From Epping to Powrunna – fourth translocation successful

Source: Tasmania Police

Issued: 23 Jul 2025

Open larger image

Eleven wombats were taken from Epping Forest National Park (Scientific) to Powrunna State Forest.

An additional 11 northern hairy-nosed wombats have been transported from Epping Forest National Park (Scientific) in Queensland’s central west to Powrunna State Forest in the state’s southwest.

This translocation project is an integral component of the Queensland Government’s northern hairy-nosed wombat recovery program which aims to establish a third population of the endangered marsupial.

The project began in May 2024 after extensive preparation of the site at Powrunna and 37 wombats have already successfully been translocated.

In June 2025, rangers from across Queensland gathered at Epping Forest National Park (Scientific) to carefully trap six females and five males for relocation to their new home.

Principal Conservation Officer Samantha Ryan said there were now 21 females and 16 males at Powrunna, which had been specifically chosen for the third population of wombats.

“Monitoring by the Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation shows the wombats have embraced their new home with plenty of new burrows,” Ms Ryan said.

“We have already seen some young-at-foot on trail cameras, and our ultimate goal is to create another self-sustaining population of northern hairy-nosed wombats.

“Transportation takes around ten hours during the day when the wombats are usually sleeping, and they’re released early in the evening into artificial burrows.

“Our goal is to translocate up to sixty wombats to Powrunna by 2026, and there is much hope that the population there will grow as it has at Epping.”

Senior Program Officer David Field had never seen a northern hairy-nosed wombat prior to the translocation, and said it was wonderful to be involved.

“It was great to be involved in the planning, trapping, relocation and release of this endangered species and it’s an experience I’ll never forget,” Mr Field said.

“I’ve learnt so much by working alongside experts, and the wombats were in excellent condition and were bigger and softer than you’d expect.”

Rangers from the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service have used radio trackers and remote cameras to monitor wombats at Powrunna, and site inspections show they have moved on from starter burrows and have dug multiple burrows of their own.

Northern hairy-nosed wombats previously ranged from New South Wales and into Queensland. In the eighties, the population of wombats at Epping Forest National Park was estimated to be around 35 and is now estimated to be at least 400.

Richard Underwood Nature Refuge near Wycombe is managed by the Australian Wildlife Conservancy and is home to a small population of northern hairy-nosed wombats.

The Gunggari Native Title Aboriginal Corporation (GNTAC) and Gunggari Native Title Holders, Glencore, The Wombat Foundation and Australian Wildlife Conservancy have provided ongoing support for this project.

In Queensland, some national parks are designated as “scientific” and are either fully or partially closed to the public to protect their natural values.

Brown goshawk released from illegal captivity

Source: Tasmania Police

Issued: 23 Jul 2025

Open larger image

The brown goshawk was released into bushland after being rescued from the enclosure.

Photo credit: © Shari Griinke

Open larger image

The person received two fines for illegally capturing the brown goshawk.

Photo credit: © Shari Griinke

A brown goshawk has been released from a private property on Brisbane’s south side after it was unlawfully captured and placed into an enclosure without approval.

In June, the Department of the Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation received information from a member of the public about a wild bird that had been illegally captured at Marsden.

Wildlife Rangers from the Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service attended the address and found a brown goshawk that been illegally held in the enclosure for up to three days.

Senior Wildlife Ranger Shari Griinke said rangers seized the bird and released it within 2.5km of the address.

“The person who lives at the address admitted to capturing raptors at least three times because he believed they had been harassing his homing pigeons and chickens,” Ms Griinke said.

“The person was planning on taking the captured goshawk to bushland west of Brisbane where it would be released it into the wild.

“It is illegal to take or keep native animals from the wild without an appropriate permit, and people needing protection for their poultry or other pets should contact a licenced bird catcher.”

Under the Nature Conservation Act 1992 it is an offence to take and or keep native animals in Queensland without the appropriate permits.

The person has been issued with two Penalty Infringement Notices to the value of $1,612 for illegally taking the bird from the wild and for keeping it in an enclosure.

View information about permits required to keep native animals and removal of native animals.

Second Reading Speech – Universities Accord (cutting student debt by 20%) Bill 2025

Source: Murray Darling Basin Authority

It is a privilege to introduce the Universities Accord (Cutting Student Debt by 20%) Bill.

As promised, this is the very first bill to be introduced to the Parliament after the election. 

And as promised, it cuts the student debt of three million Australians by 20 percent. 

Mr Speaker, on the 3rd of May Australians made their voices heard. 

They voted for the tax cuts we are delivering.

They voted for free TAFE that we are making permanent.

They voted for us to build more homes.

They voted for us to roll out more Medicare Urgent Care Clinics.

They voted for cheaper medicine. 

They voted for the biggest investment in Medicare ever, to make it easier to see a doctor for free than ever before. 

And they voted for this. 

Cutting the student debt of three million Australians by 20 percent. 

Most of those are young Australians. 

Just out of uni. Just out of TAFE. 

Just out of home. Just getting started. 

Trying to save to buy a home. 

Thinking about starting a family. 

Nurses. Teachers. Tradies. 

Doctors and Paramedics.

Engineers. Architects.

IT workers. AI Experts.

These are the Australians who will build Australia’s future. 

Who are already building it. 

And this will take a weight off their back. 

