http://rt.com/programs/keiser-report/episode-401-keiser/
Max Keiser looks at all the scandal behind the financial news headlines.
In this episode of the Keiser Report, Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert discuss the
yellow-cake-baking, talcum-powder-shaking, perpetual-war-making,
balloon-boy-chasing, fake-it-til-you-make-it global economy. In this system,
spoof trading and a shadow banking system – collateralized by a combination
of liar loans and temporary workers consuming genetically modified food-like
products – gives us such heroes for our times as Robb U., the guy who was
handed $6 million in loans based on having a YouTube music video with 1-million-plus views.
In the second half of the show, Max Keiser talks to former Scotland Yard fraud squad
detective Rowan Bosworth-Davies of Rowans-Blog.blogspot.co.uk about justice departments
and regulators going after the ‘little guy,’ because he is easier to get than the too-big-to-fail guy.
Watching this im reminded of a bill the NSW lands Corporation sent me vide the Department of housing or community services dept Who when asked to prove how many litres of water a tennant has used , and as they cant as there are no water meters they employ a guestimation process, then they another corporation strikes a document that evicts a tennant and makes them homeless whilst ignoring Weights and Measures Legislation, the Geneiva conventions ruling on the loss of quality of life by action or otherwise , The human rights act and their own mission statements statements of values and oaths of office >
Police are supposed to protect life and property and detect and apprehend offenders but when the offenders are government workers fellow public servants they find it easier to pick on the little guy than take on their own public service union.
UNCHONCONABLE
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- Bond-Pocalypse Now (E400) Keiser Report (peterbdunn.wordpress.com)
- Keiser Report, Max Keiser and Stacy Herbert & MI5 agent turned whistleblower (peterbdunn.wordpress.com)
- Keiser Report: Kamikaze Currency Killers – Episode 399 (dprogram.net)
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http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/icac-seizes-on-australian-waters-link-to-obeid-family-20121216-2bhj2.html
For a time, a director on the board of the company’s Queensland subsidiary was Santo Santoro, a former minister
in the Howard government who resigned in disgrace for failing to properly declare his shareholdings.
The company also employs John Wells, a spin doctor with extensive Liberal Party connections.
For almost three years until November last year, the federal senator and former finance director of the Liberal Party,
Arthur Sinodinos, was the chairman of Australian Water Holdings.
Last week, Mr Sinodinos said he, too, had 5 per cent of the company as part of his role, and he has recorded a
shareholding in the company in his parliamentary pecuniary interest register.
But Mr Sinodinos’s name is absent from the company’s official share register filed with the Australian Securities
and Investments Commission. Instead, Mr Sinodinos said, Mr Di Girolamo was holding the shares on his behalf.
Asked why the shares are not publicly registered with the corporate regulator, Mr Sinodinos said: ”Because it was
on a gentleman’s agreement.”
He said his agreement was that the trigger for the shares to be registered in his name was ”some realisation event”.
He also said it would not be inaccurate to say a successful PPP was one such event.
Since 1992, the company has been paid $580 million to roll out infrastructure to new housing estates in Sydney’s
north-west on behalf of Sydney Water Corporation.
Mr Di Girolamo has already had a significant win since the Coalition took government in March last year.
In January this year, his company and Sydney Water entered a new 25-year exclusive agreement to give it the
sole right to project manage the remaining half-a-billion dollars of water infrastructure work in the north-west growth
centre.
A spokesman for the Premier, Barry O’Farrell, said: ”Any agreement Australian Water Holdings has with
Sydney Water was negotiated and agreed by Sydney Water at arm’s length from government, as is appropriate.”
Since about 2004, the company’s main goal has been to convince the state government to sell it Sydney Water’s
activities in the north-west growth centre, though the O’Farrell government said it had not received a formal bid
from the company.
This would be a deal worth billions of dollars, according to a senior government source.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/icac-seizes-on-australian-waters-link-to-obeid-family-20121216-2bhj2.html#ixzz2H9wEWWkz
http://www.measurement.gov.au/measurementsystem/Pages/MeasurementLegislation.aspx
http://www.comlaw.gov.au/Series/F2009L03479
http://www.comlaw.gov.au/Details/F2013C00022
Division 2.2 Verification, reverification and in-service inspection
2.28 Verifying and marking measuring instruments
(1) If an inspector makes a verification mark on a measuring instrument that is not a glass measure, the inspector must also mark on the measuring instrument, in the approved manner, the date on which the inspector’s mark is made.
(2) If a servicing licensee makes a verification mark on a measuring instrument that is not a glass measure, the servicing licensee must also mark on the measuring instrument, in the approved manner, the date on which the servicing licensee’s mark is made.
(3) If an employee of a servicing licensee verifies a measuring instrument that is not a glass measure, the employee must:
(a) make the servicing licensee’s verification mark on the measuring instrument; and
(b) mark on the measuring instrument, in the approved manner, the date on which the servicing licensee’s mark is made; and
(c) make a mark on the measuring instrument that will enable the servicing licensee to identify the employee who made the servicing licensee’s mark.
