GREENS PUSH FOR URGENT INVESTIGATION INTO VICTORIA’S BROKEN CHILDCARE SYSTEM AS LABOR FAILS TO COMMIT TO RELEASING KEY DOCUMENTS

The Victorian Greens will move to establish a powerful parliamentary inquiry into Victoria’s early childhood education and care (ECEC) system this week and have called on Labor to commit to releasing key documents relating to safety and regulation in childcare, after they missed the deadline last week.

The Greens will push for a select committee, saying it’s needed to fill the gaping holes in Labor’s own review, amid growing concern over the lack of transparency and accountability in how the childcare sector is regulated.

The move comes as the Greens today table a letter to the Premier, formally calling on the Labor Government to commit to releasing the documents requested by the Greens which was respectfully drafted to ensure identifying details are redacted to protect children’s privacy.

The Greens say they understand more time may be needed to do this thoroughly, but that the public deserves a firm commitment that the documents will eventually be released, and a clear timeline to go with it.

While Labor continues to operate in secrecy – and with their narrow review fails to examine how the Department of Education regulates the sector – the Greens say a broader inquiry is essential to understanding the full scale of the crisis and how to fix it.

The proposed select committee would be chaired by a non-government member to ensure transparency and independence. It would have the power to call witnesses, compel documents, and investigate both government and private childcare providers. It will require the support of the Opposition and additional crossbench members to pass.

The inquiry would examine the consequences of Victoria’s increasingly privatised childcare system, unsafe staff-to-child ratios, poor workforce conditions, weak oversight, and critically, the Department’s role in regulating the sector.

Victorian Greens spokesperson for Early Childhood, Anasina Gray-Barberio:

“If we want to fix this crisis, we need to understand the full scale of the problem. Labor’s narrow review avoids scrutiny of their own regulation while they’ve been marking their own homework. We need this inquiry to fill in the gaps.”

“This Labor government consistently fails to be transparent and accountable. I’ve written to the Premier with a yes or no question, are you going to release these documents? We understand that redacting private information takes time and we support that but families need assurance they’re not going to be left in the dark.”

Senate passes strongest motion yet on Gaza

Deputy Leader of the Australian Greens and spokesperson for International Aid & Global Justice, Senator Mehreen Faruqi has responded to today’s motion.

Senator Faruqi:

“Words won’t feed people, but with this motion, Labor’s hand will be forced to implement sanctions. The parliament’s support for this Greens motion puts it on the record that Israel is breaching international law and that the Australian Government must act. 

“There is a legal obligation to prevent genocide, and from today’s vote, Labor can no longer pretend that they did not know.

“This is a direct result of community and Greens pressure. For almost two years, voices for peace including the Greens have been attacked and maligned by the Government but today is vindication that they are starting to open their eyes to stopping the genocide and the forced starvation of Palestinians.

“Finally, Parliament is starting to pressure Israel to stop its genocide. After 21 months, Parliament is finding its heart, but Labor’s courage on sanctions is still missing. 

“This is just a start. The Greens will continue to hold the Government to account to ensure that their support for this motion today translates to genuine action – including the economic sanctions needed to end the blockade. 

“The only blocker to sanctioning Israel is Labor. The Greens will continue our pressure, continue to hold Labor to account, and to ensure that Parliament’s vote for this motion today translates into genuine action.” 

International exhibition shines spotlight on works from Newcastle Art Gallery collection

Newcastle Art Gallery has taken a significant First Nations series of work out of storage and onto the world stage as part of a major exhibition at a prestigious London institution.

While local art lovers are anticipating the return of the $145 million collection to the expanded Newcastle Art Gallery, London audiences are being given the chance to appreciate one of its treasures firsthand at the Tate Modern.

Newcastle Art Gallery Director Lauretta Morton at Tate Modern exhibitionNewcastle Art Gallery Director Lauretta Morton OAM with the Awely series painted by Emily Kam Kngwarray, on display at the Tate Modern in London. The three works from the Newcastle Art Gallery collection are positioned on the top left and bottom left and right of the image. 

