Saturday, September 12, 2009

Robert Fittock - outrageous!

ROBERT FITTOCK'S letter about the Fremantle Markets
(Market man, Herald letters, August2 9,2009)
is one of the most outrageous I have read for years.

He criticises a decision of his own council to investigate massive rent increases at Fremantle Markets and alleged mistreatment of stallholders by the head lessee.

He says the review was initiated by a"few"councillors "who appear to hold an unhealthy and vindictive grudge against [FremantleMarkets Pty Ltdl".

In March a special meeting of council was called. One hundred aggrieved stallholders and others turned up to vent their anger, hurt, and distress at the treatment they alleged they were getting.

Question time went on for two hours as speaker after speaker in the packed council chamber told their stories.

The mayor, along with Crs Brad Pettitt, Doug Thompson, Jon Strachan, John Alberti and Robert Fittock - all of whom had voted to give the markets to FMPL for 18 years - were absent.

Cr Fittock did turn up late but voted against investigating the alleged abuses.

Cr Fittock may like to explain who is going to paythe $4.5 million needed to fix the markets, since the lease he voted for does not require the Murdoch's to pay for it.

John Dowson
Deputy Mayor
Fremantle
Editor's note: This letter has been substantially edited for length.

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John Dowson not interested in being new Fremantle mayor

Media Statement

Why I am not running for Mayor of the City of Fremantle

I am not nominating as a mayoral candidate. For the past 4 years as Deputy Mayor I have worked very hard to represent the community interest in the face of mediocrity and vested interests.

The community, while tired of internal bickering, has not fully appreciated the necessity for the battles waged to get better decisions and a better future for Fremantle.

I believe that a fresh and mature face such as Michael Martin will unite the council. A vote for Brad Pettitt, who is backed by Peter Tagliaferri, and the very people who, for example, have given us the Fremantle Markets and SMRC Waste Management fiascos, would be a vote for a continuation of big business and factional interest over community interest.

It is obvious that political parties such as Labor and the Greens want to have a major influence in these council elections. For the mayoralty and in the wards, Fremantle needs to elect community candidates, not party ones.

Good luck to all candidates.
John Dowson
Deputy Mayor
City of Fremantle

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Tuesday, August 04, 2009

Jamie Murdoch's curious bean counting

John and Jamie Murdoch have an accountancy background. They understand that if you double a tenants rent you can make off with a truckload of money. As businessmen though, they don't quite grasp the fact that if you kill the golden goose it stops laying golden eggs.

Reading through the transcript of last Fridays nights Stateline telecast leaves me very curious about their sums.
http://www.abc.net.au/stateline/wa/content/2006/s2644274.htm

Quote JAMIE MURDOCH: The average stall is still paying about $300 a week to trade at the Fremantle markets for a Friday, Saturday and Sunday. It equates to approximately $12 per trading hour. So we still think that's a low-cost environment.

Quote PENNY BANNISTER, FORMER STALLHOLDER: I'm told my rent is going to be times three, like treble what it had been. So I thought - I laughed at first, I think, it was so over the top it was ridiculous.

Quote BOB WILLIAMS, FORMER STALLHOLDER: I was told I couldn't sell it as a fish shop and what was the future? - $1,700 extra out of my pocket each month. So I thought it was the time to leave.

REBECCA BOTELER: Mr Murdoch says he's been forced to increase rents because the owner of the building, the City of Fremantle, put his rent up by about 12 per cent. But that doesn't wash with the Stallholders' Association, which says the Murdochs have passed on increases of 50-100 per cent.

GRAEME MACKENZIE, CEO, FREMANTLE COUNCIL: The Council's intent was always to recognise that it's a market. It's not a shopping centre, it's a market, and it's a low-cost environment. And I guess that's probably where the rents that have actually been imposed under the valaution have been unexpected, because we don't think it's probably a low-cost environment anymore under those arrangements.

Of course we all laughed when we heard the Murdoch's research (The council didn't check the figures but the stall-holders crunched down the numbers)
The asserted that 40,000 people attend the markets each week end and spend on average $45 per person =$1800000 that divided by approx 170 stall holders means that they average a weekend turnover of $10,588. (Is there a stall in there that would even hold that amount of stock? Aparently most of them are millionaires!)

And beautifully put by Penny Bannister when she spoke about how it was:
The whole place was like an ecological system, you know, a really wonderful dynamic system that fed off each other and itself and the energy in there was great.
It's changed because they've upset the balance, and in the process of doing that, by trying to take far too much money out.

http://sonyagreen.blogspot.com/

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Saturday, May 30, 2009

Plea to Fremantle Council to ACT.

Stall-holders association - Plea to Fremantle Council to ACT.

What I am going to propose to you tonight is a drastic measure but one that should be carefully evaluated for the sake of the Markets, the council, the stallholders and the ratepayers.

