative Review Committee
- 2010-05-06
- 2010-05-26
- 2010-06-23
- 2010-06-30
- 2010-07-21
- 2010-09-15
- 2010-09-29
- 2010-10-27
- 2010-11-09
- 2010-11-10
- 2010-11-24
- 2011-02-09
- 2011-02-23
- 2011-03-09
- 2011-03-23
- 2011-04-06
- 2011-05-04
- 2011-05-18
- 2011-06-08
- 2011-06-22
- 2011-06-23
- 2011-07-06
- 2011-07-27
- 2011-09-13
- 2011-09-14
- 2011-09-28
- 2011-10-18
- 2011-10-19
- 2011-11-09
- 2011-11-22
- 2011-11-23
- 2011-11-30
-
Legislative Review Committee: Criminal Intelligence
-
Legislative Review Committee: Inquiry into Stillbirths
-
Legislative Review Committee: Subordinate Legislation Act
- Legislative Review Committee: Victim Impact Statements
- Lego Exhibitions
- Leigh Creek Copper Mine
- Levy, Hon. J.A.W.
- Library Committee
- Life Education Australia
- Liquid Licorice
-
Liquor Licensing
- 2010-05-25
-
2010-07-21
- 2010-10-14
-
2011-03-23
-
2011-04-06
- 2011-06-21
- 2011-09-13
- 2011-11-10
-
Liquor Licensing (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Liquor Licensing Act
- Liquor Licensing Code of Practice
-
Little Corellas
- Liu, Mr X.
- Live Animal Exports
- Live Odds Betting
- Livestock (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Livestock Act
-
Livestock Slaughter
-
2011-11-08
-
2011-11-10
-
Ministerial Statement (1)
-
Personal Explanation (1)
-
-
- Local Business Awards
- Local Government
- Local Government (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Local Government (Model By-Laws) Amendment Bill
- Local Government Allowances
-
Local Government Association
-
2011-09-15
-
-
Local Government Boundary Adjustments
- Local Government By-Laws
-
Local Government Code of Conduct
-
Local Government Disaster Fund
-
Local Government Elections
- 2010-11-10
- 2010-11-11
-
2010-11-24
-
Matters of Interest (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2011-02-10
- 2011-09-14
- Local Government Ethics
-
Local Government Grants Commission Funding
- Local Government Managers Association Leadership Excellence Awards
- Local Government Managers Australia
-
Local Government Ministers Forum
-
2011-11-24
-
- Local Government Reform Fund
-
Local Government Regional Subsidiaries
-
2011-07-27
-
- Local Government, Financial Management
-
Locust Plague
- Long, Dr R.
- Lonsdale Railway Station
-
Lotteries Commission of South Australia
- Lyell McEwin Hospital Colonoscope
- Lymphoedema Assessment Clinic
-
-
M
- Macken, Mr M.
- Madeley, Mr D.
- Magill Training Centre
- Making Changes Prisoner Rehabilitation Program
- Male-Dominated Industries
- Mandatory Alcohol Interlock Conditions
-
Marathon Resources
- Marie Stopes International
-
Marine Parks
- 2011-02-09
- 2011-02-23
-
2011-03-23
-
Motions (2)
-
-
2011-04-05
- 2011-04-06
- 2011-05-18
- 2011-09-13
-
2011-11-08
- 2011-11-22
- 2011-11-29
-
2011-11-30
-
Matters of Interest (1)
-
Motions (1)
-
- 2011-12-01
-
Marine Parks (Parliamentary Scrutiny) Amendment Bill
- Marleston TAFE
-
Marriage Equality Bill
-
Mary MacKillop
- Mary MacKillop Foundation
- Matters, Muriel
- Mcgee, Mr Eugene
- Mcmahon, Ms L.
- Media, Misreporting
-
Media, President's Instruction
- Member of Parliament, Criminal Charges
- Member, Change of Name
- Member, New
- Member's Comments
- Members, New and Former
- Members, Swearing in
- Members' Behaviour
-
Members' Register of Interests
-
Members' Remarks
- Members' Travel Allowances
- Members' Travel Expenditure
- Members' Travel Provisions
-
Men in Community Program
- Mental Health
-
Mental Health (Repeal of Harbouring Offence) Amendment Bill
- Mental Health Week
- Mental Illness and Intellectual Disability Treatment
-
Methadone Treatment Programs
- Mifepristone
- Migrants and International Student Workers
- Militsis, Mr V.
-
Milk Pricing
-
Minda Incorporated
-
2010-05-12
- 2010-06-22
-
- Mine Safety
-
Mineral Exploration
-
Mining (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- 2010-05-11
-
2010-06-24
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2010-07-01
- 2010-07-20
-
2010-07-22
- 2010-09-14
- 2010-10-28
- 2010-10-28
- 2010-11-09
- 2010-11-23
-
Mining (Royalties) Amendment Bill
-
Mining Development
-
Mining Industry
- 2010-11-11
-
2010-11-24
-
Mining Royalties
-
Mining Super Tax
-
2010-05-06
-
2010-05-11
-
Ministerial Statement (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2010-05-25
-
- Mining, McLaren Vale and Barossa Valley
-
Mining, Regional Development
-
2011-09-29
-
- Minister for State/Local Government Relations
-
Minister's Overseas Trip
-
2010-07-01
-
- Minister's Remarks
- Minister's State/Local Government Forum
-
Ministerial Appointments
- 2011-06-07
-
2011-06-09
-
2011-06-22
-
Matters of Interest (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2011-06-23
- Ministerial Council on Consumer Affairs
-
Ministerial Offices
- Ministerial Responsibilities
-
Ministerial Staff
-
Ministerial Travel
-
2011-03-08
-
-
Mobility Scooter Safety
- Moomba Gas Fields
- Morrison, Mr R.
- Motivation Australia
- Motor Vehicle Inspections
- Motor Vehicle Registration Database
- Motor Vehicle Registration Fees
- Motor Vehicle Stamp Duty
-
Motor Vehicles (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Motor Vehicles (Third Party Insurance) Amendment Bill
-
Mount Barker Development Plan Amendment
- Mount Compass Area School
-
Mount Gambier
- Mount Torrens Gold Battery
-
Mouse Plague
- 2011-05-17
-
2011-07-06
- 2011-07-07
- Moveable Signs
-
Mullighan Inquiry Recommendations
- Mullighan, Mr E.p.
