Norman Lacy

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  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Bone, Pamela (2006). Up We Grew: Stories of Australian Childhoods. Melbourne University Press.
  2. ICA website
  3. Education Department Annual Report, Victorian Government Printer, June 1981, page 7
  4. Ridley College website
  5. 1 2 3 4 "Lacy, Norman Henry". re-member. Parliament of Victoria . Retrieved 24 August 2008.
  6. Barry Jones, A Thinking Reed, Allen & Unwin, 2006.
  7. 1 2 3 4 Walter Jona, People, Parliament and Politics, Tertiary Press, 2006, p 178
  8. Minutes of the Victorian Parliamentary Liberal Party September 1977
  9. Murray Landt - Past VPPA President
  10. http://40yearsof.arts.vic.gov.au/pages/seventies/milestone24/index.html [ bare URL ]
  11. Victorian Arts Centre Bill Explanatory Second Reading Speech by the Hon. Norman Lacy MP Minister of the Arts in the Legislative Assembly on 21 November 1979
  12. Victorian Arts Centre website
  13. Victorian Arts Report 1979-1980 7th Annual Report Victorian Council of the Arts and Victorian Ministry of the Arts, Government Printer, page 8
  14. Vicki Fairfax, The Place Across the River: The Story of the Building of the Victorian Arts Centre, Macmillan, 2001,
  15. Fairfax, Vicki (2001). The Place Across the River: The Story of the Building of the Victorian Arts Centre. Macmillan.
  16. Fairfax, Vicki (2001). The Place Across the River: The Story of the Building of the Victorian Arts Centre. Macmillan.
  17. Fairfax, Vicki (2001). The Place Across the River: The Story of the Building of the Victorian Arts Centre. Macmillan.
  18. The Victorian College of the Arts Bill Explanatory Second Reading Speech by the Hon. Norman Lacy, M.P. Minister for the Arts in the Legislative Assembly of the Parliament of Victoria on 19 March 1981.
  19. The Victorian College of the Arts Bill Explanatory Second Reading Speechibid Lacy laid out a rationale for the re-constitution of the College under a VCA specific Act which was derived firstly "from the quite specific demands and circumstances of preparing young artists for professional practise." He asserted that "the basic concept upon which the college is built is that young artists intending to enter careers as practitioners in their various fields are best assisted to achieve their ambitions in a milieu of continuous artistic activity and endeavour of a fully professional nature. To the extent that artistic education is separated from normal professional practice it is so much less effective." Secondly, the rationale related to the adjacent location of the VCA campus to the National Gallery of Victoria and the Victorian Arts Centre. He said that this "Greater Arts Centre concept is central to the Government's decision to reconstitute the college by separate statute as well as to the development of the arts in general. It represents a simple, readily achievable and highly effective means of creating a substantial milieu of continuous professional activity of the highest standards. It also has ramifications which extend far beyond the college and its partner institutions. Its implementation will shape and invigorate the arts in many ways and lead to a dynamic, cultural and social facility without peer in Australia" and that it "afforded an unparalleled opportunity and challenge to present total programmes in the arts which should encourage creative exchanges between the art forms, give inspiration to students of the arts and provide for the public an experience which few places in the world can match." The Government therefore believed that the VCA's role was substantially different from other educational institutions.
  20. The Second Reading Speech on the Film Victoria Bill presented to the Legislative Assembly of the Parliament of Victoria by the Hon. Norman Lacy M.P. Minister for the Arts and Minister of Educational Services, 6 October 1981
  21. ibid page 2. "Over the last few years the view has been expressed that the quality of educational television should be improved, that local production initiatives should be encouraged and that distribution services should be rationalised. This has been evident in official enquiries into the granting of broadcast licenses, at ministerial conferences and in published reports. In response I set up the Interim Board for Educational Film and Television in April 1980. .... The views of the Interim Board have been conveyed to me through numerous progress reports and have been influential in developing the concept of Film Victoria. .... another substantial influence on this Bill was my visit last year to the Children's Television Workshop in New York and the Ontario Educational Communications Corporation in Toronto."