The average HELP debt today is about $27,600.

When this legislation passes it will cut that debt by about $5,520.

If you have got a debt of $50,000 it will cut it by $10,000. 

All up it will cut student debt by over $16 billion.

When this legislation passes your debt will be cut by 20 per cent, based on what it was on 1 June this year, before this year’s indexation occurred.

That will make sure you get the maximum benefit possible and that we honour our promise in full.

And it will all happen automatically.

The Australian Tax Office will process changes at their end. 

You won’t have to do a thing.

It will take a bit of time for the Tax Office to do this work. 

But once this Bill is passed the cut is guaranteed. 

Mr Speaker, this is a big deal for everyone with a student debt today.

Three million Australians.

But it’s not the only thing this Bill does.

It also makes important structural changes to the way the repayment system works.

To make it fairer.

And to help with the cost of living.

This Bill raises the minimum amount you have to earn before you have to start making repayments – from $54,435 in 2024-25 to $67,000 in 2025-26.

And it reduces the minimum repayments you have to make.

For someone earning $70,000 it will reduce the minimum repayments they have to make by $1,300 a year.

That’s real cost of living help.

More money in your pocket – not the government’s.

When you really need it.

This is an important structural reform.

We are replacing the current repayment system with a new marginal repayment system.

At the moment the amount that you pay off every year is based on your entire wage.

That means once you earn above the current minimum repayment threshold of $54,435, you pay a percentage of your entire wage as a repayment.

Under the changes in this Bill, you will only pay a percentage of your wage above the minimum repayment threshold.

So, for example, if you earn $70,000 at the moment you currently have to repay $1,750 each year.

Under these changes you will only have to repay about $450.

In other words, if you earn $70,000 a year, you will have to repay $1,300 less a year than you currently have to.

If you earn $80,000 a year, you will have to repay $850 less a year than you currently have to.

And if you earn $110,000 a year, you will have to repay $700 less a year than you currently have to.

You can still pay off more if you want to.

But what this does is make the system fairer.

It means you start paying off your uni degree when university starts to pay off for you.

It’s a recommendation of the Universities Accord.

And it’s a recommendation of the architect of HECS, Professor Bruce Chapman.

When we announced this reform to create a marginal repayment system, Professor Chapman said this is:

“…the most important thing that’s happened to the system in 35 years. It’s a marginal collection, it’s much gentler and much fairer than previously — we should have done it years ago.”

Mr Speaker, these are important reforms, that will help millions of Australians, now and into the future. 

It’s why it is the first Bill that we have introduced to this new Parliament.

As the Prime Minister said when he announced in November last year that we would cut student debt by 20 per cent and make these structural changes:

“It helps everyone repaying a student debt right now – and it delivers a better deal for every student in the years ahead.

Permanent, structural reform to boost take home pay for young Australians.

This is about putting money back into your pocket – and putting intergenerational equity back into the system.

Good for cost of living.

Good for this generation – and for generations to come.

Good for building Australia’s future.”

Mr Speaker, not surprisingly, the Coalition immediately said that they would oppose this Bill. 

Like everything else, their immediate reaction was to attack this.

I suspect they now rue that decision.

They called it “terrible”. They called it “unfair”.

In the electorates they represented, people saw something different.

In electorates right across the country, where 1 in 4 voters have a student debt, they saw an opportunity to get a load off their back.

To make their life a little bit easier.

And they voted for it.

As one anonymous National Party MP told the Daily Telegraph after the election:

“My kids are paying off a university debt and I reckon they voted for Labor”.

Mr Speaker, when even your own family won’t vote for you, you know you’ve got it wrong.

Now the Opposition have a chance to get this right.

Not just by voting for it.

But by actually speaking in support of it.

This is a chance for the opposition to admit they got it wrong.

And that the Australian people got it right.

Education is the most powerful cause for good.

A good education changes lives.

A good education system changes countries.

It’s changed ours.

We have got a good education system in Australia today.

But the truth is it can be better and fairer.

This Bill is part of that.

So is Paid Prac that started this month for teaching and nursing students.

For midwifery students and social work students.

So are the University Study Hubs that will open up in our outer suburbs and regions over the next few months.

And so is the new Needs-based Funding system for our universities that starts next year.

It is also what the agreements we have signed with every State and Territory to fix the funding of our public schools are all about.

And tying that funding to real reform to help kids who start behind or fall behind to catch up and keep up, and help more kids finish school and then go on to TAFE or University.

It also means making our child care centres safer.

And I will introduce legislation to help do that in a few moments time.

Mr Speaker, once again, it’s my privilege to make good on a promise we made last year and that we repeated every single day of the election campaign. 

In every seat across the country.

To cut student debt by 20 per cent.

To cut the debt of 3 million Australians.

To take a weight off their back.

To help with the cost of living.

And to help build Australia’s future.

I commend this Bill to the House.

Transcript – ABC News Breakfast with James Glenday

Source: Murray Darling Basin Authority

JAMES GLENDAY: Next, we take you to Canberra and bring in the Federal Education Minister, Jason Clare, who is of course at Parliament House. He has a very big day. Responsible for a couple of key bits of legislation. Minister, welcome back to News Breakfast. 

JASON CLARE, MINISTER FOR EDUCATION: Thanks, mate. Good morning. 

