Call for Information – Domestic Violence – Darwin

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The Northern Territory Police Force are calling for witnesses after a domestic violence incident occurred in Malak on Sunday night.  

Around 10:50pm, the Joint Emergency Services Communication Centre received reports of a single vehicle accident on Patterson Street, Malak.

The driver fled the location leaving behind a 26-year-old female passenger.

Police and St John Ambulance attended, and the female was conveyed to Royal Darwin Hospital for treatment for non-life-threatening injuries.

Investigators from Strike Force Lyra are investigating and urge anyone with information, dash cam footage or CCTV footage in the area to make contact on 131 444. Please quote NTP2500089639. Anonymous reports can be made through Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or via crimestopersnt.com.au

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.

Liquid Instruments’ cutting-edge tech wins the company the ACT Exporter of the Year title

Source: Australian National Party




Liquid Instruments’ cutting-edge tech wins the company the ACT Exporter of the Year title – Chief Minister, Treasury and Economic Development Directorate

















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 09/09/2025

A Canberra business driving innovation in product design and development has taken out the title of ACT Exporter of the Year at the 2025 ACT Chief Minister’s Export Awards.

Liquid Instruments’ technology has the potential to solve some of the world’s greatest problems; from understanding climate change to transitioning to renewable energies and developing new medical solutions.

It took out the top spot for its outstanding contribution to international markets, showcasing the Territory’s strength in innovation and advanced manufacturing. Its accelerated approach to product development has positioned it as a standout among ACT exporters.

Liquid Instruments, founded by Professor Daniel Shaddock and a team of researchers at the Australian National University (ANU), uses technology from gravitational wave research to create flexible, software-based test equipment. Their devices replace bulky hardware and let users run multiple instruments at once, making testing faster and easier.

Liquid Instruments has many large customers in the industrial space, in company sectors that range from telecommunications to semiconductor to aerospace and defence. They can be proud to call NASA, Google and Intel as their clients.

“The ACT Government is focussed on growing our export market as a major contributor to our economy. Our service exports exceeded $2.6 billion in 2023-24, and total ACT Export volumes grew by 2.5% through the year to June 2025,” Chief Minister Andrew Barr said.

“I congratulate the Liquid Instruments team for this significant achievement. I commend them for doing it all from Canberra and offering Canberra’s stream of top-notch STEM graduates a local career path.

“I also wish to congratulate the other businesses recognised at this year’s ACT Chief Minister’s Export Awards. These businesses continue to promote Canberra on the world stage, showcasing our city’s innovation and creativity to an international audience.”

Liquid Instruments was also named this year’s winner in the Manufacturing and Advanced Materials category.

This year’s category winners are:

  • ACT Exporter of the Year: Liquid Instruments
  • Emerging Exporter: Dentroid
  • Sustainability and Green Economy: Ardexa
  • Technologies: Cogito Group
  • Small Business: BixeLab
  • Professional Services: Teron Labs
  • Creative Industries: Scott Leggo
  • Manufacturing and Advanced Materials: Liquid Instruments
  • International Education and Training: UNSW Canberra
  • ACT Promising Exporter: Agile Digital & Multiforge (ACT only winners)

Winners of the ACT Chief Minister’s Export Awards become national finalists at the Australian Export Awards.

More information on the ACT Chief Minister’s Export Awards can be found at act.gov.au.

More information on the 2025 category winners is available at Lighthouse Business Innovation Centre.

Quotes attributable to ACT Chief Minister’s Export Awards judge and Tailored Accounts CEO Harry Hoang:

“It is exciting to see so many inspiring businesses growing their client base internationally.

The finalists and category winners demonstrated a solid understanding of their markets and had made significant inroads into capturing market share.”

– Statement ends –

Andrew Barr, MLA | Media Releases

«ACT Government Media Releases | «Minister Media Releases

UPDATE: Arrests – Serious assault – Alice Springs

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

Six males have been arrested in relation to a serious assault that occurred on Sunday morning in Alice Springs.

Yesterday, police arrested two 15-year-olds, one 16-year-old and two 19-year-old males.