Over the previous 30 years the council, the market management and the many small businesses at Fremantle Markets have had a successful and mutually supportive relationship. It was a winning formula for everyone. With the granting of the head lease most thought that the conflicts and debate of the previous 31/2 years had come to an end. The decision had finally been made, the conditions set and we were ready for a new era.

We had no reason to believe the Markets would be any different in fact they would be better with the promise of 5 year leases with 5 year options to replace our one month agreements and periodic rent increases linked to cpi. Stallholders could see their businesses would be more valuable through increased goodwill.

Then everything changed. In June the head lease was signed and by July we were notified that there would be no leases and options - only license agreements.

In September we first heard of the size of the rent increases. Then in November with the first batch of EOI’s the realization that what was promised was not being delivered. Overheads more akin to a shopping centre than a market were imposed and then came the news of the redevelopment of the new food area and how this would be achieved by downsizing other stalls or forcing others out through prohibitively high rents. The fruit and vegetable traders also learnt their shops would be downsized but their rents increased. And this is just the start.

What’s behind those changes, we believe, amount to a serious abuse of trust of both the stallholders and the council. What was publicly promoted as a carefully crafted and thoroughly researched business plan has turned into a mess…not just from a stallholder’s perspective but increasingly in the opinion of the broader community.

Stallholders and councillors now must question why, what was promoted and promised has not materialized? These were black and white commitments, fundamental to the awarding of the lease.

The marginal support the Murdoch brothers once had at the Markets disappeared with the broken promises…, once stallholders realized what the new agreements, the rent increases and the Markets redevelopment meant, they knew they had been manipulated.

Remember Jamie Murdoch’s comment from last year’s Special Council meeting:
“We don't want to lose any stallholder’s; we want all the stallholders we have to come along. We have 200 stallholders who are all fantastic people who we want to continue. We don't want to preclude any stallholders from anything.”
What a load of garbage!
Question Time FCC Council Meeting 27th May 2009

They knew then what was planned but misled and betrayed us.

They needed both the stallholders and councilors support to secure this lucrative lease. Now that they have it, we are all being treated with contempt.
The Murdoch brothers are difficult people to deal with, which we all now fully appreciate.

The question for council is not just in addressing the apparent breaches of the head lease but more importantly how and if you address the many misrepresentations made to both stallholders and yourselves.

We have legal advice which confirms the Murdoch’s may have breached sections 51A and 52 of the Trade Practices Act….that is “where they have engaged in conduct that is misleading or deceptive or likely to mislead or deceive”. Such conduct is unlawful. We have provided Council with our legal advice on this matter and a proposed resolution for council.

The stallholders do not have the resources nor should they have to mount a challenge against this deception. It is the council who voted to support the business plan based on the information before them and it would be open to the City if they were so inclined to bring an action against the Murdoch’s for the apparent breaches.

If the City and the councillors now believe what has occurred, is not what the council was led to believe would happen, then the question is …what do you do to rectify if? The unlawful activities have already taken place and there is nothing that can be done to undo it.

For the Stallholders Association we believe there is only one answer and that is to…terminate the lease under Clause 20 of the head lease?

The Mayor and Mr. Dougall made public assurances to stallholders in relation to the safety of their businesses under the new Murdoch regime. These assurances meant nothing to the Murdoch’s. They have totally disregarded them as they did with the Mayors attempts to have Richard Murphy reinstated. Those assurances now also mean nothing to the long established stallholders who have lost their livelihoods and their goodwill. Bob Williams, Mary Cole, Richard Murphy, Penny Bannister and many others. What is their compensation in this sorry saga?

Our Association has the strong support of our many members at the markets… these are small business people who through their dedication and loyalty have helped make the markets what it is today. They are totally disillusioned with the Murdoch’s and how they have turned their lives upside down.

Unless something is done within a very short timeframe, stallholders will fall apart as both the financial pressure and continued stress will prove too much.

This proposal cannot happen without your support. You have heard over the past months many stallholders stand here and recount how their lives have been dramatically affected by what has taken place. These are genuine hard working people who this should never have happened to. It can never be undone. It now urgently needs your commitment to make sure that it won’t happen in the future.

My question is to the CEO….. If your legal advice, like ours, supports the allegation that breaches to the Trade Practices Act have occurred in relation to misleading or deceptive conduct both during and after the awarding of the Markets lease, will you convene a Special Meeting of Council, to determine if councilors support the action to commence legal proceedings against the Murdoch’s and terminate the head lease?




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Thursday, May 28, 2009

Jamie Murdoch - lies and betrayal

Remember this comment from last years March 6th Special Council meeting. Jamie Murdoch stated:

“We don't want to lose any stallholder’s; we want all the stallholders we have to come along. We have 200 stallholders who are all fantastic people who we want to continue. We don't want to preclude any stallholders from anything.”

We are committed to a secure low cost trading environment despite capital expenditures and trading initiatives.

Once stallholders realized what the new agreements, the rent increases and the Markets redevelopment meant, they knew they had been conned.

