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Congestion complaints prompt review

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 05 Oktober 2013 | 21.51

Main Roads is reviewing traffic signal timing after receiving a record number of congestion complaints. Source: PerthNow

THE timing of traffic signals across Perth - including green lights on highways - is being reviewed after Main Roads received a record number of complaints about traffic congestion.

The agency received 2789 complaints in 2012-13, a 56 per cent increase from the 1783 the year before.

In 2005, there were just 204 complaints.

The figures show that one-in-five complaints were about congestion or traffic signals.

Roadworks and traffic management were also among the biggest headaches for road users.

"Traffic signals and congestion trend the highest and are linked," a Main Roads spokeswoman said.

"Most traffic signal complaints are as a result of timing issues.

"Most of these are as a result of congestion.

"We are currently reviewing our traffic signals to improve their co-ordination."

Main Roads relies on a computer system called SCATS, which monitors real-time traffic volumes to co-ordinate the 900 sets of signals it operates across WA.

The system is used in more than 50 countries.

A spokeswoman for Transport Minister Troy Buswell said Main Roads was reviewing the system to see if keeping some lights green for longer on routes such as the Canning and Stirling highways could ease congestion.

But Opposition transport spokesman Ken Travers said the rise in complaints to Main Roads was a result of the Barnett Government's mismanagement of city projects, such as the Elizabeth Quay waterfront development.

"There wouldn't be a week go by where I don't end up in a conversation with someone talking about congestion in the city," he said.

Mr Travers called on the Government to create a plan that predicted Perth's transport network needs over the next 50-100 years, instead of looking for "cheap fixes".

The Main Roads spokeswoman said its $105 million CBD Transport Plan, announced in April 2012, would ensure Perth's traffic could function during the development of big projects such as the Perth City Link and Elizabeth Quay.

The plan provided the $57 million needed for additional lanes in the Northbridge Tunnel and increased lane capacity on Mitchell Freeway northbound to Hutton St.

It also included a new Green CAT bus service between the Esplanade Busport and Leederville train station.

The spokeswoman said other improvements included enhancements to alternative transport facilities, such as cycle and footpaths, and reviewing pedestrian crossings at traffic signals in the city centre to improve traffic flow.

Other major complaints in the past year related to speed zones and noise.


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Clocks locked in to no change

WA daylight saving advocates admit it is not worth pushing the issue in the state. Picture: Theo Fakos Source: The Sunday Times

WA will be three hours behind the eastern states from midnight on Sunday - but even pro-daylight saving advocates admit they have lost their appetite for change.

Former Liberal leader Matt Birney, who raised $100,000 four years ago to fight for daylight saving in WA, said it was unlikely he would have another go at changing the minds of those who voted no to it in the 2009 referendum.

Mr Birney said opposition to daylight saving in the bush was too strong, and he could not see how their opinions could be swayed.

Federal Member for Perth Alannah MacTiernan said another referendum should not be held for at least five years, while WA Liberal Senator Mathias Cormann said the issue was "well and truly settled".

Ms MacTiernan said the fact West Australians had rejected daylight saving in four referendums - 1975, 1984, 1992 and 2009 - was reason enough to forget about it until at least after the next state election, in 2017.

Daylight saving was overwhelmingly rejected in 2009, after a three-year-trial.

At the time, Premier Colin Barnett said: "It is a very clear result. West Australians don't like daylight saving. We've just got to accept reality".

Mr Birney said though the majority of people living in Perth had supported daylight saving, the 2009 referendum had not been successful because most country people had rejected the idea.

Perth Lord Mayor Lisa Scaffidi said that while she supported daylight saving, there were benefits with WA being in the same time zone as most of Asia and China.

Victoria, Tasmania, NSW, SA and the ACT began daylight saving at midnight last night. Queensland, NT and WA do not have it.

So at midnight in WA, it is 3am in NSW, Victoria, Tasmania and the ACT; in SA it is 2.30am; in Queensland it is 2am and in the NT it is 1.30am. 


 


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Friends speak out on quarry murder inquiry

Lina Suria Brayley (left) and friend Jeany Penfold (right). Source: The Sunday Times

FRIENDS of Lina Brayley, whose body was found at a Perth quarry in 2011, say they are desperate for answers after police revealed yesterday they were now treating her death as a suspected homicide.

The 37-year-old's close friends said they were heartbroken over Ms Brayley's death and described her as a "caring, easygoing" person.

Major Crime Squad detectives yesterday released new information about their inquiry into Ms Brayley's death, revealing she was in the company of a man at Statham Quarry in the days leading to her death.

Police held a press conference at the Gooseberry Hill site, about 25km east of Perth, to make a public appeal for information and urge anyone who was at the quarry on the weekend of February 25, 2011, to come forward.

Ms Brayley's body was found by a bush walker at the base of a 43m cliff face on Sunday, February 27, 2011.

Lina Suria Brayley. Picture: Ganesh Penfold Source: The Sunday Times

At the time, it was believed the keen photographer had slipped and fallen to her death while taking pictures of the scenery at Beelu National Park.

She was found with her camera gear about 9am, but police believe she had died the night before.

Friend Jeany Penfold said Ms Brayley's friends and parents, who live in Indonesia, wanted answers about her death.

"It's been really hard. We contacted Lina's brother (when she died) and he got all the family members together and we called her mum to tell her," Ms Penfold said.

Police have renewed calls for information on the death of Lina Suria Brayley, who was found deceased at the Stratham Quarry in Gooseberry Hill in February 2011. Picture: WA Police Source: PerthNow

"She was really shocked. She was screaming and asking, 'How could this happen? Why was she up there?' "

Acting Det Sen-Sgt Cameron Blaine said police were treating her death as a suspected murder.

He said Ms Brayley was with a fair-skinned male at the Zig Zag scenic drive and Statham Quarry at different times throughout the weekend.

The man went to the area separately on a dark-coloured motorcycle, police said.

"That male has never been identified," Det Sen-Sgt Blaine said.

"If you are that male, we would like to speak to you because we believe you can assist in the investigation."

Acting Detective Senior Sergeant Cameron Blaine from Major Crime Squad at the Stratham Quarry where Lina Suria Brayley was found. Picture: Theo Fakos Source: PerthNow

Ms Brayley was born in Indonesia and moved to Australia in 2007.

She worked as a carer at an aged-care facility in Mount Lawley.

"She was an easygoing person, we loved dogs and going out for lunch and dinner," Ms Penfold said.

"She never spoke much about her personal life  she always showed me the happy side of her life.

"For the first three months after Lina died, I dreamt about her every night. But they were always bad dreams." Police say Ms Brayley drove to the quarry in a 2007 black Honda Jazz to take photos over the weekend.

Police have renewed calls for information on the death of Lina Suria Brayley, who was found deceased at the Stratham Quarry in Gooseberry Hill in February 2011. Pictured is the car she drove to the scene. Picture: WA Police Source: PerthNow

She stopped at a carpark to take pictures at the Zig Zag trail before driving to a second car park.

From there, police say she walked along a path to the quarry site.

She was wearing a black top, white shorts and brown boots when she died. Police have asked anyone who was taking photos in the area during the summer of 2011 to check the dates on their pictures to see if they were from the same weekend.

Anyone who was at the quarry between Friday, February 25, and Sunday, February 26, is asked to call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.


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Double fatal near Geraldton

TWO people died in a car accident near Geraldton tonight.

Police were called to the incident at Waggrakine, 7kms north-east of Geraldton, at around 7pm.

A St John Ambulance spokeswoman confirmed two people died at the scene.

Details of the incident, including how many vehicles were involved, were still unclear. Police said there was one male and one female victim.

The crash happened on the corner of Chapman Valley Road and North West Coastal Highway.

Police were unable to confirm the cause of the crash.

More to come.


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We won't be a Hawks clone: Simpson

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 04 Oktober 2013 | 21.51

The West Coast Eagles have named Hawthorn assistant coach Adam Simpson as John Worsfold's successor.

Start ... Adam Simpson on his first day as Eagles coach. Source: News Limited

The Eagles unveil their replacement for John Worsfold at club HQ today.

NEW West Coast coach Adam Simpson says he can't turn the Eagles into Hawthorn but that there are parts of the premiers' game he hopes to implement next season.

Simpson, an assistant coach with the Hawks for the past four years, was introduced at a press conference at Patersons Stadium this morning.

No clone ... Adam Simpson and Alastair Clarkson. Source: News Limited

"We're not Hawthorn, so I don't want you guys to think we're going to become a clone of Hawthorn Football Club,'' he said.

"But there will be things that I'll take away from that organisation that I have to, because they're exceptional at what they do.

"The main part about what Hawthorn do is they educate the players really well. So whatever you're style of play is, if you can't educate and teach it then you're in strife.

"There will be things about Hawthorn that we do, but we'll be our own team.''

Simpson refused to go into detail about the team's list or trading and recruiting priorities or which assistants he hoped to bring with him, saying it would be disrespectful to comment before he had time to settle in.

The North Melbourne legend stopped short of targeting a return to the finals next year, but said he expected improvement following the 13th-placed finish this season.

"I'm not going to make any closed-end statements about where they'll finish next year, but we'd expect improvement,'' Simpson said.

"This club is built on success and expectation and I'm fully aware of that.''

West Coast has capped a banner week in Adam Simpson's AFL career by selecting him as their new senior coach.

Simpson said he would also seek advice from former coach and club legend John Worsfold, who quit last month.

