Ian Smith: It's a shame Adelaide is crumbling.
Posted: Sun Oct 10, 2010 6:53 pm
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/op ... 5936199774
Grain of salt type stuff, or a few home truths? Normally I don't take much notice of this type of drivel but it certainly hurts when it's the top banner of the front page of the Weekend Australian under the title "What's Wrong With Adelaide?"It's a shame Adelaide is crumbling
Ian Smith From: The Australian October 09, 2010 12:00AM
SOUTH Australia's parochial capital declines further as other cities jostle globally.
ADELAIDE is stagnant. While the cliches are true - including its relaxed lifestyle, being a great place for kids, quality schools, beautiful and accessible surrounds including the hills, vineyards and beaches - the status quo is no longer good enough; certainly not if we want national relevance to be a goal.
Having once competed with Melbourne, Perth and Brisbane, South Australia's capital is more of a match for Geelong or Townsville. Without action at all levels of politics, the city of churches' torpidity will remain in stark contrast to interstate vibrancy.
There is only one ASX-listed company of global significance headquartered in Adelaide, Santos. The big law firms, investment banks and other international professional firms service South Australia from afar.
Shops are closed on public holidays, and when they are open the city has few of the global brands seen in other states or overseas. While a couple of new hotels have opened recently, there is no accommodation of the quality international business leaders expect.
The "university city" tag was true more than a decade ago but we are now a long way behind others; indeed the University of Adelaide was 73rd in the world in this year's Times Higher Education World University Rankings. It was behind the University of Melbourne (36th), the Australian National University (43rd) and the University of Sydney (71st).
A string of councils has been unable to embrace metropolitan development and successive state governments' reluctance to reform local government has seen Adelaide languish as other cities thrive. It is here we should start.
The coming city council elections offer little hope for change; what should be a group one event would be lucky to qualify for maiden status with five candidates of little apparent consequence.
Better candidates were not forthcoming because there is little appeal in the job. The paucity of experience offers the chance for the Rann government to take control. It would be in the state's interests.
If the SA government or indeed the opposition had the resolve, Adelaide could become a super council responsible for an expanded area, working constructively with all tiers of governments and generating more funds to benefit the city.
Brisbane did this many years ago and administers a budget of more than $3 billion, while Melbourne brought together local councils across the city to form effective local government conglomerates that work more efficiently with the state government.
My old boss, Victorian premier Jeff Kennett, dissolved 210 councils, dismissed 1600 elected councillors and created 78 new councils through amalgamations. That is reform.
From once being a drawcard to the state, leading nationally in areas such as the arts, Adelaide risks becoming a negative to SA.
The state economy is booming. Unemployment is at historic lows as immense wealth flows from mining. The defence industry has done well and agriculture should have a good year.
There are a number of successful niche companies led by many people who love Adelaide, too. They are in areas as diverse as renewable energy, biotechnology, health, new media and food, but the chances are their businesses will remain boutique or be picked up by interstate or international players.
While other capitals boast many global companies, Adelaide is starved of international business relevance.
Little has been achieved to woo new players to establish themselves in the city, to provide real corporate activity and, most critically, to provide employment alternatives for the state's young graduates.
They continue to flock west and east. Retaining smart people in their 20s and 30s is perhaps Adelaide's most desperate challenge.
The immediate future is also threatened by the state's comparative lack of political influence nationally.
Federally, we have lost the depth of powerful SA politicians who served in the cabinets of prime ministers Bob Hawke, Paul Keating and John Howard.
Senator Penny Wong alone has real clout, but she is in a catch-22 situation as the toe-cutting Finance Minister. She must be wary of conflict in looking too much after her own state from such an exalted position. Mark Butler in Mental Health and Ageing impresses many and Don Farrell, Parliamentary Secretary for Sustainability and Urban Water, is of obvious influence in the party, but both are a long way from muscling in on big decisions.
With Nick Minchin retiring, Christopher Pyne is our only voice at the federal opposition's top table. While senator Simon Birmingham is on the rise, and senator Cory Bernardi and MP Jamie Briggs have a future, they are some time away from key roles.
Oh, for the days of Mick Young, Chris Hurford, Neal Blewett and Nick Bolkus or Alexander Downer, Minchin, Amanda Vanstone and Robert Hill.
Contributing further to the slowly sinking feeling is the demise of local media. First, Adelaide is a one-newspaper town. A strong and bold press should be one fundamental ingredient of a city's development. The Advertiser carries the burden alone.
Furthermore, there has been the demise of other local media, including a state-based The 7.30 Report and even A Current Affair. Those that are here tend to sweat the small stuff, despite the bigger issues demanding attention.
Time has been wasted in an extraordinary way on two urgently needed pieces of infrastructure.
Despite the fact existing sports facilities consist of the god-forsaken, windswept AAMI Stadium and a quaintly out-of-date Adelaide Oval, the debate about a new stadium has been embarrassing. Similarly, plans for a new hospital were derailed for months by a vocal few who chose to ignore the fact that, when built, the hospital could be the most modern and well-equipped in the southern hemisphere.
While other cities would have built both facilities by now, in Adelaide such sluggishness is nothing new.
A couple of years ago, the sandals and socks brigade prevented the upgrading of Victoria Park. This rare jewel, a racetrack literally minutes from a city centre, could not be developed to provide night racing or other activities for residents and visitors.
Melbourne or Perth would have jumped at such a chance, but Adelaide fostered tumbleweeds.
Those same parklands play host to the Clipsal 500, a successful event.
However, in line with the demands of the protesters who took NIMBY politics to a new level, Clipsal buildings are temporary; put up and taken down each year during a nine-month period. Amazing, but a fact.
Ian Smith is a partner in Adelaide-based advisory business Bespoke Approach with former ministers Nick Bolkus and Alexander Downer.