Monday, February 01, 2010

The Human face behind the stories

The photos below are just a small snapshot of the human faces behind the current carnage. The Murdoch's have referred to ex-stallholders as 'yesterdays people'. Are these today's people and who are tomorrows people?


Julia as pleasant as ever pretending it's business as usual. 2 hours after I took this photo she was packed up and on her way out. Within weeks of buying her shop she was advised of the rent increases. In just over a year she walks away with nothing but heartache and lose of initial investment.
Ed closing down the previously owned family business. His mum and dad are at a loss to understand. No reason, no explanation just 'go'.
An Australiana shop. Perfect for a tourism icon, but not so, according to the Murdoch's. Gone by the end of the day.

Sweet enough to pose for a photo. The smile hides the sadness of packing up before the sun sets.
Pretty box's don't hide the fact that the shop is no longer occupied. Perhaps they contain her Christmas surprise - a vacation.





PAST MEMBERS & FRIENDS

It is also appropriate to recognize the contribution made by the following long term stallholders to the markets who have left the markets, for one reason or another, since the lease negotiations commenced just over 2 years ago. Some have been evicted, others decided to leave because of the high rents and outgoings, others who weren’t offered the 5 years tenure promised and yes some, who have sold their business but, in most instances, for far less than it was previously worth.


Richard Murphy - Aromatica Soaps, Chris Jones - Mosaics, Alison Viera - Freo Hats, Steve Beard - Hammocks, Cuong - Leather Bags, Mary Cole - Antique Corner, Bob Williams - Fish Corner, Kylie Larsen - Artist, Penny Bannister - Antique Books, Nathan Baws - Naturopath, Bill Hopkins - Toys, Sue Smith - Asian Handicrafts, Mick Marlin - Art Prints/Framing, Sue - Bushtucker Foods, Peter & Lam - Farmers Lane Food, Herman Visser - Sunglasses, Wen - Fruit & Veg, Carol & Ralph - Paramor Crystals, Hulusi Atahan - Wildflowers in Resin, Mick - Candles, Anne Hughes - Rainbow Magic, Lorraine Ryan - Reiki, Annie - Artist/Silk Scarves, Wayne Bynder - Bootja Aboriginal, Ant & Julie - Photographer/Prints, Nellie - Ceramic Artist, Pat Mason - Woodturner,Patrick & Lynne - Wireworks, Lizzie - Cake of Soap, Colin and Marilyn Wright - Bonsai, Jerry Drenthe - Mr. Organic, Billy Ho - Fruit & Veg, Fan - Fruit & Veg, Scotty’s - Fruit & Veg, Gloria Stewart - High as a Kite, Richard Dixon - CrocodileMagnets, Gloria - Aladdins Kebab, Kerry & Lyn - The Bali Shop, Looch - Tricycle Clothing, Lee - Fruit & Veg, Maureen - The Box Shop, Mei Mei - Chinese Emporium, Subhi & Annupo - Floonies, Ken & Julia - Ken’s Art,
And ...



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Saturday, May 23, 2009

take the money and run

Richard Branson is a very successful and clever businessman. He has a lot of fun, he is admired and respected and he is very, very wealthy. When asked about his phenomenal success he says simply, ‘I look after my staff’. His formula is simple; he believes that when the staff are happy they work like they own the business. They take on the responsibility of making the customers happy and when the customers are happy they keep coming back. This makes Richard Branson and his shareholders very happy and very successful.

In light of the current recession it’s pretty easy to see that many of the huge business collapses are the result of administrator’s obscene and reckless greed. With an insatiable lust for profit big business has replaced good personnel with cheap technology; they have severely reduced staff, abandoned customer service, invented dodgy service fees, taken jobs overseas and returned inferior products and services. Short-term they all made out like bandits but it never was sustainable. The world economy is collapsing and look who is being asked to bail them out – the taxpayers! Yes, the working man is now being asked to pick up the tab and bail out the very people who have robbed and betrayed them.

If we ever manage to find our way back will we know better and will we do better? I think not. Just look around and you can see the same scenario playing out all around you.

A successful business can not survive on a smash and grab basis. Richard Branson’s very simply formula applies to any business; if they have any intention of going the distance. Overpricing or under servicing is either a matter of stupidity or it is a deliberate attempt at grabbing the money and running.

