New cutting-edge crocodile detection technology to test the waters

Source: Government of Queensland

Issued: 24 Mar 2026

A potential breakthrough in crocodile detection technology has been given the green light to proceed with the first deployment to test its feasibility in northern Queensland.

The Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation (DETSI) is collaborating with James Cook University (JCU) to develop a device to detect crocodiles.

In theory, the device can spot crocodiles swimming in the water by linking state-of-the-art cameras and the artificial intelligence (AI) technology trained to identify crocodiles.

Ready to test-drive this AI technology in real-world settings, the device is going to be deployed to see if and how it can be used to help keep Queenslanders safe from crocodiles.

The detection system is mounted on a mobile camera platform, configured as a trailer, for easy transportation to different locations as the trial phase rolls out.

DETSI Senior Conservation Officer Daniel Guymer said JCU researchers analysed thousands of hours of footage supplied by DETSI to train an AI technology that can differentiate between crocodiles and other floating objects in the water.

“The aim is to create a reliable detection system that could be deployed on fixed or mobile infrastructure in high recreation-use areas,” Mr Guymer said.

“This is a significant step forward as we continue looking at innovative ways to improve public safety in areas where crocodiles also live.

“If successful, this technology could revolutionise how we monitor crocodiles, providing real-time data to help us manage crocodiles as effectively and efficiently as possible.”

The project lead, Senior Lecturer and Co-Deputy Head of JCU’s newly established Centre for AI and Data Science Innovation, Dr Tao (Kevin) Huang said baseline tests have demonstrated the AI technology can detect crocodiles.

“This is a huge benefit for community safety, and we now need to check that it can detect crocodiles in the water in real time,” Dr Huang said.

“If the program is successful, it could lead to the technology being used at public locations such as boat ramps or in marinas.

“Our aim is to detect crocodiles, while also considering future extensions of the AI technology to estimate their size, which could assist wildlife rangers in investigating sightings.”

The partnership will assess the feasibility of the detection system, with researchers optimistic about its potential to deliver practical solutions for crocodile management.

The new Queensland Crocodile Management Plan prioritises public safety while also seeking to conserve crocodiles in their natural habitat.

Speech: After Acacia: The Next Era of Financial System Innovation?

Source: Airservices Australia

Introduction

Today I’d like to foreshadow the key findings from Project Acacia – our experimental project into opportunities to uplift the functioning of Australia’s wholesale markets through the tokenisation of assets and money. Before I do, some historical scene setting is in order.

Seismic innovation in the way that assets and money move through the global financial system occurs rarely.

A reading of the history of past episodes suggests three enabling conditions stand out. First is a compelling economic value proposition from innovation that can be scaled to meet the changing demands of investors, issuers and the global economy. Second is technology that is up to the task of making the system more efficient and resilient. Third is public-private coordination to break through the inertia that often results from entrenched network effects in finance, and to overcome coordination failures when the ultimate payoffs to reform might be uncertain and likely to accumulate only over the longer term.

The last era to fit this characterisation was the transition from the centuries-old paper-based system of ledgers and money to an electronic system. As obvious as the benefits might now seem, this transformation did not occur overnight, nor did it occur without resistance from incumbents.

So what happened? In short, the increasing demands of market participants simply overwhelmed the ability of longstanding conventions to keep up. Wall Street found itself drowning in paper amid a host of institutional failures, so much so that in the early 1970s the US House of Representatives Committee on Commerce and Finance convened a special inquiry to investigate what could be done about the ‘paper crisis’. The result was that Wall Street turned to the latest cutting edge technology of the time (computers) to keep track of the ownership of paper securities and confirmation of monetary settlement. This heralded the beginning of the end of the era where purchasing a financial security or accepting securities as collateral meant receiving a physical certificate in the post a week later.

Even then, the process of ‘dematerialising’ securities and transitioning trading activity and record-keeping to electronic ledgers that commenced in the late 1960s took decades to fully embed at the global level. As late as 1987, just down the road from here, price discovery still consisted of the scribbling of chalk on blackboards as brokers barked out orders. Comprehensive reform took a coordinated push by both the private and public sectors around the world. Industry developed new infrastructure to support electronic trading, clearing and settlement, record-keeping and safe custody; central banks overhauled their settlement infrastructure; and legal and regulatory reform streamlined rules for securities issuance and clearing and settlement licensing in a manner fit for the electronic age.