They have been charged with multiple offences, including Aggravated assault, Aggravated robbery, Engaging in violent conduct, Recklessly endangering serious harm, and Theft.

The 15-year-olds and 19-year-olds were remanded in custody and are scheduled to appear in court today.

The 16-year-old was remanded to appear in court on 2 October 2025.

Earlier today, an additional 16-year-old male was arrested. He remains in police custody with charges expected to follow.

The victim, who is believed to be known to several of the offenders, has since been discharged from hospital.

Police urge anyone who witnesses crime or antisocial behaviour contact police on 131 444. In an emergency dial 000. Anonymous reports can be made through Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or via https://crimestoppersnt.com.au/.

Address to the Australian Student Equity Symposium hosted by the Australian Centre for Student Equity and Success

Source: Murray Darling Basin Authority

When I got this job three years ago I think I made it pretty clear what I thought the main game was.

And that’s opening the doors of our universities to more people like the kids I grew up with.

Kids who thought it wasn’t for them.

Most people nodded when I said it.

It’s hard not to.

It’s hard to argue against fairness.

It’s hard to argue that our education system is what it could be.

Think about it.

If you are a kid from a poor family today, you are less likely to make it to university.

You are less likely to make it to the end of high school.

You are more likely to start school behind or fall behind.

And you are less likely to go to pre-school or child care.

It’s all connected.

It’s the same if you grow up in the regions or the bush.

You might have been able to mount an argument fifty years ago that this sort of unfairness was OK given the sort of workforce we had then.

But not now. 

And not in the world our kids are going to inherit.

More and more jobs are going to require more and more skills.

And if a big group of Australians are locked out of that it won’t just hurt them. 

It will hurt us.

We will all be poorer. 

Because we will be part of an economy that can’t get out of second gear. 

That doesn’t have the people power it needs.

That’s basically what the Accord tells us.

That opening the doors of our universities wider isn’t just the right thing to do, it’s what we have to do.

What it says is that in 25 years, 80 percent of the workforce will need a tertiary qualification.

A certificate, a diploma or a degree.

Today it’s 60 percent.

Where do you think at extra 20 percent is going to come from? It’s not coming from Mosman or Toorak or Peppermint Grove.

Most people there already have a tertiary qualification.

It’s going to come from breaking down that invisible barrier that stops so many people in our outer suburbs and in our regions from getting to university in the first place, and then succeeding when they get there.

What this Centre talks about all the time – access and success.

And that requires reform to the entire education system.

We took the first steps in the Budget last year.

And I remember speaking at this conference just a week later.

In that budget were the first bits of the Accord we bit off.

One of those was making it easier for people who aren’t ready to do a uni degree to get ready.

We are doing that by massively expanding funding for what we sometimes call Enabling Courses – those free bridging courses that give you the skills you need to do a uni degree.

Last year I mentioned what Newcastle University does here. 

They have been doing this for 51 years.
 
About one in five people who start a degree at Newcastle have done one of these courses first.

And I told you the story of Jennifer Baker, the single mum who saw an ad for one of these courses in the local paper and is now a Fulbright Scholar.

Here’s a couple more examples.

Roy Turner dropped out of school in year 10. 

He became a fitter and machinist and worked in the oil and gas industry.

When COVID hit, he lost his job. 

That’s when his fiancée said to him, ‘Why don’t you do one of these free courses?’ 

He did and now he’s doing a degree in medical engineering.

Here’s another.

Zee Johnson did one of these free courses at the age of 48 when she was on a carer’s pension, looking after her husband, who’d had a stroke.

Now she has got a degree in Biomedical Science.

This year she completed an honours degree in Ovarian Cancer Research.

Next is a PhD.

From a pension to a PhD.

If you want to know what uncapping funding for these free courses means, it means about an extra billion over the next ten years.

More than that, what it really means is more people like Roy and Zee at university.

In that Budget last year was also Paid Prac.

It’s the first time the Australian Government has done this. 

And it’s about another $1.4 billion over the next ten years.

It’s means tested. 

Targeted at people who need it the most. 

Targeted at placement poverty.

