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Two WA unis announce fee freeze

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 29 Mei 2014 | 22.17

Murdoch University and Edith Cowan University have announced a fee freeze for students starting their studies in 2014. Source: Supplied

Murdoch University vice chancellor Richard Higgott. Source: Supplied

TWO WA universities have announced that they will freeze fees for all students starting their studies this year.

Edith Cowan University has joined Murdoch University in making the commitment to domestic students to "provide fairness and certainty".

In this month's Federal Budget, the Abbott Government announced plans to introduce higher education reforms that will deregulate fees and make students pay back loans sooner and with higher interest.

Today, ECU announced that the freeze would apply to all domestic students who start in semester 2, 2014.

"Our decision to freeze fees recognises that many students had already decided to study at ECU but had not yet enrolled before the Budget was announced. We want to give them the chance to study with us under the current fee structure," ECU vice-chancellor Kerry Cox said.

"It also ensures that those who have been considering university studies, but had been put off by the discussions about fee increases, have the chance to commence studying at ECU and have certainty that the cost of their degree will not change."

The announcement comes after Murdoch University announced earlier today that it would also "protect" this year's students from fee hikes.

The move to freeze fees for students starting in 2014 at Murdoch and Edith Cowan universities was made to "provide fairness and certainty" to students. Picture: File image Source: Supplied

"Murdoch has acted speedily to bring about certainty for new students on their fees in 2016 when the Government's 20 per cent funding cut applies," Murdoch vice chancellor Richard Higgott said.

"Our move means that no student who commences a bachelor degree at Murdoch in 2014 will be worse off.

"This will ease concern and bring much needed fee certainty to all students commencing an undergraduate degree at Murdoch in the second half of this year.

"If we had not taken this decision, there would have been a disproportionate impact on the cohort of students considering mid-year entry and that was something we were determined to avoid.

"Failure to act would have adversely affected the high proportion of mature age learners and returners to education who are typically represented in this cohort at Murdoch."

22.17 | 0 komentar | Read More

GP found guilty over serious crash

Christine Caffrey, who was today found guilty of dangerous driving causing grievous bodily harm, leaves court earlier this week. Source: News Corp Australia

A WESTERN suburbs GP has been found guilty over a serious crash which left a Coles delivery driver with an amputated leg.

Christine Marie Caffrey was this afternoon found guilty of dangerous driving causing grievous bodily harm against Matthew Chapman.

A Perth magistrate convicted Caffrey following a three-day trial.

While driving to pick up her daughter, Caffrey hit Mr Chapman as he unloaded the back of a Coles delivery truck on Vincent Street in Nedlands on August 8 last year.

While one of his legs had to be amputated, the other was also severely injured.

She was fighting the charge arguing that while she hit Mr Chapman, she was not driving dangerously.

The prosecution argued phone records showed Caffrey had been distracted by her mobile at the time of the crash – a claim the doctor rejected.

This afternoon, Magistrate Michael Wheeler found Caffrey guilty, fining her $5000 and suspending her driver's licence for two years.

The magistrate could not conclude Caffrey was on the phone at the time, but said it was inevitable she was either totally distracted by something or driving with such inattention which led to a catastrophic accident.

"The truck was there to be seen, and should have been seen and must have been seen – it was not a hidden obstacle," Mr Wheeler said.

After the verdict, Mr Chapman told Seven News he was pleased with the result, which would offer some closure.

But he said he had been hurt that Caffrey had not tried to contact him and was offended by claims in court she was remorseful, but still forgave the doctor.

He said the court case was difficult to endure and it was "hard not to have relapses of what happened that night."

"It has totally changed our lives, but we have to move on and try live the best way we can now," he said

Victim Matthew Chapman is relieved at the guilty verdict against Dr Christine Caffrey. Source: News Corp Australia


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Wife ‘shattered’ at MH370 setback

Danica Weeks with her two sons Lincoln and Jack. Source: News Corp Australia

THE Perth wife of a passenger on ill-fated Malaysia Airlines flight 370 says she has difficulty processing news that searchers have given up on an area of the Indian Ocean where acoustic "pings" were detected.

