New NSW Privacy Commissioner appointed

Source: Australia Civil Aviation Safety Authority

Published: 20 March 2025

Released by: Attorney General, Minister for Customer Service and Digital Government


Ms Sonia Minutillo has been appointed as the new NSW Privacy Commissioner to deliver an independent voice on the administration of privacy legislation.

Ms Minutillo’s appointment allows her to continue promoting, protecting, and enhancing the privacy rights of the people of NSW.

The NSW Privacy Commissioner investigates and conciliates complaints about breaches of privacy, advises government agencies, businesses, and other organisations on how to ensure the right to privacy is protected.

The Commissioner also oversees NSW Government agency reviews of reported breaches with a view to developments in policy, law, and technology that may impact privacy.

Ms Minutillo will continue to provide oversight of and advice to NSW public sector agencies on compliance with the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act 1998 and the Health Records and Information Privacy Act 2022 and in protecting the personal information of individuals.

Ms Minutillo was formerly the Director of Investigation and Reporting at the Information and Privacy Commission, leading its regulatory functions including the conduct of reviews, complaints, investigations, and proactive compliance program.

She has been acting NSW Privacy Commissioner since August 2023.

Find out more about the Information and Privacy Commission NSW here.

Minister for Customer Service and Digital Government Jihad Dib said:

“The Privacy Commissioner plays an important role in ensuring accountability in NSW Government by ensuring the public sector handles personal information responsibly and take steps to prevent and manage any data breaches.

“Ms Minutillo has demonstrated her expertise in this area while acting as Privacy Commissioner over the past 18 months, drawing on her experience leading programs in the fields of industrial relations and employment rights and obligations under NSW and Commonwealth legislation.

“I congratulate Ms Minutillo on her appointment and look forward to working with her to uphold the privacy of every NSW resident.”

Attorney General Michael Daley said:

“As the NSW Privacy Commissioner, Ms Minutillo will drive integrity and strong accountability in the public sector to underpin robust governance at every level.

“I welcome Ms Minutillo to this significant role. Her extensive experience and qualifications make her well-placed to continue the important work of promoting and protecting the privacy rights of the NSW community.”

$800,000 to make shooting in NSW safer

Source: Australia Civil Aviation Safety Authority

Published: 20 March 2025

Released by: Minister for Sport


Shooting organisations across NSW have shared in almost $800,000 in funding after grants were awarded under the NSW Government’s Safe Shooting Program.

The Safe Shooting Program supports shooting clubs, shooting ranges and shooting organisations to improve storage, security and safety, as well as purchase new equipment such as electronic targets.

The Program invests in projects which incorporate inclusive design, improve safety, environmental sustainability and increase use of existing shooting facilities in NSW.

Another key objective of the Program is to increase participation in shooting by removing barriers for women and girls, people with disability, First Nations peoples, people from culturally and linguistically diverse communities, and LGBTQIA+ people.

Grants of $10,000 – $50,000 were awarded to 25 projects that aim to improve the safety and quality of shooting facilities in NSW.

Some of the projects to receive funding include:

  • $49,287 to Gilgandra Rifle Club for safety repairs and upgrades to prevent projectiles injuring people or damaging property after they pass through targets
  • $49,575 to Bermagui Field and Game Sporting Clays for new clay target traps
  • $37,243 to Cootamundra Rifle Club for a new solar power system for the clubhouse, shed, and toilet block.

For further information including the list of grant recipients, visit: https://www.sport.nsw.gov.au/grants/safe-shooting-program

Minister for Sport Steve Kamper said:

“The Safe Shooting Program supports shooting clubs to provide safe, inclusive and accessible facilities.

“Projects announced today will increase the use of shooting facilities across NSW and encourage participation by people of all ages, backgrounds and abilities.

“This funding will play a significant role in supporting the next generation of Olympians and ensure Australia’s success at the Brisbane 2032 Olympic Games.”

NSW Leads the way: first state to regulate batteries

Source:

Published: 20 March 2025

Released by: Minister for Environment and Heritage


The Minns Labor Government has introduced nation-leading legislation that would require suppliers to take greater responsibility for the handling and disposal of products including batteries that can cause a risk to human safety and the environment.

