Operation Ventura delivers strong early results in Palmerston

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The Northern Territory Police Force’s high-visibility Operation Ventura continues to deliver strong enforcement outcomes across Palmerston, with officers making more than 20 arrests and tipping out almost 260 litres of alcohol in the first week of the operation.

Launched on 18 May 2026, Operation Ventura brings together police and partnered agencies to target anti-social behaviour, alcohol-related harm and criminal activity in known hotspot locations across Palmerston.

Superintendent Katie Hatzismalis said the first seven days of the operation demonstrated both strong enforcement action and proactive community engagement.

“The operation is only in its early days, but we’re already seeing strong results and positive engagement within the community,” Superintendent Hatzismalis said.

“Police are continuing to keep the pressure on in Palmerston, working closely with partnered agencies to monitor and target active known hotspots.

“Our members remain committed to maintaining a highly visible presence and ensuring residents and businesses know that action is being taken against those who look to cause harm.”

Since the commencement of Operation Ventura on 18 May 2026, police have recorded the following activity outcomes:

  • Persons spoken to – 602
  • Persons moved on – 325
  • Alcohol litres tipped out – 259
  • High visibility patrols – 256
  • Arrests – 21
  • Protective Custody Apprehensions – 12
  • Banned Drinker Orders Issued – 17
  • Wandings – 182
  • Weapones seized – 7
  • Infringements issued – 6

Operation Ventura will continue with ongoing patrols and targeted enforcement activities over the next two months.

Bushfire research strengthens Victorian preparedness and response

Source: Victoria Country Fire Authority

New bushfire research has identified important learnings for future bushfire preparedness and management.

Bushfire scientists from CFA and Forest Fire Management Victoria (FFMVic), through the Safer Together program, have reconstructed 5 bushfires from the 2023-24 fire season, including the bushfires at:

  • Bayindeen – Rocky Road
  • Mt Stapylton
  • Bellfield
  • Staffordshire Reef
  • Dereel.

The reconstructions strengthen CFA and FFMVic’s science and learnings across fire behaviour, modelling, suppression and overall management effectiveness to improve how we prepare for and manage major fires.

Researchers examined fires that burned more than 28,000 hectares and interacted with areas that had undergone planned burning in the past five years.

FFMVic Chief Fire Officer Chris Hardman said reconstruction reports are essential for understanding fire behaviour in real conditions and improving how agencies manage bushfire risk and are part of an annual program of research that fire agencies collaborate on.

‘These reports help us learn directly from major fires and understand what worked, what was challenged and where we can improve,’ Mr Hardman said.

Researchers looked at how fuel treatments, the landscape, weather and firefighting efforts affected how the fires spread and how severe they became. This included on-the-ground observations, aerial infrared imagery, fuel moisture data and new 3D mapping technology.

Overall, research from the Bayindeen – Rocky Road fire found that fuel management can make a real difference during major fires by slowing or moderating fire behaviour in some parts of the landscape and creating safer conditions for firefighters.

‘The research shows fuel-reduced areas can support decision-making during a fire by giving crews more options on the ground,’ Mr Hardman added.

When fire moved into areas that had been treated by planned burning, researchers found lower fire severity, suggesting that fire behaviour was less intense. Experienced crews on the ground reported that those treated areas made it safer and easier for firefighters to work closer to the fire edge, slow or stop the fire, and establish containment lines.

The research also observed lower fire severity in treated areas in parts of the fire footprint. This included reduced canopy scorch and char height compared with nearby untreated areas. These patches of lower severity fire can help reduce longer-term ecological damage and support environmental recovery.

The reports highlight variability in the effectiveness of planned burning, influenced by factors such as fire behaviour at the time of interaction, time since treatment, fuel regrowth and weather. This reinforces the need for ongoing research and continual improvement in how fuel management is planned and delivered.

The reports also reviewed how fire danger ratings and bushfire simulators performed. Those insights will help refine modelling, risk assessment and operational planning.

‘By combining field data with operational experience, we’re strengthening the evidence that underpins both fuel management and fire response,’ Mr Hardman said.

CFA Deputy Chief Officer Alen Slijepcevic AFSM said reconstruction reports ensure lessons from major bushfire events are recorded and shared across the sector so that we continually improve mitigation, planning and operations.

‘By combining field data with operational experience, we’re strengthening the evidence that underpins both fuel management and fire response,’ Mr Slijepcevic said.

