Community News

MARIAN BOWLERS STITCH KINDNESS INTO EVERY SQUARE

MARIAN BOWLERS STITCH KINDNESS INTO EVERY SQUARE

The ladies from Marian Bowls Club have shown that community spirit is alive and well, recently donating ten beautifully handmade knee rugs to the residents of Nanyima Aged Care Home in Mirani. Over the past few months, members have been busy crocheting and knitting squares from home, later joining them together to create colourful, cosy rugs designed to keep elderly residents warm while in wheelchairs. On Wednesday, June 25, Marian Bowls Club President Thelma Johnston, Treasurer Judith Miller

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Stirring The Pot

Stirring The Pot

It’s not every week I get the privilege of having the Mayor cook me dinner — but thanks to Crunch Time, part of this year’s Mackay Festival of Arts, that’s exactly what happened. The live-theatre-meets-dinner-party event delivered five unpredictable courses dictated by democracy and whipped up by Mayor Greg Williamson himself. Let’s just say the democratic process took a dark turn when someone voted for Natto — a fermented bean experience that confirmed some things are better left off the plate

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Mackay Army Cadets Step Up For Veteran Homelessness Awareness

Mackay Army Cadets Step Up For Veteran Homelessness Awareness

Last Sunday, the Mackay Army Cadets once again laced up their boots and marched with purpose – this time around the Bluewater Trail – as part of a growing movement to raise awareness and support for veteran homelessness. Twelve months on from the extraordinary 382km trek in 2024, the cadets returned to action, completing a symbolic circuit of Mackay’s scenic Bluewater Trail. The event served as both a show of continued solidarity and a powerful reminder that, for many veterans, the battle

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Mackay Courthouse Set For Major Upgrade

Mackay Courthouse Set For Major Upgrade

$6 Million Allocated For Victim Safety And Justice Access Mackay’s justice precinct is set for a significant transformation, with a $6 million funding injection from the Queensland Government to upgrade the region’s courthouse—placing victim safety and frontline justice services firmly back on the agenda. The funding forms part of an $18.8 million boost to the state’s Domestic and Family Violence Courthouse Improvement Program, announced in the 2025–26 Budget. The additional investment li

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Local Festivals Funded By Federal Government

April 24, 2024

The Festivals Australia program, administered by Australian Government, is injecting $1.4 million into festivals across Australia, including the Mackay region, to support a diverse array of artistic endeavours.

One recipient of this funding is the Mackay Film Festival for Youth, which will host the Pioneer Valley Acting and Screen Production Weekend Community Workshop.

This workshop aims to enhance digital storytelling skills, covering scriptwriting, acting, producing, directing, editing, and post-production.

The resulting productions will be showcased at the Pinnacle Playhouse Red Carpet Community Screening Event during the Mackay Film Festival for Youth.

Another initiative supported by the program is the Sunset Cultural Experience organised by the Issac Regional Council.

This event will kick off the St Lawrence Wetlands Weekend Event, offering a platform to showcase First Nations culture through music, dance, storytelling, and gourmet interpretations of traditional bush tucker.

One of the primary objectives of the Festival Australia program is to nurture local talent and strengthen community bonds through artistic expression.

By facilitating access to art and culture in areas that might otherwise have limited opportunities, the program strives to create a more inclusive cultural environment and showcase local talent.

Minister for the Arts Tony Burke said, “Festivals – at their best – are about building community, sharing stories, and creating memories. They put artists on a bigger stage, with a brighter spotlight.”

“This program helps support that right across Australia, making sure these opportunities aren’t just for people in capital cities,” said Mr Burke

An initiative supported by the The Festivals Australia program is the Sunset Cultural Experience organised by the Issac Regional Council

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BLUEWATER LAGOON TO CLOSE FOR RELINING WORKS

April 24, 2024

Mackay Regional Council announced last week that the Bluewater Lagoon will close from Monday, April 29, until early September 2024 for significant upgrade work.
Contractors will be completing work to replace the existing surface of the main and top lagoons with a new lining and tiles.
Council said that the existing Quartzon lining of the lagoon’s floor is being replaced with a Polyvinyl Chloride membrane system that will reduce maintenance requirements at the facility.
This follows on from the work completed last year, which involved relining the children’s pool with the new finish.
This work has been scheduled to be completed during the winter maintenance period to avoid unnecessary inconvenience to the public.
Residents are also advised that the Bluewater Lagoon’s kids’ pool and splash pad are also currently out of action.
The pool pump is in need of repairs that may take several weeks to complete as there are parts that need to be ordered from an overseas supplier.
As a result, the kids’ pool and splash pad will remain closed for the rest of the season.
Mackay Regional Council says it apologises for any inconvenience this may cause and thanks the public for its understanding and patience.
The Memorial Swim Centre and Mackay Aquatic and Recreation Complex will remain open as usual over the winter period.

