Acton Waterfront park gifted new Ngunnawal name

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

An artist’s impression of the Acton Waterfront park

The future public park at the Acton Waterfront will be known as Ngamawari (pronounced ‘nar-mar-wa-ree).

The name was gifted by local Ngunnawal representatives at a special ceremony today, which also saw the National Capital Authority (NCA) announce works approval for the new park.

Ngamawari – which means ‘cave place’ in Ngunnawal language – recognises the cultural significance of the limestone caves flooded during the creation of Lake Burley Griffin.

The name signifies these landmarks and the important role they played for shelter and art along the Molonglo River.

“Ngamawari reflects the truth telling story of this place – a place of significance to Ngunnawal people” Ngunnawal Elder Dr Caroline Hughes AM said.

“There is so much Ngunnawal history in this place that has not been told such as the limestone caves that have been hidden by Lake Burley Griffin at a time when Ngunnawal were excluded from the conversation and development of Canberra.

“Ngamawari celebrates and educates all about Ngunnawal Country, history and language,” she said.

City Renewal Authority CEO Malcolm Snow said the idea to recognise Ngunnawal culture has been a popular theme in public consultations on the Acton Waterfront project.

“We have been working closely with the Ngunnawal community representatives and artists on how the park’s design can celebrate and embed Ngunnawal culture and history,” Mr Snow said.

“It is now a great honour to accept this Ngunnawal-language name, which will help forge the identify for what will become a major Canberra destination featuring an adventure playground, cafes, native gardens and events lawns.

“Thank you to the Ngunnawal community for giving this name to the Acton Waterfront – it is precious gift that will leave its mark on future generations of visitors to the park.”

The City Renewal Authority wishes to thank the United Ngunnawal Elders Council, Dhawura Ngunnawal Caring for Country Committee and the Winanggaay Ngunnawal Language Aboriginal Corporation for sharing this name, as well as their insights and knowledge of the area.

The official naming comes as the NCA has provided works approval for the development of the public park following their recent public consultation.

A tender process is currently underway for the delivery of early works in 2024. It is expected the temporary park will open to the public in 2025-26, followed by the permanent park in 2028.

Please note: The new park name will officially come into effect once publicly notified on the ACT Legislation Register in early 2024.


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Swimming this summer? Read this first

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

It’s important to take extra care when swimming in inland waterways.


In brief:

  • Whether you’re swimming a pool or in a waterway, it’s important to keep safe.
  • This story shares safety advice for swimming in backyard and public pools and inland waterways.

There’s nothing like a swim to cool off in the hot weather.

Don’t have a backyard pool? Canberra’s public pools are all open for summer. Plan a visit to:

  • Dickson Aquatic Centre
  • Manuka Pool
  • Canberra Olympic Pool
  • Gungahlin Leisure Centre
  • Stromlo Leisure Centre
  • Lakeside Leisure Centre.

Canberra also has inland waterways where you can swim.

Wherever you go, these simple guidelines will help you keep safe in and around the water this summer.

Go prepared

The ACT has several inland waterways, including Kambah Pool and Cotter Bend.

Remember to take extra care when swimming in inland waterways. Hazards are always present and can catch you by surprise.

It doesn’t matter how confident you are in and around the water. You can prepare by following safety advice:

  • Avoid going alone.
  • Tell a responsible person where you are going. Let them know when you plan to return, and what to do if you are late.
  • Always closely supervise children who are in or near the water.
  • Know your limits – consider your swimming ability and endurance before visiting waterways. If unsure, stay away from the water’s edge.
  • Always wear a life jacket when boating and fishing.
  • Understand the dangers. Water depth in rivers can change suddenly and there may be rocks and logs hidden below the surface. Surfaces can be slippery, and currents may be stronger than they appear.
  • Be careful when getting into the water and avoid diving.
  • Check the weather conditions and be prepared for changes regardless of the forecast.
  • Do not enter the water if signs advise of hazards and never enter the water in times of flood.
  • Do not consume alcohol if you are planning on entering waterways or need to supervise children in or near the water.
  • Be prepared for an emergency. Take a first aid kit and ensure people in your group are trained to use it.
  • Carry multiple means of communication, including waterproof options if you are boating or fishing. Check whether your phone has range before entering the water.
  • Locate and keep a look out for emergency phones near waterways in case you do not have good reception.