Awely 1990 is a series of paintings by Indigenous artist Emily Kam Kngwarray (c.1914-1996), who is internationally renowned as one of the most significant contemporary painters of the late 20th century.

The work is currently being featured at the London gallery as part of the first major exhibition held in Europe dedicated to the extraordinary talent of the late Anmatyerr elder.

Newcastle Art Gallery Director Lauretta Morton OAM said it was an honour to have Newcastle’s collection represented in this landmark exhibition.

“Emily Kam Kngwarray was an incredibly important Australian artist, whose unique style enabled her to create powerful depictions of her cultural connections to her Country, Alhalker, located in the Sandover region of the Northern Territory,” Ms Morton said.

“Newcastle Art Gallery is committed to celebrating and championing the work of First Nations artists as part of our vision to be locally grounded, nationally engaged and globally minded.

“We are proud to be the only public gallery from outside of an Australian capital city to be included in this important exhibition at the Tate Modern and can’t wait until we can invite our community back into our expanded Art Gallery to see more of the significant First Nations works from our collection.”

The Tate Modern exhibition was organised in collaboration with the National Gallery of Australia, bringing together more than 80 works from across Kngwarray’s extraordinary career. It is the first time many of Kngwarray’s works, including the series from Newcastle Art Gallery, are being shown outside of Australia.

For more information about Newcastle Art Gallery and its collection visit https://newcastleartgallery.nsw.gov.au/

To learn more about the Emily Kam Kngwarray exhibition on show at the Tate Modern visit https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/emily-kam-kngwarray

New national park to protect Sydney’s largest koala population

Sydney’s largest koala population will now enjoy greater protection thanks to the state’s newest national park that winds along the Georges River in the city’s south-west.

Warranmadhaa (Georges River Koala National Park), located between Long Point and Appin, covers 962 hectares. Work is already underway to grow the park with more land transfers planned into the National Park system which will protect up to 1,830 hectares of habitat.

Koalas require large, connected areas of habitat so they can eat, move and breed.

Warranmadhaa National Park will safeguard the most important corridor in the area, facilitating the safe movement of koalas between Campbelltown and the Southern Highlands.

When fully established, the reserve will further protect Cumberland Plain Woodland and Shale Sandstone Transition Forest, which are both listed as critically endangered ecological communities in NSW.

Warranmadhaa National Park delivers on the NSW Government’s commitment to establish a koala national park along Georges River under the Cumberland Plain Conservation Plan.

The Plan supports the delivery of approximately 73,000 homes in Western Sydney and will minimise the impacts of development on threatened plants and animals at a landscape scale while creating protected suburban green spaces.

The name Warranmadhaa refers to the geography in the southern areas of the reserve and was chosen in close consultation with Traditional Custodians, the Tharawal Local Aboriginal Land Council and the local Aboriginal community.

The NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service has started the process to prepare a plan of management for Warranmadhaa National Park.

This will provide opportunity for people to have their say to help shape how the park will be managed to preserve its values and how it will be accessed and used by the community.

Minister for the Environment, Penny Sharpe:

“This new national park is one of the most important in the state for koala conservation, protecting almost 1,000 hectares of vital koala habitat in south-west Sydney and delivering on our promise to safeguard this iconic species.

“$48.2 million has been committed to establish and manage this park, ensuring long-term protection for the south-west Sydney’s koalas.”

Minister for Planning and Public Spaces, Paul Scully:

“It is great to see this land in southern western Sydney transferred into the national park system to protect koala habitat in perpetuity.

“There is even more great news, in the longer term with plans to almost double the size of the park through future land acquisitions in the Georges River area under the Cumberland Plain Conservation Plan.

“This is a strategic approach which aims to balance urban development with the protection of important biodiversity including threatened plants and animals.”

Member for Campbelltown, Greg Warren:

“I welcome this important step towards koala conservation in our region.