The new Product Lifecycle Responsibility Act, if passed, will create a framework for suppliers of certain products to participate in mandatory stewardship schemes. That means those who make and sell products will have to adhere to requirements on design and manufacturing, reuse and recycling and safe disposal options of their product.

NSW will be the first state to pass such legislation.

The first products that will be regulated under this act will be batteries, which according to NSW Fire and Rescue are the fastest growing fire risk in our state.

The waste and recycling industry estimates that between 10,000 and 12,000 fires each year in trucks and at waste facilities are caused by improper disposal, use, and poor design of lithium batteries.

Fire and Rescue NSW responded to 384 lithium-ion battery incidents since 2024 alone. Those incidents include at least 33 injuries and multiple fatalities.

If passed, the Act could require battery suppliers to:

  • Register battery products to ensure compliance and facilitate safe disposal or recycling through dedicated collection points
  • Run public education campaigns to improve awareness of battery risks and disposal options
  • Enhance battery design, packaging, importation, and storage to improve safety and recyclability.

The new legislation and regulation will also apply to smaller embedded batteries, which are found in everyday devices such as, cordless vacuums, electric toothbrushes, children’s toys, e-bikes and e-scooters.

Industry and other stakeholders have helped shape the reforms and will be key to their successful implementation.

Quotes attributable to NSW Environment Minister Penny Sharpe:

“This Bill will give the NSW Government the strongest powers in the country to ensure suppliers take accountability for the products that they sell. This is nation-leading reform and I’m very proud to move on it.

“Batteries power our modern life, and we will need them more as we decarbonise our economy. But without adequate safety and care we will see further deaths, injuries, and property damage.

“Our product stewardship obligations will be a critical step in protecting firefighters, waste and resource recovery workers, and the broader community from dangerous and preventable battery fires.” 

Consumers urged to check it or forget it following ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred

Source:

Published: 20 March 2025

Released by: Minister for Building


Communities recovering from the impacts of ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred are being reminded to stay vigilant when it comes to arranging repairs or building work with tradespeople.

With a significant number of homes damaged during the weather event landlords and homeowners are being warned against accepting unsolicited offers of repairs from people who may be posing as builders or other tradespeople.

Service NSW offers a free licence check tool to verify a tradesperson’s credentials before hiring, while the myHome Planner tool can be used to identify key planning controls which may impact a site, such as flood-prone areas, bushfire risk, and heritage orders.

Before engaging a tradesperson, customers should:

  • Check their licence via the Service NSW website.
  • Ask for references and examples of previous work.
  • Complete the step by step process outlined on the NSW Building Commission website.
  • Clarify what is and isn’t included in the contract.
  • Confirm whether subcontractors will be involved in the project.
  • Check for additional insurance beyond the mandatory Home Building Compensation (HBC) Scheme.
  • Understand what compensation may be available if construction delays lead to extra costs such as additional rent or mortgage repayments.

Since 1 July 2024, Building Commission NSW has received almost 400 reports of alleged unlicensed or unregistered trade work.

After catastrophic events such as cyclones, floods, and other natural disasters, it is even more important to be vigilant and ensure the people completing work on your home are appropriately licensed, and that Home Building Compensation cover is purchased for work worth more than $20,000.

To complete the step by step process outlined on the NSW Building Commission visit here: https://www.nsw.gov.au/departments-and-agencies/building-commission/current-and-future-homeowners/building-and-renovating-resources/step-by-step-guide-to-choosing-right-tradesperson-or-builder.

If consumers have concerns with the building contract being offered or the quality of work being performed, they are encouraged to lodge a complaint with Building Commission NSW via https://hbc.fairtrading.nsw.gov.au/forms/20490.

Consumers can check a builder or tradesperson licence on the Service NSW website here: https://www.service.nsw.gov.au/transaction/check-a-builder-or-tradesperson-licence.

Use step-by-step guides to plan and build a home with myHome Planner: https://www.planningportal.nsw.gov.au/myhome-planner.

Check when Home Building Compensation insurance is required for residential building works here: https://www.sira.nsw.gov.au/home-building-compensation/home-building-compensation-for-homeowners.

Renters whose homes have been damaged should report repairs to their landlord or property manager as soon as possible.

There are two types of repairs: urgent and non-urgent.