- Multicultural Communities
- Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
- Murray Bridge Development Plan Amendment
-
Murray River Water Allocations
-
Murray-Darling Basin
-
Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- My Tehran for Sale
-
N
- NAIDOC Week
- Nanoparticles
-
National Disability Insurance Scheme
- 2011-02-23
- 2011-03-23
-
2011-11-30
-
Matters of Interest (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
-
National Energy Retail Law (South Australia) Bill
- National Occupational Health and Safety Laws
-
National Plan to Reduce Violence Against Women and Their Children
-
2011-02-23
- 2011-05-19
- 2011-07-06
-
- National Youth Week
-
Native Vegetation (Application of Act) Amendment Bill
-
Native Vegetation (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Natural Disaster Scams
-
Natural Resources Committee
- Natural Resources Committee: Adelaide and Mount Lofty Ranges Natural Resources Management Region Fact Finding Visit
-
Natural Resources Committee: Adelaide Desalination Plant Fact Finding Visit
-
Natural Resources Committee: Annual Report
-
Natural Resources Committee: Bushfire Inquiry
-
Natural Resources Committee: Invasive Species Inquiry
- Natural Resources Committee: Levy Proposals 2010-11
- Natural Resources Committee: Levy Proposals 2011-12
-
Natural Resources Committee: Little Penguins
- Natural Resources Committee: South Australian Arid Lands Natural Resources Management Board Region Fact Finding Visit
-
Natural Resources Committee: Upper South-East Dryland Salinity and Flood Management Act Report
-
Natural Resources Management (Commercial Forests) Amendment Bill
-
Natural Resources Management (Review) Amendment Bill
-
New Migrants
-
New Ministry
- New Prime Minister
- New Zealand Mining Disaster
- Ngarrindjeri People
- No Strings Attached Theatre of Disability
-
Non-Government Organisation Community Sector
- Nonno-Nipote Project
- Northern Advanced Manufacturing Industry Group
- Northern Connections Office
- Northern Expressway Bridges
- Northern Suburbs Bus Routes
-
Novita Children's Services
- Nuclear Waste
-
Nurses and Midwives Enterprise Agreement
-
2011-02-22
- 2011-02-24
-
-
O
- O'neil, Mr Allen
- Oaklands-Noarlunga Substitute Bus Service
- Occupational Health and Safety Laws
- Occupational Health, Safety and Welfare (Industrial Manslaughter) Amendment Bill
- Occupational Health, Safety and Welfare Grants
-
Occupational Licensing National Law (South Australia) Bill
-
Office for Women
-
2010-09-28
-
-
Office of Consumer and Business Affairs
-
2011-03-09
-
Matters of Interest (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2011-05-03
-
2011-05-05
-
- Office of Consumer and Business Services
-
Office of the Liquor and Gambling Commissioner
-
2010-09-16
-
- Offshore Oil Rig Licensing
-
Olympic Dam
-
Olympic Dam Expansion
- 2011-07-06
- 2011-07-27
- 2011-07-29
-
2011-09-14
-
Motions (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2011-12-01
-
One and All
-
Opal Fuel
-
Open Space Funding
-
Operation Flinders Foundation
- Organised Crime Legislation
- Otago Road, Wallaroo
- Outback Areas Trust
-
Outback Communities Authority
- Overseas Travel Expenses
- OzAsia Festival
-
OzHarvest
-
P
-
Papers
- 2010-05-06
- 2010-05-11
- 2010-05-12
- 2010-05-13
- 2010-05-25
- 2010-05-26
- 2010-06-22
- 2010-06-23
- 2010-06-29
- 2010-06-30
- 2010-07-01
- 2010-07-20
- 2010-07-21
- 2010-07-22
- 2010-09-14
- 2010-09-15
- 2010-09-16
- 2010-09-28
- 2010-09-29
- 2010-09-30
- 2010-10-14
- 2010-10-26
- 2010-10-27
- 2010-10-28
- 2010-10-28
- 2010-10-29
- 2010-11-09
- 2010-11-10
- 2010-11-11
- 2010-11-23
- 2010-11-24
- 2010-11-25
- 2011-02-08
- 2011-02-09
- 2011-02-10
- 2011-02-22
- 2011-02-24
- 2011-03-08
- 2011-03-22
- 2011-03-23
- 2011-03-24
- 2011-04-05
- 2011-05-03
- 2011-05-05
- 2011-05-17
- 2011-05-18
- 2011-06-07
- 2011-06-08
-
2011-06-09
- 2011-06-21
- 2011-06-23
- 2011-07-06
- 2011-07-26
- 2011-07-28
- 2011-09-13
- 2011-09-15
- 2011-09-27
- 2011-09-28
- 2011-09-29
- 2011-10-18
- 2011-10-19
- 2011-10-20
- 2011-11-08
- 2011-11-09
- 2011-11-10
- 2011-11-22
- 2011-11-23
- 2011-11-24
- 2011-12-01
- Park Rangers
- Parking Fines
-
Parks Community Centre
-
2010-09-28
- 2010-10-14
- 2011-02-08
- 2011-04-07
- 2011-05-05
-
2011-06-23
-
Ministerial Statement (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2011-09-15
- 2011-09-29
-
- Parks Community Centre (Preservation of Land and Services) Bill
- Parliamentary
- Parliamentary Committee on
-
Parliamentary Committee on Occupational Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation
- Parliamentary Committee on Occupational Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation: Annual Report 2010-11
-
Parliamentary Committees (Membership of Committees) Amendment Bill
-
Parliamentary Internet Filter
-
2011-04-06
-
- Parliamentary Procedure
- Parliamentary Remuneration (Basic Salary Determinations) Amendment Bill
-
Parliamentary Remuneration (Basic Salary) Amendment Bill
-
2011-11-23
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2011-11-29
-
- Parliamentary Remuneration Act
- Parliamentary Secretary
-
Parliamentary Sitting Hours
-
2011-09-29
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2011-12-01
-
- Parliamentary Sittings
- Passing the Baton
- Patterson, Ms M.
- Pay Equity
- Payday Lenders
- Payroll Tax
-
Payroll Tax (Nexus) Amendment Bill
- PEER VEET
- Penola
-
Pensioners
- People with Disabilities, Sexual Abuse
-
Permaculture Education Zone
- Personal Data
- Personal Injury Scholarship Program
- Pet Shop Sales
- Peterborough Council Disaster Fund
- Petition for Mercy Process
- Petroleum Industry
-
Phosphate-Free Laundry Detergents
- Pimp Pad
- Place
- Planning and Local Government Department
- Planning and Local Government Department Consultancies
- Planning Collaboration
- Plastic Shopping Bags
-
Plumbing Industry Regulation
-
2010-06-23
- 2010-07-22
- 2010-09-16
- 2011-03-09
-
-
Point Lowly
- 2010-05-11
- 2010-09-16
-
2011-07-06
- Police Association Conference
-
Police Attendance Procedure
-
2010-09-15
-
Ministerial Statement (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2010-10-29
-
- Police Call Centre
- Police Complaints Authority
- Police Headquarters
- Police Investigations
-
Police Minister, Assault
- 2011-05-17
-
2011-05-19
- Police Numbers
- Police Resourcing
- Police Video Cameras
- Police, Impounded Vehicles
- Police, Shooting Incident
- Polish Air Tragedy
- Pollution Monitoring
-
Population Growth
-
2011-05-04
-
-
Population Strategy
-
Population Targets
-
Port Adelaide Precinct
-
2011-12-01
-
-
Port Augusta and Davenport Aboriginal Communities
- Port Augusta, Moveable Signs
- Port Elliot Show
- Port Hughes Marina
-
Port Lincoln Airport
- Port Lincoln Waste Dump
- Premier Rann
- Premier Staff Payouts
- Premier's Awards
-
Premier's Council for Women
- Premier's Statements
- President's Casting Vote
- Pretty, Mr G.
-
Prince Alfred College Incorporation (Variation of Constitution) Amendment Bill
-
Printer Cartridge Scam
-
Printer Cartridges
-
2011-09-27
-
-
Printing Committee
- Prisoner Rehabilitation
-
Prisons, Drug Use
- Private Finance Initiatives
- Privatisation
- Problem Gambling
-
Producer's Liquor Licences
-
2011-09-27
-
-
Product Safety
-
Professional Development Research Scholarships
-
Professional Standards (Mutual Recognition) Amendment Bill
- Prominent Hill
-
Property Identification Codes
-
Prorogation of Parliament
-
2011-11-23
-
- Prospect Road Speed Limits
-
Provincial Cities Association
-
2011-10-19
-
- Pseudoephedrine Sales
- Public Health Forum
-
Public Holidays
-
2011-11-10
-
-
Public Integrity
- Public Sector Employment
-
Public Sector Leave Entitlements
-
2011-02-10
-
Ministerial Statement (1)
-
Question Time (3)
-
-
-
Public Sector Management
-
2010-09-28
-
-
Public Sector Performance Commission
-
2010-06-23
-
2010-06-29
-
-
Public Service Employees
- Public Service Executives
- Public Spaces
- Public Transport
-
Public Transport, Adelaide Hills
- Public Trustee
-
Puppy Factories
-
-
Q
-
Queen's Birthday Honours List
- Questions Without Notice
- Quorn Ambulance Station
-
-
R
-
Radiation Protection and Control (Licences and Registration) Amendment Bill
-
Radioactive Waste
-
Rail Commissioner (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Rail Revitalisation
-
Rail Safety (Safety Coordination) Amendment Bill
-
Railways (Operations and Access) (Access Regime Review) Amendment Bill
-
Railways (Operations and Access) (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Railways (Operations and Access)(access Regime Review) Amendment Bill
- Rann Government
-
Rann, Hon. M.d.
