New Wollongong MP Paul Scully has used his inaugural NSW Parliament address to label his appointment – and that of new Premier Gladys Berejiklian – as “a fresh start”.
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Using a similar tone to the campaign messaging that helped him to byelection victory in November, Mr Scully’s opening words signalled his intention to fight to ensure the region got its “fair share”.
The new MP’s speech, which was delivered in the Legislative Assembly on Tuesday afternoon, was an all-encompassing address that ranged from thanking supporters to a commitment to “working every day for everyone in Wollongong”.
Mr Scully also tackled the perception Wollongong was a safe Labor seat. “People often assume that Wollongong has always been represented by Labor,” he said.
“However, under various electorate names it has been represented by the Liberals, an independent, Nationalists, Protectionists, Free Traders and the Australian Labor Party.”
“Some also make the false assertion that Labor does not support our region. But you see Labor’s investments everywhere you go.
“You can get on a free bus delivered by Labor and take a journey around Wollongong highlighted by Labor investments.”
The WIN Entertainment Centre, upgraded WIN Stadium and redeveloped Wollongong Hospital were among the Labor investments mentioned.
However, more must be done by the current government, Mr Scully said, including lifts at Unanderra train station to fix the “72-step struggle to the platform”.
Unemployment, waiting times at Wollongong Hospital and the lack of a Minister for the Illawarra position required action, he said.
Speaking about the area he now represents, Mr Scully said Wollongong had “grown through waves of migration” and that his own family reflected the city’s migrant history.
“In representing my community, I look to harness the strength of the tapestry of people and backgrounds that comprise it,” he said.
“Embracing our shared values of fairness, decency and equality for all.
“These shared values are Labor values. And they are my values.”
The MP’s closing words told of a future “where everyone gets a shot at a good education, a decent job near where they live and a bright future”.
“Together we can achieve this,” he said.
Former Labor MPs David Campbell (Keira) and Col Markham (Keira/Wollongong) were in the public gallery for the speech, as were Cunningham MP Sharon Bird and Labor Wollongong City Councillor Ann Martin.
FULL SPEECH: PAUL SCULLY’S INAUGURAL SPEECH
Thank you Mr Deputy Speaker.
I am humbled to be addressing the oldest Parliament in Australia for the first time.
Today I commit to working every day to retain and strengthen the trust and confidence the people of Wollongong have placed in me.
We commence sittings this year with both a new Member for Wollongong and a new Premier.
It’s a fresh start.
Premier, this is an opportunity for you to deliver the fair share you have promised the Illawarra.
Deputy Speaker, Wollongong is a city forged in steel, mining and heavy industry.
From the Dalfram dispute to campaigning to improve Port Kembla’s air quality its industrial history and history of activism means that Wollongong holds a special place in the labour movement and the Labor Party.
In advancing our interests the political and the industrial arms of the labour movement united to advocate for Labor’s plan for Wollongong during the by-election. We showed that we are at our best when we work together and the number of people who volunteered their time was simply phenomenal.
I would like to pay particular thanks to:
- Members of every Labor Party branch in the Illawarra.
- New South Wales and Illawarra Young Labor – a committed group of future leaders coordinated by Jen Light and Alex Costello, many giving up every weekend for weeks.
- The trade union movement particularly - Graeme Kelly, Gary Vann and the United Services Union; Gerard Hayes, Renee Cross and the Health Services Union; Tony Sheldon, Rob Pirc and the Transport Workers Union; Lee Webb, Bob Timbs and the CFMEU United Mineworkers; Gary Keane, Mick Cross and the Maritime Union of Australia; Daniel White and the Australian Manufacturing Workers Union; Wayne Phillips and the Australian Workers Union; and Tara Moriarty and United Voice.
- Long-time friends and supporters including David Voltz, Jane Shelton, Owen Torpy, Laura Ryan, Gail Morgan, Kathryn Conroy, Simon Tatz, Amanda Bresnan, Chris Parkin, Donna Tetley and Aaron Rule – a few of them join us in the galleries today.
And my wife Alison - my strongest supporter and toughest critic who is right more times than she is not.
She is simply amazing.
Her advice can be blunt but it is always effective – her final words on the way to my first media event are firmly etched in my memory.
