Media release – Madeleine Ogilvie, Minister for Small Business, 11 May 2023

Putting our plan for business growth into action

Tasmania has the highest business confidence in the country and the Rockliff Liberal Government is continuing to take action to support our small business sector to further flourish.

Following the launch of the Small Business Growth Strategy 2026 in February, the first implementation plan arising from the Strategy has been released today, which sets out the actions the Government and private sector will take towards the Strategy’s objectives.

Minister for Small Business, Madeleine Ogilvie, said it was important to back up the objectives set out in the Small Business Growth Strategy 2026 with a clear set of actions.

“This implementation plan demonstrates the Rockliff Liberal Government’s unwavering support for our 41,000 small businesses,” she said.

“The more than 100 actions in the plan will be undertaken by the Government and industry, with a focus on maintaining Tasmania’s strong appeal as a place for business.

“New actions in the plan include developing an Aboriginal business community engagement Program; delivering the Business Resource Efficiency Program which will provide businesses with tailored and practical information about ways to reduce operational costs; and working with providers of cyber security training to help small businesses to better protect their online activities.”

The actions also include work already underway, such as the staged implementation of the new Tasmanian Business Advice Service from 1 July 2023 onward.

This first implementation plan draws on consultations with businesses across the state and covers the period from 1 January 2023 to 30 June 2024. Further implementation plans, each covering a period of 12-18 months, will be developed for the period out to 2026.

A working group that includes the Tasmanian Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the Tasmanian Small Business Council will convene every six months to review progress of the Plan’s initiatives.

Further consultation with key stakeholders including industry peak bodies and regional chambers will also take place from March 2024.

“This agile approach allows for actions to be developed that respond directly to changes in the business environment,” Minister Ogilvie said.

The plan is available at business.tas.gov.au.


Media release – Shane Broad MP, Shadow Treasurer, 11 May 2023

Misleading Michael Ferguson hiding behind his own GST projection failures

Treasurer Michael Ferguson is trying to make Tasmanians believe that we have been short-changed by the Federal Government on GST, but the only measures he’s basing that argument on are his own $1 billion mistake.

Yesterday, Michael Ferguson tried to claim Tasmania’s share of the GST had been reduced in the Federal Budget, saying it showed “a reduction in support for our state”.

The fact is Tasmania will receive $788 million more GST than projected in the March 2022 Federal Budget, and $949 million more GST than projected in his own May 2022 State Budget.

The only mistake in this year’s Tasmanian GST allocation is a $1 billion error that the Treasurer made himself!

Whether that mistake was sheer incompetence or a feeble attempt to cover up his budget mismanagement doesn’t change the fact that Michael Ferguson is failing Tasmania as Treasurer – he has blown the budget with record debt and deficits.

While Mr Ferguson has been shuffled across numerous portfolios, one thing has remained constant – his continuing ability to wreck everything he touches.

This Liberal government has shown a complete disregard for responsible economic management over the near decade it’s been in power, and its Tasmanians that are paying the price.


Hansard transcript – Cassy O’Connor MP, 10 May 2023

Tasmanian Economic Performance

Ms O’CONNOR (Clark – Leader of the Greens) – Mr Deputy Speaker, we will not be supporting this rubbish motion which seems to come out of the rubbish motion machine every time it is Government Private Members’ Time.

I note that it is not until the end of the motion that has been put forward by Mr Young that the words ‘health, education, housing and community infrastructure’ appear. The entire rest of the motion is basically all about money and the mistaken view that we live in an economy, not a society underpinned by a healthy environment.

I did not listen too carefully to Mr Young’s turgid, colourless, flavourless, entirely read-from-a-prepared-script contribution but it was not persuasive and it actually got me thinking. what is the point of these sorts of speeches that we get from government backbenchers? Why do they do it? Who reads that garbage? Who would? They become just this dull use of the English language and then it becomes a kind of a shopping list. We spent $100 something million here and we are getting boots on the ground and it is cliched and it is boring.

I really wondered what is the point of those sorts of speeches from government backbenchers? It does not help them understand the administration of finances. I do not believe it helps them be better members of parliament. It certainly does not test their talent or skills and it contributes nothing to the public debate. It is of zero relevance to the lived experience of the Tasmanian people and, inevitably, of course, there is always a line in there about, ‘congratulates the Hodgman Liberal Government’, ‘congratulates the Gutwein Liberal Government’. Today, we are congratulating the Rockliff Liberal Government.

They are boring and time-wasting motions that are designed for self-promotion and politics because if Labor votes against this motion then there will be a media release from the Government media office which is publicly funded that says, ‘Labor does not support small business’, or some predictable rubbish –

Dr Broad – It is really important to the political debate.

Ms O’CONNOR – Yes, it really does contribute but, Dr Broad, I have to say, some of the things that you said were wrong. I encourage you to present evidence that the salmon industry is the biggest industry in Tasmania.

Dr Broad – I did not say that.

Ms O’CONNOR – Yes, you did.

Dr Broad – No. Primary industry. Primary industry is what I said.

Ms O’CONNOR – What about our agricultural producers who contributed about $1.5 billion to state product, last time I looked?

Dr Broad – Beef is about six or seven. Dairy is the next biggest, but it is not $1 billion.

Ms O’CONNOR – But you cannot call salmon the biggest industry in the state.

Dr Broad – Primary industry.

Ms O’CONNOR – The biggest primary industry in the state. Bigger than all our farmers?

Dr Broad – Yes. Well, not collectively. You are talking a segment. Bigger than beef. Bigger than dairy. Bigger than vegetables. Bigger than sheep.