I was here at UTS last year to talk about this and I met a midwifery student named Clare, and this is what she told the media that day:

“I’m a first-year mature age midwifery student. 

This payment is going to be absolutely life-changing for me.

As a mother of two small children, I’m often balancing between practical work, placement and looking after my babies. 

There are literally some days where I’m doing 16 hour days between my study and my work and looking after my children.

I cannot wait for this payment to be available for myself and other future mature-age students who might also want to enrol in this course who previously couldn’t financially afford it.”

That’s why we are doing this. 

For people like Clare. 

And now it’s started. 

It started on 1 July and already more than 30,000 people have applied.

In the last 12 months we have also begun the roll out of more university study hubs, in the regions and the suburbs.

And there is more to come in the next few months.

I told you last year when we were at Bankstown what it meant to have the word university on a building in a place like where I grew up.

The message it sends is that kids from there belong at university. That it’s for them too.

I was in Broadmeadows in the northern suburbs of Melbourne a few weeks ago and I opened a hub there with the team from La Trobe.

And there was a law student there called Tori. 

She talked about her family. How her dad didn’t even finish year nine.

And how it would take her two hours to get to uni by bus.

Not any more. 

Now it’s a ten-minute walk away.

And this is what she said: 

“It makes me feel like my university wants me to study. … 

And it makes me feel really seen. … 

And also I feel really safe here. 

And being able to study and feel safe just lets my confidence and my concentration peak.”

That’s what hubs like this do. 

They save you time. 

They save you money. 

They make it easier to get to your part time job after uni.

They make it easier for people to go back and study after you have had kids too.

At Broadmeadows there is a child care centre next door, and the busiest time at the hub is after the kids have been dropped off.

They make people like Tori feel like they belong.

All of that, the bridging courses, the Paid Prac, the Study Hubs, have started to roll out this year.

We have also done something else this year. 

We have quadrupled the amount of funding to help more students with a disability to access and participate in higher education.

That is significant.

In the last 12 months we have also done something else that hasn’t happened before.

We have signed agreements with every State and Territory to finally fully fund every public school in the country.

Not everything we are trying to fix can be fixed at the university gate.

As I said earlier we have got to reform the entire education system.

And this is the big one.

If we want more Australians to take on a university degree we need more to finish school. 

Again, the problem isn’t everywhere. 

In independent and Catholic schools, completion rates are high and are either stable or going up. 

It’s in our public schools where the real challenge is.

And where a lot of the heavy lifting happens. 

In the last decade the percentage of young people finishing high school has dropped in public schools from about 83 percent to as low as 73 percent. 

The agreements I have signed are about turning this around. 

It’s a $16 billion investment over the next ten years. And it’s about triple that in the decade after that. 

And it’s not a blank cheque. It’s tied to reform.

I said these are schools where the heavy lifting happens. 

The schools that play an outsized role in educating some of the most disadvantaged children in this country. 

Children who we know are more likely to start behind or fall behind. Through no fault of their own. 

This funding is tied to reforms to help them catch up, keep up and help more young people finish school. 

Things like evidenced-based teaching.

Like phonics checks and numeracy checks in Year 1 to identify kids who need additional help.

And then making sure they get the help they need through more individualised support, things like small group tutoring.

This is a historic moment with all States and Territories signed up. 

To help us now in the task of making this real, implementing the reforms and hitting the targets we have agreed to, I have written to my State and Territory colleagues proposing that we consider bringing together the work that:

•    the Australian Curriculum, Assessment and Reporting Authority;
•    the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership;
•    the Australian Education Research Organisation; and 
•    Education Services Australia

do, under one roof.

I am proposing we consider a new Teaching and Learning Commission that would maintain and protect the critical work that these organisations do, and improve coordination. 

But in addition to that, help us to implement the reforms and hit the targets we are all committed to. 

And oversee and drive the reforms we are making to initial teacher education to help build the workforce we need and raise esteem for what I think is the most important job in the world. 

It’s something I am going to put on the table for education ministers to talk about when we meet next month. 

Earlier this year we also did something else. 

We know children disadvantaged backgrounds are more likely to start school behind other children. 