Underwater drone Bluefin-21 has completed its scouring of the zone off the West Australian coast where the man-made sounds were picked up, and come up with nothing.

A massive broadening of the search area is now expected, based on a fresh analysis of data that led British satellite firm Inmarsat to conclude the plane crashed in the southern Indian Ocean.

New Zealander Danica Weeks, whose mechanical engineer husband, Paul, had boarded MH370 on his way to start a new job in Mongolia, remains in Perth, where their family moved after the Christchurch earthquakes in 2011.

Ms Weeks said she had "cried a lot of tears today".

"It just is another slap in the face, it's just another long road for us and I'm just shattered by the news, I'm absolutely shattered," Ms Weeks told the Seven Network.

"When your child cries for their father, it just breaks your heart and I can't tell them the truth because I don't know.

"I still haven't reconciled that he's not coming back, because I've had nothing.

"When you don't have anything – not even a piece of the plane, just nothing, and so many different stories – how can you not have a little piece of hope?"

The couple have two boys, Lincoln, 3, and 13-month-old Jack.


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Rolf tells of family’s shock

Trial appearance. Australian born veteran TV and music entertainer Rolf Harris arrives at court with his daughter Bindi. Picture: Matt Dunham Source: AP

BINDI Harris had become so incensed with allegations her father Rolf sexually abused a school friend of hers she was banging her head against a wall and later sought counselling, a London Court has heard.

Rolf Harris took to the witness stand for a third day to be cross examined over who knew what and when in relation to claims he indecently assaulted a 13-year-old friend of Bindi's during a holiday in 1978 as well as other women.

The 84-year-old agreed his daughter had become upset when she heard the claims in 1997, almost 20 years after the alleged incident, and was "beside herself" when she rang him on the telephone while he was in Australia to accuse him over the sexual child abuse claim.

"She was in such a state she was banging her head against a wall she was beside herself with shock," prosecutor Sasha Wass put to Harris to which he agreed she was bedside herself in shock.

He told the court he couldn't recall her head banging or receiving counselling but was aware she had smashed two paintings he had done for her.

Harris, has pleaded not guilty to 12 counts of indecently assaulting four females over almost two decades, from 1968 to 1986.

Harris told Southwark Crown Court all the women, including the four alleged victims and up to a dozen other witnesses who have claimed they had been or witnessed indecent assaults, were lying.

But he told the court he couldn't say why they would do that.

Ms Wass yesterday set out five points of a "common theme" between all the alleged independent victims and witnesses as: Harris meeting them all in public; sexually assaulting them from a friendly gesture like a hug; each victim being unable to move or protest; other people present or close by and then he behaving after the assault as if nothing happened.

The prosecutor told the court what Harris found attractive about touching children was they would not judge him like adults.

Harris denied the claim and suggested there were holes in all of the women's stories with many of the alleged acts just "not physically possible". That included allegedly molesting a girl sitting on his lap at a pub bench which he said was physically not possible because the bench was tight to the wall, indecently assaulting a girl while signing her an autograph because he had no free hands, assaulting a girl after he had been on all fours and barking like a dog because he had never been to the venue and tongue kissing an 11-year-old girl with Harris claiming it was physically impossible to tongue kiss anyone who didn't want to partake in the act.

The case continues.


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Uproar over MH370 ping ‘mess’

Today's top trending stories and news.

Koji Kubota of the Japan Coast Guard keeps watch for debris from Malaysia Airlines flight MH370. Photo: AFP. Source: AFP

REVELATIONS that the underwater pings heard in early April were not from the MH370 black box has left family members of those on board angry and demanding answers.

The area where the supposed black box pings were heard later became the focus of an intensive ocean search by an underwater vehicle over an 850 square kilometre zone.

But oceanographer Dr Erik Van Sebille warns against criticism, saying deep ocean searches are massively difficult tasks.

Selamat Osman, whose son was on board MH370, said he had been informed by Malaysian Airlines about the doubt now surrounding the supposed black box pings.

Mr Osman said from his home in Malaysia that he was disappointed in the efforts to find the plane and his son and the other 238 on board.

