Supporting stronger relationships in the Pacific through the opening of the Falepili Mobility Pathway ballot

The inaugural ballot for the Falepili Mobility Pathway will open to registrations from Tuvaluan citizens on 16 June, enabling up to 280 Tuvaluans each year to live, work and study in Australia.

As a low-lying island nation, Tuvalu is one of the most vulnerable countries in the world to the effects of climate change.

The opening of the mobility pathway is an important milestone in the delivery of the groundbreaking Falepili Union Treaty, which was signed in 2023 in response to Tuvalu’s request of Australia to help safeguard the future of Tuvalu.

The agreement supports the people of Tuvalu to live and thrive in their home through land reclamation and continued investments in infrastructure, education and health.

At the same time, it will provide a pathway for mobility with dignity as climate impacts worsen.

This is also the first agreement of its kind anywhere in the world that recognises that Tuvalu’s statehood and sovereignty will continue, notwithstanding the impacts of climate change-related sea level rise.

In 2025-26, Australia has committed $47 million in development assistance for important climate adaptation, telecommunications, infrastructure, health and education projects in Tuvalu.

This includes support for Tuvalu’s flagship national development initiatives, the Tuvalu Coastal Adaption Project (TCAP) and the Vaka Cable.

Our development partnership is advancing a peaceful, prosperous and resilient Tuvalu, which safeguards the future of Tuvalu’s people, identity and culture.

More information about the Falepili migration pathway including how to apply, is available on the Department of Home Affairs website.

Australia’s Minister for Foreign Affairs, Senator the Hon Penny Wong:

“The opening of the Falepili Mobility Pathway delivers on our shared vision for mobility with dignity, by providing Tuvaluans the opportunity to live, study and work in Australia as climate impacts worsen.

“The Pathway reflects the deep trust between our two countries, and we look forward to the contributions Tuvaluans will make to Australian society.”

Australia’s Minister for Home Affairs, The Hon Tony Burke MP:

“I am honoured to open the inaugural treaty stream visa ballot, delivering on Australia’s commitment to provide a special mobility pathway under the Falepili Union.

“This will provide Tuvaluan citizens the choice to live, work or study in Australia, bringing our nations closer together.”

Australia’s Minister for Pacific Island Affairs, The Hon Pat Conroy MP:

“The Falepili Union is the most significant agreement between Australia and a Pacific country since the agreements for PNG’s independence in 1975.

“The opening of the Mobility Pathway ballot is a landmark moment for Australia and Tuvalu.

“Alongside the Pacific Australia Labour Mobility scheme and the Pacific Engagement Visa, the Falepili migration pathway will strengthen relationships with our Pacific neighbours.

“It demonstrates how we are working in partnership with the Pacific to ensure our region remains peaceful, stable and prosperous.”

Arming civilians with chemical weapons will not make our communities safer

Background

The Finocchiaro CLP government has today announced they will initiate a 12 month trial allowing civilians to possess and use pepper spray for personal protection. The NT will be the second jurisdiction to do so, following WA.

Pepper spray is a dangerous substance for both the user and the person it is used against. It can cause permanent disability, vision impairment, breathing difficulties and burns. It is especially dangerous when used on children. It should not be made available in our community. 

The NT Greens oppose this trial and demand that the CLP listen to the experts and people with lived experience, and take a humane, evidence-based approach to tackling crime. The CLP must not enable the proliferation of chemical weapons in our community. 

Nic Carson, Acting Convenor of the NT Greens

“This policy is highly insensitive and offensive in the wake of two Blak deaths in custody in as many weeks. This initiative won’t make our communities any safer.” 

“If the CLP was genuinely committed to community safety, they’d be properly funding preventative and supportive measures, like therapeutic and rehabilitative programs, public housing, and crisis accommodation.”

“Legalising civilian use of a restricted chemical weapon risks encouraging vigilantism, which is already so often racially motivated against Aboriginal communities.”

“Pepper spray is banned for military use under the Geneva Convention. It is bad enough that the police have an exemption to use it. We cannot allow chemical weapons to become commonplace in our community.” 

“We have already seen the immense social and health impacts of pepper spray when used by police against civilians. We cannot make this chemical weapon more widespread in our community.”

Kat McNamara MLA, Member for Nightcliff

“This is vigilantism masquerading as personal safety and choice.” 

“The CLP is fuelling crime panic with this dangerous trial.”

