Advertencia sanitaria por hallazgos de hongos de la muerte

Source: Australian Green Party

​​​Salud NSW está advirtiendo a las personas sobre los riesgos para la salud al ingerir hongos silvestres, ya que se han encontrado hongos de la muerte (death cap mushrooms) que crecen en Nueva Gales del Sur.
Recientemente se ha detectado que Amanita phalloides, comúnmente conocida como hongo de la muerte, crece en Sydney, en las Southern Highlands y el sur de NSW.
Genevieve Adamo, especialista principal del Centro de Información de Envenenamientos de NSW, dijo que los hongos de la muerte pueden ser mortales si se ingieren.
“Los síntomas de la intoxicación por hongos a veces se pueden retardar, pero el tratamiento temprano es vital para los resultados de salud”, dijo Adamo.
“Estos incluyen vómitos y diarrea y, en casos graves, daño hepático y renal, o la muerte”.
El profesor Brett Summerell, científico jefe de los Jardines Botánicos de Sydney, advirtió que identificar si un hongo silvestre es seguro para comer es extremadamente difícil.
“No hay forma fácil o confiable de identificar si un hongo silvestre es comestible o venenoso, por lo que aconsejamos a las personas que no busquen ni consuman hongos silvestres”, dijo el profesor Summerell.
“Cocinar hongos venenosos no los hace seguros para comer.
“Solo debe comer hongos que compre en una tienda de comestibles, supermercado o mercado de productos de buena reputación”.
En 2024 se produjeron 23 hospitalizaciones por el efecto tóxico de hongos ingeridos, dos de ellas en niños menores de cinco años.
Ese mismo año, el Centro de Información sobre Venenos de NSW respondió a 363 llamadas relacionadas con exposiciones a hongos silvestres en NSW y el Territorio de la Capital de Australia, lo que supone un aumento del 26% en comparación con 2023.
En lo que va de año (hasta el 31 de mayo de 2025), se han realizado 190 llamadas.
El descubrimiento de hongos de la muerte altamente venenosos en NSW, es una advertencia de que puede haber consecuencias desastrosas por comer hongos silvestres.
“Como los niños pequeños tienden a llevarse cosas a la boca, pueden estar en riesgo”, dijo la Sra. Adamo.
“Vigile a los niños cuando jueguen al aire libre, especialmente alrededor de árboles grandes en parques o en el jardín de su casa donde puedan crecer hongos.
“Retire cualquier hongo que pueda crecer para mantener a sus niños seguros”.
Salud NSW y los municipios locales han estado llevando a cabo una vigilancia continua de los hongos de la muerte durante los últimos dos años después de una detección inicial en el sur del estado.
Si le preocupa que pueda haber ocurrido una intoxicación por hongos, no espere a que aparezcan los síntomas. Llame inmediatamente al Centro de Información sobre Venenos al 13 11 26.
En caso de emergencia, llame al Triple Cero (000) o acuda a algún Departamento de Emergencias. Si es posible, lleve una muestra del hongo o una foto para ayudar con la identificación.
Puede encontrar más información sobre el envenenamiento por hongos en el sitio web de Salud NSW​.

