Students
rally against Woolworths |
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Late last
year I had a conversation with a very concerned, mature age student.
This financially established, hard working gentleman enrolled
so he could one day buy his own pharmacy.
Three years down the track he claimed that he wasn't prepared
to invest in an industry that would enviably be deregulated.
My jaw hit the floor.
This year,
when Bob Carr broke his promise, the risk became even more apparent.
Alarm bells rang so loud I waited for the fire trucks to come.
Students did their bit in receiving signatures of support from
the public.
They took petitions back to college, to their apartment buildings,
to their corner stores and onto the bus on the way home.
But why, did I hear, as the petition forms were being passed around
one lecture "How long do you think until it happens?"
On Wednesday
21st April close to two hundred pharmacy students walked the streets
of Sydney.
They explained that to deregulate pharmacy meant that the public
risked no longer getting the health advice they need and deserve.
One thousand people signed in agreement in just one hour.
It astounded me how willing people were to sign, they came to
us. Pharmacy as we know it was doing something right.
In attempt to confront the man who would jeopardize their future,
Mr Roger Corbett, CEO of Woolworths, students rallied outside
the prestigious Shrangri-La hotel.
Roger spoke to hundreds of well paying business men, but Roger
did not speak to us.
Instead he slunk through the back door, as one newspaper called
him "Roger the Dodger".
We have all heard his outlandish statements that have not once
reflected the true reason why we want to preserve our future.
Our message was simple "we are about health not wealth;we
give advice not focus on price".
We did not work that hard at school to be able to enroll for a
course that would send us back to being checkout chicks.
We did not spend four years studying so hard at university, to
work for a company that does not care about the health and well
being of its customers.
With respect to the 200 students who stood up for what they believe
in I want to ask a question.
If there are 800 students enrolled in Sydney why were there only
200 at the rally?
Why when I walked into lectures as the troops were heading off
were there faces still staring back at me?
Why were students so concerned about a 10% quiz when their future
was being attacked?
Furthermore, why did a good friend of mine have to resign from
her job because her pharmacy was being relocated into a PriceLine
store?
Why do PriceLine pharmacies exist?
Why isn't every pharmacy accredited?
Why doesn't every pharmacy offer MMR services?
Why do some not realize that the knowledge we gain is pointless
unless we work in a place where it can be utilized?
Why do others not realize that when you sell your soul the devil
uses you?
Why aren't we utilizing the resources that we have?
Why did only half of the pharmacists' polled on the Austpharmlist
believe that pharmacy would win the battle?
Have we already given up on our future?
Are we our own curse?
History has shown destruction of the greatest empires comes from
within.
I've heard pharmacists tell me they don't care.
I've heard professors state that deregulation won't be detrimental.
I've even heard a dean (not mine) state that he didn't care what
kind of industry he sent his future pharmacists into.
There is no enviable, there is only a future that you make.
But we have to all to make it together.
And we must believe.
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