“This is the CLP sending the message that they have given up actually improving community safety or preventing crime.”

“It’s foolish to think that we can control whose hands these weapons fall into. It’s only a matter of time before we start seeing pepper spray being misused.” 

“We want less weapons in our community, not more. This is an incredibly dangerous and ill-thought-out plan.

Latest ABS rental data a festering symptom of WA Labor’s tenancy reform failures

New ABS data that reveals rent has increased more in Western Australia than any other state or territory is the latest symbol of the Cook Labor Government’s total desertion of renters.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics’ latest insights into the rental market, which measures data from around 480,000 private rentals around the country, places the current median weekly rent in WA at a whopping $613.

The figure represents a 75 percent increase in average weekly rent in less than five years.

Prior to 2021, WA’s median weekly rent was $350 – a figure that had remained steady since at least June 2018, the earliest date included in the ABS dataset.

The updated data cements WA’s position as the second most expensive place to rent in Australia only after NSW, further highlighting the urgent need for meaningful residential tenancy reform.

Tim Clifford MLC, Greens WA spokesperson for housing and homelessness:

“For the almost one-third of Western Australians who rent, this latest ABS data is more than just a collection of statistics – it represents a daily reality marked by relentless stress, fear and uncertainty.

“The Cook Labor Government can pat itself on the back as much as it wants for its so-called progress on rental reform, but the data doesn’t lie.

“Labor is tinkering around the edges of the housing crisis and packaging it up as meaningful policy, which is pushing more and more Western Australians into acute housing stress and homelessness.

“The fact that rents began their seemingly endless upward trajectory at the same time WA Labor gained a supermajority at the 2021 election clearly shows where the government’s priorities lie. 

“They had every opportunity to enact meaningful rental reforms, like the ones recently introduced in the ACT. They chose not to – a decision that is crushing everyone from single parents to uni students. 

“WA Labor is trading our basic human right to a safe and secure place to live for the profits of their property developer mates. In a state as wealthy as WA, it is simply unacceptable.

“As the Greens (WA)’s spokesperson for housing and homelessness, I look forward to working alongside the community to deliver real reform to the Residential Tenancies Act, and I won’t stop calling out the government until that happens.”

AUKUS is unravelling in real time against Trumps’ America First world view

As the US begins an ‘America First review of AUKUS every rational observer can see that the deal is sinking and it’s time Australia abandoned ship before billions more are squandered.For more than 2 years it has been clear that the US will not supply Australia with second hand nuclear submarines in the early 2030’s as proposed under AUKUS, for the simple reason that they will not have any spare submarines.

Report after report from the independent Congressional Research Service has explained that in the early 2030’s the US will have critically low numbers of nuclear attack submarines. To meet this “valley” the US needs to produce close to 2.5 new nuclear attack submarines a year yet it producing only 1.3. Despite billions more invested in the US submarine industrial base, including from Australia, this has not lifted and likely will not lift due to workforce and industrial constraints.

The US knows this even if Australia wants to ignore it.The Greens identified that the AUKUS agreement has an escape clause for the US. It only requires the US to supply Australia with nuclear submarines if the US President certifies the transfer will not impact the US’ own defence capability. No US President, especially not Trump or any future President like Trump, will do this.

Senator David Shoebridge, Greens Spokesperson for Defence and Foreign Affairs, said:

“Donald Trump is erratic, reckless and careless of America’s allies and alliances but he does have one fairly constant trait, he puts US interests first and allies last.

“The USA is reviewing whether to scrap AUKUS while Australia has just handed the US an $800 million AUKUS tribute payment. We’re locked into a $375b deal that our “partner” might walk away from.

“It’s time for Parliament to launch a full inquiry into this dud deal, and allow critics of AUKUS a seat at the table, not just a nodding bunch of Labor and Coalition members.

“The USA reviewing AUKUS shows what the Greens have been warning about for years – this deal makes Australia a junior partner in America’s military strategy, not an equal ally.

“The Australian public deserves an urgent inquiry into AUKUS before Labor wastes more billions on submarines we will never see.

“It’s pretty clear what any US review into AUKUS will say, the US does not have any spare submarines to give to Australia.

“Trump will use this review to either terminate AUKUS and pocket the money already paid or extract an even more eye-watering sum from Australia to stay in the sinking project without any hard promises for the US to deliver.

“While Trump considers scrapping AUKUS, Australia remains committed to a spending billions each year on a deal that ties us to America’s military aggression against China.