The Bluewater Lagoon will close from Monday April 29, reopening in September 2024. The children’s pool and splash pad are already closed and will remain closed until September. Photo credit: Amanda Wright

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$1M Community Fund Unveiled At Community Expo

April 24, 2024

A $1 million fund to enhance social and community life in the Isaac region has been unveiled at today’s (20 April) inaugural Pembroke Resources Community Expo in Moranbah.
 
Pembroke Chairman and CEO Barry Tudor said the new Pembroke Community Partnership Program fund was created to ensure the local area continued to benefit from the opening of the Olive Downs Complex for generations to come, with funding being provided to projects identified, prioritised and supported by local residents.
 
“The Olive Downs Complex is already working in strong partnership with the local community by creating and supporting hundreds of jobs, prioritising local procurement whenever possible and providing our workforce with a genuine choice to live within the Isaac Region,” Mr Tudor said.
 
“Today, we are proud to announce the next step in working together to build a stronger community, through the $1 million Pembroke Community Partnership Program.
 
“This is stage one of the fund, which will run over the next five years to help ensure the local community reaps the benefits of having the Olive Downs Complex operating in their region. Projects of interest could include those focused on improved health, welfare and employment outcomes as well as improved social infrastructure.
 
“Another priority for us is reducing unnecessary red tape so it’s as easy as possible for locals to decide how and where this funding is spent for the future benefit of the community.”
 
Mr Tudor said the Pembroke Community Partnership Program was in addition to other contributions the Olive Downs Complex was making to the region through job and training opportunities, local purchasing whenever possible and leading-edge environmental stewardship.
 
“The local community is rightly proud that the high-quality steel-making coal being produced by Olive Downs is supporting our national and state economies, as well as much-needed infrastructure across the world. Our Community Partnership Program will ensure those economic benefits are delivered at the local level as well,” he said.
 
In addition to these community benefits, the Olive Downs Complex will make a significant contribution to the local, state and national economies.  The project is estimated to contribute more than $10 billion in royalties for the Queensland Government over its projected 79-year life.

Photos supplied

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SAY NO TO DIGITAL ID

April 24, 2024

GUEST SPEAKER: Stephen Andrew MP with current, irrefutable information.

Across this great nation of ours, we are rising up to “Say NO to Digital ID”.

Digital ID means every one of us will be under total control of the government:

   • The government will track your every movement 24/7
   • The government will keep a record of every cent you spend and reward or punish you accordingly
   • The government will control what you buy and even IF you can buy
   • The government will control where you go, who you see and what you do with your time
   • The government will have total control over your medical details with a data bank of information that can be easily hacked, shared or sold without your permission or knowledge
   • The government will require permit for everything (eg: to own a bee hive, enter a national park, have more than six chickens)
   • Microchips will be inserted in your body

We say NO, NO, NO!!!!
Join us, add your voice to ours, and put a stop to this globalist ideology.

WHAT: Say No To Digital ID
WHEN: Sunday 5 May at 11am
WHERE: Bluewater Quay, Mackay

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Enhancing Positive Healthcare Outcomes

April 24, 2024

A local program changing the trajectory of chronic illness in First Nations people and providing greater access to care and education will be showcased across the state next month.

The healthy lifestyle program is for First Nations and Australian South Sea Islander people who are at risk of type 2 diabetes, living with type 2 diabetes or have post-gestational diabetes.

This program uses group lifestyle sessions, one-on-one care management and community event education to support those at risk, newly diagnosed or living with the debilitating condition which is prevalent in these communities.

“Providing diabetes education, timely access to care and sharing practical tools to manage illness and prevent further decline, all in a culturally appropriate way, has helped reduce the growing pressure on healthcare providers including general practitioners and hospitals,” said Mackay Hospital and Health Service nurse practitioner Maree Wearne. 

“This program helps those in Mackay, Whitsunday and Isaac regions understand the risks and complications of type 2 diabetes, assists them in reducing the chances of hospitalisation, supports the management of diabetes through healthy lifestyle choices and works together with healthcare providers for type 2 management.”

“Many in these communities just accept diabetes as their fate as others in their family have it, but this program helps show them how, with good management and practical tools, they can change their health trajectory and stop or slow a decline into chronic illness,” she added.

