Central Land Council
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CLC Press Releases
- 14 Augyust 2008 2008
- Communities have their say on intervention ›› more
- 31 July 2008 2008
- Fairfax news in bad taste ›› more
- 24 July 2008 2008
- election: accountability needed ›› more
- 17 July 2008 2008
- Royal commission needed into NT funding ›› more
- 11 July 2008 2008
- Simpson Desert: the last land rights claim under the Aboriginal Land Rights Act ›› more
- 8 July 2008 2008
- Sacred site damage at Wilora ›› more
- 30 May 2008
- Seal the Mereenie Loop Road Now ›› more
- 27 May 2008
- Angela Pamela Negotiations ›› more
- 9 May 2008
- Angela Pamela and the native title process ›› more
- 18 February 2008
- Coalition should support permit system ›› more
- 15 February 2008
- Politicians threaten to derail fresh start ›› more
- 22 January 2008
- Police ignorance upsets Lajamanu community ›› more
- 26 November 2007
- Optimism for a fresh consensual approach on Aboriginal affairs ›› more
- 21 November 2007
- Concerns over Central Petroleum tactics ›› more
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Education before mortgages for Australia 's poorest The Central Land Council said today that the most impoverished sector of the Australia society - Central Australia 's remote communities - simply cannot afford home ownership. CLC Director David Ross says that while the CLC is not opposed to private home ownership, the issue is currently being hailed as the end of disadvantage for Aboriginal people in the Northern Territory . He says to continue with a simplistic debate along these lines will only cause chaos to communities already severely handicapped by barriers to economic development. "The first assumption that is being made is that land rights are a cause of poverty and an impediment to individual home ownership. This is patently not the case as is graphically and tragically illustrated in the Northern Territory . While nearly half of the NT is Aboriginal land, the other half is not. Aboriginal communities on non Aboriginal land suffer just as extreme cases of disadvantage and poverty as those on Aboriginal land," Mr Ross said. "Secondly, inalienable Aboriginal freehold title does not exclude private home ownership. Like Canberra - where people are on long leases rather than freehold title - people can obtain leases on land that is owned by Land Trusts. There are many cases of these leases negotiated by the CLC for commercial interests. "Thirdly , the reality is that many Aboriginal people in our region are simply not in a position to consider a mortgage. The average income of Aboriginal people living in the central remote region is $9,133, or 25 per cent of the average annual income of a non-Indigenous person in the region," he said. "The way out of poverty is education and health, not crippling debt. As the case of Wadeye shows, for every dollar spent on a kid's education in Darwin , only 26 cents (26 per cent ) gets spent on a kid in Wadeye. There is a direct correlation between how much is spent on a child's education and their subsequent adult income levels. "Not surprisingly, the issue of individual home ownership is not raised as an aspiration of traditional land owners living on Aboriginal land. Perhaps if living standards and income levels were to rise it may become an aspiration for future generations. "Solutions to the systematic exclusion of Aboriginal people from the social, political and economic mainstream are multi-layered and complex, but it is ludicrous and simplistic to lay the blame on land tenure," Mr Ross said. The real and crippling barriers to economic development include poor education, poor health, a lack of housing, roads and communications infrastructure and extreme remoteness. The CLC s has proposed reforms to the Land Rights Act which include simplifying leasing arrangements, improving access to public housing on Aboriginal land through housing leases, and further expediting mining procedures and governance issues. The CLC is strongly of the view that the key to increasing economic development does not lie in abolishing the customary tenure system; it lies in adapting this system to resolve any specific and genuine problems, with the consent of title-holders. "It would seem that the original rationale for land rights; the recognition of Aboriginal peoples' perpetual spiritual ties to their land and restitution for past injustices, have been deliberately swept under the carpet. Suddenly, land rights are blamed for entrenched poverty, alienation from the 'real' economy and extreme social dysfunction in most Aboriginal communities," David Ross said.
Contact: Jane Hodson 0417877579 0889516217 5 April 2005
2003 Coniston an opportunity to acknowledge our past September 22 NT Government Bungles Cyanide Prosecution September 18 Mereenie Oil and Gas Agreement March 6 2003 Traditional owners welcome Mereenie Loop Road upgrade April 28 2003 2002 Yorta Yorta heritage survives despite dispossession December 12 NT Parks: victory for negotiation over litigation October 25 A Road Swap Win for All 4 April 2002 Congratulations to Arrernte Native Title Holders 23 April 2002 Registration of Alice Springs Native Title Body 14 May 2002 Lhere Artepe Aboriginal Corporation to represent Arrernte Native Title Holders 15 May 2002 Barrow Creek (Kaytetye) title handover by the Governor General 27 August 2002 NT Parks: victory for negotiation over litigation 25 October 2002 2001 Obituary - Warumungu leader 17 May 2001 Practical Reconciliation: Uluru climb closure integral part of the cultural experience 16 May 2001 Closing climb a mark of respect 15 May 2001 New Chairman for the CLC... 3 April 2001 Aboriginal flood victims cop a raw deal 20 March 2001 More exploration in the Tanami...1 March 2001 CLC mourns a true Tanami countryman 13 February 2001
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