GLENDAY: We’ve got a lot of policy to discuss, but I just wanted to ask you for your reflection first of all. What was it like going into Parliament yesterday and seeing the scale of your victory, all of those Labor MPs spilling out right to the other side of the chamber? 

CLARE: Well, I guess it reminded me of the responsibility we’ve got. The Australian people have entrusted us with government and a very large majority. We’ve got a responsibility to be worthy of that trust and to pay that back with responsible government. And that’s what we’re determined to do. 

GLENDAY: I couldn’t help but notice that the two women who beat both Peter Dutton and Adam Bandt got to deliver their maiden speeches first. They were lovely speeches. Watched them last night. Quite moving. Were the order of these speeches meant to send a bit of a message to your political opponents? If you get in our way, this is what could happen to you? 

CLARE: No, but, I think the personal stories of both of those women are incredible. I should have brought a box of tissues to listen to Ali and tell the story of not just the accident that took her leg, but the tragedy that took her son. They are extraordinary women who make a very, very big contribution in this Parliament. I’m looking forward to working with them. 

GLENDAY: Alright, let’s get to policy. I mean, they were very moving speeches. Anyone who hasn’t seen them is worth just reflecting on them. It looked as though during the election the Coalition was going to oppose your student debt reduction bill. Seems like they’ve had a change of heart. Have they pledged to wave that through? 

CLARE: Well, not yet, but I hope they do. You know, this was one of the big promises that we made in the election campaign, that we would cut the student debt of 3 million Australians by 20 per cent. And this will take a weight off the shoulders of a lot of young people right across the country. In particular at elections, young people don’t often see themselves on the ballot paper, but they did at this election and they voted for it in their millions. For the average person with a student debt today, this will cut their debt by about five and a half grand. So, there’s a lot at stake here and I’m hoping that politicians right across the Parliament will vote for this legislation. 

GLENDAY: Do you have a date? You hope it’s in place? Some of those young people have been getting in touch saying, hey, it’s gone up because of indexation and I haven’t seen this cut yet, but of course it’s not law yet. 

CLARE: Yeah, really good question. Thanks for that, mate. So, when the legislation passes, the impact of it will be to backdate that cut to 1 June this year before indexation happened. That will make sure that people get the maximum benefit of the 20 per cent cut, so that the 20 per cent cut is made on what your debt was on the 1st of June before indexation happened. So, first we have to get the legislation through, then the tax office will have to go through the process of cutting the debt based on what your debt was back on the 1st of June. But you won’t have to do anything. This will all happen automatically at the Tax Office and you’ll get a text message when it happens to tell you that that debt’s been cut. 

GLENDAY: There you go. So, sit tight. Though we do appreciate the emails we’ve been getting. A trickier issue for you is going to be child safety, in particular, child care, because you don’t control all the levers. You’ve got this Bill to terminate subsidies to child care operators doing the wrong thing. First of all, do you expect the Opposition is going to let that sail through as well? 

CLARE: Well, we’ve been working really professionally and constructively with the Opposition and I do want to thank Sussan Ley, the Opposition Leader, and Jonno Duniam, the Shadow Minister, for the constructive way in which we’ve been working with them. We’ve also briefed the Greens. This is too important for politics. Parents across the country aren’t interested in us fighting about this. They’re not interested in excuses. They just want action. And this legislation is one part of it. I think all Australians have been sickened and appalled by the evidence coming out of Victoria. We need to do everything that we can to rebuild faith and trust in a system that parents need and rely upon. Right across the country, there’ll be parents packing bags and getting kids ready for early education and care right now. What this legislation will do is give us the power to cut funding to child care centres that aren’t up to scratch, that aren’t meeting the sort of minimum standards that parents expect and that our kids deserve. In a sense, it’s the biggest weapon that we’ve got to wield here because taxpayers provide about $16 billion to child care centres every year. That represents about 70 per cent of the funding to run a centre, you know, pays the rent, pays the bills, pays the salaries. So, they can’t operate without them. If centres are repeatedly not meeting that standard, I think most mums and dads watching will think it’s fair that we should have the power to cut that funding off to make sure that kids are safe. 

GLENDAY: Sussan Ley will be along in a minute. We can ask her as well. I just wanted to know, have you worked out what the threshold for intervention is going to be? Is it going to be 1, 2, 3 strikes for a centre and then you strip the money? 

CLARE: Well, it could be as simple as one. It’s important to make the point that regulators have the power to shut a centre right now if they think there’s a serious threat to children’s safety. But this will also give us the power to issue a show cause notice to a centre to say that we’ll shut it within 28 days unless they meet that minimum standard or to set conditions on them as well. And we’ll work closely with the state regulators who do the work in checking centres to identify the centres that should be the subject of this legislation first, the ones that are repeatedly failing to meet those minimum standards. And I’ve got to tell you, that work is happening right now with my department and state regulators across the country. 

GLENDAY: Yeah. So, just before I let you go, next month, you can have a big meeting with states and territories. Advocates in this sector say a huge problem is that states and territories and the Commonwealth don’t talk to each other. Are we going to see concrete action on things like security cameras, better safety checks, maybe a national worker register for child care operators and workers? 

