News

Bannister Downs Dairy | International Women’s Day 2023

In honour of International Women’s Day, we wish to celebrate the two inspirational women leading our business : our co-owners Sue Daubney (our Managing Director) and Mrs Gina Rinehart who have formed a very special relationship spanning the last 9 years. Their passion for Bannister Downs and their work ethic is unrivalled! We are very lucky to have a large number of women here at Bannister Downs working hard every day in diverse roles to ensure our customers get to enjoy our delicious and nutritious dairy products. We are so grateful for all the amazingly talented women who make up the Bannister Downs team!

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Twenty Australian women influencing the agricultural industry | Gina Rinehart

Gina Rinehart may have made her fortune in mining, but she has also put her stamp on Australian agriculture. That was clear when she stepped forward to buy the famous S Kidman and Co holdings in 2016, making her Australia’s biggest landowner, controlling more than 10 million hectares. Ms Rinehart has since been one of the most active purchasers of Australia farmland, but in the past few years has diluted her property holdings. However, she still owns a commanding six million hectares, running about 240,000 cattle, with an eye on new purchases along the east coast. Ms Rinehart, who is not reluctant in making her views known, is a strong advocate for Australian agriculture.

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Hancock Group | Building an Exceptional Future

Women play an essential role at all levels of the Hancock Group. Executive Chairman, Mrs Gina Rinehart, is an industry leader, providing a role model and inspiration for other women. We are proud to be an organisation committed to developing opportunities for women across our operations.

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Weekly property review: The changing face and future of S. Kidman & Co

THIS week’s property review looks at reasons behind the change in direction for Gina Rinehart’s two pastoral businesses – Hancock Agriculture and the S. Kidman & Co joint venture – and some interesting developments in the property space concerning the companies. Nobody has been more active in the Australian grazing property market than Ms Rinehart over the past five years, both as a buyer and seller. When Mrs Rinehart decided to offload eight properties spanning 1.9 million hectares in 2020, some media saw this as first signs of her ‘bowing out’ of agriculture. The claims couldn’t have been further from the truth. Australia’s richest woman was simply realigning her strategy to improve the genetics and quality of her cattle and also create a better balance between her breeding and finishing country. There’s also compelling evidence it was about reducing her exposure to northern live export trade, in favour of traditional Australian production and processing.

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Retirees asked to help fill labour shortages in Warrnambool as council tries new approach

National Seniors Australia chief advocate Ian Henschke said Australia could learn from New Zealand’s approach, with about 24.7 per cent of people over 65 still working in that country. “We’ve heard of people [in Australia] where they work up until a certain hour and then they tell their employer, look, if I work beyond this, I start to lose too much from my pension,” Mr Henschke said. He said Australia needed a fairer system that did not reduce pension benefits when a retired person worked. Instead, they would be taxed in an income bracket that included their new income and their pension payments.

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Ian Henschke Chief Advocate for National Seniors Australia emphasises that the work bonus for pensioners should just be the beginning of national reforms | A Current Affair

Ian Henschke from National Seniors Australia. I think we need to recognise that we’ve got a jobs crisis in Australia, 450,000 plus jobs going begging and we’ve got 4.5 million Australians over 65. Ian says the work bonus should just be the beginning of major reforms in the system. He’d like to see Australia follow in the footsteps of New Zealand, where pensioners can work as much as they like without losing benefits. New Zealand has a workforce participation rate of 71%, we’ve got 66%, they’ve got 5% more of their population working and most of it is older workers. That’s where they’re getting their workforce from. Let’s take the handbrake off the economy and let those pensioners work and let those retirees work.

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Let people work | by Ian Henschke | Chief Advocate National Seniors Australia

AUSTRALIA is facing a workforce crisis it’s never seen before. Job vacancies are approaching half a million, dragging business and economic growth down and fuelling a cost-of-living crisis. The hardest hit sectors include agriculture, hospitality, mining, tourism, and the caring industries. The Federal Government has raised the yearly permanent migration quota by 35,000 – but workforce shortages are not going to be solved by immigration alone. We need to boost participation and support people with limited income and savings to earn more. We also need to boost tax revenue to pay for health, aged care, and other social services. To fix these economic and socioeconomic challenges we must “let people work”.

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