Visit the City Services website to check current advice on conditions in Canberra’s lakes, ponds and rivers.

Be a backyard lifeguard

Whether it’s your own pool or you’re visiting someone else’s, be a backyard lifeguard. Follow these steps to keep everyone safe this summer.

  • Check that your pool fences, gates and other barriers are secure
  • Keep pool barriers clear of objects and plants that kids can use to climb into pool areas
  • Ensure the pool gate is always shut
  • Actively supervise children in and around the pool
  • Know how to perform CPR
  • Teach kids to swim and be safe around pools
  • Pool toys and floatation aids are for fun, not safety. Stay close and supervise children
  • Avoid alcohol when swimming.

New rules for home swimming pools in the ACT commence on 1 May 2024. Find out more at Home swimming pool safety reforms – Environment, Planning and Sustainable Development Directorate – Planning (act.gov.au)

For information on being a backyard lifeguard visit planning.act.gov.au/backyardlifeguard.

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ACT’s new planning system now live

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The system will better fit a growing and sustainable Canberra.

The ACT’s new planning system is now in effect.

This milestone comes after extensive research and work with the community and industry to create the new framework for the city.

The ACT Government has also released an update to the City Plan and a new City Centre Urban Design Guide, which will guide development and design in the City Centre.

The new, modern planning system will better fit a growing and sustainable Canberra.

It will support delivery of the 100,000 dwellings required to meet population and demand by 2050.

The new planning system will allow the Government to plan for this growth in a measured and sustainable way.

It will mean Canberrans have the services and infrastructure they need now and into the future

The Government has also released an update of the 2014 City Plan today which provides a clear vision and framework for future development in the City Centre as a place for all Canberrans.

The City Plan is supported by a new City Centre Urban Design Guide that works alongside the previously announced Housing and Urban Design Guides to improve development outcomes and guide the design and assessment of developments in the City Centre.

Training programs on the new planning – for both community and industry – have been occurring since September.

Development applications under the previous system will continue to be assessed.

More information about the Planning System and the City Plan is available on the ACT Government’s new Planning website.


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Registrations open for Solar for Apartments Program

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

Owners corporations can now register for assistance to install rooftop solar in eligible apartment complexes in the ACT.

Owners corporations in the ACT can now register for the Solar for Apartments Program.

The program provides owners corporations up to $100,000 in grant funds and access to a zero-interest loan, to install rooftop solar in eligible apartment complexes in the ACT.

Eligible owners corporations need to apply to the Solar for Apartments program to get funding.

Half the funds are in the form of a grant and half is funded by a zero-interest loan that the owners corporation will need to pay back.

The program aims to allow more Canberrans to enjoy cheaper, cleaner energy from solar and further support the ACT’s transition to a low-emissions future.

The program is co-funded up to $3.6 million under the Solar Banks Initiative of the Australian Government and the ACT Government’s Sustainable Household Scheme.

The benefits of these solar installations will flow to the residents. Many residents in multi-unit developments are renters.

This announcement comes as the Sustainable Household Scheme reaches a significant milestone of 20,000 applications.

This amounts to more than 1 in 10 Canberra households accessing the scheme to address cost of living pressures while reducing their carbon footprint.

It is anticipated over 2,100 households will benefit from the Solar for Apartments Program, which could provide a 35 per cent reduction in electricity bills for Canberrans living in apartments.

This program supports the ACT Government’s commitment to being a global leader in climate action and allows apartment households to share in the benefits of solar.

Brighte is the exclusive finance and administration provider of the ACT Government’s Sustainable Household Scheme.

“Brighte is proud to continue supporting the ACT Government’s nation leading programs by extending finance to apartments, making sustainability more inclusive, affordable and accessible to everyone,” Brighte founder and CEO Katherine McConnell said.

For more visit the Climate Choices website


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New brewing ‘apprenticeship’ for craft beer industry

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

Richard Watkins, Co-owner and Head Brewer at BentSpoke Brewing

The ACT Government is working with Canberra’s local brewers to deliver a new pilot project to train Canberra’s next beer brewers.

