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Force are good for the future
One Team - One Dream - Go The Western Force
This was news back during the election but has since been furthered by the governments more recent backing of our future. Also, more government support was agreed to by both the ARU and the state government when the Alliance Agreement was drawn up. After all, the ARU came to Perth to buy our license and IP for $4 million and left with $5 million of our governments money to host a Bledisloe. Yet another example of how WA contributes to Australian rugby, not just expecting handout after handout like Mr Wards shambles of a home state.
Well it's been 2 days since this dribble was published and none of the noteworthy Rugby journos have followed up. After last night and what could be a massacre at AAMI Park tonight, I don't reckon we'll hear much from this bloke for a while.
"The main difference between playing League and Union is that now I get my hangovers on Monday instead of Sunday - Tom David
Re renewal for next season, I had an idea about the sponsors logo. Instead of saying 'Road Safety' on the match shirts, they could evolve with different messages on different shirts. Likewise each supporters shirt could carry a different message on the front depending on size. Ie, the kids sizes could say 'it's 40kph in a school zone'. The XL shirts could say don't drink and drive and the ladies shirts say don't do your make up on the freeway. The messages could be numerous but ultimately up to the sponsors.
Don't be an idiot and drive slow in the outside lane
Learn how to merge in with the crowd
Proudly Western Australian; Proudly supporting Western Australian rugby
"The main difference between playing League and Union is that now I get my hangovers on Monday instead of Sunday - Tom David
Great ideas keep em moving
Good to see those in power - the harvard business degrees, LSE'ers and masters degrees in marketing have contributed precisely....nada
The long sobs of autumn's violins wound my heart with a monotonous languor
Uh oh!!!
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-06-2...p-deal/8661128
The McGowan Government is demanding former state treasurer Mike Nahan release full details of a rugby sponsorship deal done under the Barnett government.
The Western Force received a financial lifeline of $1.5 million in January, under a sponsorship deal that saw the Road Safety Commission become their naming rights partner.
During Question Time in WA Parliament, the McGowan Government sprayed the Opposition with demands to see the documents related to the deal.
"Quite unusually, very late in the term of the former government ... an interesting arrangement was entered into with the Road Safety Commission and Western Force," Treasurer Ben Wyatt said.
"I was unsure as to exactly what the road safety implications were, because sponsoring a tier-one sporting code I thought was probably outside the core activities of the Road Safety Commission."
Mr Wyatt said Treasury had advised him it was not aware of the deal or consulted before it was done.
"Treasury would not have recommended this reallocation of RTT [Road Trauma Trust] expenditure based on the proposal," Mr Wyatt said.
"Without any form of Cabinet endorsement, without the role of Treasury, without any credible explanation as to exactly how [the money] ... was going to influence road safety, the former government somehow concocted a case."
Dr Nahan, who is now Opposition Leader, defended the deal and said the documents were protected by Cabinet confidentiality.
"It was a Cabinet document and we — as previous governments have — haven't allowed the release of Cabinet documents of that nature ... and we won't do so now," he said.
"We're not going to violate [that] and release Cabinet documents."
The debate spilled over a day after it was revealed Road Safety Commissioner Kim Papalia had stepped away from his role.
He did so after having sought legal advice about refusing to give evidence to a State Government inquiry examining the rugby sponsorship documents.
The Government said Mr Papalia left because he was unhappy that the Road Safety Commission was being rolled into the same department as WA Police.
But the Opposition said Mr Papalia was "shoved sideways to purgatory" after taking the legal advice.
Premier Mark McGowan said Mr Papalia first sought legal advice from the Director of Public Prosecutions before taking independent legal advice without consulting Road Safety Minister Michelle Roberts.
"Mr Papalia didn't advise me of that and he should have," Ms Roberts told Parliament.
Mr McGowan said as a result, acting director-general of Premier and Cabinet Darren Foster spoke to Mr Papalia last Friday — four days before he left his role.
Proudly Western Australian; Proudly supporting Western Australian rugby
Good news one minute, bad the next 😳