Man charged with prohibited behaviour

Source: New South Wales Community and Justice

Man charged with prohibited behaviour

Thursday, 3 July 2025 – 9:06 am.

Police have arrested and charged a 34-year-old Little Swanport man with one count of Prohibited Behaviour following an incident in the Devonport CBD on Tuesday.
The man will appear in the Hobart Magistrates Court at a later date.
Police thank members of the public who assisted in identifying and locating the man.
Anyone with further information is asked to contact police on 131 444 or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or at crimestopperstas.com.au. Information can be provided anonymously.

Interview – The Today Show with Karl Stefanovic and Jayne Azzopardi

Source: Murray Darling Basin Authority

KARL STEFANOVIC: Well, the crisis gripping Australia’s child care sector is deepening, with a second man charged in connection to an abuse investigation that led to the arrest of a Melbourne worker.

JAYNE AZZOPARDI: The Victorian Government has announced a major crackdown which will include a phone ban inside centres. But action is needed at a national level and it is needed now. So, for more on this, we’re bringing in Federal Education Minister Jason Clare. Minister, good morning to you. You revealed yesterday that you actually know a family that has been impacted by all of this. How are they doing?

JASON CLARE, MINISTER FOR EDUCATION: One of my best friend’s daughters is caught up in this. Two of her little girls. She’s burning with rage, as you would expect her to be, and we’ve spoken a bit over the last 48 hours. She’s angry, she’s confused, she’s feeling all of the guilt and shame and anger that any mum or dad would be feeling when you get that notification. And she’s grappling with what she needs to do now to make sure that her girls are safe. 

This is sickening and it’s serious. It’s not the sort of stuff we like to talk about on breakfast TV. But people can’t turn away. We’ve got to act here. There’s steps that we’ve already taken, but not enough and not fast enough. One of the things that I will do as the Minister for Education, is, when the Parliament returns later this month, introduce legislation that will cut off funding to child care centres that aren’t meeting our safety standards or our quality standards. If they’re repeat offenders, if they’re not meeting the sort of safety standards that we meet, that we need and we demand as a country, then we’ve got to cut off their funding. That’s the big weapon that the Commonwealth Government has to wield here.

STEFANOVIC: I’ll circle back to some of those things in a second. This is such a difficult case, right, and it’s difficult too, because there’s a running narrative on the side of this and they’re just charges. But there are so many families affected and, you know, one. And I was just thinking about this the other day. Jayne has kids as well, and I was just going, if that was me, I don’t know what I’d do, but I’d be baying for blood. So, to try and wrestle all those emotions around this is incredibly difficult.

CLARE: And she is. She is. Look, it’s impossible to put yourself in that position until you’re there. I’ve got a sense of it because of the fact that it’s one of my best friends. And these are allegations put aside this individual case. There was an individual that was arrested, charged and convicted with serious acts. Australia’s worst serial paedophile was arrested for actions in child care centres in Queensland a couple of years ago. It’s what prompted me to conduct a child safety review. It’s what’s prompted the actions on mobile phones in centres, as well as mandatory reporting. But it’s also the reason why we’ve got to go further, whether that’s a national register of workers in centres or the sort of action that’s now being taken in NSW and in Victoria around CCTV. Or for that matter, the action that I will take as Minister to introduce that legislation to cut funding to centres that aren’t up to scratch. The fact is that about 70 per cent of the funding that runs the centre comes from Australian taxpayers, comes from the Commonwealth Government through the child care subsidy. It’s what makes these centres work. And if they’re not working in the interest of our kids, then we’ve got to have the power to be able to cut that funding off.

AZZOPARDI: Minister, as a dad yourself, who would be personally paying child care centres, as we do, to look after our children and to have the expectation that they are going to be not only safe, but nurtured and nourished, do you think your Government has done enough here?

CLARE: The honest answer is no, of course we haven’t. We haven’t done enough and we haven’t done it fast enough. 

You’re right. One of my little guys is in child care right now. Can I use this opportunity to say thank you to all of the extraordinary child care workers, early educators across the country. They’re as angry as I am, as my friend is right now. I remember the day that we told my big guy, my 8 year old, that Louise was pregnant with his little brother. The first thing he said when we told him that he was going to be a big brother is, “I can’t wait to tell Kelly.” And Kelly is the woman that looked after him when he was in early education and care. And that reminds me that that special bond and connection that our children have with our educators. This is an essential service for mums and dads to help them get back to work. But it’s much more than that for our kids. It helps them to get ready for school, it helps them to get ready for life. Every educator out there that’s seeing this is angry and furious as well. And the responsibility rests with me as well as every other educator in the country to make sure that we make our centres safer than they are today. Not enough’s been done, more needs to be done.