डेथ क्याप (Death cap) च्याउ फेला परे पछि स्वास्थ्य चेतावनी जारी

Source: Australian Green Party

एन.एस.डब्ल्यु. मा विषालु डेथ क्याप च्याउ उम्रिरहेको भेटिएकाले एन.एस.डब्ल्यु. स्वास्थ्य (NSW Health) ले जङ्गली च्याउ खाँदा स्वास्थ्यलाई हुने जोखिमको बारेमा चेतावनी दिइरहेको छ।
अमानिटा फाल्लोइड्स, जसलाई सामान्यतया डेथ क्याप च्याउहरू भनेर चिनिन्छ, हालसालै सिड्नी, दक्षिणी हाईल्यान्ड्स र दक्षिणी एन.एस.डब्ल्यु. मा उम्रिरहेको फेला पारिएको छ।
एन.एस.डब्ल्यु. वीष सम्बन्धी जानकारी केन्द्रका वरिष्ठ विशेषज्ञ, जेनेभिव अडामोले डेथ क्याप च्याउ खाएमा घातक हुन सक्छ भन्ने कुरा बताइन्।
“कहिलेकाहीँ च्याउको विषाक्तताका लक्षणहरू देखिन समय लाग्न सक्छ, तर स्वास्थ्य परिणामहरूका लागि प्रारम्भिक उपचार महत्त्वपूर्ण छ,” सुश्री अडामोले भनिन्।
“यिनीहरूमा बान्ता आउने र पखाला लाग्ने, र गम्भीर मामिलाहरूमा, कलेजो र मृगौलामा क्षति पुग्ने वा ज्यानै जाने समावेश छन्।”
एउटा जङ्गली च्याउ खानको लागि सुरक्षित छ कि छैन भनेर पहिचान गर्न एकदम गाह्रो हुन्छ भनेर सिड्नीको वनस्पति उद्यानका प्रमुख वैज्ञानिक, प्राध्यापक ब्रेट समर्रेलले चेतावनी दिए।
“एउटा जङ्गली च्याउ खान मिल्छ वा विषालु छ कि भनेर पहिचान गर्ने सजिलो वा भरपर्दो तरिका छैन, त्यसैले हामी मानिसहरूलाई जङ्गली च्याउहरू नखोज्न र नखान सल्लाह दिन्छौँ।,” प्राध्यापक समर्रेलले भने।
“विषालु च्याउहरूलाई पकाउँदा तिनीहरू खानको लागि सुरक्षित हुँदैनन्।
“तपाईंले केवल सम्मानित किराना पसल, सुपरमार्केट वा उत्पादनको बजारबाट आफूले खरिद गरेको च्याउहरू खानुपर्छ।”
२०२४ मा, च्याउ खाएर विषाक्तताको कारणले अस्पताल भर्ना हुने २३ घटनाहरू थिए, ती मध्ये दुईजना ५ वर्ष भन्दा कम उमेरका बालबालिकाहरू थिए।
त्यही वर्ष, एन.एस.डब्ल्यु. वीष सम्बन्धी जानकारी केन्द्रले एन.एस.डब्ल्यु. र ए.सी.टी. मा जङ्गली च्याउका जोखिमहरूका सम्बन्धमा ३६३ फोनहरूको जवाफ दियो, जुन २०२३ को तुलनामा २६ प्रति शतको वृद्धि हो।
यस वर्ष अहिलेसम्म (३१ मे २०२५ सम्म), १९० फोनहरू आएका छन्।
एन.एस.डब्ल्यु. मा एकदम विषालु डेथ क्याप च्याउको पहिचान गरिएकाले जङ्गली च्याउहरू खाँदा विनाशकारी परिणामहरू हुन सक्छन् भन्नेबारे यो चेतावनी हो।
“साना बच्चाबच्चीहरूको जे कुरा पनि आफ्नो मुखमा हाल्ने प्रवृत्ति हुने भएकाले, उनीहरू जोखिममा पर्न सक्छन्,” सुश्री अडामोले भनिन्।
“आफ्ना बच्चाबच्चीहरू बाहिर खेल्दै गर्दा उनीहरूलाई ध्यान दिनुहोस्, विशेष गरी पार्कका ठुला रूखहरू वरिवरि वा तपाईंको घरको बगैँचामा जहाँ च्याउहरू उम्रिन सक्छन्।
“तपाईंको बच्चाबच्चीहरूलाई सुरक्षित राख्नको लागि उम्रिन सक्ने कुनै पनि च्याउहरूलाई हटाउनुहोस्।”
प्रारम्भिक रूपमा पत्ता लगाएपछि अघिल्ला दुई वर्षदेखि एन.एस.डब्ल्यु. स्वास्थ्य (NSW Health) र स्थानीय काउन्सिलहरूले दक्षिणी एन.एस.डब्ल्यु. मा डेथ क्याप च्याउहरूको निरन्तर निगरानी गरिरहेका छन्।
यदि तपाईं च्याउको विषाक्तता भएको हुन सक्छ भनेर चिन्तित हुनुहुन्छ भने लक्षणहरू देखा पर्ने प्रतीक्षा नगर्नुहोस्। तुरून्तै वीष सम्बन्धी जानकारी केन्द्रलाई १३ ११ २६ मा फोन गर्नुहोस्।
आपत्कालीन अवस्थामा तीनवटा शुन्य (०००) मा फोन गर्नुहोस् वा आपत्कालीन विभागमा जानुहोस्। सम्भव भएसम्म, पहिचान गर्न मद्दतको लागि च्याउको एक नमूना वा फोटो लिएर जानुहोस्।
च्याउको विषाक्तताबारे थप जानकारी एन.एस.डब्ल्यु. स्वास्थ्य (NSW Health) को वेबसाइटमा पाउन सकिन्छ​।