The reality is, no one has shown more confidence in me, has been willing to take up causes with me or has encouraged me in the same way that she has.
We are in this together and I am grateful for her love and support, her intelligence, her ideas, her instincts and her hard work that have allowed me to be here today fulfilling my dream to represent the community where we were both born.
Deputy Speaker, Wollongong is in my blood.
I am the third generation of my family to call it home.
To paraphrase our marketing slogan – I love the Gong!
I am a proud product of its public education system – the first in my family to complete high school and university.
During my time in this place I will work to advance public education, particularly as we work to improve the support provided to children with autism.
To the best of my knowledge, I am also the first representative in this place to come from the small mining village of Mount Kembla on Wollongong’s outskirts.
Mount Kembla is infamous for a mine explosion in 1902 which killed 96 men and boys and is commemorated every year – an important reminder of the need to be vigilant on workplace standards and safety.
I have always been lucky to have the love, support and encouragement of my parents, Inta and Ian, my brother Glen and sister Jane.
Thank you for everything.
Their support and encouragement has expanded to include my motherin-law Pem, brothers-in-law Boyd and Colin; sisters-in-law Rosie and Karen; nieces Kimberley and Annabelle; nephew Caelan; and Aunt Edith.
Thank you for your help and the confidence you have shown in me.
I also recognise my grandparents Gunda and Villis Klavins, Bill and Edna Scully and my father-in-law Ron Byrnes who have all passed away but would have loved to have been here today.
Mr Deputy Speaker, Wollongong has grown through waves of migration.
In making this point I acknowledge that European settlement is only a small part of its history.
The Wodi Wodi people have lived in the Illawarra for tens of thousands of years and have an important role in our future - I pay my respects to their elders past and present.
My own family reflects Wollongong’s migrant history.
My mum migrated from post-World War II Germany while dad’s family originates in Ireland.
Migration created a community accepting of all.
Ethnic and religious differences took a back seat.
People moved to Wollongong for a better life and largely they achieved it.
Residents new to Wollongong might not have shared a common language but they shared common goals and values.
In representing my community I look to harness the strength of the tapestry of people and backgrounds that comprise it.
Embracing our shared values of fairness, decency and equality for all.
These shared values are Labor values. And they are my values.
My values and passion for our region prompted people like Carolyn Brown, Steve Tyerman, Vivien Twyford, Nick and Judy Whitlam, Colin and Melissa Markham, Bevan Fermor, Fay Campbell, Wendy Richardson, Jenny Osmond and cricketing legend Adam Gilchrist to back me publicly.
I thank each of you for putting your trust and confidence in me.
I bring to the role knowledge and experience gained in a mix of volunteer, advisor and chief of staff roles for Stephen Martin, David Campbell, Sharon Bird, Chris Hayes, Craig Emerson and Justine Elliot – all of whom have served or continue to serve their communities with distinction.
I thank them for teaching and mentoring me – I have learned a lot from each of you, especially you Sharon and Chris.
Deputy Speaker, people often assume that Wollongong has always been represented by Labor.
However, under various electorate names it has been represented by the Liberals, an independent, Nationalists, Protectionists, Free Traders and the Australian Labor Party.
Some also make the false assertion that Labor does not support our region.
But you see Labor’s investments everywhere you go.
You can get on a free bus delivered by Labor and take a journey around Wollongong highlighted by Labor investments such as:
- The Wollongong Entertainment Centre and upgraded WIN Stadium
- A steelworks that continues to operate as a result of action by Labor governments
- An expanded port of Port Kembla, now the largest vehicle importation hub in the country
- A redeveloped Wollongong Public Hospital that was an 8 metre hole in the ground just 20 years ago
- A world-class university and Innovation Campus that is home to world-leading academics and researchers, and
- First class TAFE facilities at Wollongong and West Wollongong
To name just a few.
Mr Deputy Speaker, people criticise politicians but these are just part of the legacy of my predecessors.
On behalf of our community I thank them for building a strong foundation for the future.
But we can make our community even better.
Wollongong deserves its fair share.
The elderly, disabled and many others find it almost impossible to access trains at Unanderra station.
It’s a 72 step struggle to the platform.
The station needs lifts and I am determined to see them built.