STEFANOVIC: We had a lady on just about half an hour ago saying the men at these child care centres should be banned. There are going to be all sorts of people wanting certain reforms, some of them easily done, some of them not. So, is that something that you would consider?

CLARE: I don’t think that’s going to be the solution here. Have a look at the Four Corners exposé from earlier this year that Adele Ferguson led on. That showed abuse in our child care centres and neglect in our centres, and they weren’t blokes. We’ve had a Royal Commission, we’ve had the child care safety review that I led. We’ve got recommendations there around registers and CCTV and legislation. We know what we need to do, Karl. Now, the obligation on us is to get busy and implement these recommendations.

STEFANOVIC: So, what’s stopping you? And I know you’re a really hardworking guy. I know you deeply feel this story, you raised the Four Corners story. When that happened, we all said, let’s change it, let’s install these reforms and let’s protect our kids. Nothing happened. So, what’s it going to be?

CLARE: People watching aren’t interested in bloody excuses, they’re interested in action. When we got the Four Corners Report, we said we’d introduce that legislation and that’s what I’ll do when Parliament returns. The New South Wales Government also commissioned the former Deputy Ombudsman to do a review. We got that report last week and the former Deputy Ombudsman briefed Education Ministers on Friday. That’s where CCTV reform’s coming from. That’s where increasing penalties and more information for parents is coming from. We’ve got to bring all of these recommendations together. That’s happening now and we’ve got to actually do the work, we’ve got to implement them.

AZZOPARDI: So, when parents who are watching now, what can you tell them? When will this all be in place?

CLARE: Number one, there’s already action being taken on mobile phones. But more action will happen in September when regulations come into effect. Legislation will be introduced into the Federal Parliament when Parliament returns in the first sitting fortnight. And as I said, that’s about cutting off funding to bad actors, to people that aren’t up to scratch when it comes to the safety of our kids. And Early Education Ministers will meet again next month on the next stage of reform. 

There’s another part to this as well, Jane, and that’s the Working With Children Checks. Not enough has been done to make sure that they work in the interest of our kids. They’re not a silver bullet because a lot of these offenders haven’t got a criminal record. So, they’re not caught by the system. But the Attorney-General has said yesterday that Attorney-Generals across the country will meet next month to make sure they work better, that there’s exchange of information, but that they’re also updated in near real-time. And Victoria and New South Wales have also announced a package of reforms. I strongly back that. We want to see that rolled out right across the country.

STEFANOVIC: I know your pain will help motivate you to get this done. It needs to be done, pronto. There’s so much, so much at stake. Jason, thank you. And a reminder, a dedicated advice line for parents impacted in Melbourne has been established. You can call 1800 791 241. Just still rattled by all that story.

AZZOPARDI: Completely. Completely.
 

Interview – Sunrise with Natalie Barr

Source: Murray Darling Basin Authority

NATALIE BARR: Australia has been dealt a horrific wake up call this morning that the rules and the regulations we thought were protecting our children are just not good enough. It follows revelations of horrific alleged crimes against children across several childcare centres in Victoria. 

More than 2,000 families have been affected by this. Now our leaders are finally acting, but it follows years and years of experts, advocates and government bodies calling for change. 

Education Minister Jason Clare joins us live in Sydney now. Our youngest, our most vulnerable Australians have been failed. What are you doing right now to fix this? 

JASON CLARE, MINISTER FOR EDUCATION: The truth is, Nat, you’re right. This has taken too long for governments to act. This is sickening and it’s serious, it demands serious action. We’ve already taken action around mobile phones in child care centres and mandatory reporting, but there’s more that we have to do. There’s a lot more that we have to do. 

When Parliament returns later this month I’ll introduce a piece of legislation in the first sitting fortnight that will cut off funding to child care centres that aren’t up to scratch when it comes to the safety of our children. 

The big weapon that the Federal Government has to wield here is the funding that we provide to child care centres. It equates to about 70 per cent of the funding that runs a centre, and if they’re not keeping our kids safe then we need to cut off their funding. 

There’s got to be consequences for this sort of bad behaviour when centres don’t look after our kids properly. 

