Shark nets don’t protect us. They never will
It is inevitable that a network of a network of the tragedy of Saturday’s tragedy, Central Coast, Northern beaches and Waverley councils to remove a network in this shark net season. All three councils expressed their desire to participate and even acknowledged that public and wildlife would be served better if all the networks in the fields of judiciary were removed. Cooperations are made in cooperation between the Councils and the NSW government where the trial will be made, but now the hearing seems to be postponed. This delay is a mistake.
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After the tragedy in Dee – a clear beach – the community will undoubtedly feel the need for fear, anger, confusion, concern and action, as he felt any community faced with this horror in the past. These emotions can be partly evaluated by a solid and open leadership against a long period of long paradigm change.
The best way to protect ourselves and our community is to approach the problem with logic and reason and to apply our developments in knowledge and technology – a change away from the idea that killing the 500 -meter sea wildlife will send their sharks.
The removal of all shark networks in NSW will not only benefit the sea wild life, but also benefit public security, and will seek millions of dollars for more drone supervision, extra beach patrols, additional labeling and monitoring and more training.
Shark networks never kept us safe and never.
Lawrence Chlebeck is a maritime biologist with animals for Australia.

