That wouldn't be out of character, but according to the article he did get bail:
"Mr Mucibabic appeared at Parramatta Local Court today and was granted bail on conditions including that he stay away from the suburbs of Darlinghurst, Paddington and Kings Cross, and that he not own paint cans.
He is due back in court on September 6."
Though I'm definitely in agreement that this one is hijinks at best, given that the article ends on
"She was able to remove the paint with WD-40"
Edit - NVM, it seems the article was updated and a prior version had him being refused bail - though not sure how it counts as "refused" when the bail hearing hadn't apparently happened yet.
"Put your helmet on, we'll be reaching speeds fertilization of 3" - MST3K (Altered)
Only four councillors didn't vote on the original ban. Two (Sarkis and Farouqi) had a leave of absence and Rahme was unable to attend and had sent his apologies.
Hamed left the room during the vote (apparently due to threats she'd received for voting on similar matters on the past).
The more significant point is that of the six who voted for the ban, five also ended up voting to repeal it (even two from Christou's own party).
And a week later Cumberland Council has voted to repeal the book ban 13-2. Even two of the OLC councillors crossed the floor in the end, leaving Sarkis and Christou alone in defeat.
So it seems the petitions and protesting seems to have helped - as well as pressure from both sides of state government.
Plenty of people addressed council, and many of them did live or work in the area (a few did not, which Christou is predictably trying to turn into a "people from outside our community pushing their values on you" talking point - but he's exaggerating here).
New information from the latest meeting that deserves to be added here.
Hamed's reason for leaving the chamber was due to threats to her family.
Understandable, but disturbing that the safety of a councillors family is being threatened over this.
Also worth noting - whilst the Labor councillors were the only ones who voted against this and most of them did - one did cross the floor (Hussein) to vote for it and another (Hamed) didn't stay in the room for the vote.
Its worth noting that if they're councillors for your ward.
The relevant council minutes can be found here in case you're in the Cumberland LGA and wanted to know how your local councillors voted: https://cumberland.infocouncil.biz/Open/2024/05/C_01052024_MIN_3134_WEB.htm
The relevant item is: Min.729 - C05/24-506 Adoption of Library Strategy 2024 - 2027 - Post Exhibition
Whilst this coming from Christou is entirely unsurprising (it seems my days of putting him and the rest of his OLC chums at the bottom of my ballot are certainly coming to a middle), I was disappointed to see that Cummings voted in favour as well.
He had seemed to be a solid independent candidate, but this has tarnished him and I won't be voting for him in future.
A slim majority of Cumberland City councillors voted to remove the book from its libraries in a meeting last week.
Honestly, better to just have an official government server with official government accounts.
They can then federate as needed - official correspondence would be recognizable as it comes from their domain.
Meanwhile people would be able to remain on the servers they've chosen and follow whatever is of interest.
GMO crops often use glyphosate for weed control, which works because the frequently the GMO crops themselves have been engineered to be resistant to glyphosate.
That's not the case with non GMO crops because glyphosate isn't selective - you'd kill your crop along with the weeds if you tried the same approach with non GMO plants.
Hence the use of GMOs is frequently coupled with more intensive use of glyphosate.
Thanks for that, that's a much better resource than what I managed to find.
So it seems that there are is guidance aimed at keeping it out of composts and manures that people might use on their garden. It does sound like there's still some risk that a supplier might cut corners or a farmer might lie in order to get a better price for contaminated feed/manures but having it in place does at least reduce the overall risk a fair bit.
Yes, exactly those. It sounds like there are others (chrolopyralids, picloram and others), but aminopyralids are the longest lived in the soil, so the biggest concern.
A lot of the resources on it are discussing the issue from a US or UK perspective, and while a lot of the issues are similar it doesn't help me assess how much of a risk a bag of manure from the local Bunnings or garden centre might really represent to my vege garden.
It'd also be worth hearing if there's been any regulatory responses to this issue locally
I've been reading up on the various persistent herbicides that are out there and how they can pass through animals and composting intact and I was wondering how significant an issue this would be for those of us gardening in Australia.
For my fellow gardeners, I'd like to know whether you've encountered this issue in your gardens and what steps you take to reduce the risk of contaminated materials entering your garden?
Thanks for your response - it's fairly new (planted about a year and a half ago years ago as a 1m high tree from the nursery) and has really taken off over the last Summer. It's quite a tangle at the moment and needs some neatening up.
It sounds like I'm over thinking things a bit - I know that different plants respond differently to pruning but it sounds like trees are broadly similar even if they do have some variations.
From your response, it sounds like I should probably wait a little until I'm confident that there won't be any more strings of 30°+ days to avoid stressing it out - it should recover better once conditions are a bit more mild.
I've got a young silver banksia that is getting a bit unruly and I'm looking for a useful guide for understanding how they respond to pruning. Ideally want to understand what they respond well to and how I can train them to grow to suit my garden.
I basically want to encourage it to grow upwards more, so that it can rise above a fence to gain better access to light and provide screening from neighbours. Also hoping that as it grows it'll create room for a bit of an understory in the same location.
Does anyone have any recommendations?