BARR: Yeah, there should be. We spent millions and millions of dollars on a Royal Commission in 2015. That recommended a national working with children scheme, it recommended a national Federal office, it recommended a national register for childcare workers. That was 10 years ago. Has the government failed these families? 

CLARE: The system has failed these families. If the allegations are proved to be true then the system has failed these families. 

BARR: But what is the system? Because there’s a Royal Commission, it outlines all this, it gets all the experts, our taxpayers’ money pays for it, Jason, and it gives it ‑ hands with a bow to the government. And says, “This is what you guys need to do”. 

CLARE: Correct. 

BARR: And look where we are today. 

CLARE: Correct, and the implementation of those reforms has taken too bloody long, and they need to be accelerated. That’s why I’ve said we need to implement a register for educators in child care centres. It’s why we need to fix the working with children checks. That’s work that’s being led by Attorney‑Generals, but it needs to be sped up. 

There’s no point in making excuses here, Nat. The families of these kids aren’t interested in excuses. One of these families is a friend of mine. I know how they’re feeling because they’ve rung me and told me, and I can’t repeat on television what they said to me because there’s kids watching. But this is serious, and I’m determined to act. 

It’s a complicated system, but people watching aren’t interested in bloody excuses. They’re interested in action. And that’s what Education Ministers must take. 

BARR: Okay. Two years ago under your Government the Children’s Education and Care Quality Authority, a national independent body, issued a warning. They said they were concerned over “the level of vetting being undertaken pre‑employment”. Why didn’t you act on that? 

CLARE: I commissioned that agency to conduct a review of child safety and I did that after a paedophile was arrested and convicted in Queensland. You’ll remember that case. That’s what led to a number of reforms around mobile phones and mandatory reporting. But there’s a whole bunch of recommendations there that need to be implemented. 

The key point here to make, Nat, whether we’re talking about that or whether we’re talking about working with children checks or anything else, is there’s no silver bullet here. This work will never be done. There will always be people that will try to break through the net and try to get into the system. And we’ve also always got to work on making sure that we find ways to keep them out and keep our kids safe. 

Now not enough has been done, and not enough has been done fast enough here. But I can tell you that I’m determined to act. That’s why I put this on the agenda of Education Ministers last week and we agreed that because of what’s happening in Victoria, but also what’s happening in New South Wales after the Four Corners exposé earlier this year, and what’s happened in Queensland, that we need to bring together all of these recommendations and implement them. 

BARR: Okay. The phone ban. You’re talking about the phone ban now, but this was brought in nationally last July, wasn’t it? Victoria is only getting centres to implement it from this September. It’s voluntary and there’ll be fines. That’s a long time between last July and this September. 

CLARE: Too long. The short answer to that is too long. The ban was put in the National Code in last July. Most centres have implemented it. The tortuous nature of the system means it needs to be put into regulations that happen in a couple of months time, and Victoria is making sure that that happens sooner than that. 

But all of the advice that we’ve received from ACECQA, and other experts is you’ve got to get the personal mobile phones and any digital devices that workers have out of the centre. The only photographs that you should receive of your children from the centre should be from the authorised centre owned camera or phone. That was the advice that we got. We got it for a reason, Nat, and we’re implementing it. 

BARR: Yep, okay. Still a massive amount of work to be done. Expanding and strengthening those working with children checks, the registers. We’re going to keep on it. Thank you very much. Thanks Jason. 

CLARE: Thanks Nat.

Rate cuts bring relief as stress levels drop

Source: Premier of Victoria

  • NAB Consumer Stress Index eased to a two-year low
  • Small cutbacks putting $4860 a year back in Aussies’ pockets

Australians are starting to breathe a little easier, with consumer stress dropping to its lowest point in two years, thanks to easing cost-of-living pressures and growing hope around interest rates.

NAB’s latest Consumer Sentiment Survey shows the stress index has dropped to 56.6, down from 59.6 in March, below the long-term average.

NAB Executive Lucia La Bella says recent rate cuts are already making a difference in how people are feeling about their finances.

And fewer Australians are seeing big jumps in mortgages, rent and transport.

“We’re seeing a sense of optimism about the future and more confidence that there’s light at the end of the tunnel,” Ms La Bella said.

“We’re seeing some relief already among mortgage holders with almost half saying they’re feeling the benefits of recent rate cuts.

“With another RBA meeting just days away, many households are watching closely and planning their budgets.”

