Home » Opinion » Cost to regional Vic is too great

Cost to regional Vic is too great

Leader of The Nationals

Peter Walsh

THE most recent lockdown may have lasted five days, but the impacts will be long-lasting across our regional communities.

When Daniel Andrews announced late on Friday — ahead of the busy Valentine’s Day weekend — that the virus had again leaked out of government-run hotel quarantine, it sent businesses and community groups into a spiral of costly cancellations.

In my home town of Swan Hill alone, the cost to the community was estimated at more than $2.5 million after lockdown forced the cancellation of the annual Victorian Country Week tennis tournament, which brings hundreds of people into town.

The snap lockdown led to a surge in requests for mental health support with Lifeline receiving its third-highest number of calls in the nearly 60 years it has been operating.

I’m not naïve enough to say that mistakes won’t happen while we all battle a pandemic — there is always going to be unknowns that the government must address.

But the difference is the Andrews Labor Government just isn’t learning from its mistakes.

There’s been more than enough time to learn how to safely deliver hotel quarantine and effective contact tracing, but we’re still waking up with the daily uncertainty of what we’ll get when Daniel Andrews parades in front of the cameras.

We’ve just emerged from a third statewide lockdown. The question must be asked, why does this keep happening?

And why is Victoria suffering from such serious and consistent lapses in management of the government’s hotel quarantine program and contact tracing?

Despite still failing to get the basics right, Daniel Andrews has moved to keep his extreme power over Victorians’ lives and livelihoods until the end of 2021.

It’s part of a debate going on in the Victorian Parliament at the moment to extend the State of Emergency powers.

Rather than allowing Parliament to review it on a month-by-month basis, Labor is asking for nine months.

A nine-month blank cheque to close your business, your children’s school, and force you to cancel weddings and funerals.

But at the same time, Daniel Andrews refuses to tell us the truth of what went wrong in hotel quarantine to lead to the second wave and to release public health advice behind his third lockdown.

This Labor Government just doesn’t care.

Well, Premier, Victorians have had enough.

The spin, the rhetoric, the lies and the incompetence has to stop — the cost to us is too great.

Daniel Andrews must put his arrogance aside and look to other states for his ‘gold standard’.

New South Wales has successfully managed to keep outbreaks under control with good contact tracing which saves the need to lockdown the entire state.

We need certainty but this will only happen when the Andrews Government fixes the holes in its hotel quarantine and ensures contact tracing is up to scratch.

More blanket lockdowns will only sound the death knell for more country Victorian jobs and businesses.

Digital Editions


  • Bowls Notes

    Bowls Notes

    RACECOURSE Congratulations to Mick Holyoak, who won his semi-final of the Champion of Champions against Danny Kelly of Lake Boga and then backed it up…

More News

  • Thefts across the region

    Thefts across the region

    SWAN HILL Theft: A REGISTRATION plate, a new Kings Swag still in its box and a bag were stolen from a vehicle parked in Barnett Street between 3.30pm Friday, 30…

  • Unflinching debut for local author

    Unflinching debut for local author

    RAW, real, honest – Charlie Hovenden’s debut memoir Fierce and Unstoppable has received praise for laying bare her daily strength and courage through MS and the sudden death of her…

  • Rams charge towards top spot

    Rams charge towards top spot

    THE final round of the Northern Valley Premier League is upon us, and it’s a two-battle for first place on the ladder, contested between Murray Downs and Cohuna Golf. How…

  • Support grows in regions

    Support grows in regions

    A REDBRIDGE federal poll released last week found One Nation’s primary vote had risen to 26 per cent, eight points lower than Labor (34) and seven points above the former…

  • Moulamein notes

    Moulamein notes

    Comedy act No, the Richmond footy team isn’t coming to town — but something just as exciting is. It’s not often we see an international comedy act roll through our…

  • Mass fish death

    Mass fish death

    AFTER further investigation into the fish deaths reported throughout the week near Menindee, the Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water has released a community update outlining its…

  • Back to school blessing

    Back to school blessing

    ANGLICAN NEWS It was great to have students and adults bringing symbols of their planned 2026 learning to be blessed on Sunday. Along with the blessing, Rev Julie gave appropriate…

  • SHDCA Round 12 Cricket Previews

    SHDCA Round 12 Cricket Previews

    Nyah District v RSL While last Saturday’s abandoned round has all but sealed reigning premier Nyah District’s fate, the Demons will still have plenty to play for when they host…

  • Training policy axed in council clash

    Training policy axed in council clash

    A COUNCILLOR training policy has been thrown in the bin, with one councillor labelling it an “overreach and a policy that we don’t need”. The policy was designed to formalise…

  • Homecoming to Mallee roots

    Homecoming to Mallee roots

    AFTER a lifetime of exhibiting and working in countries across the globe, woodturner and sophisticate Terry Martin has returned home. The internationally acclaimed artist grew up in the early 60s…