Assistant coach Scott Burns, who missed out on the top job, has been offered a contract but is yet to reveal if he will stay. Simpson said he hoped Burns would remain and would speak to him within the next 24 hours.

Simpson would not comment on whether he wanted veteran Daniel to complete the final year of his contract. Kerr is expected to announce his retirement.

"I'm aware that people here know more about the list than I do,'' Simpson said.

"I've got judgments that I've made from afar... but at the moment I'll be learning more than I'll be making decisions.

"I can't comment on who we're going to get and what we're going to target, because I just haven't sat down with them yet and really discussed the needs for individual players.''

Simpson said he had simple football philosophies.

"The pillars of my philosophy are pretty similar to a lot of coaches I suppose,'' he said.

"The competitive instinct is No.1. I think flexibility for me, I'd like to develop the players into dual-role type of capabilities and not just be stuck in one position.

Peter Sumich questions the process behind selecting the new West Coast head coach.

"Along with football intelligence. It's really important to me. So I need to assess where they're at in terms of where they are with the modern game.''

Eagles chairman Alan Cransberg did not directly address Peter Sumich's angry reaction to missing out on the job but said he hoped to extend an olive branch.

"Peter was disappointed. He's an outstanding football person,'' Cransberg said.

"He's done a wonderful job for this club either as a player or a coach and we wish him all he best at Fremantle.

"I would like to catch up with Peter, I talked to him last night and hopefully we can catch up at a later stage. That's up to Peter but I've offered that.

"But at the end of the day when we looked at the candidates and we looked at what this club needed, then Adam came up trumps.

"We're really excited about the fact we have a new coach. I think Adam is exactly the right person we need for this stage of our development as a club.

"We have very high expectations as a club and will continue to have high expectations. We know we've got work to do and Adam is very excited about that challenge.''

Cransberg said he was particularly impressed by Simpson's long-held ambition to become a senior coach and his ability to innovate.

"Adam is a driven man. He made a decision as a player that he wanted to be a coach and just didn't sit there with his fingers crossed,'' he said.

"The second thing for me that I think is very important in this club, is that we were looking for somebody who can innovate and who can lead us in a new direction.''


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When parents make fatal mistakes

Police outside the daycare centre in Helena Valley, Perth. Picture: Theo Fakas. Source: NewsComAu

IT'S agonising to think about. A baby boy approaching his first birthday died after being left in a car found in front of a daycare centre in Helena Valley in Perth's east at 4pm on Wednesday.

Perth police are still investigating, but say they they are not treating the child's death as suspicious, but as a tragic accident.

Perthnow reported that It was understood the boy's father arrived at the childcare centre to pick up his son, but staff told him his child had never been dropped off in the morning.

The tragic story unfolded late Wednesday and it was revealed early Thursday that the shocked father had returned to his vehicle, where he found the unresponsive boy in the backseat of the car.

But how does an incident like this happen?

Internationally there is a tragic record of deaths where parents have, at the end of a horrifying sprint to the car, found their child dead, News.com reports.

Writer Gene Weingarten won a Pulitzer Prize for a Washington Post investigation which found 15 to 25 children die each year in the United States after being left in cars. One horrible day in America it happened to three babies.

Weingarten chronicles how ordinary people simply forget they have their baby in the car and go about their ordinary lives, leaving their child in the car, not through neglect but believing they have been dropped at day care, or with a nanny or into the loving arms of a relative.

It is easy to jump to conclusions about the character of the parent. But Weingarten's explanation of who is responsible will surprise you.

"The wealthy do (it), it turns out. And the poor, and the middle class. Parents of all ages and ethnicities do it. Mothers are just as likely to do it as fathers.

"It happens to the chronically absent-minded and to the fanatically organised, to the college-educated and to the marginally literate.

"In the last 10 years, it has happened to a dentist. A postal clerk. A social worker. A police officer. An accountant. A soldier. A paralegal. An electrician. A Protestant clergyman. A (Rabbi) student. A nurse. A construction worker. An assistant principal. It happened to a mental health counsellor, a college professor and a pizza chef. It happened to a pediatrician. It happened to a rocket scientist."

Weingarten continued: "Several people have driven from work to collect the child they thought they'd dropped off, never noticing the corpse in the back seat.".

Just last month, a Texas family found baby Lillian Isabel Guerra dead in the back seat of the car. Her father forgot to take her to childcare after dropping his other children at school.

A similar catastrophe happened to Elena Petrizzi, just shy of two years of age. Her father, Lucio, found her unconscious in the back of his hot car in 2011. He was convinced he had dropped her off.

How something like this happens differs from case to case. A reason that is commonly cited has to do with the human psyche and brain function.

Psychologist Michael Carr Gregg says people often operate day-to-day in a "state of flow". That means they are carrying out a routine task on autopilot while focusing on other things.

While the infant deaths are extreme examples of this, many of us have experienced moments of absent mindedness like this.

"I once had a very similar experience where I put my child safety seat on the top of the car roof," Mr Gregg said. "The child wasn't in it, but I drove off with the bloody thing on top."

"I had no memory at all of not putting it in the back seat."

Your brain's autopilot is called the basal ganglia. While the more complex brain structures that carry out higher-level thought are elsewhere - say planning your evening - your basal ganglia is running the routine motor skills required to drive you home from work.

But molecular physiology professor David Diamond told The Washington Post that when a person is stressed, sometimes the more primitive basal ganglia can take over.

"The important factors that keep showing up involve a combination of stress, emotion, lack of sleep and change in routine," he said. That makes a person's conscious mind too weak to do its job.

Although police do not know the exact cause of the child's death in Western Australia, the early response from police and the day care centre was that it had been a tragic accident.

Daycare staff performed CPR on the boy but their desperate attempts to revive him were unsuccessful. They have been offered counselling following the tragedy.

General Manager of the daycare centre Kim Beange praised the professionalism of the centre's workers and assured parents that no other children were aware of the incident.

"Our thoughts and condolences are with the parents of the child and their family through this tragic time."

Earlier, a police spokesman said: "It is a tragic time for their family and it's also hard for the daycare centre staff, who were also present."

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Baz throws weight behind co-host

Lisa Fernandez and Rick Parish at The Telethon Adventures Spring Soiree at The Red Herring. Picture: Alf Sorbello Source: PerthNow

Lisa Fernandez, pictured with Paul Hogan, announces she is leaving 92.9FM. Picture: Alf Sorbello

Lisa Fernandez and Jodie Land.  Picture: Alf Sorbellp Source: PerthNow

Lisa Fernandez dresses up as Barbie to make a point. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied

FM morning radio host Lisa Fernandez has put family first in announcing her departure from the 92.9 breakfast show.

Fernandez, one third of Lisa, Paul and Baz show on the Today Network's Perth station, made the announcement this morning via her Twitter account.

The short Twitter message said she would be telling her listeners at 8am today and directed followers to her blog post on the reasons why she is leaving - to spend more time with her daughter before she starts school.

"Part of being a breakfast announcer is you've got to go to events at night, you've got to attend functions, so it's not just the 4am wake ups, and it's pretty tough on your body," she said.

"And it also takes its toll on the people around me, the people who support me like my dad Rog, and I started breakfast radio here at 92.9...Isabella was just nine weeks old."

"Belle starts school not next year, the year after and that's huge. And I just thought to myself I haven't done the day care drop off with her because I've been here, I've had so many functions you know, and I'd really like to spend more quality time with her before she does start school.

"So I have made the very tough decision to take some time off from radio. So that's what I'll be doing. I'll be leaving 92.9 as sad as it is."

Co-host Basil Zempilas said he did not appreciate the effort Fernandez had gone through until he became a father recently himself.

"Lis, can I just say congratulations on what you have done and what you've achieved. I mean, four years, it does feel a little bit – from a selfish point of view – it does feel like a part of the family is getting out of home but it's impossible for us not to understand the reasons why you are doing this," Zempilas said.

Shortly after 8am, Fernandez said she had been "talking to the higher ups at 92.9" and after about 12 years of doing breakfast radio across Australia, she felt it was time to call it quits.


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Run-down cop reveals 'we're lucky to be here'

A man has been charged after three police were run down in Claremont.

Three police officers are in hospital and Stirling Highway is closed after a serious crash in Claremont. Picture: Alyesha Anderson Source: PerthNow

THREE police officers have been hospitalised, one with serious leg injuries, after they were hit by a car while walking in Claremont today.

Police said a car that was involved in a collision just after 10am speared off the road and crashed into the three detectives, believed to be walking on a footpath alongside the highway.

The two cars involved were a Mazda sedan travelling east on Stirling Highway and a Ford Falcon XR6 sedan travelling west.

It is believed the driver of the Ford turned into the path of the Mazda.

A 39-year-old Parmelia man was this afternoon charged over the crash.

Police will allege he was driving the Ford Falcon and have charged him with two counts of dangerous driving occasioning bodily harm, one count dangerous driving occasioning grievous bodily harm and driving with a blood alcohol level in excess of 0.08.

He will also be summonsed for drug offences after drug items were allegedly found in his vehicle and is due to appear before the Perth Magistrates Court on October 24.

The crash forced the Ford Falcon to leave the road, hitting the officers from Western Suburbs Detectives, as they walked along the footpath.

Detective Senior Constable Justin Comnelli from Major Crash said the injured officers had been walking along the side of the road doing their duties.

"The two vehicles have collided and unfortunately been thrown into the path of oncoming pedestrians who happened to be police officers," he said.

