In addition to potential advice and guidance currently open for consultation, we plan to seek formal comment on the following items in the coming months.
This list is subject to change.
April 2025
If you are concerned about the delay in the delivery of particular pieces of public advice and guidance, email us at publicguidance@ato.gov.au.
Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services
The heritage home offers a unique glimpse into Canberra’s past.
Lanyon Homestead offers a unique glimpse into Canberra’s past.
The restored 1850s property is open for the community to enjoy, with some special events ahead to allow Canberrans to embrace all it has to offer.
A rich, multifaceted history
You can’t speak about Canberra’s history without appreciating the thousands of years of Aboriginal history preceding our 190 years of European settlement.
And you can’t speak about the last 190 years of Canberra’s history without mentioning historic places like Lanyon Homestead.
Each of the homestead’s residents left their distinctive mark over the years, and each area is meticulously honoured as part of the heritage site’s preservation.
New life for a historic walnut tree
Attention to detail in the property’s restoration and maintenance filters down to individual plants and trees.
Recently, Lanyon Homestead and Yarralumla Nursery partnered to preserve a historically significant walnut tree, first planted between 1835 and 1840.
Along with his team, the head gardener at ACT Historic Places, Neil Wright, tried to propagate the tree for eight years with limited success.
“We just couldn’t get it, so we called Yarralumla Nursery in,” Neil said.
“They’ve got better facilities than us. They’ve got 200 cuttings and of those, only 11 were successful.”
The trees were grown under the careful watch of the team at Yarralumla Nursery.
Eventually, seven were planted along the river corridor to replace the stumps where the original trees once stood.
While Neil has a deep appreciation of the garden, he says Lanyon Homestead has something to offer everyone.
“You come and do a tour of the house but then you realise it’s nice to just sit here, to have a cup of coffee at the cafe. The kids can run around, you can have a picnic, and then you come back again and appreciate something new.”
The team at Lanyon Homestead meticulously manage the house according to seasonal needs. In summer, the muslin curtains billow in the breeze, while in winter the fires are lit and candles glow.
Outside, the gardening team work to update the garden in line with the seasons.
“I try and do something different in the garden every year to bring people back. This year we’ve got a big pumpkin display, and the Harvest Day Out is coming up,” Neil said.
Harvest Day Out: Saturday, 2 March
Harvest Day Out is a celebration of Lanyon Homestead’s autumn kitchen garden. There’s a focus on sustainable food and growing practices under the theme of “grow – preserve – sustain”.
The event will include workshops, demonstrations, and tours. Guests can learn about practices like preserving, pickling, seed saving and gardening practices as valuable today as they were in the homesteads early days.
From 10am to 2pm there will be face painting on offer, and from 10am to 4pm there will be market stalls selling coffee, food, wine, jewellery, arts and more.
Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services
The Critical Services Building building provides a major upgrade and expansion to the Canberra Hospital.
Construction of the new Critical Services Building at Canberra Hospital is progressing well towards the planned opening later in 2024.
The 44,000 square metre building provides a major upgrade and expansion to the Canberra Hospital.
It will include:
a larger Emergency Department, including a dedicated children’s emergency area
more operating rooms
more treatment spaces
more intensive care beds.
The building’s public facilities and amenities have been designed to make the hospital experience more comfortable for staff, patients, their carers, and families.
New facilities and amenities include:
two new cafes
a family respite lounge with kitchenette, meeting room and showers
breakout spaces and waiting lounges for patients, families, carers and visitors
parent rooms
a kid’s play zone and sensory room
a Changing Places facility with accessible toilet facilities
outdoor gardens, courtyards and terraces for patients.
Take a peek at the construction work happening inside the building:
Main reception area and view of patient transfer link bridge.
Medical imaging in the Emergency Department.
Nurses’ station in inpatient unit.
Family lounge area in inpatient unit.
Operating theatre.
Surgical recovery area.
Helipad.
Acute care treatment space in the new Emergency Department.
Ambulance triage area in the new Emergency Department.
Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services
Playground Safety Inspector Lawrence and the safety inspection team
Canberra has more playgrounds than any other state or local council in Australia.
And each day, plenty of work goes into ensuring they are safe and ready for play.
Playground Safety Inspector Lawrence is part of a City Services team working to assess Canberra’s 500+ playgrounds.
Lawrence’s team of six inspects district parks twice a week, community play spaces weekly and smaller neighbourhood parks every fortnight.
Lawrence and his team use three main assessment methods.
Level 1 – visual inspection
In this initial inspection, workers check the area for sharps, vandalism and major equipment faults.
They collect any litter and rake bark into heavy-use areas to keep the playground clean and ready to use.