‘Brewed to Succeed’ is proposed to be a state-of-the-art training program to meet the diverse requirements of Canberra’s local brewing industry.

Bentspoke Brewing approached the ACT Government and CIT in 2022 about the need for skilled workers in artisan fermented products in the beer and wine industries.

The Canberra Institute of Technology (CIT) is now partnering with BentSpoke to deliver a new workplace program to strengthen local brewing businesses and train more employees in the specific skills sets they need to have a great career.

The pilot will test the potential delivery of a full-time course through CIT, incorporating food production, distilling, wine making and brewing.

“The new brewing course at CIT will empower newcomers to enter the beer industry with the necessary knowledge to hit the ground running, while simultaneously enhancing the skills of employed brewers, thereby strengthening and supporting the local brewing industry,” Richard Watkins, Co-owner and Head Brewer at BentSpoke Brewing, said.

In the ACT, 0.7 per cent of the labour force is in the brewing industry – more than double the 0.3 per cent proportion in Victoria and Western Australia.

The initial program will provide teacher training for an existing expert brewer who will then deliver the course to around 12 students employed in the industry.

The training model could serve as a basis for future programs in other emerging industries facing skills shortages where accredited training isn’t currently available.

Support for more brewing skills is part of the ACT Government’s Skilled to Succeed agenda, and forms part of the Skills Industry Action Plan for the Tourism and Hospitality Sector, which will be released in the coming months.

The program is being delivered by CIT in collaboration with local brewers, following a successful grant of nearly $80,000 through the Skilled to Succeed Innovation Grants Program.

The first students are expected to undertake training from April 2024.


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Investing in Canberra’s future through education infrastructure

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The Infrastructure Plan will support all Canberrans to access inclusive, high-quality education close to where they live.

The Education update of the ACT Government’s Infrastructure Plan was released today.

Key elements include:

  • a new college in Gungahlin
  • the modernisation and expansion of both Majura Primary School and Garran Primary School
  • a new CIT campus in Woden
  • planning for more schools in the Molonglo Valley.

The Infrastructure Plan update outlines projects with a total value of more than $1 billion, to build and renew public education and training facilities to meet the needs of a growing Canberra.

It is the biggest investment in education infrastructure in ACT Government history.

As the Territory continues to grow, the ACT Government is building new public schools and upgrading education facilities across Canberra.

This will support all Canberrans to access inclusive, high-quality education close to where they live.

In addition to new, modernised and expanded schools across Canberra, the update also makes clear the scale of work delivering maintenance and upgrades across the public-school network.

This includes works at 37 public schools as part of the Public School Infrastructure Renewal Program, roof replacements works in schools across the city, infrastructure investment to support inclusive education and planning work for future expansions of capacity in key growth areas.

Building new educational and skills facilities and upgrading existing ones will meet the needs of students, teachers and families into the future.

The new CIT Campus in Woden will see new educational and community facilities built in a central, well-connected area, complemented by a new light rail enabled public transport interchange.

This project also includes the relocation of the Yurauna Centre from the city to CIT Bruce campus.

The new centre will offer courses in literacy, numeracy, communication and vocational training in a culturally sensitive environment, tailored to the need of First Nations people in the region.

The full Education update of the ACT Government’s Infrastructure Plan can be found at www.builtforcbr.act.gov.au/infrastructure-plan.


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ACT students shine at Australian Training Awards

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

A proud Ngemba woman, Emma Brown received the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Student of the Year Award.

ACT students Emma Brown and Cyrus Wren have been recognised at the Australian Training Awards.

The national awards showcase best practice in vocational education and training (VET).

A proud Ngemba woman, Emma received the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Student of the Year Award, while Cyrus was named runner-up Trainee of the Year.

Emma was awarded for her achievements during a 12-month Indigenous Apprenticeship Program (IAP) with CIT Solutions.

Her program combined a Diploma of Government with full-time employment as a Customer Service Officer with the Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA).

Struggling with dyslexia at school and becoming a mum at 17, Emma said she never imagined pursuing further education.

“I really didn’t enjoy school growing up, it was only when I got to college and I started to get support from teachers who recognised that I need to learn in a different way. They helped me believe in myself.