‘Each reconstruction helps build a clearer picture of how fire behaves under extreme conditions. This work is critical to improving preparedness, supporting firefighters during incidents and making Victoria more resilient ahead of future fire seasons.’

To view the full reports, visit Fire research and adaptive management publications.

Submitted by CFA media

Construction starts on new Winnindoo Fire Station

Source: Victoria Country Fire Authority

The new fire station for Winnindoo Fire Brigade is officially under construction, with the local community set to receive a boost to their emergency service capability by the end of the year.

The southeastern Victorian rural community is home to 333 people, and the brigade, first registered in 1946, holds a membership of 65 volunteers, with 19 operational firefighters who average 27 callouts a year.

The new station is being developed at 1151 Rosedale-Heyfield Road in Winnindoo and will replace the existing station on the same road.

Key amenities will include a reverse in motor room – bay, to house their Heavy Tanker, and include storage space, a car park, operational areas and a multipurpose room. There will be turnout areas for both men and women, with accessible unisex bathrooms.

Winnindoo Fire Brigade Captain Ton Van Dijk said brigade members are eager to utilise their new purpose-built space.   

“Being in a rural setting in a small town, the new fire station is going to make a real difference to not only our brigade but the broader community,” Ton said.

“Our current station is just one shed, with one engine bay and kitchenette, so it will be fantastic to have dedicated spaces that will make things more functional and easier to meet as a group.

“Being right at the edge of the bush not far from the foothills, we do at times find it hard to recruit new members, so I am hopeful that our new modern facilities will allow for greater training and recruiting opportunities.”

Ton said he doesn’t see the new fire station existing just for Winnindoo, instead he sees it as an asset for the broader community to use.

“We work closely with our neighbouring brigades, and we often turn out for each when the pager goes off,” Ton said.

“We are very grateful to be receiving a new fire station. It leaves the door open for our group or district to invest in a new vehicle and have it stationed here as a resource for everyone to use when needed.”

Winnindoo members have attended numerous significant incidents over the years, including the 2019-20 bushfires, 2009 bushfires and the Hazelwood mine fire in 2014. 

CFA District 10 Assistant Chief Fire Officer Kade Dowie said the new design reflects CFA’s dedication to volunteer safety, inclusivity and sustainability.

“The new station will not only enhance the brigade’s response capabilities further, but also the broader community and southeast region,” Kade said.

“Projects such as this one demonstrate CFA’s commitment to our regional communities.

“It’s great to see environmentally sustainable design features have also been incorporated, such as solar panels, an EV charging station, rainwater recycling, and water sensitive landscaping.”

Construction is expected to be completed by late 2026.

Submitted by CFA media

ACCC consults on view not to oppose Australia Post stamp price increase

Source: Australian Ministers for Regional Development

The ACCC is seeking feedback from businesses and consumers on its preliminary view not to object to Australia Post’s proposed stamp price increase of 8.8 per cent from mid-to late-2026.

Australia Post’s draft price notification submitted in December 2025 proposes the following price increases:
 

Letter type

Current price

Proposed price

Increase

Small letter (basic postage rate)

$1.70

$1.85

8.8%

Large letter up to 125g

$3.40

$3.70

8.8%

Large letter between 125 and 250g

$5.10

$5.55

8.8

Australia Post is not proposing to increase the price of concession stamps (60 cents each) or seasonal greeting card stamps (65 cents each).

Earlier this year, Australia Post also increased the number of concession stamps available to eligible consumers from 50 to 75 each year, in response to a recommendation from the ACCC.

After assessing the draft price notification, the ACCC has found that Australia Post’s reserved letter service revenue is unlikely to exceed its efficient costs.

“Our assessment found Australia Post will likely fall slightly short of covering its efficient costs with the proposed price increase,” ACCC Commissioner Anna Brakey said.

“Without a price increase on stamps, Australia Post’s reserved letter service would be likely to experience a much larger shortfall.”

Australia Post continues to highlight declining letter volumes as the primary cause of financial pressure on its letter service, with letter volumes forecast to further decline by approximately 10 per cent annually over the coming years.

Despite declining letter volumes, the ACCC notes that Australia Post’s losses for its reserved letter service appear to be decreasing, in part due to successive stamp price increases in 2023, 2024 and 2025.