Cost-of-living is still the main concern among Australians although it has now eased to its lowest level in three years.

Households are continuing to tighten their belts, cutting back on things like eating out, entertainment and travel – saving an average of $4860 a year. But it’s not just about cutting back, people are shopping smarter too.

One in three are switching to cheaper brands, one in four are doing their homework before buying, and one in ten are snapping up deals when they see them.

“They’re showing resilience, making smart choices, and setting themselves up for a stronger financial future,” Ms La Bella said.

With a new financial year here, it’s a good opportunity to start fresh with a new budget. Free tools like the NAB Budget Planner are a good place to start.

Notes to editor:  

  • NAB’s measure of consumer stress is based on household stresses arising from their job security, health, ability to fund retirement, cost of living and the impact of Government policies.
  • NAB Economics forecasts three further 25bp cuts in 2025 taking the cash rate back to a broadly neutral rate of 3.1%.
  • The NAB Consumer Sentiment Survey uses data from 2,000 people

ENDS 

For further information:
NAB Media: +61 (0) 3 7035 5015

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Arrests – Police vehicle rammed – Alice Springs

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The Northern Territory Police Force has arrested two 14-year-old males after a police vehicle ramming incident occurred in Alice Springs yesterday.

Around 5:40am on Tuesday 1 July, the Joint Emergency Services Communication Centre received a report that a red Mahindra station wagon had been stolen from a residence in Teatree Court in Sadadeen. The victim reported seeing two unknown persons inside the vehicle leaving the area.

At 6am, police CCTV operators observed the vehicle at a service station on Railway Terrace. Two police vehicles responded and sighted one offender running from the scene on foot, and the second offender entering the stolen vehicle. The driver reversed at speed and rammed into the front of one of the police vehicles, before fleeing the area.

No police member was injured as a result of the incident, however the police vehicle sustained substantial damage.

The 14-year-old passenger was arrested nearby after a short foot chase.

Earlier today, the 14-year-old driver was also arrested and the stolen motor vehicle was recovered by police.

Commander Mark Grieve said, “This incident highlights the dangers that our members face every day while responding to violent behaviour.

“It is appalling behaviour, and police do not deserve to be targeted while executing their duty of serving and protecting the community.

“This could have easily resulted in serious injury or death, and I commend the officers for acting safely and professionally under challenging circumstances.”

Hit and run driver at Gawler charged

Source: New South Wales – News

A driver has been charged following a hit and run crash at Gawler on 26 June.

Just before 7pm on Thursday 26 June, emergency services responded to reports a pedestrian had been struck by a vehicle on Thirteenth Street, Gawler South.

The pedestrian, a 52-year-old local woman, sustained life-threatening injuries and was rushed to hospital where she remains in a critical condition.

This morning, Wednesday 2 July, a 56-year-old woman from Gawler attended at Gawler Police Station where she was arrested by Major Crash Investigators.

She has been charged with careless driving cause serious harm, leave scene of serious crash having caused harm.

She has been bailed to appear at Elizabeth Magistrates Court 13 August.

Investigators attended a Gawler address where the vehicle involved was located and seized for forensic examination.

Western suburbs man charged over abuse of public office

Source: New South Wales – News

A western suburbs man will face court charged with multiple counts of abuse of public office.

Detectives from SAPOL’s Anti-Corruption Section today arrested a 37-year-old man from Welland and charged him with 78 counts of abuse of public office after a lengthy investigation.

The arrested man has been bailed to appear in the Adelaide Magistrates Court on 20 August 2025.

As the matter is before the courts, no further comment will be made.

Doorstop – University of Technology Sydney

Source: Murray Darling Basin Authority

KATHLEEN BAIRD, HEAD OF SCHOOL OF NURSING AND MIDWIFERY: Good morning, everyone. Firstly, I’d like to acknowledge the Gadigal people of the Eora Nation on whose land UTS stands. And I welcome you all to UTS. I’m Kathy Baird, Professor Kathy Baird, and I’m the Head of the School of Nursing and Midwifery. It is an absolute honour to welcome the Minister for Education, the Honourable Jason Clare, to UTS this morning.

I do also want to acknowledge the Commonwealth’s ongoing support through the placement payment for our student nurses and midwives. This initiative will provide much-needed financial support to our students during their clinical placements. It will help to ease the burden they face while they gain the practical skills required. Their dedication, resilience and compassion are the foundation of the future of nursing [indistinct] will be built.