"Everyone in the vehicles are fine, it was the pedestrians that were injured."

"A lot of people at the time did render assistance but we do seek more witnesses and we ask if anyone did see it to contact Crime Stoppers." (1800 333 000)

One of the injured officers, Acting Sen-Sgt Michael Fogell, said the trio were lucky to survive.

"It could've been anyone, we were just in the wrong place at the wrong time," he said.

"We're lucky to still be here."

Det-Sgt Frank Glynn was the most badly injured of the trio.

Three police officers are in hospital and Stirling Highway is closed after a serious crash in Claremont. Picture: Alyesha Anderson Source: PerthNow

"Their (the injured detectives) colleagues were here and saw everything that happened, obviously they are traumatised and are getting counselling at the moment."

Acting Sen-Sgt Fogell and a female detective received minor injuries while Det-Sgt Glynna has suspected broken bones.

All three were taken to Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital by St John Ambulance.

Det Sen Const Comnelli said just because police were involved did not mean extra charges would be laid and it would be treated the same as any other traffic incident.

"There were extra items found in (one of the) vehicles of a criminal nature, but I can't comment on what it was," he said.
Officers searched his car and bagged a number of items, allegedly related to criminal activity.
 

Three police officers are in hospital and Stirling Highway is closed after a serious crash in Claremont. Picture: Alyesha Anderson Source: PerthNow

The 22-year-old driver of the Mazda was shaken up but was unhurt.

Major Crash Investigators remained at the scene for several hours.

Stirling Highway, between Bayview Terrace and Queenslea Drive was closed for some time but reopened to traffic in both directions around 12.30pm.

A truck crash in city has caused chaos on the Mitchell Freeway, with south-bound traffic backed up to Karrinyup Road. Source:

Truck causes chaos on Mitchell

A truck crash in city has caused chaos on the Mitchell Freeway, with south-bound traffic backed up to Karrinyup Rd.

The truck was carrying reinforced concrete panels when it hit an overpass bridge on the Mitchell Freeway, near Hay St, just before 9am.

Debris from the crash has forced the closure of two left-hand lanes on the freeway.

The Murray St on ramp is also closed and motorists are asked to avoid the area.


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Can you crack code to get this job?

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 03 Oktober 2013 | 21.51

Can you solve this riddle? Picture: BigCommerce Source: Supplied

The 'batphone' will ring once the code is cracked. Source: Supplied

EVER fancied yourself the next Mark Zuckerberg or David Karp?

Well, here's your chance to shine.

Sydney-based tech company Bigcommerce is recruiting engineers to work in their inner-city warehouse offices, fitted out with ping pong tables, Xboxes and nerf guns in true start-up vibe.

The only thing standing in your way is solving the ridiculously difficult riddle pictured above.

Once cracked, the code will generate a phone number that leads to a "batphone" in their Sydney offices.

The only problem is it's so tough, no one has managed to crack it yet.

Bigcommerce's vice president of Engineering Soren Harner said they were still waiting on a call to the office 'batphone', although it's definitely possible as it has been solved by staff in the office.

"We're looking for people who are constantly learning and hungry to improve their skills and find better ways to do things."

"The core values around working as a team, being smart and getting stuff done, keeping things simple. People identity with those values," Mr Harner said, adding that the company chose its unusual approach to recruitment to gain staff who were talented about problem solving.

"Traditional recruitment is hit and miss in that regard, you have to rely on your gut," he said.

"We want engineers who are enthusiastic and passionate and crack puzzles for fun. It also creates an element of scarcity. We are recruiting a lot of people but compared to the number of people who would like to work in a tech start up there is a scarcity."

Since rebranding in 2009, the company - which provides software for nearly 40,000 online businesses - has received $75 million in venture capital funding, including $40 million from the co-founder of AOL who also sits on the board.

Successful applicants will join about 65 others in the Sydney offices, as well as another 270 employees in the US.

Can you crack the code? Continue the conversation on Twitter @NewscomauHQ | @Bigcommerce | @victoria-craw

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Simpson to coach Eagles

Hawthorn's senior assistant Adam Simpson set to be appointed West Coast coach. Source: News Limited

ADAM Simpson has won the race to become coach of West Coast, with the club overlooking dual premiership star Peter Sumich.

Simpson, 37, will be unveiled as the Eagles' sixth coach at a press conference at club headquarters on Friday morning.

Sumich, 45, had been regarded as the favourite to take over from John Worsfold and his latest snub comes as a devastating blow to the long-time assistant coach.

Sumich served under Worsfold for a decade at the Eagles before moving to Fremantle to work under Ross Lyon two years ago.

Simpson, the Hawthorn assistant coach and dual premiership player with North Melbourne, said he was looking forward to coaching in his own right.

"I am grateful for this opportunity and I look forward to moving across to Perth with my family and settling in to the challenge ahead,'' Simpson said.

"I have always admired West Coast from afar and I believe the list has an exciting mix of senior and emerging young players.


"I would like to acknowledge both Hawthorn and North Melbourne for the grounding they have given to me in this game.

"Hawthorn has been fantastic for me in the last four years and it was certainly a great experience to be a part of the coaching group as the club achieved the ultimate success last Saturday.

"Being so closely involved from a coaching perspective has provided me with a sense of the hard work which has to be done to achieve a premiership. I obviously enjoyed that feeling as a player, but it is different as a coach.

"I will move across to Perth as soon as possible and I look forward to meeting the players and working with them from the start of pre-season."

West Coast chairman Alan Cransberg thanked the other candidates who had been interviewed for the role, including Sumich, Leigh Tudor and current assistant Scott Burns.

"I am sure they will continue to add enormous value in assistant roles or any future senior coaching roles," Cransberg said.

"It was a tough job for the selection panel and the board to arrive at this unanimous decision, but we believe Adam is best equipped to take the club forward."

Simpson was a member of the Kangaroos' 1996 and '99 premiership sides, and also captained North Melbourne.

It came down to a race for two on Monday when both Sumich and Simpson presented to the club's board.

They were both called in to a second interview on Tuesday and psyche testing on Wednesday before Simpson was ratified by the Eagles' board on Thursday.

Simpson, who made his senior debut against West Coast at Princes Park in round 18, 1995, played 306 games for North Melbourne before retiring midway through the 2009 season.

He spent five years as club captain, was a premiership player in 1996 and 1999, won the club's fairest and best award in 2002 and was an All-Australian player in the same year.

ADAM SIMPSON
Born: February 16, 1976

PLAYING
Club: North Melbourne
Drafted: No.14 in 1993 national draft from Eltham/Northern U18
Career span: 1995-2009
Games: 306 (equal third highest in North Melbourne's history behind Brent Harvey 362 and Glenn Archer 311 and equal with Wayne Schimmelbusch)
Honours: premiership sides 1996 and '99; best and fairest 2002 (four other top-three placings); All-Australian 2002; club captain 2004-08

COACHING
Hawthorn assistant coach 2010-13
 


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Sumich 'gutted' but Freo going places

West Coast legend and former club assistant Peter Sumich, who was overlooked for the Eagles coaching job and will remain at Fremantle as an assistant. Picture: Theo Fakos Source: PerthNow

PETER Sumich says he was 'gutted' to miss out on the West Coast coaching job and said there was still a 'burning desire to be a senior coach.

Sumich said he had re-signed as an assistant coach at Fremantle in the wake of the Eagles announcing that Adam Simpson would be the new Eagles coach.

Speaking with talkback radio 6PR this evening, Sumich said: "I'm gutted, make no doubt about that, and I'm disappointed I didn't get the job.

"I thought I was a really good chance again with this one and unfortunately it didn't work out, it got down to the last two, same as Essendon, and just missed out."

Analysis: Sumich a bridesmaid once again

Sumich said he had given it his best shot and had no regrets.

"I suppose the board, they were thinking a little bit differently to a lot of people and they make those decisions," he said.

"I just worry about when boards make decisions, there is usually not too many footy people on them, but that's fine."

However, he recognised that the club may have been looking for a new start with someone from outside the club.

"And that's fair enough, I love the club, I always will because I played in two premierships there and I was an assistant coach with the premiership, so they've been good to me," he said.

"But I've got to move on quickly because I know that Fremantle are going places."

Sumich said there was still a 'burning ambition' to coach and he would continue to apply for senior coaching roles at other clubs.

"But if it doesn't happen, I'm at a great club now and hopefully I can be there long-term but if it doesn't work out for me to be a senior coach, I'm not going to cry over it."

Sumich said that West Coast's discipline would have been an area of attention if he had won the top job, after being asked what he had learned in two years under Ross Lyon.

"I've got no doubt that some of the players, in my opinion, whether it's right or wrong, just need to be brought in line a little bit,' he said.

"I read a tweet by Ash Smith...he tweeted he was sick of seeing purple, go the Hawks.

"I just thought to myself, geez Ash, those little discipline things...you just need to bring back into line. The players shouldn't get out of line with tweeting those types of things."


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Baby death likely a tragic accident

POLICE will investigate if a baby was left inside a car for an entire day before his devastated father found him lifeless

Ladybugs Childcare Centre in Helena Vallley, where a baby was found dead yesterday. Picture: Justin Benson-Cooper Source: PerthNow

POLICE will investigate whether a baby boy was left inside the family car for an entire day before his devastated father found him lifeless in the backseat.

Detectives are still piecing together the circumstances around the 11-month-old boy's tragic death after he was discovered in the car outside a daycare centre in Helena Valley, east of Perth.