"I feel really disappointed. The attempt to search for the plane is not optimal yet," Mr Osman said.

"They should be working harder rather than talking and talking. In my opinion, they have too much talking rather than working. It doesn't make us really feel sure about their work."

Mr Osman said it was his big hope that the renewed search would yield some results.

FLIGHT PATH: MH370 report confirms search delays

"I am really disappointed that the search operation hasn't found anything."

Sarah Bjac, whose partner Philip Wood was on board the plane, leads a group of relatives of passengers who want more answers.

She said yesterday the latest black box twist was "consistent with the tangled mess that is this supposed investigation". Ms Bajc said from her home in Beijing: "It is a sad commentary on the situation that family members are rejoicing that there is still a chance that our loved ones are being held hostage by hijackers. It is a better option than dead at the bottom of the ocean."

She said the family members were being managed and intentionally distracted.

"I've been saying this since the first weeks. We are being managed and intentionally distracted. Lead, redaction, lead, redaction, lead — until three months later there is not a single solitary fact or piece of evidence that has been proven to be true, not one. Both the leads and the redactions come from a mix of official sources and "leaks". Nothing is logical or consistent or according to standard expected protocols much less common sense."

Mystery disappearance ... it is now believed the pings came from a source not related to the missing Malaysia Airlines plane. Source: AFP

'INCREDIBLY DIFFICULT TASK'

But oceanographer Dr Erik Van Sebille warns against criticism of authorities in the search.

He said deep ocean research, particularly in a place like the southern Indian Ocean, was an incredibly difficult task.

He said oceans were full of sounds and it was not easy to discern them.

'Sounds are made at all different frequencies. The ocean is more a cacophony of these different sounds. You might think you hear one thing but it is another," Dr Van Sebille, from the University of New South Wales said yesterday.

"I think we should be very careful with our criticism. There is no team in the world that could have done a better job than this. Navies know their sounds in the ocean like nothing else," he said, adding that the Australian Navy were among world experts in underwater sounds.

Dr Van Sebille said so many things in the ocean made sounds and it was very difficult to differentiate them.

"Everything in the ocean makes sounds, from whales to shrimps that actually make clicking sounds. Biologists use instruments that make sounds to track animals," he said.

He said that while the 850quare kilometres search by Bluefin-21 did not sound like a lot, searching that amount of ocean floor was a painstakingly slow task.

No sign of the plane ... specialists prepare to launch the Phoenix Autonomous Underwater Vehicle 'Artemis' Bluefin-21 from the vessel Ocean Shield. Source: AFP

PRIMARY SEARCH ZONE 'DISCOUNTED'

Australian authorities today discounted an area that had been considered the most likely zone.

The triangle of water in the Indian Ocean was seen as the prime area largely as a result of the acoustic pings picked up last month, and thought to be from the missing plane's black box.

But the Australian Transport Safety Bureau today advised that the search in the vicinity of the acoustic detections can now be considered complete and that the area can be discounted as the final resting place of MH370.

Transport Minister Warren Truss told parliament the hunt for the missing Malaysia Airlines plane will continue in the Indian Ocean even though it was not found in the recent search zone. He said search is about to move into a new phase and Australia was committed to doing everything it can to find the plane.

"We are still very confident that the resting place of the aircraft is in the Southern Ocean," he said.

SEARCH TEAMS HEAD HOME

The ATSB said Bluefin-21 completed its last mission yesterday afternoon searching the remaining areas in the vicinity of the acoustic signals which were detected in early April by the Towed Pinger Locator deployed from ADV Ocean Shield.

"The data collected on yesterday's mission has been analysed. As a result, the JACC can advise that no signs of aircraft debris have been found by the Autonomous Underwater Vehicle since it joined the search effort," it said in a statement.

HUNT TO CONTINUE

The next search begins in August and is expected to take about 12 months.

"Unfortunately this is a painstaking effort in a very large ocean." The next area could be 800 kilometres long and 70km wide, he said.

Manager of opposition business, Tony Burke, said the hopes of many had been dashed by the failure to find the plane in the most recent search zone.