CLARE: Yeah. This legislation is just one part of the things that we need to do. We’ll be talking at that meeting about a national educator register so we can track workers from centre to centre as well as from state to state. I think what’s happening in Victoria shows the weakness in that area, but also the role that CCTV can play in deterring bad people from doing bad things and help police with investigations and perhaps most important of all, mandatory child safety training. So, for the 99.9 per cent of workers in our centres who are good people, who care for our kids, you know, whose reputation has been tarnished by what’s happening at the moment, who are in the media for all the wrong reasons, to give them the skills that they need to identify people that might be up to no good, who might be trying to target our kids or to try and distract them from the work that they’re doing to keep our kids safe. 

GLENDAY: Alright, Jason Clare the Education Minister, you’ve got a lot on your plate. We do appreciate you making time for us on News Breakfast this morning.  
 

Doorstop – Parliament House, Canberra

Source: Murray Darling Basin Authority

JASON CLARE, MINISTER FOR EDUCATION: Thanks very much for coming along. Today’s a big day. Today, I’ll introduce two pieces of legislation. The first, to cut student debt by 20 per cent; and the second, to cut funding to childcare centres that aren’t up to scratch, that aren’t meeting the sort of minimum standards that parents need and that our children deserve.

The first piece of legislation to cut student debt by 20 per cent is something that we promised, I think, every day of the election campaign in every part of the country. It means cutting the debt of three million Australians. A lot of those are young Australians. Often young people don’t see themselves on the ballot paper when they go to vote, but a lot of young people did at this election, and they voted for it in their millions. The impact of this legislation is that for the average person with a student debt, they’ll see their debt cut by about $5,500. That’s a big deal. That’s a lot of weight off their back, and it will help a lot of young people that might be just out of uni, just out of home, just getting started.

The second piece of legislation that I’ll introduce is about giving the Commonwealth the powers that we need to be able to cut access to the child care subsidy for centres that aren’t up to scratch. I think the whole country has been sickened and shocked by the revelations that have come out of Victoria in the last few weeks, and a lot of work is needed to rebuild trust in a system that parents rely upon every single day – more than a million parents across the country – and this legislation is part of that. The biggest weapon that the Commonwealth has to wield here is the funding that we provide that enables child care centres to operate. It’s something like $16 billion a year, and that covers about 70 per cent of the cost of running the average child care centre. Child care centres can’t operate without it, and I think it’s fair, I think most mums and dads will think it’s fair, that if centres are repeatedly not meeting the sort of standards that we set for them, that we should have the power to be able to cut that funding off. This is not about shutting centres down. It’s about lifting standards up and giving us the powers to make that happen.

I might pass to Andrew to talk in a little bit of detail about the cut to student debt by 20 per cent, and then ask Jess to talk a little bit more about the legislation that we’ll introduce today to be able to cut funding to centres that aren’t up to scratch.

ANDREW GILES, MINISTER FOR SKILLS AND TRAINING: Thanks very much, Jason. From our very first day in office, the Albanese Labor Government has been committed to breaking down all of those barriers that have held back too many Australians from accessing education and training. And today, we take another really big step forward in that regard. I’m going to talk really to make two points about this. The first one is to recognise the significance, as Jason just laid out, of this first piece of legislation – a piece of legislation that we talked about constantly through the campaign, and indeed since the commitment was made some months before that. A commitment that really resonated with so many Australians, three million of whom will benefit from this cut. Real cost of living relief. Money back in the pockets of Australians who can do with that help and that message of reassurance. I want to say this, though – not only have we been listening to students in Australia, we’ve been listening to all of the students in tertiary education and apprentices too, because this is not just relief from HECS debt. It’s relief that will also support nearly 300,000 students with various VET loans. They will also benefit.

And that leads me to the second point I want to make here. There really is never a better time than now to think about pursuing a VET pathway. At the same time that we made this commitment that Jason will be introducing in the form of legislation today, we also made our commitment to make Free TAFE permanent. And that has been an extraordinary success in turning around the skills crisis and breaking down another barrier that’s held back too many Australians from accessing skills. As of today, more than 170,000 Free TAFE courses have been completed. More than 650,000 enrolments have taken place. This is making a huge difference alongside so many other incentives, like the one that’s just rolled out for 1 July encouraging more people to pick up the tools and become a housing tradie. There is more to be done of course, but all of these commitments demonstrate our determination to do everything possible to deliver cost of living relief today, and to create more pathways for more Australians to get the skills they want to do the jobs that we need. I’ll hand over Jess to talk about the second bill.

JESS WALSH, MINISTER FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION: Thanks very much, Andrew. Thanks very much, Jason. Well, every child deserves to be safe in early childhood education and care, and every parent deserves to know that their children are safe too. But it has been a really distressing time for children and their families as we see these revelations unfold in Victoria. It’s been distressing for parents. It’s been distressing for the vast majority of early childhood educators as well, who are just going into work every day to take the best care that they can of our nation’s children. We want to rebuild the confidence that our early learning centres are safe and that they do provide quality early education. And of course, the vast majority of our early learning services do that every single day. But there are some repeat offenders who continue to put profit ahead of child safety, and that’s what the legislation that we’re introducing today is targeted to deal with. We have a strong message for those providers who do put profit ahead of child safety, and that is that we want you to lift your game or to leave the sector.