“We are teaching them how to control their diabetes, not be controlled by it.”

In less than 12 months, the team has received more than 100 referrals from GPs, community health care workers, hospitals as well as self-referrals, and now has about 70 active program participants.

Maree, who has more than 30 years’ experience in First Nations healthcare, said she was excited to present the benefits of the program at the Clinical Excellence Showcase next month and demonstrate how it could also be applied to programs targeting other chronic illnesses.

“It’s exciting and very motivating to see the improvement in health outcomes with achievements such as reducing obesity, cutting back on medications and patients coming off insulin because of changes we’ve helped them make.”

Mackay Hospital and Health Service nurse practitioner Maree Wearne  is part of a local program changing the trajectory of chronic illness in First Nations people. Photo supplied

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On The Beat

April 24, 2024

Two men and a teenage boy have been charged in relation to the unlawful use of a motor vehicle in Mackay.
It will be alleged the 2019 Nissan Navara was stolen from an address on Fitzroy Court, Mount Pleasant on Sunday, April 21.
Just after 9am on April 22, the car crashed on Oak Street in Andergrove and three males left the scene on foot.
It will be further alleged a 22-year-old man resisted arrest and allegedly kicked one officer and headbutted another officer.
A 22-year-old Beaconsfield man has been charged with 14 offences, including three counts of unlawful use of a motor vehicle, one count of serious assault police officer, assault police officer, enter dwelling and commit and stealing.
He is expected to appear before Mackay Magistrates Court on April 23.
A 17-year-old Andergrove boy has been charged with 12 offences, including unlawful use of a motor vehicle, three counts of enter premises and commit indictable offence, driving of motor vehicle without a drivers licence and obstruction of a police officer.
He is expected to appear before Mackay Children’s Court on April 23.
A 20-year-old Andergrove man has been charged with five offences, including unlawful use of a motor vehicle and enter premises with intent to commit indictable offence.
He is expected to appear before Mackay Magistrates Court on May 22.

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The Gentle Way A Game Changer In The Funeral Industry

April 24, 2024

Mackay is set to introduce ‘The Gentle Way’, a revolutionised end-of-life process with an effective, environmentally friendly approach to handling human remains.
Inspired by a desire to provide a gentler alternative to traditional burial and cremation methods, CEOs and Founders of Whitsunday Funerals, Jeff and Judy Boyle explored the American Alkaline Hydrolysis system. Despite its potential, they recognised its shortcomings, including harsh effects on the body and significant water wastage.
Drawing inspiration from the natural breakdown of bodies in the ground, their new system, The Gentle Way mimics this process by placing the body in a stainless-steel chamber, adding water, and raising the alkalinity using potassium hydroxide (lye).
The water then sways over the body for a period of 4 to 6 hours so that the water gently circulates around the body, breaking it down. Once complete the family receive the remains back, the same as you would with cremated ‘ashes’, along with a desert rose to signify new life.
After this, it goes into a membrane filter straight after the body tank which ensures that the sand, bones and leftover remains are collected. The water is then transferred into what they call the holding tank, where the water goes through a state-of-the-art specialised filtration system. This results in crystal clean coming out again with no connection to town water or sewage systems.
This revolutionary new system creates a completely harmless, encapsulated process where the water continues to be recycled.
The benefits of The Gentle Way extend beyond its gentle treatment of remains.
Unlike cremation, which emits pollutants and consumes significant energy, The Gentle Way produces no odour, fumes, or pollution and is carbon neutral.
During cremation, if a loved one has a pacemaker, usually they would have to cut it out, however, with The Gentle Way, the pacemaker is left in because the process is so gentle that it will still be intact and functional when the machine is finished.
Hip joints, knee joints, breast implants or even missed jewellery on a loved one can be found at the bottom, crystal clean and polished like new.
“This is a game changer for the funeral industry,” Jeff remarked.
The origin of The Gentle Way traces back to a memorable interaction with a client who expressed dissatisfaction with traditional burial and cremation options. This conversation spurred Judy and Jeff to seek a better alternative, leading to the development of The Gentle Way, a solution that honours individuals' final wishes while offering a more gentle, environmentally friendly approach to end-of-life care.
“The great thing is, it’s employing people, it’s good for the environment, it brings the prices down for funerals and it’s a win win for everybody,” Jeff said.
Regarding cost, a direct Gentle Way process is said to be less than half the price of other Funeral Homes in Mackay. The Gentle Way now offers an affordable option for the families of passed loved ones.
“The worst thing in the world is when you lose a loved one and you can’t afford a funeral,”

“We make it affordable and it’s 100% environmentally friendly.”
Over the past nine years, multiple tests have been conducted to ensure The Gentle Way body vessel is capable, efficient and most importantly, gentle.
Townsville Funerals was the first to receive a commercial unit which has been in use for the last four months, with a demand for more proving this method to be highly desired and affordable.
The Gentle Way has recently introduced this facility to Mackay, with the official opening on Monday the 22nd of April.

