2+2 Climate and Finance Dialogue with New Zealand

Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

We will travel to New Zealand today to meet our counterparts in Auckland to strengthen climate action, clean energy cooperation and regulatory alignment between Australia and New Zealand.

This is all about working across the Tasman to seize the golden economic opportunities of the net zero transformation, boosting trade and investment and making our economies more resilient and productive.

Delivering on our shared commitment to net zero is critical for investor certainty, cheaper, cleaner energy in our region and advancing climate action across the Pacific.

Our meeting with New Zealand’s Finance Minister, Nicola Willis, and Climate Change and Energy Minister, Simon Watts, will be the third Australia-New Zealand 2+2 Climate and Finance Ministers’ Dialogue.

This will include a focus on energy security, affordability and promoting sustainable finance.

By working together on regulatory reform we will pave the way for more renewable energy, storage and efficient products for households and businesses.

Treasurer Chalmers and Minister Willis will meet separately to discuss economic policy and the productivity opportunities being delivered and progressed following this year’s Economic Reform Roundtable.

Minister Bowen will meet with solar and battery industry representatives to share the success of Australia’s Cheaper Home Battery Program, and meet with Minister Watts to discuss working together to bring the world to the Pacific for Pre-COP in 2026.

Closer economic cooperation on cheaper and cleaner energy and modernising regulation could not be more important at a time of heightened global uncertainty.

Total Fire Ban for Mallee tomorrow

Source: Victoria Country Fire Authority

A Total Fire Ban (TFB) has been declared for the Mallee tomorrow, Friday 5 December 2025.

Tomorrow’s conditions in the Mallee will be dry and windy with west to north westerly winds gusting up to 70km/h during the late morning and afternoon.  

Maximum temperatures will reach up to 38 degrees in the Mallee, with lower temperatures in the south.  

A Total Fire Ban means no fire can be lit in the open air or allowed to remain alight from 12.01am to 11.59pm on the day of the Total Fire Ban.  

CFA Chief Officer Jason Heffernan said the TFB has been declared due to the increased risk of fire in the Mallee, driven by hot, dry and windy conditions in the area.  

“Tomorrow’s conditions will make it difficult for firefighters to suppress a fire should one start, Jason said.  

The Mallee also experienced extreme conditions today which adds to the extended fire risk into tomorrow. 

We urge farmers to postpone harvesting activities tomorrow as ignition is a real possibility with the strong gusty winds. 

“We’re asking people to follow the strict conditions associated with the Total Fire Ban declaration and understand how the increased fire risk will impact you. 

Victorians can find out if it is a Total Fire Ban on the CFA website www.cfa.vic.gov.au, where it is usually published by 5pm the day before a Total Fire Ban.  

For more information on what you can and can’t do visit the Can I or Can’t I page on the CFA website.   

They include: 

  • The VicEmergency App 

Submitted by CFA Media

Police charge two teenagers over Rokeby firearms incident

Source: Tasmania Police

Police charge two teenagers over Rokeby firearms incident

Thursday, 4 December 2025 – 1:40 pm.

Police have charged two teenagers following a reported firearm incident in Rokeby on Tuesday evening.
Authorities were called to Hart Place about 8:30pm on Tuesday evening after police allege a man in his 30s was shot in the leg.
Investigators arrested a 16-year-old and an 18-year-old at separate locations in Southern Tasmania on Wednesday afternoon.
Several searches were conducted and a total of four firearms were seized by police, one of which police will allege was involved in the incident.
Police intend to lay charges against other individuals in respect to the other three firearms.
The 16-year-old has been charged with attempted aggravated carjacking, aggravated armed robbery and wounding.
The 18-year-old has been charged with attempted aggravated carjacking, aggravated armed robbery, wounding and breach of a police family violence order.
Both will appear jointly in the Hobart Magistrates Court later today.
Police will allege this is an isolated, targeted incident.
The victim remains in hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

New responsibilities for ACT Nurse Practitioners in Australian first

Source: Government of Australia Capital Territory

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 04/12/2025

The ACT Government is delivering on its commitment to strengthen the role of nurse practitioners in the Territory’s health system.

New legislation has been introduced to give nurse practitioners, endorsed by the Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia, the legal practice authority to issue cause of death certificates and witness non-written health directions.

Minister for Health Rachel Stephen-Smith said the Nurse Practitioners Legislation Amendment Bill 2025 will allow nurse practitioners to work to their full scope of practice, recognising their advanced training and expertise – especially those who work in hospice, palliative care, or residential aged care facilities.

“Nurse practitioners are highly qualified clinicians who play a vital role in delivering person-centred care across our community. These reforms will ensure their skills are fully utilised, improving access to timely, high-quality healthcare for Canberrans,” Minister Stephen-Smith said.

