The national poker machine party. There’s a rough justice really whenever the Anti Pokies Party Senator Nick Xenophon is responsible for thwarting the plans of the Rudd Labor Government for the Labor Party in Canberra is one of the nation’s big beneficiaries from poker machine revenue. Up until now the cash generated from the machines has gone into the coffers of the local Australian Capital Territory Branch but the prospect of a multi tens of million dollar jackpot has seen the Federal Labor authorities start muscling in.
The windfall pokies payout will come from taking advantage of a provision in the constitution of clubs trading as a company under a Canberra Labor Clubs banner that makes the Labor Party, rather than the individual club members who put their hard earned through the machines, the beneficiary of any profits that result from a sale. Last year directors of these Labor Clubs determined that the best interest of the company (effectively the local Labor Party branch) would be served by finding a buyer and the Party pocketing the lump sum.
Given the political difficulties for the ACT Labor Party of being the Government determining such matters as who can have poker machines and under what terms while being the Territory’s biggest poker machine operator there was an element of good sense in that decision. The election of Senator Xenophon to represent South Australia had just made it more so.
The Labor Club directors — a majority appointed by the ACT Labor Party Branch — went through the process of getting legal and financial advice and ended up negotiating seriously with the local territory division of the CFMEU trade union which too is a big clubs operator under the Canberra Tradies name. With the deal on the verge of being done something prompted the officers of the Federal Labor Party branch to stick their bib in. An interest in getting its own hands on the $25 million was clearly apparent but some of my informants say there was a great deal of resentment from the right wing members of the Federal Executive that the left leaning CFMEU would emerge as a winner from the deal as well.
Threats of federal intervention were made with real vigour when a figure was noted in some of the legal advice that the value of the clubs being sold was nearly $45 million rather than $25 million.
Now finding a market price for licensed clubs is no easy matter because the purchaser has to have some semblance of being a not-for-profit organisation. A shortage of potential buyers makes the market a relatively thin one as the Labor Clubs found. An added complication comes from the directors also having to deal with the interests of club members – as distinct from, and as well as, the beneficiaries of a sale.
The unsuccessful tender of the right wing National Union of Workers for around the same figure as offered by the CFMEU fell at that hurdle as the cash component was only some $10 million with the rest of the $20 million to be paid from future profits.
The whole sale process has now turned quite ugly with Federal Labor strong arming local ACT Labor into putting things on hold but the directors of the Canberra Labor Clubs refusing to do so. The directors have in their mind that the Australian Securities and Investment Commission expects them to act in the company’s best interests, even if this may not be in your own interests, and even though you may have set up the company just for personal or taxation reasons.”
The ACT branch’s administrative committee, with the support apparently of the Federal body, has now ordered the directors the Party has on the Club Board to change their mind when they meet again next week. If they refuse to do so they are threatened with the sack although that would involve ASIC in having to make some very interesting decisions about the obligations of directors and attempts by third parties to prevent those directors from acting in the best interest of their company.
I am sure that the lawyers are ready and waiting to see how much of the $25 or $50 or however many millions they can carve off before anyone else gets a dollar. And surely Senator Nick will soon decide that this is just the kind of Labor skulduggery that should see the light of an investigation by a Senate Committee.
An organic food con brings on MacDonalds. I’m feeling a bit cheated this morning. I have got into the habit of buying organically grown vegetables despite the considerable extra cost over the standard alternative. I had somehow convinced myself that the price was worth paying before of the extra good they would do my ageing body. And what do i find when I do my morning survey of the world’s press. This headline all over the London Daily Telegraph: “Organic food has no added nutritional benefit, says Food Standards Agency – Expensive organic food is no better for you than conventionally-grown farm produce, according to the Government’s food watchdog.”
In shock and horror I quickly moved to the quoted academic journal from the story derived in the hope that there was some cruel misinterpretation of the real findings. Alas there was no joy in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. The authors of “Nutritional quality of organic foods: a systematic review” — Alan D Dangour, Sakhi K Dodhia, Arabella Hayter, Elizabeth Allen, Karen Lock and Ricardo Uauy — had been quoted correctly.
I bring you the evidence that has left me so depressed I am going out to buy MacDonalds:
Background: Despite growing consumer demand for organically produced foods, information based on a systematic review of their nutritional quality is lacking.
Objective: We sought to quantitatively assess the differences in reported nutrient content between organically and conventionally produced foodstuffs.
Design: We systematically searched PubMed, Web of Science, and CAB Abstracts for a period of 50 y from 1 January 1958 to 29 February 2008, contacted subject experts, and hand-searchedbibliographies. We included peer-reviewed articles with English abstracts in the analysis if they reported nutrient content comparisons between organic and conventional foodstuffs. Two reviewers extracted study characteristics, quality, and data. The analyses were restricted to the most commonly reported nutrients.
Results: From a total of 52,471 articles, we identified 162 studies (137 crops and 25 livestock products); 55 were of satisfactory quality. In an analysis that included only satisfactory qualitystudies, conventionally produced crops had a significantly higher content of nitrogen, and organically produced crops had a significantly higher content of phosphorus and higher titratable acidity. No evidence of a difference was detected for the remaining 8 of 11 crop nutrient categories analyzed. Analysis of the more limited database on livestock products found no evidence of a difference in nutrient content between organically and conventionally produced livestock products.
Conclusions: On the basis of a systematic review of studies of satisfactory quality, there is no evidence of a difference in nutrient quality between organically and conventionally produced foodstuffs. The small differences in nutrient content detected are biologically plausible and mostly relate to differences in production methods.
Re: An organic food con brings on MacDonalds
Isn’t the key benefit of organic foods that they ‘don’t contain’ nasties, eg pesticides, and antibiotics, rather than that they are more nutritious? I suspect the study’s authors were looking for the wrong benefits.
Also look at the farming and animal husbandry methods used by organic farmers. These are generally much better for the environment than conventional farming.
Yes Matthew Read, I was wondering why the researchers were looking for values of nitrogen and phosphorus, rather than residuals of organochloride pesticides, heavy metals, and bioaccumulation of polychlorinatedbiphenyls.
I am also concerned by the seemingly flexible use of ‘nutrient quality’ and ‘nutrient content’, how are those two terms defined and how are they interrelated because they are definately not the same thing?
The final sentence is telling “The small differences in nutrient content detected are biologically plausible and mostly relate to differences in production methods.” – which is precisely why organic accreditation schemes seek to invoke and promote production methods that aren’t wholly related to massive inputs of pesticides, herbicides and other artificial supplements (GM) to various agricultural practices.
http://www.ajcn.org/cgi/content/abstract/ajcn.2009.28041v1 link to research paper.
Why do we need the label organic?Couldn’t the foods just be labelled “ge inside” I’ve read that the companies say this costs too much to re label but couldn’t the law be if you change the design of your label and it contains ge then you must include this on the new label
Nutrition aside, often organic produce is just of a higher quality in terms of appearance and taste. It’s the reason I buy free-range/barn laid eggs rather than cage eggs – they’re a superior product.
The sustainability benefits are also difficult to overlook. I’d be interested in research comparing the ecological effects and environmental practices of conventional farming compared to organic.
And yet, having said all that, there are a pretty large number of questionable assertions out there about the safety or health benefits of various types of food. It’s hard to know what comes from truthiness and what comes from actual evidence.