New data from the Federal Government confirms Premier Jacinta Allan is continuing to neglect the jobs crisis in the Latrobe Valley, with the unemployment rate in Morwell sitting at a staggering 15.4 per cent.
The alarming figures represent a 2.6 per cent spike in the unemployment rate for the September 2024 quarter, up from 12.8 per cent in the June 2024 quarter.
The Nationals’ Member for Morwell, Martin Cameron, said the data flies in the face of Labor’s claims it is “creating jobs, not cutting jobs” in regional Victoria.
“Jacinta Allan has held senior positions in the Victorian Labor Government for 10 years, and for 10 years she has consistently failed the Latrobe Valley,” Mr Cameron said.
“Labor shut Hazelwood prematurely, shut the white paper mill at Maryvale, shut the sustainable native timber industry, and the result of this is an unemployment rate of 15.4 per cent.
“The closure of our coal-fired power stations – the economic heart of the Valley – will begin in just three years and amount to hundreds more job losses, yet there is no urgency from Labor to establish new industries.”
Mr Cameron said a trail of broken promises, failed investments, and inaction had exacerbated the jobs crisis.
“The deceptive promise the SEC would be ‘brought back to Morwell’ and create 59,000 jobs was nothing but a grab for votes,” Mr Cameron said.
“We were promised Morwell would become the centre of electric vehicle production with a manufacturing facility and 500 jobs, but that project was abandoned.
“We have the HESC project ready to go, which Labor admits has the potential to create ‘thousands of jobs’, but the Energy Minister’s anti-coal ideology has jeopardised its viability.
“Here in the Valley, where we have powered the state for a century, we have the know-how and infrastructure to lead Victoria through another 100 years of power generation, but we need real leadership from a state government that is prepared to take sensible and decisive action.
“Labor can no longer neglect the Latrobe Valley. We need investment in new industries, and we need it now.”