This of course brings me back to the madness of the Fremantle markets. When the management appears to be destroying a successful enterprise you can’t help but wonder why. There really isn’t much to manage; basically they are landlords and although the markets are under one roof they are actually run by all of the small businesses operating within. It is not a matter of real estate, it is fundamentally a retail outlet, but over time it has evolved into something much more than just that.

People don’t just pop into the markets to shop. It’s a place to go on weekends, almost like a work of art in motion. You go and spend time there like it’s an exhibition; you take visitors down to check it out, you look for unique and unusual products, listen to buskers, interact with merchants, find bargains and homemade things and get caught up in the sounds and smells and colours.

Freo markets is not just another of the cheap junk markets which most cities have and until recently they have attracted innovative people and ideas. Many of the stallholders have been there for at least 10 years and some for almost 30. They have relationships with customers and are as much a part of the markets as the products are. It is a community within its own right and it is filled with character and characters.

When the Murdoch brothers (the management) renewed their lease with the Fremantle council everything changed and became crazy. They both make a lot of money from the rents and have done pretty much bugga all as the stall holders evolved and went about making the markets what they are today.

For reasons beyond comprehension the Murdoch’s increased the rents by around 80% and then announced that they would change the very nature of the markets and redevelop the outdoor area into a glorified ‘Italian style’ delicatessen. Established businesses were stolen by legal technicalities, others were so severely downsized that they were pretty much bullied into leaving and no matter how they want to dress it up or justify it they have betrayed, lied to, mislead and robbed the people who are the markets.

I know that I have been accused of conspiracy theory before and that much of my questioning does not provide answers or facts and details. All I can say is that when something doesn’t make any sense at all it’s because it is either untrue or because someone is hiding something.

Why won’t the Murdoch’s show their valuation? Could it be that they never had one done?

Why was that lease renewed before the old one expired?

Why didn’t the lease go out to public tender?

Why won’t the Murdoch’s or the Council buy out the stalls that are being destroyed by the redevelopment?

Why does the head lease exclude the stall-holders rights and give carte blanche to the Murdoch’s? Did the Murdoch’s draft this lease? Did the council really examine it?

Why weren’t stall holders or their association consulted about the changes?

Why was Richard Murphy (Stall-holders spokesperson) really evicted?

Who can’t predict that the redevelopment is going to be a complete failure? Wasn’t that Mayor Tagliaferri’s idea to begin with? Was that a condition of the lease?

Who doesn’t know that Morley markets, e-shed and Canningvale aren’t offering great deals for Freo stall-holders to come and join them?

Who can’t see that when the stall holders leave or fail then the market collapses?

Who doesn’t understand that when rents go up - prices go up and sales go down?

Who doesn’t know that when the markets go - the tourists stop coming and that business's throughout Freo lose?

WHO CARES?

Not the Murdoch’s. Why? Could it be that they have no intention of going the distance? Why else would they destroy or disregard the stallholders?

It would make sense if they didn’t care about the longevity or the success of the markets. What if they doubled the rent - which would makes the books look very attractive and then just on-sold the lease?

If this is true then let me laugh out loud now, because the stallholders will be long gone and the council and the Murdoch's will be left riding their big fat white elephant because I don’t believe that anyone will be lining up to take all of that on.

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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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Saturday, May 09, 2009

Letter to Mayor Peter Tagliaferri

Dear Peter,
I have just read the article below by Jessica Strutt. (West Aust News 8/5/9) It seems to me that there is a subtle suggestion that a labour candidate may do favours for donations. Now, don’t get me wrong here, I’m not making any accusations. It’s just that I saw Adele Carles and Alan Carpenter state outright that they were totally against this development.
You said you had not decided and were staying open minded about it.

I thought that was curious.

So, rather than make any judgments without the real facts I thought it would be wiser and fairer just to ask you point blank and that way we can avoid rumours and or innuendos.

Of course this kind of thinking can’t help but open up the possibility that something similar could have happened with the Freo Markets. Since I have had difficulty finding you down at city hall I thought you might do me the courtesy of shooting off a quick email. I has happy with your simple reply of ‘no’ the other week so a yes or no answer would be great now.

