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Help Connect Tasmania to the Global Space Industry

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Twitter: https://twitter.com/PeartForProsser

Kim Peart is holding six community meetings around Prosser in the coming week.

Ross ~ 6pm Thursday 26 April, Town Hall supper room

Sorell ~ 6pm Saturday 28 April, Sorell Memorial Hall supper room

Bagdad ~ 2pm Sunday 29 April, Bagdad Community Club, 1661 Midlands Hwy

Oatlands ~ 6pm Monday 30 April, Ex-Servicemen’s & Women’s Club, 1 Albert St, Oatlands

Eaglehawk Neck ~ 6pm Tuesday 1 May, Eaglehawk Neck Community Hall

Swansea ~ 6pm Wednesday 2 May, Swansea Town Hall

Then on the last night of the campaign, there is an invitation to a meeting with a difference.

Would you like to explore ways for Tasmania to connect to the global space industry: creating work, launching exciting careers, and inspiring new enterprise?

On the last day of the Prosser campaign, on the eve of the poll, there will be a space meeting with a difference, for anyone in Tasmania who would like to explore our future with space development.

7pm Friday 4 May
in a space station in Second Life

If you are active in Second Life, ask Kim for directions.

If not, help is available.

This will be the dawn of a whole new discussion, exploring the possibilities of space for Tasmania, setting up displays, working with robots and remote control systems, and learning to work in space, even from Earth.

Kim and his wife, Jennifer, founded Space Pioneers in 2011, to explore the possibilities of space.

With space we are looking at a future where anything we can imagine, could be created.

ABOUT Kim Peart ~ Born in 1952, Kim was raised in Howrah when it was farmland, played in the old fort in Bellerive, and rode the old ferries to Hobart to go to movies. Kim plied the life of a visual artist, with a studio in the Salamanca Arts Centre, and then in Murdunna, and later in Bellerive in the old bakery. In 2007 Kim was listed among Tasmania’s top 200 movers and shakers for “An urban bushland conservationist who has worked tirelessly over the years to maintain walking tracks and protect wildlife from the encroachment of bush-front housing developments.” Kim is campaigning for an Australian Convict Trail, with the Tasmanian leg running from the ferry in Devonport to Port Arthur, along with foot and cycle paths by Tasmania’s highways and roads. After being at the launch of an Australian Space Agency last September, Kim is seeking ways to create employment, careers and new enterprise in Tasmania with the global space industry. Kim now lives in Ross, with his wife Jennifer, and a small tribe of alpacas.

Authorised by: Jennifer Bolton, 39A Bridge St, Ross
Kim Peart, running in Prosser as an independent

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