Ritrovamenti del fungo amanita falloide causano un’allerta sanitaria

Source: Australian Green Party

​​​NSW Health ha emesso un’allerta sanitaria sui rischi associati all’ingestione di funghi selvatici a seguito del ritrovamento di esemplari di amanita falloide NSW. 
Esemplari di Amanita falloide, comunemente chiamata ‘death cap mushroom’ in Australia, sono stati recentemente rilevati a Sydney, nelle Highlands meridionali e nel NSW meridionale.
Genevieve Adamo, specialista senior del Centro informazioni sulle sostanze velenose del NSW, ha dichiarato che questi funghi possono essere letali se ingeriti.
 “I sintomi di avvelenamento da funghi possono talvolta essere ritardati, ma un trattamento precoce è fondamentale per la sopravvivenza”, ha dichiarato Adamo.
“Questi includono vomito e diarrea, e in casi gravi danni ai reni e al fegato o morte.”
Il Prof. Brett Summerell, scienziato capo dei giardini botanici di Sydney avverte che l’identificazione di funghi selvatici per l’ingestione è molto complessa.
“Non esiste un metodo semplice e affidabile per capire se un fungo selvatico sia commestibile o velenoso; quindi raccomandiamo di non raccogliere e mangiare funghi selvatici, ha dichiarato il Prof. Summerell.
“Cuocere funghi selvatici velenosi non li rende commestibili né sicuri.
“Si dovrebbero solamente mangiare funghi acquistati in un negozio di fiducia, mercato o supermercato.”
Nel 2024, ci sono stati 23 ricoveri ospedalieri causati dagli effetti tossici di funghi ingeriti da persone, tra cui due bambini di meno di 5 anni.
Nello stesso anno, il Centro informazioni sulle sostanze velenose del NSW ha risposto a 363 chiamate relative ad ingestione di funghi selvatici nel NSW e nell’ACT, con un aumento del 26% rispetto al 2023.
Quest’anno (al 31 maggio 2025), ci sono state 190 chiamate.
Con il rilevamento di esemplari di amanita falloide molto velenosi nel NSW, si avverte che il consumo di funghi selvatici può avere conseguenze disastrose. 
“I bambini sono particolarmente a rischio a causa della loro abitudine di mettere tutto in bocca,” avverte Adamo. 
“È importante controllare i propri figli quando giocano all’aperto, specialmente se vicino a grandi alberi nei parchi o giardini in cui possono crescere funghi.
“Si raccomanda di rimuovere funghi per tenere i bambini al sicuro.”
NSW Health e le municipalità locali stanno conducendo sopralluoghi da due anni per verificare la presenza di amanita falloide a seguito di rilevamenti nel sud del NSW.
Se temete che si sia verificato un avvelenamento da funghi, non aspettate la comparsa dei sintomi. Chiamate immediatamente il Centro informazioni sulle sostanze velenose al numero 13 11 26.
In caso di emergenza, chiamate il Triplo Zero (000) o recatevi al Pronto Soccorso. Se possibile, portate un campione del fungo o una fotografia per facilitarne l’identificazione. 
Maggiori informazioni sull’avvelenamento da funghi si trovano sul sito web di NSW Health.​

Police seek arson suspects at Solomontown

Source: New South Wales – News

Police are investigating an arson at Solomontown and believe the suspects may have been injured during the fire.

Just after midnight on Monday 16 June, police were called to a report of a car on fire in Young Street, Solomontown.

When police officers arrived, they discovered a car on fire and a fire burning at the front of a nearby residence, which they extinguished with a fire extinguisher.

The occupants of the house were not injured during the incident.  The exterior of the house was charred by flames.

Investigations revealed three male suspects had attended an address in Young Street and doused the front of the residence with accelerant.

The suspects then entered the vehicle, which became engulfed in flames.  They ran off, abandoning the car in the street.

It is believed the men may have suffered significant burns or injuries in the fire and police urge them to seek medical attention.

Anyone with information about the identity or location of anyone involved in this incident is encouraged to contact Crime Stoppers immediately on 1800 333 000 or online at www.crimestopperssa.com.au

Anyone with CCTV or dashcam footage that may assist the investigation is asked to contact police.

The vehicle has been seized for forensic examination.  Investigations are continuing.

Tasmania Police mourns fallen officer

Source: New South Wales Community and Justice

Tasmania Police mourns fallen officer

Tuesday, 17 June 2025 – 9:26 am.

Investigations continue today into the tragic shooting death of a Tasmania Police officer in the state’s North-West on Monday.
With the permission of the officer’s family, Tasmania Police Commissioner Donna Adams has confirmed the officer is Constable Keith Anthony Smith, a 25-year veteran of the police service.
Constable Smith, 57, was shot and killed at a rural property in North Motton on Monday morning as he and a fellow officer attended the premises to serve a court-ordered warrant to repossess the home.
Commissioner Adams said Constable Smith was a dedicated officer over a distinguished career with Tasmania Police, who was highly regarded and admired by his colleagues.
Constable Smith had worked in communities across the North and North-West and, for the past five years, was an officer working at Ulverstone police station.
“Keith was a respected and committed officer, and his loss will be deeply felt across our policing family and the wider community,” Commissioner Adams said.
“My heart goes out to Keith’s wife and family. We will be supporting them in every way we can during this incredibly difficult time.
“The Blue Family will come together today, and over the next days and weeks, and will support the family and each other.”
The family of Constable Smith has asked for privacy at this time.
Constable Smith joined Tasmania Police on September 25, 2000, graduating on May 11, 2001, as part of Course 3/2000, and was a passionate cyclist, participating in the 2011 Charity Trust bike ride.
Constable Smith served in Northern District in both the Northern Crime Management Unit and uniform roles until 2020, when he transferred to Ulverstone uniform.  He received the Commissioner’s Medal in 2011 and 20-year clasp in 2021, as well as the National Police Service Medal (15 years) in 2016.
Commissioner Adams acknowledged emergency services who responded to the incident and assisted at the scene on Monday.
She praised investigators and forensics officers who examined the scene and worked late into the night, through difficult weather conditions, gathering evidence.
“While no other staff have been injured in this terrible incident, all will be impacted by their involvement in such a tragic event,” Commissioner Adams said.
A 46-year-old North Motton man remains in Launceston General Hospital, under police guard, having undergone surgery for non life-threatening injuries.
No charges have yet been laid.