It's understood the father may have gone to work on Wednesday morning and parked his vehicle for the day - unaware his son was in the backseat.

Fatal distraction: The tragedy of babies left in cars

When he went to collect the boy from Ladybugs Early Learning Centre at about 4pm that afternoon, he was told the child was never dropped off in the morning.


That's when he returned to his vehicle and found the baby unresponsive in the backseat.

Daycare centre staff performed CPR on the boy but their desperate attempts to revive him were unsuccessful. 

A dark grey Honda Civic sedan at the centre of the investigation into the death of an 11-month-old boy. Picture: Theo Fakos. Source: PerthNow

Police are not treating the death as suspicious but will continue interviews with the parents this afternoon and review results of a post-mortem examination.

It's understood the boy was the couple's only child.

"Major crime squad detectives are continuing their investigation into the sudden death of the child," a police spokesman said.

"At this time the child's death is not being treated as a homicide, however inquiries into the circumstances leading up to the child's death are continuing."

The temperature in Perth yesterday reached 25.7C - the hottest day in several weeks.

Staff members at the daycare centre have been offered counseling following the tragedy.

General manager Kim Beange praised the workers for their efforts in trying to save the boy's life and assured parents that no children witnessed the incident.

"Our staff's professionalism came to the fore and they remained vigilant throughout this time, and at no point were other children in attendance aware of the circumstances occurring," Ms Beange said.

"The child was enrolled at our facility in Helena Valley, however was not in attendance yesterday. When the staff were alerted to the fact that child needed first aid assistance they immediately commenced CPR and attempts to revive the child were unsuccessful.

"Our thoughts and condolences are with the parents of the child and their family through this tragic time."

Earlier, a police spokesman said: "It is a tragic time for their family and it's also hard for the daycare centre staff, who were also present."

This morning, parents at the centre said they were devastated to learn of the boy's death.

"I'm still a bit shocked; it's a bit emotional because it's a baby. I don't know who it is, it's a very sad story," one mother said.


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Buddy deal a year in the making

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 01 Oktober 2013 | 21.51

Lance Franklin is set to line up in a Sydney jumper next year. Digitally altered image. Source: HeraldSun

LANCE Franklin's plans to move to Sydney began soon after the 2012 Grand Final loss to the Swans.

Franklin's manager Liam Pickering contacted the Swans and said Franklin would like to play for them in 2014.

Talks were held during this season, before they were ramped up in the past eight weeks, culminating with today's stunning development — and nine-year deal worth $10 million.

Swans chief executive Andrew Ireland confirmed to the Herald Sun Franklin contacted Sydney and not vice versa.

"We got a general sense around the end of last season he would like to play for us,'' Ireland said.

"The difficulty was the Kurt Tippett thing was going through and we did that, and then nothing much happened.

"During the Liam indicated he was still keen to play for us if that was achievable and I guess probably over the past six to eight weeks, we had more conversations about it.''

Asked who contacted who, Ireland said: "Liam was the one who first indicated to us."

He admitted the club was stunned with the approach.

"It's not very often a player of his stature actually wants to approach you on the basis he wants to play for your club,'' Ireland said.

"Clearly, through the discussions along the say he loves the Hawthorn football club and the fishbowl of Melbourne has taken it s toll, and he wanted to get out of that.''

All Ireland's discussions with Franklin and his management will be investigated by the AFL for any potential rule breaches.

A statement from the league yesterday said it's Legal, Integrity and Compliance Department would interview key people.

The Swans coup has left Greater Western Sydney reeling, and the AFL blindsided.

Late last week they tabled an offer of $1.2 million over six years, well short of the Swans offer.

Ireland said Franklin's salary fitted into the cap, alongside the estimated $900,000 a year salary for Tippett.

"I don't want to go into the method of (payment) other than to say it's something that works with our salary cap,'' Ireland said.

He agreed it was a risk. "Once before I was involved in this sort of deal with Alastair Lynch (To Brisbane from Fitzroy) and he played 11 years after being recruited as a 26-year-old.''

Asked if the money was unconditional, Ireland said: "The contract is the contract.''

Despite the development, Ireland said the club was aware the Hawks had the ability to match the offer.

"The one thing we were respectful of, with free agency, is clearly Hawthorn have got an opportunity to match the offer, and so, we're not presumptuous to think Buddy is playing for us yet,'' Ireland said.

The official paperwork will be lodged on Friday.

Ireland hit out at critics of club's allowance.

"The reason why we were able to secure Kurt last year and hopefully secure Franklin this year, is because we've got enough space in the cap and the space in the cap comes about because players who were on our list will not be on our list, so therefore there is space,'' Ireland said.

"The reality is every player on our list shares in the cost of living allowance, it's in their contracts, the AFL know that, the AFL sees that, so there's no pool of cost of living for us to be able to hand it to players individually.

"People who spread that are not really honest about how it's used.''

How can the Swans afford Buddy?

Anderson questions salary cap bonus

Fans react to Buddy move


Footy's biggest trade bombshells

Buddy deal small change on world stage

HAVE YOUR SAY IN THE CHAT WINDOW BELOW

The news comes after News Limited today revealed that the Sydney Swans had launched a last-minute offer to snare Franklin, with the offer believed to be in the vicinity of $7 million across five seasons.

The Giants sensationally tweeted today that they had taken their offer to Franklin, believed to be worth $2 million a season, off the table. 

AFL writer Jon Ralph doubts whether Sydney needs cost-of-living allowance for players and warns of repercussions as Buddy Franklin makes his move.

Giants coach Leon Cameron said GWS still had several experienced players on its radar, despite being knocked back by key targets Franklin and Essendon ruckman Tom Bellchambers, who signed a two-year extension at Windy Hill.

"You're not going to lie about it (and it is a blow) but we've gone on the record this year that we're looking for mature-age players to come into our football club to help our young list ... and Lance was one of five or six that we've been looking at throughout the year," Cameron said.

"We're confident in where we're heading, we're confident in our list management strategy.

"To fast track our performance we need some players to join our football club and we're very confident we'll do that in the next couple of weeks."

Join Mark Robinson and Gerard Whately for a special edition of AFL360 tonight. Source: FoxSports

Five time premiership player, and GWS forwards coach Dermott Brereton reacts to news Lance Franklin has gone to rivals, Sydney Swans.

Former Kangaroos star and Fox Sports commentator David King says the Swans have scored an amazing coup in signing Hawthorn superstar Lance Franklin.

Clarko takes Mike to task

Latest trade news, whispers and more

GWS coach Leon Cameron chats to AFL 360 about Lance Franklin coming to the club.


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Kicked out of school for being gay

Adam and his partner Rick. Picture: Supplied Source: NewsComAu

THESE are the letters that will sicken any fair-minded Australian to their core.

Gay Australians have opened up about the discrimination they faced from teachers, staff and peers at school in a series of heartfelt letters.

Today we publish two of these letters.

The letters were originally shared with Independent NSW State MP Alex Greenwich. They are honest, raw, heartfelt and shockingly revealing of the entrenched discrimination and homophobia which still exists in many schools.

Mr Greenwich is lobbying for the NSW State Government to change its Anti Discrimination Act so private and independent schools cannot expel students on the basis of their sexuality.

"A number of students reached out and were brave enough to share their stories," he said, adding that gay and lesbian children faced discrimination across the country. "A number were anonymous as they were threatened with expulsion if they talked."

Ros Philips, from Christian group FamilyVoice Australia, said Mr Greenwich's proposed change was "Orwellian" and threatened "freedom of speech, association and religion".

Dear Alex,

Back in 2007 while I was in Year 12, I was in Girlfriend magazine with a coming out story and because of that I was asked with my partner to make an appearance on Sunrise.

Because of these media appearances, students and teachers at my school found out I was gay. This didn't go down well.

It was six weeks before my HSC and they set a meeting with me and my mother to talk to them about the "issue" of my sexuality. I was called up to the office, in tears, with two teachers, the assistant principal and my mother.

We were up there for over an hour talking about what I had done, why I did it and who I was.

After this meeting the conclusion was that they would take it to the school board to see what will be done and whether or not I would be expelled. I was stressed out not knowing what would happen.

A week later I had another meeting with them which ended in the school saying I could stay in school - on these conditions:

1. I could not mention or talk about my sexuality at school to anyone.

2. My partner Rick was to have nothing to do with the school or functions.

3. I had to see a counsellor weekly until I left school.

I didn't agree with this but with only six weeks left I had to suck it up and deal with it. It left me feeling very angry and stressed.

I contemplated leaving the school and seeing the counsellor was the hardest part. Knowing who I was, and having the school make me try to "fix" myself wasn't easy. Growing up with a very supportive family, I didn't think I needed to be "fixed".

Even in our Bible Studies class I recall hearing 'if you are a homosexual you are going to hell'.

I did have two teachers who were very supportive through my situation and I thank them for that as it helped me get through my last weeks of school.

Then the school formal was another issue all together as I wanted Rick to be there. My date card was rejected because another male's name was on the card. They did not allow same sex partners to attend the formal.

It took a lot of planning to get Rick there. He ended up going as a date with one of my good friends and I took a friend of mine from outside of school.

When teachers found this out I was hounded with questions and assumptions like "he's not 30 or something is he?" Or "you won't make out with him on the dancefloor" at the actual formal?

We did sit next to each other, but we were clearly looked down upon. We did not dance together or be affectionate towards each other because it was very uncomfortable.