  22. ibid page 2
  23. ibid page 7. "Preliminary steps have been taken ..... to develop high quality television programs for children. With the passage of this Bill, Victoria will be in a better position to continue these developments, to link in with initiatives which may be undertaken by the proposed Australian Children's Television Foundation and to tap into the resources of the private sector of the film and television industry. I would expect Film Victoria to take up the challenge to produce good children's drama for commercial television and to fill the present void in this area of children's television programming."
  24. Heide Museum of Modern Art website
  25. "Arts Flashback 1970s: Meat Market becomes a craft centre". 14 February 2017. Archived from the original on 14 February 2017. Retrieved 25 April 2024.
  26. http://www.michaelkirby.com.au/images/stories/speeches/1980s/vol9/1982/303-National_Book_Council___A_Year_of_Difficulty_and_Achievement.pdf [ bare URL PDF ]
  27. The Hon. Mr. Justice Michael Kirby, National Book Council Annual Report, January 1982,page 1-2 "Book House is an exhilarating project. Probably the happiest occasion of the year was the opening by the Honourable Norman Lacy MP, Victorian Minister for the Arts, of Book House, Melbourne on 8 December 1981. Mr. Lacy was introduced to a representative cross section of people involved in the world of books in Australia by our Chairman, Dr. Stephen Murray-Smith. Without the support of the Victorian Government, and the interest of the Minister, this novel enterprise would not have been possible. Mr. Lacy was a minister of religion, before, he became a Minister of the Crown in 1979. The precedent for this transfer were not suspicious, St. Thomas á Becket and Cardinal Wolsey being two precursors who sprang to my mind."
  28. Murray Landt - Past President Victorian Primary Principals Association - "The years 1980 and 1981 were very significant years in the history of state education in Victoria. For the first time in eighty years there was a complete restructure of the Education Department. Minister Norman Lacy whilst attending a two-month course at the Australian Administrative Staff College at Mount Eliza devised a model in which the Director-General was replaced by a group of managers. At the end of 1981, he Government legislated to scrap the teaching divisions (Primary, Secondary and Technical) and to remove the statutory bodies (The Committee of Classifiers and the Teachers' Tribunal). ...a firm of business consultants (P.A. Australia) was used to implement the Government's plans."
  29. Alan Hunt and Norman Lacy, Strategies and Structures for Education in Victoria, Victorian Government Printer, 1980
  30. M Frazer, J Dunstan, P Creed Eds., "Implementing Change" in Perspectives on Organisational Change, Longmans, 1985
  31. Education (Amendment) Bill Explanatory Second Reading Speech by The Hon. Norman Lacy MP Minister of Educational Services in the Legislative Assembly on 10 September 1981
  32. Aims and Objectives of Education in Victoria Ministerial Statement by The Hon A.J.Hunt MLC Minister of Education in the Legislative Council and The Hon Norman Lacy MP Assistant Minister of Education in the Legislative Assembly on 12 December 1979
  33. The Hon Norman Lacy MP, Minister of Educational Services. "Education Amendment Bill – 2nd Reading Speech" via Internet Archive.
  34. Education (Amendment) Bill Explanatory Second Reading Speech by The Hon. Norman Lacy MP Minister of Educational Services in the Legislative Assembly on 10 September 1981
  35. The Age, 21 January 1981
  36. New Directions in Physical Education A Ministerial Statement by The Hon. Norman Lacy MP Minister of Educational Services in the Legislative Assembly on 17 September 1981
  37. Health and Human Relations Education Education Department of Victoria 15 March 1982
  38. The Age, 25 June 1981
  39. Andrew Spaull, A History of the Australian Education Council 1936-1986, Allen & Unwin, 1987, pp 285-288
  40. Australian Children's Television Foundation Annual Report 2001-2002, page 16 - The Hon Norman Lacy, former Victorian Minister for the Arts and Educational Services at the ACTF's 20th Anniversary Symposium - "The Eyes of the Child:The World They’ll See in the 21st Century", 20 March 2002 at The Chapter House, St Paul’s Cathedral, in Melbourne, Victoria, "There are not a lot of events in my career about which I look back on with a deep sense of satisfaction. But amongst the most satisfying of them is the moment when I took the punt and asked Dr Edgar to come and work for me half time in a 'dingy little office with its stingy ray of sunlight' on Exhibition St, here in Melbourne and to begin working on turning her vision into a reality. And the rest as they say is history. But what a rich history of achievement in 'caring for kids' it has been."