Further, the ACCC expects losses from the reserved letter service in 2026-27 will be smaller than Australia Post’s forecast.

Australia Post estimates the proposed price increase will impact the average household by 75 cents per year, but some consumers will be affected more significantly.

“Businesses and organisations who send large mail volumes will be most affected by the proposed price increase, particularly those required by law to communicate by post,” Ms Brakey said.

In forming its preliminary view, the ACCC considered stakeholder feedback provided in the early-2026 consultation process. While the ACCC acknowledges public opposition to the proposed increase, it assessed the proposal using a cost-based approach consistent with its role.

The ACCC does not approve any proposed price increase under the Australia Post price notification framework. Only the Minister for Communications has the power to reject a price increase proposed by Australia Post.

Consultation on the ACCC’s preliminary view paper is open until Monday 22 June 2026.

Submissions can be sent by email to postalservices@accc.gov.au.

For more information about the consultation process, including guidelines for making a submission, see consultation on ACCC preliminary view.

Note for editors

Australia Post’s proposal is not an additional increase to letter costs, but the same draft proposal as previously discussed in this February 2026 media release – ACCC seeks views on Australia Post’s proposed stamp price increase.

Background

Under the Competition and Consumer Act, the ACCC is responsible for assessing proposed price increases by Australia Post for its reserved ordinary letter services delivered to the regular timetable.

Australia Post’s reserved ordinary letter services are services for which Australia Post has a statutory monopoly and are declared as ‘notified services’ under the Competition and Consumer Act. The current declaration for Australia Post’s notified services is due to expire on 31 December 2028.

The ACCC must consider Australia Post’s proposed price increases for these services and may decide to:

  • not object to the price increase
  • not object to a price that is less than that proposed, or
  • object to the price increase.

The lodgement by Australia Post of a draft price notification provides the ACCC with time to undertake a public consultation process and preliminary economic assessment of the proposed increase. Once Australia Post submits a formal price notification, the ACCC will issue a final decision within 21 days.

Australia Post is also required to provide written notice of the proposed price increase to the Minister for Communications. It can only increase the basic postage rate if the Minister does not disapprove the proposal within 30 days.

The last price notification from Australia Post considered by the ACCC was in 2024, and prior to that in 2023 and 2022.

While the ACCC did not object to Australia Post’s last price notification, it made a series of recommendations in its June 2025 decision regarding cost allocation, forecast data and customer engagement. A summary of Australia Post’s implementation of these recommendations is available at Appendix 2 of the draft price notification.

P plate driver detected drink driving

Source: Tasmania Police

P plate driver detected drink driving

Sunday, 24 May 2026 – 8:24 am.

A 17-year-old male P-plater has had their vehicle clamped and will appear in court at a later date after being found hooning with excess passengers and alcohol in their system overnight.
About 1:15am on Sunday (24 May), a member from Launceston Police Station was on routine patrol in the Newnham area when they observed a blue Jaguar Sedan allegedly hooning on George Town Road.
The vehicle was intercepted and a youth was identified as the driver.
They were found to have an excess number of passengers between the ages of 16 and 21 in the vehicle, contrary to the conditions of their P1 licence.
The youth was breath tested by police and returned a positive indication for alcohol – as a provisional licence holder they are not permitted to drive with any alcohol in their system.
The youth completed a breath analysis which returned a reading of 0.039.
This National Road Safety Week Tasmania Police is reminding members of the public to drive in a manner which does not put the lives of their passengers, other members of the public or themselves at risk of serious injury or death.

Victorian Labor Party conference

Source: Prime Minister of Australia

begin by acknowledging the Traditional Owners of the land on which we meet and I pay my respects to their Elders past, present and emerging.

And I want to say that last night I did one of the best things you can do in Melbourne, The Long Walk to the MCG.

Delegates, it is an absolute pleasure to be here in Victoria, among so many true believers.

I acknowledge the Premier of Victoria, my friend Jacinta Allan who will address you this morning. I acknowledge her family, who I got to meet earlier.

Jacinta is defined by her enthusiasm and by her determination to make Victoria stronger and fairer – stronger because it is fairer.

JA loves this state: from the growing regions she calls home, to the great global city her infrastructure has transformed.

That pride in Victoria, that belief in Victorians and their capacity and that investment in Victoria’s future success is the story of her Labor Government.