“Enabling the legal practice authority for nurse practitioners to issue cause of death certificates, where they were responsible for the care of the person and within 48 hours of the person’s death supports families during a difficult time and helps them to finalise legal affairs more quickly.

“Where it isn’t possible or appropriate for a nurse practitioner to play this role, and the death does not need to be referred to the Coroner, a doctor will still be required to issue the cause of death certificate. However, this change removes the need for a doctor’s involvement where a nurse practitioner has the capacity to undertake this role.

“Should the legislation pass the Legislative Assembly, the ACT would be the first jurisdiction in Australia to enable nurse practitioners to do this, which will mean they are able to provide even more comprehensive end of life care.”

The reforms will also allow nurse practitioners to witness non-written health directions, alongside doctors and other health professionals.

“Health directions are an important way for people to ensure their wishes are respected when they can’t communicate them directly. Expanding the role of nurse practitioners in witnessing these directions will make the process more accessible and efficient.

“This change would enable a non-written health direction to be witnessed by two health professionals, as long as one of those health professionals is either a doctor or a nurse practitioner.”

Recent legislation has also enabled nurse practitioners to legally undertake key roles in the voluntary assisted dying process and to prescribe medical termination of pregnancy in accordance with the Therapeutic Goods Administration changes.

“Further work is underway to enable nurse practitioners to conduct fitness to drive medical assessments and complete documentation such as work capacity certificates for initial Workers’ Compensation claims,” said Minister Stephen-Smith.

“I look forward to continuing the ACT’s work to expand scope of practice for a range of health professionals to ensure their skills can be used to the greatest benefit of the community.”

For more information on the roles and responsibilities of nurse practitioners, go to the ACT Government website.

Quotes attributable to Tim Keun, ACT Chapter Lead, Australian College of Nurse Practitioners:

“This is a landmark moment for healthcare in Australia. By empowering Nurse Practitioners to work to their full scope, the ACT Government is ensuring families receive timely, person-centred care when they need it most.

“These reforms reflect contemporary healthcare needs and set a benchmark for other jurisdictions to follow.”

– Statement ends –

Rachel Stephen-Smith, MLA | Media Releases

«ACT Government Media Releases | «Minister Media Releases

MATARO STREET, NURIOOTPA (Grass Fire)

Source: South Australia County Fire Service

Issued on
04 Dec 2025 12:02

Warning area
Mataro Street, Tanunda Road, Murray Street, Old Mill Road and Railway Terrace at Nuriootpa in the Barossa Valley.

Warning level
Advice – Avoid Smoke

Action
Smoke from the NURIOOTPA Fire is in the Mataro Road Parklands area.

Smoke can affect your health. You should stay informed and be aware of the health impacts of smoke on yourself and others.

Symptoms of exposure includes shortness of breath, wheezing and coughing, burning eyes, running nose, chest tightness, chest pain and dizziness or light-headedness.

If you or anyone in your care are having difficulty breathing, seek medical attention from your local GP. If your symptoms become severe, call 000.

More information will be provided by the CFS when it is available.

Local groups and individuals urged to help with Clean Up Australia Day 2026

Source: New South Wales Ministerial News

The City of Greater Bendigo is encouraging community groups, clubs, organisations and individuals to register a site that they are prepared to clean up as part of the annual Clean Up Australia Day on Sunday March 1, 2026.

Clean-up sites are organised by community groups and organisations and the day is a good opportunity for everyone to come together, meet neighbours and other members of the community and help clean up local parks and waterways.

City of Greater Bendigo Presentation and Assets Director Brian Westley said Clean Up Australia Day is the largest ongoing community participation event in Australia with tens of thousands of Australians in cities and towns taking part each year.

“Clean Up Australia Day is an important, annual event that provides an opportunity for people of all ages to work together to help enhance our local community and our local environment and I encourage local groups and individuals to get involved,” Mr Westley said.

“Many environmentally important local areas benefit greatly each year from Clean Up Australia Day.

“Local waterways, bush reserves and recreation areas are targeted and loads of rubbish are collected and taken away each Clean Up Australia Day.”

For further information contact the City of Greater Bendigo via email or phone:

[email protected]

1300 002 642

Interview with Sally Sara, RN Breakfast, ABC Radio

Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

Sally Sara:

The federal government in Australia will provide an additional $95 million in military assistance to Ukraine. It’s Australia’s first significant increase in military help to Ukraine in more than a year, bringing the total in defence support to $1.7 billion since Moscow’s full‑scale invasion began in 2022.

Jim Chalmers is the federal Treasurer and joins me now. Treasurer, welcome back to Radio National Breakfast.

Jim Chalmers:

Thanks for having me back, Sally.

