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Ousted CFMEU leaders lose High Court challenge to take back union

Ousted CFMEU leaders lose High Court challenge to take back union

Former CFMEU leaders have lost their High Court challenge against federal Labor's takeover of the scandal-plagued building union.
The High Court threw out the case on Wednesday in a unanimous decision that rejected former union officials' attempt to wrest back control from a government-appointed administrator who stepped in to clean up the union last year.
The government passed laws to oust most of the union's leadership after the Building Bad investigation by this masthead, The Australian Financial Review and 60 Minutes last year reported allegations of corruption and infiltration by bikie gangs.
The court's decision to uphold the government's forced take-over of the union will remove a roadblock for administrator Mark Irving, who had warned that the spectre of the CFMEU's former leaders returning to the organisation was hampering his efforts to reform it.
Irving welcomed the court's decision on Wednesday, saying in a statement the 'attack on the legitimacy of the administration' was dismissed by the court.
'The administration is committed to returning the union to the membership as a strong, democratic, member-controlled union, enduringly free of corruption and criminal influence as soon as possible,' he said.
Former Queensland CFMEU construction secretary Michael Ravbar, who has not been accused of wrongdoing, led the challenge and said members were disappointed, but they put up a good fight.
'What this result does show, however, is just how easy it is for hostile governments in cahoots with the ACTU to interfere in the operations and running of democratically run unions,' he said.
'It took little more than spurious allegations broadcast on a tabloid current affairs program. That should be of deep concern to any trade unionist.'

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When Treasurer Chris Steel, fresh in the job after Labor's seventh straight election win, provided a mid-year budget update in February, he was forced to make an embarrassing admission. The territory's budget deficit had blown out to $971 million, more than 50 per cent higher than predicted just seven months earlier. The government's anaemic revenue stream is falling behind what's needed to meet the growing demand for health services of its ageing population. Health spending accounted for less than 30 per cent of the ACT budget in the 90s, Mr Steel says. Now it accounts for 36 per cent. "All of us are facing this massive fiscal challenge from the growth in demand and cost on our hospital systems," the treasurer tells AAP. "That is something that we want to address with the Commonwealth sitting down and getting underway with negotiations on a new five-year National Health Reform Agreement." 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ACT budget on life support amid health funding woes
ACT budget on life support amid health funding woes

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The ACT budget has a health problem. When Treasurer Chris Steel, fresh in the job after Labor's seventh straight election win, provided a mid-year budget update in February, he was forced to make an embarrassing admission. The territory's budget deficit had blown out to $971 million, more than 50 per cent higher than predicted just seven months earlier. The government's anaemic revenue stream is falling behind what's needed to meet the growing demand for health services of its ageing population. Health spending accounted for less than 30 per cent of the ACT budget in the 90s, Mr Steel says. Now it accounts for 36 per cent. "All of us are facing this massive fiscal challenge from the growth in demand and cost on our hospital systems," the treasurer tells AAP. "That is something that we want to address with the Commonwealth sitting down and getting underway with negotiations on a new five-year National Health Reform Agreement." The agreement lays out how much funding the federal government doles out to states and territories to run their hospital systems. The current agreement runs out on June 30 and the Commonwealth has only guaranteed funding for one more year in a stop-gap deal for 2025/26. While the interim agreement gives the ACT a 16 per cent funding increase from the current financial year, Mr Steel says it's not enough. "The extent of demand and cost in the healthcare system is not being acknowledged by the Commonwealth," he says. Current funding arrangements would result in the federal government contributing to 33 per cent of ACT hospital funding, when the Albanese government has promised to raise their contribution to 45 per cent by 2035. A spokesperson for the federal Department of Health said the Commonwealth was working on finalising negotiations by the end of 2025. Mr Steel stresses the situation is changing for the better under the Albanese government, instead pinning the blame on the previous coalition government for a "decade of underinvestment" in Medicare and general practice. Tuesday's ACT budget will include measures to boost frontline services too, such as payroll tax changes that incentivise bulk billing, intended to take pressure off hospitals. In exchange for a better funding deal, the territory government could help its federal counterpart control the spiralling cost of the NDIS by providing more foundational supports for young males, who are signing up to the scheme at a rate of more than one in 10. "But we also need the Commonwealth to recognise that beyond the NDIS pressures, the major pressure that governments face in this country is about pressure on our acute hospital systems, and that is something that has to be addressed," Mr Steel says.

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