"Once again we offer our condolences and words of comfort to the families and friends of the passengers on MH370 who still await more news," he said.

It's over ... the search for the plane in the Indian Ocean has come to an end. Source: AP

SHOCK CIRCLES THE GLOBE

The news has come as a shock and disappointment for relatives who are still searching for answers.

New Zealander Danica Weeks, whose mechanical engineer husband, Paul, had boarded MH370 on his way to start a new job in Mongolia, remains in Perth, where their family moved after the Christchurch earthquakes in 2011.

"When your child cries for their father, it just breaks your heart and I can't tell them the truth because I don't know," Ms Weeks told the Seven Network.

"I still haven't reconciled that he's not coming back, because I've had nothing.

"When you don't have anything — not even a piece of the plane, just nothing, and so many different stories — how can you not have a little piece of hope?" The couple have two boys, Lincoln, 3, and 13-month-old Jack

US BREAKS THE BAD NEWS

The official word came after a US Navy official told CNN this morning that the pings are now universally believed to have come from a man-made source unrelated to the missing jetliner, and not from the plane's data or cockpit voice recorders.

Michael Dean, the Navy's deputy director of ocean engineering, said that if the pings had come from the recorders, searchers would have found them.

"Our best theory at this point is that (the pings were) likely some sound produced by the ship ... or within the electronics of the Towed Pinger Locator," Dean said.

"Always your fear any time you put electronic equipment in the water is that if any water gets in and grounds or shorts something out, that you could start producing sound."

When asked if the other nations involved in the search effort also believed the pings were unrelated to MH370, Dean answered "yes".

No sign of the plane ... specialists prepare to launch the Phoenix Autonomous Underwater Vehicle 'Artemis' Bluefin-21 from the vessel Ocean Shield.

He went on to tell CNN that it is not possible to categorically rule out that the pings came from the black boxes but that there is no evidence to suggest they did.

The US Navy later dismissed Mr Dean's comments as "speculative and premature" — but that was before the ATSB's announcement this afternoon.

"The US has been working cooperatively with our Malaysian, Australian and international partners for more than two months in an effort to locate MH370," US Navy spokesman Chris Johnson said in a statement.

"Mike Dean's comments today were speculative and premature, as we continue to work with our partners to more thoroughly understand the data acquired by the Towed Pinger Locator.

"As such, we would defer to the Australians, as the lead in the search effort, to make additional information known at the appropriate time."

'Debacle' ... Prime Minister Tony Abbott with search co-ordinator Air Chief Angus Houston. Source: News Corp Australia

REQUEST FOR DATA

The latest revelation comes after News Corp Australia last week revealed that underwater scientists have labelled the search for MH370 a "debacle" and say Prime Minister Tony Abbott was playing politics when he prematurely announced the black box pingers had been found.

The acoustic experts, who do not wish to be identified, said the four crucial signals detected by a US pinger locator were almost certainly not from the missing Malaysian Airlines plane's black boxes, but from another man-made source.

They insisted that the signals were in the wrong frequency and detected too far apart to be from the boxes.

"As soon as I saw the frequency and the distance between the pings I knew it couldn't be the aircraft pinger," one scientist said.

That conclusion is supported by the lack of success from a detailed search of the area conducted by the US deep sea drone Bluefin 21.

In answer to questions from News Corp Australia the Joint Agency Coordination Centre (JACC) said that the signals were "likely" sourced from electronic equipment and were "believed to be" consistent with the Flight Data Recorder.

However the scientists said the 33.3 kilohertz frequency of the signal was very different to the 37.5 kilohertz generated by underwater acoustic beacons. The signals were also detected some 30km and four days apart.

The JACC has refused a request to release recordings of the signals for independent analysis and it did not release the exact location or precise depth of the signals.

Agency head retired defence chief Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston said the signals were still being analysed to ensure nothing was overlooked.

Meanwhile the families of passengers aboard missing flight MH370 accuse Malaysia of a cover-up over newly released satellite data, saying it is incomplete and does not prove that the plane crashed in the southern Indian Ocean.

