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Queensland Treasury Contract Disclosure
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Reports disclosing all awarded contracts over $10,000
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Additional information reported in lieu of inclusion in the annual report. Read the complete annual report at http://www.qbcc.qld.gov.au/about-us/our-performance
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Asset revaluation index: Engineering construction, Queensland
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Additional information reported in lieu of inclusion in the annual report. Read the complete annual report at http://www.qbcc.qld.gov.au/about-us/our-performance
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This dataset and its metadata statement were supplied to the Bioregional Assessment Programme by a third party and are presented here as originally supplied.
The groundwater database extract holds groundwater bore location, construction, aquifer details, level and quality information from the Queensland Government Department of Natural Resources and Mining core groundwater system. The system is provided in text files and as Microsoft Access database. There are twenty one main tables:
-bore_condition
-casing
-elevations
-facility roles
-flow irregularities
-lithology
multiple conductivity
precipitates
-pump test readings
-pump test summary
-registrations
-sample record
-sample results
-strata logs
stratigraphy
water analysis
water levels
wireline logs
For further explanation on these tables, information is found in the Queensland Government Department of Natural Resources and Mining, Groundwater Database : Data Dictionary and Standards.
A read-me file is also provided that allows the user to import each text file to excel or access. All tables have already been imported to the microsoft access database.
The database was created by the staff at the Queensland Government as the States repository of groundwater bore and monitoring information.
Queensland Department of Natural Resources and Mines (2014) QLD Department of Natural Resources and Mines Groundwater Database Extract 20142808. Bioregional Assessment Source Dataset. Viewed 12 December 2018, http://data.bioregionalassessments.gov.au/dataset/a5c5cbdb-1152-43f7-9533-a123027b7ce1.
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Additional information reported in lieu of inclusion in the annual report. Read the complete annual report at http://www.qbcc.qld.gov.au/about-us/our-performance
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Conditional registration applies to non-standard vehicles that don't comply with standard regulations for registering vehicles. Find out about conditional registration for construction vehicles before you apply for conditional registration.
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Asset revaluation index: Non-residential construction, Queensland
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A directory of awarded government contracts over $10,000.
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The Department of Transport and Main Roads (DoTMR) is undertaking the upgradation of highway and bridge on the Bruce Highway in Queensland, Australia.The project involves the upgrade of a 3.7km, two-lane highway, along with a new 72m two-lane bridge at Sandy Gully and improved approaches.The project will also include the upgrade of intersections at Crompton Street, Champion Street, Bergyl Street and Euri Creek Road East, and the construction of culverts, service roads and related infrastructure, and the installation of signaling and safety systems.The Australian Government provided US$34.5 million funding and the Queensland Government provided US$8 million for the project.DoTMR issued request for proposal (RFP) to select an engineering design consultant in December 2014 and selected Aurecon Australia Pty Ltd for the same in May 2015.Detailed design activities commenced in May 2015 and completed in March 2016.On April 21, 2016, DoTMR issued RFP for the project with the bid submission due date as June 15, 2016. The following companies have submitted the bids: BMD Constructions, Vassallo Constructions, CPB Contractor, Seymour Whyte, Savory Construction and Doval Construction.In early August 2016, Vassallo Constructions was appointed as construction contractor for the project.In September 2016, construction works were commenced and are underway with the completion is expected by the third quarter of 2018. Read More
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The Department of Transport and Main Roads Queensland (DoTMR) is undertaking the upgrade of Bruce Highway in Queensland, Australia.The project involves the upgrade and realignment of a 62km Bruce Highway from Cooroy and Curra, which is being implemented in four sections namely section A, B, C, and D.Section A:The US$363 million project includes the construction of a 13.5km, four-lane divided highway between the existing interchange south of Cooroy and the new section of highway in Federal (near Sankeys Road). It is being divided and constructed in three contracts namely Contract 1B, Contract 2 and Contract 3.Contract 1B includes the upgrade of Black Mountain Range Road. It includes the realignment of an 800m section of Black Mountain Range Road and the construction of an overpass over the new highway to maintain the connection to the existing highway. Contract 2 includes the upgrade of a highway between Cudgerie Drive and Sankeys Road. It includes the construction of 7km, four-lane new interchange north of Cooroy and new bridges over Skyring Creek and Gardners Road as well as Evan Thomas Road. Contract 3 includes the upgrade of a highway between Cooroy southern interchange and Cudgerie Drive. It includes the construction of 6km of new northbound lanes to duplicate the existing Cooroy bypass, the rehabilitation of the existing highway to provide two southbound lanes, and the upgrade of the existing Cooroy southern interchange and new bridges over Six Mile Creek.The funding for the project has provided in an equal ratio by the federal government and the state government.In June 2013, Hazell Bros Group Pty Ltd was appointed as contractor for Section A contract 1B. The works commenced in July 2013 and were completed in April 2014. In October 2013, Bielby Holdings was appointed as a contractor for Section A contract 2. The works commenced in November 2013 and are expected to complete by mid-2016.In April 2014, Lend