ACT Budget 2025-26: Education equity support extended

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

As part of ACT Government’s ‘One Government, One Voice’ program, we are transitioning this website across to our . You can access everything you need through this website while it’s happening.

Released 16/06/2025 – Joint media release

The ACT Government will continue to support Canberra families with the cost of education through the 2025–26 ACT Budget, expanding two key programs that ensure every student has access to a full and inclusive school experience.

Minister for Education and Youth Affairs Yvette Berry said the Budget will extend funding for both the Future of Education Equity Fund and the Free School Camps at Birrigai program, helping to ease financial pressure on families.

“The cost of living is affecting Canberra families, which is why the Future of Education Equity Fund and Free School Camps at Birrigai are so important,” Minister Berry said.

“Equity is at the heart of everything we do in education because all children and young people, regardless of their circumstances, deserve the support they need to achieve a good education.”

The Equity Fund will be boosted by $600,000 for the 2025 school year, enabling support for an additional 1,000 eligible students through one-off payments for school-related costs like uniforms, books, excursions and extracurricular activities.

In addition, $3.3 million over four years will ensure all ACT public primary school students can continue to attend a free school camp at Birrigai each year, a program which began in Term 1 this year.

Treasurer Chris Steel said the funding reflects the ACT Government’s commitment to practical support that helps families right now.

“Extending these equity programs delivers on our election commitments to support thousands of Canberra families,” Minister Steel said.

“This is about making sure every child, no matter their background, has the chance to take part in the full educational experience, from classroom learning to outdoor adventure.”

The Future of Education Equity Fund supports students from preschool through to college. In 2024, the program helped thousands of students access the essentials they need to succeed at school.

View more information about the Future of Education Equity Fund.

– Statement ends –

Yvette Berry, MLA | Chris Steel, MLA | Media Releases

«ACT Government Media Releases | «Minister Media Releases

ACCC to examine unsolicited selling and lead generation practices

Source: Australian Ministers for Regional Development

The ACCC has commenced a review into unsolicited selling and lead generation, including door-to-door selling and cold calling, in response to the Consumer Action Law Centre’s designated complaint.

Unsolicited selling is when a salesperson approaches a consumer out of the blue to try and generate the sale of a good or service and the consumer has not invited the contact. It often occurs in the form of door-to-door selling, cold calling, or approaching a consumer in a shopping centre.  Unsolicited selling can be facilitated through ‘lead generation’, including social media advertising. Lead generation refers to the process of identifying people as potential sales targets.

This is the first designated complaint received by the ACCC under the new designated complaints framework.

The ACCC is satisfied that the conduct identified in the Consumer Action Law Centre’s complaint requires an in-depth review.

“Unsolicited selling and lead generation has the potential to cause significant financial harm to consumers and it can often disproportionately impact consumers experiencing vulnerability or disadvantage,” ACCC Deputy Chair Catriona Lowe said.

“We consider that a review into these practices is necessary in order to better understand how the practices are used and their impacts across different cohorts of consumers. Gaining a better understanding of these practices will help determine if further action is needed to better protect consumers.”

As part of its review, the ACCC will further examine the issues raised in the designated complaint, focussing on:

  • the consumer experience of unsolicited selling
  • sales structures and practices, including the role of incentives such as commission-based remuneration.
  • the role of lead generation, including the role of advertising on social media channels.
  • whether there are any issues with the application of the Australian Consumer Law, including the unsolicited consumer agreement provisions.

The ACCC has opened consultation and published a consultation paper and is seeking stakeholder feedback on the benefits and detriments of unsolicited selling and lead generation. Consultation closes on 31 July 2025.

“We want to hear the views from a broad range of stakeholders, including businesses that use unsolicited selling, industry associations, government, consumers groups and consumers, to help inform our review,” Ms Lowe said.

After the completion of the review, the ACCC will publish a report on our findings.

In the meantime, the ACCC will, as usual, continue to consider conduct by individual businesses involving unsolicited consumer agreements for potential compliance or enforcement action, including those raised in the designated complaint, consistent with our Compliance and Enforcement Policy.

Our review and report may also lead to further actions, pending our findings.

The ACCC’s response to CALC’s designated complaint is available on our website.