Labor has committed to them and we look to the government to match that commitment.
Today I pose the same question to the Premier that she herself posed in her own inaugural speech – “how long must we wait for this basic service?”
Because if you cannot access a service it might as well not exist.
A state that trumpets being number one should never settle for second best for its most disadvantaged citizens.
Mr Deputy Speaker, Wollongong’s unemployment rate remains stubbornly above the NSW average and around 20,000 people a day leave the region for work – I know what it’s like having commuted for nearly 15 years myself.
Over the next twenty years Sydney’s south-west will be home to more than a million people and an estimated 100,000 more jobs.
I was pleased to work with the University of Wollongong when it decided to engage directly with the region through a campus in Liverpool.
In a similar way, we need to invest in infrastructure connecting Wollongong to this growing region.
Improving infrastructure connections will also increase tourist and recreational visitors to the Illawarra, helping to create more local jobs.
Deputy Speaker, at the same time we must also invest to support our own population growth.
Despite the best efforts of great staff, Wollongong Public Hospital has some of the longest waiting times in the state;
And the future of services at Port Kembla Public Hospital is uncertain;
We have multi-million dollar school and housing maintenance backlogs;
An unfulfilled promise of a thoracic surgeon at Wollongong Public Hospital;
And we deserve our seat at the Cabinet table back by reinstating the Minister for the Illawarra.
Deputy Speaker, I am committed to strengthening our local economy, society and environment by pursuing the initiatives in Labor’s Illawarra Jobs Action Plan.
A Plan developed with Labor leader Luke Foley, the Shadow Ministry and Caucus who engaged with Wollongong residents and organisations to better understand our needs.
I thank them for their support.
They listened to local problems; developed local solutions informed by local knowledge and committed to real plans and real solutions. The Leader of the Opposition was clear - Wollongong matters to Labor and it will always be taken seriously and he meant it – I mean you can hardly keep the guy away from the place!
He has shown that by focusing on the issues that matter to people and transforming this into a clear direction for Labor the old adage rings true – good policy makes good politics.
We communicated our plan through a comprehensive campaign coordinated by the formidable team of Kaila Murnain, Pat Garcia and David Dobson supported by the offices of the Leader and shadow ministry, and the smart and energetic team in Wollongong of Liam Rankine, Gino Mandarino, Jess Malnersic, Caitlin Roodenrys, Jessica Malcolm Roberts, BJ Roberts, Chris Lacey, Janai Tabbernor, Chris Snewin, Blake Osmond, Elyse Delphino, and Jenelle and Rod Rimmer to name a few.
We were cheered on from afar by Mitch, Monika and Marta O’Dwyer on an overseas posting, by Jessica Sparks who was recovering from her second double lung transplant and by Mike Meurer and Kristen Wall in Queensland.
I thank my council colleagues Ann Martin, Chris Connor, David Brown, Janice Kershaw and Marianne Saliba along with the staff in the offices of the members for Cunningham, Whitlam, Keira and Shellharbour for their help.
Time prevents me from naming all of the literally hundreds of people who helped me but I thank each of them.
However, I would like to thank some individually especially Dot and John Park, Tom Ward, Bob Turner, Norma and Michael Wilson, Neil Barnett, Tania Brown, Brian Dellit, Fay Elbourne, Jihad and Hussein Salem, Peter Bubev, George Bartolo, Craig Kershaw, Ann and Bob Bower, Vicky King, Charlie Habazin, Simon, Aldo and Annette Zulian, Lou Stefanovski, Allan and Pat Cobbin, Bev and Kev Reed, Rusty Abbott, Kiley Martin, Linda Campbell, Michael Knight, Dom Ofner, David Latham and Dermot Ryan and the Irish Friends of Labor.
Along with some great young campaigners including Peter Munford, Alex Saliba, David Atkins, Josh Mills, Kyle Waples, Blake Horcicka, Patrick Bell, Hugh McClure, and Rita Andraos.
And my friends from Bellambi Surf Club and former colleagues from the University of Wollongong.
I also thank Federal Member for Whitlam Stephen Jones and sincerely thank my great mates from the Illawarra Labor team in this place – the Member for Keira and Member for Shellharbour – your advice, counsel and assistance was simply superb.
