The towns where a pub steak costs you $45
By Daniel Piotrowski
news.com.au
February 27, 2013
$8.90 for a bottle of Coke
$40 - $50 pub steaks
'Astronomical' rises in cost of living
A BOTTLE of Coke can cost nearly $9, a pub steak more than $40, and rent for a three-bedroom house can suck more than $1500 a week out of your bank account.
These are some of the "astronomical" prices people pay to live and work in outback mining towns.
A new parliamentary report finds the resources boom and a "fly-in, fly-out" culture is pushing the cost of living in regional areas well beyond city prices.
Support services have warned the cost of living is placing a huge strain on local families - especially those who don't work in the mines.
"We have observed astronomical rises in the cost of housing and in the cost of living in remote communities," said Rosemary Young, the national director of Frontier Services, a Uniting Church group who provide support to outback communities.
"This has resulted in a huge strain on local families," she said. "They are finding it harder and harder to meet these rising costs and sadly, in some cases, families can no longer afford to remain in the communities in which they belong."
The parliamentary report, Cancer in the bush or salvation for our cities, said the divide between the prices in the city and the bush was being fuelled to an "extreme level" by fly-in or drive-in workers.
The report said a three-bedroom house in resources hubs Moranbah (Queensland) and Port Hedland (Western Australia) can attract triple the rent of a Sydney property with Harbour views.
Even fly-in, fly-out mining workers, often cashed up with huge salaries, believe prices in mining centres can be obscene.
Port Hedland mine
FIFO culture at outback mines has fuelled a huge rise in the cost oif living for locals and workers.
"Costs in the Pilbara are ridiculous," said Melissa Petrie, who visits the Karratha region four or five times a year for work.
A restaurant meal or pub steak can cost between $40 and $50, and a three-bedroom house in the town of Onslow can cost up to $1500 a week, she said.
That same rental price has also been seen on the other side of Australia in Queensland. Former resources worker Bianca Dodd, whose partner works in mining, said when she was in Moranbah in 2011, a three-bedroom house could snatch $1500 a week.
In Queensland's Bowen Basin mining hub, $4 Coke cans are the "norm", Ms Dodd said. A Sydney convenience store was selling a 375mL can for $2.40 today.
One worker who visited South Hedland, just south of Port Hedland, said she had purchased a 600mL Mount Franklin bottle and a 600mL Coke Zero for $8.90 each.
Mick Connelly, a WA Transport Worker's Union representative in the Pilbara, said workers paid double they would in the city in many remote lunch bars.
"[It's] just unbelievable," he said. "For a box with a handful of chips, pieces of fish and prawns you're looking at $19, $20."
A Roxby Downs, SA, resident said she had seen a hot dog - just bread, sausage and sauce - sold for $8.
The prices are being driven up by the huge salaries of the fly-in/drive-in mining workers, a lack of local small business competition and distance from major cities.
On the other hand, the parliamentary report said fly-in/fly-out work had allowed many Australians to become wealthy without uprooting their families from the cities.
It can also allow partners to pursue fulfilling careers and spend large time away from work "to concentrate on full-time parenting", the report said.
Support groups have called on the government to act on the report's recommendations to supply more affordable housing and enhance small business in remote regions.
KPMG demographer Bernard Salt, who completed a study on mining towns for the Minerals Council, said mining towns had higher incomes and lower levels of unemployment than other parts of the country.
The study did not look at the cost of living.
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/money/cost-of-living/the-towns-where-a-pub-steak-costs-you-50/story-fnagkbpv-1226586764308#ixzz2M8KrNSuJ