Fast forward to today, and a key question now animating policymakers globally is whether the tokenisation of assets and money represents the next epoch-defining shift in the operation of the financial system, or a modest extension of today’s electronic arrangements – one that is more evolution than revolution. In this debate, it is important to recognise that tokenisation does not transform the economics of underlying real-world claims. It is simply a process whereby money and assets are represented as digital tokens that can be stored, traded and transferred on programmable platforms, enabling them to interact in new ways.

The most fervent advocates of the view that tokenised finance and related infrastructure upgrades will be revolutionary emphasise a range of potential benefits:

  • 24/7 trading platforms offering investors and issuers constant access to liquidity and improved collateral mobility.
  • Instantaneous ‘atomic’ settlement to reduce counterparty risk, where money and assets are pre-positioned and can be exchanged on the same ledger on an all-or-nothing basis.
  • Efficiency and functionality benefits from programming tokenised assets and money to interact in predefined ways that are not currently possible.
  • Cost and risk reductions for issuers and investors resulting from a reduced role for intermediaries performing manual tasks relating to reconciliation, asset servicing and compliance.

More sceptical critiques question whether these benefits will be as profound as some claim and whether the challenges are understated. To name a few:

  • The prospect that liquidity is fragmented across multiple trading venues or tied up in pre-funded trades.
  • Uncertainty about the scalability, security and resilience of underlying technologies.
  • Interoperability challenges with synchronising new and existing infrastructure.
  • Legal uncertainties surrounding tokenised claims and the smart contracts that govern their programmability.

There is, of course, a large space in between the extremes of these perspectives.

A few years ago I posed the question of whether tokenised markets had a future in Australia’s financial system, and if so, how new forms of money and infrastructure might support them. We set out to understand these issues through Project Acacia – a collaborative research project with the Digital Finance Cooperative Research Centre (DFCRC) and industry – examining whether tokenised forms of money and assets could enhance the functioning of our wholesale asset markets. The Payments System Board and Council of Financial Regulators (CFR) have engaged closely in this initiative, recognising the significant global momentum now building in this direction, and that dynamism in our wholesale financial markets has significantly lagged that in other areas of the Australian financial system like retail payments.

Let me cut to the chase on our main findings and the path ahead.

First, we no longer see the main question as whether tokenisation has a future in Australia’s financial system, but rather, how. Our findings in Project Acacia build on those from our previous central bank digital currency (CBDC) pilot, and external research, in suggesting the potential for tokenisation – when coupled with infrastructure design and payment system upgrades – to reduce risk while unlocking greater efficiency and functionality in our wholesale markets. Analysis recently published by the DFCRC quantified these potential gains for the Australian economy in the order of $24 billion per annum, and larger still if new markets emerged and second round effects are included. To be sure, tokenisation gives rise to a number of issues that should be subjected to closer scrutiny – a point we have previously stressed. But we have now seen enough to warrant intensified focus on how some of the potential benefits might be realised, consistent with system-wide stability.

Second, realising even a fraction of these potential benefits in coming years will require longstanding impediments to innovation in Australia’s financial system to be addressed. As much as Project Acacia has revealed strong industry interest in tokenised finance, a range of factors have stymied dynamism in our wholesale markets to date: a lack of competitive tension reflecting entrenched network effects; risk aversion, partly reflecting perceived legal and regulatory uncertainty; and coordination failures that have made strategic planning difficult.

Third, and most holistically, unlocking a new spirit of innovation in our wholesale markets is beyond the scope of any individual institution, public or private. The coordination challenges are very real. Unleashing more dynamism in Australia’s financial economy, enhancing our attractiveness as a destination for capital in the digitalising global economy, and strengthening our sovereign resilience at the same time, is likely to require a Team Australia effort. This will require all stakeholders to approach things differently. In the background is the momentum already building in key financial centres: witness, for instance, the sharp increase in tokenised asset issuance internationally (Graph 1); daily activity in tokenised repo markets in the United States now approaching US$400 billion; the US Securities and Exchange Commission’s recent rule change allowing the Nasdaq to facilitate trading of tokenised equities; and Clearstream’s launch of a tokenised securities platform.

To that end, the RBA will be partnering with other CFR agencies, the DFCRC and industry, in pursuit of an ambitious program of initiatives to support responsible innovation in Australia. A focal point for this effort will be the RBA’s exploration with the DFCRC into a new digital financial market infrastructure (DFMI) sandbox. This could allow industry and policymakers to build on the learnings from Acacia and smooth the path to practical implementation by providing a safe space for the testing and scaling of tokenised money, assets and new infrastructure in a longer term, stage-gated environment. To maximise synergies, this exploration will commence following the independent review commissioned by the Australian Government into Australia’s financial sandbox arrangements.