“Our community has an expectation that wildlife in our region, particularly our koalas, are protected and safeguarded. This commitment is a step towards ensuring that this community expectation is not just met, but exceeded.”

New Keith’s Closet supporting mental health consumers in Northern NSW

People living with mental illness in Northern NSW are set to benefit from better access to essential clothing and supplies to support their wellbeing, thanks to the expansion of Keith’s Closet to Lismore Mental Health Services.

Minister for Health Ryan Park, Minister for Mental Health Rose Jackson and Minister for the North Coast Janelle Saffin officially opened the service, made possible thanks to an investment of $185,000 by the NSW Government to open additional Keith’s Closets across NSW, including at the Lismore Base Hospital campus.

The Lismore outlet is the sixth Keith’s Closet to open since the not-for-profit charity began operating in 2019, and the first outside of Sydney and the Illawarra.

Keith’s Closet is a walk-in wardrobe which helps to clothe and support vulnerable clients with everyday essentials and is co-located at Tallowwood Adult Mental Health Inpatient Unit at Lismore Mental Health Services.

It is open to people who have an arranged ‘shopping visit’ with their assigned nurse where they can select outfits, footwear and toiletries from the donated wardrobe of goods inside.

Pioneered by Keith Donnelly, former Mental Health Clinical Nurse Specialist in the South Eastern Sydney Local Health District, the program has been running since 2019.

For more information on Keith’s Closet, visit www.keithscloset.org

Minister for Health Ryan Park:

“Keith’s Closet has been supporting mental health consumers to access essential supplies to support their wellbeing since its establishment in 2019.

“Focused on fostering dignity and respect, Keith’s Closet is a truly inspiring space.

“When mental health consumers visit Keith’s Closet, they can choose from a range of donated goods like clothes, shoes and toiletries. This helps them feel better about themselves so they can focus on their treatment and recovery.

“I’m so pleased to support the expansion of Keith’s Closet to another NSW site where I am sure it will deliver for mental health consumers.”

Minister for Mental Health Rose Jackson:

“Keith’s Closet reflects the kind of mental health care we believe in. It is practical, compassionate and grounded in dignity.

“This is a simple idea that makes a powerful difference. A clean shirt, a pair of shoes, a toothbrush, these are small things that can help someone feel themselves again and focus on their recovery.

“We are working to build a mental health system that supports people as they are. Keith’s Closet does that by meeting people with kindness and giving them what they need.”

Minister for the North Coast Janelle Saffin:

“The new Keith’s Closet, located at the Lismore Mental Health Service, will provide meaningful support to those in our community living with mental illness.

“This innovative model of care builds on the compassionate care health staff at Lismore Mental Health Services provide each and every day to the most vulnerable in our community.”

Keith’s Closet Founder Keith Donnelly:

“During my time as a student and qualified mental health nurse, I recognised that mental health consumers accessing our services often arrived at hospital with just the clothes on their backs and limited access to alternative clothing, toiletries and accessories.

“This is about swapping the traditional hospital white gown for good quality clothing and accessories, helping to reduce stigma and boost morale and wellbeing.

“It’s exciting to see Keith’s Closet grow and now benefit patients in the Lismore area.

“It’s also really important to acknowledge Keith’s Closet would not be the success it is without the amazing support of our volunteers, our sponsors and the wider community.”

NAPLAN results highlight NSW students’ strengths but much more to do to lift outcomes

The 2025 NAPLAN National Report released today shows some positive progress, with more still to be done to lift literacy and numeracy outcomes across the state.

This year, students in Years 5, 7 and 9 were the first cohort to complete a second NAPLAN cycle under the new proficiency levels first introduced in 2023.