CEO’s and Founders Jeff and Judy Boyle with Operations Manager and Partner, Ivan Oehlert. Photo Credit: Hannah McNamara

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19 highlights for 19 years in business

April 24, 2024

Our region is home to a highly unique business, known as a community bank. The community bank model is based on profit for purpose – where anyone can choose to be a customer, and a percentage of the profits are re-invested directly back into the local community. One of just 322 community banks across Australia, our very own Community Bank Sarina Bendigo Bank is celebrating 19 years of business this June – and over $3.8 million invested back into our local community.

Providing a full suite of banking services and advice to individuals, businesses and community groups, Community Bank Sarina is renowned for its dedication and support for our community. This is only possible thanks to the people who choose to bank with them – which is easy to do! The Community Bank Sarina team are there to welcome you – whether in person, in branch, online or they can even come to you.

There have been many highlights along the way – and many more to come. Community Bank Sarina is truly here for you, and here to stay. A snapshot of some key milestones to date:

2005 – Community Bank Sarina Bendigo Bank open for business
2008 – First Community Grants and Sponsorships awarded
2009 – First dividends paid to local Shareholders
2011 – Became major sponsor of Sarina Bowls Club
2012 – Higher Education Scholarship Program with CQUniversity launched
2012 – Commenced support for Sarina District Schools Chaplaincy Committee
2015 – Hosted Queensland’s Community Bank State Conference in Sarina
2016 – Charmaine Matsen appointed as Manager of Community Bank Sarina
2016 – Inducted into Community Bank Network National Hall of Fame for outstanding community impact
2017 – Sarina State High School (SSHS) Scholarship Program launched
2017 – Hosted Community Strengthening Conference with Rio Tinto Hail Creek and Mackay Regional Council
2018 – Inaugural naming rights sponsor for Cruisin’ the Coast Sarina Beach Fun Run
2019 – Scholarship Program extended with CQUniversity to include Apprentice Scholarships
2019 – Inaugural SSHS scholarship recipient Josie Dahtler commenced employment with Community Bank Sarina
2019 – Community Impact Award launched
2022 – Hit the $3 million mark in community investment (which today has exceeded $3.8 million)
2023 – Supported QCWA Sarina Branch and Koumala State School in their centenary milestones
2023 – Achieved certification as a Social Enterprise with Social Traders
2024 – Hosting Celebration of Community Anniversary Dinner with guest speaker Shane Webcke

The latest highlight is still to come – and you can join in! All are invited to Community Bank Sarina’s Celebration of Community Anniversary Dinner – to be held on Saturday, 8 June 2024 at the Bob Wood Cultural Hall. Featuring food, music, fun – and Shane Webcke – it will be a night to remember. Tickets close 12 May and are available for purchase at $90pp now at bit.ly/communitydinner2024.

Community Bank Sarina Board Directors Nicholas McDougall, Ann Fordyce, Karen May, Maree Franettovich, Rainee Shepperson and Ted Malone with Manager Charmaine Matsen.

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Join The Pack RSPCA Million Paws Walk Returns to Mackay!

April 24, 2024

The annual RSPCA Million Paws Walk, dedicated to fighting animal cruelty, is back in Mackay! On Sunday, May 26th, from 8:00 am to 10:30 am, join the community at Queens Park for a day of fun and fundraising. Celebrating its 30th year, the Million Paws Walk started in Queensland and has since become a beloved event nationwide.

Everyone is welcome to participate, so bring the whole family for a fantastic day out. Don't worry if you don't have a furry friend – all are invited to enjoy the festivities. Bring a camp chair or picnic rug to relax and watch the dog competitions, with fantastic prizes up for grabs!