We thank the Consumer Action Law Centre for the time and effort in preparing and submitting the designated complaint on this important consumer issue. We value the insights and concerns the Consumer Action Law Centre has shared with us over many years through various other forums. The designated complaint avenue provides another means of drawing focus to key issues impacting consumers

ACCC’s response to further designated complaints

In general, the ACCC may take a broad range of actions in response to a designated complaint. This may include conducting in-depth investigations into specific businesses’ practices, reviews into a specific sector or issue, advocacy activities, and/or undertaking research, education or engagement.

The ACCC’s response to a designated complaint may also include advising that we won’t take any further action. We may do this when:

  • The designated complaint doesn’t meet the necessary criteria.
  • We consider the subject matter of the designated complaint is already the focus of certain types of existing inquiries, reviews, investigations or legal proceedings, and has been or is likely to be adequately addressed through those other processes.
  • We consider no further action would be appropriate, having regard to the nature of the issue, the nature and extent of the harm or potential harm, and the likely impact ACCC action may have.

Background

A new designated complaints framework in the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 came into effect on 1 May 2024.

Under the law, 3 bodies can be designated by the Minister as designated complainants. Currently these are Australian Consumers’ Association (CHOICE), Consumer Action Law Centre, and the Council of Small Business Organisations Australia (COSBOA).

In March 2025 the Consumer Action Law Centre submitted the first designated complaint to the ACCC under the new framework.

A designated complainant may only make one designated complaint within a 12-month period.

Under the framework, designated complaints must meet certain criteria, including that they relate to a significant or systemic market issue affecting consumers or small business in Australia, and that they relate to a potential breach of the CCA or the ACCC’s powers or functions under the CCA.

The ACCC is required to assess and publicly respond to the designated complaint within 90 days. The ACCC’s response must state what further action, if any, will be taken in response to the complaint.

Charges – Domestic violence – Parap

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The NT Police Force have arrested a 29-year-old male, following a coordinated arrest operation led by Strike Force Lyra in Parap yesterday on 16 June 2025.

The arrest was the resolution of an investigation into on-going offending reported between 7 – 16 June 2025.

Utilising specialist resources, including but not limited to the Territory Response Group and the Police Negotiation Unit, the offender was safely taken into custody around 3:15pm. He was conveyed to the Palmerston Watch House and was charged with:

  1. Breach Domestic Violence Order x 2
  2. Damage to Property
  3. Breach of Bail

He was remanded to appear in Darwin Local Court today.

Domestic Violence Orders are put in place with conditions to protect victims, breaches of those orders will not be tolerated and police will continue to hold offenders to account for their actions.  

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

Keeping the engines running

Source: Reserve Bank of Australia

20 May 2025

TAFE NSW Ultimo in the heart of central Sydney delivers the state’s only Marine Mechanical Cert III alongside qualifications in marine engineering, in a purpose-built onsite marine craft construction education facility.
The Ultimo campus, originally opened in 1891 as the new home of Sydney Technical College on the lands of the Gadigal People of the Eora Nation and represents New South Wales’ first government owned and built vocational education facility. Today its NSW’s largest TAFE campus consisting of heritage buildings from the 1890s with newer buildings built through the 20th century to support expanding educational offerings and the growing number of students. The campus encompasses structures including the former Technological Museum (1893), Turner Hall (1892) and Commercial High School (1892), and the separate George Street-located Marcus Clark Building (1913), which was acquired in 1966.It seems fitting that mechanics remains an important offering on campus, considering Sydney Technical College was initially established in 1878 as a partnership between the Sydney Mechanics’ School of Arts, the Trades and Labor Council of New South Wales, the Engineering Association of New South Wales Trades, and supported by government. When the government decided to fully fund the college in 1883, it became the birthplace of TAFE as we now know it – a statewide system of technical education. Today TAFE NSW continues its public vocational education mission. When visiting the Ultimo campus in February, NSW minister for Skills, TAFE and Tertiary Education Steve Whan said: “The maritime industry is crucial to our economy and TAFE NSW plays an important role in ensuring the next generation of seafarers and mechanics have the skills to succeed.”

Navigating the Waves

Simon Rodgers is acting head teacher, Mechanics at TAFE NSW Ultimo. He looks after marine mechanics, motorcycles and auto electrical and is the first marine mechanic to head the department. Rodgers has been teaching at TAFE NSW for 20 years and began his career as a marine mechanic apprentice, learning at TAFE NSW alongside automotive apprentices as the marine mechanic qualification wasn’t yet available. “I grew up on a farm, so we were just into motorcycles and boats and tractors and things like but when I started my apprenticeship, that’s when my formal training started,” he says. “When I was at school, I loved mechanics and a lot of my friends were getting into automotive and I saw that as there was so many people doing it that I didn’t want to do it, I wanted to do something unique and I was lucky enough to secure a marine apprenticeship.” “I started my apprenticeship as a marine mechanic in 1988 and worked with that company for just under 10 years. [Then] I had an opportunity to start my own business.” After 10 years running his business, one of his boating industry representatives mentioned a TAFE NSW teaching role and he decided to look into it and found it offered him the flexibility to spend more time with his young family. After 10 years running his business, one of his boating industry representatives mentioned a TAFE NSW teaching role and he decided to look into it and found it offered him the flexibility to spend more time with his young family. He went through the TAFE NSW teacher training program at the time, where he taught at TAFE on a reduced program and went to university to earn a BA in Adult Education: “Working in industry with your hands for 15–20 years and then having to go and sit in a classroom and write essays, it was very difficult, but what I have noticed is the teaching skill set that I gained through that process has benefited me.” He hasn’t looked back, discovering he truly loved being a TAFE teacher. “My philosophy is that I don’t try and drag them up to where I’m at with my experience is, I let them know that the only difference between the students and myself is time in the saddle,” he says. “So I like to get down to their level, interact with them and just teach them stuff. “Probably my best teacher was my stepfather and he always explained to me, it doesn’t matter how much you learn or whatever you do, if you don’t pass it on it gets lost. I’ve got to pass the baton on.”