I thought that I had dealt with this but when the school said that they "find it offensive for people to even suggest they discriminate against students" it made me stop and think because I was discriminated against and I found it "offensive" for them to say that.

-- Adam L

Hurt ... Beci Jay was asked to leave her school. Picture: Supplied Source: NewsComAu

Dear sir/madam,

I've been gay for as long as I can remember.

I've had good male and female role models, I come from a decent family, and most people would say I am a good role model to others (now).

When I was 14, my parents and I moved to regional Queensland for a new start. In high school, I was the textbook 'gifted underachiever'. I acted out in school because I was disengaged, unchallenged and couldn't relate well to the purpose of such a 'sausage machine model' of education (one that churns out lots of copies of the same thing).

We moved to the area for a new start in my father's business and in my education. I was enrolled at a Christian school and I settled in happily in the first few months. But in Year 10 things went downhill.

I started to acknowledge and accept my own 'gay' feelings that I'd always had and experimented with another girl. It was outside of school hours, outside of school property, in the privacy of my family home.

Because I trusted one of my teachers I sat her down and told her about my feelings. But rather than help me, she told the principal ... a lie about how she'd seen me engaged in a sexual act with a girl on the bus.

I was absolutely indignant and so hurt. In the end I was asked to leave the school because after they outed me to my parents my parents supported me and not their homophobia. Apparently, our 'values' didn't align with their 'values'.

So it came to be - I ended up in public school.

The letters were first sent to Alex Greenwich, right, the independent MP for Sydney. Source: NewsComAu

After that, I tried to convert myself to heterosexuality by going to church and praying about it. Of course, nothing happened. It's like holding your breath to change your eye colour. Even if you really want it to happen, it won't. I was gay.

In such frustration and anger, I started cutting myself, binge drinking and taking risks. Later on, I started taking drugs. At the end of Year 11, I had had enough of my feelings and having to hide my true self. I thought nobody would ever accept me. Not long after that, I tried to take my own life.

My parents saw what nobody should ever have to see - their 16-year-old daughter unconscious on her bedroom floor with a pile of empty pill bottles on the shelf.

After I finished high school I moved back to Brisbane. It was much more accepting and I was free of school. Because I'd suffered so much in Years 11 and 12, I didn't bother going to uni.

After two years of working awful jobs, I finally pulled myself together and went. I am now in the final semester of my teaching program, working with a great school, getting marks within the top 15 per cent of my cohort, and blitzing life with the new-found confidence of having people around me who accept and love me.

I get treated with dignity and respect at work, university and at home. It's amazing what a difference it makes.

So why, then, should any school have the right to expel gay students? A student generally doesn't decide which school they go to and they certainly don't decide to be gay.

What a student does outside of school or in their personal life is no business of the school.

It's like expelling a student because you've heard a rumour that they are having sex out of marriage. Or if they get pregnant - imagine if someone was expelled from a school for being pregnant and told their bastard child is going to hell, as well as ten generations of their children (as it says in the Bible). Imagine the uproar then.

But because it's gay students, it's okay. Well, no it is not.

It's time for a change.

Kind regards,

-- Beci Jay

Continue the conversation on Twitter @alexgreenwich | @drpiotrowski | @newscomauHQ


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Shutdown: 800,000 won't get paid

President Barack Obama took his healthcare reforms to an election, but the Tea Party Republicans have refused to pass them in the budget.

US government agencies were ordered to close for the first time in more than 17 years after Congress stalemated over Republican efforts to block President Barack Obama's health care law.

US government agencies were ordered to close for the first time in more than 17 years after Congress stalemated over Republican efforts to block President Barack Obama's health care law.

More than 800,000 federal workers were to spend Tuesday, the first day of the new fiscal year, on unpaid leave as agency managers executed contingency plans for the costly process of closing down operations indefinitely.

The official word to shut down came from the White House just before midnight Monday. Hours earlier, the Senate, by a 54-46 party-line vote, killed a House measure that would have funded government agencies for six weeks but delayed key parts of Obamacare for a year.

Shutdown: What happens now?

It was the second such vote that the Senate took during a day in which the two chambers exchanged volleys of legislation with little expectation that any of it would become law.

The one exception to the legislative futility was a bill to ensure that military service members would be paid during the shutdown. Obama signed it into law late Monday night.

The Statue of Liberty is a government facility and will be closed during the shutdown.

The House's final legislative effort passed 228-201, mostly along party lines. It would have delayed for one year the requirement in the health care law that individuals have insurance or pay a fine and would have reduced benefits for members of Congress and some of their staff members.

Late at night, Republican leaders moved to set up a House-Senate committee that could seek a compromise in coming days. Democratic leaders asserted that they would not negotiate under duress and insisted that the House first pass a measure temporarily providing funds for government agencies.

Visa panic: Will this affect your travel?

"You know, with a bully you cannot let them slap you around," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said after the Senate's initial vote. "They slap you around today, they slap you five or six times. Tomorrow it will be seven or eight times. We are not going to be bullied."

Obama warned that a shutdown would harm the nation's economy and vowed that the health care law, his signature domestic policy achievement, would move forward.

Indeed, among the ironies of the standoff is that a shutdown will have no effect on the law the Republicans tried to block. The money to implement the law does not depend on the annual spending bills stuck in the congressional logjam. A major element of Obamacare, online marketplaces that consumers without insurance can use to buy coverage, will open to the public Tuesday.

Republican House Speaker John Boehner (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

"That funding is already in place. You can't shut it down," Obama said during a short appearance earlier in the White House briefing room.

"This is a law that passed both houses of Congress, a law that bears my signature, a law that the Supreme Court upheld as constitutional, a law that voters chose not to repeal last November," he said, referring to his re-election.

"I'm always willing to work with anyone of either party to make sure the Affordable Care Act works better," he added. "But one faction of one party in one house of Congress in one branch of government doesn't get to shut down the entire government just to refight the results of an election."

Republicans, for their part, insisted that blame for the stalemate fell on Democrats. The president and his party, they said, had put preserving Obamacare ahead of keeping government agencies running.

"Americans didn't want Obamacare forced on them, and they don't want a shutdown forced on them either," Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus said in a statement. "Once again, Democrats are unwilling to listen."

Obama spoke with the four leaders of the House and Senate on Monday evening, including a 10-minute conversation with House Speaker John A. Boehner, R-Ohio, but neither side indicated progress toward a deal.

Members of the House of Representatives file into the Capitol in the dark as ideological enemies battle into the night over the US budget. Win McNamee/Getty Images/AFP

Late in the evening, after the Senate's second set of votes, Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, one of the few remaining GOP moderates, urged colleagues to compromise. "There are real lives, real families, laying awake wondering what the rest of the week is going to mean to them," she said. "It's not just about the next election."

But on both sides, many more lawmakers were looking beyond Monday's midnight deadline and focusing on which party would bear the brunt of public anger if a standoff disrupts government services.

The stalemate happened because Congress failed to pass any of the annual laws, known as appropriations, that provide money for government agencies. Federal law says agencies cannot spend money without an appropriation except when necessary to protect life or property, or in cases of programs that have permanent sources of funds.

Widespread disruption of services probably will not occur for a while. Many basic government functions do not depend on annual spending bills. Social Security cheques will go out as always, for example, as will payments under Medicare. Mail delivery will be unaffected. Courts, which have reserve funds that can last for some time, will still hear cases.

But as other government functions close, economists say, a prolonged shutdown will slow growth. A two-week standoff would shave about three-tenths of a percentage point off the current growth rate, projections indicate. Although not huge, that punch would sting in an economy expanding at less than 2 percent per year. A longer standoff would cut growth more.

The last time the government closed, during the Clinton administration, two shutdowns took place. One lasted five days; the other, affecting only part of the government, ran three weeks.

Democratic Representative from Florida Alan Grayson wears a Stars and Stripes tie as he stands outside the Senate chamber on a night of idealogical impasse. AFP PHOTO/Nicholas KAMM

Who gets the political blame for a shutdown will have a big impact on how the standoff ends.

Nearly all Democratic strategists and many Republican ones think Democrats hold the upper hand in the current fight, indicating that Republicans would eventually have to yield. Polls so far have indicated that Americans are somewhat more likely to blame congressional Republicans than Obama for the stalemate, although the advantage Democrats have is much smaller than the one they enjoyed in the Clinton-era standoff.

A Washington Post-ABC News poll released Monday showed majorities of the public disapproving of the way all the major actors in the budget drama have handled their roles, but giving congressional Republicans the worst reviews. Obama got the approval of 41 percent and the disapproval of 50 percent. Congressional Republicans got just 26 percent approval and 63 percent disapproval; congressional Democrats, 34 percent approval and 56 percent disapproval.

Some conservative Republicans argue that Obamacare's unpopularity ultimately will give them an advantage. Although polls show the health law is unpopular, the same surveys show the public does not support shutting down the government to block it.

In a CNN/ORC poll also released Monday, for example, Americans said, 60 percent to 34 percent, that it was "more important" for Congress to pass "a budget agreement that would avoid a government shutdown" than to approve legislation "preventing major provisions in the new health care law from taking effect."

As several polls have shown, Democrats remain largely united behind Obama, but significant numbers of Republicans disapprove of their party's leaders. That has proved true in Congress as well. Relatively conservative Democrats, such as Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and Mark Pryor of Arkansas, have consistently voted with Reid during the current standoff. By contrast, divisions on the Republican side have been open and bitter and continued to plague the party Monday.