Get your VIP (Very Important Pooch) ready for a red carpet photo opportunity at the event. Additionally, throughout May, the local shelter team will sell raffle tickets at various locations, including Caneland Shopping Centre, Mt Pleasant Shopping Centre, and Bunnings. At just $3 per ticket, you could win one of six incredible prizes, kindly donated by local businesses: $400 2-Night Family Holiday – Camp Kanga; $275 Pet Photography Session – Coffee & Hops; $250 Joy Flight – Mackay Tiger Moth Museum; $200 Fuel Voucher – SGC Global; $185 Beginner Scuba Diving – Rainforest Scuba; Two $50 Vouchers – Body Haven Mackay.

Proceeds from the event will support animals in need, just like Loki, who found himself in RSPCA's care in November 2022. After receiving medical attention for various health issues, Loki was placed in foster care with Michelle, a dedicated volunteer at RSPCA Mackay Animal Care Centre. Michelle grew very fond of Loki and officially adopted him in April 2023, giving him a chance at a loving forever home.

Join us in celebrating 30 years of Million Paws Walk and make a difference in the lives of animals like Loki. Don't miss this opportunity to support a great cause. Tickets are available at millionpawswalk.com.au. Join the cause with a Million Paws to fight animal cruelty and ensure a brighter future for our furry friends.

What: RSPCA Million Paws Walk
When: Sunday, May 26th, from 8:00 am to 10:30 am
Where: Queens Park
Register: millionpawswalk.com.au

Michelle, Loki and the team from the Mackay RSPCA are gearing up for this year’s Million Paws Walk

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The Elephant In The Living Room

April 24, 2024

By Kevin Borg, Chairman, CANEGROWERS Mackay
Isaac region residents have followed the Mackay Region and received new Land Valuations, with some dramatic increases causing discussion and anxiety as they take in the new valuation.
Across the board, the total value of rural land across the region has increased by 70%. But for many, increases are beyond 100%.
That, of course, translates into rates increases for landholders. While CANEGROWERS Mackay is continuing discussions with Mackay Regional Council on the rates burden for canefarming enterprises, we now are also initiating discussion with Isaac Regional Council.
While the State Valuation Service points out that rates and rating categories are under the control of local government, councils readily point out that they are based on state valuations.
For the property owner, this blame game puts us in a position of being like the piggy stuck in the middle, in a game where the ball gets higher and higher, more out of reach.
For a canefarmer, meeting the cost of rates is a double challenge. It’s about maintaining the family home and the family business. It is an ever-ballooning cost of production that sits alongside the pressure of the cost of living.
Canefarming is like quite a range of agribusinesses that are price takers, not price makers. We are at the mercy of world sugar price. There is nowhere to pass on inflating costs of production. It’s about margins. Sugar price is strong right now, but so are costs, and cost of production is unfortunately on a steep trajectory. There will be years when that price will almost certainly move closer to the cost of production. If we are lucky, the lower sugar prices will not go in tandem with drought, fire or flood.
The cost of living is a community-wide pressure. And while local government also faces the pressure of inflation, and has to meet its increasing costs, the continual pressure on landholders needs to be addressed.

Rates cost increases precipitated by steep increases in valuations are effectively a money grab: councils have the powers to set parameters within their rating system that could show greater empathy to cost of living pressures of landholders. But equally, local governments need to be supported by other levels of government to utilise a range of mechanisms that help to meet their budgetary requirements - not just via rates revenue.

The Queensland Government has a voluntary Guideline on equity and fairness in rating for Queensland local governments. CANEGROWERS is part of a growing list of organisations urging that the guidelines should be adopted as mandatory for all councils. This is a move also supported by the Queensland Farmers Federation (QFF), of which CANEGROWERS is a member.
The QFF has also reported it will be putting a submission to a Federal Senate inquiry into the sustainability of local councils, calling on the federal government to increase the allocation of financial assistance grants provided to local councils. These grants come from GST revenue, however, whilst GST revenue has continued to grow, the allocation / revenue split to local councils has remained unchanged, and has in real terms actually declined.
A sustainable council is critical to the local community. The local government share of the GST allocation needs to be increased. This will be the major lever that can assist with the financial viability of councils, allowing them to have more wriggle room when it comes to their strategies to raise income through rates.


Another major influence on cost-of-living is the market element in determining property valuations, often driven by some quite outlandishly high sales in some localities. Who really wins when a property is sold well over value? Banks? Real Estate? High land prices set off a domino effect.
Governments and opposition are always talking up how they are addressing cost-of-living issues, but they aren’t addressing that elephant in our living rooms – the influence of market value on property valuations, which impacts right down the line from landholders to renters to the community. The more money it costs to keep a roof over our head - or business – and to maintain our rates bill, the less there is to spend in local businesses and on other qualities of life.
Controlling ever-spiralling rates and land values is an issue on which all levels of government need to work together to ease cost-of-living pressures. Creating a fair system of rating categories is something that local government can do to ease community cost of living issues but we also need to see economic sustainability and services maintained at the local government level.

