❓ Opposition MP questions the purchase of cows from the Royalties for Regions-subsidised Margaret River Cow Parade by agencies within the Minister's portfolio. The Minister's answer deflects the question by highlighting the parade's success and charitable contributions, while stating that no purchases were made.
AnsweredQoN 3955Legislative Assembly
Asked
7 September 2010
Member
Portfolio
Local Government; Heritage; Citizenship and Multicultural Interests
QuestionView source ↗
In relation to the Royalties for Regions-subsidised Margaret River Cow Parade, I ask whether any agencies, departments, associated entities or ministerial offices within the Minister’s portfolio have directly purchased any cows, or further subsidised the creation or purchase of a cow, from the Royalties for Regions-subsidised Margaret River Cow Parade; and
(a) if so, how many cows were purchased;
(b) if so, how much did each cow cost;
(c) if so, where is the cow intended to be located;
(d) if so, what is the handover date for the cow;
(e) if so, have any embellishments been made to the purchased cow;
(f) if so, what pen, fencing or housing will host the cow; and
(g) if so, what percentage of the cost involved copyright and royalties payments to overseas copyright holders?
(a) if so, how many cows were purchased;
(b) if so, how much did each cow cost;
(c) if so, where is the cow intended to be located;
(d) if so, what is the handover date for the cow;
(e) if so, have any embellishments been made to the purchased cow;
(f) if so, what pen, fencing or housing will host the cow; and
(g) if so, what percentage of the cost involved copyright and royalties payments to overseas copyright holders?
AnswerView source ↗
Answered
12 October 2010
Responded by
Minister for Local Government; Heritage; Citizenship and Multicultural Interests
Response time
35 days
It is noted members of the Opposition have vehemently opposed the highly successful cow parade initiative. The Cow Parade is world renown having featured in more than 50 cities throughout the world, including Paris, Tokyo and London. It is also noted the members Opposite have maintained opposition to the parade despite the resultant 15% increase in tourism numbers to Margaret River and the raising of $393,000 for charities including Telethon, the Starlight Foundation, August-Margaret River SES and the McGrath Foundation.
Ministerial Office
;
Department of Local Government including the Office of Multicultural Interests; Heritage Council of Western Australia
;
Metropolitan Cemeteries Board
and
National Trust of Australia (Western Australia)
(a) Nil
(b) - (g) Not applicable
Notice: This document is created or edited using unregistered or evaluation copy of rtLib valid for testing or development purposes only. To use it for productive or any other purposes please register it. You may purchase the license on
http://www.rtlib.com
Ministerial Office
;
Department of Local Government including the Office of Multicultural Interests; Heritage Council of Western Australia
;
Metropolitan Cemeteries Board
and
National Trust of Australia (Western Australia)
(a) Nil
(b) - (g) Not applicable
Notice: This document is created or edited using unregistered or evaluation copy of rtLib valid for testing or development purposes only. To use it for productive or any other purposes please register it. You may purchase the license on
http://www.rtlib.com
Explore WA Government Data
Search the full archive in the free dashboard, or query programmatically via API.
Explore more
Government Gazette
Appointments, regulatory notices, planning changes.
Hansard
Debates, questions, speeches and sentiment.
Tabled Papers
Reports and documents tabled in Parliament.
Committees
Committee profiles and recent reports.
Regulations
Subsidiary legislation with filters and summaries.
Bills
Proposed laws and parliamentary progress.
Acts
Current WA legislation and summaries.
Explanatory Memoranda
Bills with EMs (text/PDF) available.
Members
MP profiles, party breakdown and rankings.
Pollie Rankings
Data-driven rankings across 19 categories.
Amendment Chains
Track how schemes and regulations evolve over time.