Real Issues, Real Plans
Clear priorities backed by long-term strategy.
The Issues That Shape Riverina’s Future
I’m not running on slogans. I’m running on structure. Riverina doesn’t need more one-off announcements or short-term headlines. We need disciplined, long-term planning that links water, health, infrastructure, and jobs into one coordinated strategy. These issues are connected and if we treat them separately, we weaken our future. Below are the core priorities I stand for. Each represents a pillar of a ten-year plan designed to move Riverina from uncertainty to confidence, from patching problems to building strength.
One Vision, Four Pillars: Riverina’s Path to Stability and Growth
A Plan That Looks Ten Years Ahead for Riverina
My vision for Riverina begins with a simple principle: we must plan beyond the next election cycle. I believe in coordinated, multi-year investment that links infrastructure, workforce planning, water security, and private capital into one realistic roadmap. That means using public funding properly not to chase headlines, but to unlock private investment and create long-term certainty for families and businesses. Riverina has outgrown maintenance politics. It’s time for disciplined, staged, costed planning that gives our region the confidence to grow.
Water Certainty, Not Water Chaos
Water is the foundation of Riverina’s economy and identity. Without certainty, everything else becomes fragile. Too often, water policy has been reactive driven by drought, flood, and sudden rule changes. I believe water certainty costs less than water chaos. That’s why I support a staged, ten-year investment in off-river storage, irrigation efficiency, town water security, and modern digital planning systems. Farmers should be able to plan ahead. Towns should not live in permanent anxiety. Stability is not radical it’s responsible.
Staffing, Not Spin: Keeping Regional Hospitals Open
A hospital without staff isn’t a hospital. Regional healthcare doesn’t have an infrastructure crisis it has a workforce crisis. Buildings don’t deliver care. People do. My focus is on recruitment, retention, housing for health workers, training pipelines, and sensible incentives that keep services open. Reliable care close to home shouldn’t depend on postcode or luck.
Our Roads
Riverina feeds the nation, moves its freight, and underpins supply chains yet too many of our roads and bridges are patched rather than properly upgraded. My long-term Roads, Freight and Infrastructure plan prioritises safety first, freight efficiency second, and resilience always. That means highway upgrades, stronger bridges, improved freight corridors, and smarter rail and intermodal investment. If Riverina feeds the country, our infrastructure should reflect it.
Jobs, Skills and Sovereignty: Building Riverina’s Next Economy
You shouldn’t have to leave Riverina to build a future. Too many young people feel forced to move away for opportunity. I believe we can change that. My ten-year Jobs & Skills strategy focuses on apprenticeships, ag-tech and food processing hubs, regional manufacturing incentives, digital connectivity, and advanced industry growth. This is about diversification, sovereign capability, and high-skilled jobs rooted in place. Strong jobs anchor families. Anchored families strengthen communities.
A Connected Vision for Riverina
Water, health, infrastructure, and jobs are not separate debates they are part of one connected system. My commitment is simple: certainty over chaos, staffing over spin, planning over patching, and sovereignty over stagnation. Riverina deserves more than commentary on national headlines. We deserve a long-term, costed, staged, and realistic plan built for the decade ahead. If you share this vision and want to help shape Riverina’s future, reach out and get in touch today.