Mayor Tagliaferri and Mr. Dougall made public assurances to stallholders in relation to the safety of their businesses under the new Murdoch regime. Those assurances have meant nothing to the long established stallholders who have lost their livelihoods; Bob Williams, Mary Cole, Richard Murphy, Penny Bannister and others. Just this last week-end further rent increases have been issued and more stallholders are preparing to leave. The assurances meant nothing to the Murdoch’s. They have totally disregarded them.

And from the minutes 6th March 2008.

Summary of response from Jamie Murdoch:

They will still have their position. (Many will be relocated into smaller and totally unsuitable places, so much so, that continued business is impossible - they have been forced out of the market!) The whole Market will still come alive on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. All stallholders are welcome to come along for the future of the Fremantle Markets for the next 20 years that the Council and the Working Group will govern, we are not precluding anyone. (No, they are culling them ) We have a database of 200 fantastic stallholders and we want to give them the opportunity to come along for the next 10-20 years.


Summary of question asked by Cr Bill Massie:

So the current stallholders are guaranteed security?


Summary of response from Jamie Murdoch:

They are guaranteed security under the working group and under the lease. (The only security offered through the Working Group is a new lease, they are not actually guaranteeing that existing stallholders will retain their businesses or premises. The Working Group does not include a stallholder representative) The lawyer that the stallholders have engaged, there was a meeting that a couple of the Councillors went to prior to Christmas and the lawyer said that the stallholders will have more security under the new lease then the old lease. The new lease allows us to offer our stallholders a 5 year lease, with the opportunity for a 5 year option. ( No, they have reniged on this and are not offering the 5 year options) We want our stallholders to continue, we have a database, as I said, of 200 stallholders who are all fantastic people. There are initiatives that we want to implement, so the 3 day a week markets stays but there are various sections of the market that can come alive on the Tuesday or a Wednesday or whenever to suit the various need that Lee and Anne have identified.


Summary of question asked by Cr Bill Massie:

So the weekend market would not be forced into working 7 days?

Summary of response from Jamie Murdoch:

No. We have gone through that process with the Thursday trial. These initiatives are just initiatives, to sit down and discuss and consider. (They are now talking about running the markets in 2 parts with the new food area operating 4 or 5 days a week)




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Thursday, May 14, 2009

Simple questions not yet answered

Justice, fairness, equality or just good old fashioned common sense used to be such a simple thing. A man’s word and a hand-shake would seal the deal and a man’s integrity was as important as his kingdom.

These days it seems that everything requires legal definition, procedures, protocols, laws, contracts, insurance, liabilities, meetings, arbitration, triplicate documentation and litigation.

The past 18 months of dealing with the Fremantle Council and the Murdoch management would have been satirical theatre if anyone had any humour left.

Let’s just get it down to basics and stop all of the nonsense. Simple questions have not been answered.

(1.) Why do the Murdoch’s refuse to show their evaluation? If ‘Fair Market Rent’ has been assessed by an independent licensed valuer then give us his name and credentials and let us look at how he has arrived at these figures.

The council must have had a valuation done prior to renewing the head-lease; they increased the rent by about 12%. Why didn’t alarm bells ring when the Murdoch’s increased stall-holder rents by 80%? Why didn’t the council query this? Didn’t the Murdoch’s submit a proposal prior to them being granted the lease?

Even when the stall-holders spokesmen confronted the Mayor and predicted the fall-out and long term repercussions they were met with disinterest and dismissal. It was only after delivering a report from their QC that the Mayor sat up and took notice.

Months later very little had been done and again the stall-holders had to chase up their own evaluation to point out the obvious. Their figures also confirmed that ‘Fair Market Rent’ was approx 12%. However let’s not forget that the Murdoch’s lease was signed prior to the recession. The stall-holders were hit with their increases just before Christmas and just after it became apparent to Governments and businesses world-wide that retail in particular was going to do it hard.

Meanwhile back at the markets small businesses were being forced to shut down and walk away with nothing. Many letters of distress were sent to the Mayor and much was said about being bullied or priced out of business. To have security of tenure they had to accept the rent rises and without some form of lease agreement they were unable to sell anything. Many had paid tens of thousands of dollars for their shops and had built up their businesses and established goodwill and could have sold at justifiable profits. However, they could not risk signing onto the new agreements as the new rents would probably lock them into considerable debt or failure if they couldn’t sell out quickly.

Why was the term ‘Fair Market Rent’ used anyway? It’s a difficult definition by any means. Why not use CPI or not more than...?

Of course Fair Market Rent is usually determined by valuation and within the valuation comparisons can be made and explained. The Murdoch’s could easily show their evaluation and it would help to justify their argument. This lack of transparency creates suspicion and I’m sure I'm not the only one who has wondered if perhaps there never was one done?

