Groups rally against meters – Bendigo Advertiser, Nov. 21, 2012

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Smart meters locked out in Darebin – Health – News – Preston Leader

MEMBERS of Darebin’s Progress Association are encouraging residents to padlock their electricity boxes to stop smart meters being installed.

Association spokeswoman Marion Harper said Melbourne barrister Eugene White had given legal advice there was nothing illegal in refusing smart meter installation.

But power company spokesman Scott Parker said residents who locked meter boxes and refused smart meters risked having their power cut off.

Ms Harper, a Reservoir resident, said she and others who’d padlocked their meter boxes were worried about radiation from the smart meters.

“When I’m in bed, my head is near where the electricity box is,” Ms Harper said.

“They’re saying it’s safe now but this could be the next asbestos or cigarettes.”

She said there were also privacy issues and concerns it could further push up electricity bills, or force people to do their washing at 3am to avoid peak times.

“A lot of us feel very strongly about these issues,” Ms Harper said.

“When they came to install smart meters at a Greek retirement village, three women chased them down with brooms.”

Read more via HAVE YOUR SAY: Smart meters locked out in Darebin – Health – News – Preston Leader.

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Councillor locks out smart meter – Hume Leader

A HUME councillor has locked her front gate to prevent power companies from installing a smart meter.

Councillor Helen Patsikatheodorou said the State Government rollout, which is occurring in Tullamarine, Gladstone Park and Westmeadows, should be stopped.

“The State Government should put a halt to smart meter installations until they can guarantee residents health will not be affected, the meters are not faulty, residents can opt in and out, residents are not bullied by power companies to have their power disconnected if they refuse, and tariffs are affordable,” she said.

The Broadmeadows Progress Association, which has long campaigned against smart meters, has recently received legal advice that residents can say no to them being installed.

Barrister Eugene White advised the group power companies had no legal right to enter properties and install new meters, only to view existing equipment.

Broadmeadows Progress Association secretary John Rutherford and his wife Sonja have also put a lock on their meter box.

via Councillor locks out smart meter – Council – News – Hume Leader.

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I have been suffering from severe headaches at night….

I had my smart meter installed two weeks ago. Since the installation I have been suffering from severe headaches at night and a buzzing noise in my head. I contacted an electrician as the smart meter is located on the outside wall which is adjacent to my bedroom to enquire about having the smart meter moved but I was informed that I would have to pay over $2000. I am a pensioner and can simply not afford this. I am unable to move to another room in the house because they are too small. Please we need to action against these ” Smart Meters” and there effects on people’s health!!

Kerina

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Glen Eira fights smart meter roll-out – Council – News – Caulfield Glen Eira Leader

Georgina raised concerns about Smart Meters with Glen Eira council

GLEN Eira Council will petition the State Government not to make Smart Meters compulsory.

Councillor have voted unanimously to follow officers’ advice and relay residents’ concerns to the State Government.

They further decided to call on the State Government to allow residents to “opt out” of the Smart Meter roll out and to allow people who already have Smart Meters to “have the right to have the meter removed and replaced with an analogue or non-wireless meter at no cost to them”.

The State Government plans to install digital Smart Meters in every Victorian home and small business by the end of 2013.

Councillors said residents complained of headaches, fatigues, disrupted sleep, aches and pains and more since having Smart Meters installed.

Cr Margaret Esakoff said they were a serious concern in Glen Eira.

Cr Oscar Lobo told the chamber last month that numerous councils had passed motions to petition the State Government to halt the roll-out.

via Glen Eira fights smart meter roll-out – Council – News – Caulfield Glen Eira Leader.

 

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No need for smart meter in my house | The Courier

I find Mark Travill’s letter (The Courier, November 9) a little bit, well, what is the word – wish I could think of one?

Independent testing, now, there are two words I can relate to. Take insulation batts, for example, another two words I can relate to. “Downright dangerous” are another two words for good measure.

As one knows, power usage is based on observation, all you have to do is read your current meter, read your account regarding cost times and costed rates at different times of the day, and then use your power wisely.

As for a website dedicated to mechanical devices, fact sheets and independent reports, well, where will it all end?

The Department of Primary Industry (DPI) will tell us all, blank, the lines they wish us to hear.

I’ve heard contrary statements to theirs, so the debate shall continue for some time.

So, one who has coped without “smart meters” for over 40 years, I do not wish to start now.

Finally, Mark, like many others in Ballarat and surrounding areas, I do not wish to have one thrust upon me.

This little abode does not need one.

RON MAYNARD

Ballarat

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via No need for smart meter in my house | The Courier.

 

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Power to the people, or maybe not

Cartoon: Sam Bennett. Photo: Supplied

Dear Mr Power Co,

Thank you so much for sending me our quarterly electricity bill of $841.25. I did a quick household head count. There are two of us and we use gas except for the electric oven and the clothes dryer. As I don’t dry towels, just knickers, I’m wondering if I should stop washing and simply buy new knickers then chuck ’em.

Naturally, I did a house search looking for any illegal marijuana crops in a spare bedroom. Those artificial lights chew up the power. No luck there, sadly, just when I needed the crop to pay the bill.

There is one other occupant namely Tuppence, our dog. Tuppence is not a big power consumer. She can’t reach a light switch. I told her, however, it’ll be her duty to keep us warm on those bitterly cold three-dog nights next winter, tough work for a Mini-Schnauzer.

Meanwhile, Mr Power Co, I’m writing to let you know how I plan to pay the $841.25 power bill you sent me.