US House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi strongly rejected Republican efforts to water down the healthcare bill. AFP PHOTO/Nicholas KAMM

In closed-door meetings, some of the most conservative members objected to the leadership's plans on the grounds that the latest House proposal would delay only part of Obamacare - the requirement that individuals buy health insurance - rather than the entire law.

On the other side, a group of Republicans, mostly from Northeastern and Midwestern states, said they believed the GOP should drop its efforts to block Obamacare and simply approve a measure to keep government agencies open. The group failed to round up enough support to block the Republican leadership's plans on Monday, but it could become a factor if the standoff drags on.

The party's current strategy is "a dead end," said Rep. Peter T. King, R-N.Y. "We're going to shut the government down, and, when all is said and done, we're going to get blamed for it.

"We have too many people who live in their own echo chamber."

The "Ohio Clock" outside the Senate Chamber on Capitol Hill as the midnight deadline passes and the government goes into shutdown. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)


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WA prisoners cost $115,000 each

New figures show it costs $115,000 a year to keep each prisoner locked up in WA jails. Pictured is Perth's Hakea Prison. Picture: file image Source: PerthNow

IT costs $317 per day - or more than $115,000 a year - to keep each prisoner locked up in West Australian jails, new figures have revealed.

And it is even more expensive to keep a young offender behind bars.

After a horror year for the state's Department of Corrective Services (DoCS), including a riot at WA's only juvenile detention centre, it has also been revealed that the cost to keep prisoners locked up has shot up in 2012/13.

With WA's prison population topping 5000 for the first time during the period, the daily cost per inmate has risen from $291 in the previous financial year to $317.

And with some juvenile prisoners still being kept in the adult Hakea prison after the Banksia Hill riot in January, the cost to imprison a young offender was $645 a day - or more than $235,000 a year - exceeding the target cost of $558 a day.

It costs more to detain a juvenile offender than an adult one because of staffing requirements.

For every eight young detainees, there must be one guard, but the ratio is much higher for adult prisoners.

The department's annual report revealed there were 11 escapes from WA prisons in the past 12 months, but none of them were the result of malfunction or damage to the physical security of a prison, and all prisoners were returned to custody within 24 hours - two on their own accord.

There are also now 16 dangerous sex offenders in the state being tracked by controversial GPS technology, just months after it was introduced.

New laws came into effect in February to allow GPS tracking of sex offenders classified under the Dangerous Sex Offenders Act.

And the department is considering extending the use of the tracking devices to criminals convicted of arson and serious violence, which would require legislative changes.


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More beds for Perth Children's Hospital

Written By Unknown on Senin, 30 September 2013 | 21.51

Perth's new children's hospital will have 24 more beds after a $35 million reconfiguration to its floor plan to add the extra room to its surgical ward.

Lighter and brighter, the Perth Children's Hospital gets a new name and an extra 24 beds under a $35 million expansion. Source: PerthNow

Lighter and brigher, the Perth Children's Hospital gets a new name and an extra 24 beds in a $35 million expansion. Source: PerthNow

PERTH'S new children's hospital will have 24 more beds after a $35 million reconfiguration to its floor plan to add the extra room to its surgical ward.

The State Government announced today it had increased beds at the facility from 274 to 298 to meet the revised demand forecast for 2021.

Premier Colin Barnett also announced that the new Nedlands hospital on the QEII site would be named Perth Children's Hospital (PCH) - the original name of the children's hospital when it opened in 1909.

The $1.2billion hospital will replace Princess Margaret Hospital in Subiaco and will serve as the hub of WA's paediatric network for the most complex and critical cases.

"The key clinical and research areas at PCH will be 52 per cent bigger than that at PMH, including an Emergency Department (ED) which will be 88 per cent bigger," Mr Barnett said.


The Family Resource Centre will be more than three times the size of that in PMH, and three out of four rooms will be single rooms.

"PCH is the centrepiece of the WA child health care system.  As a world-class tertiary hospital, it will provide the specialty medical treatment required for the most serious medical cases," Mr Barnett said.

Health Minister Kim Hames said the expanded capacity at PCH was part of the Government's program to boost the total number of paediatric beds across the metropolitan area to about 400.

"PCH will be supported by six other public hospitals - Fiona Stanley Hospital, Midland Public Hospital, Joondalup Health Campus, Peel Health Campus, Armadale-Kelmscott Memorial Hospital and Rockingham General Hospital - all with dedicated paediatric beds," Dr Hames said.
 


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Boat arrives with 80 ‘asylum seekers’

The PM insists his talks with Indonesia's leader will cover more than asylum seekers as he heads to Jakarta.

The new vessel came hours before Immigration Minister Scott Morrison was due to hold his weekly briefing on boat arrivals this afternoon. Source: News Limited

A BOAT carrying up to 80 suspected asylum seekers has arrived at Christmas Island this morning.

The vessel was escorted to the island by the Navy after calling in to WA authorities.

Passengers were transferred to immigration detention on the island but the government is yet to reveal the latest arrival under its new secrecy provisions.

ABBOTT FLIES OUT AMID CONTROVERSY

The new vessel came hours before Immigration Minister Scott Morrison was due to hold his weekly briefing on boat arrivals this afternoon.

He was expected to be challenged on the secrecy surrounding boat arrivals and rescues after the gagging of search and rescue agencies restricted access to information about the latest sinking on Friday night which claimed dozens of lives.

The government has gagged all agencies which previously provided details on asylum boat issues and has decided to hold weekly briefings.

###


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Chopper Read admitted to hospital

Mark 'Chopper' Read talks candidly about his battle with liver cancer.

UNDERWORLD figure Mark ``Chopper'' Read has been admitted to hospital as his 17-month battle with liver cancer continues.

The 61-year-old told the Herald Sun earlier this month that he was told by doctors he would not live beyond Christmas, but was ``not worried'' about dying.

A statement issued by Read's manager Andrew Parisi, through the Royal Melbourne Hospital's media department, confirmed Read had been admitted for ``an ongoing and serious illness''.

``Neither, Mark or his family will be providing any information regarding his prognosis and would appreciate privacy in these most difficult times,'' Mr Parisi said.

``I will ensure that media are properly advised of Mark's condition in the coming days.

``Thank you for your interest in Mark's health.''

The former criminal was diagnosed with liver cancer in April last year and he also has cirrhosis. He said his illness started after contracting hepatitis C while in prison.


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This boy was murdered. Does anyone care?

11-year-old Gerard Ross was abducted on October 14, 1997 at Rockingham in Western Australia. Picture: Supplied. Source: Supplied

THIS boy was snatched off our streets 16 years ago. His body has been found but his killer has not. Somebody knows something.

The 11-year-old was abducted on the morning of October 14, 1997 while holidaying in the Western Australian town of Rockingham, 50km south of Perth. His body was found in a nearby pine plantation two weeks later.

No one has been charged. There's been no inquest. And police aren't saying whether the cold case will be reviewed.

His grief-stricken family — who lived in Newman in the Pilbara region at the time, where father Stuart worked in the mining industry — don't even have a death certificate.

After Gerard's death they moved to Queensland before returning home to Scotland and expanded their family.

October marks 16 years since the schoolboy was stolen from the seaside town and as more time slips by, it looks less likely justice will ever be done.

Somebody knows what happened to Gerard, who was abducted in broad daylight while heading to a nearby comic shop with his older brother Malcolm.

Reports from the time say the brothers had been playing noisily in the house so their 35-year-old mother Cyrese — who was then pregnant with twins — sent them down Kent Street to the shops in Churchill Park.

The pair set off together about 9.30am and 13-year-old Malcolm sped ahead, along the foreshore, on his rollerblades.

When Gerard, who was on foot, didn't arrive at the store Malcolm returned home and alerted his parents. Gerard had been grabbed within 800m of their holiday home.

Police launched a large-scale search. The Ross family clung to hope that their son was still alive.

Mrs Ross made an emotional television plea "Gerard, if you can see this — just know that we love you and don't lose hope". But two weeks later his fully-clothed body was found less than 20km away in Karnup, south of Perth. The money was still in his back pocket.

Detectives said Gerard had suffered a senseless "brutal death" and that his body appeared to have been hurriedly dumped.

They initially suspected sexual interference but later said there was no evidence of it. Still, the cause of death was so horrific that it was kept from most of the taskforce. Gerard's parents were deliberately kept in the dark.

A coroner permitted Gerard's body be released from the mortuary and he was buried at the Newman cemetery.

The Gerard Ross Memorial Gardens were established outside the Rockingham Police Station — a constant reminder of justice not served.

A plaque dedicated to Gerard Ross outside Rockingham Police Station. Picture: Supplied. Source: Supplied

The hunt for his killer continued. Detectives at the centre of the case put their heart and soul into solving it.

They thought the boy was taken somewhere between being kidnapped and dumped, and hoped dog hairs found on his clothing would reveal where and by whom.

The Ross family didn't have a dog and there weren't any at the holiday home where they were staying.

Forensic experts in Adelaide examined evidence, as did the FBI a few years later.

Police scoured every house for streets either side of where Gerard was last seen. They removed plumbing and swabbed u-bends. If a homeowner refused to have their house searched, police got a warrant.

The initial investigation identified two persons of interest. Detectives felt so strongly about these men that it divided the taskforce.

One person of interest was written off early but came under renewed scrutiny when new information came to light. News.com.au does not know the nature of that information.

Police were ready to charge one local man after they found blood traces in his car and evidence that blood had been washed off a wall in a room at his home where he kept model aeroplanes. But the cleaning agent used prevented DNA from being extracted. Blood traces were also found at the suspect's parents' house.