While everyone is fart-arsing around stall holders are left without leases and feeling enormous pressure to just sign and hope for the best. Their option is simple: walk away with nothing, lose their initial investment, goodwill, and their livelihood and be left in debt and jobless or sign the new agreement, try to pay the high rents and pray that they can keep afloat or sell out.

This then becomes an even bigger problem for the others. The more people who sign on, the more the Murdoch’s can justify ‘fair market rent’. The definition of fair market rent can be argued that ‘this is what we have people agreeing to pay therefore it becomes fair market’.

If this happens then rent per square metre becomes a measure throughout the Fremantle CBD. All rent renewals throughout Fremantle will be evaluated on this artificially inflated price. Every business in Fremantle will be forced to either pay the higher rents or index the cost into their sales. That means that everything in Freo will cost more!

(2.)
Why did Freo council renew the Murdoch’s lease 2 years before the old one expired?

Conflict between the Murdoch’s, the council and the stall-holders began soon after the Murdoch juniors took over the lease from Murdoch senior. At one stage the Mayor was talking about buying out the remainder of the lease. I’m not sure of the finer details but it is on record that the Murdoch’s threatened to run the markets into the ground and sue the council. So what really happened? This is pure speculation but it seems to me that the council was bullied into that renewal.

One councillor stated outright at a meeting that he had felt personally threatened; another said she had felt intimidated and I noticed two other councillors nodding in agreement. Regardless of this, half of the councillors fiercely opposed the renewal but when two of these councillors were out of town the decision was made.

It’s really a matter of ‘the nature of the beast’. I have always believed that when someone shows you who they really are then it is very wise to believe them.

Why would anyone marry up for an additional 18 years when they only had two to serve? In retrospect it seems like there were other options so were those threats really the issue or was there something more going on?

With Tagliaferri’s term as mayor ending soon, I am left wondering if it was a matter of making sure the deal was done before Tags left office. If so - why?

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Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Rally for Richard Murphy

FREMANTLE MARKETS
Rally for Richard


Special guest speaker Greens candidate
Adele Carles


Richard Murphy, Chairman of the Freo Markets Stallholders Committee has been evicted after
22 years at the markets.

Please show your concern for the dire situation Stallholders now find themselves in.

-Created by-

Fremantle mayor Peter Tagliaferi
CEO Graeme Mckenzie

And councillors
John Strachan
Doug Thompson (chair of Markets Committee)
Brad Pettit
Robert Fittock
John Alberti

Who still support this unfair situation despite huge community opposition.

This Wednesday, 22nd April, 5pm
At Council Chambers steps
Kings Square (opp. Myres).

Richard Murphy has been evicted from the Fremantle Markets. Richard has owned his shop in the markets for 22 years and a year ago he could very well have sold his business for around $100,000. This weekend he left with nothing but stock. His livelihood has been stolen.

The Murdoch management has not just filled his vacant space but have given the new occupants the opportunity to walk into Richard’s business and reap the rewards of repeat custom, reliable wholesalers, expertise and good will. In effect, someone has just been given a $100,000 established business.

Although this seems highly unlikely and many are left wondering…

As chairman and spokesperson for the Fremantle Stallholders Association, Richard has been intimidated and victimized by management.

Richard has been confronting, outspoken and fearless in trying to get to the truth and the agendas behind massive and unfair rent increases at Fremantle Markets. At substantial personal costs he has championed those who have been intimidated, supported many who have had to close down and walk away and prevented a mass walk out. And all the while, trying to educate the council about long term repercussions.

Fremantle Market is not just a real estate investment. It is a Fremantle icon and tourist destination. It is commercially successful and ironically it is this winning formula that is now being dismantled. The Markets in its current format brings people from outer suburbia and overseas into Freo.

Peter Tagliaferi and the Murdoch’s vision of turning half the market into a glorified Deli will destroy the Fremantle markets. Rents and dubious outgoings will destroy many established businesses. Half of Fremantle councillors are heartbroken at the lack of information that they have been able to work with. These councillors are working hard to rectify the situation and it looks like Peter Tagliaferri is stepping out and leaving carnage in his wake.

The Fremantle Herald and Gazette have had all the twists and turns running as front page news for almost 2 months. Have you been paying attention?

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Monday, April 06, 2009

Fremantle Markets - the story so far

Fremantle is probably one of the loveliest cities in the world. Beautiful old buildings, laid back pubs, huge green parks with plenty of trees, countless cafes and coffee shops and all sitting right on the harbour and short distance to the beach.

Fremantle really comes alive on weekends in a casual, friendly way. It’s a place to go and just wander around. Many people enjoy a long leisurely breakfast on the sidewalk; sit drinking coffee and reading papers or just chatting with strangers. Probably the biggest draw to Freo is a wander through the markets, a seafood lunch on the harbour, a frolic in the park and a cappuccino on the café strip.