This comes as the first stage of the search off the west coast of Australia concludes without finding any debris from the missing Boeing 777.

The Malaysian Airlines flight, with 239 passengers and crew on board, disappeared in the early hours of March 8 on a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. Since then no trace of the jetliner has been found, despite a multi-million dollar search effort.


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Obese toddler put into state care

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 28 Mei 2014 | 22.16

A MORBIDLY obese child has been taken into state care amid fears her life is at risk.

The Department of Child Protection and Family Services had confirmed an East Kimberley toddler has been placed with a foster family in Perth so she can receive urgent medical treatment.

Department acting director-general Emma White said the child was at signficant risk of death and was not receiving the appropriate care.

"The Department is faciliating ongoing contact between the child and the family," she said.

"Medical professionals have clearly stated that the child needs to reside close to a

hospital which has the necessary breathing equipment which is required if she gets into

breathing difficulties.

"The only hospitals with this equipment are in Perth, Broome and Kalgoorlie."

The ABC reports the three-year-old child weighs at least 30kg and is believed to have been hospitalised in Broome several times in the past 12 months.

She was flown to Perth last week after a court order to place her in foster care was secured.

It was reported that her family, who live in a remote Aboriginal community, have refused to move to Broome or Perth so the child could be near a hospital with breathing equipment.

A spokeswoman for WA Health confirmed the child had been discharged from Broome Hospital, but said all other inquiries should be directed to the Department of Child Protection and Family Services.


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Rolf ’admired’ bikini teen

Rolf cross examined ... The entertainer admitted to a prosecutor in court today that comments about a 13-year-old's bikini may have been sexual. Source: AFP

ROLF Harris has conceded his admiration of the bikini of a 13-year-old girl he later allegedly indecently assaulted during a beach holiday may have been a sexual reference to her body, a court has heard.

The 84-year-old entertainer in his second day in the witness box was softly spoken, barely audible in part, as he was placed under cross-examination by prosecutor Sasha Wass QC.

That was in marked contrast to his testimony yesterday in which he sang a verse of his hit tune Jake the Peg and mimicked a wobble board sound.

Prosecutor Wass today reminded him his trial was not a "talent show" nor was his "polished performance" ever in question. But Ms Wass said that couldn't disguise Harris' darker side and the court had to decide how dark that side was.

The court had earlier heard one of his alleged victims was a sporty 13-year-old and on holiday with the family in 1978 when she was allegedly indecently assaulted by Harris after she stepped out of a shower wrapped in a towel and later on the beach after she went swimming.

Harris denied he ever assaulted her but said he had during the holiday complimented her on her bikini.

Ms Wass said when he said that it could have meant "you've got a great body" as opposed to admiring the material of a couple of small triangles.

"I suppose so," Harris said.

"And she was 13?" Ms Wass asked.

"Yes."

He was then asked whether that could be seen as a sexual comment.

"In hindsight I suppose it is," he replied.

"You admired (alleged victim's) body during that holiday … you admired her sexually during that holiday?"

"It's possible yes."

Ms Wass reminded the court that Harris had admitted having an affair with the girl when she turned 18, and he was aged in his 50s, and also a secret sexual affair with a housekeeper/chauffeur staying with his family.

"You are pretty good Mr Harris aren't you at disguising the darker side of your character aren't you?" Ms Wass asked.

"Yes"

"The issue that we have to decide in this court is how dark is that dark side."

Harris yesterday admitted he had said "it takes two to tango" when the brother of the alleged victim rang him up to abuse him decades later.

But Harris said that was in reference to their consensual relationship when she turned 18. Ms Wass branded the remark as arrogant and dismissive.

Harris denied visiting the alleged 13-year-old — who was a friend of his daughter Bindi — after the holiday when the family returned to England.

He said the victim and her family, despite being decent people, were now lying.

"I think she's probably supporting her daughter's story," Harris said of the mother's testimony in which she said Harris visited her home, asked to see the schoolgirl then when directed upstairs abused her once in her bedroom and again in an upstairs sitting room.

Ms Wass said he was grooming her and she had "nowhere to hide".