For NSW schools, results in 2025 are stable compared to previous years, with students showing strengths in areas including:

  • Year 5 reading up 4.9 percentage points in strong and exceeding compared to the same cohort’s Year 3 results in 2023
  • Year 5 spelling up 6.3 percentage points in strong and exceeding compared to the same cohort’s Year 3 results in 2023
  • Year 7 spelling up 3.6 percentage points in strong and exceeding compared to the same 2023 cohort in Year 5
  • Year 5 grammar and punctuation up 7.4 percentage points in strong and exceeding compared to the same 2023 cohort in Year 3

Today’s results show positive signs for many students in NSW, which is exceeding the national average in writing, reading, spelling, grammar and punctuation, and numeracy. The results also show where continued and consistent support is required, particularly in Years 5, 7 and 9 writing and Years 7 and 9 reading.

The Minns Labor Government is committed to the work of rebuilding public education and lifting outcomes across NSW.

Among our most significant reforms has been our work to address the teacher shortage and ensure every classroom in NSW has a dedicated teacher, by lifting wages, improving job security, reducing workload and improving the classroom environment by banning mobile phones and restoring principals’ authority to manage student behaviour. This work has seen teacher vacancies drop 40% to their lowest level in five years and the number of merged and cancelled classes halved.

The Better and Fairer Schools Agreement we signed with the Commonwealth earlier this year ensures every public school is on a path to getting 100% of the Schooling Resource Standard, with the additional funding going directly towards programs and reforms that will lift student outcomes.

Our ongoing work to lift student outcomes includes:

  • Introducing a new Year 1 Number Screening Check trial to assess students’ early numeracy skills, with wrap-around early intervention;
  • Delivering the Year 1 Phonics Screening Check with targeted support for schools to ensure students obtain foundational literacy skills;
  • Introducing system-wide literacy and numeracy targets with ambitious goals to improve student outcomes;
  • Boosting the Small Group Tuition Program to provide more targeted literacy and numeracy support;
  • Building teachers’ capacity to deliver the new knowledge and skills rich K-12 English and Mathematics syllabuses through explicit teaching;
  • The explicit and systematic teaching of writing is a key focus in all new NSW syllabuses to better support all NSW students. 

The full 2025 NAPLAN national results are published on ACARA’s website.

Acting Minister for Education and Early Learning Courtney Houssos said:

“Congratulations to all of the students across NSW who participated in NAPLAN testing this year, especially those at more than 300 schools in the state’s north who did so in the face of extreme weather conditions.

“Students, families and teachers across NSW should feel proud of these results – and know that where there are gaps, we are focussed on supporting schools and teachers to close them.

“These results show NSW continuing to perform strongly against national benchmarks, and identify areas that require attention.

“We are committed to reforms that will strengthen literacy and numeracy foundations, including the introduction of an early Phonics and Number Check and a knowledge-rich curriculum explicitly taught across all our schools. These will equip NSW public school students with the vital knowledge and skills they need to achieve excellent outcomes.”

Government cuts the ribbon on therapeutic home for vulnerable children

The Minns Labor Government has opened the latest in a growing network of government-owned residential homes, ensuring more vulnerable children in out-of-home care (OOHC) are moved from unsuitable emergency accommodation into stable, therapeutic settings.

The Waratah Care Cottage at Blacktown in Western Sydney is the fourth new property designed to keep sibling groups in the OOHC system together, with a sibling group of three already identified to move into the new cottage in the coming weeks.

The cottages support children who were living in High-Cost Emergency Arrangements (HCEAs) who cannot be immediately placed with relatives or foster carers, with the former government’s arrangements often seeing sibling groups split up.  

The Blacktown cottage opening builds on a $49.2 million investment in 44 government-owned homes for children in OOHC with the most complex needs as part of the record $1.2 billion Child Protection Package in the 2025-26 Budget – the largest in NSW history.

The purpose-built and upgraded homes will accommodate up to four children each, providing:

  • Trauma-informed care in a stable environment tailored to support recovery and wellbeing
  • Improved safety and permanency outcomes
  • A reduction in the number of children in High-Cost Emergency Arrangements (HCEAs)
  • Greater flexibility for government to respond to placement needs
  • Better staffing models that increase visibility and accountability, and reduce service delivery costs

The new homes will be located in metropolitan Sydney and regional areas including the Hunter, using both new construction and upgrades to existing government-owned properties.