For many, including me, the jewel in the crown is the Freo Markets. It’s an old fashioned ‘flea market’ or bazaar. I have been shopping there for around thirty years. Some of the current stall holders have been there that long and many for ten to twenty years. Many of today’s business leaders and entrepreneurs will admit to starting out at the Freo markets. Many thousands of people have worked week-ends down at Freo Markets and it is pretty precious to all of them.

It’s an eclectic mix of people and products. Fresh fruit and veg, cheap and unique gifts, massage, exotic foods, hand made pottery, specialized clothing, unusual jewellery and art, tarot readings, buskers, a quaint little pub, antiques, books and lots of surprises. There is colour, smell and sound all around and even the people watching is fascinating.

The main reasons it has been so successful for so long is that it’s interesting, cheap and casual and you get to talk with the stall holders with none of that “Have a nice day,’ cheesiness or ‘Just give me your money and be gone,’ attitude of regular shopping. It’s not just a matter of shopping – it’s a day out.

The land and the building is owned by the people of Fremantle; managed by the council and leased out to the Murdoch brothers. The Murdoch brothers run the market and collect rents from the stall holders.

Commercially it is very profitable to both the council and the Murdoch’s. The Murdoch’s have just had their lease renewed for the next 18years and even at loose estimations it is easy to see that they have a million dollar + p.a. cash cow.

To date, everyone’s a winner. The council gets more than 1/2 million dollars in rent but more importantly the markets bring people into Fremantle from the outer suburbs, interstate and overseas. It is a must see tourist destination. This pulls money into the overall economy of the city. The Murdoch’s win with their 18year lease and projected rents and up until recently the stall holders had a win by having fair rents in place and thereby passing on fair prices to customers.

When the lease between the council and the Murdoch’s was renewed, the council increased their rent by 12%. We all assume there was an independent valuation to arrive at this figure to establish ‘fair market rent’. The Murdoch’s then turned around and increased the rent from the stall holders between 50-80% on average, but also presented one woman (in a prime location) with a 300% increase.

The stall-holders association employed their own independent valuer and his figures confirmed that the previous rents were very close to fair market value. He was perplexed by the overestimation given by the Murdoch’s.

Who did the Murdoch’s valuation? How were those numbers so much greater than the councils and the stallholders? Is there any legitimate justification for this assessment? We have asked for a copy but so far it has not been forth-coming.

The Murdoch’s have stated a couple of times that the stallholders have had it too good for too long and that is why the rent increase seems to be so extreme. They said that the stallholders have been like kids let loose in a lolly-shop and now they are just catching up with what’s real.

The rent per sq metre has never been cheap; it has always been based on fair market value. The concept of cheap is simply the fact that people can rent a very small space with no frills and that keeps the overall cost down. Per sq mtre it has been the same as any comparable location.

The new rents also come with new extras; like approx $50,000 for administration. Basically this is the new fee charged for taking and banking the rents. Considering most rent is auto-banked these days you can only wonder what it could have been worth back in the days of counting cash and writing receipts.

Signing a new lease agreement costs around $800 per person. Even if only 100 people sign, that earns $80,000 for what amounts to not much more than a few keystrokes and printing out from a computer template.

What I thought was really sneaky, is that they only approached twenty of the stall holders to begin with. It was just before Christmas and they were given just 2 weeks to agree to the new rents or be given notice to vacate. Knowing that the stall holders would have invested everything in Christmas stock and that pre-Christmas is the most profitable time of the year, I would say that this was blatant intimidation. Targeting only twenty also gave them some feedback on reaction or opposition; and made these stall holders “guinea pigs”.

Many knew that the price hike would destroy them, a few had to walk away but most have held on in the hope that the stallholders association - their collective voice, would swing into action; which they did. Meetings were held, legal advice sought and meetings with the Fremantle council were arranged. The media was quick to investigate after conflicts and despair over other issues in previous years.

Almost half of the Fremantle councillors had voted against the Murdoch’s being given the lease renewal but lost the vote by one. Mayor Tagliaferri pushed for the lease renewal to go ahead. Many, including me, wondered why it was not put to public tender and why it was renewed years earlier than the old leases expiration. I am still wondering why the council didn’t take over the running of the market themselves, as is the case in the Eastern States? I also wonder why the discrepency in rent value didnt set off any alarms.

Trying to get the mayors attention with this new turn of events took a number of letters and pleas from stall holders and a lot of tenacity from the stallholder’s spokes people. With the threat of legal action, pressure from some councillors, newspaper articles and a solid document from the stallholder associations Q.C. Mayor Tagliaferri appeared to show some interest and agreed to, “Look into it”.

(Months later he became known around Freo as the Mirror Mayor as his stock answer to most questions was, “I will look into it.’’

Meanwhile, the Murdoch’s continued their twenty at a time notifications and some later said that they felt intimidated into agreements. The hard and obvious questions were:
Can I afford the rent increase?
Can I index the rent increase into the sale of my product?
Can I afford to walk away?