“I never thought in a million years I’d want to continue study, but now I’m looking at other CIT courses I could do, including what’s available through CIT Yurauna [CIT’s dedicated Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Educational Centre of Excellence],” she said.

The IAP aims to prepare First Nations learners for successful careers in the Australian public services and has had more than 1500 graduates in the past four years.

While she dedicated her award to her son, Zachary, Emma said she’d also surprised – and motivated – herself.

“I wanted to show him good work ethic and that anything’s possible if you put your mind to it. It was about creating a better future for me and my son,” she said.

Like Emma, Cyrus didn’t enjoy high school.

He soon realised he needed a different pathway, and his year coordinator suggested an Australian School-based Apprenticeship (ASbA).

“It seemed like a bit of a no-brainer,” he said.

Cyrus completed work experience at the ACT Education Directorate, which led to an ASbA studying a Certificate III in Business.

“And from that point in time everything started to change for me,” he said.

He accepted a full-time traineeship with the Directorate’s Career and Vocational Pathways team.

He now works as a Career and Transitions Project Support Officer and is studying a Diploma of Project Management.

As part of his role, he has presented to over 1500 students on opportunities in vocational education and training (VET).

“I have a powerful, impactful story I would like to share with people all across the country to help them understand how VET can change their life,” Cyrus said.

The awards were held in Hobart on 17 November 2023.

Cyrus found the ASbA pathway life-changing.


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Another win for National Multicultural Festival

Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

The National Multicultural Festival will now represent Canberra at the National Tourism Awards.

The National Multicultural Festival won the Major Festivals and Events category at the Canberra Region Tourism Awards during a ceremony on 24 November.

The hosts of the 2023 festival were congratulated for attracting a record-breaking crowd of 380,000 people in February.

The National Multicultural Festival will now represent Canberra at the National Tourism Awards in Darwin early next year.

The Multicultural Festival unites 170 cultures and celebrated its 25th anniversary this year.

The award affirms Canberra’s position as a proudly welcoming and inclusive city, and its success is an example of ACT Government and community working together.

The Canberra Region Tourism award recognised the National Multicultural Festival for creating economic impact, increasing visitor numbers to the ACT and community participation in delivering the festival.

It’s not the first award for the festival this year, with a previous win in the Best Community Event category at the Australian Event Awards in September.

This award recognised the benefits of an event in building communities and community engagement.

Planning is well underway for the next National Multicultural Festival that will be held from Friday 16 February to Sunday 18 February 2024.


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Investing in regional road upgrades in Victoria

Source: Workplace Gender Equality Agency

The Albanese Government is supporting regional Victorian councils with critical road upgrades through the Safer Local Roads and Infrastructure Program (SLRIP).  

$13.7 million will help fund five new projects which will mean safer and more resilient roads for communities across the state. 

The Swan Hill Council will receive almost $5 million for the Karinie Street Reconstruction Project. This project will include drainage improvements, kerb and channel replacement, an all-abilities shared-path, road line-marking and improved lighting.

In Leongatha South, the South Gippsland Shire Council will receive $2.4 million to relocate the Simons Lane intersection with the Bass Highway to a safer new location. The relocated intersection will incorporate dedicated turn lanes, road pavement improvements and lighting.

Other projects receiving funding include: 

  • $878,080 for Yarriambiack Shire Council to widen the Banyena Pimpinio Road in Murtoa.  
  • $5 million for Greater Shepparton City Council to upgrade the Goulburn Valley Highway (Numurkah Road) and Hawkins Street intersection in Shepparton.
  • $490,000 for Yarriambiack Shire Council to widen Glenorchy Road in Rupanyup.

Through the upcoming Budget the Albanese Government is also providing additional funding to ensure the delivery of two important projects on the Princes Highway: 

  • an additional $2.6 million to support the delivery of the Princes Highway East – Lakes Entrance East – Princes Highway Safety Upgrades project.
  • an additional $2 million to support the delivery of the Princes Highway Intersection Upgrades – Pakenham to Beaconsfield. 

This new funding adds to the Australian Government’s existing $316.3 million investment in Victoria’s Princes Highway, which is a key route that connects people and freight throughout Victoria’s regions. 

