Showing posts with label Honours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Honours. Show all posts

Thursday, 26 January 2012

The Network singles out special ones from the Australia Day Honours List


To-day, January 26, is Australia Day - Australia's national day of celebration (that's the settler attitude) or the day to mark survival (that's the Aboriginal point of view).  The Governor-General publishes a list of Australian honours.  It is my Australia Day ritual to peruse the lists nodding in agreement with some (not a lot) and making snarky remarks to myself about others (quite a few).  The snarky remarks go along the lines of  - well, he/she has got it for a job in which they were well remunerated; so-and-so got this level of honour while so-and-so did similar activities and only got a lower level of honour.  

One thing is always clear to me, though, and that is that Honours Lists are status-ridden.  The highest level honours are few, seldom given to women or at least not more than one woman per list, and it is clear that one has to have reached a certain position - usually based on economic position - to be in the running.  Although it is possible to work your way up from one level to another.  This is noted in the lists with the biographies clearly delineating what the recipient has done since his/her last and lower honour.  

For you, dear Networkers, I have singled out a few which are a great fit for the ethos of The Network.  I have excerpted their listings and have placed them in the document below so you can read them in greater detail.  Those that capture my attention are as follows:
  • David Rhett BUTLER - Firstly, don't you love the name, Rhett Butler. At least one parent must have loved Gone with the Wind.  And, did he marry someone called Vivian and have a daughter called Scarlett?  That's not why he made The Network Honours List.  No.  It is because he is the chair and founder of Skyjuice Foundation. As Networkers realise, water is a major priority on The Network and so I regard this not only as a gong  for David Butler but for water as well.
  • Bryan Andrew KEON-COHEN QC.  Networkers will realise that the First Nations have the highest priority on The Network.  This blog is concerned for recognition and relationships with the First Peoples of all parts of the globe.  This, however, is an Australian blog and The Network's primary concern is with the First Nations of Australia.  Bryan Keon-Cohen's work for which he is honoured makes it perfectly clear that his priority is the same as The Network's priority.
  • Jon Stephenson - like myself an old Townvillean - has gone from the midst of us.  Please note, Networkers.  If you wish to nominate someone, please don't wait until they are on their last legs.  Jon's achievements are amazing.  For my money this man should have been nominated years before and received no less than our highest honour.  Neither of these things have occurred.  This man's achievements are many and unique.  We ought to be reading about him in schools and libraries across the country.  Is there a Hall of Fame somewhere for Jon Stephenson?
  • Lyn Pengilly of Parkes and Helen Poulos of Bondi Junction touch my heart strings.  The Network emphasises and tries to live and breathe community and communitarianism.  Lyn and Helen display this in their daily lives and have been honoured for it - one in regional Australia, the other in the very centre of Australia's major city.  They are unpaid.  They have done the most basic of volunteer jobs.  Without Lyn and Helen and people like them across this nation and across the world our human community would be poverty stricken in mind, body, and spirit.  They have turned their hands to what needs doing.  They have provided the grease for the wheels of their communities.  
Read more about these wonderful people here:

Monday, 14 June 2010

The Great Artesian Basin and Jeff Austin get a gong

The Great Artesian Basin. The envelopes marked in red represent regional clusters of springs called ‘super-groups’. The dark yellow represents the major areas of outcropping sediment where the basin is recharged by rainfall, and the arrows broadly represent the direction of groundwater flow.

Australia is a big country and it does the out of sight/out of mind trick very well.  The Outback can be a forgotten place, another country in the affairs of State and Commonwealth Governments.  In watching over Australia's precious water (Australia is the driest inhabited continent on earth), most of the visibility goes to the Murray-Darling Basin.  Sure, the MDB involves four states but the GAB involves three.

It is therefore pleasing that, in this year's Queen's Birthday Honours List, has received a gong from Her Maj.


Medal of the Order of Australia



Mr Jeffrey John AUSTIN RFD, 
Walgett NSW 2832
For service to water management and conservation, and to the community.


Chairman, Great Artesian Basin Coordinating Committee, since 2004.
Member and Deputy Chair, Great Artesian Basin Consultative Committee, 1997-2002.
Chairman, NSW Great Artesian Basin Advisory Committee, 1999-2004; Member, since 1997.
Current Deputy Chairman, Namoi Catchment Management Authority; Member, Risk and Audit Committee.
Former Chairman, Groundwater, Regulated and Unregulated Water Committees in the Namoi Valley.
Former Member, North-West Catchment Management Committee.
An Institute of Public Works Engineering Australia representative on the Local Government and Shires Associations Water Resources Committee, for a number of years.
Secretary, Walgett Aero Club, for the past 5 years.
Controller, NSW State Emergency Services and concurrent local government Emergency Management Officer, 1982-1999.
Director, Walgett Special One (Grain) Co-operative, for 8 years.
Chief Engineer, Walgett Shire Council, for approximately 22 years.
Awards/recognition include:
Reserve Force Decoration, long service award presented to officers in the Reserve elements of the Australian Defence Force.

Congratulations, Jeff and all the team 
working to support and care for
The Great Artesian Basin.
I hope you celebrate with a drop of 
Vintage Bore Water.

Related Reading and Viewing:
http://www.environment.gov.au/water/publications/agriculture/video-great-artesian-basin.html
The Great Australian Artesian Basin and the Source of Its Water
The Great Australian Artesian Basin and the Source of Its Water
Regions of Australia: Great Artesian Basin, Lake Eyre Basin, Murray-Darling Basin, List of Regions of Australia, Eastern States of Australia
Ranking spring wetlands in the Great Artesian Basin of Australia using endemicity and isolation of plant species [An article from: Biological Conservation]
Ranking spring wetlands in the Great Artesian Basin of Australia using endemicity and isolation of plant species [An article from: Biological Conservation]
Geology of Australia: Great Artesian Basin, Geology of Tasmania, Geology of the Australian Capital Territory, Seaham, New South Wales, Gondwana
The hydrology of portion of the Great Artesian Basin near the Peake and Denison Ranges (Geological Survey of South Australia. Report of investigation)
The great Australian artesian basin and the source of its water.
Groundwater: Aquifer, Water pollution, Saltwater intrusion, Groundwater recharge, Water table, Hydrogeology, Artesian aquifer, Watertable control, Surface water, Great Artesian Basin
Groundwater: Aquifer, Water pollution, Saltwater intrusion, Groundwater recharge, Water table, Hydrogeology, Artesian aquifer, Watertable control, Surface water, Great Artesian Basin
Gas and oil prospects of the Great Artesian Basin: Paleozoic and Mesozoic possibilities are good over vast areas of east-central Australia

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