Graph 1

Insights from Project Acacia – industry and policy perspectives

Assisted with regulatory relief from ASIC and AUSTRAC, industry participants in Project Acacia explored 20 use cases involving a range of assets, forms of money and settlement arrangements (Table 1).

The project benefited from the diverse range of domestic and international participants: among them were banks; custodians; fintechs; payment system and financial market infrastructure operators; fund managers; stablecoin issuers; and technology providers.

Tokenised assets ranged from government and corporate bonds, repo, and bank term deposits, to investment funds, trade payables and mining royalties – among many others. Settlement was largely conducted in two forms of private money (stablecoins and bank deposit tokens) and two forms of central bank money (wholesale CBDC, and exchange settlement account (ESA) balances). Private and public distributed ledger technology platforms were utilised, and a novel element of Acacia was the issuance of a wholesale CBDC onto external ledgers to better understand the associated efficiency and safety issues.

As I will set out in a moment, the project findings were broader than initially envisaged, extending beyond tokenisation to include broader pathways to spurring dynamism in Australia’s wholesale financial system.

Table 1: Assets and Money Featuring in Project Acacia Use Cases(a)
  Money
  Central bank money
(wholesale CBDC and ESA balances)
Tokenised private money
(stablecoins and bank deposit tokens)
Asset Class Fixed income Government bonds
Government bond repos
Corporate bonds
Term deposits
Government bonds
Corporate bonds
Term deposits
Certificates of deposit
Annuities
Asset-backed securities
Investment funds and other assets Carbon credits
Private credit funds
Trade payables
Investment funds
Mining royalties

(a) For example, tokenised government bond transactions were settled in both central bank money and private tokenised money, while tokenised investment funds were only settled in private tokenised money.

Source: RBA.

Tokenised assets

Let me begin with some insights on the tokenisation of assets.

First, the intensity of industry engagement in the project revealed to us a strong and growing appetite to explore how the potential of tokenised asset markets could be realised, including through more creative use of market infrastructure. Project use cases highlighted several ways for value to be unlocked: through improved capital efficiency via reduced settlement frictions and shorter settlement cycles, reduced counterparty risk, automation of asset lifecycle management, and lower manual processing errors. Use cases also showed how tokenisation could be used to create assets that appealed to new investor profiles, potentially opening new channels for funding and liquidity. The programmability of tokenised assets and money also opened up opportunities to introduce advanced functionality in financial products and services that would be difficult or impossible to achieve with conventional forms of money and infrastructure.

Second, the project highlighted considerable industry interest in tokenising fixed income and related assets. This is consistent with trends in the United States and elsewhere (Graph 1; Graph 2). It is also in line with previous analysis by the RBA and DFCRC highlighting that aggregate efficiency gains from tokenisation could be material in existing markets because of their size (even if gains-per-trade are modest), reflecting in part that innovation in Australia’s wholesale markets has lagged other parts of our financial system. As a case in point, the manner in which banks raise funding in term deposit markets (accounting for around 15 per cent of total funding) has changed little in a generation: price discovery, placements and confirmation continue to largely occur over a mix of antiquated technology – telephones, branches, email and spreadsheets – and settlement is far from instantaneous. There was particular interest in the tokenisation of government bonds, given the critical role they play in the financial system as a safe asset and pricing benchmark for other credit instruments. For this reason, several jurisdictions, including the United Kingdom, are undertaking tokenised government bond pilots.

Graph 2

A third insight was that industry participants generally viewed ‘digitally native’ asset issuance as the preferred target end state, but recognised that the intermediate path of issuing asset tokens as ‘digital twins’ is more realistic as tokenised markets develop. In digitally native issuance, a token is the primary record of value and ownership on the ledger, eliminating the need for reconciliation with other (off-chain) records; by contrast, tokens that are digital twins represent a claim on underlying assets that are recorded in an off-ledger register, thus requiring a bridge between the two. While industry is attracted to features of native issuance like reduced reconciliation, streamlined custody and increased programmability, legal and operational considerations mean the path of least resistance is likely skewed toward the digital twin model in the near term.

