Home EsporteAustralia news live: Husic says ‘driest minds’ in treasury and finance need to see science as an investment not a cost after CSIRO jobs slashed | Australia news

Australia news live: Husic says ‘driest minds’ in treasury and finance need to see science as an investment not a cost after CSIRO jobs slashed | Australia news

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Ed Husic on CSIRO cuts: ‘we need to start valuing and having faith in Australian ideas’

Labor MP Ed Husic is on Afternoon Briefing talking about the loss of hundreds of CSIRO jobs. He said investing in the CSIRO and science and research is an investment in the future.

We need to start valuing and having faith in Australian ideas. I’m personally sick of seeing an idea that began in an Australian mind (ending up as) a product made in another country. We need to address that.

Some of the driest, driest minds in the sphere of government, notably treasury and finance, do view these things as a cost. You know, in some cases their view is, if another country wants to spend money and they turn an idea into a product that we just buy off the shelf, that’s great.

I actually think that’s the worst example of short-term thinking you can have when (we) need a long-term commitment to back in science and research.

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Andrew Messenger

Andrew Messenger

Greens MP Michael Berkman has asked the Queensland health minister whether he will ensure the state’s Catholic hospitals will offer reproductive health services, after reports women requiring an abortion or miscarriage treatment are refused care at publicly funded Mater hospitals.

The state’s Mater hospitals are publicly funded but run by a Catholic organisation as a charity. It operates maternity and other health services in Townsville, Mackay, Rockhampton and at a large hospital in South Brisbane.

The Guardian has previously reported their policy of refusing to provide reproductive care, such as abortions has left some patients struggling to get access to services.

“We expect all facilities to honour the agreements that they have with the department,” Queensland health minister Tim Nicholls said, in parliamentary question time.

“And the Mater hospital continues to honour its agreement, the agreement that it has with the department. There is no reason to doubt that they are not honouring that agreement … the short answer to it is, the contracts are being honoured. We continue to monitor those contracts to ensure compliance.”

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