We also know they are less likely to go to early education and care than other children. 

One of the reasons for that is the Activity Test. 

This is a test that stops children from some of the poorest families in the country from getting the Child Care Subsidy. 

The reason is because their parents don’t work enough hours or aren’t studying. 

The result is their kids miss out. 

That ends at the start of next year. 

From the 1st of January next year the Activity Test goes and gets replaced with a three-day guarantee. 

Three days a week access to the Child Care Subsidy for every child who needs it. 

No one blinks when you say every child has a right to go to school and government has a responsibility to help fund it.

The same has got to be true today for early education.  

That doesn’t mean it should be compulsory, but it should be there for every parent who wants it and every child who needs it.

To help make sure they start school ready to go. Ready to learn.

That’s the sort of change that changes lives. 

It’s the next step in building a universal early education system. 

And if we get that right anything is possible. 

Now let me take you back to university and what comes next.

Next year we start to turn on the big equity engines in the Accord. 

Next year Needs Based Funding starts. 

Think Gonski for universities.

The school funding system provides schools with extra funding based on where they are located and the needs of the students they educate.

Students who come from economically disadvantaged families receive additional support. 

So do schools in the regions and the bush.

At the moment we have programs like HEPPP that provide funding for extra student support.

This is different.

This isn’t a capped program.

It’s demand driven.

The money follows the student.

The more students a university has that meet the criteria the more funding they will receive.

The more students there are at regional unis, the more funding those unis will receive as well.

That starts next year.  Just a couple of months away.

The year after that, in 2027, a new type of demand driven system starts.

Last year we brought back a demand driven system for Indigenous students.

It doesn’t mean university is free.

But does mean if you get the marks for the course you want to do you will get a place at university.

It started last year and it’s already having a positive impact.

Indigenous enrolments were up about five percent last year. 

And another three percent this year.

Over the next 10 years we think it could double the number of Indigenous students at university.

The next step is to do the same sort of thing for students from other disadvantaged backgrounds.

Effectively a demand driven system for all students from disadvantaged backgrounds.

Now think about these two things working together. 

A demand driven system for disadvantaged students to get them in, and demand driven needs based funding to get them through. 

Help to get in and help to get through. 

Access and success. 

I expect to introduce legislation to do it next year. 

And the new Australian Tertiary Education Commission, that we will also put into law, will drive it. 

I hope you can see then that there is a bit happening. 

And that my focus hasn’t shifted.

I still think this is the main game. 

And I know that there is still a lot more to do. 

But we have made a start. 

And we have got a chance in the next few years to cement in all of this and build on it. 

Build a better and a fairer education system. 

And a better and a fairer country too. 

And the work you Shamit and your team do is a critical part of that, and I thank you for it, and I am so very, very grateful that you have invited me back to speak to you today.

Arrest – Aggravated assault – Tennant Creek

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

A 49-year-old male has been arrested in relation to an aggravated assault that occurred in Tennant Creek this morning.

Around 8:15am, police members responded to an aggravated assault occurring across the road from the Tennant Creek Police Station on Paterson Street. It is alleged a 49-year-old male had been struck to the head with a blunt weapon by the 49-year-old male offender.

The two are believed to be known to each other.

The offender was arrested at the scene and remains in police custody.

The victim was conveyed to Tennant Creek Hospital via St John Ambulance with non-life-threatening injuries.

Police urge anyone with information to contact police on 131 444. Please quote reference P25240631. Anonymous reports can be made through Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or via https://crimestoppersnt.com.au/.

Honouring 57 consecutive years on a brigade management team

Source:

John ‘Jack’ Hedley and Tallarook Fire Brigade Captain Time Ward

Having served 57 consecutive years as an elected office bearer on the management team at Tallarook Fire Brigade, John ‘Jack’ Hedley was honoured with the presentation of a plaque, at the brigade’s recent awards dinner.

More than 50 people attended Tallarook brigade’s dinner on 6 September to acknowledge brigade and CFA Life Member, and Outstanding Service Medal recipient Jack Hedley, for having served the local brigade and community as a member of the brigade management team for 57 consecutive years.