A fourth insight was the importance of interoperability – between new and existing financial infrastructure, and between systems that operate domestically and those in international financial centres. I will return to the former in a moment. On the latter, I would simply note that reflecting Australia’s status as an open economy, our financial markets strongly benefit from active participation by foreign investors – they keep the cost of capital for Australian issuers lower, and liquidity in our markets higher, than otherwise (Graph 3). Investors from the United States, where tokenised markets are developing most rapidly, account for the largest source of foreign investment in our fixed income markets. A key implication is that if tokenised markets in Australia are to scale, they will need to offer a safe and seamless experience for investors abroad – building a domestic walled garden won’t do.

Graph 3

A more general insight was that for all this interest, industry has been grappling with impediments to large-scale commercial adoption. A consistent theme was that further exploration of commercialisation pathways will require closer coordination across industry, regulators and Government. Greater legal clarity, including over the enforcement of on-chain records and settlement finality, were cited as important to unlocking private investment. On the regulatory side, questions focused on the applicability of financial product designations in tokenised settings, how emerging digital financial market infrastructures fit within existing licensing frameworks – particularly when the clearing function is eliminated in tokenised markets – and how prudential standards apply to banks’ digital asset exposures.

Tokenised money

Let me now turn to the main insights relating to tokenised money.

First, use cases highlighted that in the long run, locating tokenised assets and money on the same ledgers could yield the largest efficiency gains and operational and settlement risk reduction benefits. However, there are a range of issues – policy, legal and technological – that need to be interrogated before this vision comes to pass. This might point to intermediate pathways in the near term where tokenised assets and money reside on separate ledgers (as today), but are able to seamlessly interact via so-called synchronisation bridges. Indeed, some use cases found this approach to be implementable today, and that it entailed minimal loss in settlement efficiency compared with more advanced arrangements involving a common ledger.

Second, the project revealed growing industry interest in the issuance of tokenised private money – stablecoins and bank deposit tokens. The experience in the United States and to some extent, Europe, has been that large banks are incentivised to issue deposit tokens when stablecoins are seen to pose a competitive threat and commercial opportunities arise from activity in tokenised markets. It will be intriguing to see if this pattern emerges in Australia following the passage of domestic stablecoin licensing reforms and the growing circulation of stablecoins internationally. One possibility in the years ahead is that stablecoins and bank deposit tokens have complementary roles: stablecoins playing a niche role in settlement for smaller greenfield tokenised markets, and bank deposit tokens having a more prominent role in larger markets. This reflects differences in their ability to scale (given stablecoins need to import trust through full reserve backing), and that bank deposit tokens build on the trust of existing bank deposits supported by a long history of prudential regulation and recourse to central bank liquidity facilities.

Third, the project pointed to a sequential role for central bank money and settlement infrastructure upgrades – one that could expand alongside the growth in tokenised markets. Some participants found that more expansive use of existing fast payment rails (via the New Payments Platform) and existing central bank infrastructure could yield meaningful progress in the near-term. An example was a synchronisation mechanism to orchestrate delivery-vs-payment (DvP) settlement between tokenised asset platforms and the existing interbank settlement system (RITS) operated by the RBA. I would note here a similar concept already exists to support property market transactions, where titles and pre-allocated exchange settlement balances are exchanged. A wholesale CBDC was viewed by industry as potentially helpful, but far from essential, for tokenised markets to get off the ground – as developments in the United States had shown. However, as I have previously noted (and the Principles for Financial Market Infrastructures allude to), if tokenised markets were to become systemically important, then the case for issuing wholesale CBDC – as the ultimate safe asset with potentially superior functionality to existing reserves – would strengthen from a financial stability perspective. As would more material upgrading of central bank settlement infrastructure. I will return to this in a moment.

Life after Project Acacia: The path ahead

Opportunities to uplift the functioning of our wholesale markets should be seen in the context of our larger national challenges around a lack of economic dynamism and need to shape international technological disruption in Australia’s national interest.

In this spirit, the final report on Project Acacia will outline a range of initiatives to be progressed by the RBA in conjunction with our CFR partners, the DFCRC and industry. This approach reflects the overarching takeaway from Acacia – stronger coordination across the private and public sectors is needed to ensure our markets are fit for the future. Tokenisation by itself is no silver bullet, but might instead be seen as one element of an enhanced payments and financial ecosystem that better serves the needs of the economy in the digital age.