Isaac region cane country.  Picture: Kirili Lamb

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BOM YouTube Channel: A Useful Tool For Informed Property Management Decisions

April 24, 2024

The Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) website and app are useful tools used by many farmers and producers. The tools help landholders to understand upcoming short and long-term climate forecasts, assisting with informed property management decisions. But did you know BOM also has a YouTube channel that provides regular videos and playlists? These outline weekly, monthly and even severe weather forecasts and events.

Navigating the BOM website can be tricky and may not always provide clear and usable information. Created by the scientists and meteorologists at BOM, these videos help make the information more digestible and easy to implement on your property. They also provide the most up-to-date information and are posted regularly. 
 
The landline weather playlist provides weekly weather outlooks for the whole of Australia focusing on rainfall across the country. These episodes are added every Sunday and can be used to inform short-term decisions. The climate and water outlook playlist covers monthly and seasonal rainfall and temperature outlooks for three-month intervals for the whole of Australia. These are released every month and at the start of every season. Long-term forecasts are still the best source of upcoming conditions compared to climate drivers alone, which help ground truth models, as they consider other factors like sea surface temperatures, and atmosphere-ocean interactions. 
 
The videos under the agriculture playlist are tailored to each state and territory, with a focus on a particular crop. The sugarcane outlook videos for central Queensland provide forecast information specifically for the Mackay, Whitsunday and Isaac regions. These videos are posted monthly between April and September.

For forecast information related to our region over spring and summer, the grain's monthly climate outlook for QLD and NSW, provides climate forecasts, with our area just viewable at the top of the map displayed in the videos. 

The videos look at comparing past forecasts with known observations to confirm how accurate the predictions were, short term (weeks) and long term (months) forecast predictions and the comparison of different international forecast models. This information can then be used to inform short and long-term decisions on your property. 
 
BOM also requests feedback from farmers to allow them to learn and adapt their tools and products to make them as useful as possible for farmers and producers. Any feedback can be provided to agriculture@bom.gov.au. These videos are another tool in your kit for helping make farm-based management decisions based on forthcoming weather conditions, thereby optimising crop productivity, and enhancing time management efficiency.
 
Additionally, for those interested in further resources and initiatives focused on drought resilience, the Tropical North Queensland Drought Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hub (TNQ Hub) led by James Cook University offers valuable support and collaboration opportunities for land managers and communities in the region.



Senior Project Officer Carlos Bueno

Project Officer Rachel Taylor. Photo supplied

Drought Hub - Putting Faces To Names

You may have heard of us but we wanted to help put faces to names as representatives of Tropical North Queensland Drought hub in the Mackay Whitsunday Isaac region.

Senior project officer Carlos Bueno (carlos.bueno@reefcatchments.com) and project officer Rachel Taylor (rachel.taylor@reefcatchments.com) from Reef Catchments work as part of drought hub as a point of contact for our region.

We’re here to connect farmers and producers with options for managing your farm including sharing information on local webinars, workshops and grant opportunities on a range of topics such as climate forecasting, farm infrastructure, new technologies or practice changes.

We know farmers and producers have limited spare time, thereby our goal is to be that one stop shop to point you in the right direction to achieve your management goals while making your farm and business more resilient to our changing climate. Feel free to email either of us through email or call Reef Catchments on 07 4968 4200.

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THE 2023 PRICING SEASON: A ROLLERCOASTER RIDE

