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Defined Terms and Documents 'Aboriginal Teenager Life Skills' RTV Social Inclusion Early Intervention Programme Bohémian Teenagers Arts Assistance Programme or BTAAP means the Second National Preventive Health Research Programme which -
(i) will provide, within 12
months of the
BTAAP
Final Launch Date, an opportunity for
6,200 Aggregate Interested Marginalised Teenagers
who live within, or close to, the
20 Lowest Socio-Economic Towns In Regional Australia With A Population >1,500 to
be accepted by two
Skilled Supervisors as
5,100 Aggregate IMT Student Singers, Dancers or
Musicians, thereby becoming directly involved in
'The Performing Arts'
by joining one of - (ii) accords with the Prime Minister's Goal To Involve The Private Sector, Facilitate Philanthropy, 'Corporate Social Responsibility' and Utilise Golden Gurus as set out in the Second National Preventive Health Research Programme; (iii) is a Social Infrastructure Lifestyle Programme which will assists interested teenagers from the 20 Lowest Socio-Economic Towns In Regional Australia With A Population >1,500 to improve their Lifestyle Behaviour to reduce the >$155b Negligent Lifestyle Annual Costs of Fifteen Problems by providing Social Infrastructure to teenagers most in need of it, to achieve - * Medium Term & Long Term Benefits Of BTAAP by 'providing the tools' for those less fortunate to develop social skills 'under a competitive and supervised social environment' where 'a spirited hunger to improve and succeed' is available; and * Fifteen Benefits Of Materially Altered Lifestyle by reducing Negligent Lifestyle Behaviour; (iv) measures/quantifies Economic Return On BTAAP Capex and ROCE of the Social Infrastructure provided to determine if the Bohémian Teenagers Arts Assistance Programme should be propagated beyond the Selected 20 Lowest Socio-Economic Regions; (v) relies on Four Public & 12 Private Equity Holders, from within the BTAAP Various Parties, to fund Three BTAAP SPVs to administer Three BTAAP Business Plans; and (vi) has a 3 Year Net Budget for Second National Preventive Health Research Programme "Bohémian Teenagers Arts Assistance Programme" of $20.1m split equally between Four Public Sector Equity Holders and 12 Private Sector Equity Holders in PPPs under the 50/50 Funding Model and noted in BTAAP Various Parties; (vii) will address the patent inequity in the distribution of Social Infrastructure in the 20 Lowest Socio-Economic Towns In Regional Australia With A Population >1,500 to achieve a Forecast Return On Aggregate BTAAP Capex of 250% over 10 years, whereupon -
(viii) has deliberately adopted a Bohémian Cultural Endeavour because unlike the Venezuela Model teenagers from age 13 with untraditional lifestyles and unorthodox social viewpoints, not "youths" from say age 6 as in Venezuela, are being targeted from the Selected 20 Lowest Socio-Economic Regions. The nomenclature Bohémian better imbues the sentiment necessary to achieve item ii) of the Seven Purposes; (ix) draws upon the enormous fillip provided by RTV Motivational Incentive to ensure that all the BTAAP Various Parties remain focused to achieve the goal of 5,100 Aggregate IMT Student Singers, Dancers or Musicians maximising their performance in their particular Annual National Bohémian Teenagers ''The Performing Arts Are Fun' Competition; (x) draws upon the precedents set by: * Twenty Renowned Orchestras, Choirs, Theatre Companies And Workshops Which Have Successfully Targeted Homeless and Marginalised, in particular the Venezuela Model - fundamental tenet of El Sistema "its not musical, but social", with BTAAP's motto "forging friendships through The Arts"; * 27 year strong NSW State 'Schools Spectacular' - no show of this scale and quality anywhere in the world - acknowledged by the Guinness Book of Records as the world's biggest variety show; * 17 year tenure of Young Talent Time hosted throughout by Johnny Young; * 40 year tenure of Carclew Youth Arts; * 3 year tenure of Music. Count Us In; (xi) draws upon the imaginative and creative skills of proven 'Reality TV' producers and directors who can capture the public interest from seemingly insignificant challenges in shows such as The Biggest Loser, MasterChef and Dancing with the Stars, as well bringing together successful artistic arrangers like Jonathon Welch, Alpha Gregory, Philip Channells, Phil Heuzenroeder, Mirra Todd [available in (x) above]; (xii) utilises the creativity of 96 Golden Gurus In The Second National Preventive Health Research Programme drawn from 36 Aggregate Private Sector Equity Holders and Four Public & 12 Private Equity Holders.
Casual empiricism of the distribution of Social Infrastructure which enables teenagers to maximise their potential, capabilities and Contribution To Society evidences that the vast majority of Social Infrastructure is distributed in upper socio-economic regions, in particular at private schools where the fortunate students enjoy many of the trimmings.
Through (x), (xi) and (xii) above, BTAAP seeks to draw on Social Capital to achieve Social Inclusion by providing Social Infrastructure to enable Australians from low socio-economic regions to become directly involved in one of the three 'Performing Arts' listed in (i) above, specifically by 'providing the tools' for those less fortunate to develop social skills 'under a competitive social environment' where 'a spirited hunger to improve and succeed' is focal, thereby improving the Social Determinants Of Health within the 20 Lowest Socio-Economic Towns In Regional Australia With A Population >1,500 as noted in Medium Term & Long Term Benefits Of BTAAP.
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