Our focus is going to be on helping those providers to lift their game, and this legislation will give us the tools to do that. It will allow us to withdraw Commonwealth Child Care Subsidy from those providers who persistently and consistently let families down. It gives us a strong stick that we’re willing to use to drive standards in early childhood education to deliver the quality and the safety that parents deserve.

JOURNALIST: Minister Clare, the Minister has just spoken about this legislation being a stick to encourage providers to do the right thing. Are there any, what else is in this bill to actually help some of the providers to do more? I mean, some of the big providers have talked about needing more funds or assistance for training, for instance; for CCTV cameras and so forth. What else is in this bill beyond stick?

CLARE: Well, this legislation is about giving the Commonwealth the power to cut off funding, cut off the childcare subsidy funding to centres that aren’t meeting that minimum standard, that are repeatedly not meeting that minimum standard. Now these centres know the standard they have to set, now they know what the consequences will be if they don’t meet it. The legislation also gives more power to the authorised officers in our department to be able to do spot checks of centres, particularly in the area of fraud. This is another area that is very serious that we’ve been working on, that I’ve been working on now for three years. The Government’s provided about an extra $220 million for fraud investigation of early education and care. It’s helped to claw back more than $300 million for the Australian taxpayer. This gives more power to our officers to be able to do spot checks without a warrant or without the AFP on board, but they will also be able to, if they spot safety concerns, pass that on to state regulators as well.

Now, Josh, you make the point that this isn’t the only thing we need to do, and that is absolutely right. When education ministers meet next month, we’ll be talking about some of the things you just mentioned. A national educator register so that we can track workers from centre to centre and from state to state. I think the revelations in Victoria over the course of the last few weeks tell us exactly why this is so important. CCTV and the role that it can potentially play in deterring a bad person from doing heinous things and also helping police with their investigations, but also the sort of training, mandatory child safety training, that already exists in the courses but doesn’t exist in the classroom, doesn’t exist in centres, that can play a crucial role in helping to make sure that the 99.9 per cent of people who are good and honest and hardworking and care for and love our kids and educate our kids every day, the people who are aghast at what they’re reading in the newspapers and are angry that their profession is in the media for the wrong reasons, have the skills they need to spot a bad person before they act. To have the skills that they need to spot somebody who might be looking to do something terrible to children or to distract them from stepping in and stopping it from happening. So whether it’s the register, whether it’s training, or whether it’s CCTV or a bunch of other things that will come out, I’m sure of the rapid review in Victoria and the work that’s being done in New South Wales, all of that is on the table when education ministers meet next month.

The other thing I should mention here for the sake of completeness is the Attorney-General will also meet with AGs across the country next month to look at the reforms that are needed that are long overdue to working with children checks.

JOURNALIST: How many breaches of the minimum standards would take you to strip the childcare centre of its funding? What’s the threshold in the legislation?

CLARE: State regulators can shut a centre down right now if they think there’s a real and imminent threat to childcare safety. So they can do that today. What this legislation gives us the power to do is to shut a centre down if we think they’re below the minimum standard and they’re not likely to get there or they’re not intending to get there. So we can issue a show cause notice and say you’ve got 28 days, give us a good explanation about why you’re not there or we will cut your funding. Alternatively, we might set some conditions on the centre and say you’ve got a period of time to reach that standard, to meet the requirements that the state regulator has told you to reach, potentially to employ a child safety expert in the centre to help you reach them. And as I said, I want centres to get to those standards. We don’t want to have to shut centres down. But also we want to make sure that parents know that if a centre has a show cause notice given to it, or it’s got conditions that are imposed upon it, that mums and dads at that centre deserve to know that we’ve done that and to be able to make a decision about where they want to send their kids.

JOURNALIST: You just said that state and territory governments already have the power to shut down centres. What difference is this going to make now that the Commonwealth has that power as well?

CLARE: Well, they have that power and they use it. This is an additional power to make sure that the centres, and there are a number of them that are not at that minimum standard, take the action that they need to take to lift their standards to the sort of standards that we set as a nation, that parents expect and that our children deserve.

JOURNALIST: So do you think that state and territory governments haven’t been doing enough of that kind of putting that pressure and threatening to shut places down, or shutting places down, if you feel like the Commonwealth needs to step into this?

CLARE: Well, states do that work now. They tell centres about the standards they expect them to meet, and sometimes centres don’t meet them, and the problem remains unfixed. This gives us the power to step in there where centres are just either deliberately or for whatever reason not meeting those sorts of standards. The bottom line, though, is we all need to do more here. States need to do more. The Commonwealth needs to do more. Centres need to do more as well.

JOURNALIST: Minister, just on HECS, obviously this is a one-off cut, but what about future students? Is it not unfair to only have this one line in the sand and cut it by 20 per cent? What about the students of the future?