Ms O’CONNOR – Look, I will eat my words, although I will never eat Tasmanian salmon again –

Dr Broad – I will.

Ms O’CONNOR – If you can present that information and that evidence, I would love to see it.

Dr Broad – That is fact. Look at the scorecard.

Ms O’CONNOR – Okay, the scorecard presented by the salmon industry?

Ms Finlay – By the Government.

Dr Broad – Primary industry, yes.

Ms Finlay – By the department.

Dr Broad – NRE.

Ms O’CONNOR – Okay. But I have it was a shocking revelation that you put on the Hansard record to think that some of our sawmillers would be ‘forced’ to use high-quality plantation timber. I mean, obviously, Dr Broad, that is a scandal.

Dr Broad – No, they have to use nitens.

Ms O’CONNOR – No, that is a scandal. I mean, honestly!

Dr Broad – It surprised me too, actually.

Ms O’CONNOR – Why would you, in 2023, when the community wants to see stronger forest protection; when even the industry’s own polling, nationally and here, says about 70 per cent of Australians and Tasmanians want to see a move out of old growth logging in the middle of a climate crisis where the planet is overheating; why would you think it is problematic if sawmillers still have supply, and it comes from plantations? I do not understand that; unless it is ideological, and it is about mowing down forests.

Dr Broad – It is not the same as native timber. The point I was making is that they have a contract. This Government is not on that.

Ms O’CONNOR – Irrelevant. It is not about the contract –

Dr Broad – It is.

Ms O’CONNOR – Because Forestry Tasmania needs to provide the wood. Alright? Does it matter if it is native forest timber or plantation timber, from a quality point of view?

Dr Broad – It does.

Ms O’CONNOR – It does, you say? Okay, right.

Dr Broad – You cannot make flooring out of nitens.

Ms O’CONNOR – I have never had a decent sawmiller complain to me, personally, if they have to use a bit of plantation timber. But maybe I do not talk to enough sawmillers. I am sure I do not. But it is nonsense to suggest that only native forest timber is good enough for our sawmillers. The world does move on. There used to be whaling in timtumili minanya, the River Derwent. There was whaling until early last century. Can you imagine, if because of dunderheaded, major party politicians, the whaling industry here was subsidised, propped up, and they were still whaling in the river? I mean, honestly, Mr Deputy Speaker.

Given that I have a few minutes to go, I might just share with the House – because I think it is more interesting to this place than Mr Young’s contribution – the experience of the US Ambassador, the delightful and intelligent Caroline Kennedy. She was very pleased to be escorted to the southern forests to see the Grove of Giants and to better understand the value, the beauty and the complexity of our native forests here. As we were going into that coupe – because the Grove of Giants is on Forestry Tasmania’s three-year logging plan – what the US Ambassador saw was flattened and burned forests. There were great piles of dead old trees on the ground. Could not hear a bird, because that is inevitably what happens – when you remove habitat, you also remove the wildlife.

Fortunately for the ambassador, and the Consul-General Kathleen Lively, who has been down here a few times to visit the state, and was very interested in Tasmania and its people, we moved past the flattened forests and into the beautiful Grove of Giants, where Ambassador Kennedy very willingly allowed herself to be hauled up this tree that has two separate names, depending on the day; this beautiful old tree which on some days is called the Vibe Tower and other days is called Joy for the amount of happiness it brings people who go into that forest.

This incredibly lively 65-year-old ambassador allowed herself to be strapped into a harness and hauled about 60 metres up into a giant tree which is, according to Dr Jen Sanger, probably between 400 and 500 years old and is threatened by logging. Our future is in looking after places like that; because there is nowhere in the whole world like this island, and there are no forests on earth like the ones here, that both major parties seem to get a thrill from politicising, flattening and napalming.

I was truly honoured to go into the forests with Ambassador Kennedy, Senator Nick McKim and Dr Jen Sanger and Steve Pearce and the volunteers from The Tree Projects. I was very proud of The Tree Projects people for their love of this place and what wonderful hosts they were for the ambassador and Consul General. We had a very interesting discussion after Ambassador Kennedy came back down the tree about why we log here; why it is such a political football; and what is the ideology of logging these forests. I have to say, it is not an easy story to tell, because I was talking to the ambassador, I was not in this place, and I wanted to be very careful about what I said. However, it is an awful story of an island that continues to this day to undervalue itself and destroy itself from within.

I know that Ambassador Kennedy’s visit to this beautiful island really moved her. I know that she has gone back to Canberra with many positive memories of her time here; but I suspect that the happiest memory of her time on this island will have been when she was hoisted up that tree called Joy in the Grove of Giants. I hope the fact that Ambassador Kennedy came into the Grove of Giants – and those images have gone global and there is a lot of attention on that beautiful little forest – I hope that at least that piece of forest is not logged, because it is truly a miraculous and beautiful place. These forests are all over the island. They are very precious, and when you see the wonderment through another person’s eyes, from another place, it reinforces how stupid we can be here and what stupid policies and politics we have from the two major parties in this place.

I encourage them, if they can, to show the same empathy for life on earth and curiosity about our forests as Ambassador Caroline Kennedy did. I encourage them to perhaps go into a place like the Grove of Giants and have a good, long, hard think about themselves and what they might want to contribute to the earth that is more positive than the kind of nasty politics we see in here – the ‘who can be more right wing and destructive towards the environment’ kind of vicious circle that we get in here. Have a think about how you are going to feel when you are old, and you are sitting there in your cups, and what you might have done to look after this planet that gave every one of us, our children, and all the people who we love, life.