Passing the Baton

Marine mechanics has been offered at Ultimo since 1997 when the marine specialist facility opened. “We get to concentrate on three main things in our qualification: engines, electrical and propulsion systems and we probably do more than most other disciplines around those three topics,” he says. “Our qualification is incredibly diverse. We’ve got specialist teachers that represent most of the industry – we all have unique skill sets and we program those skill sets around the subjects to best suit the apprentices.” “We’ve been able to restructure the course delivery in Stage Three to run two separate streams so that we can have the heavy diesel people concentrating on their discipline and the petrol people concentrating on theirs.” “You can engage any employer, any engine manufacturer and they really respect what we do at TAFE and how we train our apprentices.” “There are apprentices who have sat in our classroom who now work for engine manufacturers, we’ve had apprentices travel throughout Europe working on superyachts and many of the students that we’ve taught in the past are now running their own business and sending their own apprentices here.” “It’s a very family style of business, very generational, we’ve got one current employer who’s got his third child coming through.”

Family Legacies

That third child is the younger brother of Michaela Douglas who recently completed her Marine Mechanical Technology apprenticeship at TAFE NSW Ultimo last year, before winning the Boating Industry Association’s Apprentice of the Year award. “I am a third-generation qualified marine mechanic,” says Douglas. “I work for my family’s business Douglas Marine; and we’re based on Pittwater out of the Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club. My grandparents started the company, then my dad and his brother worked in the business, and now me and my two brothers are in the business and my sister was also working in the office while she was at uni.” “The teachers, they’re great. If you put the effort in, they will put double the effort in, they really want to help you.” “They have really good facilities. They start in the morning teaching you the theory. And then you’d go into the workshop and actually pull apart whatever you’re learning about… and learn how to put them back together.”

Lifelong Learning

Following the completion of her Cert III, on the recommendation of her teacher Simon Rodgers, TAFE NSW nominated Douglas for Boating Industry Australia’s Apprentice of the Year award. She won both the NSW and Australia wide Apprentice of the Year. Now fully qualified, she’s loving her work, especially the variety it offers: “I enjoy explaining to someone why [what I’ve done is] important… it’s always different.” Douglas is now studying Automotive Electrical Technologies to support her marine mechanic work.

Building and Sharing Knowledge

TAFE NSW marine construction teacher Robert Reid is a shipwright by trade and has been teaching full time at Ultimo since 2018. “I kind of needed to share,” he says of his transition from industry to teaching. “Thinking back, as a kid sailing, I was kind of always instructing… and as a foreman at work, I was showing others how to do things.” Reid says TAFE is about more than technical instruction: “TAFE is about access, support, and being able to come in and learn all the [skills] and the mechanics behind the visual.”

Nurturing Initiative

“When things start to click for them, things they couldn’t do before… when they’ve brought in their own initiative.” “There’s close ties to industry… the apprentice’s bosses came through TAFE and they want the same skills demonstrated.” “We’ve been able to tie in Cert IV from this year, which is set up for fabrication and welding units and for bidding for contracts.”

Smoother Sailing

Maddison Webb-Leck, Certificate III in Marine Craft Construction Stage 1 Student of the Year, is a shipwright apprentice and Wiradjuri woman. She found her passion through hands-on TAFE learning and help from her uncles: “I watched [my boss] put a transom in and lay it up a bit and I was like, oh, this is kind of cool.” She especially enjoys fibre glassing and being on the water: “The guys are stronger in woodwork, but you put me in a glass room and I pretty much overtake them all,” she laughs.