- Rape Investigation
- Raytheon
- ReachOut
- Real Estate Laws
-
Real Estate Licensing
- 2011-05-04
-
2011-05-19
-
Question Time (2)
-
- Reconciliation Week
- Recovery and Return to Work Awards
-
Recreation Grounds (Regulations) (Penalties) Amendment Bill
- Refugee Week
- Regional Airlines
- Regional Communities
-
Regional Communities Consultative Council
-
2011-03-23
-
2011-05-03
- 2011-09-15
-
-
Regional Coordination Networks
-
2011-03-09
- 2011-06-22
-
-
Regional Councils
-
Regional Development
-
2011-05-05
-
2011-05-17
-
2011-06-21
-
2011-09-14
-
2011-09-28
-
- Regional Development Australia Adelaide Board
- Regional Development Australia Boards
- Regional Development Australia Fund
-
Regional Development Infrastructure Fund
- Regional Flood Management
- Regional Funding
- Regional Health Services
- Regional Planning
- Regional South Australia
-
Regional Subsidiaries
- 2010-06-22
-
2010-09-29
- 2011-02-24
- 2011-06-07
-
Regional Tourism
- Regulated Trees
-
Remote Areas Energy Supplies Scheme
- 2011-03-22
- 2011-03-23
-
2011-05-18
-
Matters of Interest (2)
-
- Remote Areas Energy Supply Scheme
- Renewable Energy Target
- Repatriation General Hospital
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Residential Development
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Residential Energy Efficiency Scheme
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2010-09-15
- 2010-09-28
- 2011-09-29
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- Residential Land Release
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Residential Tenancies
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Residential Tenancies Tribunal
- 2011-04-05
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2011-05-05
- 2011-06-21
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Responsible Alcohol Service
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2010-05-13
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Question Time (2)
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- 2010-10-29
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- Retail Sector
- Retail Workers
- Return to Work Fund
- Right to Farm Bill
- Rigney, Mr M.
- Rigney, Mr M. and Johnston, Mr E.f.
- Ritual Slaughter
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Riverbank Precinct
- Riverland Regional Prospectus
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Riverland Storm Damage
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2011-11-24
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Riverland Sustainable Futures Fund
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2011-03-22
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2011-03-24
- 2011-06-07
- 2011-09-13
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- 2011-10-19
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2011-10-20
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- Riverland Tourism
- Riverland Wine Industry
- Road Funding
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Road Traffic (Owner Offences) Amendment Bill
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Road Traffic (Red Light Offences) Amendment Bill
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Road Traffic (Use of Test and Analysis Results) Amendment Bill
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Roadside Vegetation
- Robe, Cats
- Robe, Dogs
- Robe, Moveable Signs
- Rodda, Hon. W.A.
- Rostrum Voice of Youth
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Roxby Downs (Indenture Ratification) (Amendment of Indenture) Amendment Bill
- 2011-10-19
- 2011-11-10
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2011-11-22
- 2011-11-23
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2011-11-24
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2011-11-29
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Royal Adelaide Hospital
- 2010-05-25
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2011-04-07
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Ministerial Statement (1)
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Question Time (1)
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2011-05-04
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Question Time (2)
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2011-06-08
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Question Time (7)
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- 2011-06-09
- 2011-09-15
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2011-09-29
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Answers to Questions (2)
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- 2011-10-19
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Royal Adelaide Show
- 2010-09-14
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2011-09-14
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Royal Zoological Society of South Australia
- RSPCA Investigation
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Rundle Mall
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2011-06-22
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Motions (2)
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- 2011-07-29
- 2011-09-14
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2011-09-28
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2011-09-29
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2011-10-18
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- Rural Accommodation
- Rural Agent Program
- Rural Doctors Association of South Australia
- Rural Property Addresses
- Rural Women's Awards
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SA Lotteries
- 2010-10-28
- 2010-10-28
- 2010-10-29
- 2010-11-10
- 2010-11-23
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2011-02-23
- 2011-09-29
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SA Water
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Safe Drinking Water Bill
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Safe Work Awards
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Safe Work Week
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SafeWork SA
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2010-05-26
- 2010-06-30
- 2010-11-09
- 2010-11-10
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2011-03-23
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2011-07-06
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2011-09-15
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- Salary Sacrificing
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Same-Sex Discrimination
- 2011-06-08
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2011-07-06
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Same-Sex Marriage
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Samuell, Dr D.
- Sängerfest
- Santos Stadium
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Save the River Murray Levy
- Schneider, Prof. S.
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School Amalgamations
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School Bus Contracts
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- School Retention Rates
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School Violence and Bullying
- Schoolies Week
- Schools Auction Idol Competition
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Seaford Heights Development
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2010-07-21
- 2010-07-22
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2010-09-15
- 2010-10-14
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- 2010-11-11
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- Seaman, Mr G.F.
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Second Reading
- Second-Hand Vehicles
- Security Camera Footage
- Security of Payment Legislation
- Select Committee on Access to and Interaction with the South Australian Justice System for People with Disabilities
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Select Committee on Department of Correctional Services
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Select Committee on Disability Services Funding
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Select Committee on Harvesting Rights in ForestrySA Plantation Estates
- 2011-07-27
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- 2011-09-13
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2011-11-23
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Parliamentary Committees (2)
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- 2011-11-30
- Select Committee on Land Uses on LeFevre Peninsula
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Select Committee on Lonsdale-Based Adelaide Desalination Plant
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Select Committee on Marine Parks in South Australia
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Select Committee on Matters Related to the General Election of 20 March 2010
- Select Committee on School Bus Contracts
- Select Committee on the Inquiry into Corporation of the City of Burnside
- Sentencing
- Seret, Mrs Claire
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Service SA
- 2011-02-10
- 2011-05-04
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2011-05-18
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2011-05-19
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2011-06-08
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- Service SA, Marion
- Service SA, Tranmere
- Sessional Committees
- Sex Discrimination
- Sex Trafficking
- Sexist and Derogatory Language
- Sexualisation of Children
- She Couldn't Say Goodbye
- SHine SA
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Shop Trading Hours
- 2010-09-29
- 2011-03-22
- 2011-04-05
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2011-07-29
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Question Time (2)
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Significant Trees Legislation
- Significant Women of Gawler Project
- Singapore and India Mission
- Singapore Occupational Health and Safety Inspectorate
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Sittings and Business
- Skills for All
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Small Business Commissioner Bill
- 2011-09-14
- 2011-09-27
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2011-10-20
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Bills (2)
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- 2011-11-22
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Smart State Personal Computer Program
- Snapper Fishing Sustainability
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Social Development Committee
- 2010-05-06
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2010-06-30
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Parliamentary Committees (2)
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- 2011-05-17
- 2011-11-08
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Social Development Committee: Dental Services for Older South Australians
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Social Development Committee: Same-Sex Parenting
- Social Inclusion Unit
- Soft Tissue Injuries
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Solar Feed-In Tariffs
- Song of Australia
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South Australia Police
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2011-03-10
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South Australian Aquatic and Leisure Centre
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2010-06-23
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Ministerial Statement (1)
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Question Time (1)
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- 2010-07-22
- 2011-03-10
- 2011-11-24
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- South Australian Bushfire Prevention Advisory Committee
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South Australian Certificate of Education
- South Australian Food Industry
- South Australian Housing Trust (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
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South Australian Public Health Bill
- South Australian Resources and Energy Investment Conference
- South Australian Sports Institute
- South Australian Tourism Awards
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South Australian Visitor and Travel Centre
- South Australian Youth Workers Conference
- South Australians Living in Poverty
- South East South Australia Innovation and Investment Fund
- South Road
- Southern Gateway Community Church
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Southern Hairy-Nosed Wombat
- Southlink Buses
- Sovereign Wealth Fund
- Special Appeals Lotteries
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Speed Limits
- 2011-11-08
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2011-11-10
- 2011-11-24
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2011-11-30
- Spooner, Mr N.