And that’s why, with your help and hard work and dedication and passion, Labor will win again in November.

I acknowledge all my parliamentary colleagues, led by the best Deputy Prime Minister anyone could ask for, Richard Marles. 

I also want to acknowledge the Victorian members of the Class of 2025, who joined the Labor Caucus on 3rd of May last year.

It is a privilege to see all of you here together, one year after Australians put their trust in Labor.

After 2022, many commentators said we’d reached our high-water mark in Victoria.

But then Mary Doyle won in Aston.

And Jodie Belyea won in Dunkley. My second favourite Jodie on earth.

And then in 2025, we didn’t just hold every seat.

Matt Gregg won Deakin.

Gabriel Ng won Menzies.

Sarah Witty won Melbourne.

And Michelle Ananda-Rajah won a third spot on the Senate ticket – the first time at a half Senate election since 2007.

None of that happened by accident.

It happened because we had outstanding candidates, terrific volunteers and dedicated supporters who worked tirelessly, passionately advocating for our plan to build Victoria’s future.

To build Australia’s future.

Delegates,

Today marks exactly four years since I had the extraordinary honour of being sworn in as Australia’s 31st Prime Minister.

Four years ago, the Australian people rejected the politics of division and denial that defined a wasted decade of Coalition government.

And backed our plan for a better future, a stronger economy and a fairer society.

Where hard work is rewarded and opportunity is expanded.

With no one held back, and no one left behind.

In those four years, the world has thrown a lot at Australia – and we know that uncertainty in the world is still putting people under pressure here at home.

But in the face of global challenges, we’ve held true to Australian values.

And we’ve kept our focus on delivering for the Australian people, each and every one.

Demonstrating the power of Labor governments to change things for the better.

That’s why we’re strengthening Medicare: with record funding for our public hospitals.

And delivering a network of 137 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics – right across the country.

Including 29 we promised in Victoria – every one of which is open, right now, including every weekend.

Those Urgent Care Clinics have been visited more than 620,000 times by Victorians accessing the free healthcare they need, closer to home.

411 Victorian GP clinics have now switched over to bulk-billing every patient, every time.

This takes the total number of fully bulk billing GP clinics in Victoria to over 1,030.

And we’ve opened new Endo and Pelvic Pain Clinics – from Werribee to Dandenong – because our Labor Government takes women’s health seriously.

Now something that in the lead up to 2022, we didn’t promise, but we’ve done it anyway. 

For the first time ever, in the Education State, we are putting every student in every government school on the path to full and fair funding.

Investing an additional $2.5 billion in Victorian schools.

Together, our governments are planning and building the suburbs and cities of the future.

Transforming Melbourne’s transport infrastructure with projects like the North East Link and the Western Freeway Corridor.

And as part of our generational investment in Airport Rail – as part of SRL – together we are expanding Sunshine Station, and electrifying trains out to Melton.

So we can connect the Airport to the CBD – but also, so we can better connect the CBD to the West.

And of course, I am proud of the Commonwealth’s commitment to the transformational Suburban Rail Loop, including an additional $3.8 billion in last week’s Budget.

Just a few weeks ago, I was out at the site where tunnel boring machines are being assembled and will be in the ground by the year’s end.

The SRL will join up railway lines in four different directions.

Including V/Line services.

Charting a course for Victoria’s future.

Slashing travel times and taking cars off the road.

Delivering thousands of jobs.

Fostering the development of new homes close to the schools and jobs in the urban centres that people want to live in. 

Reshaping the flow of Melbourne’s public transport network so commuters who want to get between suburbs don’t have to travel into the city – and then back out again.

This is the sort of project that defines the public transport infrastructure of global cities.

London, Paris, New York.

And through the Suburban Rail Loop, Melbourne will join those peer cities as a modern, future-looking global centre.

Because Labor will deliver it.

Together, federal and Victorian Labor are building more homes.

And together, we are helping more Australians to buy them.

Faster approvals, better planning and more new homes closer to the city – so young Victorians can buy a home in the same neighbourhood where they grew up, close to family and friends.

And greater investment in social and affordable homes, so essential workers can live closer to their vital jobs, school and public transport.

Victoria is also the first home buyer capital of the nation.

Since coming to government, our 5 per cent deposit plan has helped over 80,000 Victorians buy a home of their own. 

And through our $47 billion Homes for Australia Plan, we are throwing everything at housing supply.