First, the RBA will explore with the DFCRC how a new sandbox could better support responsible innovation in wholesale markets. Project Acacia and our previous CBDC pilot have been valuable in surfacing a range of issues associated with tokenisation. But there is now a recognised need to move beyond short-term pilots, towards longer term, stage-gated environments in which industry can better progress ideas to commercialisation, and regulators can learn about new technologies and safely adjust their policy settings if needed. The interaction of wholesale CBDC with bank deposit tokens and stablecoins, and the synchronisation of tokenised asset ledgers with RITS, will be particular areas of interest. Internationally, the synchronisation of asset and settlement ledgers is becoming viewed as a way of making practical, sequential progress – that is, ahead of larger investment commitments by industry and policy commitments by central banks on wholesale CBDC and overhauling settlement systems. We will be seeking industry input on these issues, drawing on the type of functionality that already exists for property settlement and international insights from initiatives like the Bank of England’s Synchronisation Lab. We envisage this consultation would feed into the RBA’s longer term work into options for RITS modernisation, aimed at ensuring our critical settlement infrastructure can support the evolving needs of the financial system well into the future.

Second, the RBA will be reviewing its policies for entities that can access ESAs to support competition and innovation in payments. We expect to commence this review once the first tranche of the Government’s payment service provider licensing reforms has passed Parliament. In the meantime, we are engaging with peer central banks to better understand the competition and financial stability implications from stablecoin issuers holding funds in central bank deposits. We note the regulatory framework for the licensing and prudential supervision of issuers of Australian dollar-denominated stablecoins is an important pillar of the Government’s approach to developing responsible innovation in the Australian digital asset industry.

Third, in recognising the substantial role that open capital markets and international trade play in the Australian economy, the RBA will also be stepping up its work in cross-border payments. This includes by exploring with peer central banks how new forms of money and settlement infrastructure could enhance wholesale cross-border payments. We will have more to say about this during the year.

We also plan to partner with CFR agencies and industry on other joint initiatives. For instance, we will shortly invite industry to participate in a joint Regulator-Industry Tokenisation Advisory Group, as an extension of the forum that provided valuable input over the past year. The objective here would be for regulators and industry to address regulatory, legal and other challenges relating to tokenised assets and money that were first surfaced in Acacia. Industry told us they valued the opportunity to discuss these challenges openly and with all regulators in the one room, so we see this forum as a way to keep the constructive engagement going.

Recognising the central role of our commercial banks in the safe and efficient operation of the payment system – and the two-tier monetary system that has served the country well – an expanded version of the Deposit Token Working Group will also be convened. The aim here is to build on the progress of the related group in Project Acacia by developing practical solutions to support the interoperability of deposit tokens issued by different banks.

Finally, CFR agencies will convene an industry C-suite Roundtable on the Future of Digital Finance in Australia. This forum would be aimed at facilitating more regular senior-level engagement on international developments as they relate to opportunities and challenges for the country in uplifting the functioning of our wholesale markets.

Concluding remarks

It is impossible to foresee where technological change might take the financial system a decade or two down the road. Some innovations will break through. Others will not survive deeper scrutiny. It remains an open question where tokenisation will eventually place here. What I can confirm is that ensuring Australia’s payments, monetary and financial infrastructure arrangements are fit for purpose in the digital age is a strategic priority for the RBA and the Payments System Board. This is why we are committed to working with industry and fellow regulators to deepen our understanding of the issues presented by tokenised finance.

Let me conclude with two reflections.

First, we could do well to draw on our history of financial innovation that has allowed Australia to punch above its weight on the international stage in some key areas. After a couple of decades of investment by the RBA and the CSIRO, Australia became the first country to develop modern polymer banknotes – a solution to the problems of forgery and damage that plagued paper-based notes for centuries and one that has since reshaped global currency manufacturing. Australia’s pioneering superannuation system has grown to be the envy of many retirement systems around the world. In retail payments, Australia’s fintech capabilities have long been distinguished by world-class innovation. And the introduction of the New Payments Platform nearly a decade ago encompassed functionalities that were on the global frontier. In different ways, these innovations all reflected the elements of scalable economic value, robust technology and public-private engagement I mentioned at the outset.

Second, the path ahead I have set out today should be viewed as part of a larger effort by the Australian policy community to ensure our financial system is positioned for a more dynamic future. This includes the Government’s current review of Australia’s financial sandbox arrangements and forthcoming licensing and digital asset platform reforms, and ASIC’s analysis of regulatory and legal barriers to asset tokenisation and its broader work program around strengthening Australia’s capital markets.