Sara:

What can you tell us about this multi‑million‑dollar funding package for Ukraine. What will this money achieve?

Chalmers:

Well, we’re steadfast supporters of the brave Ukrainian people who are standing up to this Russian brutality. And the end of this war can’t come soon enough, but it needs to be a lasting peace that does justice to the courage that the Ukrainians have shown.

And so for as long as this war continues, we will continue to support Ukraine in any way that we responsibly can. Today’s announcement is all about that.

This is about contributing to a fund for material and equipment to help support the Ukrainian war effort. It does come as part, as you rightly identified, of a $1.7 billion package over recent years, which makes us a big contributor in non‑European terms, and it also comes hand‑in‑hand with some targeted sanctions. We’re going to sanction an additional 45 ships in Russia’s shadow fleet.

So all of these things are about supporting the bravery, the courage of the Ukrainian people in the face of these years now of completely unacceptable Russian brutality and aggression.

Sara:

You’ve mentioned briefly these new sanctions. So this will apply to around 45 Russian ships. How did the government arrive at this decision?

Chalmers:

Well, we take advice on this. There’s now about 200 sanctioned Russian vessels in their shadow fleet. As your listeners would appreciate, that sanctions need to evolve because the Russian strategy to avoid these sanctions evolves as well. We engage with our partners around the world and we take these decisions when it’s appropriate to do so. Really across a range of fronts, we’re doing what we can to try and strangle Russian oil revenue. That challenge evolves, and so our sanctions evolve as well.

Sara:

So how will the sanctions work on these 45 ships?

Chalmers:

Well, there’s a whole range of international legal arrangements, that’s why we work with our partners, nobody really imposes these sanctions completely alone, but we’ve seen, for example, in recent weeks stories about some of these ships accessing ports inappropriately. So there’s about 200 ships on the list now, they’re sanctioned as part of the shadow fleet, that gives them a different status as they try and access the ports of the world.

We don’t pretend that with every announcement that we completely strangle this trade in Russian oil, they’re doing a lot of work to get around it, but our sanctions evolve because their strategies evolve, and that’s part of it.

But the main thing today is this extra $95 million as part of our efforts to support the Russian military to try and achieve peace in that part of the world which does justice to the sacrifices that Ukrainians have made.

Sara:

Let’s take a look at the economy. The Australian economy grew by 0.4 per cent in the September quarter, a softer than expected figure, were you disappointed by that?

Chalmers:

No, not for one second. In fact, the number came in a bit lower because the quarter before was revised up and there was some unusual activity when it comes to inventories.

This was a very positive and very promising set of numbers and the reason for that is because the overwhelming story of these National Accounts was a very substantial recovery in the private sector.

We saw business investment absolutely galloping, we saw investment in the building of new homes growing strongly as well. We saw the fourth consecutive quarter of productivity growth. And so overwhelmingly this is a very positive and a very promising story emerging out of these National Accounts. It also means the strongest annual growth in the last couple of years. And so for all of those reasons, these numbers were very welcome.

Sara:

A lot of the growth for this quarter is driven by investment in data centres. You can’t count on that every quarter, can you?

Chalmers:

Well, the investment mix changes from quarter to quarter, but this is a trend now, and frankly, one of the most encouraging elements of this data was the way that this business investment grew very substantially, and technology and data infrastructure was a big part of the story. And that’s a good thing, because data and digital and artificial intelligence is a game changer for our economy, it will be a huge part of the more productive economy that we’re building into the future. And so we welcome this investment.

Investment came into other areas as well. Really, the new business investment number in the National Accounts was extremely positive as were the numbers around investment in building more homes. The productivity numbers were encouraging too. So really right across the board there was a lot to be pleased about in these National Accounts.

Sara:

You’ve attracted criticism from the Opposition about government spending keeping interest rates high. What do you say to those concerns?

Chalmers:

Well, it’s rubbish, and the reason it’s rubbish is, if you look at the National Accounts yesterday, it’s the private demand which is doing all the heavy lifting in our economy. Private demand has now contributed more to growth in our economy than public demand for 4 quarters in a row. In fact, in the quarter just gone the private economy made a 3 times bigger contribution than public spending. And if you think about the last year, annual private demand growth in the last year has increased more than 5 times and annual public demand growth is less than a third of what it was a year ago.

So they don’t know what they’re talking about. They’ll go to great lengths, even dishonest lengths to talk down our economy and diminish the progress that Australians have made together. Any objective observer of yesterday’s National Accounts would conclude that the private sector recovery is the stand out story of those National Accounts, and that’s a good thing.

Sara:

You’re getting ready to deliver the mid‑year budget update. What’s going to happen with energy rebates? Is there a case for those being extended?