Lease Engineering Pty Ltd was appointed as contractor for Section A contract 3. The works commenced in July 2014 and are expected to complete by the end of 2016.GHD Pty Ltd has been appointed as a management contractor for the entire section A.In May 2017, construction works completed on section A.Section B:The US$380 million project includes the construction of a 12km, four-lane divided highway between Sankeys Road in Federal and Traveston Road in Traveston.It includes the construction of a new interchange at Traveston, a new road into the Mary Valley from Traveston (the Mary Valley Link Road), and the realignment of the western end of Traveston Road, which now connects to the new interchange.A US$76 million funding has been provided by Queensland government and US$304 million by the federal government of Australia. Synergy JV served as a contractor, which is a joint venture of Civil Mining and Construction, Probuild Civil (Qld) Pty Ltd and Downer EDI Works Pty (Downer).The major construction works commenced in September 2009 with the new highway opened to traffic in December 2012.Section C:The US$285 million project includes the construction of a 10.5km, four-lane divided highway between the new section of highway in Traveston and Keefton Road.It includes the construction of a new and improved alignment between the new section of highway between Traveston and Keefton Road, with the capacity to be upgraded to six lanes in the future. It also features an interchange at Woondum to connect the new Bruce Highway alignment to the existing Bruce Highway, overpasses at Tandur Road and Woondum Road, and major waterway crossing structures over Traveston Creek, Cobbs Gully, and Jackass Creek.A US$57 million in funding provided by the Queensland government and US$227.5 million by the federal government for the project. In July 2014, detailed design works commenced.In April 2015, tenders were invited from the construction companies for an early works package between Woondum Road and the Six Mile Creek rest area. While detailed design works for the remainder of the section is currently underway.On July 4, 2015, BMD Constructions Pty Ltd was appointed as the construction contractor for the early works package between Woondum Road and the Six Mile Creek rest area of Section C.On July 27, 2015, early construction activities commenced on the Venardos Avenue intersection which is the part of section C.In February 2016, CPB Contractors has been awarded a construction contract for section C.In March 2016, construction activities commenced on section C.Construction activities are expected to be complete by the first quarter of 2018.Section D:It will include the construction of 26km highway section between Keefton Road to Curra comprising a bypass of Gympie with the corridor running east of the town, close to the railway line until Old Maryborough Road.Preliminary planning work commenced in March 2014 and secured initial planning approvals in the first quarter of 2016.A1 Highways was contracted to install the guardrail and wire rope systems along the highway.GHD Pty Ltd has been appointed as a design consultant for section D.The project is expecting US$303.5 million funding from the State Government over the next four years.The US$38 million funding for the detailed design works is being contributed with US$7.6 million by the State Government and US$30.4 million by the Federal Government. The detailed planning works costing US$81 million are being funded by the federal government of Australia.In May 2016, detailed design work commenced on section D and slated for completion by the first quarter of 2018.In February 2018, construction works were completed on section C.In April 2018, Federal and State Governments committed US$605 million for Section D to fast-track construction. Design activities on section D are underway. Read More
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This dataset and its metadata statement were supplied to the Bioregional Assessment Programme by a third party and are presented here as originally supplied.
The cadastral dataset is the spatial representation of property boundaries and descriptions in the following QLD local government areas:
Barcaldine
Blackall Tambo
Bulloo
Central Highlands
Charters Towers
Flinders
Isaac
Longreach
Maranoa
Murweh
Paroo
Quilpie
Richmond
Winton
It is a fundamental reference layer for spatial information systems in Queensland. This is a complete extract from the digital cadastral database (DCDB). A lite version of the DCDB is available from the Queensland Government Information Service website. Attributes are described in the "QIF file specifications" at http://www.nrm.qld.gov.au/property/mapping/dcdata/index.html#data_attributes .
Lineage statement:
The DCDB was captured by digitising the best available cadastral mapping at a variety of scales and map accuracies. These mapping scales ranged from Standard 1:2500 to 1:250000, Provisional 1:2500 to 1:253400 and mapping such as Parish, Locality, Environ and Town maps. At the initial capture, existing control identified from the Survey Control Database, standard cadastral and topographic mapping, photogrammetric and orthophoto compilations and this control was used as part of the digitising process. Additional control was requested if necessary. The DCDB is continuously updated by inputting metes and bounds descriptions from registered plans of subdivision and from any attribute updates from government gazettes and other administrative notifications. The DCDB is being upgraded for an improved positional accuracy, this is an ongoing process. In October 2000, the datum of DCDB was converted from AGD84 values. A distortion model based on a Queensland grid was used in the transformation process for the conversion of the DCDB co-ordinate values from AGD84 to GDA94. The distortion grid used is QLD_0900.gsb. The DCDB includes polygons and feature names for parts of the sea adjoining the coastline of Queensland. The spatial representation of any part of the sea has been delineated in the DCDB by the construction of polygons. The feature names assigned to those polygons have been obtained from a variety of sources, Topographic Maps, Navigation Charts, local usage, etc. Indeterminable Extent, the delineation in the DCDB of the extent of any part of the sea by the creation of construction lines for each polygon is to permit the inclusion of the feature name only. The construction lines are not warranted to be the actual boundaries of any water feature or to be accurate or complete.