CLARE: Look, I think there’s a lot of work to do to make our education system better and fairer. And there’s a lot of work to do to make our higher education system better and fairer. The fact is today about 50 per cent of young people have a uni degree, but not everywhere. Not where I grew up, not in the outer suburbs of our big cities, not in regional Australia, not amongst kids from poor and disadvantaged backgrounds. And I want to fix that. That’s what the Universities Accord is all about, and we’ve already taken steps to implement some of that report –

JOURNALIST: Does that –

CLARE: Hang on a second. Part of that’s Paid Prac that rolls out this month – financial support for the first time for teaching students and nursing students and midwifery and social work students while they do the practical part of their university degree. Part of it is also uncapping funding for the fee-free university bridging courses that help make sure that people that have finished high school, or maybe they haven’t finished high school and aren’t ready for a uni degree, are ready for it. Part of it is also changing the way that we fund universities. Over the course of the last 12 months or so, I’ve struck agreements with every state and territory to fix the funding of public schools, what David Gonski called for more than a decade ago. Now, what we’ll do next year is change the funding of universities, so it’s needs-based as well, and the funding follows the student. And so more funding flows to students from disadvantaged backgrounds and students from regional Australia, because we know that there is not just fewer young people from disadvantaged backgrounds starting a degree but fewer finishing a degree.

It also means, and I’m sorry for the long answer, but this is a comprehensive piece of work, building and operating more university Hubs in our outer suburbs, in our regions. When I was a kid growing up, there were a lot of Macca’s logos and a lot of Westfield logos in Western Sydney, not a lot of uni logos. Uni felt like it was someplace else for somewhere else. And a lot of my mates just either dropped out of school or finished school, never thought of uni because they thought it wasn’t for them. I want to change that too. And that’s what those Hubs are about. But this Accord is big. It’s the work of multiple governments and multiple ministers. That’s why we’ve set up the Australian Tertiary Education Commission to act as a steward to drive long-term reform here. And there is more work to do. This is just the start.

JOURNALIST: If I can just follow up on that. Does that mean some of those changes involve potentially cutting student fees into the future?

CLARE: Well, the ATEC’s job is to look at all of that. Not just that, but all of that.

JOURNALIST: Can I go back to child care? I’m obviously very mindful you’re introducing this legislation today and the national database, it does require sort of corralling the states and territories. It’s a tricky job. Can you wait for this much longer, for this meeting to happen in the middle of August or later in August for a three-year period? And then can I ask as well, what’s the timeline for fresh year is setting up the database? This would take some time, would it not?

CLARE: Josh, the truth is this should have happened yesterday. And this can’t happen fast enough. And states are already taking steps to expand their existing teacher registers. Victoria is a good example of that, and they’ll have that stood up by the end of August. So where states do that, that’s good, but we need to join it up, because to make the system work the way it needs to work, we need to be able to track people not just from centre to centre, but from state to state. And if you want evidence of why that’s important, have a look at the Ashley Griffith case in Queensland from a couple of years ago.

JOURNALIST: If I may, this is on another issue –

CLARE: Yep, and then we’ll bounce back.

JOURNALIST: When are we looking to see the Government’s 2035 emissions target, and can we expect a more ambitious target?

CLARE: Oh, look, I’ll ask you to talk to Chris Bowen about that. I’m pretty busy today on some pretty important things.

JOURNALIST: Just back on the future student stuff, the cost of an arts or humanities degree has almost doubled under the last government. Is that something you’re looking to change this term?

CLARE: Really, it’s the same answer that I gave just a moment ago about the role of the ATEC.

JOURNALIST: Could I just follow you up on one of the questions you asked a minute ago? What’s the timeline for setting up a register like this with the national database for the childcare workers? I mean, and I believe there was a Child Safety Authority report in 2013 that said investigations into –

CLARE: 2023, I think, Josh?

JOURNALIST: Maybe 2023. The problem is investigations into sexual assaults that were unsubstantiated, whether they would be included in a data set?

CLARE: Two separate questions. We want to stand this up as quickly as possible, and I mentioned in my previous answer the work that states are doing, but ACECQA, the National Independent Authority, is doing that work about what the elements of the register need to involve, and that will be presented to ministers when we meet in August. On that second question, that’s something that attorneys will be looking at as part of the working with children checks.

JOURNALIST: Is it time for a national watchdog in this space?

CLARE: Well, one of the things that the Productivity Commission recommended when they provided us with a blueprint for reform of early education and care, and I touched on the Accord, which is the equivalent for higher education, is a national early education and care commission. And I’ve got an open mind about that. I’ve said that in the media last week. What that report said is we’ve got to do a number of things to build a better, a fairer and a safer early education and care system. One of those, the first of those, is to pay workers more. When you pay people more, more people want to and we’re seeing the evidence of that this year. That 15 per cent pay rise has meant that we’re now seeing more people come back to the sector and building a permanent workforce. Our kids will be safer if the workers are permanent, that they’re not moving in and out of centres all the time. So that pay rise is already reaping dividends for parents and for our children. It also recommended that we remove the activity test so kids from disadvantaged backgrounds don’t miss out on the value of early education and care. And it’s recommended a commission like this. In its report, it didn’t say that this would have a role in safety, but that doesn’t mean that it can’t. And this is something that we will look at in the future.

JOURNALIST: It was already hard to get child care workers in Australia. I know that there’s been a pay rise since then. Are you concerned that people aren’t going to be choosing child care careers following the really heinous allegations that have come out?