The bottom line is this – a financial system that is more dynamic and resilient to technological disruption is in our national interest. But it will take a Team Australia effort. Thanks to everyone involved in Project Acacia for being part of this journey so far.

Long standing supporters of the Good Friday Appeal

Source: Victoria Country Fire Authority

For more than 56 years, Ararat Fire Brigade has been tin rattling for the Good Friday Appeal (GFA) – a cause that first hit home when a brigade member’s child required lifesaving surgery.

Jim Jackson kicked off fundraising efforts after his daughter received heart surgery at the Royal Children’s Hospital back in 1970 before dedicating 37 years as the brigade’s area manager.

He raised $743,869 within the Ararat community up until he passed away in 2015 and would stay back until the last cent was counted, begging to see what the final tally was. 

Graeme and Peter Cooper both took over the reins from Jim in the years following, however, for the past 5 years, Rhonda Wall and Daniel Ramsdell have taken the lead as area managers.

“We will ensure the support to the RCH and the Appeal continues around Ararat long into the future and will endure to honour Jim’s legacy with the same dedication, drive and passion he had for the Appeal,” Rhonda said.  

“We all love raising money for the kids and seeing it go toward research and development to help enable them to give children a better life through treatment and cures. 

“One of my relations received treatment from the age of one to 16 years old and I cannot speak highly enough of the care and dedication at the hospital.  

“There are other brigade members’ families who have had children treated there too, such as Peter Cooper when his daughter required open-heart surgery. 

“The CFA connection is very special throughout Victoria, and we are proud to carry on this tradition for many years to come.” 

With a current tally of total funds raised at $1,163,913 and an annual target of $30,000, Ararat brigade members continue to strive for more each year.  

“We fundraise by walking the streets of Ararat rattling tins with busloads of children, friends and parents, some of whom have had children hospitalised at the Royal Children’s Hospital,” Rhonda said.  

“We also collect at the traffic lights raising a large amount of money, and all the pubs, clubs and businesses in Ararat have collection boxes too. 

“One volunteer visits the neighbouring towns on the outskirts of Ararat and has been doing so for many years.   

“Member Carl Forshaw has brought roughly $18,000 to the Appeal over eight years through raffles, auctions, barbecues, concerts and dressing up as the Easter Bunny. He will continue until he can’t and says he is doing it for the kids.” 

Rhonda encourages other brigades to get involved if they haven’t already, and it’s OK to start small because every dollar counts.  

“Just do it! Keep trying until it works and ask other brigades for their advice or join in alongside them,” Rhonda said.  

Meanwhile in Boronia, the name Bill Ireland remains infamous with the Good Friday Appeal, as he has also supported the cause since 1970.  

Bill joined the brigade in 1967 and recalls the brigade decided to start collecting for the hospital three years later. He has only missed two collections since.  

“When I joined the brigade, we weren’t part of a group, and it wasn’t until we joined the Knox Group with seven other fire brigades that we started collecting together for the RCH,” Bill said.  

“I probably would have collected quite a few thousand dollars over the years, and sometimes I get the same people donating who remember me year after year. 

“Over many years I’ve collected at the Boronia Road and Dorset Road intersection, and more recently we have been basing ourselves at Kmart in Boronia on the night before.  

“We don’t usually set targets, but on average we get between $30,000 and $35,000 a year. We try to keep up with the lack of cash that people carry so we now have a card machine available.” 

Bill’s connection to the RCH runs deep, with his son receiving treatment when he was younger.   

“I was also just made a life member of the RCH and recently received a certificate of appreciation for helping the hospital too,” Bill said.  

“It’s amazing to see the generosity of the community and every second car donating. Lots of them have kids in the car and they learn to understand what the hospital is.  

“You don’t have to force people to give money, they’re so generous. Last year we had people handing out $100 notes. It’s just so nice to know that you are helping in some way.” 

Make this Friday a Good Friday. Give what you can – in person or donate online at https://fundraise.goodfridayappeal.com.au/find-a-fundraiser

Submitted by CFA media

A working smoke alarm can save a life – and this week it did

Source: Victoria Country Fire Authority

Last Monday evening (23 March) Lilydale Fire Brigade was paged to a chimney fire in Kidgell Street, Lilydale.

The fire was called in by a neighbour who heard a smoke alarm activating inside the house. On investigating he noticed smoke and called 000.

Lilydale Fire Brigade members train on a Monday night, and coincidentally a truck and crew were travelling in the same street when the call was received. This enabled them to arrive at the house within a couple of minutes.