Chalmers:

I will make those decisions in the final few days before we lock down the mid‑year budget update. I’ve made it very clear, I think, on your show before, Sally, and certainly on other occasions when I’ve been asked, that people shouldn’t expect that those energy rebates will be a permanent feature of the budget.

They are an important way that we’re helping people with the cost of living, but not the only way that we’re doing that – we’ve got tax cuts, cheaper medicines, student debt relief, more bulk billing, Fee‑Free TAFE, rent assistance, there are a whole range of ways that we’re helping people with the cost of living. We haven’t finalised the mid‑year budget update, but people shouldn’t expect those rebates to go on forever.

Sara:

Treasurer, thank you very much for joining me again.

Chalmers:

Appreciate it Sally, all the best.

Sara:

Jim Chalmers is the federal Treasurer.

Press conference, Brisbane Commonwealth Parliamentary Offices

Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

Jim Chalmers:

Today’s National Accounts show an uptick in annual economic growth and a stronger and broader private sector recovery. Australia’s economy grew 0.4 per cent in the September quarter to be 2.1 per cent higher through the year. That means in annual terms this is the fastest growth in 2 years. The really encouraging part of these numbers is to see that the growth in the private sector is gathering pace and that’s powered by the strongest growth in private investment in almost 5 years.

The biggest story in these National Accounts is the very strong growth in business investment and investment in housing as well. This is a positive and promising result. It speaks directly to the progress that we have made together in our economy. It’s especially heartening to see the way that the private sector is gathering pace when you see the business investment numbers and also when you see the progress we’ve made in this quarter and through the year in housing as well.

So in a little bit more detail when it comes to that private investment number this is the fastest quarterly growth in private investment in almost a decade. It’s making a very important contribution to growth in the quarter and through the year. New business investment grew 3.4 per cent in the quarter to be 3.8 per cent higher through the year as well. So, if you think about it in the course of the last few years since we came to office, new business investment has grown by an annualised average of 3.9 per cent. Remember it was falling 1.3 per cent on average under our predecessors. And so the new business investment story is the most encouraging, the most positive part of the National Accounts which have been released today.

But just as encouraging is the progress that we’ve made on housing, which is obvious and evident in these numbers. Investment in new housing supply is another really positive part of the story in these National Accounts. We’ve now seen dwelling investment grow for 7 consecutive quarters which is the longest consecutive streak in a decade. Dwelling investment grew 1.8 per cent in the quarter to be 6.5 per cent stronger through the year. When we came to office dwelling investment was going backwards by 3.6 per cent in annual terms. It’s now grown 6.5 per cent through the year to September. So very encouraging outcomes in this data when it comes to housing and when it comes to private investment as well.

Similarly, and we’re much more cautious here, given productivity is a long standing challenge that will take us some time to turn around in a sustained way, but very encouraging to see productivity lift for a fourth consecutive quarter as well. It’s now growing at 0.8 per cent in annual terms which is roughly consistent with the 20‑year average and, again, when it comes to the private sector story productivity in the private sector in the market sector is up 1.1 per cent through the year as well.

So, we are very cautious about the productivity figures this is a challenge that’s been a big feature of our economy for a couple of decades now, but very encouraging to see 4 consecutive quarters of productivity growth and especially encouraging to see market sector productivity at 1.1 per cent through the year as well.

Now when it comes to incomes we’ve also seen real household gross disposable income per capita grow again. In the quarter it’s now 2.1 per cent higher through the year. The compensation of employees’ number in these National Accounts which goes to wages grew by 1.7 per cent in the quarter to be 7.1 per cent higher through the year. One of the reasons why that’s important is it now means that the wages share of income has risen to 54.2 per cent when it was below 50 per cent before we came to office. The wages share of income is well over 50 per cent now, it was less than 50 per cent when we came to office.

You can also see in these numbers that the 3 interest rate cuts this year are flowing through to household budgets. We see the mortgage interest costs falling in these National Accounts. They’ve actually fallen by around $2.1 billion since the end of last year and that’s because of those 3 interest rate cuts that we’ve seen through the course of calendar 2025.

So the story of 2025 is really about this private sector recovery. And if you compare private demand with public demand this becomes even clearer. New private final demand grew 1.2 per cent in the quarter to be 3.1 per cent higher through the year. What this means is that private demand, the private economy, has now contributed more to growth than public demand for 4 consecutive quarters.

In the quarter that we’ve seen the data for today, the contribution of private demand is 3 times bigger than the contribution of public demand. And if you look over the last year, annual private demand growth has lifted more than fivefold at the same time as annual public demand growth is less than a third of what it was a year ago. All of the economic growth over the past year, the main story there has been private demand and private growth and the recovery in our private economy.

