Work has begun to drain the 200-hectare Yandina Creek Wetlands on the Sunshine Coast. As has been reported, the wetlands are home to an extraordinary variety of birds including several threatened species. The drainage works are proceeding in defiance of federal and state investigations into potential breaches of environmental laws. An update can be found at this link, along with further suggestions about who people can email if they are concerned: http://sunshinecoastbirds.blogspot.comau/2015/05/drainage-works-begin-at-yandina-creek.html Greg Robertsninderry@westnet.com.auhttp://sunshinecoastbirds.blogspot.com/
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Greg, do you know the original reason they stopped growing sugar cane there? Peter Shute Sent from my iPad
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The premier spoke on ABC on Thursday. Jobs were mentioned 6 times, environment 0. Sent from my iPhone
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Greg, there have often been issues with URLs getting split, which I don’t fully understand, but in this case I think the fault lies with the program you used to type the email. Looking at the headers of the original email received by the list server, it looks like you used your ISP’s webmail interface. Like many email programs, it included both a plain text and a formatted HTML version of the text you typed, but the plain text part had a dot missing in the URL. The HTML part, which is most likely what you could see when you sent it, was ok. The list server sends the plain text part of people’s emails out to the list members, so we only got to see the partial URL. It’s quite common for formatting to get messed up by this process, but not common to have differences in the actual text like that. I’ve emailed the author of your ISP’s mail program, Atmail, to see if they can suggest anything to prevent it happening. Peter Shute Sent from my iPad
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Greg, what’s the stance of your new government on such projects? Denise Lawungkurr Goodfellow PO Box 71 Darwin River, NT, Australia 0841 043 8650 835 PhD candidate, Southern Cross University, Lismore, NSW. Founding Member: Ecotourism Australia Nominated by Earthfoot for Condé Nast’s International Ecotourism Award, 2004. With every introduction of a plant or animal that goes feral this continent becomes a little less unique, a little less Australian. On 1 May 2015, at 1:51 pm, Greg Roberts < ninderry@westnet.com.au> wrote:
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Hi all, I can’t believe they went ahead with the drainage, it is very sad to think this sort of thing is being done Jayden On Fri, May 1, 2015 at 3:46 PM, Carl Clifford < carlsclifford@gmail.com> wrote: This message is intended for the addressee named and may contain privileged information or confidential information or both. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender.
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Looks like nice acid sulphate soil. Carl Clifford
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