PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
27/07/1998
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
10951
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP PRESENTATION OF THE MASTER PLUMBERS AND MECHANICAL SERVICES ASSOCIATION OF AUSTRALIA 91ST GOLD MEDAL AND TRAINING AWARDS VICTORIAN ARTS CENTRE - MELBOURNE

E&OE..........................................................................................................................

Thank you very much to Mr McLelland and Mrs Henderson. To Mr and Mrs

Durham, Mr and Mrs Herbert; to Mr Kevin Sheedy, ladies and gentlemen.

Can I start my remarks by congratulating all of the young men and

women here today who will receive awards and recognition as a token

of your qualities, as a token of your professionalism and as a proper

recognition by your peers of your particular skills and your specialities.

It is for me quite an honour to address this awards ceremony and to

take the opportunity of saying what an enormous store the Government

places on apprenticeships and traineeships within the Australian community.

I endorse in the full the remarks that were made by Mr Durham about

the responsibility of all people in Government to ensure that the

maximum employment and apprenticeship opportunities are available

to young people.

I am particularly proud to say in that context that in the time that

the Government has been in office, the number of apprenticeships and

traineeships available will have risen from about 143,000 just over

two years ago, to in the order of 200,000 towards the end of this

year, and a result of our new apprenticeship and training system,

we have placed a much greater emphasis on improving the opportunities

for people - for men and women - in apprenticeships throughout all

areas of the Australian economy and throughout all areas of Australian

industry.

We have endeavoured to produce within the community a new ethic, a

new approach, a new era in relation to training and the options that

are available particularly to young people. We have, as I've

just mentioned, placed a greater emphasis on apprenticeships and traineeships

and we've tried to model those apprenticeships and traineeships

to suit the needs and the convenience of individual employers and

their employees, rather than trying to mould the desires and the needs

of individuals to a preconceived set notion of what ought to amount

to the right way of going about apprenticeships.

In addition to that, we have in recent weeks introduced a new system

of youth allowances which has profoundly altered the incentive that

used to exist under the old system away from that old system, where

the incentive was really to go on unemployment benefits rather than

to remain at school or to go into some kind of training. And the way

in which we have altered the system now means that there is a much

stronger incentive for young people to undertake training and far

less of an incentive for young people to go on unemployment benefits.

We have also introduced a work-for-the-dole scheme, whereby the community

in implementing the principle of what we call mutual obligation. And

that is if somebody can't get work in Australia, a decent society

has an obligation to give those people a decent level of social security

support, but it also has the right to ask of those people if it is

reasonable that they provide something in return for that social security

support.

We've also integrated into the apprenticeship system the notion

of school to work transition, and a number of the young men and women

who are receiving awards today are examples of that. And it is very

important that we see a greater connection and continuum between what

people learn at school and the skills that are required when they

leave school and enter the workforce. It is a trite expression for

any public figure to say today that we live in a world that is undergoing

great change. It is undergoing great change and whether we like it

or not, and there are some in our community who don't like it

- and I understand why they may not like it - but whether we like

it or not, every nation and every society must adjust itself to change.

There are some things in our society that quite properly we not only

want to hang on to but we should hang on to. As an Australian community,

we have certain received values that bind our society together. Those

values of decency, of recognising the individual worth of people irrespective

of their ethnic background, of encouraging tolerance and respect for

difference, of recognising that mateship and equality of treatment

have always been part of the Australian ethic, and hanging on to many

of those traditional values and attitudes that are so important to

keeping our society together. But hand-in-hand with that we must recognise

that we do live in a globalised world economy and unless Australia

competes, unless Australia is efficient, unless Australia's industries

are efficient, unless our training is modern and our training methods

are efficient and up-to-date we're not going to provide the jobs

and opportunities that particularly our young people will need as

the years go by.

That is why taking a few moments off for all of us, and particularly

the parents and friends of those who are receiving awards today, to

honour their abilities, to pay respects to the industry with which

they are associated, and to thank them for the contribution that they

are making to contemporary Australian society is so important.

I think part of a civilised society is to recognise and to honour

achievement and to honour success and today I know will be a source

of particular pride to the mothers and fathers and brothers and sisters

and friends of those who are going to receive awards. And I want all

of those people to savour this occasion and to enjoy the moment, because

you have played a role as we all know, as parents, as we live through

school and university examinations and other examinations with our

children, we all understand what it is like and we all have that great

sense of exhilaration when what our child or our brother or sister

has done is publicly recognised, and that is what today's ceremony

and awards presentation is all about. It is about recognising particular

skill and particular achievement. It is about honouring the importance

within our society of stable levels of employment. It is recognising

the importance of skilled trades within our community and it is also

recognising the restoration of the importance within modern Australia

of apprenticeships and traineeships.

To be quite frank, we went through a period in this country where

the importance of those things were down-graded. We became obsessed

as a society with university education to the detriment of other methods

of education and the other pathways to fulfilling employment. I'm

very happy to say that in recent years there's been a re-awakening

within the community of the importance of apprenticeships and traineeships

and a growing recognition that a holistic approach to learning and

education and instruction within the Australian community requires

a renewed emphasis on the sort of contributions that are going to

be honoured today.

Ladies and gentlemen it is a particular privilege for me as Prime

Minister to be here today. The association that is staging today's

presentation ceremony is of course of very very long standing, as

Mr Durham mentioned. It predates the formation of most professional

and trade organisations within Australia. And those who receive the

awards today are joining a very long and distinguished list of Australians

who've gone before them within this particular calling. So I

congratulate again all of those young men and women who are receiving

recognition today. I thank you for the contribution that you are making

towards a positive image of the modern Australia. I thank your association

for the contribution that it is making to the Australian economy and

I wish all of you well in your future professional careers, and in

your personal lives I wish you great success, good health and great

happiness.

Thank you.

[Ends]

10951