Deputy Speaker for the last five years I worked at the University of Wollongong’s Innovation Campus alongside dedicated researchers who are shaping our industrial, employment and social futures.
I was the only economist in the building and my colleagues were never convinced that a background in the dismal science was good enough for me to take on science in the labs.
It was probably just as well – with thousands of chemicals in the building if it all went wrong the explosion would have rivalled Sydney’s New Year’s fireworks! Research in nanotechnology, 3D printing, autonomous vehicles and sustainable buildings are just some of the areas being advanced at the University of Wollongong.
At the Australian Institute for Innovative Materials, where I was the Chief Operating Officer, the task was to innovate, scale-up and to help develop devices integrating research breakthroughs.
It was a complete process to turn research into reality.
Whether it is more efficient energy generation and storage or personalised medical devices, today’s innovations will be part of our future.
Hopefully future breakthroughs will help others diagnosed with cancer at a young age like my friends Louise Biggs, Campbel Giles and Toni Newman – three strong women taken from us in their prime.
Mr Deputy Speaker, Wollongong will continue to make a great contribution to Australia’s future – just as we have always done.
Over the past couple of decades Wollongong has transformed from a steel, mining and heavy industrial town to a more service-based economy.
We are the city of innovation for a reason.
Comparing the Wollongong of my childhood which had around 20,000 people employed at the steelworks and a few thousand students at the university to the Wollongong of today with a few thousand employed by the steelworks and more than 30,000 students enrolled globally at its university is a clear demonstration of the change.
But this does not mean that our steel and traditional industries are not part of the Illawarra’s future – they most certainly are.
That’s why we have developed our steel plan that helps provide a sustainable future for steel and metal manufacturing.
But our city and its employment mix has changed.
While I welcome the potential of emerging technologies I realise that this feeling is not universal.
As the son of a retired truck driver and a family who owned an airport shuttle small business, I am conscious of the impact of automation on the future of work.
It is claimed that nearly two thirds of children who started school a few weeks ago will work in jobs not yet thought of.
And more than a quarter of existing jobs will be obsolete in a generation.
Parliamentary Library research suggests that more than half of the jobs in the Wollongong electorate are at risk from computerisation and automation – that’s nearly 17,000 jobs.
I don’t believe that all of these jobs will disappear without replacement but naturally people become concerned about the future when they don’t immediately see their place in it.
After all, very few middle aged steelworkers go on to create high tech start-ups.
But innovation is about more than just IT and fintech.
Innovation and disruptive technologies have given rise to the ‘gig economy’ – our next industrial revolution – the new or the “now” economy.
This is changing competition and employment relationships.
This is not new; Technological change has changed work and society in the past.
But innovations and technology need to work for us.
They should help improve the common good, not erode it.
They should help bind people, not divide them.
They should help create jobs, not destroy them.
They should drive new industries, new jobs and new possibilities.
Deputy Speaker, the ‘gig economy’ is here to stay – trying to regulate disruptive technologies out of existence is nothing more than wishful thinking.
But that doesn’t mean we have to accept workers being put into positions where employment flexibility becomes nothing more than employment insecurity.
And a global labour market should not mean job chasing involves a wages race to the bottom.
They deserve a level playing field.
Underemployment and underutilisation, which are growing, should not be allowed to become the norm.
Instead governments should set effective market rules, compliance regimes and intervene only when necessary.
Governments can and should make access to legal redress more understandable and accessible;
Governments can and should make our school education, TAFEs and apprenticeships more responsive to the impacts of technological changes;
Governments can and should provide more comprehensive STEM education and access to the digital devices students need.
To complement technological advances state governments must drive the next round of microeconomic reforms to help boost productivity and assist in job creation.
To support new and existing businesses embrace new technologies, I have advocated for the creation of environments like the iMake maker space which allows people to test out new technologies and techniques before committing to large capital outlays.
After all, many innovations will continue to come from the shop floor.
Mr Deputy Speaker, government procurement can and should support new industries and new jobs.
The barriers to entry for government procurement for new companies are often high.
Risk aversion can force purchases of overseas equipment while local companies selling a cheaper but superior product are locked out.