This investment reverses the former Liberal and National Government’s complete outsourcing of residential care services, which stripped away public oversight and control, and left vulnerable children without the protections they deserve.

In our first two years, the Minns Labor Government:

  • Ended unaccredited emergency accommodation for vulnerable children – meaning no children are living in places like hotels and motels as of April this year
  • Reduced the number of children placed in all types of High-Cost Emergency Arrangements (HCEAs) by 35 per cent since November 2023
  • Restarted the recruitment of foster carers in the Department of Communities and Justice (DCJ), a critical program which was disgracefully abandoned by the Liberals and Nationals more than a decade ago
  • Recruited more than 240 emergency carers so far, who have kept hundreds of children out of emergency arrangements
  • Announced the first real increase in the Foster Care Allowance in 20 years, with $143.9 million budgeted to recognise the critical role of foster carers to keep NSW children safe
  • Delivered a record $350 million investment for family preservation programs delivered by Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations
  • Invested $191.5 million to recruit more than 200 new caseworkers and retain 2,126 caseworkers with higher pay and more specialised training, as well as 100 new leading caseworker roles
  • Redeployed our best and brightest casework specialists back to the frontline. Already this means more than 300 additional vulnerable children have been given support
  • Insourced 300 family time workers, directly employing staff to keep children in OOHC connected to their parents
  • Released a comprehensive roadmap for reform

Treasurer Daniel Mookhey said:

“This new cottage builds on our record $1.2 billion investment to protect and support the most vulnerable children in NSW.

“We are building the capacity of the child protection system to provide safer, more stable care — and reversing years of neglect under the former government.

“Every dollar we invest in frontline services and stable homes is an investment in a better future for these children.”

Minister for Families and Communities Kate Washington said:

“These children have experienced the most serious trauma — and they deserve care, stability, and a real chance to heal.

“For too long, too many children with complex needs have been let down by a system that isn’t providing what they need most: a safe and stable home.

“The government’s historic investment will help us change that. It means purpose-built homes, specially trained staff, and a care environment that supports recovery and hope.

“The Minns Labor Government is rebuilding the system from the ground up — putting children’s safety, wellbeing and futures at the centre of everything we do.”

Member for Blacktown Stephen Bali said:

“I’m incredibly proud that this new Waratah Care Cottage will play a critical role in protecting vulnerable children – and keeping siblings together here in Blacktown.

“It’s not just a house – it’s a safe and supportive home where children get the care and stability they deserve.

“This is what real change looks like on the ground, and I’m pleased to see it’s happening right here in Blacktown.”

Labor fails third NAPLAN test

The latest NAPLAN results have revealed student outcomes in NSW are stagnating, with no significant improvement under Labor’s watch.

Despite the Minns Government’s claims of record investment, foundational skills including reading, writing and maths are going backwards, with one in three students failing to meet the baseline standard.

Opposition Leader Mark Speakman said proper support is needed for teachers and kids in the classroom.

“What we’ve seen under Labor is a Government that has stripped resources from schools and slashed budgets, which is why we are seeing these results today,” Mr Speakman said. 

“The Premier and the Education Minister are always quick to claim things are improving when it comes to teacher vacancies, but student results are going in the wrong direction and that should be the real test.”

Shadow Education Minister Sarah Mitchell said the Government has cut crucial resources and support over the past two years and it needs a new plan to lift student outcomes.

“Under the former Coalition Government, we invested more than $950m in small group tuition to help students catch up, but that was cut down to just $80m this year, which shows this Government just isn’t investing in things we know make a real difference,” Mrs Mitchell said.

“We’re not seeing the improvements we should be seeing in our classrooms, and when you’ve got a third of students falling behind something is seriously going wrong. 

“Without a plan to lift outcomes, Labor is failing the kids who need help the most and that should be extremely concerning for every parent and student in NSW.”