So that’s why these numbers are especially encouraging. They are positive and promising numbers in these National Accounts today and the biggest reason for that is recovering new business investment, the growth we’re seeing in housing investment, all feeding through to the private economy taking its rightful place as overwhelmingly the main driver of growth in our economy in ways that we are encouraged by and ways that we welcome. Happy to take a few questions.

Journalist:

The growth in the government spending was stronger in the quarter than household spending. Doesn’t this show that the hand over from public to private is not really happening?

Chalmers:

Absolutely not. I couldn’t disagree with you more when it comes to the contribution of the private economy versus the public economy. Overwhelmingly, the story of 2025 and the story of these National Accounts has been very encouraging and very strong recovery of the private economy. You see it in the new business investment, you see it in the dwelling investment, you see it in our consumption, you see it in the ways that incomes are feeding that consumption but especially when you look at private final demand versus public final demand. And as I said a moment ago, private demand growth has lifted more than 5 times over the last year.

And it’s contributed to all of the economic growth, at the same time as public demand growth is less than a third of what it was and so overwhelmingly. However you cut the numbers, the story here is the recovery in the private economy. This is the recovery in the private economy that we have planned for and prepared for and hoped for, and it’s pleasing to see it coming to fruition in the way that these numbers lay bare.

Journalist:

I recognise that private investment has grown. But isn’t the problem that government spending is still growing faster than household spending?

Chalmers:

No, I don’t believe that is an issue in these National Accounts and the reason for that is because if you look at the public final demand, overwhelmingly I think two‑thirds from memory of it is state spending. But even leaving that aside for a moment, the contribution to growth which is being made by the private economy absolutely multiples compared to the contribution made by public investment. And in previous years we’ve seen public demand play a bigger role in the economy, there are good reasons for that when the economy is especially soft. But right throughout the course of the last 3 or 4 years we’ve wanted to make sure that the private economy takes its rightful place as the key driver of growth in our economy and that’s what we’re seeing in these National Accounts.

Journalist:

Treasurer, how much are you looking to find in savings in MYEFO?

Chalmers:

Well, we’re still putting the finishing touches on the mid‑year budget update. We will release that later this month. We’re working very hard, Katy Gallagher and I, with the Expenditure Review Committee and the Cabinet colleagues more broadly. We’ve made it clear that in every budget update that we hand down we’re looking for ways to reprioritise some spending to higher priority areas and already in the course of the last 4 Budgets and budget updates we have found around $100 billion in savings and that’s helped us make room for investments in strengthening Medicare or providing tax cuts for all 14 million Australian workers.

So, people should expect us to continue to search for ways to reprioritise spending, it’s one of the ways that we manage our budget in the most responsible way that we can. It’s one of the reasons why we’ve already delivered 2 surpluses in our first 2 years and much smaller deficit in our third year. Now the main task of this mid‑year update will be finding room for some of the upward revisions to spending. My colleague, Matt Keogh, has spoken about the extra $1.3 billion in estimates variations in the veterans’ portfolio for example.

So, as we go through the budget in our usual responsible and considered and methodical way, one of the main tasks for the mid‑year budget update is to find room for those pressures and make room for those pressures. It won’t be a mini budget later this month, the main game will be in May. But we won’t be waiting for May in order to make some decisions to make room for some of these budget pressures which are escalating rather than easing.

Journalist:

The September quarter growth was still slower than expected. Are you hoping to see that accelerate this quarter into the new year, and do you think interest rate cuts would help with that?

Chalmers:

A couple of things about that. I mean, one of the reasons why the quarterly growth figure came in a little lower than the market was expecting is because they have revised up the quarter before. And you would understand, certainly, people who follow the National Accounts closely will know that that can have an impact. It means that we’ve actually had economic growth of at least 2 per cent in annual terms for the last 2 quarters because they’ve revised up the last quarter and that flows through to the calculation for this quarter. That’s a big part of the story.

Another part of the story is inventories particularly when it comes to coal and gold, that’s making a detraction from growth here. But overwhelmingly, the story here is about the engines of private sector growth firing up and we want to see that continue. And so much of our agenda is about encouraging our economy to grow, encouraging our private sector to make great investment decisions. And looking at these National Accounts today one of the reasons I describe them as positive and promising is because we need this investment to flow, to make our economy more productive, more resilient, over time and so it’s very welcome from that point of view. Obviously want to see the economy continue to grow and we want to make sure that the private sector continues to be the main reason for that growth.

On interest rate decisions, as you know, I don’t predict or pre‑empt decisions taken independently by the Reserve Bank and its board. There’s already been 3 interest rate cuts this year, that’s one of the reasons why mortgage repayments are down $2.1 billion, that’s providing some welcome relief to people who are still doing it tough.

Journalist:

Treasurer, last week you said that you would be looking closely at today’s GDP figures before making a call on whether to continue energy rebates. Given the GDP print is softer than what economists predicted, does this make a stronger case that households need that continued support?