Reserving a proportion of the government’s procurement spend for innovative new products would support risk-taking, entrepreneurship and help speed up the time to bring new products to market.
Mr Deputy Speaker, as a Parliament we must be across research and innovation and be ready for the associated ethical and social debates.
People expect us to lead debates, not follow them.
Innovators are imagining the future of hospitals, schools and communities and we must do the same.
People also expect more rapid implementation of government decisions.
They don’t understand why after decisions have been made on issues like medicinal cannabis, for example, that people can be left waiting and suffering because implementation is time consuming.
Instead it has been left to the Labor Opposition to take the lead on this issue.
Together this is using government policy, procurement and implementation as an exemplar.
Governments can and should lead by example and help spread the benefits of new ideas to as many people as possible.
This is how we can help to make sure that New South Wales is always at the forefront of new innovations, new industries and new jobs.
Deputy Speaker, the future of new jobs and new industries should not be the exclusive domain of Sydney CBD.
Wollongong has a big role to play in our state’s future.
Wollongong can help take pressure off Sydney.
The combination of technology and a supportive environment nurtured by governments can advance communities like Wollongong.
To do this you don’t need to embrace policies of economic isolationism or hand out massive regional relocation subsidies.
Rather rational policies aimed at growing jobs and the economy; at increasing income and improving its distribution can be employed.
Policies built on our shared values of fairness, decency and equality of opportunity.
Governments can and should lead by example with a serious effort at decentralisation.
The multiplier effect of shifting businesses and government operations to regional centres is considerable while the impact on Sydney CBD is largely negligible.
It helps improve lifestyles by taking pressure off transport networks, reducing commuting and congestion.
It grows regional opportunities.
Deputy Speaker, when I worked with the team from Advantage Wollongong we sold the benefits of Wollongong to businesses looking to relocate.
It wasn’t a hard sell when you outlined our relatively lower costs, positive business environment and Wollongong’s lifestyle benefits for staff.
It was selling a win-win yet this government, unlike previous Labor governments, seems unable to recognise it.
In six years it has only relocated 38 public sector jobs to the Illawarra.
Decentralisation will require some supporting infrastructure but it first needs a real and genuine commitment from government.
Mr Deputy Speaker, many of the challenges we face are not new.
Fundamentally it remains a question of who gets what, why, how and at what cost.
At times we need to unpack problems and begin from first principles rather than scramble for gesture politics and quick fixes that can entrench problems.
Addressing housing and housing affordability warrants such an approach. We need to be willing to start with the question of “why not”.
As George Bernard Shaw wrote: “You see things; and you say, ‘why?’ But I dream things that never were; and I say ‘why not’?”
We need to be as creative and innovative in our role as legislators and policy makers as our world-leading researchers are in creating new possibilities.
Governments cannot solve every problem but a shared responsibility between the government, the people it serves and the organisations that help to deliver solutions can make a real difference.
To help restore respect, integrity and faith in public life we parliamentarians must also be willing to be more upfront with our constituents.
Mr Deputy Speaker, Paul Keating said: “We Australians have a remarkable future within our grasp, a future which other countries can only dream of. We have this great goal and Labor has a great passion to reach it.”
This is very much the case in Wollongong.
We are ready for the future.
The key elements already exist – a skilled, multi-lingual workforce, a research-driven university, connection with an international airport and a working port.
This will allow us to seize new opportunities such as the production of medical devices, green collar jobs, energy storage or developing new ways of tackling dementia or caring for our aged, disabled and mentally ill.
These new opportunities can also increase demand in our existing industries.
If we are to address the politics of division and feelings of alienation we must share the benefits of economic growth beyond Sydney CBD.
We must do everything possible to support those who weren’t blessed with opportunity and address the pockets of poverty, inequality and disadvantage that exist in the suburbs of Wollongong, the outer suburbs of Sydney and other parts of the state.
Improving access to housing, access to education, access to job opportunities and access to quality health care can be supported by spreading the corridors of growth – that’s fair, that’s decent and that helps provide equality of opportunity.
Mr Deputy Speaker, in pursuing this I commit to working every day for everyone in Wollongong.
I believe in a future where everyone gets a shot at a good education, a decent job near where they live and a bright future.
Together we can achieve this. I thank the House.