Saw Will Genia walking around Brisbane CBD yesterday with his family. Any reason as to why he wouldn't be over in Europe?
getting treatment I believe on his knee. Apparently he needs surgery when he heads back to Paris.
Saw Will Genia walking around Brisbane CBD yesterday with his family. Any reason as to why he wouldn't be over in Europe?
I'm with you, the Membership is just shy of 24k. How many is he responsible for - no idea. Has us at least talking about something other than the going backwards in attack game plan we have been employing the last couple of years.
Martin Kriewaldt slams the Queensland Reds for having “no moral compass’’ over seating
ANOTHER prominent Brisbane bizoid has joined the chorus of complaints about Queensland Rugby Union’s controversial “reseating’’ program for those with perpetual memberships.
Martin Kriewaldt, who has sat on the boards of some of the state’s biggest companies, slammed QRU this week as “an organisation which shows no moral compass and is failing to honour its commitments’’.“There has been a very deliberate campaign to oust the perpetual ground members and 30-year members from Suncorp games,’’ he said.“The seats are not the most favoured, as our original seats at Suncorp were. Now we can have those back but only if we pay a significant fee per game.“This is justified by classifying the top tier as premium seating, along with the best seats lower down, and sending those who will not pay to the top tier.
If the seats really were as good as each other, they would just give us a choice of which tier to sit in.’’In addition, tickets for Reds games must be picked up at Ballymore or posted out at an “outrageous gouging fee’’ of $25 and, even then, don’t arrive for weeks, he said.Kriewaldt, who chairs XLam New Zealand and Hyne Timber, has previously helped run Suncorp, GWA, Campbell Brothers, Macarthur Coal, Oil Search and the failed Brisconnections, which built the Airport Link toll road.A QRU spokesman yesterday defended the seating policy and blamed the fuss on a few malcontent members.
He said “ambiguity’’ surrounded some of the membership plans drafted more than 40 years ago.“We have been in dispute for five years with a very small group of perpetual ground members and welcome the opportunity to determine our obligations and rights and the rights of the PGMs in court,’’ he said.Lawyer Lyn Crowley, a former QRU official who paid $300 to become a life member in 1967, sued the organisation in the Supreme Court late last year alleging breach of contract and unconscionable conduct. QRU is defending the case.
Barrister Robert Ingham-Myer also filed a lawsuit against the QRU in early 2014 and that matter is still before the court. QRU is fighting this action too.
Seems the original 4-eva-Reds members are still not happy:
http://www.couriermail.com.au/busin...g/news-story/1bff939076bde29ecd780ed48c07ae39
I'm pasting it as I'm not too sure if people can view it behind the paywall:
An organization such as The Reds, representing the face of Queensland Rugby in the professional era, needs to be transparent in all its dealings, to maintain the support of its players, staff, the fans, and the public in general.
To walk away from a perpetual commitment made by Queensland Rugby when the body desperately needed funds at the commencement of Ballymore is in itself deplorable.
That legal beagles are individually suing the QRU is in itself a manifestation of poor governance of that organisation.
I was a perpetual member at one stage but sold the membership in happier times. Other perpetual members told me they were sold down the river regarding the location of their seats, when Suncorp became the Reds home ground.
Lyn Crowley is one of the most respected people behind Queensland rugby, and the fact that he has been forced to take this action is unconscionable from the Reds .