April 24, 2024

Simon Hood
Wilmar Manager Grower Marketing

As the close of the 2023 pricing season nears, it's an opportune time to reflect on the journey it has been.
Opening in July 2020 with an indicative forward price of $350/t, the trajectory since then has been nothing short of remarkable, with the price steadily climbing to a peak of $950/t towards the end of 2023.
Describing the past 12 months as tumultuous would be an understatement.
At the beginning of 2023 pricing started at $550/t, steadily growing to $840/t, before dropping to $725/t in July. By late October, prices soared and we witnessed the peak of $950/t, only for it to drop once more to around $650/t by the start of 2024. This year we have seen prices fluctuate back up to $810/t, ultimately closing the season at around $675/t.
Comparing the average price of $550/t over the past three years with the $750/t average of the past 12 months, shows the volatility experienced.
Reflecting on Wilmar Sugar and Renewables’ performance in managing pools throughout this period, the primary pool used by growers was the Production Risk Pool, equivalent to QSL’s Harvest Pool. These pools are managed over a seasonal timeframe and prices may not be directly comparable to the average prices achieved by growers pricing on the forward market over a three-year period.
Despite the fluctuations, Wilmar remains dedicated to maximising returns for growers through informed pool pricing decisions. The graph below shows that growers who price under the Wilmar Production Risk Pool are consistently better off over a three-year period, than those who market with QSL’s Harvest Pool. With the 2023 season ending, significant changes to pool prices are unlikely with the expiry of the May #11 contract.
Over the past month, Wilmar’s Grower Marketing team has been bolstered by the addition of two new staff members, and some changes to increase the support for growers across all milling regions. Owen Richards will support Fiona Villis and Meghan Wilson in the Burdekin region with grower pricing. He will also be exploring new avenues to enhance profitability for growers across all regions through new products and services.
Similarly, Angus McKerrow will now split his time between the Plane Creek and Herbert regions to facilitate Wilmar’s growing presence.
In Townsville, Megan Hawke will oversee the administration by providing support to Wilmar’s growers and field team. Megan will work on enhancing grower relationships through updated communications and the development of pricing systems and tools.
Be sure to stay tuned for the upcoming quarterly analysis of pool performance and comparative outcomes. This report is a valuable resource for growers when evaluating their marketing strategies.
Additionally, Wilmar Sugar and Renewables will release an annual 2023 season pricing analysis to combine the results from all products and regions. It will provide a basis for growers to assess their current pricing strategies, and will be a reference point for the Grower Marketing team and how they will assist in GEI sugar pricing decisions, for the 2024 season and beyond.

Wilmar’s Production Risk Pool has outperformed QSL’s Harvest Pool for three consecutive years.

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4mk Robb Kidd

April 24, 2024

There are so many activities around Mackay and the Whitsundays for you and the family to be involved in lately. So many great opportunities to get the family out of the house and have a few laughs and the odd yelling experience too.

Saturday night is your opportunity to go and check out some basketball action with our great local teams in the NBL1!

If you remember back in the glory days of the Queensland Basketball League or, the QBL, Mackay was an absolute powerhouse. Our basketball stars with the Meteors and Meteorettes were top of the pile in sporting circles, because we won a lot of flags and trophies for the cabinets.

Right now, fast forward to 2024, we still have that greatness in basketball, because our Meteors and Meteorettes are a strong force in this expanded NBL1 competition.

This Saturday is round 3, and we’ve got another home game (that’s 3 in a row) that you can come down to and cheer. This weekend we are taking on Rockhampton and I will tell you now, there is no love lost when we take on these guys from down the goat highway.

Whenever I mention these guys, comments come back about the history of these meetings over the years. There are plenty of stories when we played them down in their home court, and the disgusting crowd behaviour given to our players. Well, that hasn’t changed all that much really. There’s still hatred towards Mackay, but now that Rocky has caught up and now have electricity and sewerage services to their homes, they have picked up their game just a bit.

Who knows how they will act when they play us at Mackay Basketball stadium on Saturday, we can only wait and see.

What I do ask of you is, quite easily, come and join us and cheer our teams on to victory. Our Meteorettes are 1 and 1 and our Meteors are 2 wins and no losses! Can we make it three on the trot? Let’s see how we go.

It’s a fun night out in the stadium. Heaps of music, fun games to watch in between the actual basketball. I’ll be the idiot on the mic getting the crowd to get louder, and who knows you could be shooting a ball from halfway to grab a $1000 cash prize! Who wouldn’t want that! Just throw it a little further than our mate Josh Smith did last week! Just saying.

Come down and get involved in basketball on Saturday. I’ll make you smile. Guaranteed.

You can join Rob Kidd from 5am weekday mornings on 4MK 1026 AM in Mackay and Proserpine, 91.5FM in Airlie Beach or just ask your smart speaker to play 4MK on iHeartRadio!

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Be ready for opportunity! DON’T WAIT!

April 24, 2024

Often we observe that people are ‘lucky’. The opportunities that come your way may have an aspect of ‘luck’, however the preparation to be ready to seize those opportunities and make the most of them (the good ones) is all up to you. Success is said to be created by being ready for and open to opportunities.

To make the most of opportunity, whether seeking a career shift or uplift, in final year at Uni, or Grade 12, here are some key tips.