Jack was presented with a plaque to recognise his exceptional service. Jack stepped away from the management team this year.

“We are exceptionally grateful that you’re not planning to give up your CFA or brigade passion any time soon,” Tallarook Captain Tim Ward said.

Jack joined Tallarook brigade in October 1958, 67 years ago. Jack’s first position on the brigade’s manangement team was as secretary in 1965. In his 67 years, Jack has held the positions of firefighter (42 years), secretary (22 years), 1st lieutenant (22 years), captain (four years), 2nd Lieutenant (eight years), 3rd Lieutenant (three years), president (two years), treasurer (16 years), group delegate (26 years) and Municipal Fire Prevention Committee delegate (26 years).

“We thank you for your perseverance, dedication, time, skills and knowledge that you have given so dilgently and willing to Tallarook,” Tim said.

“We also say thank you to Glenda and your family for allowing you all the time to commit to the brigade and CFA duties – quite often, no doubt, to the detriment of family time. Our appreciation and admiration are endless. We are so very grateful for all you have done for the brigade and the protection of our community.

“We present you with this plaque in recognition of your extrordinary service and hope that every time you see it, you are reminded of our appreciation of your civic mindedness, of the camaraderie of your fellow firefighters, old and new, and reflect with pride on your service that reflects the true spirit of CFA.”

Submitted by Tracey Mastropavlos

Changed traffic conditions at the intersection of Sackville and Cathcart streets, Canley Vale

Source: Mental Health Australia

Road users are advised of changed traffic conditions at the intersection of Sackville and Cathcart streets, Canley Vale.

The changes are necessary to carry out traffic light upgrades.

We will work for up to 21 nights between Tuesday 23 September and Sunday 19 October 2025, weather permitting.

Work hours are from 8pm to 5am, Sunday to Thursday. We will not work Friday or Saturday nights, or on public holidays.

There will be temporary traffic changes while we complete this work. This includes lane closures and a reduced speed limit of 40km/h.

Please drive and ride to the conditions and follow the directions of signs and traffic controllers.

Thank you for your patience during this time.

For the latest traffic updates across the network download the Live Traffic NSW App, visit livetraffic.com or call 132 701.

Changed traffic conditions at the intersection of Moore-Oxley Bypass and Cordeaux Street, Campbelltown

Source: Mental Health Australia

Road users are advised of changed traffic conditions at the intersection of Moore-Oxley Bypass and Cordeaux Street, Campbelltown.

The changes are necessary to carry out traffic light upgrades. 

Work will take place for up to 20 nights between Wednesday 17 September and Sunday 26 October 2025, weather permitting.

Work hours are from8pm to 5am, Sunday to Thursday. No work will occur Friday or Saturday nights, or on Public Holidays.

There will be temporary traffic changes while we complete this work. This includes lane closures and a reduced speed limit of 40km/h. 

Please drive and ride to the conditions and follow the directions of signs and traffic controllers. 

Thank you for your patience during this time.

For the latest traffic updates across the network download the Live Traffic NSW App, visit livetraffic.com or call 132 701.

Tender awarded for major upgrade to William Hovell Drive

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services




Tender awarded for major upgrade to William Hovell Drive – Chief Minister, Treasury and Economic Development Directorate

















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 09/09/2025

The ACT Government has awarded the construction tender for the duplication of William Hovell Drive, marking a significant milestone in improving Canberra’s road infrastructure.

Canberra Contractors will oversee the build of the $107.25 million project – jointly funded by the Australian and ACT Governments – after being awarded the contract through an open tender process.

Construction is expected to start in November 2025 and be completed by the end of 2028.

The William Hovell Drive duplication will see 4.5 kilometres of William Hovell Drive duplicated from John Gorton Drive to Drake Brockman Drive.

This upgrade is designed to improve safety, reduce congestion, and improve travel times for thousands of daily commuters between West Belconnen and the city.