Process step:
The DCDB data, in DCDB transfer format (IFO), is FTP'd to the Spatial Information Resource server every fortnight where it is transformed into the Spatial Information Resource (SIR) ArcSDE Geodatabase.Note: the MapInfo dataset was generated/transformed/derived from the ARCSDE dataset.
See also, Metadata HTML for each shapefile.
Queensland Department of Natural Resources and Mines (2014) QLD Cadastral data for the Galilee subregion - 12/01/2014. Bioregional Assessment Source Dataset. Viewed 05 July 2017, http://data.bioregionalassessments.gov.au/dataset/ea2abe06-d2d4-4d4e-975a-efc62a219c15.
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Remuneration information for the Queensland Building and Construction Commission Board.
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Road construction contracts and performance incentive cost reimbursement contracts awarded by the Department of Transport and Main Roads.
Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
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This dataset was supplied to the Bioregional Assessment Programme by a third party and is presented here as originally supplied. Metadata was not provided and has been compiled by the Bioregional Assessment Programme based on known details at the time of acquisition.
This dataset contains reports and appendices related to the EIS for the Carmichael Coal Mine and Rail Project. Tables, figures and maps have been extracted from these reports to produce supplementary datasets.
This report evaluates the potential impacts of the Carmichael Coal Mine and Rail project (the project). It has been prepared pursuant to section 35 of the State Development and Public Works Organisation Act 1971 (Qld) (SDPWO Act).
The proponent, Adani Mining Pty Ltd, proposes to construct a 60 million tonnes per annum open-cut and underground greenfield coal mine and a 189 kilometre (km) greenfield rail line connecting the mine to the existing Goonyella and Newlands rail system south of Moranbah. The mine is located in the Galilee Basin and is situated within the Isaac Regional Council (IRC) Local Government Area.
The project, which will require A$16.5 billion of investment, also includes the development of an airport, industrial area, workers accommodation village, five quarries and water supply infrastructure. At full export capacity of 60 mtpa, the project is expected to contribute $929.6 million annually to the Mackay Region's Gross Regional Product and $2.97 billion annually to the Queensland economy.
The project is expected to create an estimated 2475 jobs during the construction phase and 3920 jobs during the operational phase. It contributes to a key Queensland Government objective of realising the timely development of the Galilee Basin, while ensuring net community benefits and environmental objectives are maximised.
Individual reports within this dataset were downloaded from the QLD Government Department of State Development, Infrastructure and Planning website.
http://www.dsdip.qld.gov.au/assessments-and-approvals/
"Queensland Department of State Development, Infrastructure and Planning" (2014) Carmichael Coal Mine and Rail Project Environmental Impact Statement. Bioregional Assessment Source Dataset. Viewed 07 December 2018, http://data.bioregionalassessments.gov.au/dataset/2a595f74-aae6-4d83-9cd7-1459247d751a.
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Queensland Building and Construction Commission Contracts Disclosure reporting to meet the requirements of the Queensland Procurement Policy 2023 Clause 31 Disclose Contracts
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The Queensland Government works closely with all Queenslanders to build safe, caring and connected communities, create jobs, protect our environment and enhance quality of life for present and future generations.
To help achieve this, a number of grant and assistance programs are open to individuals, small community groups and non-government organisations right across the State.
Funding programs cover a range of service areas and interests from sport, arts, and events to education, environment and Advance Queensland research and innovation initiatives.
Expenditure data reflects amounts paid for these grant/funding and frontline service procurement programs. This is a consolidated dataset that can be used by the public, non-government organisations and Government departments to research the investment the Queensland Government makes across grant/funding programs.
The information is correct at the time of reporting however figures and other details may be subject to change. Budgeted and expenditure amounts may also be subject to variation due to changes in project timing, scope or funding reallocations.
Where individuals have received funding, these details have been aggregated within the broader program, funding categories or location, to maintain privacy.
Please view the Data Dictionary (see Data and resources) to understand the data attributes, quality and limitations of this data which should all be considered before using this data for any purpose.
Due to program name changes, consolidation of funding into other programs, machinery-of-government changes and refinement in the data fields collected overtime, comparison of figures across different years may be ineffective.
This dataset provides a consolidated view of payments made by all Queensland Government agencies responsible for the administration of grant and funding programs. The data contained within this file is not owned by Queensland Treasury.
To view the data as provided by the data owners, please use the link under Related resources. Any questions regarding the data should be directed to the respective Queensland Government agency responsible for the payment. You can contact the responsible agency via the Contact Us option.
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A directory of supplier procurement arrangements across the Queensland Government for the supply of goods and services that provides high level information about the arrangements.
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Queensland Building and Construction Commission Contracts Disclosure reporting to meet the requirements of the Queensland Procurement Policy Section 3.1 Clause 3
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Queensland Treasury Contract Disclosure