  • Urgent repairs – include gas leaks, dangerous electrical faults, burst water services, blocked toilets, serious structural damage from flooding, storms, or fire, and essential appliance failures such as stoves, ovens, heaters, or hot water systems.
  • Non-urgent repairs – are those that do not pose an immediate risk but still need to be fixed.

Tenants should contact their landlord or real estate agent about anything needing repair.

Landlords and agents have an obligation to carry out urgent repairs promptly.

If urgent repairs are required and the landlord or agent cannot be reached, tenants may arrange repairs themselves using an approved or preferred tradesperson listed in their tenancy agreement and claim reimbursement up to $1,000.

If a landlord fails to carry out urgent repairs, tenants should keep records of all communications and receipts and if the issue remains unsolved, lodge a complaint with NSW Fair Trading here: https://www.cas.fairtrading.nsw.gov.au/icmspublicweb/forms/Tenancy.html

More information on rental repairs is available here: https://www.nsw.gov.au/housing-and-construction/renting-a-place-to-live/getting-repairs-done.

For more information about help after flooding, visit the NSW Fair Trading website: https://www.fairtrading.nsw.gov.au/resource-library/publications/natural-disasters.

Quotes to be attributed to Minister for Building Anoulack Chanthivong:

“Disasters can bring out the best in our communities, but unfortunately also attract those looking to take advantage of vulnerable people, so renters and homeowners must stay alert to unlicensed tradespeople and scams.

“We don’t want to see people already dealing with a natural disaster left further out of pocket by dodgy operators, so remember to always check a tradesperson’s licence and credentials before engaging their services.

“If you’re a tenant of a rental property which sustained damage and it requires urgent attention, remember that urgent repairs are just that – urgent – and should be treated as such by your agent and landlord.”

Minns Labor Government introduces new laws to protect gig workers and owner drivers in the road transport sector

Source:

Published: 20 March 2025

Released by: Minister for Industrial Relations


The NSW Minns Labor Government is introducing legislation this week to provide long overdue protections for transport gig workers as well as modernising the provisions of the Industrial Relations Act that applies to part of the road transport industry.

The legislation is complementary to the Federal Government’s gig workers reform and follows consultation with unions, industry and the community to ensure the changes are fit-for-purpose for the gig economy and the modern transport sector like rideshare.

The legislation will provide a mechanism for transport gig workers to access the same legal protections currently offered to owner driver truck drivers, couriers and taxi drivers under the NSW Industrial Relations Act (the Act).

The decision to reform the Act was an election commitment and will allow platform companies, employers and unions to apply to the Industrial Relations Commission for binding determinations on workers’ pay and conditions of employment for the first time.

Once the changes are implemented, eligible gig workers in the transport sector and their representative will be able to apply to the NSW IRC to have contract determinations or agreements that will regulate their pay and conditions

The NSW Government’s bill will:

  • Modernise the existing provisions of Chapter 6 of the Industrial Relations Act, including establishing objects for the Chapter
  • Allow the Commission to determine what is fair and reasonable pay and conditions for rideshare and other gig workers in the transport industry.
  • Establish new offences of accessorial liability for those who break the law in a supply chain.
  • Ensure there are enforceable standards across road transport supply chains to make sure everyone, no matter how big or small, can recover their costs.

Consistent with the approach of the Commonwealth Government, the existing exemptions for transport of livestock and produce will remain in place.

Minister for Industrial Relations Sophie Cotsis said:

“This new legislation will enable our Industrial Relations system to be fit for purpose when it comes to gig workers in the transport sector.

“The public relies on gig workers in the transport industry every day, and workers can rely on us for the same legal protections.

“This is an important step in supporting the thousands of gig workers to ensure they have the same industrial rights to access the industrial relations commission.”

Busiest emergency departments in Australia slash ramping

Source:

Published: 19 March 2025

Released by: Minister for Health


Some of the busiest emergency departments in Australia have seen significant reductions in hospital ramping, according to the latest Bureau of Health Information quarterly results.

One of the key indicators of hospital ramping is the proportion of patients transferred from paramedics to ED staff within 30 minutes – also known as Transfer of Care (TOC).

St George Hospital – which received over 82,000 ED attendances last year – saw a 25 percentage point improvement in transfer of patient from paramedic to ED staff in the December 2024 quarter compared with the same period the previous year.

Blacktown Hospital – which received over 67,000 ED attendances last year – saw a 23.2 percentage point improvement.