- Sports Participation
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Sports Star of the Year Awards
- St Leonards Primary School
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Stamp Duties (Insurance) Amendment Bill
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Stamp Duties (Partnership Interests) Amendment Bill
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Standard Time (Alteration of Standard Time) Amendment Bill
- Standing Committees
- Standing Orders
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Standing Orders Committee
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Standing Orders Suspension
- 2010-05-06
- 2010-06-24
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2010-06-30
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Parliamentary Procedure (2)
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- 2010-07-22
- 2010-09-16
- 2010-10-28
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- 2010-11-10
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- 2010-11-25
- 2011-05-05
- 2011-06-08
- 2011-06-09
- 2011-07-28
- 2011-07-29
- 2011-11-30
- State Aboriginal Women's Gathering
- State Budget
- State Election
- State Finances
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State Heritage
- State Minimum Wage
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State Records Act
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2010-10-26
- 2010-11-09
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State Strategic Plan
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2011-09-15
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State/Local Government Relations
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2011-02-10
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2011-04-05
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- Status of Women
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Statutes Amendment (Arts Agencies Governance and Other Matters) Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Budget 2010) Bill
- 2010-09-30
- 2010-10-14
- 2010-10-26
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2010-10-28
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2010-10-28
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- 2010-11-10
- 2010-11-23
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Statutes Amendment (Budget 2011) Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Community and Strata Titles) Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Criminal Intelligence) Bill
- 2010-11-10
- 2010-11-23
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2010-11-25
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Bills (3)
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- 2011-03-08
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Statutes Amendment (De Facto Relationships) Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Directors' Liability) Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Driving Offences) Bill
- 2010-07-21
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2010-09-28
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2010-09-30
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Bills (2)
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- 2010-10-26
- Statutes Amendment (Drug Driving) Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Electricity and Gas—Price Determination Periods) Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Land Holding Entities and Tax Avoidance Schemes) Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Members' Benefits) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (National Energy Retail Law)
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Statutes Amendment (National Energy Retail Law) Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Personal Property Securities) Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Public Assemblies and Addresses) Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Surrogacy) Amendment Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Transport Portfolio—Penalties) Bill
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Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Australian Consumer Law) Bill
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Statutory Authorities Review Committee
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Statutory Authorities Review Committee: Annual Report
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Statutory Authorities Review Committee: Annual Report 2010-11
- Statutory Authorities Review Committee: Teachers Registration Board
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Statutory Officers Committee
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Stock Theft Squad
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Stolen Generations Reparations Tribunal Bill
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Strathmont Centre
- 2010-05-26
- 2010-09-16
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2011-04-06
- 2011-05-03
- Stroke Awareness
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Subordinate Legislation (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
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Suicide Prevention
- 2011-02-23
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2011-03-22
- 2011-05-19
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Summary Offences (Prescribed Motor Vehicles) Amendment Bill
- 2011-03-09
- 2011-03-10
- 2011-03-22
- 2011-03-24
- 2011-05-03
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2011-05-19
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Bills (2)
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- 2011-06-07
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2011-06-08
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Bills (2)
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- 2011-06-09
- 2011-06-21
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- 2011-06-23
- 2011-07-06
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- 2011-07-26
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- 2011-09-13
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- 2011-09-27
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- 2011-11-08
- 2011-11-09
- 2011-11-10
- 2011-11-22
- 2011-11-23
- 2011-11-24
- 2011-11-29
- 2011-11-30
- 2011-12-01
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Summary Offences (Tattooing, Body Piercing and Body Modification) Amendment Bill
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Summary Offences (Weapons) Amendment Bill
- Super SA Pensions
- Super Schools
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Supply Bill
- Suppression Orders
- Susheela, Dr A.K.
- Sustainable Budget Commission
- Sustainable Cities
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- Tales from the Whales and Riffs in the Cliffs
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Tasting Australia
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2011-11-09
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- Tatiara, Cats
- Tatiara, Dogs
- Teenage Runaways
- Telstra Business Women's Award
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Ternezis, Ms K.
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Terrorism (Surface Transport Security) Bill
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Thebarton Urban Forest
- Thevenard Port Facility
- Thinker in Residence
- Timor-Leste Delegation
- Tobacco Products Regulation (Further Restrictions) Amendment Bill
- Torrens House
- Torrens Island
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Torrens Island Quarantine Station
- Torrens River Footbridge
- Torrens University Australia
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Tour Down Under
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Tourism
- 2011-07-06
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2011-11-08
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Tourism, South Australia
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2011-11-24
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- Toxic Chemicals, Children's Products
- Trade and Economic Development Department Chief Executive
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Trade Union Officials
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2011-10-19
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Question Time (2)
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Traffic Police Plan
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2010-07-21
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Matters of Interest (1)
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Question Time (1)
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Training and Skills Development (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Tramline Extension
- Tramlines
- Transport Subsidy Scheme
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Travel Compensation Fund
- Treadmill Safety Warnings
- Trevorrow, Mr G.
- TRUMPS
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Trustee (Charitable Trusts) Amendment Bill
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Trustee Companies (Commonwealth Regulation) Amendment Bill
- TS Noarlunga Navy Cadet Unit
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- Umeewarra Mission and Children's Home
- Unification of Italy
- Union Hall
- Unitingcare Wesley
- Unlicensed Building Contractors
- Upper South-East Statutory Easements
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Upper Spencer Gulf
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2011-06-09
- 2011-07-27
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2011-07-29
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Uranium Exports
- Urban Development and Planning
- Urban Renewal
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Valedictories
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Victims of Crime (Compensation Limits) Amendment Bill
- Victor Harbor, Moveable Signs
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Victoria Square
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2010-05-12
- 2010-05-13
- 2010-11-10
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- Victorian Bushfires Royal Commission
- Vietnamese Navy Veterans' Association of South Australia Inc.
- Villers-Bretonneux
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Visitors
- Vocational Education and Training (Commonwealth Powers) Bill
- Vocational Education and Training Services
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Voluntary Euthanasia
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Waste and Landfill Policies
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Waste Levy
- Water Allocation Plans
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Water Fluoridation
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2010-09-14
- 2010-09-29
- 2010-09-30
- 2010-10-28
- 2010-10-28
- 2010-11-09
- 2010-11-10
- 2010-11-11
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2011-02-09
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Answers to Questions (2)
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Question Time (1)
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- 2011-06-08
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2011-06-22
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- Water Industry Act
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Water Industry Bill
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Water Pricing
- Water Projects
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Water Rates
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2010-06-22
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2010-09-16
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Answers to Questions (2)
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- Water Recycling
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Water Supply
- Water Trading Laws
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Weapons Amnesty
- Webb, Mr M.
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Weight Disorder Unit
- Wellington Weir
- West Terrace Cemetery
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Western Mount Lofty Ranges Draft Water Allocation Plan
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White Ribbon Day
- 2010-09-16
- 2010-09-30
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2010-11-25
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2011-11-24
- Whyalla
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Whyalla Mineral Exploration
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Whyalla Rare Earths Complex
- Wild N Fresh Pty Ltd
- Willaston, Redbanks and Main North Roads
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Willunga Basin
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2010-10-28
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Petitions (1)
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Questions & Answers (2)
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2010-10-28
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Petitions (1)
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Question Time (2)
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Willunga Basin Protection Bill
- Wilson, Mr G.I.
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Wind Energy Development
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2011-07-26
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- Windlass, Mr K.
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Women at Work Initiative
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Women Hold Up Half the Sky Award
- Women in Business and Regional Development
- Women in Hotels Conference
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Women in Leadership
- Women in Leadership, International Students
- Women in Local Government
- Women Influencing Defence and Resources Industries Program
- Women on Boards and Committees
- Women's Christian Temperance Union
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Women's Education
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2011-11-09
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Women's Honour Roll
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2010-09-14
- 2011-06-21
- 2011-11-23
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Women's Information Service
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Women's Studies Resource Centre
- 2010-09-16
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2010-11-11
- 2011-06-22
- Woodville West Urban Renewal Project
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Woomera Prohibited Area
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2010-11-09
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Ministerial Statement (1)
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Question Time (1)
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- 2011-05-03
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Work Health and Safety Bill
- Work Injured Resource Connection
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Work-Life Balance
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WorkCover Board
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2010-06-22
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2011-03-10
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WorkCover Corporation
- 2010-05-06
- 2010-05-13
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2010-05-27
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2010-06-30
- 2010-07-01
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2010-07-20
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2010-07-22
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2010-09-15
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2010-09-30
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Ministerial Statement (1)
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Question Time (2)
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- 2010-10-28
- 2010-10-28
- 2010-11-10
- 2010-11-23
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2010-11-25
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Ministerial Statement (1)
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Question Time (2)
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- 2011-02-09
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2011-03-24
- 2011-04-05
- 2011-04-06
- 2011-05-03
- 2011-09-15
- 2011-10-20
- WorkCover Review
- WorkCover SA
- Workers Compensation Regulations
- Workers Compensation Tribunal
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Workers Rehabilitation and Compensation
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Workers Rehabilitation and Compensation (Employer Payments) Amendment Bill
- 2011-11-10
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2011-11-23
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2011-11-29
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Bills (3)
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- 2011-11-30
- 2011-12-01
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Workers Rehabilitation and Compensation (Reinstatement of Entitlements) Amendment Bill
- Workplace Health and Safety Research Grants
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Workplace Injuries
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Workplace Safety
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2011-02-10
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2011-02-24
- 2011-03-08
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2011-09-29
- 2011-10-19
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- Workplace Safety Grants
- World Day Against Child Labour
- World No Tobacco Day
- World Tennis Challenge
- Worrall, Mr L.