Build your basic toolkit
Create an email address that is suitable for job applications – keep it simple – use your full name recommended.
Build your Résumé so it’s up to date, and then it will only be tweaks for each application.
Prepare a cover letter template – this is your summary pitch for the role.

Do your research
Check out the job and career offerings of your preferred employers. Many organisations have a dedicated section on their website (e.g. Careers, Work with Us) with information about what’s on offer. Research also will give you a sense of what it’s like to work there, including employee stories. Consider carefully not only the job you want, but also the type of place you want to work – it makes a big difference to motivation!

Make it easy – don’t miss opportunity
Sign up to career alerts via those websites for the types of roles that match what you are looking for (e.g. roles in your field, apprenticeships and graduate programs) - then it comes direct to your inbox (of course you have to check your inbox) and you won’t miss when applications open. If you are already working, also make the most of LinkedIn job alerts.

Be ready to take action
With your personal toolkit prepared, you are ready to take action and craft your application to suit the opportunity responding to why you are the right fit for the role, whether looking for a career shift or a school leaver. Be ready NOW!

If you are currently in Grade 12, for example, and seeking an apprenticeship, many of the region’s major employers are already recruiting or will be soon (not in November when you finish school). Similarly if you are completing Uni, Graduate Programs are open or soon will be for employment next year. Ensure you also explore what’s on offer from the local, state and federal governments.

Initiate rather than react – don’t be a spectator of your own life!
Open your eyes to opportunities and seize them. If it all seems overwhelming, seek some assistance to develop your Résumé, assist with your applications and interview preparation, or with an option to complete a comprehensive personal Career Action Plan. CareerForce Australia can provide that dedicated personal support - contact me at powerup@careerforceaustralia.com.au or 0409 894 131 to learn more.

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Property Point

April 24, 2024

One of the things that really annoys me about today’s world is the argument that people have to apologise for, and feel guilty about, what happened in the past.
That’s not to say that what was done in the past was not wrong … in many cases it was and must be acknowledged.
All sorts of things were wrong in the past. But they were done at a time when values and beliefs were different. We now know them to be wrong and society has changed accordingly.  
We don’t discriminate against people based on the colour of their skin. We don’t accept child labour, although sadly it does still happen in Third World countries. Discrimination against women is no longer acceptable, although there are parts of the non-Western world that seem to feel it is absolutely fine. “No driver’s licence for you, dear lady.”
It is also true when assessing history that two things, one good and one bad, can happen at the same time. At a moment in time we can condemn one aspect of society and admire another.
Great works of art and philosophy and public discourse were being created at a time also marked by slavery, discrimination, brutality and unjust wars. Do we condemn everything from that time or admire the good parts and reject, condemn and never repeat the aspects that we now know to be wrong?
Which brings me to my mate Dave and the house he and his wife share in Mackay.
Dave and his wife live in a house bought by his wife’s grandfather many, many years ago, a Queenslander on Shakespeare St.
Dave told me the other day that his wife’s grandfather, Bill Higham, was a senior engineer in the sugar industry who worked at the North Eton Mill in the 1940s.
At some stage in the mid-1940s, Bill was confronted by his employer and told to convert to Catholicism.
In fact, he was given an ultimatum: become a Catholic or you will be sacked.
Now Bill wasn’t the sort of bloke who was going to be pushed around and told what, if any, religion he was going to be. He refused to take the easy way out and convert to Catholicism. So, he was sacked from his job as senior engineer at the North Eton Mill.
Imagine someone being sacked today for not being a particular religion. Rightly, it wouldn’t happen.
Fortunately, Bill moved on and got a job as head engineer at the Farleigh Mill, working there until his retirement.
During those early days at the Farleigh Mill, Bill bought a house in Shakespeare St where he and his wife raised three daughters … the same house that his grand daughter lives in today with her husband, my mate Dave.
It’s a typically beautiful, highest Queenslander with the polished floorboards, high ceilings, tongue and groove walls … an authentic work of art and functionality created by builders and who did quality work designed to stand the test of time and engage with a tough environment earmarked by heat, humidity and flood.
The house lives on nearly 100 years later, a proud statement in workmanship and design.
A moment in time in which a senior engineer could be sacked because he wasn’t a Catholic also produced a beautiful, unique style of housing designed to withstand the harshest elements of the tropics.
While society has moved on from religious-based sackings, the Queenslander stands proud and as popular as ever. Queenslanders live on, a beautiful statement in style and functionality in a modern world far removed from the time in which they were built.
You can’t sack a bloke for not being Catholic any more but you can still love living in his house.

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