“We need an independent defence and foreign policy, that does not require us to bend our will and shovel wealth to an increasingly erratic and reckless Trump USA.”

Nets out now!

The Greens have renewed calls for the Albanese government to reject a major expansion of shark nets used in the Queensland Shark Control Program.

It comes as yet another rescue operation is underway this morning to save a whale stuck in a shark net off the Gold Coast. 

The Queensland LNP Government has controversially announced plans to expand shark nets, in a move that would need exemptions from already weak federal environment laws. 

Greens spokesperson for healthy oceans, Senator Peter Whish-Wilson:

“The evidence of how damaging shark nets are to our marine wildlife is playing out before our eyes, yet the Queensland government continues to ignore the facts. 

“Shark nets cause mass destruction to marine wildlife, and evidence proves they do not make our beaches safe. In fact, evidence shows shark nets may attract sharks to beaches, where they can feed on marine wildlife caught in the nets.

“The LNP’s decision to expand the use of shark nets in Queensland’s Shark Control Program goes against the advice of its own government-commissioned report. It is a desperate distraction to create division within communities and is sadly straight out of the culture war playbook that the LNP loves.

“Under federal laws the Albanese government has a legal responsibility to protect endangered marine wildlife, including wildlife killed by lethal shark nets and drumlines deployed by the states of Queensland and NSW. 

“I’ve written to Minister Watt imploring him to use Labor’s upcoming commitment to reform Australia’s environmental laws to remove existing exemptions to state-controlled lethal shark net programs that risk federally protected species.”

“Governments can help keep ocean-goers safe by supercharging investment in modern-day alternatives to outdated and ineffective shark nets and lethal drum lines: investing in shark shield personal deterrent devices, shark spotter programs, eco-shark barriers, bite proof wetsuits, and increasing public education are amongst many emerging risk mitigation alternatives.

“A 2017 Senate Inquiry into shark risk mitigation recommended the federal government show national leadership on driving this investment, but this has so far been ignored – it’s time to change that.

Monash uni must dump dirty Woodside partnership

Australian Greens Deputy Leader and Higher Education Spokesperson Senator Mehreen Faruqi has called on Monash University to dump its partnership with climate wreckers Woodside Energy amid staff concerns about attempts to cover up a “climate change and energy transition” conference with the gas giant at the university’s Prato campus in June 2024.


Earlier this year, Senator Mehreen Faruqi introduced a Bill that requires universities to disclose and divest from any partnerships with dirty industries, including fossil fuel companies and weapons manufacturers. This Bill and Explanatory Memorandum can be found here.

Senator Mehreen Faruqi:

“Instead of covering up its partnership with Woodside, Monash should rip it up altogether.

“Universities should be places that advance the public good, not help morally bankrupt companies like Woodside greenwash their reputation and muddy the science as they torch the planet for profit.

“Last month, Woodside got approval from the Labor Government to proceed with the most polluting fossil fuel project in the Southern Hemisphere. That should be a red line for Monash University, especially since it will be young people, like Monash students, who will bear the brunt of climate collapse.

“The funding cuts of successive federal Governments have led universities to cozy up to companies like Woodside Energy and Elbit Systems which profiteer from the destruction of people and planet.

“The Albanese Government must commit to fully funding universities to be places of democracy, equity and public good.

“The Greens stand in solidarity with Stop Woodside Monash, and will keep pushing all universities to disclose and divest from dirty industries.”

Preliminary report of People’s Inquiry into Campus Free Speech on Palestine a damning indictment of uni management

Senator Mehreen Faruqi, Australian Greens Deputy Leader and Higher Education Spokesperson, who is a patron of the People’s Inquiry into Campus Free Speech on Palestine, has responded to the Inquiry’s recently released Preliminary Report (Report).

The Report outlines three preliminary findings:

1) Australian universities have restricted the free speech and academic freedom of staff and students on the question of Palestine;

2) Australian universities have targeted students and staff who express support for Palestine for surveillance and discipline;

3) Universities have used existing policies and devised new policies in an opaque way to target and censor students and staff expressing support for Palestine.

The People’s Inquiry will be holding public hearings in Sydney, Melbourne and over Zoom to allow university staff and students to share their experiences. Observers and media are welcome. Anyone interested in participating or observing the hearings should register here.

Senator Mehreen Faruqi:

“This preliminary report confirms what many students and staff already know- universities have trampled over the values of free speech and academic freedom in their cowardly attempts to shut down support for a free Palestine.

“Shutting down peaceful protests while bombs fall on Gaza is an act of complicity. By silencing those who speak out against genocide, our universities are not neutral — they are choosing to side with a brutal, apartheid regime.

“Academic freedom means nothing if it doesn’t extend to the most urgent moral issues of our time. The universities that have punished students and staff for standing with Palestine are revealing themselves not as spaces of free inquiry, but as instruments of political censorship.”

“The preliminary report makes for disturbing reading, showing that universities are turning into ideological battlegrounds where only state-sanctioned narratives are allowed to survive. This is not just about Palestine — it’s about the death of democratic space.”

“When institutions silence those demanding justice for Palestine, they send a chilling message: that truth is conditional, and that certain lives — Palestinian lives — are not worthy of solidarity. This is a stain on the conscience of Australian academia.

“Across Australian universities, students are already being surveilled, censured, and punished for standing in solidarity with Palestine. Adopting the IHRA definition will only shut down criticism of Israel and intensify the crackdown- universities must resist the pressure to do so.”

APAN President Nasser Mashni:

“This harrowing report lays bare what so many of us already knew: that speaking up for Palestine comes at a cost – to reputations, educational opportunities and careers.

“During the past 20 months, universities across the country have stepped into the role of censors and surveillance organisations, distorting existing policy or arbitrarily creating new policy in order to restrict student and staff free speech and protest rights, and undermine academic independence.

“Universities have also weaponised antisemitism and twisted the concept of psycho-social safety to suppress Palestinian voices and learning about Palestine, deliberately creating a climate of fear on campus for those who oppose institutional complicity in Israel’s ongoing genocide.

“This is textbook anti-Palestinian racism: the calculated silencing, erasure and dehumanisation of Palestinians and those who act in solidarity with them.

“The experiences documented by this report, and the hearings and recommendations to come, must mark a turning point for universities. They must defend civil liberties, sever their ties to genocidal Israel, and support Palestinian justice.”

Dr Max Kaiser, Executive Officer, Jewish Council of Australia:

“This report reveals a chilling reality: universities are surveilling, disciplining, and censoring students and staff who speak up for Palestine. Events cancelled, lectures monitored, students tracked via Wi-Fi—all justified by vague appeals to ‘wellbeing’ and false claims of antisemitism. As a Jewish organisation, we refuse to let our identity be weaponised to shut down legitimate debate. Universities must end these draconian practices and restore the right to speak freely on campus.”

James McVicar, Inquiry Panel Member and Education Officer for the National Union of Students:

“University students and staff have faced surveillance, discipline, and even expulsion for speaking out against the genocide in Gaza. History will remember what side our vice-chancellors and politicians stood on during this crime against humanity.”

Council to consider proposed $2 pool entry trial

Councillors will vote next week on implementing a $2 entry fee trial at Beresfield, Mayfield, Stockton and Wallsend swimming centres for the 2025/26 swimming season while retaining a $6 all-day entry fee for Lambton Pool.

The trial of a gold coin entry fee was proposed by Labor Councillors in February this year and would reduce the cost of a single admission at four of the five City of Newcastle-owned inland pools to enhance affordable access for the community.

The proposal was strongly endorsed during community consultation, with 95% of respondents supporting the trial and 92% indicating they would visit pools more frequently if entry fees were reduced.

Executive Manager Community and Recreation Lynn Duffy said City of Newcastle recognises the importance of its inland pool network to the community.

“Our swimming centres play a vital role in fostering community connection, providing accessible opportunities for physical activity, social engagement and water safety education,” Ms Duffy said.

“The trial will provide valuable data to allow Council to fully consider the risks and benefits of making this a feature of our inland pools for future seasons. 

“Our pools are among our most popular community facilities, attracting more than 430,000 visitors during the 2024/25 swimming season, which is the second highest attendance level across our five pools in more than 30 years.

“Lambton Park War Memorial Swimming Centre accounted for almost 60% of those visitors across the season and so will not be included in the $2 entry trial, to ensure we continue to support the safe and effective management of that facility and reduce the risk of overcrowding. Lambton will remain the most affordable pool with similar facilities in the region.

“However, proposed $2 entry fees at our four other inland pools including Mayfield and Wallsend, which are just 6km away from Lambton, would ensure easy access to reduced entry fees for all residents, with swimmers also enjoying continued free entry to the much-loved Newcastle and Merewether Ocean Baths.”

Implementation of the trial would require amendment to the management agreement between City of Newcastle and pool operator BlueFit.

The trial is expected to cost City of Newcastle $900,000 in 2025/26, which includes subsidising the reduced entry fees and accommodating higher operational expenses such as increased staffing and lifeguard services, and greater facility maintenance requirements.

City of Newcastle would also invest around $200,000 into enhanced security measures at all pools including CCTV and AI-driven safety technologies.

These costs have been added into the draft 2025/26 Budget, which is also set to be considered for adoption at next week’s Council meeting.

“We are committed to investing in and improving our pools to ensure they continue to meet the expectations and evolving needs of our community,” Ms Duffy said.

“Adequate lifeguard coverage, security measures, and crowd management strategies are essential in maintaining the safe and efficient operations of our pools while ensuring compliance with industry standards, balanced with affordability. 

“Safety remains the highest priority for our pool operations. Should this trial be implemented, City of Newcastle will work with BlueFit to plan for potential surges in attendance.”

City of Newcastle driving major EV charging expansion

A project to triple Newcastle’s public electric vehicle (EV) charging network is nearing completion, with 34 new charging ports being added across 11 locations citywide.

Local and visiting EV drivers have already started enjoying the convenience of an expanded charging network, with new chargers operational at Lambton, Wallsend, Hamilton, Stockton, Adamstown, Mayfield, Newcastle, Newcastle East and Wickham. Sites at Beresfield and Georgetown will be completed in the coming weeks.

EV chargers on Wharf Road in NewcastleEV chargers on Wharf Road in NewcastleExecutive Director Planning and Environment Michelle Bisson said the new public chargers installed by City of Newcastle will benefit the growing number of EV drivers and encourage others to make the switch.

“Our Newcastle Environment Strategy has a target of 52% of all new car registrations being EVs by 2030-31,” Ms Bisson said.

“The signs are already encouraging, with more than 1,350 EVs currently registered in Newcastle, a number which has risen by more than 1000% in the past four years.

“One of the challenges, however, is that many drivers lack access to off-street parking to charge an EV.

“Increasing the availability of public chargers in different suburbs is an important step in achieving our goal of driving EV uptake and creating a cleaner, quieter, and lower emissions city.”

The installation of the new chargers is co-funded by a $270,000 grant from the NSW Government as part of the EV Kerbside Charging Grants (the program).

Minister for the Hunter Yasmin Catley said the NSW Government has approved $4.1 million in co-funding to install 671 EV charging ports in 16 local government areas, including Newcastle, during round one of the program.

“Investing in EV charging infrastructure is about making sure Newcastle is keeping up with the growing demand for electric vehicles,” Minister Catley said.

“It’s not just about future-proofing our energy grid – it’s also about making every day travel easier and more accessible for everyone. 

“Having more charging points across Newcastle means people can drive with confidence, knowing they’ll have the support they need to charge up and get where they need to go.”

Member for Charlestown, Minister Jodie Harrison said, “this partnership between local and state government is delivering real, practical infrastructure that supports the growing number of EV drivers in our region.”

Member for Newcastle Tim Crakanthorp said, “this major expansion of EV charging stations shows Newcastle is leading the charge toward a cleaner, more sustainable future for our community.”

Member for Wallsend Sonia Hornery said, “expanding EV charging infrastructure in the Hunter is key to meeting our state’s emissions targets and supporting the transition to electric vehicles.”

“I’m very glad to see this investment in our suburbs and making the switch over to EV’s easier for those who choose to do it.”

Chair of City of Newcastle’s Strategy and Innovation Strategic Advisory Committee, Councillor Declan Clausen, welcomed the roll-out of public EV charging infrastructure, which is a key deliverable in the Newcastle Environment Strategy.

“Tripling the number of public EV chargers is an important step towards our city-wide transition to net zero emissions,” Cr Clausen said.

“These new chargers are strategically located within key local centres to support economic activity and benefit local businesses. They will be powered by 100% renewable energy that comes from a combination of our Summerhill Solar Farm and existing power purchase agreement with the Sapphire wind farm.

“To ensure Newcastle remains a leader in sustainable transport, City of Newcastle is also working to finalise a comprehensive EV and Low Emissions Transport Strategy to guide further investment.” 

The 34 new chargers add to existing infrastructure at Wharf Road, No. 2 Sportsground, Laman Street and Perkins Street in the CBD, to create a public EV charging network of 50 ports across 15 locations across Newcastle.

For more information, visit: https://newcastle.nsw.gov.au/about-us/news-and-updates/projects-and-works/ev-chargers

Minns Labor Government delivers record funding for NSW public school students

The Minns Labor Government is delivering on its commitment to improve essential services by fully and fairly funding public schools while delivering targeted reforms aimed at lifting student outcomes across NSW public schools.

In 2025, the NSW Government’s annual investment in every public-school student will be more than $17,000 — an increase of $2,203 per student compared to the former Liberal-National Government’s 2023 commitment.

This is a total investment of $13.1 billion by the NSW Government in the 2025 calendar year.

This follows the State and Federal Labor Governments signing a historic 10-year funding deal earlier this year that will see the Federal Government fund 25 per cent of the Schooling Resource Standard (SRS) by 2034 through an additional $4.8 billion 10-year commitment, ensuring that public schools are fully funded.

The remaining 75 per cent of SRS required to fully fund NSW public schools has already been delivered by the Minns Labor Government two years ahead of schedule through a total additional $5.6 billion investment over 10 years.

This is the largest funding commitment to public school students in NSW history, ensuring every child has access to free public education and the opportunity to reach their full potential, regardless of where they live.

In contrast, under the former State and Federal Liberal Governments, funding was capped at 95 per cent while driving up teacher vacancies to record levels of 3,300 vacancies.

This increased funding is being directed to expand critical early intervention programs, including:

Small Group Tuition Program

The Minns Labor Government is boosting the government’s small group tutoring program to $80 million, a $27 million increase on last year. This will help lift literacy and numeracy outcomes for our students.

This additional funding means the program is now available to nearly 60,000 students with an increase in the support available for students from 10 weeks of tutoring to 15 weeks.

This program provides targeted literacy and numeracy support in small groups (of two to five students).

It will introduce an assessment for students before and after the program to measure how much they’ve improved.

University teaching students will also be able to provide hands-on classroom experience as tutors — supporting student outcomes and strengthening the future teaching workforce.

The Australian Government Productivity Commission’s report on school funding identified that small-group tuition can improve learning outcomes in reading by up to 4 months, and mathematics outcomes by up to 3 months.

Year 1 Phonics Support Program

All Year 1 students currently take a short phonics test to help identify how strong their key early reading skills are. The check helps teachers quickly spot students who need extra help and provide them with support.

The Minns Labor Government is supporting this work with more classroom resources and targeted support with 144 schools  participating this year in a focused support program, providing extra training, tools and leadership support to lift phonics outcomes.                                                                                                                                                      

Year 1 Number Screening Check

The Minns Labor Government is trialling a new check across 165 public schools to assess Year 1 students’ early numeracy skills.

This is helping over 7,000 Year 1 students to identify gaps in key numeracy skills — including counting, ordering, and basic operations — giving teachers immediate insights to deliver tailored support.

The check is part of the government’s plan to lift student outcomes after years of decline in NAPLAN results.

Rebuilding public education

This is all part of the Minns Labor Government’s plan to rebuild public education and improve student outcomes by addressing over a decade of neglect by the former Government.

We are ensuring that students across NSW can attend a public school close to home, and that all families can access a world class education.

We know there’s much more to do, but we’re getting on with the job of rebuilding public education by:

  • Banning mobile phones in all public schools, which has meant reduced distractions in school;
  • Paying our teachers more, which has seen a 40 per cent drop in teacher vacancies since coming to office. That means more teachers in front our classrooms;
  • Making more than 16,000 teachers and school support staff on temporary contracts permanent;
  • Delivering a record $8.9 billion investment in new and upgraded schools across NSW.

Premier Chris Minns said:

“This is the single largest investment in public school students in NSW history, because every child deserves the opportunity to succeed, no matter where they live or what their background is.”

“We know that funding alone isn’t enough. That’s why we’re also delivering practical changes like early literacy and numeracy checks and expanded tutoring — to make sure students get the right support when they need it.”

Acting Minister for Education and Early Learning Courtney Houssos said:

“This announcement is a tribute to Deputy Premier Prue Car and her tireless work to deliver record education funding and ensure that every public school student can achieve their full potential.

“This is part of our work to reverse declining student outcomes after more than a decade of neglect and mismanagement under the former Liberal-National Government.  

“The Minns Labor Government is rebuilding the NSW public education system to ensur