On arrival, the brigade noticed smoke coming from the chimney and out of the eaves. Lilydale Fire Brigade Captain Warren Davis approached the house and felt the locked front door, which was hot.

While standing at the door he heard a man inside the house call for help. Warren asked whether the man could get to a window, but he couldn’t. Warren then forced open the front door and two CFA members wearing breathing apparatus entered the dark, smoke-filled house and felt their way around the room until they found the man.

The firefighters dragged the soot-covered man to the front of the house where first-aid was commenced, and he was placed on oxygen until the ambulance arrived. he was then transported to hospital with suspected smoke inhalation.

The fire is believed to have started in the kitchen.

“This is a powerful reminder that working smoke alarms don’t just alert you, they can alert those around you too,” Warren said. “Without a working smoke alarm this incident could have had a very different outcome.”

Submitted by Sue Harley

RANGE ROAD, WILLUNGA (Grass Fire)

Source: South Australia County Fire Service

Issued on
25 Mar 2026 11:28

Warning area
5 Kilometres East of Willunga in the Southern Mount Lofty Ranges of South Australia

Warning level
Advice – Stay Informed

Action
Monitor local conditions and stay informed if you are in this area. Decide what you will do if the situation changes.

At this time there is no threat to life or property and firefighters are attending this fire.

More information will be provided by the CFS when it is available.

Death in Custody Investigation – Casuarina

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The Northern Territory Police Force (NTPF) is investigating a death in custody that occurred in Casuarina overnight.

Around 8:40pm, the Joint Emergency Services Communications Centre received a report that a man had damaged window louvres and assaulted a woman at the Tiwi Gardens Retirement Village in Casuarina.

Police attended the scene and located a man in the vicinity, who was arrested without incident.

The man was secured in the rear cage of a police vehicle. A short time later the man was observed by members to have laboured breathing. St John Ambulance were contacted while police began CPR.

St John Ambulance members attended and conveyed the man to Royal Darwin Hospital where he was later declared deceased at 10:10pm.

The formal cause of death is yet to be determined and the deceased is yet to be formally identified.

A crime scene was established at the police vehicle and the location of arrest.

The NTPF Major Crime Section Detectives are investigating the death with oversight from the Professional Standards Command.

Police are also investigating this matter on behalf of the Coroner.

Competition runs in the family at Kerang

Source: Victoria Country Fire Authority

The Ash family will be competing in this weekend’s State Championships in Stawell

For one Kerang family, the CFA/VFBV State Firefighter Championships isn’t just a competition, it’s a family outing.

Six members of the Ash family are competing for bragging rights this weekend in the Urban Senior competition.

You can see them in action this weekend as the State Champs reaches it’s conclusion at Stawell’s North Park Oval on Saturday 28 and Sunday 29 March. 

Submitted by CFA Media

Improving access to endometriosis care across Victoria

Source: Australian Capital Territory Policing

March marks Endometriosis Awareness Month, dedicated to raising awareness for the chronic condition.

Endometriosis, commonly known as “endo,” affects one in 7 women in Australia, yet many live in pain for years without a diagnosis. With no cure and often debilitating symptoms, endometriosis can significantly disrupt daily life – impacting everything from a woman’s ability to work and study to their relationships, social life and fertility.

Endometriosis External Link occurs when tissue similar to the lining of the uterus grows outside the uterus (womb) – usually in the pelvis, but sometimes in other areas of the body. While every woman’s experience looks different, some common symptoms of endometriosis include:

  • painful, often heavy, periods
  • persistent pelvic pain
  • pelvic, abdominal, or lower back pain
  • deep pain during or after sex.

For many women, physical pain is only part of the story. The Inquiry into Women’s Pain heard from women and girls about their experiences of endometriosis and how their pain impacted every aspect of their lives.

The exact cause of endometriosis is not yet fully understood, but current research suggests that the condition may be linked to a combination of hormonal, genetic and immune factors.

While there’s no known way to prevent endometriosis, recognising symptoms early and seeking medical care can help women manage the condition and minimise its impacts.

Improving endometriosis care in Victoria

Led by the Department of Health, the delivery of the Victorian Government’s Women’s Health and Wellbeing Program is setting a new benchmark for accessible, comprehensive and inclusive women’s healthcare to transform the way women’s health issues are understood and treated.