- Wudinna Housing Development
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- Yalata TAFE Campus
- Yankalilla, Dogs
- Yankalilla, Moveable Signs
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Yatala Labour Prison
- Yorke and Mid North Region
- Yorke Peninsula Dialysis Service
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Young People, Nursing Homes
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2010-07-21
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- Young Women's Christian Association
- Youngcare
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Youth Parliament
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Youth Violence
- Youth Volunteer Scholarship Awards
- Yuendumu Families
SUPPLY BILL
Second Reading
Adjourned debate on second reading.
(Continued from 3 May 2011.)
The Hon. T.A. FRANKS (16:34): I conclude my comments in response to the government's Supply Bill by rounding up that the total number of positions lost in the Public Service, since the horror budget of last year, is at the moment a little over 477 full-time positions, or equivalent full-time positions. These have come from the Department of Education and Children's Services, where we have seen 22 jobs go, including those in family day care.
We have seen jobs lost in the Attorney-General's Department of some 25.6 equivalent full-time positions, and these were in the Equal Opportunity Commission, the Office of Business and Consumer Affairs, Multicultural SA, the Office for Youth, Justice Youth Reform and the Crown Solicitor's Office. We have also seen a position go from SAPOL; we have seen two positions go from the SA Ambulance services; we have seen the Department of Primary Industries and Resources lose 21.3 equivalent full-time positions.
These are in agricultural food and wine, biosecurity, fisheries and agriculture, and SARDI. We have seen 15 jobs go from the Department of Health, we have seen 21 jobs go from the Department of Further Education, Employment, Science and Technology, and we have seen jobs go from the Department of Families and Communities, a department that I think could not afford to be losing jobs. We have seen 113 jobs go from that department. It is a shameful situation, as I said. This Labor government should be incredibly ashamed that it has betrayed its core values.
Yet what have we seen from the ministers in this time? We have seen ministers refurbish and refit offices. We have seen the Minister for Transport, Pat Conlon's, North Terrace office, boasting stunning views of the River Torrens and the Adelaide Oval (soon to be upgraded, as we know), have a $490,000 remodelling. We were told that these are the budget cuts that we had to have by our then treasurer Foley, yet ministers have gone around and splashed out the money upgrading their offices, totally unnecessarily and totally showing that they have lost touch with the community.
The Secretary of SA Unions, Janet Giles, actually said that the overall cost of this office showed that the government had lost contact with the community. She said that before that refit the office already had a lovely walnut coffee table, leather lounges, and a big desk overlooking the oval. She thinks, and I agree, 'taxpayers expect the government to spend money on community services and not making ministerial offices nicer'.
Sadly, the Minister for Transport's office is not the only one that has been refurbished. We have also seen refurbishments in several other ministers' offices. Up to 12 ministers, in fact, have had improvements to their offices in recent years. I think this is a disgraceful situation, where, although treasurer Foley said at the time that these budget cuts were being taken internally, clearly the internal cuts did not start at the top with the ministries themselves being reduced, and certainly not with the ministers' offices losing any of the luxuries that these ministers have come to expect.
I wanted to sum up in final comments to this bill, because, of course, we saw the announcement made by the government yesterday about the South-East and the privatisation of the South-East forests. The Greens believe that selling off the family farm and community-owned businesses is an irresponsible way to manage the state's finances. I am sure many of the parliamentary officers of this place would have received many emails, letters and phone calls from local communities who are outraged by this Rann government's decision. It is a shame that the loud noises of the logging trucks, the forestry workers and the families who all travelled down from the South-East and stood on the steps of this place did not reach our current leadership. I would say that that was an irresponsible action of this Rann government which may perhaps prove to be one of its last actions.
This government needs to make it clear to what extent we are prepared to export jobs overseas, which is what will occur if we forward sell these plantation rotations. We need to be investing in community jobs, not privatising for the sake of it just so that this government can shine away on an Adelaide Oval project. Treasurer Snelling has said that the jobs of forestry workers, the jobs in the South-East regional economy, will be secure and that he would not have proceeded if he was not completely convinced.
How is government convinced that jobs will not be lost? How is this government convinced that the state's economy is being reasonably managed, when clearly jobs will be lost to foreign investors who can process the logs overseas and cost community jobs. We should be exporting overseas products and building our manufacturing base, but we should be smart, competitive, and, most of all of course, value adding.
A prime opportunity for this government actually exists in live export. At the moment Australia exports live sheep to the Middle East. I would encourage the Rann government to take a look at the Port Adelaide facilities and to take a look at the opportunities that exist for South Australia in chilled meat exports, and I would hope that they would see public investment in that area as investment in not only a humane industry but also a very profitable one for South Australia.
The Greens believe that this government's most recent budget has been a travesty and a denial of Labor's roots. We have seen in New South Wales, as I said yesterday, the people who had always voted Labor not vote Labor this time around. We have seen the premier there, Kristina Keneally, admit that it was Labor that left their people. In South Australia, the Labor Party is losing support from its core base at a rate of knots. It if comes up with another budget like the one that it did last year—
The Hon. P. Holloway: Why don't you worry about the Greens and how they're going? Why don't you worry about them?
The Hon. A. Bressington: They're going all right.
The Hon. S.G. Wade: They're doing very well.
The PRESIDENT: They're 'green' with envy.
The Hon. T.A. FRANKS: In response, the Greens in New South Wales have actually picked up Labor votes. We have picked up a safe Labor seat in that state. We are quite happy to take further safe Labor seats from the Labor party in the future. The Labor party is making our job much easier with budgets like the one they produced last year. We look forward to a more 'core value' Labor budget this year, but I do not hold my breath on that one, and certainly the South Australian people and the Labor voters of the past are probably not holding their breath, waiting for Labor to come back to its core traditional values, either.
With that, the Greens will support this Supply Bill. We do not believe in blocking supply. We understand the significance of the guarantee for the supply of the stability of any government, but we just hope that that government starts to shape up.
The Hon. CARMEL ZOLLO (16:41): I rise to support the Supply Bill. Indeed, I welcome the opportunity to place on record the commitment of this government to the state's financial and, hence, our society's, wellbeing. I would like to touch on a few areas: jobs; mining; and infrastructure spending, whether it be for transport or our public health institutions, education or sports and recreation—all areas that require the commitment of funding to enable the business of government to run smoothly for its constituency.
In relation to jobs—it is what this government stands for; about giving young people a decent start in life. Indeed, it is important to note that, since this government was elected nine years ago, over 120,000 new jobs have been created. I should also place on record that growth in total employment over these nine years stands at 17.8 per cent, which is more than double that under the previous opposition's term in office.
I know that, as a society, the measure that is more indicative of employment success is full-time jobs, and I am aware that, in the past year alone, this government has delivered 11,600 full-time jobs, which is double the figure for the previous government's entire term. The importance of ensuring that the skill base necessary for jobs is also recognised by the government's commitment to also deliver 100,000 extra training places over the next five years.