Land clearing in NSW surges 40% as the Minns Labor Government stands by and looks on in horror

Shadow Minister for the Environment, James Griffin MP, has slammed the Minns Labor Government for presiding over an environmental catastrophe, following the release of data showing a 40% surge in land clearing across New South Wales in 2023.

According to the 2023 NSW Statewide Landcover and Tree Study (SLATS) released yesterday, 66,498 hectares of native vegetation were cleared last year – a 40% increase from the previous year, and the equivalent of 237 Sydney CBDs or four Royal National Parks lost in 12 months.

Mr Griffin said the Minns Labor Government has betrayed conservation and communities across New South Wales.

“What we’re seeing is environmental vandalism on a scale comparable with palm oil deforestation in Indonesia. This Labor Government came to office promising reform, and two years later they’ve delivered nothing but excuses and inertia,” Mr Griffin said.

“Labor campaigned in 2019 and 2023 on curbing land clearing yet clearing has exploded on their watch. They campaigned on this issue and have delivered absolutely no solutions.”

Mr Griffin said, “The State of the Environment Report earlier this month was a shocker, the Great Koala National Park is a farce, there are no aquatic reserves or marine conservation ideas to speak of, and clearly the environment doesn’t really matter around the Minns Cabinet table”. 

Labor’s inaction contrasts with the forward-looking initiatives of the previous Coalition government – conservation initiatives such as those aimed at: 

  • The establishment of NSW’s first Natural Capital State Accounts – a nation-leading framework to measure, value and protect the state’s ecosystems in economic decision-making.
  • Major investments in koala habitat corridors and private land conservation agreements.
  • Strengthened data systems for land cover monitoring and vegetation mapping.
  • And an ambitious push to integrate biodiversity metrics into infrastructure planning.

Authorised by Chris Stone, Liberal Party of Australia, NSW Division, Level 2, 131 Macquarie Street, Sydney NSW 2000.

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Albanese Government protecting kids from social media harms

The Albanese Labor Government is backing Australian families, parents and kids by announcing today YouTube will be included in its world-leading under-16 social media laws.

Delaying access to social media, including YouTube, until the age of 16 will protect young Australians at a critical stage of their development, giving them three more years to build real world connections and online resilience.

Following extensive consultation and advice, age-restricted social media platforms will face fines of up to $49.5 million for failing to take responsible steps to prevent underage account holders onto their services.

Age-restricted social media platforms will include Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, X and YouTube, amongst other platforms.

Informed by advice from the eSafety Commissioner, the Online Safety (Age-Restricted Social Media Platforms) Rules 2025 tabled today specify which types of online services will not be captured by the social media legislation, including online gaming, messaging apps, health and education services.

These types of online services have been excluded from the new minimum age obligations because they pose fewer social media harms to under 16s, or are regulated under different laws.

From 10 December 2025, all services that meet the definition of ‘age-restricted social media platform’ in the Act, and are not excluded in the rules, will be subject to the social media minimum age law.

Age restricted social media accounts are defined as services that allow users to interact and post material.

The Government is proud to be on the side of families.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese

“Our Government is making it clear – we stand on the side of families.

Social media has a social responsibility and there is no doubt that Australian kids are being negatively impacted by online platforms so I’m calling time on it.

Social media is doing social harm to our children, and I want Australian parents to know that we have their backs.”

Minister for Communications Anika Wells

“The Albanese Government is giving kids a reprieve from the persuasive and pervasive pull of social media while giving parents peace of mind.

We want kids to know who they are before platforms assume who they are.

There is no one perfect solution when it comes to keeping young Australians safer online – but the social media minimum age will make a significantly positive difference to their wellbeing.

The rules are not a set and forget, they are a set and support.

There are heavy penalties for companies who fail to take reasonable steps to prevent underage account holders onto their services of up to $49.5 million.

“There’s a place for social media, but there’s not a place for predatory algorithms targeting children.”