Putting in the work

Webb-Leck says the approach of seeing and then doing at TAFE suits her style of learning: “I can’t just be told on how to do it. I have to watch it a bit and then I can replicate it.” She applies the same philosophy to her work: “There’s only the three of us at my work, so I have to do a lot of my own jobs. I’ll get shown how to do it and then I’m on that, as a small business we’ve got a lot of business to get through.” Webb-Leck’s work includes the gamut of repairs and building of marine craft, but her favourite part is glassing – working with fibreglass. “I do a lot of fibreglass work, so then when I come to TAFE, it’s a bit of a struggle because it’s all woodwork, but we do a lot of rebuild and repairs at work, so that helps me a lot. “The guys are stronger in woodwork, but you put me in a glass room and I pretty much overtake them all,” she laughs. It’s those skills and her work ethic that put her in contention for the Student of the Year award. “So many people in the class were like ‘you got it because you’re a girl’, but I’m good at what I do. I’ve come so far and I’m more trained than most people my age,” she says. “My folks, they’re actually really proud. Everyone’s really proud. It’s a lot of pressure on me, but it’s good to have pressure, because there’s been a few rough days and rough weeks where I’ve thought about leaving just because it’s rough but I pulled through. I start thinking about that and I’m just like, whoa, I’ve come this far, there’s so much riding on it. Those days where it gets really hard and your boss is angry at you, you’re angry at yourself and you kind of just have to go with it.” She says her love of being on the water also helps and reminds her of why she’s working so hard, but also of being a kid and constantly going up river with her dad. “I learned how to ski when I was four – dad grew up on the water, his mates grew up on the water, his dad grew up on the water,” she says. “Quiet weekends when you go out on the water with your mates and you have the whole water to yourself and we don’t stop skiing, it’s just fun.” Aside from playing netball, most of her hobbies, such as water-skiing, revolve around the water: “Power boat races are pretty cool to watch. We’ll go to Yarrawonga to watch them and then when they come back down to the Hawks, we’ll watch them again. There are a lot of different designed hulls and motors in there. It’s really fun – they’re one of the best weekends.” Between work, her apprenticeship, friends and family, she also continues to spend time with her dad on the water and looks forward to one day helping him race his boat. “My dad wants to race his boat. He’s got a car motor in it, but he’s always wanted to race it. So if he was to race that, I’d race that with him just for the fun of it, not for any competition, just see how quick we can go,” she says. “If we actually put work into it and do it, then yeah, maybe we can do it.”

By Diana Ward

This article was originally published in the Australian TAFE Teacher, Autumn 2025

Paid to learn

Source: Reserve Bank of Australia

12 May 2025

The Skills Shortage and the Teaching Gap

The skills shortage gripping Australia’s workforce is a vicious cycle. Vocational education is essential to train workers to fill these gaps, but there’s also a shortage of qualified TAFE teachers – who are struggling under high workloads to meet this essential demand.

To close that skills gap, and avoid losing current staff to burnout, the VET sector desperately needs more industry-qualified teachers. But like other Australian employers, TAFE must hire from the same limited pool of skilled tradespeople and professionals.

From Industry to the Classroom

Ten years ago, trade-qualified carpenter Steve Cole turned down a TAFE teaching job because “business was booming” and he had contract commitments. At the time, Cole was keen to share his 30 years’ knowledge of the construction industry, but as the boss of a busy company he felt he couldn’t walk away.

Still, teaching stayed in Cole’s mind.
“I was training people on-the-job and I felt that there were things that I had to give,” he says. Looking ahead to the final act of his career, he liked the idea of “a full circle back to where I started. I had fond memories of TAFE in the ’70s studying carpentry and construction”.

Teaching is an intellectually challenging job that offers great work/life/family balance without the physical demands of industry labour.
“I know as a 62-year-old electrician that I wouldn’t be up crawling around in roofs or out digging ditches,” says Phil Chadwick, NSW Teachers Federation TAFE lead organiser.

Enter: Paid to Learn

To lure mid-career and senior professionals such as Cole, “TAFE NSW had to be a little bit creative in the way that they recruited teachers to encourage people to get off the tools [and] pick up the whiteboard marker,” Chadwick says,

It developed a program that’s unique to NSW: Paid to Learn.

Learning to Teach

There are three prerequisites to become a VET teacher: a nationally recognised qualification in the discipline in which you want to teach, between three and five years of industry experience, and a Certificate IV in Training and Assessment (TAE).

“One of the bigger barriers in attracting tradespeople and professionals out of the jobs that they do is gaining that minimum teaching qualification, the TAE Cert IV,” Chadwick says.

While the TAE course is fee-exempt under the Free TAFE joint government initiative, it still demands six months of full-time study, or 12 months part-time. To a busy professional, that’s a long time without their usual income.

Even juggling part-time coursework with an industry job is tough, as worksite demands compete with the routine and discipline of study. “I wouldn’t advise that,” says Cole.

Early in 2024, he was browsing the ‘I Work for NSW’ public-sector jobs website when he spotted a Paid to Learn carpentry teaching job at Meadowbank TAFE. For Cole, the chief attraction was financial: “I’ve still got bills to pay, a mortgage to pay, and I could learn on the job and be paid a reasonable salary instead of closing my business, having no income and doing it that way.”

Paid to Learn allowed Cole to start working at Meadowbank straight away – with full teaching salary, plus superannuation, leave and other benefits – while refreshing his 11-year-old TAE qualification through an intensive course of 14 weeks.