Most of the stall holders had paid tens of thousands of dollars for their businesses and without the security of a long term rental agreement they would have no business to sell. They would just lose their initial investment and be left with stock and no income. Some are still paying off their initial loans.

If the fruit and veg guys increased their prices they would then be competing with all of the big supermarkets in all of the suburbs. The markets are not air-conditioned; there are no wide aisles, no on site parking and no shopping trolleys. Their food is fresh and cheap but, who would bother shopping there if they could buy at the same or perhaps cheaper prices locally? This was the same dilemma for most of the stalls.

Sometime later, the Murdoch’s reasoned that they would relocate a number of outdoor stalls into the inside section because they were planning on turning the outer area into glorified Deli. They have big dreams of mimicking eastern states markets and selling seafood, meats, cheeses, olives, and upmarket or gourmet food items and possibly having wine tastings and cooking demos.

A few points on this I don’t understand:

How can people be charged higher rent now for upgraded facilities to be built sometime later? (Can a landlord near double a tenants rent because he is going to renovate the bathroom next year?)

Why would people come from outer suburban locations to buy what they can get at their local modern shopping centre?

How can the outdoor stallholders fit into the already full indoor area? Are stalls going to be down-sized or are they counting on pushing some out. Maybe that explains why some rent increases are much higher than others.

Interesting, that the guy who runs the fresh seafood business, in a prime location, had his rent increased so much that he has already walked away and lost everything. The Murdoch’s stated that they would rather have frozen seafood in the new development. Now, who wants to go to Freo to buy Frozen Fish? Fremantle is famous for fresh fish and every supermarket in town sells frozen fish.

Why introduce wine tasting and promotion when there has been a great little bar inside the markets forever! Won’t this threaten or destroy his business? There are two great pubs within a 1 minute walk from the markets.

Why would they want to bring in coffee shops? The main street of Freo is well known as “The café strip”.

Why would the market management bully out long term successful stall-holders to bring in unknown traders, selling common grocery items and expect them to be successful? OR are they having their rents subsidized by the others paying almost double?

Who the hell wants to walk around Freo on Sunday afternoon looking at meat and olives?

The very popular Canning Vale growers markets have already announced a multi- million dollar upgrade going ahead this year. They have around 13,000sq metres and anticipate 300 stalls being set up. Perth city, Kalamunda, Subi, Claremont, Morley and Bayswater areas also have plans for new fresh produce markets. Not to mention others that are already in place throughout the metro area. Many suburbs have roadside fish vans and most suburbs have supermarkets to cater to frozen seafood and meat. The Swan Valley has an abundance of vineyards and wine tastings.

What I find rather intriguing is that Mayor Tagliaferri used to own a successful gourmet deli before becoming the mayor. I also find it intriguing that in an article published in the Fremantle Herald in 2006 he had stated that HE wanted to see the markets redeveloped with exactly this in mind.

I believe his motivation was that Freo was pretty quiet during the week and he thought if the markets opened during the week it could bring more people to the city. As the upgrades won’t be completed until later this year or next, and the Mayor is de-seating himself very soon, I am now wondering if perhaps he has a personal financial interest in the market?

Well, there will be no conflict of interest if he is no longer mayor and he has expertise and experience in that type of business. That’s not an accusation, but I can't help but wonder. After all, there was a lot of opposition to the Murdoch’s having that lease renewed, and as soon as it was, they announced ‘their’ plans for the glamorous delicatessen.

I just can’t imagine how anyone could make a living selling these products if they are paying the new rent prices. The seafood guy knows that he can’t; he has the figures to prove it and he was in a large space, in a prime location, with a regular clientele. Not only did he know that he wouldn’t survive with the new rent increases but he would not risk signing himself into a new 5 year contract. He had no choice but to walk away from a previously successful business and is now unable to sell what last year might have been worth almost enough to retire on.

The Murdoch’s have stated that they already have people waiting to go into the new food site. Now that’s really peculiar. How or why would they be so confident that a list of people will wait a year or so to find space in a yet to be developed market? Canningvale has 300 stalls coming up and all the facilities one could ever wish for. Could it be possible that one person or one company will be taking on the whole of the new development?

Opening midweek or any additional days was strongly opposed the year before last by the stall holders. Most lose money, break even or make very little as it is by opening on Friday. The market rocks on week ends. Forcing full time trade would do nothing but force people to employ additional staff, waste valuable time and force many to leave. Again though, as they pay rent by the day, it would be another way of further increasing rents.

Although the stall holders retail Friday to Sunday many of them are busy making products through the week; buying, loading and packing produce and quite a few have taken on the stalls to work weekend whilst spouses look after children. Many of the stall-holders bought into the markets specifically because it was a week-end business. Many are owner operator businesses and it would be impossible to pick up stock or make products without time during the week. None anticipated or had any warning that that could change at managements will.

Trading extra days would require larger storage facilities, more cool-room space for some and loss of perishables for others. Don’t forget that most of the stalls are only a few metres wide and many need to run in and out to their cars or vans to restock the shop during the day. Generally speaking most are really home businesses retailing on weekends.

