Peter Ross-Edwards in his prime. |
Peter Ross-Edwards was recently farewelled by fewer than
expected people on what might be described as a “halcyon” day.
That seemed appropriate for the former leader of the
Victorian National Party and Member for Shepparton was in the rush of public
life during what might be described as the halcyon decades of the late 20th
Century.
Mr Ross-Edwards’ October funeral, a State recognized event
at Shepparton’s St Augustine’s Anglican Church, saw provision of nearly 1000
seats, but less than 300 were occupied.
The surprisingly low turnout for a fellow who had broad and
deep respect within his community was not an indictment, rather the realisation
that he had been effectively out of the public gaze for two decades, at least
in his home city.
This fellow, known for the brevity of his conversations,
appeared to have the ear of the state’s decision makers and was able it seemed,
to make the impossible, possible.
He had stepped down from his very public role as the Member
for Shepparton in 1991 and while he may have slipped from that public gaze, Mr
Ross Edwards was still waist-deep in public life.
He chaired the Goulburn-Murray Rural Water Authority from
1994 through to 2001 and in what was an almost invisible role Mr Ross-Edwards
was the chief commissioner for the City of Greater Bendigo for two years in the
mid-1990s.
Mr Ross-Edwards had been in the air force for four years, he
had been an integral part of the Shepparton based legal firm, P.V. Feltham and
Co, and had been the president or vice president several major organizations in
Shepparton.
The near empty hall at St Augustine's Church in Shepparton. |
To say he was in the ruck of public life in the halcyon days
of the 20th Century is in some sense unfair, but in others a comment
without quarrel.
Being a decision maker is never easy, no matter what the
environment, but undoubtedly the 24-hour news cycle and the emergence of its
digital counterparts of the internet, Twitter and Facebook in the late 90s,
have combined to make the life of public personality complex in the extreme.
Add to that the collision of “peak everything” from
population through to oil along with the added complication of a human-induced
changing climate bringing with it shortages of those things which allow
humanity to thrive, water and food.
Those were matters simply not on the agenda for the MLA for
Shepparton in his 24 years in parliament.
That however, does not lessen the importance of the task was
in any way, just makes it different as the wants and needs of the electorate
were both equally intense and important at the time.
Peter Ross-Edwards might have been a man of his time, but
the impact of time was evident on that halcyon day in October.
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