Campbelltown Hospital – which received over 92,000 ED attendances last year – saw a 9.3 percentage point improvement.

Liverpool Hospital – which received over 90,000 ED attendances last year – saw a 7.2 percentage point improvement.

These improvements come despite the health system recording the highest ever number of patients arriving to EDs by ambulance – almost 200,000 in a single quarter.

The Minns Labor Government has invested half a billion dollars into ED relief, which includes:

  • $189 million in tax relief to incentivise GPs to maintain bulk-billing rates, meaning people with non-life-threatening conditions don’t need to present to the ED
  • $171.4 million to expand statewide virtual care services helping 180,000 avoid a trip to the ED
  • $100 million to back in our urgent care services to become a mainstay and key instrument of the health system in providing a pathway to care outside of our hospitals for an estimated 114,000 patients
  • $70 million to expand emergency department short stay units to improve patient flow to reduce ED wait times by nearly 80,000 hours
  • $15.1 million for an Ambulance Matrix that provides real time hospital data to enable paramedics to transport patients to emergency departments with greater capacity and reducing wait times
  • $31.4 million to increase Hospital in the Home across the state allowing over 3,500 additional patients each year to be cared for in their home rather than a hospital bed
  • $53.9 million to improve patient flow and support discharge planning by identified patients early on that are suitable to be discharged home with the appropriate supports in place.

Quotes attributable to NSW Minister for Health Ryan Park:

“Relieving pressure on our emergency departments and ensuring people receive care in a timely manner have been top priorities of our government.

“Such significant challenges have been met with a significant half-a-billion dollar investment in ED relief.

“Today, I’m so pleased to see encouraging progress in our effort to reduce ramping.

“But I don’t want us to get ahead of ourselves, because there is still much more to do.

“I do want to reiterate that people who present to hospitals with non-life-threatening conditions can still expect to wait long periods in the ED.

“So if you do have a non-life-threatening condition, I strongly encourage you to phone HealthDirect on 1800 022 222 where you can avoid an unnecessary wait in the ED, and receive care outside of the hospital including through urgent or virtual care services.”

Automatic Mutual Recognition expanded in NSW

Source:

Published: 19 March 2025

Released by: Minister for Better Regulation and Fair Trading


The Minns Labor Government has moved to make it easier for more qualified workers from interstate to operate in NSW after the passing of new laws last night expanding Automatic Mutual Recognition (AMR) to more industries.

From 1 July 2025, conveyancers, real estate and property agents, and automotive industry workers from interstate will be allowed to work in NSW without having to get a separate NSW licence.

The AMR scheme supports workers and businesses across Australia by facilitating worker movement between states by reducing red tape and removing the need to apply and pay for another licence.

Under AMR, interstate licensees must also meet relevant mandatory compensation fund obligations while working here.

The Minns Labor Government has acted carefully to ensure consumers across the state are protected by the same regulatory enforcement as people licenced to work in these industries in NSW.

The laws passed by the Minns Labor Government allow NSW Fair Trading to calculate and collect compensation fund contributions from conveyancers, property and stock agents, and motor dealers and repairers, ensuring customers can seek compensation as a last resort if they suffer a financial loss caused by an interstate operator.

From 1 July 2025, conveyancers, real estate and property agents, and automotive occupations will join the range of trades and professions already covered under the AMR scheme, including electrical, tow trucks, some construction trades, and traffic control industries.

For more information please visit the Browse your occupation webpage.

Quotes attributable to Minister for Better Regulation and Fair Trading Anoulack Chanthivong:

“This legislation recognises the licenced interstate workers we need and supports both workers and businesses across Australia by removing red tape and reducing costs, which will allow NSW businesses access to a larger employment market.

“With more occupations now added since the Automatic Mutual Recognition scheme was introduced in 2021, it now allows more workers greater movement across industries with similar national standards, while still maintaining and protecting consumer rights.”

Multicultural Communities Council of South Australia

Source: Lance Franklin teams up with NAB to celebrate unifying power of footy

My name is Giridharan Sivaraman and I’m the Commonwealth Race Discrimination Commissioner at the Australian Human Rights Commission.

Thank you for the opportunity to speak today.  

I wish to acknowledge the Kaurna peoples as traditional custodians of the land we are meeting on and recognise any other people or families with connection to the lands of this region.