  41. Patricia Edgar, Bloodbath: A Memoir of Australian Television, Melbourne University Press, 2006
  42. 'The Art of Getting Things Done' by Patricia Edgar in Share Visions - Women in Television, Annette Blonski and Hilary Glow Eds. Australian Film Commission 1999 page 30 "Norman Lacy, the Victorian Minister for the Arts and Education, happened to read a paper I’d given for the annual Grierson Lecture in which I had proposed the establishment of a foundation for children’s television. He asked me to see him because he said he liked the idea and I and others set about gathering support. Lacy took the idea to the AEC (the Council of Ministers of Education). After long and extensive lobbying of State governments and Canberra politicians, we succeeded."
  43. Senate Legislative and General Purpose Standing Committees The First 20 Years (1970-1990) - Employment Education and Training Archived 4 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  44. Australian Children's Television Foundation website
  45. Andrew Spaull ibid
  46. Letters to the Editor, The Age, 10 July 1980
  47. a speech by the Hon. Norman Lacy MP, Assistant Minister of Education at the Opening of the Seminar of Special Assistance Resource Teachers at the Hawthorn State College on 15 December 1980
  48. The Special Assistance Program A Ministerial Statement on New Directions in Literacy and Numeracy by the Hon. Norman Lacy MP Minister of Educational Services in the Legislative Assembly on 9 September 1981
  49. The Hon. Mr. Justice Michael Kirby, ibid, "But there is no doubt that the Minister has used his public office to good effect in ensuring support (including financial support) for the establishment of Book House in Melbourne. He has taken a special interest in the problem of illiteracy and the remedial teaching of English. In his department, he is known as the 'Minister for Reading'. Personally, I can think of no prouder title for an Australian Minister to hold."
  50. The Age, 4 March 1985
  51. Pamela Bone ibid
  52. Barry Jones, Sleepers, Wake!: Technology and the Future of Work, Oxford University Press, 1982
  53. Bone, Pamela (2006). Up We Grew: Stories of Australian Childhoods. Melbourne University Press.
  54. The Role of the DSS Designer: A Study of Computer Industry and Public Sector Perceptions, by Norman Lacy, Dissertation submitted as part requirement for the degree of Master of Science in Management Studies of Durham University Business School, 1984
  55. Bone, Pamela (2006). Up We Grew: Stories of Australian Childhoods. Melbourne University Press.
  56. Norman Lacy, "Leadership in Australia" in The Practising Manager, July 1990
  57. Yan Jiao China-Australia Management Centre, "Enrolment Application Brochure", August 1993
  58. Yan Jiao China-Australia Management Centre, "Enrolment Application Brochure", August 1993
  59. President's Report 2007-2008, Information Technology Contract & Recruitment Association, 19 August 2008
  60. Bone, Pamela (2006). Up We Grew: Stories of Australian Childhoods. Melbourne University Press.
  61. President's Report 2007-2008, Information Technology Contract & Recruitment Association, 19 August 2008
  62. Bone, Pamela (2006). Up We Grew: Stories of Australian Childhoods. Melbourne University Press.
  63. President's Report 2007-2008, Information Technology Contract & Recruitment Association, 19 August 2008
  64. Income tax: the meaning of personal services income
  65. Australian Financial Review, Plea for Leniency on Contractors, "The Howard Government may be forced to accept a lower revenue yield from its planned crackdown on contractors, prompting industry to lobby senior ministers for a more sympathetic contractor test." 24 March 2000
  66. Australian Financial Review, ATO unreasonably rejects travel claims of IT contractors, 7 August 2012
  67. itwire, Independent contractors bill next month, 26 February 2006
  68. ABC transcript from The World Today, Government Introduces Independent Contractors Bill to Parliament, 22 June 2006
  69. Independent Contractors Act 2006
  70. O'Malley Nick, Workplace Reporter, New Law Threatens Pay Rights of Workers, Sydney Morning Herald, 23 June 2006
  71. Charter of Contractual Fairness

Sources

Norman Lacy
Norman Lacy MP.jpg
The Hon Norman Lacy MP in 1979, aged 38.
Member of Parliament
for Warrandyte
In office
1973–1982