The majority of the stalls are only a few trestle tables wide. Recently, some have had their space reduced by 1/3 even though the rent has increased so dramatically. There is almost no storage space, limited display area, no on-site parking, limited dispatch area, no personal amenities and few stalls have doors or windows. The management refuses to air-condition the premises even though temperatures in summer can reach over 40 degrees Celsius and the winter months are teeth-chattering cold. Many of the outdoor vendors have had tarpaulin covers fill with water and stallholders have had to wear gumboots and raincoats.

Recent rent comparisons have shown that the new rent rises make price per square metre more expensive than many of the very upmarket and modern shopping centres throughout the metro area. Jamie Murdoch has stated in at least two newspapers that many stall holders are happy with the price rise. They may have agreed to accept the rises but happy they are not. John Murdoch suggested “Take it or leave it’. Most of the people who agreed have been nervously forced to take a punt on making a go of it, knowing that declining the offer would mean walking away with nothing. The fact that around 80% of stall-holders showed up at the Councils meeting to support the stall-holders associations is a more accurate indication of who is happy. Only one stall-holder came in support of the Murdoch’s, but he declined to speak.

Speaking about that meeting, I need to mention a rather shocking incident that occurred:
The room was filled beyond capacity with market supporters; many who have never attended a council meeting in their lives. There was a large crowd of people who were crammed into the doorway and out into the foyer. One woman called out to Mayor Tagliaferri that they could not hear and she requested that the audio be turned up. I can't say off-hand exactly what was said but I know that it was recorded and more importantly I know what the gist of it was:

He said YOU don’t need to hear, these people are here to speak with ME!

I also noticed that throughout the night the mayor often whispered to the guy sitting next to him even though people on the floor were speaking to him.

Alan Carpenter recently called Mayor Tagliaferri “A man of the People” What a joke!

Fortunately the Mayor’s apparent indifference was no deterrent to Cr Haney who ended the meeting by announcing a special meeting to do something and get this mess sorted out quickly. True to her word, and with the support of other councillors, the special meeting achieved more in a few hours than the months of consultation with the mayor.

We were appalled that the mayor did not even show up for this meeting. All of the tea and sympathy, the looking into it, the long list of platitudes and the ducking, diving and dodging finally made sense. It seems pretty clear that he has been covering his own arse all along and not only supporting the Murdoch’s but has probably instigated a sweetheart deal which included getting his GlamDeli up and running.(?)

I should also mention that Deputy Mayor John Dowson, chaired that meeting and whilst consulting with a lawyer and being mindful of legal responsibilities, obligations and limitations, he clearly paid attention to the human factor and gave everyone a chance to be heard. I might also mention that he bought in additional chairs so that no one was left outside the room.

Mayor Tagliaferri has high ambitions to take Jim McGintys seat in the up-coming bi-election for Fremantle. When council colleagues where asked to comment on Mr Tagliaferri, one was quoted as saying, “Much of my time is spent trying to clean up the mess made by the mayor with his poor decisions and stunts, and that is what I am wholly focused on at the moment, addressing the crisis at the Fremantle Markets.”

Another councillor was quoted as saying, “I would much rather support another candidate who… (has) a reasonable ego.” A man of the people – indeed!

It seems that the Freo Markets, the stall-holders and the ratepayers have been screwed around by greed, ego and personal agendas but there is even more at stake than that.

We are in a recession and responsible leaders and hard working taxpayers are all making hard, complex and mindful choices about how to turn things around. I see the issues of Freo markets as a microcosmic view of the world stage. I think world-wide we all see clearly that this entire mess is a matter of greed and it’s now the workers who are financially bailing out the administrators.

Governments, banking industries and the big end of town have been forced to realize that it is, ‘the little people,’ who have always held the economy together. The smart ones have already swung into action to protect and support the retail and manufacturing industries. You can almost hear them screaming “Nurture the workers”.

Tagliaferri and the Murdoch boys must be living in a bubble. Are they oblivious to the precarious position that the stall-holders are in and are they completely blind to the fact that it is the Markets which finance them? If they lose the stall-holders, they lose the stalls and that means they will lose the Markets. Didn’t anyone point out that this is exactly what happened with the previously successful Pavilion Markets in Subi?

When someone is willing to give a new idea a go, they need a low cost opportunity to test themselves. The Government has been handing out millions of dollars over the years to finance and mentor new enterprises and all along The Freo Markets has encouraged and supplied a perfect venue for such creative and innovative people. These are people who have not gone looking for government hand-outs and have got themselves up and running. Many are still there after decades and many have gone on to bigger and better things. Actually, it really would be good business sense for the government to subsidise the markets to encourage and support such people; it would certainly be much cheaper than paying them dole money, lending start up costs and staffing mentors.