The Director of Public Prosecutions wasn't satisfied there was enough proof to proceed with charges.

Detectives re-examined their suspect "with fine tooth comb multiple times" but couldn't find that extra skerrick of evidence they needed to get the DPP across the line.

The case was complicated by the fact that there'd been a murder at the house previously, even though it had occurred on the grass outside.

Police also made mistakes. DNA at that time was still a reasonably new investigative tool and samples were contaminated.

There were also other clues.

An old TV news report mentions an altercation between two people in the street Gerard disappeared from, on the morning he vanished. They were driving a faded brown or maroon station wagon.

At the time Detective Sergeant Mike Miller said there had been reports, in the prior couple of years, of kids being stopped and attempts being made to get them into cars.

News.com.au is aware of another person of interest who, despite being in the area and having no alibi for the Tuesday morning Gerard disappeared, has been overlooked.

The man, who is now 49, came to be a suspect after an anonymous tip off to police.

He was from Newman, as were the Ross family, and his children went to the same school as Gerard and Malcolm Ross. He also happened to be in Rockingham at the time of Gerard's disappearance.

Police interviewed the man twice. Each time he gave slightly different stories about his whereabouts on the morning of October 14. He initially said he was at his psychologist's office but the psychologist disputed this. He was vague during his second police interview but conceded that he had lied about being with the psychologist. In the end he told police he did not recall his movements that day.

Months later he moved to the US and in 2002 he moved to Queensland.

Police have told the Ross family he is not Gerard's killer.

The Ross family have largely maintained their silence but last year, on the 15th anniversary of their son's disappearance, they issued a fresh plea for information.

"It's 15 years ago today since we last saw Gerard. We miss his love, his humour and feel an overwhelming loss of his presence within our family. On behalf of Gerard and our whole family we would like to put out an appeal to anyone who knows the person or person involved with Gerard's abduction and murder to please come forward and give this information to the police," they said in a statement published in the Herald Scotland.

In November 1998, the Ross family published a book written and illustrated by Gerard, called Sock of the Year. Picture: Supplied Source: Supplied

In November 1998, they published a book written and illustrated by Gerard, called Sock of the Year.

Western Australia Police have maintained contact with the Ross family who now live in Fife and seem, even after all these years, to still have blind faith in the force.

But WA Police have repeatedly refused to comment other than to say the investigation remains active and ongoing.

"Inspector Prins highlighted the delicate nature of these investigations and the distress caused to the family. That, in itself, should explain why we will not publicise when a review is taking place unless there was some operational reason to do so," a police spokesman told news.com.au.

"I'm sorry if you can't see the point that Inspector Prins is making when he talks about the sensitivities of the family and not wanting to make public when, or if, a review is taking place.

"There will be no further comment from WA Police on the matter".

It is understood that Operation Shoalwater (the investigation into Gerard's abduction/murder) is still a high priority case for the major crime squad.

It is also understood a full review, which would take about eight months and much resources, is imminent if not already underway with the squad recently assigning a new case manager. He's been described as an "experienced and ferocious" detective.

Any review is expected to focus on entomology — the study of insects — and the dog hairs. Experts say the dog hairs could have been transferred from the killer's clothing, even if their dog wasn't with them at the time.

In June, WA Department of the Attorney General spokeswoman told news.com.au Gerard's death was "finalised administratively".

"An administrative finding is made in cases where the Coroner does not hold an inquest. The Coroner reviews the information provided as a result of the post mortem and the police investigation and drafts and records a finding on the basis of that information."

The parents of Daniel Morcombe, who was murdered in 2003, have taken a strong interest in Gerard's case.

Bruce Morcombe says there were striking similarities between Daniel and Gerard's abduction.

"A number of people have said there's quite a similarity in appearance between Gerard and Daniel and they were both brazen daytime abductions," he said.

The Morcombes, who established the Daniel Morcombe Foundation after their son's abduction, reached out to the Ross family earlier this year.

"It's very similar to us meeting the McCanns (parents of missing British girl Madeleine). We're just exploring some of the parallels in life and our journey. This case was on the other side of Australia but was still very much close to home," Mr Morcombe said.

"I don't want to upset the family (by speaking out) but have we still got an abducting murderer wandering around?

"I have a hunger to find out what happened to Daniel but it doesn't stop there. I have a hunger that these heinous crimes are absolutely followed through to the nth degree and somebody is held accountable."

The Sunshine Coast couple, who are currently visiting schools around the country as part of a national child safety road trip, want to see a national body established to review cases that state police can't solve.

"Certainly in Gerard's case if there was another police service that was able to assist or review, with qualified specialists, I think that'd be a good thing," Mr Morcombe said.

"I think it's time for a review in the public arena by a coroner. As we all know, that was a game-breaker in Daniel's case. It resulted in further inquiries, charges being laid and Daniel's remains being found.

"We have at our disposal a system that has additional powers to police. Why not use them in a positive way and leave no stone unturned? We owe it to Gerard."

A $100,000 reward for information about Gerard's murder, announced in 1998, is still available. Somebody knows something.

Contact Kristin Shorten at kristin.shorten@news.com.au or continue the conversation on Twitter @itsKShort and @newscomauHQ

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Response wasn’t delayed: Morrison

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 29 September 2013 | 21.51

The federal govt has expressed its sympathies to the victims of an asylum seeker boat sinking off Indonesia.

IMMIGRATION Minister Scott Morrison rejects claims the Australian government delayed its response to distress calls from an asylum seeker boat that sank off Indonesia, leaving scores of people dead or missing.

"The government completely rejects allegations of a 26-hour delay in response to this tragic incident by Australian agencies," Mr Morrison's office said in a statement issued today.

"Suggestions Australian authorities did not respond to this incident appropriately are absolutely and totally wrong.

"Australian agencies acted on the information provided on this tragic incident."

One survivor told ABC TV that a GPS location was sent to Australian authorities when multiple distress calls were made on Thursday.

"We called the Australian government for 24 hours. They were telling us 'we're coming, we're coming, we're coming', and they didn't come," he said.

Labor says the coalition must provide a full briefing of the latest asylum seeker tragedy off Indonesia.

"This is because of the Australian government. I want them to know that," he said of the tragedy.

Mr Morrison said initial searches failed to find the boat, which was reported to be about 25 nautical miles off the Indonesian coast.

"The Australians who work for our rescue and border protection agencies respond to all such events with great professionalism and a keenly felt sense of duty, as they did on this occasion," the statement said.

Rough seas off Java today continue to hamper rescue efforts and Indonesian authorities were expecting more bodies to wash up on shore, the ABC reported.

An asylum-seeker rescued by Australian navy boards an Indonesian search and rescue boat in the waters off western Java. AFP PHOTO

Aussie cousin got call from boat

Meanwhile, horrific details of the tragedy have emerged with the Melbourne cousin of a family on board the doomed vessel revealing they feared they were in trouble when the boat was turned back to Indonesia.

The man received a phone call from the boat on Friday — and now Melbourne's Lebanese community is in mourning after the drowning of at least 21 people, mostly children, while many are still missing.

The Lebanese foreign ministry says at least 29 Lebanese asylum seekers are missing while Indonesian police say 28 people were plucked from the water but around 30 people are still missing after the boat sank off Java on Friday.

Local authorities say it's believed the boat was carrying about 80 passengers.

However the Lebanese foreign ministry says there were 68 Lebanese people on board the boat and only 18 of those survived the ordeal.

Dr Michael Kheirallah, the chairman of the Victorian Lebanese Community Council, said Melbourne man Abdulah Abdulah last heard from his cousin on-board when it was turned back to Indonesia, because "something was wrong with the boat".

Dr Kheirallah said there were other Lebanese families in Melbourne who had relatives on the boat and most were in limbo waiting to hear if their loved ones were among those who had survived.

"They're very stressed and the whole community here in Melbourne are getting together to mourn the deaths of the people who perished in the sea," Dr Kheirallah said.

"They're very depressed and very stressed."

An Australian naval personnel holds documents beside Indonesian search and rescue personnel after the transfer of rescued asylum seekers in the waters off western Java. AFP PHOTO Source: AFP

At least 18 of the victims were Lebanese, including 13 members from two families, Lebanon's National News Agency reported.

NNA said Hussein Khodr survived but his wife Kawsar and the couple's eight children perished, while Asaad Ali Asaad was also rescued but lost his wife Reyya and their three children.

A Lebanese official said Mr Khodr had called people in his home village "and told them that the boat sank at dawn, when waves destabilised the vessel", AFP reported.

Sources have confirmed Australian Customs vessel RV Triton was at the scene helping Indonesian authorities.

Navy frigate HMAS Parramatta was also involved in another incident on Friday, rescuing 55 people on a stricken boat in international waters and returning them to Indonesia.

Abbott due in Jakarata on Monday

The Australian Greens are calling for an immediate inquiry into the "heartbreaking" boat tragedy.

"We certainly will be wanting an inquiry into what has happened with the most recent tragedy, in terms of what the Australian authorities knew and what they did or didn't do," Australian Greens Leader Christine Milne told Sky News today.

"I would expect that to happen before the next parliament sits."

The government has remained tight-lipped on the boat tragedy ahead of Prime Minister Tony Abbott's crucial meeting with Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono in Jakarta on Monday.

The first deaths at sea since the election threaten to further disrupt the talks between the leaders which Mr Abbott had hoped would not focus on his new government's asylum seeker policy.