2.29 Verifying and marking material measure
(1) If a verifier makes a verification mark on a material measure that is not a glass measure, the verifier must:
(a) if the verifier is an inspector or servicing licensee — mark on the material measure, in the approved manner, the date on which the verification mark is made; and
(b) if the verifier is an employee of a servicing licensee — perform each of the following actions:
(i) mark the servicing licensee’s verification mark on the material measure; and
(ii) mark on the material measure, in the approved manner, the date on which the servicing licensee’s mark is made; and
(iii) make a mark on the material measure that will enable the servicing licensee to identify the employee who made the servicing licensee’s mark.
(2) However, if compliance with subregulation (1) is impracticable because of the nature, shape or size of a material measure, the requirements in subregulation (1) are taken to have been complied with if the material measure is enclosed in a sealed container that is marked in accordance with subregulation (1).
Part 5 Miscellaneous
5.1 Beer, spirits etc must be sold by reference to volume
(1) For a sale of each of the following items, the item must be sold at a price determined by reference to volume:
(a) beer;
(b) stout;
(c) ale;
(d) brandy (including armagnac and cognac);
(e) gin;
(f) rum;
(g) vodka;
(h) whisky (including whiskey).
(2) In this regulation:
sale means retail sale.
5.2 Sale of article at price determined by reference to measurement
(1) Subject to subregulation (3), if an article is advertised, offered or exposed for sale at a price determined by reference to measurement, the measurement referred to in the price must be:
(a) if the price of the article is determined by reference to mass:
(i) 1 kilogram; or
(ii) 1 kilogram, with another reference to a whole number of kilograms; or
(iii) a whole number of tonnes; or
(iv) for an item that is a precious metal — 1 gram or 1 troy ounce; or
(b) if the price of the article is determined by reference to volume:
(i) 1 litre; or
(ii) 1 litre, with another reference to a whole number of litres; or
(iii) a whole number of cubic metres; or
(iv) for LPG — the volume of the LPG as measured by the amount in litres that the LPG occupies, or would occupy, at a temperature of 15 degrees Celsius at equilibrium vapour pressure; or
(v) if a person advertises, offers or exposes firewood for sale at a price determined by reference to the volume of the firewood, the person must ensure that the following requirements are met:
(A) the firewood must be stacked with as few gaps between each piece of firewood as practicable;
(B) the volume of a stack of firewood calculated using the dimensions of the stack must be at least the volume mentioned in advertising, offering or exposing the firewood for sale; or
(c) if the price of the article is determined by reference to linear measurement:
(i) 1 centimetre; or
(ii) 1 metre; or
(iii) 1 metre, with another reference to a whole number of metres; or
(d) if the price of the article is determined by reference to superficial measurement:
(i) 1 square centimetre; or
(ii) 1 square metre; or
(iii) 1 square metre, with another reference to a whole number of square metres.
Note 1 An example of a measurement mentioned in paragraph (a) (ii) is 1 kilogram for $10 and 3 kilograms for $25.
Note 2 An example of a measurement mentioned in paragraph (b) (ii) is 1 litre for $10 and 3 litres for $25.
Note 3 An example of a measurement mentioned in paragraph (c) (iii) is 1 metre for $10 and 3 metres for $25.
Note 4 An example of a measurement mentioned in paragraph (d) (iii) is 1 square metre for $10 and 3 square metres for $25.
(2) A person who engages in conduct that contravenes paragraph (1) (a), (b), (c) or (d) commits an offence.
Penalty: 20 penalty units.
(3) An offence mentioned in subregulation (2) is an offence of strict liability.
Note For strict liability, see section 6.1 of the Criminal Code
5.6 Exempt utility meters
For the definition of utility meter in subsection 3 (1) of the Act, the following classes of meters are exempt from the operation of Part IV of the Act:
(a) gas meters;
(b) electricity meters installed before 1 January 2013;
(ba) electricity meters installed on or after 1 January 2013, other than electricity meters that measure less than 750 MWh of energy per year;
(c) water meters installed before 1 July 2004;
(d) water meters installed on or after 1 July 2004, other than cold water meters with a maximum continuous flow rate capacity of not more than 4 000 litres per hour.
Note Meters with a maximum continuous flow rate capacity of not more than 4 000 litres per hour are normally, but not exclusively, used for metering water supplies to domestic premises.
Division 5 Liquid-measuring systems
Accuracy classes
1 Liquid-measuring systems are classified into 5 accuracy classes as set out in table 4.
Table 4 Liquid-measuring systems — Accuracy classes
Item
Accuracy class
Field of application
1
0.3
Measuring systems on pipeline
2
0.5
All measuring systems if not differently stated elsewhere in this table, in particular:
(a) fuel dispensers for motor vehicles (except LPG dispensers); and
(b) measuring systems on road tankers for liquids of low viscosity; and
(c) measuring systems for the unloading of ships’ tanks and rail and road tankers; and
(d) measuring systems for milk; and
(e) measuring systems for loading ships; and
(f) measuring systems for refuelling aircraft
Australian Water Holdings has extensive connections with the Liberal Party. In the past five years it has donated at
least $80,000 to the Coalition, and has used Michael Photios, a member of the NSW Liberal Party’s state executive,
as a lobbyist.