Chalmers:

Well, we’ve made it really clear that the electricity bill rebates are an important part of our budget but not a permanent feature of our budget. There were important reasons for us to introduce and extend on a couple of occasions the electricity bill rebates that are in the budget. We have been really upfront with people all along and said people shouldn’t expect that to be a permanent feature of the budget.

We’re still putting the finishing touches on the mid‑year budget update. These numbers that we’ve got today are an important input in to putting that document together. We’ll make all of those final decisions, but as we’ve said now I think on countless occasions people shouldn’t expect those electricity bill rebates to go on forever.

Journalist:

How confident are you –

Chalmers:

We’ll go back to [inaudible] and then back to you.

Journalist:

Treasurer, would reducing government spending help prevent a rate rise next year?

Chalmers:

Well if public spending is the key determinant of interest rate decisions, we’ve had 3 interest rate cuts this year. And 2 of those came after the Budget that Katy and I handed down in March. But overwhelmingly, the pressure on inflation and some of the issues that the Reserve Bank grapples with, you know, they haven’t been identifying public spending as part of the story.

Even today when the Governor was asked about the relationship between budgets and monetary policy decisions she was speaking I think overwhelmingly about global conditions. The Governor has made it clear on other occasions that we’re a bit different to other countries, we’ve had those 2 surpluses, we’ve got a much stronger, much smaller deficit in our third year. Debt to GDP is a fraction of a lot of other countries.

We’ve got the peaking debt down. There’s $200 billion almost less debt in our budget than when we came to office and so we’ve been managing our budget in the most responsible way that we can. We’ve seen 3 interest rate cuts already this year. I think the pressures on inflation and some of the considerations around interest rates are not primarily about the budget position but if they are we’ve seen those 3 cuts already this year.

Journalist:

How confident are you that real wages will continue to improve?

Chalmers:

Well we’ve seen 2 consecutive years now of real wages growth and real wages were falling sharply when we came to office. We’ve deliberately turned that around. It’s been a really a key feature of our economic plan to make sure that more people are working, earning more and keeping more of what they earn with the tax cuts. Obviously the real wages calculation is about inflation and it’s about the wage price index.

We’ll update our forecasts in the usual way in the mid‑year budget update, but already to have those 8 consecutive quarters of real wages growth is a key reason why incomes have recovered in our economy and why we’ve seen over the last year or so the increase in consumption. We’ve been able to make sure that we get wages moving again, interest rates have been cut 3 times this year, we’re providing cost‑of‑living relief in other ways and that’s all important ways that we help people who are still doing it tough.

Journalist:

With inflation ticking up again do you have any concerns that it might over take wages growth in the new year?

Chalmers:

Well obviously we want to see a real wages growth continue for as long as it can and we’ll update our forecasts for the CPI and the WPI in the usual way over time. But those 2 years of real wages growth shouldn’t be lightly dismissed, it’s a key reason why we’re seeing this recovery in incomes including incomes per person. When we came to office living standards were falling sharply, real wages were falling sharply, housing investment was falling sharply, business investment on average was [inaudible] and we’ve been turning that around and those are the reasons why we’re so encouraged by these numbers today.

Journalist:

Michelle Bullock has come out and told estimates that we’re facing a chronic under build of new homes and we’re likely to miss your target of 1.2 million new homes by the end of the year. What more can be done to ensure that we do those targets and do you believe that you will miss them?

Chalmers:

Well first of all, the target is not for the end of the year.

Journalist:

End of the decade.

Chalmers:

No, understood. No problem. Look, I wasn’t able to watch Governor Bullock’s testimony, as it turns out I was actually at a ceremony to open 500 new apartments at Bowen Hills near where you work in that wonderful neighbourhood around where so much of the action will be for the Olympics. Look, we’ve acknowledged as a government that we need to build more homes. That’s the whole reason why we’ve got this ambitious but achievable housing target for 2029. It’s why we’re throwing so much time and energy and resources in to building the homes that Australians desperately need, because we recognise that this is one of the defining challenges in our economy.

Now, that target is ambitious but it is achievable if everybody does their bit and the Commonwealth is doing its bit, $43 billion in investment working with the states, with local governments, working with the industry, working with investors, providing all kinds of different ways that we’re encouraging the building of more properties in our local communities. And again, I refer you to the National Accounts today because today’s National Accounts show that investment in new homes is growing strongly. It’s actually one of the key stories out of the National Accounts today. So we need to maintain that momentum. We need to build that momentum and if we do that, if we keep, if everyone does their bit we can hit that very ambitious target.

Journalist:

Who is not doing their bit?