Referring to his behaviour on the holiday, Ms Wass suggested Harris "played with her like she was a toy".

He replied: "I would never do that."

He said their later sexual encounters when she was 18 was borne out of "mutual love and affection"

Harris has pleaded not guilty to 12 counts of indecently assaulting four women from 1968 to 1986.

The case continues.


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Jim’s Mowing man found after crash

Parkerville man Leigh Anthony Morgan, 52, a Jim's Mowing franchisee, has been found. It is understood he had been involved in a traffic accident. Source: Supplied

MISSING Parkerville Jim's Mowing man Leigh Morgan has been found after a traffic crash in the Perth Hills, police revealed.

Police said Mr Morgan had been "involved in a traffic crash'' at Bailup, near Wundowie, about 45km east of Perth.

"At about 10.25am this morning, police were called to a crash, where a car had collided with a tree on Bailup Road, Bailup,'' Police said.

"The male driver of the vehicle (Mr Morgan) was taken to Swan District Hospital with injuries that are not believed to be life-threatening.

Mr Morgan had not been seen since about 4.30pm Monday, when his white Mitsubishi Triton and Jim's Mowing trailer, were spotted on Great Eastern Highway, Ascot.

Parkerville man Leigh Morgan, 52, a Jim's Mowing franchisee, has been found.

Given he was not found till just after 10am today, police are trying to piece together the missing 40-odd hours.

Bailup is a bush area just west of Wundowie, off the Toodyay Road and just a few kilometres from his Parkerville home.

Earlier today Mr Morgan's wife Debbie made a public plea for information to help police find her husband.

Debbie Morgan last saw her husband of 30 years at 8.15am on Monday, when she left for work.

She was expecting to see him home that evening, but when she left for netball at 6pm he had not yet returned home.

"I already had dinner ready, he knew what we were doing for dinner — I was expecting to cross paths with him on the way out," Mrs Morgan said.

"When I got home at 7.30pm and he was still not there, that's when I knew something was wrong."

Mrs Morgan said it was "absolutely" out of character for Mr Morgan not to let her know where he was, and she was "extremely worried".

The 52-year-old operates a Jim's Mowing franchise, and usually gets home from his mowing round between 4pm and 6pm.

"If he is not going to be home by six, he would always ring first," Mrs Morgan said.

The last sighting of Mr Morgan is at 4.30pm on Monday, when he was driving on Great Eastern Highway in Ascot in his white 2004 Mitsubishi Triton ute, registration number 1BWO625, and towing a Jim's Mowing trailer, registration 1TKC571.

Mrs Morgan said none of Mr Morgan's family or friends had seen the father of two and were all very worried for his welfare.

"He is the most easygoing person you would ever meet," she said.

"Everyone loves Leigh."

Mr Morgan is in Royal Perth Hospital in a stable condition.


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One step closer to ‘waste dump’ shut down

The Department of Environment Regulation today served Bio-Organics Pty Ltd with a "draft decision" to revoke its licence. Source: News Limited

Industrial effluent pouring out of a culvert on a property next to the Bio-Organics facility at Oakford. Source: Supplied

WA's environmental watchdog is one step away from shutting down an Oakford composting business that neighbours complain has become a dumping ground for noxious liquid wastes.

The Department of Environment Regulation today served Bio-Organics Pty Ltd with a "draft decision" to revoke its licence.

The company, which is paid by industry to receive a range of liquid wastes, has ten business days to respond.

A DER spokeswoman said: "After considering any response, DER's Acting CEO will make a final decision."

Bio-Organics has been the subject of an investigation by The Sunday Times. In February, the newspaper revealed:

THE plight of neighbouring residents, who claim their idyllic corner of rural Oakford, 36km south of Perth, had been ruined by putrid smells and other impacts from the Bio-Organics site. They complained of nausea, headaches, burning eyes and nosebleeds;

LIQUID had been pouring from the site into a creek that drains into the Serpentine

River. Samples collected by the DER showed high concentrations of a range of chemicals, including arsenic, cadmium, chromium VI, lead, nickel, nitrogen and phosphorus; and

AN environmental scientist, hired by the Shire of Serpentine Jarrahdale to test groundwater quality on a neighbour's property downstream from Bio-Organics, reported results "suggestive of industrial effluent contamination".