I wish to acknowledge and respect their continuing culture and the contribution they make to the life of this city and this region.

I would also like to acknowledge and welcome other Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who may be attending today’s event.

Acknowledging that I’m on country is important. For me, as a non-First Nations person, but who has lived experience of racism and is leading anti-racism work, it’s important to understand the difference between the racism someone like me suffers, and that which is suffered and has been suffered for 238 years by First Nations people. Someone like me may suffer racism through a denial of equality, dignity and respect. The racism First Nations people suffered and continue to suffer is also a denial of equality, dignity and respect. But in addition, it is a denial of self-determination and sovereignty which included the taking of their land by settlers before me. And I, as a settler, have benefited from that denial of sovereignty. I have benefited from the taking of their land. Therefore, it is a small but important step for me to acknowledge I’m on country.  

As many of you know, this week has been traditionally celebrated as Harmony Week in Australia, and the 21st of March as Harmony Day. This is the context in which I’ve been invited here to speak today.  

The 21st of March has been a date globally recognised as the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (IDERD). It was designated as such by the UN in 1966 and began as a day of mourning. It is a day set aside to annually observe and reflect on the mass murder of 69 people, by police, at a peaceful demonstration against apartheid in Sharpeville, South Africa. The United Nations frames the day as one in which we should be “building solidarity with the peoples struggling against racism and racial discrimination.”

For me, it is somewhat jarring that a day recognising a massacre born of racism, is replaced with a day of celebration under the banner of Harmony Day. And Australia is the only country in the world to do so.  Harmony is a wonderful ideal. But we have to ask ourselves, as a country, why are we so loathe to talk about racism? Because to get to a harmonious society, we first need to address racism.

Racism is rarely about race. Ta Nehise Coates wrote, ‘race is the child, racism is the parent’. It’s usually about power and privilege. Structural racism ensures that power and privilege is maintained by the dominant race. In Australia that dominancy is white. It is white Anglo race, culture and identity which remains dominant, and structurally so.    

If you are white, it’s the power and privilege to know that the institutions around you were built by people like you, for people like you and privilege people like you.  

It is also the power and privilege to decide on the narratives that influence politics and public discourse.  

It was a deliberate decision to rename IDERD to Harmony Day. The change was made in 1999 under former Prime Minister John Howard, to celebrate diversity and multiculturalism, instead of focusing on racism and discrimination.  

Celebrating the diversity within our communities has value. However, in Australia, the refusal to name and confront racism has prevented meaningful progress on eliminating it.  In our work at the AHRC we have found that approaches to anti-racism across all levels of government is ad-hoc, disjointed and piece meal. Many areas of government don’t even want to use the word racism. They would rather use terms like social cohesion, or harmony. Racism isn’t Beetlejuice. Naming it doesn’t make a demon appear, the demon is already amongst us. Anyone who’s watched a horror movie knows that closing your eyes and pretending the monster isn’t there doesn’t make it go away. It’ll still get you.

Australia is often eager to promote itself as a successful multicultural nation. But are we genuinely pluralistic or are you forced to express your culture in the shadows? I think of my own life and journey into the world of law. I was brought up in a Tamil speaking, Hindu, teetotalling, vegetarian household. I was acutely conscious of fitting into the world of law. It rewarded conformity not difference. I let go of Tamil so as to not sound different. It’s a beautiful language, of poetry and literature but it had no place anywhere outside private spaces. I remember my ceremony to be admitted as a lawyer. I was given a choice of an oath on a bible or a secular affirmation. No room for Hindu beliefs there. I remember attending events started with a Christian prayer. Even now the only religious public holidays recognised by law are Christian ones. Alcohol was the key to mingling with clients or other lawyers, otherwise you were left out. So, all I maintained was my vegetarianism. For a while their veganism was in vogue which meant i was cool for a bit but that quickly passed.  I’m part of the multicultural success story. Yet my culture, language and religion were all obstacles to my success.

When it comes to calling the 21st of March IDERD or Harmony Day, it can be easy to say that it’s just a choice of words. But words are never neutral.  

Throughout history, language has been used to label people, to erase struggles and to strategically shape political narratives. In Australia’s own history, racist policies enacted towards First Nations communities were called ‘protection policies’. Yet these policies involved abhorrent racial segregation, dispossession, and the tragedies that we now refer to as the Stolen Generations.