As part of this work, a new suite of dedicated women’s health services is expanding access to endometriosis care across the state. These services are designed to help women receive earlier diagnosis, coordinated treatment and ongoing support closer to home, reducing the barriers that have traditionally delayed care.

New Women’s Health Clinics External Link offer free multidisciplinary specialist care under one roof, giving women faster access to the care they need. While the clinics provide care and support for a range of women’s health issues, the assessment and management of endometriosis is a service available to all women, girls and gender diverse people.

Jesse, an Advanced Laparoscopic Fellow at the Women’s Health Clinic in Frankston, provides specialised evidence-based care for women with suspected or confirmed endometriosis.

She says listening to women and validating their experiences of pain is integral to ensuring women are heard and supported when seeking care.

“Last week, I had a patient who came for her first visit, and she came out after the clinic appointment, and she said it was first time since her first period that she has been listened to,” Jesse says.

  • 24 March 2026

The care delivered at 20 new Women’s Health Clinics is complemented by additional Women’s Health and Wellbeing Program services and initiatives.

As part of the program, an additional 10,800 laparoscopies are being delivered free of charge over 4 years (2023-2027) to help diagnose women with endometriosis.

Endometriosis assessment and care is also available at the dedicated Aboriginal Women’s Health Clinic External Link , and the Virtual Women’s Health Clinic External Link , which offers free telehealth appointments to women and girls statewide.

Find out more about how the Department of Health is bridging the gap in women’s healthcare through the Women’s Health and Wellbeing Program.

Charges – Going armed in public – Darwin City

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

A man has been charged following an alleged weapons incident in Darwin City yesterday evening.

Around 10:40pm, police CCTV operators observed three males allegedly breaking into a parked vehicle at a carpark on Cavenagh Street.

One male was observed removing an edged weapon from the rear passenger seat while the second male removed two edged weapons from the front compartment.

Both men were then observed walking around the area with the weapons in their hands.

Police attended and apprehended a 34-year-old male who was allegedly in possession of two edged weapons.

He was later charged with possess, carry, use controlled weapon at night and granted conditional bail to appear before the Darwin Local Court on 1 June.

The second offender fled the scene on foot with CCTV operators confirming he was not in possession of the edged weapon at the time.

Both the weapon and the alleged offender remain outstanding.

Police are urging anyone with any information to contact police on 131 444 or make a report anonymously via Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

Rain serves as reminder to monitor damp haystacks

Source: Victoria Country Fire Authority

Hay fire in McMillans

Farmers are being reminded to monitor damp haystacks after recent rain which has caused spontaneous combustion of multiple stacks across the state.

Since summer kicked off, CFA volunteers have been called out to more than 30 incidents involving haystacks.  

On Friday, 20 March CFA crews responded to a hayshed fire in the north west in McMillans where over 1,500 bales of hay were destroyed. 

CFA Assistant Chief Fire Officer for District 20, Mick Sporton, said recent rain caused the bales to spontaneously combust, and recent incidents serve as a timely reminder for others to check on their haystacks.  

“Things are starting to cool down as we head into autumn, but with that comes rain and moisture which can increase the risk of haystacks catching fire,” Mick said.  

“It is important people check the internal temperature of their bales regularly to ensure they aren’t heating up too much. 

“Farmers all over the state are currently battling many challenges and it is devastating when we see them loose hay.” 

On Monday, 23 March CFA crews also responded to reports of a haystack fire in Wilby where units from multiple local brigades found more than 3,000 bales issuing smoke.  

Luckily members were able to save a large portion of the stack but unfortunately, 200 bales were lost. 

Earlier the same day CFA responded to another haystack fire in Ballendella where approximately 800 bales were alight.  

A moist environment allows for microorganisms to grow inside the hay bales which generate heat, and if it remains undetected the rising can ignite a fire.  

Mick said the temperature of haystacks can be monitored by using a temperature probe or crowbar. 

“If there are signs that the hay is starting to heat up, pull the stack apart to improve airflow and allow the bales to cool,” Mick said.  

“Keep an eye out for steam rising from haystacks, condensation or corrosion under the hayshed roof or mould growing on the bales. 

“The hay make slump in sections and can produce unusual odours like a burning, musty, caramel smell. 

“It is best to limit the size of your haystacks and store hay in a number of different locations away from vehicles and machinery to avoid losing more than your hay. 

More information on haystack fires and what to do to prevent them can be found on CFA’s website at www.cfa.vic.gov.au/hay   

Submitted by CFA Media