In relation to mining, last month, the Premier welcomed the announcement by BHP Billiton that it is moving to the feasibility study phase of the Olympic Dam expansion project. This proposed expansion will see many new jobs for this state. Similarly, yesterday, the Premier announced in a ministerial statement that, together with federal ministers Stephen Smith and Martin Ferguson, and state Minister for Resources Development, the final report of a review into the Woomera Prohibited Area was released.
The Premier was pleased to report to the parliament that the review recognised that the WPA, as it is known, should be opened up to the exploration of resources to the maximum extent possible. Even more pleasing for us as a state is that the federal government announced at the same time that it accepted the finding of the review and will now seek to implement the new rules for the WPA.
This is, indeed, exciting news for our state, with the new rules making it possible to unlock essentially tens of billions of dollars in resources in gold, uranium, copper and iron ore that lie beneath the surface of this protected area.
When one hears that this unique area stretches over an area roughly the equivalent of the whole of England then one realises the enormity of this project. Again, this government commitment within its agencies to progress the betterment of this state and jobs for its citizens is on a scale never seen before.
I know we were all pleased to see the strong mineral resources and wheat exports earlier this year totalling more than $1 billion. In particular, our farmers well and truly deserved a decent break, both in the weather and the financial gains that comes with it.
There is an area of agency spend in this state which is unprecedented, and that is infrastructure spend. This government has embarked on the biggest infrastructure spend in our state, with an investment of $10.7 billion over four years.
One of the biggest challenges we have faced over the last five years or so has been the risk of enough water. This government took the necessary action of building a desalinisation plant, which is planned to be online by the end of next year.
As a member of the select committee set up by the Independents and the opposition in this chamber, I have had the opportunity to visit the plant and see what is the largest infrastructure build in our state taking shape. The scale and complexity of this plant is a first for our state and I know that we all welcome not just the jobs but the extra skill sets that those working at the plant have been able to acquire.
In relation to reinvigorating the Riverbank precinct, including an expanded Adelaide Convention Centre, we will now see a world-class redevelopment of the internationally-renowned Adelaide Oval. I know we all welcome the commonsense decision of SACA members in voting for the upgrade of the oval and in the future both codes, cricket and football, will be able to enjoy the respective sports in a world-class stadium.
Despite the many knockers, preparation is well and truly underway for the building of a new Royal Adelaide Hospital. As a migrant child, and often interpreter, I know the Royal Adelaide Hospital well and am someone who appreciates that whilst the staff are wonderful, the condition of most of the accommodation is in urgent need of upgrade and expansion for its patients.
I am pleased that the new hospital, when it comes online, will be the most advanced. It will provide more beds, bigger operating theatres, an expanded emergency department and better infection controls. Far too many people leave the RAH with MRSA, for example.
The transport infrastructure spend is an investment of over $2 billion. We are seeing a major revitalisation of public transport infrastructure. I know that it is often annoying for the public to reduce speed or be diverted, but ultimately major works necessitate such inconvenience to see better transport corridors in the long run.
We have commenced on the electrification, extension and upgrade of our metropolitan rail network, all the way from Gawler to Seaford. As well, we have seen the extension of the now much-used tram system. I think that those of us on this side of the chamber were bored to death with the many ways the opposition thought of using the money that was used to extend the tram thus far. The people of South Australia have well and truly spoken when it comes to using the tram and, very obviously, welcome its extension.
On the road network, the government is undertaking major improvements, including an upgrade of the main north-south link by creating a dual-direction Southern Expressway—I know that many will welcome an expressway that goes in both directions at the same time and stop the confusion it can now create—and, of course, our state's biggest ever road project, the South Road Superway.
The very recently completed NEXY, or Northern Expressway, has improved access between the Barossa Valley, the Riverland and our port facilities. I make special mention of our port facilities because the deepened harbour channel, new grain terminal and new road and rail bridges that are linked to the Port River Expressway are further assisting our exporters and ensuring that we are even more internationally competitive and, of course, government has a facilitating role in ensuring this success.
I could go on with infrastructure spend, whether it is the $300 million investment to build Techport Australia or the $44 billion worth of defence contracts we have won, all providing job opportunities, but I would like the opportunity to look at several other areas.
In relation to spending on health, I have already mentioned the new RAH, but I think it important to place on record that since 2002 the health expenditure in our state has more than doubled. We have employed more than 4,000 extra nurses and in excess of 1,000 additional doctors—all public servants for whom this Supply Bill is necessary. Apart from the RAH rebuild, every other metropolitan public hospital has been or is being rebuilt or redeveloped. It is the most comprehensive upgrade of our health facilities in decades.
I know that South Australia was instrumental in lobbying for a new health deal with the federal government. The new deal struck with the commonwealth will mean that from 2014-15 every new bed, every new doctor and every new nurse will help us to meet those future health needs which will be funded by federal and state governments on a dollar-for-dollar basis.
In the meantime, getting back to the Supply Bill, South Australia has secured an extra $306 million for our health system, which will be delivered over the next three years to accommodate growth, including extra beds, more clinicians and, of great importance, more additional surgery procedures.
As a former minister for mental health, I am pleased that South Australia has been successful in having mental health reform placed on the COAG agenda. It is important to see a greater partnership in mental health as well, and we are hopeful of a boost in the upcoming federal budget. More importantly, this government has committed more than $300 million to rebuilding, renewing and restructuring mental health services and facilities.
When we talk about mental health, we are talking about one in five people suffering some form of mental illness in our state. I am sure that we all know somebody, whether it is a family member or friend, who at different times in their life can suffer from a mental health issue. We readily acknowledge that this state's mental health system needed some overhauling and major reform as it had not happened for decades.
In 2005 the Premier asked the Social Inclusion Board to conduct a major review of mental health in our state. The report from that review, 'Stepping Up', led to the implementation of a stepped model of care. This model of care enables people to enter the system at the level that their individual needs require. This philosophy also underpins this government's historic investment of more than $300 million to rebuild, renew and restructure our system.
I think it is important to place on record what this means for the funding of these services. It includes $128.2 million mental health and substance abuse facilities being built at Glenside, comprising a state-of-the-art 129-bed hospital, as well as a 15-bed intermediate care centre, and 20 supported accommodation places. It includes new acute and intermediate care services. Two of the four intermediate care centres are operational at Glenside and Noarlunga, with a third due to be completed at Queenstown later this year.
Six new community mental health centres are being established across metropolitan Adelaide. The first of these facilities, which I understand is collocated with the new GP Plus centre at Marion, is due to begin operation hopefully some time this month. In addition, we have already opened community rehabilitation centres in Adelaide's north, south and west.
In relation to regional services, I will give a few examples. This government is committed to providing good services and facilities in regional South Australia, whether it is the recently announced extension of services in Clare that minister Gago today told the chamber about or the newly opened $7.9 million Roxby Downs police station, amongst many services.
I cannot really conclude this contribution without mentioning the newly opened Marion Aquatic Centre. Members would, no doubt, be aware that it is the largest single built aquatic centre and one that we should all be rightly proud of. I have not had the opportunity to visit the centre yet but I am told it does look outstanding and can hold some 4,500 people. It is also state of the art for the purposes of preparation and training.
In the area of law and order and the need for us to pass the Supply Bill the government has employed more than 700 additional police which translates to more police, of course, on our streets than ever before. Priority has also been given to equipping our hardworking police with the latest technology. Our tougher laws are reflected in the fall in crime rates, which have fallen by 35 per cent since this government came to office. We have also seen an investment of more than $1 billion in school capital works, maintenance and asset funding since 2002-03, with the government now focusing on school and teacher improvements.
We are all aware, particularly the government, that it has had to make some tough decisions in the last budget. These decisions are never easy but it is the business of government and it sometimes needs to be done to ensure the economic future of the state which you are governing and for which you are responsible. I add my support to the Supply Bill.
The Hon. M. PARNELL (16:56): In speaking to the Supply Bill I would like to start by fully endorsing the comments of my colleague Tammy Franks who, I think, has eloquently and thoroughly addressed issues of government waste, government misallocation of resources, and the underlying principle behind both those things—the government's loss of direction, particularly in relation to its traditional support base.