The SLRIP was created by the Albanese Labor Government to ease the administrative burden on local councils as well as state and territory governments. 

With $200 million available each year, the Program is part of the Australian Government’s commitment to strengthen investment and support the delivery of safer and more productive roads across Australia. 

For more information about the Safer Local Roads and Infrastructure Program, visit: Safer Local Roads and Infrastructure Program

Quotes attributable to Minister for Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local Government Catherine King:

“We know that that local governments in the regions often require more funding to manage rising costs and increased pressure on transport infrastructure due to climate change and extreme weather events.

“The Albanese Government is committed to delivering the funding local councils need to improve road safety, allowing more money to be spent on projects and less on administration.

“We’ve increased funding under the Safer Local Roads and Infrastructure Program, as well as the Roads to Recovery Program and the Black Spot Funding Program to strengthen investment in safer and more productive local roads. 

“Whether it’s local roads or major freight and passenger routes like the Princes Highway, we are investing in regional Victoria’s roads right across the state.”  

Australian Education Union annual conference

Source: Murray Darling Basin Authority

Let me begin by acknowledging the Traditional Owners of the land on which we are meeting and pay my respects to elders past, present and emerging.

There is really only one job in politics I have ever wanted. And this is it. 

There is one reason more than anything else I wanted to do it. 

To do what we are doing right now.

Fixing the funding of our public schools and what it will do.

I don’t think there’s anything more important than what we do in education. 

It doesn’t just change lives. 

Its impact ricochets through generations. If you finish school, your kids are more likely to finish school.

It changes communities too and it changes countries. It’s changed ours. 

And public education does most of that heavy lifting. 

It’s where you’ll find the most disadvantaged children in this country. The children who need our help the most. 

And these are the schools that are most underfunded. 

Where the challenges are the greatest. Where the need is the greatest. 

This is what we’ve got to fix. We have got a long way to go, but a lot has happened in the last 12 months.  

This time last year I talked about the agreement I had just signed with Western Australia. 

That extra funding is now in WA schools. 

Last year I also reached agreements Tasmania, the ACT and the Northern Territory. 

And that funding is also now rolling out. 

There’s no public school in the country, apart from the ACT, where funding is at the Gonski level yet.

And there’s no public school in the country where the disadvantage is as bad or the funding is as low as the Northern Territory. 

Until this agreement. 

It was sitting at less than 80 per cent of the SRS. 

In other words, one in five children in the Northern Territory were effectively not being funded at all. 

This agreement fixes that. 

It doubles the amount of money that the Australian Government puts into public schools in the Northern Territory.

It means instead of reaching full funding in the second half of this century. 

They will reach it in the next few years.   

It means that some of the most disadvantaged public schools in this country will now be some of the best funded.

That’s the sort of thing that will change lives. 

It is the sort of thing that only Labor Governments do.

And since I last spoke at this conference, something else just as important has happened. 

We’ve doubled what we’re offering the states. 

We will fund the full 5 per cent. What you’ve always asked for. 

In return, we want the states to get rid of the 4 per cent that is spent on things like capital depreciation – what you have also been calling for. 

That’s a big shift. 

And South Australia has signed up to that, Victoria has signed up to that too and so has Western Australia. 

And I want to do the same across the country. 

This is a big change, that you have made happen. 

It still involves the Australian Government and state governments both chipping in. 

And it still means tying that funding to the sort of things that we know will help children who need extra help and support.

The sort of things that you’ve been calling for and asking for. 

Things like extra funding for catch-up tutoring and mental health support.

And it means being able to see where that money is going. Making sure it goes where it’s needed. The sort of transparency that you’ve been asking for. 

That’s where we stand today. 

I can promise you as long as I am in this job, I will not stop fighting for this.

What I can’t promise you is that this will survive if Peter Dutton becomes Prime Minister. 

That’s not a threat, it’s just the truth. 

You just have to look at what they did last time.

They ripped the guts out of funding for public schools.

The legislation we have put in place last year will make it hard for him, but not impossible.

The fact is if he wins he could still reverse that and rip this funding out.

That’s the truth. 