That includes Help to Buy and Build to Rent.

The National Housing Accord.

And the Housing Australia Future Fund.

Last weekend, I visited a HAFF site in Rosanna with Kate Thwaites and Clare O’Neil.

When I first visited during the election campaign, it was a construction site.

Now, there are 45 new social and affordable homes – right there, where they’re needed – next to the train station, right near the shops.

That’s what we’re building on, all over the country.

And the Liberals want to stop in its tracks.

They have spent four years trying to block every single housing policy we have brought to Parliament.

At the last election, they promised to abolish the HAFF, Build to Rent and Help to Buy.

And last week, they committed to do it all again.

Because they have learned nothing.

Their plan on housing is tools down.

They want to stop construction of tens of thousands of homes across Victoria and the nation.

To remove the Commonwealth’s leadership in unlocking new housing supply.

And to make it harder for Australians to get into a home of their own.

Remember this – for most of their time in government, they didn’t even bother to have a housing minister. 

They are the blockers and the wreckers – we are the builders and we’re getting on with it.

Together, we have thrown everything at housing supply.

But it is clear we need to make a bigger difference.

Because it has never been harder for young people to buy a home of their own.

Even though so many of them are doing everything right:

Working hard.

Saving hard for a deposit.

Going to dozens of inspections and auctions.

For so many, it feels like they are paddling furiously, but going nowhere.

And they are right to feel that.

Because the truth is, the system isn’t working.

Since 1999, house prices have risen by more than 400 per cent – more than twice as fast as incomes.

And every Saturday, just like every Saturday, young people are out there. They’ve been missing out. They go to an auction and they’re there bidding away for the home that they want to live in. The security that comes from that roof over your head, but the person next to them has got someone else on their side – the Australian taxpayer. And because of the tax breaks that are there, it’s not an equal process. Because if it’s a matter of an extra $20,000 to bid or $30,000 to bid, they know that they can do that in the comfort that that will be an increase in their tax deduction, that all of you and every Australian taxpayer is their partner here. But if you’re trying to buy your own home, you don’t have that.

That’s why, put simply, we are reforming negative gearing and capital gains.

As a Labor Prime Minister, I refuse to stand back and say, ‘We know it’s a broken system. We know it’s locking the entire generation of the Australians out of the housing market, but if there’s only something we could do.”

We’re doing something. Not the easy thing, but it’s the right thing.

Because I want to make this very simple point to the people in this room, but most important, to the people out there: Labor is the party of aspiration and we will not allow Australia to become a country where aspiration is only for some.

Our reforms are about backing aspiration for all.

Bringing the great Australian dream of home ownership back in reach for a new generation.

Our changes are pro-aspiration, and pro-supply, so we can help people get into a home of their own.

We also back aspiration for people to invest in increasing their wealth and their assets. That’s a good thing. If people want to invest in property, use negative gearing and build their wealth, good on them.

But from now on there’ll be a distinction. They will also be investing in new housing supply.

And that changes the dynamic because when they invest in the property market, they will be investing in their future assets and their future wealth, but they’re also investing in the future assets and wealth for our nation.
  
Friends, we want Australians to earn more and keep more of what they earn.

That’s why we have backed 5 consecutive increases to the minimum wage.

There’s a really easy figure when you’re in your workplace to remember when you’re discussing these issues of how many times the Liberals have ever made a submission to the Fair Work Commission supporting the maintenance of real wages or a real increase.

A big duck egg, zero. Has never happened. Really easy to remember. One of the great distinctions in Australian politics.

As a result of the measures we’ve taken already, the lowest-paid workers are more than $175 a week better off compared to when we took office in 2022. 

A few years ago I came to one of these conferences in another state for the north, and then I went to National Conference, and I spoke about junior pay rates, spoke about the need to lift them up. Why was it that you were discriminated against if you were an 18- to 20-year-old and paid less, as I was at that time, working at all sorts of jobs, at Maccas or Grace Brothers or Pancakes on the Rocks or various jobs. 

Now, we have done something that you have all helped with through the mighty trade union movement. We have abolished junior pay rates. This is the result of a long, hard-fought campaign. Fought for by the people of this room, I’m sure, not just for years, but over decades. Although, it wasn’t that long ago that I was in Year 11.

Finally, 18- to 20-year-olds get paid like the adults that they are.