I’d also like to thank the students that came here this morning. And I would like to hand over to Minister Clare. Thank you.

JASON CLARE, MINISTER FOR EDUCATION: Thanks very much. And a big thank you to UTS for letting me visit today to talk about something which is dear to my heart and I think is going to be really important in supporting the teachers and nurses and midwives and social workers that are training in our universities now that are getting an education in our universities right now to help them with their studies, with the cost of living while they’re studying, and help them to complete their degree.

When I got this job a couple of years ago, I remember talking to some nursing students who talked to me about placement poverty. It was something that I hadn’t heard of before. Now I understand. And it’s because of the stories that they told me. There’s a lot of nursing students who work in our hospitals right now as assistants in nursing, and it’s a part-time job where they’re getting paid to work in a hospital while they’re studying here at university. But a big part of their degree is also prac, practical training. And it’s something like 800 hours of practical training that they have to do as part of their degree.

And often that prac will happen at the same hospital where they’ve got a part-time job, but while they’re doing their prac, they can’t do that job. So, they’re working in the same hospital, but they’re no longer being paid. And that’s what placement poverty looks like. It means that you don’t have the money that you ordinarily would have to pay the bills, to pay for parking, pay for public transport. And it can make life harder.

The end result of that is that some students who start a degree, like nursing or teaching, don’t finish it. For some students, prac also means you have to move away from home to do it. And that can make life more difficult as well. It can mean giving up your part-time job because you’re not living around the corner while you’re doing the practical training.

This was a key recommendation of the Universities Accord, which is a big report. It’s a blueprint for how we reform higher education in Australia over the next decade and the decade after that. And I released that report early last year, and at the budget last year, I announced that we’d allocate almost over a half a billion dollars to fund paid prac. I think I was here to talk about that then. And it’s terrific to be back at UTS on the week that it starts, where we’re bringing the words from that report to life and making it real. And, most importantly, making a difference to the sort of people I got to meet today.

This applies to teaching students, to nursing students, to midwifery students and social work students. These are some of the most important professions in our country. These are young people who one day will teach our kids or look after us when we’re sick, who will help women giving birth, who’ll help women fleeing domestic violence. And this is a bit of practical help while you do your practical training.

Can I just pass over to Dorsa who I got the privilege to meet this morning, who’s a third-year midwifery student here at UTS, to tell your story about what drew you to midwifery and how you think this payment might help.

DORSA NEMATIAN: Thank you so much, Minister Clare. So I am a refugee from Iran who has been doing a midwifery course for the past three years. I started off with a degree in Bachelor of Medical Science, which helped made me realise that it wasn’t for me, and I was more drawn to midwifery and childbirth, which is the reason why I made the switch. Obviously, this Commonwealth Prac Payment will make the difference between surviving through the practical part of our degree to just enjoying it and being able to learn while we’re undertaking our practice.

JOURNALIST: So there has been a huge slump in the number of students on youth allowance, and experts are warning that we may not meet our tertiary education targets if low-education and regional students aren’t going to uni. Would you consider raising the rate of those payments or loosening eligibility requirements?

CLARE: We’ve already increased youth allowance as well as rental assistance. You are right that what we do need to do over the next decade and beyond is help more young people finish school and then go on to TAFE or university to get the qualifications that the jobs that are in demand now and that are going to be in even more demand in the decades ahead. There’s no part of the economy where jobs are growing faster than in nursing and in health care. That’s for sure.

Yesterday I formally announced the creation of the Australian Tertiary Education Commission in its interim reform, and it kicked off yesterday, headed up by Professor Mary O’Kane, who is the author or the lead author of the Universities Accord. And she makes the point there that we’re not going to have the workforce that we need – something like four out of five workers in the economy with a university degree or a TAFE qualification – unless we break down that barrier that stops a lot of young people, particularly from disadvantaged backgrounds, from poorer backgrounds and from the regions and the bush, from getting a crack at university in the first place and then going on and finishing their degree.

And that’s why the prac payment is part of this. It’s definitely part of it, support for people while they do their practical training, but it’s not the only thing that we’re doing. Next year, you’ll see the rollout of funding reform for the way our universities are funded. And, in particular, funding reform to help the sort of people that you mentioned in your question, people from disadvantaged backgrounds. And part of that is developing and rolling out a needs-based funding system a little like the Gonski model for schools for universities.

JOURNALIST: What do you think that slump is due to?

