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Headless Nation
So the Governor-General has voted himself out of the Big House, recognising that his capacity to discharge his duties as Head of State had been fatally compromised by the skeletons in his Yarralumla closet.
Interview: Staying Alive
CPSU national secretary Adrian O'Connell talks about the fight to keep the public service - and the union movement - alive.
Bad Boss: The Ultimate Piss Off
Wollongong workers on poverty-level wages are losing up to $5000 for taking toilet breaks, according to the union representing staff at a Stellar call centre.
Industrial: Last Drinks
Jim Marr looks at the human cost of the decision to close Sydney�s Carlton United Brewery
National Focus: Around the States
If Tampa told us that John Howard circa 2003 is the same spotted rabid dog from 1987, this week�s assault on Medicare confirms it reports Noel Hester in this national round up.
Politics: Radical Surgery
Workers are vitally interested in Medicare, not least because they traded away wage rises to get it. Now, Jim Marr writes, the Coalition Government is tearing apart the 20-year-old social contract on which it was founded.
Education: The Price of Missing Out
University students and their families will pay more for their education following the May Budget, writes Tony Brown.
Legal: If At First You Don't Succeed
Love is wonderful the second time around, goes the famous torch song. But is the same true for legislation? Asks Ashley Crossland
History: Massive Attack
Labour historian Dr Lucy Taksa remembers the general strike of 1917 to put the recent anti-war marches into perspective
Culture: What's Right
Neale Towart looks at a new book that looks at the failings of the Left, while reasserting the liberal project
Review: If He Should Fall
Jim Marr caught Irish folk-rock-punk legend Shane MacGowan at Sydney�s Metro Theatre. He was surprised but not disappointed.
Poetry: If I Were a Rich Man
Through a distortion in the time-space continuum, we have found a recording showing how people a few years into the future will deal with health care.
Satire: IMF Ensures Iraq Institutes Market Based Looting
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has agreed to monitor the Iraqi economy to ensure that the reintroduction of looting into the economy conforms with free-market theory.
Sanitarium Casts Democracy into Hell�s Fire
Mouse that Roared
Abbott: Look After Number One
Entitlements Revamp � Acid on States
Strong Stuff � Commission Star in Court
Think Before You Drink
Maritime Hero Takes Final Journey
All Ding but No Gong
Aged Care in Terminal Condition
Strathfield Joins War on Shonks
AMWU Returns to the Fold
Green Jobs In Offing
Register for Action
Activists Notebook
The Soapbox
What May Day Means to Me
Reader Marlene McAlear penned this tribue to May Day and worker solidarity.
Solidarity
The Toast
Labor Council secretary John Robertson's toast to the annual May Day dinner in Sydney. The Locker Room
The Numbers Game
In life there is lies, damned lies and sporting statistics, says Phil Doyle - but who�s counting. Postcard
Brukman Evicted
ZNet's Marie Trigona reports from the streets of Argentina in the rundown to last week's presidential election. Bosswatch
The Costs of Excess
Some tall business poppies had their heads lopped this week as the laws of economic gravity applied their always chaotic theory.
Language Most Foul
Unions Deserve Reputation
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Labor Council of NSW
Vic Trades Hall Council
IT Workers Alliance
Bosswatch
Unions on LaborNET
Evatt Foundation
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News
Green Jobs In Offing
Sustainable energy is like real estate � the longer you wait to invest � the harder it becomes and the longer you wait for your returns.
That's the message from a ground breaking report by the Sustainable Energy Development Authority (SEDA) to uncover the benefits to the NSW economy of embracing new forms of energy production.
Last year the Labor Council, together with the NSW Sustainable Energy Development Authority, and a steering group of other forward thinking industry representatives engaged The Allen Consulting Group to model the potential impact of the sustainable energy industry on the NSW economy and jobs.
The resulting Sustainable Energy Jobs Report has found that increasing energy efficiency and growing the share of renewable energy has huge potential to grow the economy and jobs while also mitigating the negative environmental impacts of conventional energy supply and use.
The report also provides an instruction book of diverse, industry-development measures that will, based on the economic model, boost NSW gross state product by more than $500m annually, with up to 4,000 new jobs created (around one quarter of these in the sustainable energy industry and the remainder in the broader economy).
These benefits depend critically on adopting a multi-pronged approach - rather than individual measures in isolation - so that the cost savings from improved energy efficiency can offset the cost of increasing our share of renewable energy, like solar and wind.
SEDA and the Labor Council are now pursuing new opportunities for ensuring that this emerging industry has the capacity and capability to meet inevitable demand as NSW starts the transition to a low carbon economy.
To read the report's executive summary visit the SEDA website http://www.seda.nsw.gov.au/pdf/PDF_GH_DIS_PAGE8_182.pdf
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Issue 180 contents
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