It’s also why in our first term we cut income taxes not just for some, but for every single taxpayer.

And why we will cut them again on the 1st July this year – and we’ll cut them again on the 1st July next year.

Our $1000 instant tax deduction will put more money in the pockets of over 6 million taxpayers – especially those on low and middle incomes.

Now, in the Budget we announced our new fifth instalment of our income tax cuts, the Working Australians Tax Offset. Delivering a permanent tax cut of $250 for every Australian wage earner.

Now, all up, these changes mean the average worker will be $2,800 a year better off under Labor.

Now, that’s about delivering real, lasting cost-of-living relief into the future.

Taking pressure off households who are doing it tough right now.

But it’s also about rebalancing and reforming the tax system so that it better rewards hard work and aspiration, making it fairer into the future.

Because for too long, income from wages – from your labour – has been taxed too heavily compared to income derived from assets.

And that’s why the changes we are making to negative gearing and capital gains, to trusts, and to income taxes add up to a better tax system.

Because the fact is that most people are working their guts out for a wage so they can provide for their family and build a better life.

These Australians, millions of hardworking people, will never be able to access a trust. Never sat around a kitchen table and thought, have we thought of setting up a trust? I mean, seriously.

The biggest investment the majority of Australians ever make – and the biggest hope they have – is to work hard and buy a home of their own.

That’s what generations of Australians have aspired to. That sense of security. That stake in our economy and our nation’s future. 

But they want something else as well. They want their kids to have more opportunity than they had. And that’s why, when you know that the next generation are doing it tougher than my generation, that you’ve got to do something about it.

And that’s why we’re rebalancing the way working Australians pay tax by better aligning income from work with income from assets.

We can open up that aspiration, giving more people a chance to get ahead.

Friends, this is the positive agenda we are arguing for, it’s the case we are making all over the country.

The big reforms that only Labor Governments ever deliver. Because we are not in Government to occupy space, to count the years and pass the time.

We are here to change the country for the better. I see the responsibility I have as leader of the Federal Parliamentary Labor Party to the people here, not only the delegates, people here who are the observers, the people who ask for absolutely nothing, except they know in their guts that it’s only Labor that does the big things that make a difference to the people who really need a government to make a difference to their lives.

My mum was a life member of the Labor Party. She never held a position as a delegate to the FEC or the SEC or let alone the State Conference. She handed out how to votes, sold raffle tickets, did what she could. She’s the sort of person who built our movement, and she’s the sort of person as well who lived in one house, public housing. Her whole life. Born and died 65 years later. And she drummed into me, as working class people do, when you get a chance to buy a home, get a roof over your head. 

And the message that we’re sending through our Budget of just a week ago is a message that’s consistent with that which working class people has said to their sons and daughters through generations in this great country. Aspire to a better life than we had. And that’s what my Government is doing.

Deepening aspiration. Broadening opportunity. Building our collective economic and social resilience.

We seek to do that for all Australians, not just some – no matter their background, or where they live.

That has always been a fundamental difference between us and our opponents in the three right wing parties and their allies.

And never more so than right now. The Liberals talk Australia down, we’re here to build Australia up.

The Liberals want to undercut opportunity, our plan creates opportunity.  

The Liberals want to compete One Nation.

We’re focused on building up our Australian nation.

One of my opponents is going around talking about the difference between ‘migrants’ and ‘Australians’ as if someone cannot be both.

As if somehow, people who work hard and choose this as the place to raise their children and build a better life aren’t quite Australian enough.

They have never heard a serious mainstream political leader use that sort of language.

Talking down the contribution of generations of migrant communities.

Parents, grandparents.

Generations of Australians.

That tells you how low the modern Liberal Party have sunk. How far they have drifted from the political centre – and from reality – in their pursuit of the far right.

Delegates, this makes our task all the more important.

It’s up to all of us to make the case for positive change.

To deliver the progress that people deserve.

To bring Australians together.

By rewarding aspiration.

Making sure people get a fair crack.

Creating the conditions where people can work towards something that is better because it is shared.

That is what Labor stands for.

That is what Victorian Labor stands for.

It is the future that the people of Victoria deserve.

And it is worth fighting for, together.

UPDATE: Concern for welfare – East Arnhem Land

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The Northern Territory Police Force continue to hold concerns for the welfare of 31-year-old Marius who remains missing in East Arnhem Land.