Chalmers:

Well I’m not putting it that way, I’m just saying we all need to do our bit. The Commonwealth is doing its bit, we’re working closely with the states and local governments, the industry we’re engaged with very closely. Clare O’Neil, the minister, is doing a heap of good work in this area. We all need to keep up the effort.

We’ve got these very strong housing investment numbers in the National Accounts today, that’s a good thing, but we need to sustain them. We need to sustain this momentum. We still don’t have enough homes because of basically the missed opportunity of the decade before we came to office. So we’re playing catch up, we’re doing everything we can, and we’re working closely with all of the relevant parties to build the homes that Australians desperately need.

Journalist:

Just to circle back to the rebate question. It’s expected that inflation will remain sticky as it stands and households won’t have that $75 a quarter rebate from January. Treasurer, what do you have to say to families that are staring down the barrel of an expensive December and new year and currently don’t have certainty on whether they can factor in a potential rebate into their budgets in the new year?

Chalmers:

Well we understand that even with the very substantial progress we’ve made on inflation and real wages and per person incomes, we know that a lot of Australians are still doing it tough. And that’s why we’re rolling out very substantial cost‑of‑living relief, cheaper medicines, more bulk billing to take pressure off family budgets. There are 2 more tax cuts on the way as well.

Now we’re rolling out very substantial cost‑of‑living help in the most responsible way that we can. Which is cognisant of all of the pressures that we have on the budget. So the electricity bill rebates are an important part of the cost‑of‑living help that we have been providing but they’re not the only part of it. Tax cuts are a big part of the story, getting wages growing again, the increase in Commonwealth Rent Assistance, cheaper medicines, more bulk billing, all of this is about trying to alleviate some of the pressure that we understand people are still facing right now.

Journalist:

You say that households shouldn’t expect those rebates to continue, you have said that repeatedly. But don’t they deserve some certainty either way, whether that’s you guys ruling it out completely? Why keep that limbo going?

Chalmers:

Well, we make these decisions from budget update to budget update in the usual way. It’s not especially unusual to make those decisions close to the finalisation of our budget updates. This is a government that manages the budget in a really responsible way, in a way that would be unrecognisable to our predecessors and part of that is to make sure that we do the work, in the lead up to budgets and in the lead up to mid‑year budget updates, to only commit to what we can afford.

There’s a lot of pressures on the budget. We’re rolling out cost‑of‑living help in the most responsible way that we can and we’re being upfront with people and saying those energy bill rebates and we’ve said now for a couple of years are not a permanent feature of the budget. That we shouldn’t expect them to continue forever and we’ll make a decision on them in the coming days.

Journalist:

What would persuade you to keep the rebates?

Chalmers:

I’m obviously not going to go in to all the conversations that we have, the Expenditure Review Committee or as a Cabinet, or my colleagues –

Journalist:

Yeah, but what would persuade you to keep it, what would be some of the factors that would make you think, we should keep this?

Chalmers:

Well again, I’d answer the question in precisely the same way I started answering it a moment ago. I’ll give you the same answer. We’re providing cost‑of‑living help in a range of ways. Not just in that way. We’ll weigh up all of the various considerations in every budget and in every budget update we consider the economic conditions, we consider the fiscal pressures and we do what we responsibly can to help people.

We’ve been doing that in a range of ways, not just one way over the course of the last couple of years. We’ve got the National Accounts now, that’s really the last key input before we make a remaining handful of decisions in the lead up to the mid‑year budget update. Not long to wait now, it will be this month, and when we release that we’ll provide all of the numbers and all of our reasoning behind the numbers.

Thanks very much.

Priority status to build more public and community homes

Source: Australian Capital Territory – State Government




Priority status to build more public and community homes – 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 03/12/2025 – Joint media release

The ACT Government has passed new laws to fast-track the delivery of more homes for the Canberrans who need them most. The Bill was opposed by the Canberra Liberals.

This new legislation has been expanded and now applies to both public and community housing, removing third party appeals and providing certainty around their construction.

This suite of reforms will support the delivery of our ambitious housing agenda to enable 30,000 new homes by 2030. This includes 5000 new public, community and affordable homes.

Public social and community homes default priority status 

Since 2019 there have been 20 appeals on public housing projects, delaying over 100 public homes in well-located areas, close to shops, services and jobs.

More than 75 per cent of these saw ACAT upholding the original approval, or specifying very minor amendments, but the process delayed projects for up to a year.

Efforts to increase the number of public homes in these areas have also been clustered in certain districts of Canberra with nearly 95 per cent of these being isolated to the inner-north and inner-south.

The new laws bring the ACT into line with other New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland and Western Australia where appeals are also not permitted for public and community housing projects.

Attribute to Minister for Planning and Sustainable Development Chris Steel:

“These housing reforms will support the rapid delivery of social housing for those most in need.