There is a lot more to do, I know that, but there is also a lot to fight to keep. 

I don’t think it is over the top to say that the future of public education is at stake. 

If this funding gets ripped out again, inevitably it means more kids will leave the public education system. More teachers will leave too, and more kids won’t finish high school. 

Our schools will become even more segregated than they are today. 

I know you know this, that’s why you’ve been fighting for this when others haven’t. 

Fighting for this for more than a decade. Keeping the cause alive. 

This wouldn’t be happening without you, that’s the truth. But the fight isn’t over yet. 

Something else I want to talk about today. Something worth celebrating. 

That’s the pay rises in the last 12 months in NSW, South Australia, Western Australia and the NT and the impact they are having. 

And the agreements you’ve struck that make a dent in things like workload. Things like more school development days, extra admin support and things like the right to disconnect.

I remember a primary school teacher telling me once that he carried 30 parents around in his pocket.  

And that high school teachers carry more than 100. 

They send him messages often late at night. Not thinking they are bothering him, but that’s just when they’ve got a spare minute when the kids are asleep, but still his phone would ping. 

That’s what the right to disconnect is all about. That’s why the agreements like the one struck in NSW are so important. 

There was some good news on Monday that shows the number of teachers last year jumped by about 8,000. That’s good. 

It doesn’t mean we don’t still have serious teacher shortages, of course we do, but what it shows, I think, is if you pay people more and respect the work they do, more people want to do the job and more people are likely to stay. 

You can also see the signs of this in the number of people enrolling in teaching courses this year – up 14 per cent. 

I’ve got to think that’s helped by pay increases, the agreements, but also things like the new Commonwealth Teaching Scholarships – worth about 40 grand or twice the cost of a teaching degree.

It’s an old school idea that we’ve brought back – we help you cut the costs while you are at uni and you pay it back by working in the public school system when you graduate. 

And from 1 July this year, for the first time ever, we’ll start providing financial support for teaching students while they do their prac.

It all helps. It’s all important. 

I’m not saying all the problems, all the challenges, all the shortages are fixed – they’re not, of course they’re not, but finally, for the first time in a long time things are starting to head in the right direction. 

Something else I want to mention today and that’s what we are doing before kids ever start kindy or prep, before they step into your classrooms. 

I think you know what I am about to say, education doesn’t start at 5 and what we do here, in those first five years, has a big impact on the sort of challenges school teachers face. 

And just like there’s a shortage of teachers in our schools, there’s a real shortage of early educators. 

A big part of that is just people leaving. 

When we won the election two and half years ago, they were leaving in droves.

Many just because they couldn’t afford to keep doing it. They could earn more at Coles or Woolies or Bunnings. 

That’s now changing. 

And that’s because of the 15 per cent pay rise that we’re now rolling out. 

The best example of that is what’s happening at Goodstart, the biggest childcare operator in the country.

At their centres job applications have now jumped by 35 per cent in the last few months. 

Expressions of interest have jumped by 50 per cent, and vacancy rates are down by a massive 28 per cent. 

We’re seeing that sort of thing right across the country.

Again, it turns out that, if you pay people more, more want to do the job.

And last week we did something else. We passed laws that will change the lives of some of the most disadvantaged children in Australia. 

You know these kids. The first time they step into a classroom environment is when they get to school. 

They never experience early education or don’t get enough of it. 

One of the reasons for that is a thing called the Activity Test. Something put in place by the Liberal Party that meant parents couldn’t get the Child Care Subsidy. 

And it meant that their kids start school behind. 

The legislation we passed through Parliament last week gets rid of that test and replaces it with a three day guarantee. 

A guarantee of three days a week of government supported early education and care 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 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. 

And that’s what happened last week.

Again, that’s the sort of reform that only Labor Governments do. And that our country needs. 

I know there is more to do. 

I don’t have to convince you of that. 

And I don’t expect you to stop fighting for it. 

I hope you don’t.  I know you won’t. 

So let me end by just saying thank you. 

Thank you for everything you do. 

Thank you for working with me over the last two and half years. 

And thank you for what you are about to do. 

To help make sure that Peter Dutton doesn’t get the chance to do a Tony Abbott 2.0 and rip everything we have done away.