I am not going to repeat the various topics that the Hon. Tammy Franks went through but we could add to them a significant number of other issues. For example, I attended a public meeting at Stirling a month or so ago where residents expressed their concern at the reduction in funding over many years for the important botanical gardens. A recent meeting at Blackwood also looked at the cuts to the funding of the Wittunga Botanical Gardens; the meeting at Stirling was focused on the Mount Lofty Botanical Gardens. There is also the example of the shortsighted forward sale of the forest rotations in the South-East.
However, today, I want to focus on two particular matters. The first is the Olympic Dam expansion, a project that will consume via subsidies (direct and indirect) vast quantities of state funds as well as vast quantities of federal funds. The second issue I want to address is our preparedness as a state for the inevitable energy shocks that we will be facing in the future.
To start with the Olympic Dam expansion, I cannot help but respond to some points that the Hon. Carmel Zollo made in relation to employment in mining. I urge the honourable member (and, in fact, all honourable members) to read the March 2011 report from the Australian Institute for Social Research which points out that jobs in South Australia in the mining sector have shrunk from 12,000 in 2007 to 7,700 in 2010. Mining was always a small employer but it is a shrinking employer, hovering around the 1 per cent mark.
The Olympic Dam expansion is a massive project. If it goes ahead it will be the biggest industrial project in this state by a mile. It was disappointing that the government had to be dragged kicking and screaming into providing reasonable opportunities for the public to comment on the project, to comment on the biggest document ever produced in the history of this state and yet, through the efforts of the Greens and the Legislative Council, we did force the government to increase the public consultation period from the bare statutory minimum to something that was a bit closer to a reasonable opportunity to comment. The government is now sitting on the report from BHP Billiton which addresses the thousands of individual, organisation and government submissions to the project.
Members might not be aware of this, but the legislated opportunities for formal participation in that project have now all passed. The Development Act does not require the supplementary EIS to go through any process of further consultation. In fact, one of the concerns I have is that the government will, true to form, seek to short-change the community in relation to opportunities to comment on this massive project. That is why the Greens have publicly called for the government to release the supplementary EIS and to provide a clear mechanism for public engagement before they approve the final project.
The reason for my concern is that the government has form in releasing supplementary environmental impact statements on the same day that it announces its approval for the project. Members should look no further than the Port Stanvac desalination plant and the Buckland Park development to see that the government often releases these important documents at the same time it announces its approval, thereby making any further comment or feedback anyone might have completely redundant and irrelevant.
The government has been sitting on the Olympic Dam expansion supplementary EIS since before Christmas. It announced it would release it in January. We are now in May and we don't have a firm date for the release of that document. The government, as I say, must provide a further opportunity for people to comment on that document because it is going to include a vast quantity of new information.
The reason it will include new information is that so many things were left out of the original EIS. It may have been the biggest document printed in South Australian history, running to some 4,600 pages, yet it was completely inadequate in relation to a number of important issues. So, with those unanswered questions, I think the government should commit up-front to a period of consultation on this further document, at least as long as the period that was provided on the original document—that was 3½ months.
The future of our economy, the future of this particular industry, is not just a conversation between the proponent and the government behind closed doors. The public need to be involved as well. We need a chance, and the business community needs a chance, to assess BHP Billiton's claims and to assess what this project means for our state economy.
I point out that the Greens have produced an alternative model for the expansion of the Olympic Dam mine; that is, an expansion that does not involve the extraction and sale of uranium. Now, this model is one that stacks up environmentally, socially and economically.
The PRESIDENT: It has nothing to do with the Supply Bill.
The Hon. M. PARNELL: We engaged a senior academic from Monash University, Dr Gavin Mudd, to analyse what it would mean. It is relevant to supply, Mr President, because, as I said earlier, this project will consume vast quantities of both direct and indirect government subsidies. The bill will be footed by taxpayers.
The report that Dr Gavin Mudd prepared showed that the no-uranium Olympic Dam expansion option is not only technically feasible but it will also use less water. It will use less energy and it will create more jobs, because we know that the Olympic Dam mine is overwhelmingly a copper and gold project. The uranium component of total revenue is decreasing and it has decreased down to below 20 per cent.
According to BHP Billiton, in the Financial Review last year, their focus is on copper. It is not on uranium, especially in the first stages of this project. So what we have to determine as a state and what our government needs to come clean with to the South Australian community is whether or not we are prepared for our state to simply be China's quarry or whether we are going to maximise the community benefit from this important non-renewable resource.
The no uranium option for Olympic Dam is a very promising alternative to the plan that BHP Billiton have outlined, which is simply to export the radioactive copper concentrate (and therefore the jobs) overseas, primarily to China. In relation to energy, the question that we have to ask ourselves is how prepared we are as a state for the inevitable shocks that lie ahead. What I want to focus on is the role of government and government spending in helping the community to absorb those shocks.
It is no surprise to anyone that the price of petrol is going up, and it will continue to rise due to a number of factors: turmoil in the Middle East, an improving US economy, increasing demand for oil from India and China. This week the average price of petrol in Adelaide is pushing $1.50 a litre. In Brisbane, it is already over $1.50. The national average is $1.45. The strong Australian dollar is the only thing that has prevented a record high price for petrol being reached already.
However, as we know, the fluctuation in currency is both volatile and difficult to predict. Members should remember that less than a year ago the Australian dollar was valued at only US83¢. If we were to go back to that level now, the price of petrol would already be over $2 per litre. If we go back a little further to February-March 2009, when the value of the Australian dollar was only US66¢, the price of petrol would already be $3 a litre. You can imagine what that would mean for South Australian families. It would be a devastating impost on the household budget.
What is the government doing about it through the measures available to it, through spending and through government policy? The answer is not much, and the things that they are doing are the wrong things. Last week, the Australian Conservation Foundation released a very sobering report about the direction we are heading in relation to transport planning and transport spending. What that report showed would come as a surprise to no-one; that is, we are spending four times as much on roads as we are on public transport.
The gulf between state and federal government spending on roads compared to that spent on public transport is massive. What that report says is that the difference is now more than four times. Over the last decade, all levels of government in Australia have spent 4.3 times more on the construction of public roads and bridges than they have on public transport. There was some $11.3 million spent on road construction in 2008-09. In addition to that, $5 billion was given away as subsidies by the federal government through the fuel tax credits program, and there was another $1 billion spent through the fringe benefits tax scheme to encourage the private use of company cars. During the same period, only $3.3 billion was spent on rail construction.
The figures for South Australia are very similar. We spent 0.61 per cent of gross state product on roads compared to only 0.15 per cent on other transport options. The Hon. Carmel Zollo spoke in glowing terms of the South Road Superway. The Greens refer to that project as the 'super waste'. We know that Adelaide has sprawled uncontrollably north and south and we know that social problems arise when people are forced to travel long distances to reach jobs and where public transport options are inadequate.
If you cannot drive or you cannot afford to drive, you miss out in our society. The government speaks in glowing terms of its expenditure on the electrification of the railways and a very short extension of the Noarlunga train to Seaford and a very short extension of the tramline, yet those programs need to be considered more as backlog maintenance than genuine new infrastructure spending. Most of the money spent on electrification will not provide a faster or a more frequent service; it is simply catching up and replacing an ageing diesel fleet with a more modern electric fleet. We need to increase patronage if we are going to help people to cope with the shocks of increased petrol prices.
International Energy Agency is an organisation that members might be aware of. This organisation has for many years denied the existence of the concept of peak oil. In fact, only five years ago, the International Energy Agency said that oil production was set to rise to 120 million barrels a day by 2030. Those predictions turned out to be wildly off the mark. What it is now saying, just five years later, is that the world's crude oil production actually peaked in 2006, and global oil production having peaked is a one-way ticket for prices to go up—prices to go up for South Australian families.
The prediction from the International Energy Agency was that oil prices were likely to rise 30 per cent over the next three years. The chief economist of the IEA, Dr Fatih Birol, said:
The existing fields are declining so sharply that in order to say where we are in terms of production levels in the next 25 years, we have to find and develop four new Saudi Arabias...It is a huge, huge challenge that we continue to underline.
However, the conclusion from the International Energy Agency was that the age of cheap oil is over, and we are seeing that already.