Questions:
Are you accepting donations from the north port development group?
And
Did the Murdoch’s offer donations for your campaign? If so, when? The exact date doesn’t really matter but was it around the time that the renewed lease was signed off on?


In anticipation of your reply I thank you. I know you are very busy at the moment but I would just hate to think that some people might think that a donation and a bribe would be similar.
Best Wishes
Sonya

An independent candidate in the Fremantle by-election claims people linked to the proposed North Port Quay development offered to assist his campaign if he agreed to preference Labor ahead of the Greens. Carmelo Zagami said two people connected with the $10 billion project, who he refused to name, made the offer during two meetings over the past week but he declined. The former Liberal Party member, who will direct preferences at the May 16 poll to the Greens’ Adele Carles, said yesterday he was concerned other candidates could be getting funding from those associated with the development but it was “difficult to trace”. Mr Zagami said the offer included volunteers to help on polling booths and paying for political advertising. “Basically the words were ‘we’ll give you whatever you want’,” he said. “They are of the belief that their project will not go anywhere if the Greens win.” Ms Carles, who is locked in a tight contest for the seat against Labor’s Peter Tagliaferri, was also concerned whether some candidates were receiving political donations from those linked to North Port Quay. “If this is actually happening this is a major concern to our democratic process,” she said. “I would like to see that investigated and come out in the open arena before Saturday, May 16.We saw what happened at Smiths Beach, we’ve seen what’s happened at Port Coogee. The public are sick and tired of this kind of corrupting influence in West Australian politics.” etc…

Replied the next day:

I have always had serious environmental concerns regarding this NPQ development .The answer to the two questions is No. No.


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Thursday, April 23, 2009

The Missing Mayor

Last nights rally for Richard Murphy and the following meeting of Fremantle Council was inspirational. Politics is not my gig but this one has me completely fascinated. Im not sure if its about Greed, Ego, Personal agendas or Ambition but things are out of control and people are being hurt. Mayor Tagliaferri seems to be largely responsible for the mess that the other councillors are desperately trying to clean up. He has had 18months (and more) to "Look into it" but last night he didn't even bother to chair the meeting.

Green's candidate Adele Carle has only had the story for a little over a week and yet she spent last week end walking the streets, talking with people and arranging a rally. SHE has done more this week than Tag's has done in the last few years.

Expect great things from this girl. Our 6 beautiful, passionate and ethical councillors finally convinced the others to step up and do something - the agreement was unanimous. Tagliaferri is now on his own and has been asked by Deputy Mayor John Dowson to resign.

Colin Wright called for the Eviction of the Murdoch's and the crowd roared in agreement. More on Colin's speech in the following blogs. Below is my little piece - addressed to "The Missing Mayor."

"I was offended by the mayors absence at the last meeting. Tonight, I am glad to see that he is not here again. It just confirms that he acknowledges his redundancy."

The old adage, “Don’t fix what aint broke” should be the catch cry of this fiasco.
.
The Markets have been the jewel in the crown of Fremantle for decades. Popular, profitable, successful, world renowned and much loved.

To take something that is unique, and turn it into something commonplace, is mindboggling.

Regardless of the fair market rent argument, it seems pretty clear that the proposed Market Super Deli is equally responsible for the price hikes. Basically, the current stallholders are being bullied into financing a venture, which will ultimately destroy their business as well as the markets.

Any fool can see, that people will not come from the outer suburbs to buy smallgoods which are readily available in most supermarkets. Who wants to taste wine at Freo markets, when they can sit at the Sail and Anchor or the Norfolk and drink what ever they like? Or they can cruise away, up to the swan valley. Fremantle is famous for fresh seafood and cafes, so why would the Markets want to compete in such an inferior way. Do you really expect tourists to come to Freo to experience the excitement of packaged meat?

No, Mr Tagliaferri, this is your pet project, and it’s personal for you. Go back to your deli and do what you love, but don’t inflict your emotional or psychological attachments on the Freo Markets.

There is so much I would like to say about the Murdoch’s, but what’s the point? We don’t expect anything from either party now –it’s up to the people of Fremantle to sort this out. After all, they do OWN the markets.

There is only one question that I would like to have answered, on record.

Do you, or will you, have any financial or personal interest in the market redevelopment?

Update: The mayor has replied and he said "No."




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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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