The search yesterday covered approximately 76 square kilometres and that area will be expanded today with ongoing helicopter, ground and vehicle assets deployed.

NTPF Search and Rescue members, local Police, NTES, NTFRS, Dhimurru Rangers, Yirralka Rangers, NORFORCE and Nautilus Helicopters have all been mobilised as the search continues.

Police are particularly interested in anyone who saw the vehicle Marius was believed to be driving in on the day of his disappearance.

The vehicle was a Blue Toyota Hilux Duel Cab with the registration CG10EZ.

The vehicle has since been recovered abandoned on the Central Arnhem Highway.

Anyone with information is urged to contact the Northern Territory Police Force on 131 444 or visit your local station. Please quote reference NTP2600049591.

Domestic Violence Assaults – Alice Springs

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The Northern Territory Police Force (NTPF) is investigating two unrelated domestic violence aggravated assaults in Alice Springs.

Around 10:45pm last night, police received a report that a 33-year-old woman had been assaulted by her 33-year-old male partner at a residence on Kilgariff Crescent.

Police attended and provided initial first aid to the woman who suffered a laceration near her collarbone.

The NTPF Drone Unit tracked the offender to a location nearby where he was arrested.

He remains in custody with charges expected later today.

Around 6:15am this morning in a separate incident, police received reports of a 27-year-old male and a 29-year-old female, both presenting near a business on Gap Road with stab wounds.

Both are believed to be in a domestic relationship, and both were conveyed to Alice Springs Hospital for treatment.

Initial investigations indicate an altercation occurred between the pair and investigations into the incident remain ongoing.

If you or someone you know are experiencing difficulties due to domestic violence, support services are available, including, but not limited to, 1800RESPECT (1800737732) or Lifeline 131 114.

UPDATE: Charges – Sexual Assault – Palmerston

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The Northern Territory Police Force have now charged a man in relation to a sexual assault in Palmerston earlier this week.

The 20-year-old man was arrested overnight by members of the Fugitive Task Force.

He has now been charged with:

  • Sexual intercourse without consent
  • Aggravated Burglary
  • Aggravated Assault
  • Deprive a person of personal liberty

He remains in custody and is expected to appear in Darwin Local Court on Monday 25 May 2026.

Detective Senior Sergeant Toby Wilson said “ This was particularly heinous crime and this arrest reflects a co-ordinated effort by Sex Crimes Unit, Forensics, Fugitive Task Force, Domestic Violence Investigation Unit, General Duties, Serious Crime, Territory Intel, CCTV operators and Dog Operations Unit.

“ The Sex Crimes Unit remains dedicated to supporting victims of sexual violence while relentlessly pursuing and prosecuting those responsible.”

Vale Professor Peter Buckskin

Source: Australian Ministers for Education

I am deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Professor Peter Buckskin PSM FACE —a proud Narungga man, respected leader, educator and tireless advocate for First Nations education.

Professor Buckskin’s distinguished career was defined by an unwavering commitment to improving educational outcomes of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students and educators, and a firm belief in the transformative power of education.

His work spanned decades of leadership, policy influence and community engagement, leaving a profound legacy across Australia’s education system.

Professor Buckskin brought insight, integrity and deep cultural authority to critical discussions shaping policy and practice. A hallmark achievement of his career was the More Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Teachers Initiative (MATSITI), which he led from 2011 to 2016 and supported collaborative workforce projects, research and a campaign to increase the First Nations teaching workforce.

He engaged with governments across a range of Indigenous Affairs matters, with recent education forums including Indigenous Education Consultative Meetings, and as a member of the National Respectful Relationships Education Expert Working Group.

As Inaugural Chair of the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education Corporation (NATSIEC), Professor Buckskin’s knowledge, leadership and generosity of spirit strengthened collaboration and helped drive a shared vision for equitable, culturally responsive education.

This leadership was integral to the establishment of the Partnership Agreement between Education Ministers and NATSIEC, and the inclusion of NATSIEC representatives in Education Ministers Meeting to ensure First Nations learners are at the centre of education decisions.

Professor Buckskin’s legacy will live on in the many students, educators and communities he inspired, and in the education systems and reforms he helped shape.

On behalf of the Australian Government and the Department of Education, I extend my deepest condolences to Professor Buckskin’s family, community and his many friends and colleagues.