It comes after a week in which Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop's private meeting with her Indonesian counterpart was released to the media.

A member of the Australian navy assists rescued asylum-seekers as they transfer to an Indonesian search and rescue boat in the waters off western Java. AFP PHOTO Source: AFP

After the PM dodged questions about the incident, Mr Morrison finally responded to questions over an asylum seeker boat.

Mr Morrison said Australian authorities were initially in charge of the search for the asylum seeker vessel after receiving a phone call about the incident Friday morning.

Initial reports placed the vessel 25 nautical miles off the Indonesian coast, inside the Indonesian search and rescue region, but a Border Protection Command aircraft and a merchant vessel responding to an all ships broadcast were unable to find it.

Residents help a group of asylum-seeker survivor on the beach after being rescued by locals in the coastal village of Cianjur located in Indonesia's western Java island. 21 people, mostly children, drowned and scores are missing. AFP PHOTO Source: AFP

The search and rescue operation is now being handled by Indonesian authorities, Mr Morrison said.

"Australian Government officials in Jakarta are seeking additional information from their Indonesian counterparts, including seeking to confirm where the vessel foundered. It is believed to have gone down in Indonesian territory."

He said Australian authorities would continue to provide whatever help was required by the Indonesian government but could not say what assistance was currently being offered.

Acting Labor leader Chris Bowen called on the government to reveal what role Australian authorities had played in the incident.

At least 22 people have drowned and many are still missing after an asylum seeker boat sank off Indonesia.

"The government has previously said that when there was a tragedy or a significant event at sea, then they would provide briefings," he said.

"This can't wait for Mr Morrison's weekly briefing. These updates should be provided as and when the government can."

Associate Professor Greg Fealy, an Indonesia expert at the Australian National University, said the boat tragedy would "make things more difficult" for Mr Abbott's meeting with the Indonesian president.

A group of asylum-seeker survivors rest on the beach after rescued by residents in the coastal village of Cianjur located in Indonesia's western Java island on September 27, 2013. AFP PHOTO Source: AFP

"I suspect Tony Abbott is going to be very gentle in the way he's going to put things," Prof Fealy said.

"If they're too blunt or undiplomatic in their language, too assertive, they could well find there are more boats coming rather than less."


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New drugs 'can cure skin cancer'

Experts say the drugs offer real hope to those who suffer from advanced melanoma. Source: News Limited

SKIN cancer suffers could be cured of the disease with new breakthrough drugs, experts claimed, as they hailed the "beginning of a new era".

Seriously ill patients are said to have seen "spectacular effects" after receiving the medication, which could eventually be used to combat other forms of the condition.

It is the first time scientists have come this close to providing a remedy for advanced melanoma.

The development will bring hope to thousands of people who are diagnosed with skin cancer in Britain each year.

Until now the prognosis for advanced melanoma has been very poor and many patients die within months of diagnosis.

Professor Peter Johnson, chief clinician at Cancer Research UK, said: "We're just at the beginning of a new era of cancer treatments using the immune system.

"These drugs that can turn the body's own defences against a tumour are starting to show real promise for melanoma and other types of cancer.

"It's only through research that we can gain the insights needed to develop new treatments for cancer patients."

The new cure contains two types of drug — ipilimumab (known as ipi) and anti-PD1s, which break down the defences of cancer cells and are still in clinical trials.

Doctors can effectively reboot a patient's immune system by combining the two.

One in six patients are already being saved by the groundbreaking treatment, the European Cancer Congress has been told.

A new combination of drugs could mean more than half are cured of the deadly condition.

Professor Alexander Eggermont of the Institut Gustave Roussy in France said: "Advanced melanoma could become a curable disease for perhaps more than 50 per cent of patients within five to 10 years." "If I'd made this bizarre prediction five years ago, people would have said I was mad," he told The Mail on Sunday.

"But it now looks like we are going to have control of advanced melanoma for years, in a substantial proportion of patients." Advanced melanoma is diagnosed when the disease has spread and can no longer be surgically removed.

Advice on the Cancer Research UK website currently warns patients that this form of skin cancer "can't be cured".

It states: "Treatments are available that can shrink the melanoma or stop it growing. It may be possible to control it for quite a while."

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Cops 'happy' with GF party: 19 arrests

There was trouble outside the Sail n Anchor on South Terrace during the grand final coverage. Picture: Jordan Shields Source: PerthNow

ROWDY footy fans have marred Grand Final celebrations in Fremantle with liquor enforcement officers restricting the service of alcohol at some venues.

The Sail and Anchor's balcony was restricted to water only midway through the game after reports of people pouring beer on people below.

Normal service continued downstairs in the main bar area.

WA Police figures show 19 people were arrested, four will be charged by summons and 46 move-on orders and eight liquor infringements were issued across the day.

A 19-year-old man was arrested at the Norfolk Hotel and charged with assault after Grand Final celebrations turned sour about 7pm.

Police said the young man argued with a 44-year-old man, punched him in the face and caused him to fall and hit his head on a kerb.


The teenager ran away but was chased by police and arrested.

The victim was treated in hospital for a cut on his chin and abrasion to the back of his head. The accused man is due to appear in Fremantle Magistrates Court on October 11.

A WA Police spokesman said officers were 'generally happy' with the crowd's behaviour.

WA Hotels Association executive director Bradley Woods said the lack of alcohol-fuelled crime proved that the industry could self-regulate, despite an uproar earlier in the week from the police commissioner about some pubs opening several hours before the midday game started.

The massive crowd in Freo for the grand final. Picture: Jordan Shields Source: PerthNow


HOW THE ACTION UNFOLDED YESTERDAY

Follow our live coverage of events around town here

Liqorland in the Woolstores building and Fremantle Liquor Store was ordered by Liquor Enforcement officers to stop trading because of problems with patrons outside the two stores, including people drinking in nearby carparks.

It comes as tens of thousands of AFL fans poured into Fremantle to cheer on the port city's beloved Dockers as they watched the grand final in pubs and on big screens on the cappuccino strip.

The crowd on South Terrace in Fremantle for the AFL grand final. Picture: Jordan Shields Source: PerthNow


The main drag of South Terrace, which has been closed to traffic, filled rapidly with crowds in the lead up to game time.

The crowd on South Terrace in Fremantle for the AFL grand final. Picture: Jordan Shields Source: PerthNow


Mayor Brad Pettitt said he was too young to have experienced the America's Cup celebrations in 1983 but, almost 30 years to the day, was told the partying in the port city was exceeding that historic win.

The crowd on South Terrace in Fremantle for the AFL grand final. Picture: Jordan Shields Source: PerthNow


At the Norfolk Hotel, a queue of about 150 footy fans formed long before the pub could open its doors at 10am.

Freo fans' dream of watching their club storm the MCG on Grand Final day had been a long time coming, and they weren't about to let it pass by without a celebration.

Dripping in purple from head to toe, the "Freo!" battle cry rang out from every corner of the city – from Kings' Square to South Terrace and beyond.

The crowd on South Terrace in Fremantle for the AFL grand final. Picture: Jordan Shields Source: PerthNow


 THE Dockers' heartland came alive as tens of thousands of diehard fans packed the streets of the Fremantle CBD.
Their dream of watching their club storm the MCG on Grand Final day had been a long time coming and they weren't about to let it pass by without a celebration.
Dripping in purple from head to toe, the "Freo!" battle cry rang out from every corner of the city – from Kings' Square to South Terrace and beyond.

Callum McNeill, 27, from Winthrop said he'd been part of the Freo faithful since 1996.

He said it was "pretty special" to be able to celebrate such a historic milestone in the port city.

"I think Ross Lyon has done such an amazing job with the team," he said.

Alannah Ashfield began following the Dockers five years ago after moving to Perth from the UK.

"I have given up soccer and come to the AFL and absolutely love Freo," she said.

"Dockers are rockers."

Five big screens were put up by the City of Fremantle in and around the Fremantle cappuccino strip.

And supporter stood shoulder-to-shoulder throughout the game.

Other packed the city's many iconic pubs.

A handful of Hawthorn supporters were among the crowd, including 11-year-old Jarrod Wearing.

Jarrod started following the Hawks three years ago, much to the dismay of his Fremantle-supporting parents.

His father, Ashley Wearing, said he was already looking into buying Grand Final ticket for next year.

"We came down to Freo after last weekend's preliminary final and thought this is the place to be," he said.

"We have say through all the hard years, with Damien Drum and all those horrible times getting beaten. "This is just fantastic."

Peter Bottcher, manager of the Sail and Anchor, said being in Fremantle was almost as good as being at the MCG.

"We had people camping out the front at 6am when I got here," he said.

"We're doing purple beers, big screens everywhere. It's as close as being at the game as possible being in here."

He said the crowd had been well behaved, but it was possible the pub may run out of some varieties of beer before the end of the long weekend.

"We triple ordered this week and it looks like we are going to run out of a few products," he said.

"We were ordering so much beer that our suppliers hadn't made it yet and they had to do two deliveries during the week."

Two men were ejected from the venue by police shortly after 1pm for throwing glasses off the balcony at police.

Watching the game from the balcony of Kulcha Multicultural Arts of WA, Mr Pettitt said he was blown away by the turn out on Saturday.

"It's electric and very purple," he said.

"The whole of Freo is behind the Dockers.

"The Esplanade has got 5,000 people, the whole of Kings Square behind the town hall is full so everywhere you look, it's just amazing.

"Win or lose today it's been a great season and they have really done us proud."
 


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