Mr Di Girolamo said he had also held meetings with other members of the NSW cabinet, including the
Water Minister, Greg Pearce, and the Treasurer, Mike Baird.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/icac-seizes-on-australian-waters-link-to-obeid-family-20121216-2bhj2.html#ixzz2H9vHE8HN
Water charges P/w where tennants =126,325 water charges =$2.40
126,325 x $2.40 = $303.180 thence 303.180 x 52 = **$15,765,360** per annum is the department of Housing A corporation,
yearly water takings
and im only asking /protesting for a $65.00 (+labour installation) alluminum mesh screen to bring me in line with that
of which my neighbours and other tennants within the ambit of the DOH enjoy for their safety and security.
they say … read below…..
Housing NSW manages over 146,000 properties worth around $28 billion – the
largest and most complex asset base of any housing authority in Australia.
Type of social housing Properties (as at June 2007)
Public housing 126,325
Community housing 15,624
Aboriginal housing properties 4,321
Our direction for the future
Housing NSW will face a range of challenges in supporting the housing needs
of an increasingly complex range of our clients. A key strength of Housing NSW
is the quality and commitment of our staff. We will depend on this to provide an
even stronger focus on our clients into the future, and on delivering integrated
housing solutions that directly support their individual needs.
For us it is a challenging future, but also an exciting one.
Mike Allen
Our purpose
Our work is driven by our purpose, which is to:
help build a stronger community by providing
housing solutions for people in need.
In working towards this purpose, Housing NSW:
works with other departments, agencies and other organisations
to address homelessness in NSW
manages NSW’s public housing portfolio
funds and regulates the provision of community housing and
crisis accommodation
manages Aboriginal public housing for the Aboriginal Housing Office
plays a key role in developing policy and supporting relationships to
increase access to the supply of affordable housing across NSW
provides a range of products and services to assist people into the
private rental market and home ownership and
provides policy advice to government and manages the Housing
Act 2001 and associated legislation.
Our values
Our core values set out the behaviours that we will demonstrate in
working towards our purpose.
We make a difference.
We help.
We work together.
We are part of the community.
Housing NSW faces a
range of challenges in
providing an integrated
set of housing solutions
for people in need.
These challenges
recognise that our
clients’ housing needs
are complex and varied.
They can range from the
need for basic shelter
and protection for those
living on the street to
the need for appropriate
or affordable housing
for those who receive a
moderate income
So now twice, ive been before the tribunal at corporate square and twice my evidence, i had ready to put before
same tribunal was ignored, not allowed to be presented Even after I made the tribunal aware that I was protesting
in stopping my water payments because of a security issue. In my view it is run by a corporation and if they are
going to deny their tennants due process within their trubunals , thats facism and a denigration of
my fellow countrymen and womens rights and in my view that amounts to TREASON against my fellow Australians.
any person /corporation/entity that says one thing and then does another, needs assessment.
PeterBDunn says:
September 3, 2012 at 9:15 pm
http://www.legislation.nsw.gov.au/maintop/view/inforce/act+40+1900+cd+0+N
545B Intimidation or annoyance by violence or otherwise
(1) Whosoever:
(a) with a view to compel any other person to abstain from doing or to do any act which such other person has a legal right to do or abstain from doing, or
(b) in consequence of such other person having done any act which he had a legal right to do, or of his having abstained from doing any act which he had a legal right to abstain from doing,
wrongfully and without legal authority:
(i) uses violence or intimidation to or toward such other person or his wife, child, or dependant, or does any injury to him or to his wife, child, or dependant, or
(ii) follows such other person about from place to place, or
(iii) hides any tools, clothes, or other property owned or used by such other person, or deprives him of or hinders him in the use thereof, or
(iv) (Repealed)
(v) follows such other person with two or more other persons in a disorderly manner in or through any street, road, or public place,
is liable, on conviction before the Local Court, to imprisonment for 2 years, or to a fine of 50 penalty units, or both.
(2) In this section:
Intimidation means the causing of a reasonable apprehension of injury to a person or to any member of his family or to any of his dependants, or of violence or damage to any person or property, and intimidate has a corresponding meaning.
Injury includes any injury to a person in respect of his property, business, occupation, employment, or other source of income, and also includes any actionable wrong of any nature.
Job no 5386473 issued 10/10/07 re insulation for 14 storey st port kembla
e mails to Mr borger 2/11/08 feeback on 3/8/08
2/11/08 greg pierce
sects 99 to 117 of constitution and int prop and maintenance codes 2006 ** BREACHES**
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