CLARE: I might ask Jess to comment on this as well because I know how dear this is to your heart. We want people to do this job. There aren’t many jobs in this country more important. They’re vested with the trust of our most precious things, our children. The little ones that walk through the door or are carried through the door of centres every single day. And that pay rise is doing what we really wanted it to do last year. We’re seeing the number of people applying to be an early education and care worker jump by, what is it, Jess, more than 20 per cent. The number of vacancies drop by about the same amount as well. That tells us if you pay people more, people want to do the job. And I do worry that these people who do this incredibly important job, one of them is my cousin, she’s worked in this sector for 35 years. I remember when my little guy first went into care, I said, ‘how do I pick a good centre?’ And she said, ‘go to the place where the people have been working there forever, where they don’t want to leave.’ That’s a great centre, but it’s also a safe centre. And if we want that to be everywhere, you’ve got to pay people better. A lot of people have been leaving to go and work at Bunnings and Woolies just because you could earn more. And so that’s why that pay rise is important and that’s why rebuilding trust and faith in in this service, in this system, is so important.

WALSH: Thanks, Jason. Well, I think when Jason’s answered a question, there’s not much left to say. But I’ve been going out to early childhood education centres for the past few weeks and talking to educators as they grapple with this. And they are absolutely devastated and distressed by these allegations. But it’s not making them want to leave the sector. It’s making them determined to stay. These are the people who want to provide quality early childhood education. That is what they are there for. That is what they are going into work to do every single day. We do want to see more dedicated, committed early childhood educators in the sector. And that is exactly what is happening with the pay rise, a historic pay rise of 15 per cent that educators themselves advocated for years and years. The previous government didn’t take action on that front. It meant that early childhood educators were undervalued. It meant that in our first term of office the workforce was really in crisis. People were leaving the jobs that they love because they weren’t earning enough and love just doesn’t pay the bills. So what we’re seeing with this pay rise is people coming back to the sector. We’re seeing people stay in the sector and we’re seeing them able to provide that really high quality care that children deserve and that they want to provide. And again, that continuity in an early learning centre with educators is the absolute key to quality and safety. When educators know each other, when they know the children, when they know the families, that’s when we get quality, safe, early childhood education. This historic 15 per cent pay rise has been a game changer for that.

CLARE: Thanks very much everybody.
 

Private groups: watch out for common CFC errors

Source: New places to play in Gungahlin

Compliance reviews have revealed a high error rate in privately owned and wealthy group CFC disclosures.

Australian resident taxpayers (e.g. the head of a group of companies) must apply the CFC provisions if they have a controlling interest in a foreign company. If this applies to you, you need to disclose all CFCs, and their income, in tax returns and the international dealings schedule (IDS).

We monitor private group compliance through a review program, where we’re regularly seeing incorrect disclosures that highlight knowledge gaps around the CFC provisions.

Common errors

Common errors we see are:

  • under-reporting of CFC attributable income in tax returns, often from errors in applying the active income test, or from failing to recognise tainted income
  • deemed dividends from unlisted country CFCs omitted from the taxpayer’s assessable income
  • incorrect IDS disclosures, including
    • completely overlooking CFCs including where there is associate-inclusive control
    • inaccurate reporting of CFC gross revenue and the number of CFCs acquired and disposed of.

Private group compliance continues to be a key focus of our Tax Avoidance Taskforce. You need to lodge correct information, otherwise you’re risking lengthy review processes and costly amendments, so it’s important to check you’re complying.

Get across your CFC obligations

Follow these tips to make sure you’re getting it right:

  1. Review our Controlled foreign company page for the Private Wealth International Program. Knowing the CFC basics might help avoid mistakes.
  2. Discuss the CFC provisions with your adviser.
  3. Take care if your group is growing rapidly in size and complexity. This is when you’re most susceptible to mistakes.
  4. Keep your adviser across all business developments – seemingly small changes can have big tax implications.
  5. Amend any previously lodged tax returns if you discover an error. Waiting for us to notice may result in a tax bill including penalties and interest. 

Keep up to date

We have tailored communication channels for medium, large and multinational businesses, to keep you up to date with updates and changes you need to know.

Read more articles in our online Business bulletins newsroom.

Subscribe to our free:

  • fortnightly Business bulletins email newsletterExternal Link
  • email notifications about new and updated information on our website – you can choose to receive updates relevant to your situation. Choose the ‘Business and organisations’ category to ensure your subscription includes notifications for more Business bulletins newsroom articles like this one.

Albanese Government introduces legislation to strengthen safety in child care centres

Source: Murray Darling Basin Authority

Today the Albanese Government introduced legislation to Parliament to lift child safety in early education and care services.

This legislation will give the Commonwealth Government power to cut off funding to child care centres that don’t meet the National Quality Standard when it comes to safety and quality, where there’s a breach of the law, or where centres are acting in a way that puts the safety of children at risk.

The legislation will also allow Commonwealth officers to perform spot-checks without warning to detect fraud and non-compliance across the sector.

Governments, State and Federal, need to do more to ensure the safety of children. These new powers are part of that.

They will be used in close collaboration with states and territories regulating quality and safety under the National Quality Framework.

This is just one of a number of steps the Albanese Government is taking with the states and territories to protect children in early education and care.

Speeding up work on a nationwide register of early educators will be on the agenda at the Education Ministers’ Meeting in August, as well as the role of CCTV in centres and mandatory child safety training for educators.

The Attorney-General has also put reform of Working with Children Checks as the first item on the agenda for the Standing Council of Attorneys-General meeting next month. 