Level 1 inspections occur bi-weekly to fortnightly, depending on the size and use of the playground.
Lawrence assesses a timber post for repair
Level 2 – detailed inspection
A Level 2 inspection occurs monthly or bi-monthly.
The team tests all playground equipment for wear and tear, operational defects, deterioration and any other faults.
They also test for hazards, including potential for head, torso and finger entrapment.
They check timber posts, look for swing chain entrapment and measure the height of swing sets to ensure a safe distance between the bottom of the seat and the ground.
Depending on the risk associated with the fault or hazard, the playground may need to be fenced off or temporarily closed for repairs.
Finger entrapment testing
Level 3 – independent assessor inspection
Qualified external assessors carry out Level 3 inspections annually.
These assessors are independent from the ACT Government and have an engineering background.
The assessor compares each playground to the Australian Playground Standards.
This ensures equipment is safe and the existing process of ongoing safety inspections is compliant.
External assessor Grant from Playtest conducting surface impact testing
Get involved
The community is the most important playground safety inspector, so if you see a potential safety hazard, please complete a job request via the Fix My Street online tool.
Provide as much detail as possible on the location and issue when completing the request.
Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services
New nurses Ainslie and Shreejana are excited to get started on their clinical placements at Canberra Hospital.
Canberrans can expect to see many new faces in healthcare settings around the city.
A new cohort of over 360 graduate health professionals have joined Canberra Health Services (CHS) in recent weeks.
There are over 200 nurses and midwives, 96 junior medical officer interns and 59 allied health graduates starting their first year of supported practice in Canberra’s public health system.
These graduate programs help build and develop the city’s public health workforce.
Graduates will experience a broad range of specialities across their rotations which span Canberra Health Services.
Placements include:
Canberra Hospital
North Canberra Hospital
University of Canberra Hospital
justice health
outpatient clinics
community health care centres
Hospital in the Home
locations in south-east NSW.
Shreejana and Ainslie are two of the new graduates starting at Canberra Hospital this week.
Between them they will be rotating through the geriatrics, oncology, cardiology and orthopaedic wards.
For registered nurse Shreejana, this career was a childhood dream.
“I’m feeling very nervous, as well as excited,” she said.
“Seeing all the support and the guidance that I will be receiving from the CHS team, I’m very, very much looking forward to this journey.”
Enrolled nurse Ainslie completed her 18-month certification at CIT.
“I wanted to care for people and give back to my community,” she said.
“Honestly, it’s the little things. It’s when you ask someone “how can I help you?” It’s giving them a cup of tea, giving them coffee, giving them warm blanket. The little things that put a smile on someone’s face and just knowing that you’ve made them happy.”
In a Canberra Health Services first, three cohorts of graduate nurses are undergoing orientation at the same time.
This includes:
the graduate Transition to Practice Program
North Canberra Hospital’s existing graduate program
the Novice Nurse Consolidation Program, which offers an alternative pathway to join the nursing workforce for those who may only be able to work part-time or hold a working visa.
“The new starters bring a great amount of enthusiasm and energy into our services and teams, and it is hugely fulfilling for all our staff to support and guide these new health professionals at a critical time in their career,” Executive Director Nursing and Midwifery at North Canberra Hospital Judy Ryall said.
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Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services
Jodie Griffiths-Cook wants to help children and young people access information they can trust and understand.
ACT Children and Young People Commissioner Jodie Griffiths-Cook is on a mission to help Canberra’s children and young people understand their rights.
In her role – which is independent from government and part of the ACT Human Rights Commission – she consults and speaks with kids every day.
“My role principally involves being able to engage directly with children and young people and find out what is important to them, then using that to try to influence public policy and create change that will hopefully make Canberra a better place for children and young people generally,” Jodie said.
She does this in a variety of ways, including creating simply written resources that can be used in schools and more broadly.
She regularly updates a dedicated section of the commission’s website with targeted, trustworthy information for kids, teens and young people.
Jodie also distributes the monthly Rights in ACTion newsletter to further inform ACT children and young people about their rights and wellbeing.
From school visits to Instagram posts, finding ways to tailor sometimes complex information for different age groups is important.
“Children and young people have a right to access information they can trust and understand,” she said.
“It really humanises things when you’re able to speak in a language that is clearly understood by kids.”
The Covid lockdowns in 2020 and 2021 highlighted a particular need for this.
“We saw a lot of communications going out to adults but very little being targeted to children and young people. For us, that really started the process of thinking mindfully about what we can do to shift that, both in terms of direct communications and modelling – trying to encourage others to do the same,” she said.
