...
Friday, May 29, 2026
Home Letters Letters to the Editor

Letters to the Editor

DOUBLE TAX, NONE OF THE RELIEF

Dear Editor,

Rates notices will lob in your letter box in coming weeks, and reality will bite.

The unwelcome addition, there for all to see in black and white, is Labor’s $3 billion emergency services tax grab.

Homeowners in Victoria can expect to pay double the rate they paid under the former fire services levy.

The tax hit on commercial properties will also double and the hit on industrial properties will rise by 64 per cent.

Farmers have a one-year reprieve, before reality hits – a 150 per cent rise.

Labor’s tax increase is plugging budget holes, not supporting frontline services where the money is needed most.

And it will cruelly hit you hard in a cost-of-living crisis.

The Nationals deeply understand these financial pressures and in government we are committed to scrapping the emergency services tax.

There will be no ifs, buts, maybes or short-term reprieves. We will scrap the tax.

Sincerely,

Danny O’Brien MP

Leader of The Nationals

STOP CHOKING THE FOOD BOWL

Editor,

As we transition to the new era of water policy and management, there are unintended consequences that need to be acknowledged and addressed.

One of these involves inter-valley trades, where environmental water holders and speculators are able to use management tools for financial benefit, at the expense of food and fibre producers.

Over the past 20 years, production of food has taken a very sad last place in the development of water policy and that is now being reflected with increased prices at the local supermarket.

Recently, a random ballot saw 100,000 megalitres of water shifted from the Goulburn to the Lower Murray Valley. For many, this may seem inconsequential.

However, in reality it raises the issue of environmental water holders effectively choking the inter-valley trades, as they have so much water at their disposal. It also poses an interesting question: If an environmental water holder purchases water to benefit the environment in a particular valley, why should it be allowed to move it to another valley?

Additionally, should government authorities like the Commonwealth Environmental Water Holder be allowed to take up 20 per cent of trading space, to the detriment of food producers?

As changes to water policy and management take effect following the massive changes over the past two decades, Australians will have to think carefully about how much they are willing to pay for policy decisions that adversely impact the farmers who put food on our tables.

If we continue to ignore the imbalances that threaten the livelihoods of those who grow our food, the price we pay will continue to escalate.

Yours faithfully,

John Lolicato

Wakool, NSW

Want to have your say?

Email your letters to the editor to

editorial@sheppartonadviser.com.au

Please keep letters to under 200 words.

Seraphinite AcceleratorOptimized by Seraphinite Accelerator
Turns on site high speed to be attractive for people and search engines.