“Unfair third party appeals of public housing projects don’t exist in major states. The only outcomes of these appeals is to delay to much needed public and community housing by up to a year, depriving the most vulnerable Canberrans of shelter.

“The Government worked closely with the social and affordable housing sector to make sure that genuine community housing projects could  benefit from this streamlined approvals process in addition to public housing.

“This has been a collaborative effort across the housing sector, and I’m pleased we’ve been able to get the legislation to a point where we have secured the support of the Assembly to get it done.

“It tells us a lot that the major first decision of the Parton Liberals is to oppose reforms that make it easier to build more housing. They are the same old conservative Canberra Liberals.”

Attribute to Minister for New Homes and Suburbs Yvette Berry:

“With too many Canberrans on the waitlist for public housing, many of whom are experiencing a range of vulnerabilities, the ACT Government must pull out all the stops to get homes built as quickly as possible.

“The Territory Priority Projects process provides a pathway to achieve this goal, while maintaining the normal development application process that still enables neighbours and other parties to be consulted and have voice in the process.”

– Statement ends –

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

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Increasing protections and improving justice for victims of family, personal and sexual violence

Source: Australian Capital Territory – State Government

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 03/12/2025

Today the ACT Government has introduced significant legislative reforms designed to increase protections and improve justice for victims of family, personal and sexual violence.

The Family, Personal and Sexual Violence Legislation Amendment Bill 2025 contains proposed amendments to establish the Family Violence Safety Notice Scheme, improve victim-survivors’ experiences in court proceedings, and make character references irrelevant in sentencing for sexual offences against children.

Attorney-General Tara Cheyne said the legislative changes proposed would improve court processes for victim-survivors and empower police to take immediate action to help prevent family, personal and sexual violence.

“The ACT Government is committed to addressing these damaging types of offending and reducing the impact and re-traumatisation that can be involved in pursuing justice through the legal system,” Minister Cheyne said.

“The new Family Violence Safety Notice Scheme will give police a greater ability to provide immediate protection for people at risk of family violence by allowing senior police officers to issue short-term notices when attending family violence incidents.

“These notices offer police an additional tool to protect victim-survivors, alongside existing powers to arrest and charge.”

The new scheme will replace the current After-Hours Order Scheme, which requires police to apply to a magistrate for a short-term protection order, and is only available outside business hours.

Family Violence Safety Notices can be issued at any time where there is a risk of family violence and immediate protection is required to ensure safety or prevent substantial property damage.

“This is a landmark reform to equip police officers with a stronger and more responsive tool to combat family and sexual violence,” Minister Cheyne said.

“It provides both an immediate response in the interests of a person’s safety, while also providing protection of up to 14 days, providing time for the protected person to seek and access support, including long-term protection through applying for a Family Violence Order.

“Importantly, in applying for and issuing a Safety Notice, police the views of the affected person and respondent, any history of family or personal violence by the respondent, and any hardship that may be caused to the respondent or anyone else by the issuing of the FVSN.

“Further, parties to an FVSN may apply to the court for the FVSN to be amended or revoked, allowing for judicial oversight and procedural fairness.”

The Bill will also remove the consideration of “good character” in sentencing people who are found guilty of sexual offences against children.

This amendment clarifies that all child sexual abuse offenders, regardless of their relationship status in relation to the victim-survivor, are treated equally by prohibiting any consideration of ‘good character’ during the sentencing for all child sexual abuse matters.

“We can no longer ignore the reality that someone guilty of a child sex offence has gained access to a child or children because there is a perception that they are of ‘good character’. This perception means they have been trusted with a child or children, giving them the access that resulted in the abuse being committed,” Minister Cheyne said.

“It is perverse that the same good character that facilitated the child sexual abuse, can then be presented as a mitigating factor during the offender’s sentencing.”

“Through this amendment, if you are found guilty of a sexual offence against a child, then evidence relating to your character or standing in the community, such as subjective qualities like someone saying you are ‘a good bloke’, will not reduce the severity of the sentence imposed.”

The reforms have been directly informed by and implement recommendations from the Your Reference Ain’t Relevant campaign, co-founded by survivors Harrison James and Jarad Grice.

Quote from Harrison James, Survivor and Co-Founder of the Your Reference Ain’t Relevant Campaign:

“For too long, survivors have had to sit in courtrooms and listen to their abuser described as a ‘good person,’ even when that reputation is what gave them access to the child they harmed. Today the ACT Government has shown it is prepared to lead the way in ending that injustice. I’m deeply grateful to Attorney-General Tara Cheyne for her courage and for standing with survivors. “


Media contact:
Harrison James welcomes media contact on 0452 603 044.

– Statement ends –

Tara Cheyne, MLA | Media Releases

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