Plan 1: Buy a power company

Yeah! I’ve gotta get myself a power company. That’s the way to print money. Electricity prices have gone up 60 per cent in three years. We should wipe the Queen off our $5 note and put on a light bulb. It’s not just the killer-kilowatt hours that push up the profits. The power companies are raking in 21 per cent profit on gold-plating the power grid with fancy poles, frilly lines and swanky sub-stations. Forget the solar-panel rorts and the pink batt debacle. This is the dodgiest green program of all. Push down power consumption using record profits for power companies. I want in. I just need to extend my Visa credit limit by a few billion dollars.

Plan 2: Get a job with a power company

Jobs with power companies are, like, so easy to get. Since 2006 the number of employees you and your mates have on your books, Mr Power Co, has risen from 35,000 to 71,000. Woweeee! How good is that! You just turn up and they give you a job. And you get an extra 26 per cent of your wage paid into your super by the company. I could be a linewoman. I can sing ”Wichita Lineman is still on the li-iiii-ine”. I reckon I’d earn my $841.25 in, maybe, five minutes.

Plan 3: Steal copper line

With my linewoman skills, I could shimmy up a pole outback somewhere and cut the line. How many kilometres of copper line equals $841.25? Just let me know.

Plan 4: Sell Smart-Arse Meters

OK. Here’s the deal. I’m going into competition. You want Smart Meters. They’re monsters. You can charge any rate you want any time and cut us off remotely. No more major blackouts. You can spread it round. Well, you can shove your kilowatt hours up your anal network. The Smart-Arse Meter will tell you when off-peak charges apply. So consumers can really save money.

Plan 5: Litigate

You said, Mr Power Co, if I joined your little outfit I’d save heaps. Five per cent as I recall. So how much did I save on the $841.25? Um, $11.43. That is 1.3 per cent. You’re goin’ down. I’ll get a joint action going. You’ll pay, matey.

Plan 6: Stop using electricity

It can be done. At Chez Cue it’ll be candles, cold showers, cold tea and coffee and cold oven-fried chips. Or, I could chuck the oven-fried chips on the barbie. And for heat in winter, I’ll stoke up the old wood fire using all the bullshit marketing leaflets you send me.

Plan 7: Buy off-shore power

I haven’t totally worked this one out. But I figure if I can run an extension cord to New Zealand, I’ll be laughing. I might even sell you some power. Ha! Some real competition. That’d be nice.

Plan 8: Emigrate

We’ve taken a lot of immigrants from Europe and it’s time to reverse the trend. I’m off to France. They never sold off their power supplies. The Electricite de France (EDF) not only owns the French system, it is one of the top six owners of British power supplies. Ha! So heaps of profit being squeezed out of British power consumers goes to the French government. Oh les idiots! It’s too crazy in Britain. When local electrical chaps fiddle with power lines in London the profit goes to east Asia’s richest man, Li Ka-shing in Hong Kong, when they fix lines in north-east England the profit goes to Warren Buffett, in Birmingham to the Pennsylvania Power and Light Company and, you’ll be glad to hear, in Manchester to the Commonwealth Bank of Australia. In Australia, lots of profit goes to Singapore. Why couldn’t the Commonwealth Bank buy our own power stations and lines?

Plan 9: Don’t pay bill

The idea is that you, Mr Power Co, will have to come to our place and take your pound of flesh. Remember once, when it was fair profit for fair service. That idea has gone to the coal-fired hell in a hand basket.

Plan 10: Take out a contract on you, Mr Power Co

There will be a tipping point when it will be cheaper to hire a hit man than pay the bill. Think about that, you bastard.

Yours Angrily

Account Number: <9000600006500523>

via Power to the people, or maybe not.

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Spread the word…. Victorian Forum, 25 November – Be there!

 

Please note, according to some Melway maps, Willesdon Road is in Hughesdal.

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Former Motorola Strategic Director directing the Victorian Government’s response to smart meter health complaints

In a recent letter to a concerned Victorian citizen from the Office of the Minister for Energy and Resources, the Minister discounted the potential for any health impacts of smart meters partially based on the expert advice of the Victorian Radiation Advisory Committee. To Quote:

Victoria’s Chief Health Officer has endorsed the advice of the Victorian Ministerial radiation Advisory Committee, consisting of doctors and experts in the field of radiation, which found “that there is no substantive evidence to suggest that exposure to radiofrequency radiation such as from Smart Meters can increase the risk of chronic health effects, such as cancer”. Further information is available on the Chief Health Officer’s website at www.health.vic.gov.au/chiefhealthofficer/smart-meters.

So, I wondered just who were the non-ionizing radiation experts on the Radiation Advisory Committee? As it turns out there is only one; Dr. Ken Joyner, so it stands to reason that as he is the only committee member with the “relevant” expertise, it is his advice that the rest of the Radiation Advisory Committee is following – and as a result the Victorian government as well.

Such an influential position is not new to Dr Joyner. Previously he enjoyed a similar role as non-ionizing radiation advisor for the National Health & Medical Research Council (NH&MRC) where he played a pivotal role guiding the direction of mobile phone research for the NH&MRC, including advice on establishing the ACRBR in partnership with Telstra. It did not worry the federal government in the least, however, when they appointed him to the NH&MRC advisory role (apparently against the NH&MRC’s wishes-see below), that he was also employed as Director, Global EME Strategy and Regulatory Affairs, Motorola Australia.

Full story at: EMFacts Consultancy Website

 

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Tullamarine Smart Meter Awareness Meeting – 17 November

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