CLARE: We’ve seen over the course of this year and last year an increase in the total number of young people enrolling in courses at university. That’s a good sign. The number of people going to university, the number of Australians going to university, has been in decline pretty much since 2017. There was a bump during COVID. That was a bit of an anomaly where people were locked at home and enrolled in courses. But overall, we’ve seen a decline in the number of Aussies enrolling in uni degrees until last year when it jumped up, and now it’s jumping up again this year. It’s on track to be the highest number of Australians enrolling in either an undergraduate degree or a postgraduate degree on record. So that’s a good thing.

As I say, it’s not just people leaping out of school to study at university; it’s also people going back to uni to reskill, to upskill, get more skills. So that’s a good sign. But the Universities Accord is about building on that and what more we need to do it to support more people into university and into TAFE. I mentioned the funding reforms that will take place next year. Another part of it is making sure that TAFE and university work better together. We shouldn’t see them as two separate systems; we should be thinking about how they can be more joined up or integrated, how some of what you do at TAFE can be counted when you go to university and vice versa.

We were having a chat, Dorsa mentioned that she did another course before she went into midwifery. Some of that is counted towards this course. That means that the degree is shorter than it otherwise would be, and costs less. But that’s a good example of what we can do more of here.

In terms of helping people with the cost of higher education, the best example I can really point to is the cut to HECS that I’ll introduce into the Parliament in the next few weeks. The first bill that we’ll introduce into the Parliament will cut the student debt for 3 million Australians by 20 per cent. This will cut $16 billion dollars off the debt of ordinary Aussies. For the average Australian, it will cut their debt by more than five and a half grand. And that’s a big deal that will make a big difference.

JOURNALIST: Do you want to move into child care now?

CLARE: I’ll just make some comments off the top. Any Australian who heard the news from Victoria yesterday would be sickened by what they heard. And for every parent that is directly affected by this in Victoria, they would be frightened and they’d be angry. They would be bloody angry. And I know that they’re angry because one of those parents is a friend of mine, and her two little girls are directly affected by this. And I won’t tell you what she told me last night because you can’t repeat it on television. But she’s right to be mad. I’m mad. I think anyone who works in the early education system, and there’s hundreds of thousands of fantastic people who do, would be angry today as well. And my friend is mad because of all of the stress and the trauma and the crap that she and her girls are going to have to go through in the weeks ahead.

This is serious, and it requires serious action. I was informed about this by the Victorian Government a little over a week ago. It’s one of the reasons why I put this on the top of the agenda when Education Ministers met last week. Let me be clear, when Education Ministers met to discuss child safety last week, we didn’t discuss this case, but we discussed what are the next steps that we need to take as a nation to make sure that our kids are safe in early education and care.

There are things that we’ve already done. We’ve banned the use of personal mobile phones and devices in child care centres, and we did that for a reason. We’ve also changed the rules around mandatory reporting from seven days to 24 hours where there are complaints about sexual or physical abuse. I’ve got to tell you, we did that for a reason.

And there are other things that are also underway. I mentioned yesterday and again this morning the legislation that I’ll bring to the Parliament which is about making sure that if services aren’t up to scratch, that they aren’t meeting the safety and the quality standards that we expect as a country, that we have the power as a Government to cut their funding off. And that’s important, too, because there’s nothing more important than the safety of our kids in early education and care.

And there’s more to do. That’s what the meeting of Education Ministers on Friday was all about. We’ve seen the awful revelations out of the Four Corners investigation led by Adele Ferguson only a couple of months ago, and the Wheeler Report that was released last Thursday. Ministers had the opportunity at that meeting to be briefed by Chris, to be briefed by Mr Wheeler, and to go through his recommendations. But we were also briefed by Gabrielle Sinclair, who’s the head of ACECQA, about the actions she recommends we take in the light of the Four Corners investigation. And now Ministers are working together on a package of further reforms that are needed to make sure that our early education and care centres are as safe as they need to be.

JOURNALIST: Minister, on that legislation you’re planning to introduce, how serious would a breach have to be for a centre to have their funding cut? What sort of threshold are we talking about?

CLARE: All of that will be set out in the legislation that we’re working on right now. I mentioned to David on RN this morning that I’ve directed my Department to get that legislation drafted as quick as possible. It will deal with a number of things. As we announced back in March when we announced our intention to legislate in this area, it’s about that, it’s about cutting off funding to centres where there’s egregious behaviour by a centre. It’s also about stopping them from getting permission to expand and open other centres. But not just that; it’s also about stopping a provider or an employee who works in a centre who’s been found to be a bad actor from moving out of the child care sector into another part of the care economy, for example, in the NDIS. And we saw examples of that in the Four Corners investigation.