The question for us in South Australia is: how well placed are we to deal with the inevitable shocks that rising oil prices will deliver to our families and our communities? It is not just about petrol at the bowser. Oil is deeply embedded in the whole of the economy. It is in our food systems and in all other goods and services we produce.
So, the government's response is counterproductive and it is counterintuitive. It is not just the disproportionate spending on roads but it is also reflected in the government's planning priorities—approving new urban sprawl out at Mount Barker or Gawler East and, if you like, the mother of all lunatic urban planning projects, the Buckland Park development. I said at the time, and I was joined by many, many professionals in the planning field, that what we were looking at was the creation of a ghetto in waiting.
The reason for that is that young families will be attracted out to places such as Buckland Park and then they will be marooned out there by rising petrol prices. You have only to imagine the viability of low-income families living out at Buckland Park, miles from anywhere, with petrol at $2 or $3 a litre and, on the proponent of the Buckland Park township's own admission, there will not be a high take-up of public transport.
The bottom line is that, with petrol prices going up, peak oil having arrived, we as a state are totally unprepared for this brave new world, and the government owes it to the community, through policy and through its spending in the budget, to help us deal with these shocks. The government has completely missed the opportunities and the challenges that have been provided by these global changes. South Australia will cope less well than other places because of this lack of preparedness.
With those brief remarks, I indicate that the Greens will be supporting the Supply Bill. We look forward to the forthcoming budget reversing some of the policy disasters of recent years and showing that this government is, in fact, prepared to lead South Australia into the future. The government will do that by making sensible decisions that reflect the fact that we live on a finite planet with finite resources.
The Hon. D.W. RIDGWAY (Leader of the Opposition) (17:14): I rise to speak to the Supply Bill 2011. As we know, the Supply Bill is of course for the supply of financial resources to the public sector to continue to operate while the government eventually presents its budget and we pass the Appropriation Bill. So, it should supply the government services to the people of South Australia. It should, but it does not.
It should provide the supply of police services, adequate staff in corrections and family services, in the Environment Protection Authority, in tourism and in trade. Instead, it sells South Australians short. It sells them so short that, if this was the stock exchange, short selling of this type would be banned. In a political context, selling South Australians as short as this should also be banned.
The only things this government can sell are the publicly owned assets. Sadly, we saw the forward sale of up to three rotations of our forests yesterday. What saddens me even more is that we saw the Minister for Regional Development in this chamber today admit that she had not read the regional impact statement or even read the executive summary of that regional impact statement. A sad day indeed, and I guess she probably voted in cabinet on that decision.
I wonder how many other ministers in this government had voted on that decision, not having read that particular regional impact statement. I know it is a subject dear to your heart, Mr Acting President, because you told me you were in Mount Gambier only in the last week or two, and the feeling in the community is extremely high about this sale of forestry assets.
Government land goes to developers. Sadly, at Glenside, a facility once famous for the care and treatment it provided to the mentally ill, the Labor Party has thrown the occupants out. I wonder how much of the violence we sadly see in our community, the shootings and violent attacks on people, is a result of this government's mental health policy. That land has been made available for a film hub, a housing development and a supermarket, because the mentally ill, the physically ill, the elderly and the young are not cared for well enough in this Supply Bill.
It is not just the public sector that is made to suffer from this incompetent and diminished ministry. The public deserves better, stronger and more compassionate government service. The government tells us that we have record numbers of police, yet we all hear every day the comment, 'Where are the police?' We just do not see them in our community. Where are the support staff? Where is the backup? Where is the infrastructure and support to let the police do the jobs they are trained to do? Where is the emphasis on road safety?
At Easter, coming back from a very enjoyable family holiday in the Riverland, on the River Murray (and it is in beautiful condition at the moment), on the South-Eastern Freeway, I saw one police vehicle. It was parked on the side of the road with a flashing light on top, warning of a traffic congestion ahead. But I think I saw four, or maybe even five, other vehicles with police officers in them; they were unmarked.
A visible police presence we know is the greatest deterrent to bad driving behaviour and, in fact, bad public behaviour, yet to have unmarked cars on the road to me sends the message that the government is not really interested in having that visible police deterrent out there in the public view; it is more about catching people and speeding revenue.
I also noticed some commentary recently in relation to Hindley Street that there were very few uniformed police officers on a particular Saturday night; yet I am advised there were 40 undercover police officers on duty that night. I can understand why some level of undercover operations needs to take place in places like Hindley Street, because of, perhaps, sale of drugs and other illegal activities.
However, surely a visible police presence is what is needed. The government, I think, is using a terribly blunt instrument with its changes to liquor licensing hours, but to bring about a change, a greater, more visible police presence is what is needed. I might also ask: where are our park rangers? Where are the staff who used to look after our botanic gardens?
Where is the provision for health care in rural and regional South Australia? And, we are reminded again of the decision yesterday to sell the forests, the decision the night before of the SACA vote and the go-ahead of the Adelaide Oval and, of course, today we have seen the publicly circulated Macquarie Bank prospectus that shows the cost of the new Royal Adelaide Hospital at $2.73 billion.
Where is the provision for health care in regional and rural South Australia? We know that the Keith hospital needs $300,000. I think the service payments on the new hospital are some $330 million a year. That is calculated at almost $1 million a day, which is nearly $50,000 an hour, and so $300,000 is only a matter of four or five hours. The time that we would spend in this place in one day when that hospital is being paid for would look after the Keith hospital for a whole year.
I am also mindful of the future. When we come to the supply next year and in future years of this particular government, it is severely at risk, especially when we talk about the Supply Bill, which not only provides funds to manage the public sector but also provides services to the people who pay the taxes and who need those services. It is, if you like, a double supply.
I know that the Sustainable Budget Commission recommendations were not all adopted, but they are still, I would assume, there for consideration. It is quite frightening. In SAPOL, the initial recommendations were to reduce the unsworn officers by up to nearly 100 personnel; remove the graduate program (another five personnel to go); reduce the service executive support area (one person to go); the closure of eight metropolitan police stations (13 people to go); the closure of nine country police stations (another 18 to be removed); the disbandment of the police band (I think about 60 personnel to go there); and the phasing out of community constables (about the same).
So, Mr President, you can see that the government is going to be under incredible pressure not to cut services as we go forward, because we know it will not have achieved its budget targets with the last budget. Notwithstanding, it has not accepted all the recommendations of the Sustainable Budget Commission, I suspect a number of those are still on the table.
Of course, another area for which I have some responsibility is planning. There are a number of cuts, again, to the public sector—some accepted and some not—but it adds up to some 50 or 60 personnel. Again, that indicates that, while we are looking at supplying the resources to keep the public sector operating, the public sector is under tremendous pressure as a result of cuts from the government and an expectation from the community that they will get a higher level of service.
I think members should be reminded that, in the time of this government, it budgeted for a bit over 2,500 extra public servants, yet, sadly, we see some 18,000 have been employed in that time. Really, I think that shows a real lack of understanding of how to run government; a real lack of understanding that it is not its money to spend but the taxpayers' money. Clearly, it just simply does not understand.
We have also seen in the last couple of days what the government really thinks of this chamber, when we have the unbelievable situation of only having one minister. There is such Labor talent in the Legislative Council—talent enough to promote an ALP backbencher. I mean, why not promote the Hon. Russell Wortley so he could sit at the cabinet table and actually have some input, or even promote the Hon. John Gazzola to the front bench? Mr President, it seems crazy. Or the Hon. Ian Hunter. Clearly—
The Hon. G.E. Gago: Relevance?
An honourable member: Supply.
The PRESIDENT: He wants to supply another minister.
The Hon. D.W. RIDGWAY: Exactly; thank you, Mr President. I mean, the Hon. Paul Holloway and the Hon. Carmel Zollo have had a go, and they are clearly either not wanted or not prepared to step up. There is some talent there, Mr President—and look, it is probably a little sad, in one sense, that you are in the chair, otherwise you would be down here on the front bench. I know that it would help the debate around the cabinet table if there was somebody else other than the hapless acting interim leader that we have at present.
There is an old saying that the price of something depends on supply and demand, and this Supply Bill demands a high price from South Australians. It is the price of a Labor government whose time has come.
Debate adjourned on motion of Hon. J.M. Gazzola.