Language is powerful. It can empower people or silence them. It can expose or obscure the truth. It can challenge or reinforce injustice.  

In this case, replacing acknowledgement of racism with words of harmony risks contributing to the notion that racism is not a significant problem in Australia — one that requires urgent attention and policy change.  

In 2024, polling by Essential Media found only 37% of respondents believed Australia was a racist country. Meanwhile 64% expressed that they were scared to say what they really think in case they’d be labelled as racist. Spoiler alert: if a person is worried that something they want to say may lead to being called racist… most of the time, that’s because it is racist.

And despite the Essential Poll showing only about a third of people acknowledge racism is rife across our society, reports of racism are only rising. For example, many organisations and peak bodies, including Reconciliation SA, have noted the increase in notifications of racism since the referendum in 2023.

Moving forward

Racial literacy and intro to Framework

Before we can tackle racism, it is necessary to first meaningfully acknowledge the issue. We must call out racism for what it is and recognise its ongoing harms, instead of allowing it to be obscured under words like harmony or social cohesion.  

But there is still cause for optimism. That’s because we have a roadmap for the future.

In November, the Commission released the National Anti-Racism Framework. It contains 63 recommendations for a whole of society approach, with proposed reforms across Australia’s legal, justice, health, education, media and arts sectors as well as workplaces and data collection.  

In the Framework, a key theme is the need to build racial literacy. When I walk into a room, people will automatically have assumptions about me based on my name and the way I look. Understanding that is racial literacy. The next step is understanding how our institutions and systems disadvantage some people based on race. That is building our racial literacy in a way that allows us to improve our institutions and systems.  

Stronger racial literacy across society is essential for initiatives like the Framework to properly address racism in all forms across vital areas of our lives like health, education, workplaces, justice and the media.

Learning and education  

Skills in racial literacy are built over a lifetime.  

None of us can be expected to know everything. For us to tackle racism, we must all make a genuine commitment to ongoing learning and educating both ourselves and others.

I am encouraged by noting that Reconciliation SA has taken proactive steps to deliver anti-racism training at schools and organisations.  

However, enhancing racial literacy and education alone is not sufficient for addressing racism. It must be accompanied by actively challenging racist systems, structures, and ideas.

Action 

The National Anti-Racism Framework aims to tackle racism in Australia through real action and change, instead of symbolic words and gestures.  

We are all too familiar with seeing corporate diversity campaigns that showcase staff of different backgrounds, while there are no steps to address the discrimination those staff are being actively subjected to.  We are tired of people in authority publicly condemning a horrific act of racism when it occurs, and then seeing no action being taken. We no longer want the pain and suffering of so many communities being swept under the rug and silenced with platitudes.  

Examples like referring to IDERD as ‘Harmony Day’ hinders our collective anti-racism journey. It weakens our ability to identify and address the harm experienced by negatively racialised communities. We need to take this chance to address racism in Australia. Let’s question how racism affects our society and commit to anti-racist efforts to eliminate it.  

I encourage everyone here today to read the Framework and reflect on your own areas of work and influence and commit to meaningful change as we embrace this collective journey to eliminate racism. 

In my explanation of structural racism, I have talked about how it is inherently tied to, and upheld by, power and privilege. Fortunately, it is also power and privilege that can be used to dismantle it.  

Yes, tackling racism on a systemic level in Australia requires significant action – some of which requires commitment from government. But each of us still have a role to play. 
Everyone in this room today, whether institutionally or individually, has some sort of power or authority.  We therefore have the privilege of being able use our power to lead the way.  Challenge racism in your workplaces, advocate for anti-racism policies and speak up when you see injustice. When we collectively commit to a better future and reflect this commitment in our everyday actions, change is possible.  

Many of the rights we take for granted today exist because people came together in solidarity, refused to accept injustice and demanded change. History shows us that when communities unite in this way, systems have to shift. At a time when the road ahead might seem overwhelming, this is the hope we must remember.  

And if you are someone who does not experience racism, your role is even more important.  As Lilla Watson and other Aboriginal activists once said “If you have come here to help me, you are wasting your time. But if you have come because your liberation is bound up with mine, then let us work together.”  