JOURNALIST: Do you think there should be a tougher background checking process for those who have a working with children check?

CLARE: I said this morning that it’s taken too long to do the work necessary to make sure that our working with children check system is up to scratch. And I’ve spoken a number of times with the Attorney-General, Michelle Rowland, the new Attorney-General, and I think I can safely speak on her behalf that she agrees and is determined to take the action necessary here to make sure that our working with children checks across the nation are up to scratch. That will be something that will be discussed by Attorneys-General when they meet next month. The Attorney-General is doing a press conference at the moment, and she’ll have more to say on that.

The only other point I would make on working with children checks is that they’re not the only thing that we need to fix or reform. They’re not a silver bullet. There are too many examples where a perpetrator is eventually caught and arrested and sentenced. They’re somebody that got a working with children check because they had no prior criminal record. And so it’s only one of the things that we need to focus on here if we’re serious about making sure that we keep our kids

JOURNALIST: You mentioned you wanted those – that legislation through as fast as possible. Can we expect to see these changes made this year?

CLARE: Yes.

JOURNALIST: Do you – the National Children’s Commissioner says the sector’s regulators need to be stronger, need more teeth to act. Has the government been slow to respond to these calls?

CLARE: You can never be fast enough here. And the honest answer is the work here will never be done. There will always be bad people that try and break through the system and the safety. And so the work here will never be done. But what the Commissioner is talking about there are one of the things that Ministers are focused on and looking at right now.

JOURNALIST: So will the Government make nationally harmonised working with children checks a priority? So those were recommended in 2015. How complicated will they be to enact, and why hasn’t it been done yet?

CLARE: Similar answer to the one I gave just a moment ago. And the Attorney-General will be able to speak to that in more detail. But this is one of the things that Attorneys are looking at when they meet next month. They’re looking at what you described as harmonisation or mutual recognition, the sharing of information across borders, but also potentially near real-time updates to working with children checks, where criminal record checks or criminal records change. There’s a big piece of work that’s going on nationally with all the states and territories here. But as you rightly point out, the work can’t happen soon enough.

JOURNALIST: Would you support the introduction of mandatory CCTV in child care centres?

CLARE: CCTV itself was the subject of a recommendation by Chris Wheeler in his report that was handed down on Thursday. And that recommendation was about installing CCTV in centres where there has been previous breaches, where there is concern by the regulator about safety and quality in those centres. The New South Wales Government has given in-principle support for that recommendation. The Victorian Government I think, will have more to say about that today. And this is one of the things that Ministers are looking at across the board as we develop nationwide reforms. That’s different, though, to the question you asked about making it mandatory. The advice from experts at the moment is targeted based on centres which have demonstrated that they’re not up to scratch.

JOURNALIST: The Victorian Greens have been calling for a royal commission into the sector. Do you – would you support that?

CLARE: We’ve had a royal commission. We’ve got the recommendations. After Australia’s worst paedophile was arrested and convicted in Queensland just over two years ago, I commissioned a review into child safety. We’ve got those recommendations as well. Now we’ve got the Wheeler Report. We’ll get more evidence and more information out of what the Victorian Government is announcing today. We know what we need to do. It’s how we do it and how we pull all of that together and get the whole country acting as one.

Okay, thanks very much, everybody.
 

