Coordinator-General – Right to Information Request for Release of Diary
The Coordinator-General is a public servant under the State Service Act. He is paid $446 000 to cosy up to business and trade in public assets.
The Coordinator-General is a public servant under the State Service Act. He is paid $446 000 to cosy up to business and trade in public assets.
Another day, another publicly-owned Tasmanian treasure is up for sale under the Liberals’ privatisation agenda.
In 2016, the Joint Standing Committee on Integrity recommended that parliament adopt a single code of conduct for members.
Eastern Shore residents are waiting for a major private development planned for the top of Rosny Hill to be advertised by the Clarence City Council any day.
Under the Liberals this money is about allowing for the increased commercial exploitation of public protected areas.
Minister Groom's continued obfuscation over the government's involvement in the CH Smith project raises far more questions than it answers.
Labor and the Liberals voted together against a Greens' Motion calling for far greater transparency in Crown Land deals with private developers.
Communities from Swansea to Stanley, Table Cape, Boat Harbour and Wynyard are faced with losing their treasured coastal crown land places.
The Liberals have released a laughably desperate list of properties sold under the previous government.
There has been much criticism from the Greens and of course members of the Opposition about the Office of the Coordinator-General and the role it plays.