I’m not asking for anyone to give anything away. Defeating racism is not a zero-sum game. If we live in a society where everyone feels safe, everyone can be their whole selves, everyone can prosper and everyone can be happy, imagine how much better that would be for all of us. That’s my vision and I ask you to join me help us realise it together.

Coastal comeback: shorebirds digging in for another breeding season

Source: Australian Labor Party (ALP)

With the return of spring comes the start of beach-nesting bird season on beaches up and down the coast, and NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) is taking this opportunity to remind the public on how you can best help these precious birds.

Each year threatened birds such as Little Terns, Pied Oystercatchers, Hooded Plovers and Beach Stone-curlews lay their eggs on beaches up and down the east coast, where they are highly camouflaged and can be very difficult to see.

Due to threats including native and introduced predators, crushing and disturbance from vehicles, humans and domestic dogs, flooding of nesting sites and adverse weather conditions, most beach-nesting birds remain endangered in NSW.

Here are a few small things you can do to ‘share the shore’ and help endangered beach-nesting birds raise their chicks on our beaches:

  • Keep an eye out for and respect bird nesting signs and fenced-off nesting areas on the beach.
  • Make sure dogs are only walked on an approved dog-beach and always kept on a leash.
  • Walk on the wet sand to avoid nesting birds.
  • Only drive on designated 4WD beaches and stay below the high tide mark to avoid accidentally crushing a chick.
  • Ensure you take fishing lines and rubbish with you, to ensure avoidable deaths from entanglement or ingesting rubbish are avoided.

Last season was a good one for Little Terns which experienced an almost 15 percent increase in breeding pairs from the previous season across the state.

For more information on shorebirds in NSW, visit Share the Shore.

Quotes attributable to NPWS Threatened Species Project Officer Katherine Howard:

‘Beach-nesting birds rely on the camouflage of their eggs and chicks to keep them safe, but on busy summer beaches, this strategy can really backfire. You might not see the eggs or chick until it’s too late.

‘We need all beach users to “share the shore” with our feathered friends by following a few easy guidelines and leaving some space for birds to raise their families.

‘Off-leash dogs may seem harmless, but they are terrifying to birds, causing them to fly away and leave eggs unguarded. Please check online whether dogs are allowed at your beach before you go, keep them on a leash and keep them well away from nesting birds.’

Read more

Source: Australian Labor Party (ALP)

With the return of spring comes the start of beach-nesting bird season on beaches up and down the coast, and NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) is taking this opportunity to remind the public on how you can best help these precious birds.

Each year threatened birds such as Little Terns, Pied Oystercatchers, Hooded Plovers and Beach Stone-curlews lay their eggs on beaches up and down the east coast, where they are highly camouflaged and can be very difficult to see.

Due to threats including native and introduced predators, crushing and disturbance from vehicles, humans and domestic dogs, flooding of nesting sites and adverse weather conditions, most beach-nesting birds remain endangered in NSW.

Here are a few small things you can do to ‘share the shore’ and help endangered beach-nesting birds raise their chicks on our beaches:

  • Keep an eye out for and respect bird nesting signs and fenced-off nesting areas on the beach.
  • Make sure dogs are only walked on an approved dog-beach and always kept on a leash.
  • Walk on the wet sand to avoid nesting birds.
  • Only drive on designated 4WD beaches and stay below the high tide mark to avoid accidentally crushing a chick.
  • Ensure you take fishing lines and rubbish with you, to ensure avoidable deaths from entanglement or ingesting rubbish are avoided.

Last season was a good one for Little Terns which experienced an almost 15 percent increase in breeding pairs from the previous season across the state.

For more information on shorebirds in NSW, visit Share the Shore.

Quotes attributable to NPWS Threatened Species Project Officer Katherine Howard:

‘Beach-nesting birds rely on the camouflage of their eggs and chicks to keep them safe, but on busy summer beaches, this strategy can really backfire. You might not see the eggs or chick until it’s too late.

‘We need all beach users to “share the shore” with our feathered friends by following a few easy guidelines and leaving some space for birds to raise their families.

‘Off-leash dogs may seem harmless, but they are terrifying to birds, causing them to fly away and leave eggs unguarded. Please check online whether dogs are allowed at your beach before you go, keep them on a leash and keep them well away from nesting birds.’