Community urged not to touch bats after rare case of Australian bat lyssavirus

Source: Australian Green Party

​NSW Health is reminding the community to avoid touching or handling bats, following the first confirmed case of Australian bat lyssavirus in NSW.
The man in his 50s from Northern NSW is in a critical condition in hospital. 
Keira Glasgow, a Director in Health Protection at NSW Health said lyssavirus is transmitted from infected bats to humans when virus in bat saliva enters the body through a bat bite or scratch. 
“This is a very tragic situation. The man had been bitten by a bat several months ago and received treatment following the injury. Further investigation is underway to understand whether other exposures or factors played a role in his illness,” Ms Glasgow said.
“We know 118 people required medical assessment after being bitten or scratched by bats in 2024, but this is the first confirmed case of the virus in NSW, and the fourth case in Australia.
“It is incredibly rare for the virus to transmit to humans, but once symptoms of lyssavirus start in people who are scratched or bitten by an infected bat, sadly there is no effective treatment.”
Ms Glasgow urged people to assume that any bat in Australia could carry lyssavirus, and said this is why only trained, protected and vaccinated wildlife handlers should interact with bats.
“If you are bitten or scratched by a bat, urgent medical assessment is crucial. You will need to wash the wound thoroughly for 15 minutes right away with soap and water and apply an antiseptic with anti-virus action, such as betadine, and allow it to dry. You will then require treatment with rabies immunoglobulin and rabies vaccine.”
Australian bat lyssavirus is a close relative to the rabies virus. The virus has been found in species of flying foxes, fruit bats and insect-eating ​microbats.
The best way to protect yourself from infection is to not touch bats. If you see a bat in distress, injured or trapped on the ground, do not try to rescue it. Instead, contact trained experts WIRES on 1300 094 737 or your local wildlife rescue group. 
For more information about lyssavirus refer to the Rabies and Australian bat lyssavirus infection fact sheet.
For more information on protecting yourself around wildlife, visit: https://www.health.nsw.gov.au/Infectious/factsheets/Pages/be-careful-around-wildlife.aspx

A look at Belconnen school upgrades

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

Hawker Primary School’s newly built ramp winds through the school’s garden.

In brief:

  • There is a lot of work happening at public schools in Belconnen.
  • This includes building a brand-new school, school upgrades and an oval refresh project.
  • This story gives an overview of this work.

There’s a lot happening at public schools in the Belconnen region.

From facilities upgrades to a brand-new school, we look at some of the work that’s:

  • been recently completed
  • currently taking place
  • planned.

This work will ensure every child has access to great, accessible, sustainable facilities and infrastructure that support high-quality education in the ACT.

Progress on Strathnairn School

Construction is well underway on what will be the ACT’s 93rd public school.

The new Strathnairn School will be co-located with an early childhood education and care (ECEC) service.

It will cater for:

  • 780 students from preschool to year 6
  • 130 ECEC places.

The school’s foundation principal, Nicole Nicholson, and other executive staff have been announced.

When will the school open?

Strathnairn School will open in stages.

  • It will open for students in preschool to year 2 at the start of 2026.
  • It is expected students from all year levels will be able to attend in 2027.

This will offer families in the Ginninderry region high-quality public education close to home.

Who can enrol?

The planned School Priority Enrolment Area (PEA) for the new school includes:

  • Strathnairn
  • Macnamara
  • Ginninderry Stage 3
  • a portion of new development in Holt, west of the golf course bounded by Fullston Way and Lionel Rose Street.

Enrol your child at Strathnairn School

Find out more about the school on the Built for CBR website

The Strathnairn School site in May 2025

Have your say on a refreshed Fraser oval

The dryland oval beside Fraser Primary school is getting a refresh. This will make it more useful for students as a learning and play space.

The community can use it too. Outside school hours, sporting groups and locals can head there for exercise, sports and recreation.

Canberrans are now invited to share ideas on how best to refresh this popular space. Children and young people are encouraged to get involved.

How to share your views

Visit the YourSay Conversations website to take a survey and/or mark your ideas on an online map.

You can do this until Wednesday, 13 August.

The ACT Government has sought early ideas from staff and students at Fraser Primary School. Traditional Owners have also shared feedback on what is important to them in this new space.

Your feedback will help shape a concept design for the refreshed oval. This will be shared through the YourSay platform.

You will then have further opportunity to give feedback before the designs are finalised.

Have your say now via the YourSay Conversations website.

Fraser oval will be refreshed for both student and community use.

Hawker Primary School upgrades

Hawker Primary School students and staff are benefitting from recent upgrades.

The school has welcomed new accessible car parking bays. There is also now a ramp leading to its entrance.

The front office has had a makeover with:

  • a new two-door entrance
  • new furniture
  • LED lighting
  • upgrades to the sick bay and nearby toilet.

The school now has a new printer facility room. Upgrades to the boardroom and principal’s office are also complete.

This work has been completed as part of the ACT Government’s Asset Renewal Program.

The Hawker Primary School front office has had a makeover.

Upgrades ahead for Melba Copland Secondary School

The 2025–26 ACT Budget includes support for the master planning, design and construction of priority upgrades at Melba Copland Secondary School.

These will include an upgrade to the foyer at the College campus, and a plan for future works.

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