There are also a good number of people past retirement age working at the markets. These people could easily have sat back and accepted a pension but instead they have continued to be self-employed and self sufficient. I know of at least one stall holder who is over eighty and still actively working his stall with no desire to retire.

Many of the stall-holders are single parents and again they could be receiving government benefits but they have chosen to finance their own business and are fully self-supportive. However, if they are forced to pay the new rents then I think many will realize that their profits will not be much more than pensions and not worth the time or the stress.

The Government also spends a bomb on advertising and promoting tourism. The Freo Markets are already known world-wide and don’t even require expensive promotion. I think it’s time that the Tourism Board got onboard this argument and protected one of its greatest assets. The Freo markets bring tourism dollars into Fremantle and into WA.

Let’s stop treating it like a shopping venue and encourage its uniqueness.

Commercially it is already a profitable and successful enterprise. Any fool knows that you don’t fix what aint broke. If you lose the people who have made it what it is or if you change the nature of what it is, then you lose something very special and much loved. To even suggest that Freo Markets needs to be similar to other markets is just indicative of the ignorance and arrogance of the current administrators.

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Saturday, April 04, 2009

john and jamie murdoch - cameleons?

Fremantle Special Council Meeting Tuesday 31st March 2008

The Stallholders Association thanks the Council for calling this Special Meeting and those councilors who have seen fit to listen to the stallholders and to recognize the markets future is at a crossroads.

As the Secretary of the Stallholders Association, I speak with a lot of stallholder’s and I can tell you tonight that the questions they want answers to are:
“Why is this happening”
“Will my business be viable”.
“What about the future?”

Fremantle Markets is an unquestionable success. It is an elusive mix and as stallholders we are proud of the markets and the community that has grown around it. Its vibrant, unique and irreplaceable.
That’s why we are here tonight and why we are willing to keep coming back…we are determined not to lose what we have helped create.

We are in touch with our customers, hear their comments and intimately know the market environment. The markets are not just “a thing”.. it has a life and that life is the stallholders …..without us it’s an empty building.

We are bewildered by the current mess we find ourselves in.

One question the Council has to ask itself is how has it been allowed to degenerate into this when the Working Group was established to prevent it?

The agenda items are just some of the issues, but, more importantly for the City and councilors to consider are the reasons behind the downward spiral in confidence and morale at the Markets.

At the centre of this are unsustainable rent increases but equally important is the dictatorial style of management. These boys are chameleons, what the council sees is not what we see.

In last years Council survey, 58% of stallholders were happy to enter into a 5 year agreement with management. That’s not overwhelming support within itself but if you conducted that survey today the results would be dramatically lower.

Jamie claims publicly that, “over half have happily accepted these increases”.
But what he doesn’t say is …this group is predominantly casual stalls….who have to be happy!

The rent increases need to be fair and equitable for everyone.
How can it be when you assessed market rent at $550,000, that’s an annual increase of $400 a stall ….. then permanent stalls are slugged an extra $4000,…….. a 1000% hike….. And I’m being very conservative!

That makes our rents right up at the top of the highest market rents in the country. These are rents comparable to major shopping centres. …….THIS IS A MARKET, NOT THE GALLERIA.


As retailers we understand markup and if in the long term, it’s excessive, your customers will desert you because they know, they have been ripped off.
And that’s how the stallholders feel… “RIPPED OFF”.

The Murdoch’s claim that rents have been too cheap… it’s not justification, it’s an excuse as are the wild claims in their marketing plan that stallholders turnover on average half a million dollars a year. Who dreams up these figures?

We are already seeing more empty casual stalls, and permanents, who have been hit with their increases, are starting to feel the reality of falling returns.
Trying to lift your prices to cover these rent hikes is simply not on with the current economic woes,

Two stallholders have just walked away; others sold out of long term businesses for little money. It’s scant return for years of dedication.

Stallholders don’t want to leave… they love the markets but now find themselves re-assessing their future and looking elsewhere for alternative premises. These have been sound successful enterprises just unable or unwilling to pay crippling rents. We can’t afford to lose good people.

For FMPL it’s not just about replacing good long term operators, but keeping them. These people are not just entries in an accounting ledger.

We acknowledge we have to move forward with the times, and new initiatives need to be undertaken, however we do not want Fremantle Markets, a premier market in Australia to fall into the trap of so many others that end up homogonous and boring because interesting and innovative operators are driven out through high rents…..

The Stallholder’s Association recommendation to rectify this is to reintroduce stallholder rents indexed to Council increases. The historic evidence is, this system works successfully. I know management are publicly critical of subsidized rents, however, the Murdoch family have been happy to re-enter a number of long term leases as beneficiaries of it over the past 30 years.

The Council, local businesses and broader community have also profited from the success it brings.

Unfortunately the other issue I raised in relation to the dictatorial management style will not be that easily addressed.

The Stallholders Association, who represent the majority of stallholder’s, urge councilors to vote in favour of the agenda items.


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