“Basically from day one, they’re in the classroom teaching,” Chadwick says. TAFE students benefit from their new teachers’ industry currency, as effectively six weeks earlier, they were on the tools.

To soften the impact of hitting the ground running, Paid to Learn also pairs trainee teachers with mentors and supervisors, whose tailored, wraparound support sets them up to succeed.

“I think that’s invaluable,” Cole says now, a year into his new career. “The TAE teaching staff are extremely supportive if you allow them to support you.”

How It Works

“Most of our members that go into the program are employed as permanent full-time or temporary full-time employees,” Chadwick says. “It’s a bit like an apprenticeship or a traineeship, where a person starts the job and then they’re released from work to attend TAFE.”

Cole spent three full days per week in TAE classes at Mt Druitt TAFE, then two days at Meadowbank, shadowing a more experienced teacher. Trade skills teaching has improved since his apprentice days. “It’s a lot more hands-on,” he reflects. “That hands-on approach, theory taught within practical, I think works well for the student cohort that we have.”

Paid to Learn prioritises industries targeted by the NSW skills shortage list: trades such as electrical, carpentry, plumbing, automotive and engineering, and metal fabrication, plus in-demand fields such as community services, aged care and community health.

“In our class, we had two electricians,” says Cole; “I’m a carpenter. We had two cabinetmaker-joiners and we had a fellow from aerospace who trains aeroplane mechanics and service technicians.”

TAFE NSW uses Paid to Learn as an incentive to attract staff to campuses with the most acute needs. “[Teachers] can be recruited based on their trade or profession, but they can also be recruited to a specific location in the state, and that’s what sets the priority,” says Chadwick.

The program was piloted from August to November 2022 in Western Sydney, which is in a construction and energy boom. “So that’s typically why there’s a lot of carpenters, electricians and plumbers in it,” Chadwick says. The next cohort of 47 new teachers start their jobs in March 2025.

Putting Learning Into Practice

The TAE Certificate IV can be academically demanding for trade-qualified professionals, especially if it’s been a while since they were in a classroom.

Though Cole already knew his trade inside out, the TAE course handed him a different toolbox: “teaching methodology and classroom management, and building up effective relationships with the student cohort.”

“[It was a] very steep learning curve for me,” Cole recalls, but he’s relished the challenge. “I learn something new every single day, and I learn things about myself.”

He uses the term “reflective journey” – which he calls “a TAFE-ism” – to describe the introspective, analytical skills he honed during Paid to Learn. “I’ve certainly learned a lot about other people.”

He was particularly impressed by his specialist TAE teacher, “and the lengths she went through to not cut corners at all, but to build our skills up to the level where we pass with confidence.” And he could immediately practise what he’d just learned: “That’s how I teach now, using her as an example.”

He also bonded with the other trainee teachers in his class.

“We’ve socialised since, got together for Christmas drinks and so forth, and talked about our experiences,” he says.

Chadwick says Paid to Learn’s cohort-based approach boosts trainee teachers’ engagement in their studies, and their completion rates, compared to those undertaking the TAE alone.

“The collaborative effort between the students helps each other,” he says.

The Rewards

Of 287 participants in Paid to Learn’s first year, 278 are still teaching – a 97 per cent retention rate.

A full-time TAFE NSW teacher can earn $88,842 to $105,362, depending on their work history. Chadwick concedes industry pay can be higher, “but it’s not the money that they come for, it’s the conditions.”

After an interim review of NSW’s VET system found only 48 per cent of TAFE NSW educators were employed permanently, “it’s a really big improvement that TAFE are taking these people on in secure jobs rather than in casual jobs,” Chadwick says.

They’ll also benefit from the newly negotiated TAFE Commission of NSW Teachers and Related Employees enterprise agreement, which will boost the top salary to around $120,000 by 2027.

Compared to teaching, “running your own business is quite an onerous task – a lot longer hours per week,” says Cole.

Now his kids are adults, he’s happy to trade off the flexibility and control of self-employment for more relaxed work.

Cole was also surprised by how much he appreciated the camaraderie of teaching.

“I was the top dog in my business; that’s a little bit isolating in some ways, and now I’m working closely with people of equal standing within the TAFE hierarchy,” he says. “To feel like I am part of a team, for me, has been a real positive.”

Chadwick says Paid to Learn “is not a magic bullet. On its own, it is not a solution. But it’s definitely a step in the right direction.”

It represents a welcome investment in an education sector whose funding has been volatile and politicised.

Cole, meanwhile, heartily recommends Paid to Learn to other NSW industry professionals contemplating a career change.

“The rewards from teaching aren’t really talked about enough,” he enthuses.

“The regard with which students hold us is something of an honour, really. We’re seen as mentors and people to be trusted, and guides. That’s a lovely position to be in. It makes me feel really good about myself.”

Article by Mel Campbell

This article was originally published in The Australian TAFE Teacher, Autumn 2025