THE site is just 250m from the Jandakot Mound, one of Perth's main drinking water supplies.

Industrial effluent pouring out of a culvert on a property next to the Bio-Organics facility at Oakford. Source: Supplied

Although the DER has taken steps to revoke Bio-Organics' licence, neighbours complain they are still in the dark about exactly what types of liquid waste have been tanked there for mixing with green waste. They say it's disgraceful they haven't been told.

A Freedom of Information application to the DER by The Sunday Times failed to shed any light on the waste types, because the regulator – which has permitted the waste to go there – has determined that the information is a trade secret of Bio-Organics. Though it confirmed "the waste types are not widely used in the composting industry."

The newspaper is in the process of appealing the FOI decision.

The Shire of Serpentine Jarrahdale is taking court action against Bio-Organics, claiming it doesn't have planning approval. Meanwhile Bio-Organics is suing Shire president Keith Ellis over comments he made about the company on radio.

Oakford residents have kicked up a stink over the Bio-Organics site, which they claim is affecting their health and well being. Picture: File image Source: News Limited

The DER spokeswoman today said that if the licence is revoked, a closure notice will be served on the company.

"This enables DER to manage the environmental implications of the materials on Bio-Organics' site during the closure period," the spokesman said.

"Such a notice would require Bio-Organics to continue managing, reporting and auditing its operations, under the provisions of the closure notice."

The spokeswoman added: "The matter of possible site contamination is being managed separately under the provisions of the Contaminated Sites Act 2003.

"DER will review the reports documenting the investigations and will update the classification of the site based on the information provided. If contamination to the soil or groundwater is identified, which represents a risk to human health or the environment, DER will require that remedial or management measures are implemented to mitigate the risk."

Bio-Organics denies causing any pollution.

PerthNow sought comment from the company earlier today.


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Serial traffic offender jailed

Serial traffic pest Mitchell Walsh has been sentenced to nine months prison for his eighth charge of driving under a suspended licence.

Mitchell Walsh leaves court following a previous court appearance. Picture: File image Source: News Limited

SERIAL traffic pest Mitchell William Donald Walsh has been sentenced to nine months prison for his eighth charge of driving under a suspended licence.

Walsh, formerly known as Mitchell Walsh-McDonald, was caught driving his work vehicle to a job in January this year, despite being banned from driving in 2013 for two years.

It was his eighth such charge and his 14th driving-related charge to go to court since 2008.

Walsh first came to the public's attention in 2003 when he struck and killed schoolgirl Jess Meehan.

He went to trial over the matter and was acquitted because the prosecution did not successfully prove the alcohol in Walsh's system had any impact on his driving.

This afternoon, the Perth Magistrates Court was told Walsh's latest charge occurred when the father-of-one got behind the wheel because his lift to work phoned to say he was sick and could not come.

This afternoon, Magistrate Joe Randazzo said Walsh had "put your personal interests ahead of the rule and sanction of the law."

Magistrate Randazzo described Walsh's criminal record as "appalling" and imprisonment was the only appropriate punishment.

"I would be failing in my duty to not impose an immediate term of imprisonment," he said.

"It is unbelievable that you have not received the message it is not OK to drive."

In sentencing submissions, Walsh's lawyer Oliver Paxman said his client had cognitive issues that were not picked up until a psychological report was done for this afternoon's sentencing hearing.

He said Walsh was living with a "constant level of stress and anxiety" following the death of Jess Meehan.

Mr Paxman suggested a pre-sentence order to monitor Walsh's behaviour and give him an opportunity of counselling for substance abuse and grief before sending him to prison.

"I don't think sending him to jail is going to stop him offending," he said.

Police prosecutors opposed any option other than a jail term.

Walsh's prison sentence was back dated to April 16 when he was remanded in custody are pleading guilty to the charge.

He will be released in January.

His 15 months driving suspension is cumulative on a current suspension that ends in June 2015.


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