“If we actually think about some of the decision-making that happens – so many of our decisions impact young people in ways that we perhaps don’t consider,” she said.
Having been Commissioner for eight years now, Jodie says the discussions she has with children and young people are most rewarding.
“Some of those conversations are just absolute gold when it comes to what young people already intrinsically understand about their rights and about those sometimes competing rights that we all grapple with,” she said.
“I can almost take off my own commissioner hat and give it to some of them!”
Particularly engaged young people can also get directly involved with the commission. This in turn provides important feedback.
“We started a new youth advisor role, pitched for young people aged 16–25 years who have left school. We bring young people in for six months where they are looking for opportunities that will help them decide and pursue their career direction. From them we get a lot of intel about the kind of language to use, and the kind of things that are of interest to young people. We also take in work experience students in years 9-12,” she said.
A range of child-friendly resources to help children and young people understand the Human Rights Act will be launched in March this year – on the Act’s 20th anniversary.
Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services
The grant programs support local climate change, environmental and sustainability projects.
Applications are now open for three grant programs that support local climate change, environmental and sustainability projects.
Canberrans can apply for grants of up to $75,000 per project to help turn their ideas into reality.
The grants assist community groups, schools, organisations and individuals to deliver projects that:
promote sustainable living and emissions reduction
help make Canberra climate-ready
promote biodiversity and community participation in conservation projects.
The ACT Food Co-op is a community owned-and-run bulk grocery store and cafe, events venue and community hub.
Receiving a grant helped the Co-op reduce emissions and cut operating costs.
“Grants funding from the ACT Government has enabled us to convert from an expensive high-emissions gas kitchen to a cheaper zero-emissions electric kitchen. Our army of kitchen helpers are now safer, our bills are cheaper and our environmental footprint is smaller – a real win,” Chairperson Lucaya Rich said.
2024 ACT Environmental Grants Program
This program offers up to $350,000 in total funding.
Grant recipients have the opportunity to:
address environmental issues that concern them
restore and conserve natural places that are special to them
Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services
The new Lanyon Drive Interchange is the first of three upgrades planned for the Monaro Highway.
Construction has begun on the first of three interchanges planned for the Monaro Highway, south of Canberra.
Work on the new Lanyon Drive Interchange has begun which will improve safety and reduce congestion.
This consists of a southbound flyover for the highway over Lanyon Drive and three intersection upgrades including:
the removal of traffic lights at the Alexander Maconochie Centre (intersection of the Monaro Highway and David Warren Road)
a new roundabout at the intersection of the new Monaro Highway southbound off-ramp and David Warren Road extension
upgrading the signalised intersection at Lanyon Drive and Sheppard Street to include a direct connection to David Warren Road and the Monaro Highway southbound off-ramp.
The design aims to have a minimal impact on existing native plants.
The landscaping plans will focus on local and native species. They will prioritise tree planting, water sensitive urban design and biodiversity conservation.
Some of the construction work has already been completed or is underway. This includes:
major water mains and telecommunication networks were relocated for protection in 2022
two gas mains have been relocated
early preparatory works, including site clearing and earthworks, started last month. This involves large machinery, including excavators and trucks.
Preliminary design is also underway on future interchanges at the Hume industrial precinct and Isabella Drive.
There will be impacts to travel times during construction. This includes during peak periods, with reduced speed limits and temporary lane closures expected.
The ACT Government is encouraging motorists to rethink their travel plans where possible and consider taking public transport or travelling outside peak times where possible.
The government expects construction to take about three years to complete. The design and construction phases are estimated to create 700 jobs.
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Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services
Upcoming building demolition will make way for new a facility for pathology and other clinical services.
The Canberra Hospital Master Plan will reach a new phase with demolition work beginning on Building 23.
The demolition of Building 23 and the adjacent Building 6 will make way for a new state-of-the art facility for pathology and other clinical services.
The next step in delivering a modern, accessible Canberra Hospital campus, it is also an early priority of the Canberra Hospital Master Plan.
It is also just one of many significant changes taking place at the hospital.
The hospital’s new Critical Services Building will open later this year, featuring a new emergency department and additional operating rooms, treatment spaces and intensive care beds.
The hospital is also home to the recently completed expansion of the Centenary Hospital for Women and Children, and a new Cancer Research Centre to be completed in late 2024.
Multiplex will undertake the demolition work for Building 23 and will then progress to the demolition of Building 6.
Demolition work is expected to take several months and is projected to be completed in quarter three of 2024.
The Canberra Hospital Master Plan will continue to transform the campus over the next 20 years.
Planning work for Canberra’s new northside hospital and more community-based health centres also continue.
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