Key features of the project include:

  1. Duplication of 4.5 km of William Hovell Drive from the Glenloch Interchange to Drake Brockman Drive
  2. A new 4.5km, three-metre-wide shared path will be delivered along William Hovell Drive connecting with the existing shared path at Bindubi St, providing a safer and easier option to walk, run or cycle, while innovative fauna crossings will support biodiversity between the Kama and Pinnacle nature reserves.
  3. Signalised intersections to improve traffic safety
  4. Upgrades to the Bicentennial National Trail underpass
  5. Improved access to the Old Weetangera Cemetery
  6. Construction of retaining walls to protect sensitive environmental areas.

Quotes attributable to Minister for City and Government Services, Tara Cheyne MLA:

“The signing of this contract represents a major milestone for this significant and complex project.

“I, like many Belconnen residents, have been eagerly awaiting this day.

“We will be sharing as much information as we can as early as we can so that commuters can plan ahead with their travel during this period of disruption.

“Ultimately, this is a project which will ease congestion and improve the overall road alignment, enhancing capacity and improving safety.”

Quotes attributable to Member for Ginninderra Yvette Berry MLA:

“This is a welcome next step on the William Hovell Drive duplication and I know the community will be pleased to see that construction will start soon on this important infrastructure project.

“I want to thank the community for their patience while we have navigated through getting the necessary approvals, and I look forward to seeing this work get underway.”

Quotes attributable to Member for Canberra Alicia Payne: 

“William Hovell Drive is used daily by thousands of Canberrans. This upgrade will have a positive effect on the daily commutes of Canberrans, and help to ensure a smoother and safer journey no matter where they’re headed.

“I’m glad that our Government is supporting this project and has awarded Canberra Contractors this tender.”

For more information, visit Built for CBR – William Hovell Drive.

– Statement ends –

Tara Cheyne, MLA | Media Releases

«ACT Government Media Releases | «Minister Media Releases

Public health warning: Opioid overdoses after using drugs thought to be cocaine

Source: Australian Green Party

NSW Health is providing a broad health warning to the community about the danger of using drugs thought to be cocaine, following a recent increase in opioid overdoses in the Sydney and Northern NSW regions.
Ten people across NSW were hospitalised in August with a suspected opioid overdose after using substances they thought to be cocaine, with three requiring treatment in an intensive care unit.
This is a marked increase on the number of people normally seen in this period. Only two of the cases are thought to have been linked.
In cases where blood or urine was tested, results show that heroin was present with cocaine.
Medical Director of the NSW Poisons Information Centre, Dr Darren Roberts, said it is important people recognise the signs of an opioid overdose early and know how to respond.
“Opioids such as heroin can cause pin-point pupils, drowsiness, loss of consciousness, slowed breathing/snoring and skin turning blue/grey and can be life-threatening,” Dr Roberts said.
“One of the dangers of illicit drug supply is the contents and strength of the substance you are getting is uncertain and can be inconsistent. An opioid overdose could quickly result from a single line.
“Opioids such as heroin can be sold as or found in cocaine, methamphetamine, and MDMA (ecstasy). You cannot always tell the difference between these drugs by appearance.
“In light of this detection, people who use drugs such as cocaine, methamphetamine, MDMA or opioids should carry naloxone.”
If you witness someone experiencing any unexpected symptoms after using drugs, you should call Triple Zero (000) immediately or seek urgent medical attention. Naloxone should be given immediately if available.
Naloxone is an important life-saving medication that reverses the effects of opioids. It does not require a prescription and is free for anyone at risk of opioid overdose in NSW.
It is available as an easy to use nasal spray or injection from some pharmacies and other health services. For more information on the take-home naloxone program visit Your Room. 
NUAA can mail you naloxone in a discreet package. Order via their online shop or call (02) 9171 6650.
You won’t get into trouble for seeking medical care. If you feel unwell, or if your friend feels unwell, do something about it.
Anyone who has concerns about adverse effects from drugs should contact the NSW Poisons Information Centre on 13 11 26, at any time 24/7.
For support and information on drug and alcohol problems, contact the Alcohol and Drug Information Service on 1800 250 015.  This is a 24/7 service offering confidential and anonymous telephone counselling and information.
NSW public drug warnings can be found at Public drug warnings.