Today’s legislation builds on the work the Albanese Government and state and territory governments have already done implementing the recommendations of the Australian Children’s Education and Care Quality Authority’s Child Safety Review. These include mandatory 24 hour reporting of any allegations, complaints or incidents of physical or sexual abuse, and restricting the use of personal mobile phones in centres.

The highest priority of the Albanese Government is strengthening safety in early education and care to make sure our kids are safe.

Quotes attributable to Minister for Education Jason Clare:

“This legislation is not about shutting centres down, it’s about raising standards up.

“This is about making sure the safety and quality in child care centres is what parents expect and children deserve.

“We are determined to do what needs to be done to rebuild confidence in a system that parents need to have confidence in.

“It’s a system that more than a million mums and dads rely on to care for and educate the most important people in their world – their children.”

Quotes attributable to Minister for Early Childhood Education Dr Jess Walsh:

“Every child deserves to be safe in their early learning centre and this legislation requires providers to put safety first.

“The Australian Government is absolutely committed to ensuring that children have a positive, rewarding and safe early education experience to get the best possible start in life.”
 

Call for information – Aggravated robberies – Katherine

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

NT Police are calling for information following two separate aggravated robberies that occurred in Katherine on Monday evening.

Around 9:40pm, the Joint Emergency Services Communication Centre (JESCC) received reports of a stolen motor vehicle from a facility on Riverbank Drive.

It is alleged that three male youths approached an employee at the facility and threatened him with a knife. They demanded their keys and subsequently stole the victim’s vehicle.  While attempting to exit the location, the offenders crashed into a fence, causing them to abandon the vehicle and flee the scene on foot.

Police attended, and a crime scene was established. The alleged offenders remain outstanding, and investigations are ongoing.

Later, in a separate incident, around 11:05pm, the JESCC received a report that a group of youths had entered another business premises in Katherine South.

An employee working at the location was threatened with a knife for their vehicle keys. The employee was able to secure themselves in the staff room with the offenders banging on the door until they heard the victim called police.

Before fleeing the scene, the group allegedly attempted to steal a vehicle that was parked outside but were unsuccessful.

Police attended and a crime scene was established. The group remain outstanding, and investigations are ongoing.

It is not known at this stage if the two incidents are linked.

Police urge anyone with information pertaining to either incident to make contact on 131 444. Please quote reference number P25195157. Anonymous reports can be made through Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or via https://crimestoppersnt.com.au/.

Albanese Government introduces legislation to cut every student debt by 20 per cent

Source: Murray Darling Basin Authority

The Albanese Labor Government is today introducing legislation to cut 20 per cent off all student debts. 

This will wipe more than $16 billion in debt for more than three million Australians. 

Our number one focus is continuing to deliver cost of living relief for the Australian people. 

Cutting student debt by 20 per cent will ease pressure on workers and students across the country. 

For someone with the average debt of $27,600 this will see around $5,520 wiped from their outstanding Higher Education Loan Program (HELP) loans. 

Backdated to 1 June, it will reduce the burden for Australians with a student debt – including all HELP, Vocational Education and Training (VET) Student Loans, Australian Apprenticeship Support Loans, Student Startup Loans, and other student loans. 

In addition to cutting student debt by 20 per cent, the legislation raises the minimum amount before people have to start making repayments from $54,435 to $67,000 and reduces minimum repayments. 

For someone earning $70,000 it will reduce the minimum repayments they have to make by $1,300 a year. 

This builds on our reforms to fix the indexation formula, which has already cut more than $3 billion in student debt. 

This means, all up, the Albanese Labor Government will cut close to $20 billion in student debt for more than three million Australians. 

Quotes attributable to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese: 

“This is another way my Government is continuing to deliver cost of living relief to Australians. 

“We promised cutting student debt would be the first thing we did back in Parliament – and that’s exactly what we’re doing. 

“Getting an education shouldn’t mean a lifetime of debt. 

“No matter where you live or how much your parents earn, my Government will work to ensure the doors of opportunity are open for you.” 

Quotes attributable to Minister for Education Jason Clare: 

“We promised we would cut your student debt by 20 per cent and we are delivering. 

“This is a big deal for 3 million Australians, in particular, a lot of young Australians. 

“Just out of uni, just getting started, this will take a weight off their back. 

“It will also cut their annual repayments. For someone earning $70,000 a year, it will cut the amount they have to repay every year by $1,300.” 

“That’s real help with the cost of living. It means more money in your pocket, not the government’s.” 

Quotes attributable to Minister for Skills and Training Andrew Giles: 

“From speaking with students at TAFEs across the country, I know that cost can often be a barrier to Australians pursuing an apprenticeship or qualification. 

“This bill will deliver cost of living relief to almost 280,000 students in the VET sector – cutting half a billion dollars of student debt from this group alone. 

“Our Government is focused on reducing the barriers to further study and training, so that every Australian can get the skills they need for secure, well-paid jobs.”

Getting the CFC provisions right

Source: New places to play in Gungahlin

Do you have clients with a substantial interest in a foreign company controlled by Australian residents?

If so, make sure you’re correctly applying the CFC provisions. This involves disclosing all CFCs, and their income, in tax returns and the international dealings schedule.

Our reviews have shown that some tax agents don’t fully understand the provisions, putting their clients at risk of lengthy reviews and costly amendments.

Resources to use

You can check your understanding of the CFC provisions by reviewing: