Children’s Hospital at Westmead reaches major staffing milestone

The Children’s Hospital at Westmead (CHW) has become the latest NSW hospital to implement the Safe Staffing Levels initiative, as the Minns Labor Government continues to deliver on its promise to deliver staffing reform.

CHW recently completed a successful recruitment campaign of more than 19 FTE nurses in the Emergency Department (ED), to facilitate the Safe Staffing Level requirements.

The staffing boost will enable a one-to-one nursing care ratio for generally occupied ED resuscitation beds on all shifts, and one nurse to three generally occupied ED treatment spaces and ED short-stay unit beds on all shifts.

The Safe Staffing Levels Taskforce was established to oversee the rollout of the Government’s commitment of 2,480 FTE over four years. It includes key leaders from the NSW Nurses and Midwives’ Association (NSWNMA), NSW Health, and local health districts.

Phase one of Safe Staffing Levels has commenced in the level 5 and 6 emergency departments, which treat the most critically ill patients, and will then be progressively implemented across other key areas in a phased approach.

Implementing Safe Staffing Levels is just one of a range of measures that the NSW Government is embracing to build a more supported health workforce, including:

  • funding the equivalent of 1,112 FTE nurse and midwife positions on an ongoing basis
  • abolishing the wages cap and delivering the highest pay increase in over a decade for nurses and other health workers
  • beginning to roll out 500 additional paramedics in regional, rural and remote communities.

Minister for Health, Ryan Park:

“Safe staffing is one of the most significant reforms in the way our hospitals have been staffed in decades.

“Reaching Safe Staffing Levels in the Emergency Department at the Children’s Hospital at Westmead is a significant accomplishment and reflects the Minns Labor Government’s commitment to continuing to improve service delivery.”

Member for Parramatta, Donna Davis:

“We acknowledge how challenging it can be for families when a child is seriously unwell and requires treatment in hospital.

“This major staffing reform will support our dedicated frontline health staff to provide more timely, personalised care to some of our youngest, most vulnerable patients.”

More than 8,100 homes declared state significant

A further 20 projects have been declared as State Significant Development following recommendations from the Housing Delivery Authority (HDA).

Of these proposals, 18 are in metropolitan Sydney and 2 are in regional NSW.

If lodged and approved, this could create more than 8,100 homes, including affordable housing across New South Wales.

To date, 136 proposals amounting to more than 53,300 potential homes have been declared state significant.

Since the formation of the HDA, 47 projects have had Secretary Environmental Assessment Requirements issued and one Development Application has been lodged.

Recommendations from the HDA are published as required under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 before the SSD declaration.

This is all part of the Minns Government’s plan to build a better NSW with more homes and services, so young people, families and key local workers have somewhere to live and in the communities they choose.

The Ministerial Order can be found here.

$8.7 million upgrade announced for Singleton Police Station

The NSW Government is continuing its work of keeping communities safe, today announcing a $8.7 million investment to upgrade the Singleton Police Station.

The refurbishment will transform the existing station into a modern policing facility, ensuring officers have modern infrastructure and resources to carry out their important work across the Upper Hunter community.

The project includes a major refurbishment of the heritage-listed building — built in 1866 — and construction of a new two-storey wing.

The new wing will house the Crime Prevention Unit, Detectives Unit and Proactive Crime Unit, as well as General Duties and Duty Rooms to support day-to-day frontline work. Highway Patrol Command and Police Prosecutors will also have space allocated there.

It will include new staff facilities such as briefing and conference rooms, locker rooms, bathrooms and meal areas.

In addition to the new wing, the station’s existing heritage buildings will be refurbished and repurposed as secure storage areas, maintaining the historic value of the site while meeting operational needs.

An additional new ground floor extension will improve staff facilities and provide additional internal space, while on-site vehicle accommodation will support police mobility and improve response capabilities.

The upgraded station will include a secure van dock to safely manage prisoner transfers and be equipped with the infrastructure required to support 24-hour operations.

The upgraded station will accommodate up to 48 staff.

The project is currently in the tender phase and construction is scheduled to commence later this year with completion expected in 2027.

To ensure no disruption to local policing services, the Branxton Police Station will act as the central hub during the construction period, maintaining the same 24/7 response capacity Singleton residents currently rely on.

While officers will be redeployed to Branxton during the construction period, a policing presence will be maintained in Singleton throughout construction Officers will be in vehicles, patrolling the streets, to ensure rapid response and continued community presence.

This investment continues the Minns Labor Government’s commitment to strengthening frontline services and rebuilding the NSW Police Force.

The former Liberal-National Government lacked a plan for police recruitment or retention and sent wages backwards for 12 years. As a result, thousands of experienced officers left the force.

We are turning that around by:

  • securing a historic pay rise for officers
  • paying recruits to train, resulting in applications to join the NSWPF soaring by 70 per cent
  • creating a pathway for recruits to serve in or near their hometown after attesting the Goulburn Police Academy
  • establishing the Professional Mobility Program for serving officers across Australia and New Zealand to join the NSWPF and keep their equivalent rank up to Senior Constable
  • introducing the Health, Safety and Wellbeing Command to look after officers.

The 2025-26 Budget builds on the solid foundations already laid to create a better, safer NSW for everyone — a mission the Minns Labor Government is proud to continue.

Premier of NSW Chris Minns said:

“This upgrade to Singleton Police Station is about backing our police and strengthening community safety for the Upper Hunter.

“This is part of our plan to rebuild the NSW Police Force — including giving our hard-working officers the infrastructure they need.

“This project is a clear example of our investment in local services to build a better NSW.”

Minister for Police and Counter-terrorism, Yasmin Catley said:

“Local officers work incredibly hard to keep the community safe and today’s announcement ensures they’ll have the infrastructure and resources they need do continue this critical work.

“A modern police station means stronger and more responsive policing in and around Singleton.

“Our police deserve workplaces that are modern, secure and capable of meeting today’s challenges – this upgrade will make a real difference for both officers and the Singleton community.

“We are working hard to rebuild the NSW Police Force and today’s announcement is another step in that direction.”

Superintendent Steve Laksa, Commander of Hunter Valley Police District said:

“When finished, this major refurbishment will modernise the current building which is heritage listed. It will enhance service delivery to the local community while meeting operational needs.

“The new station will be a central operating point for general duties, detectives, highway patrol and prosecutors.

“Construction is set to commence in September this year, but the community can be assured the same 24/7 policing response will be maintained throughout the building works.”

Emily Suvaal, Duty MLC for the Hunter said:

“This is a huge win for Singleton – we’re delivering real investment in regional infrastructure that will support our local police and strengthen public safety across the district.

“This upgrade recognises that Singleton is growing and our services need to grow with it – we’re future-proofing policing in this region for decades to come.

“I’m proud to stand with the community and say that Singleton deserves the best – and that’s what we’re delivering.”

Sobering bocsar update

The latest NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research (BOCSAR) quarterly update reveals a welcomed downward trend in break and enters and motor vehicle thefts across the state but domestic violence assaults in regional parts of NSW have risen to even more alarming levels. 

In the March 2025 quarterly report, recorded incidents of break and enter (both dwellings and non-dwellings), motor vehicle theft, and retail theft have all seen significant declines highlighting a strong police performance in reducing certain major offences across NSW.

However, domestic violence-related assaults increased by 3.6%, with rises recorded in 8 of 13 Regional NSW areas and 3 of 15 Greater Sydney locations. In some areas, such as the New England and North West region, the rate of violent crime is more than double the state average.

Over the past 2 years, family violence has increased by 7.3%, while the number of child victims of domestic violence has increase by 9.5%.

Intimidation, stalking and harassment are up 4.8%, while Apprehended Domestic Violence Order compliance checks continue to drop under Labor, by almost 17,000 from 113,509 in 2023 to 96,520 in 2025.

Shadow Minister for Prevention of Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Natasha Maclaren-Jones said that under the Minns Labor Government family and sexual violence has reached record highs.

“These are not just statistics in a report, they represent women and children, which the Minns Labor Government is failing,” Mrs Maclaren-Jones said.

Shadow Minister for Police Paul Toole said the latest report gave a sobering reminder of the reality of domestic violence in NSW. 

“The lack of decisive action from the Minns Labor Government is leaving victims in regional communities vulnerable and allowing domestic violence incidents to increase,” Mr Toole said. 

“The statistics speak for themselves. Whatever Labor is doing is not working and the Ministers responsible need to take some accountability. 

“We cannot continue to have innocent lives lost or permanently affected by acts of violence in their own homes, so we need new approaches, new thinking and a hell of a lot more resourcing. 

“The cries from the bush are going unanswered by this city-centric government and this cannot go on.” 

In 2024, the NSW Police Force attended 152,268 domestic and family violence incidents, equating to on average NSW Police officers responding to 560 domestic and family violence incidents each day.

Visit to Fiji, The United States of America and Canada

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will travel to Fiji, the United States of America and Canada from 13-19 June 2025.

On 13 June 2025 in Nadi, Prime Minister Albanese will meet with the Hon Sitiveni Rabuka, Prime Minister of Fiji.

Leaders will discuss bilateral cooperation under our elevated Vuvale Partnership, including on climate change and regional security.

In Seattle, the Prime Minister will meet a range of business leaders to discuss how the US and Australia can work together to take advantage of emerging technologies, including artificial intelligence.  

Prime Minister Albanese will also visit Kananaskis, Canada to attend the G7 Summit.

The G7 brings together seven of the world’s largest advanced economies – Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States – and the European Union to discuss and agree on collective solutions to global challenges. 

Canada has also invited a select group of partner countries, including Australia.

Prime Minister Albanese will participate in G7 partner discussions focusing on global energy opportunities and challenges, including the role of critical minerals, secure and reliable supply chains, enabling and advanced technologies, and underlying infrastructure and investments.

At the Summit, the Prime Minister will work to advance our economic security and resilience to deliver benefits for Australian workers, businesses and communities. 

He will have bilateral meetings with a range of world leaders.

Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles will be Acting Prime Minister while Prime Minister Albanese is overseas.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“Visiting Fiji so soon after the election is a deliberate decision to reinforce my Government’s Pacific priorities and to exchange views with my dear friend Prime Minister Rabuka, a respected Pacific statesman.

“I am honoured to be invited by Prime Minister Carney to attend the G7 Leaders’ Summit in Alberta as a key partner.

“I look forward to working productively with world leaders to discuss how we tackle some of the most challenging issues facing Australia, our region, and the world”

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.