Police operation continues at Bondi Beach

A police operation is ongoing after a public place shooting by two men at Bondi Beach earlier today.

Ten people have been confirmed dead, including a man believed to be one of the shooters. The second alleged shooter is in a critical condition.

At this time, a further 11 people are reported to be injured, two of which are police officers.

Emergency services were called to Campbell Parade about 6.45pm (Sunday 14 December 2025), responding to reports of shots being fired.

Officers attached to Eastern Suburbs Police Area Command attended assisted by multiple resources across the city.

A number of suspicious items located in the vicinity are being examined by specialist officers and an exclusion zone is in place.

A multi-agency response is continuing.

An extensive crime scene has been established and inquiries are now underway.There have been NO reports of any other incidents in Sydney connected to this incident.

Police are now appealing for anyone with mobile phone vision or dashcam vision relevant to this incident to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

Kellie Sloane – Bondi Beach Statement

What has happened this evening at Bondi Beach was a horrific attack on our community and on our way of life.

Tonight, on the first night of Hanukkah, members of our Jewish community had gathered peacefully in Bondi Beach and Dover Heights to mark the beginning of the Festival of Light.

That celebration was shattered by a violent and senseless attack on Bondi Beach which has seen lives lost, many seriously injured, and our entire community and state in shock and grief.

This situation is still ongoing.

This is not a time for speculation or blame beyond those responsible for this horrific act.

What has also been witnessed tonight is extraordinary bravery and humanity.

Members of the public, surf lifesavers, volunteers, police, paramedics, and health workers ran toward danger, helping strangers, comforting children, and doing everything possible to save lives.

No community in this country should live in fear.

This is an attack on our shared sense of safety and belonging

Tonight, our community and state stand together, determined that light will overcome darkness.

Scathing uni governance report released but government remedies fail to meet the moment

Today, the Final Report of the Inquiry into the Quality of Governance at Australian Higher Education Providers has been released. Following five public hearings, hundreds of submissions, and countless hours of work from brave staff, students, unionists, and activists, this Report and the work of the Committee shines a light on the governance rot that is hollowing out our public universities.

The Report makes clear the crisis we are facing, but disappointingly, the recommendations fall short of the overhaul that is required. The Australian Greens have provided Additional Comments and recommendations that address these gaps.

Senator Mehreen Faruqi, Deputy Leader of the Greens and spokesperson for Higher Education:

“The final report exposes the depth and breadth of failed leadership, corporate rot and consultant capture decaying our public universities. Arrogant executives indulge in obscene pay packets and big consultancies feast on public money, while the people who teach, research, support students and hold the university together are overworked, underpaid and exploited.

“While the report is a scathing indictment on the corporatisation of universities and the severity of the crisis at hand, it falls short of providing remedies that match the systemic overhaul needed to end the era of managerial bloat and unaccountable opaque governance.

“The corporate university has utterly failed its communities. It is high time we return to higher education as a public good, not a market for profit-seeking firms and austerity-obsessed executives. Our universities must be institutions grounded in equity, democracy, accountability, and transparency, empowered to pursue research and education in the public interest.

“The failures of governance in universities go hand in hand with decades of underfunding by governments, most viciously exemplified by the fee hikes and funding cuts of the JRG scheme, which have been widely condemned and yet still not been reversed by the Labor government.

“The government must commit to substantially increasing funding to universities to catch up with the OECD average, starting by dumping the disastrous JRG scheme’s fee hikes and funding cuts.

“I want to thank the staff, students and their unions who have spoken up and called time on a rotten system, despite the risk of retribution from university management. It is because of their courage that we can hope to finally see some change.

“It is imperative that the Government listen to the damning evidence provided to this inquiry, take seriously the recommendations being made by staff and students, and act with urgency to turn things around.”

Australian Greens Recommendations

Recommendation 1: That the Australian Tertiary Education Commission’s foundational legislation should clearly articulate the public mission and the educational, social, and civic functions of a public university sector.

Recommendation 2: That the establishing acts of universities be amended to clarify that their central purpose is public research and education, not commercial or corporate performance.

Recommendation 3: That the Australian Government immediately reverse the Job-ready Graduates Package fee hikes and funding cuts.

Recommendation 4: That the meetings of all university councils and governing bodies be held in public and be livestreamed online.

Recommendation 5: That all higher education provider governing bodies reflect the community’s diversity including First Nations peoples, Culturally and Racially Marginalised people, LGBTIQA+ people and people with disabilities.

Recommendation 6: That the majority of members on university governing bodies have public administration and higher education expertise.

Recommendation 7: That a minimum membership requirement of at least 50 per cent democratically elected staff and student representatives (including undergraduate and postgraduate students) be set for governing bodies.

Recommendation 8: That, in addition to council minutes, reports produced for council and annual self-performance reviews be published on university websites.

Recommendation 9: That complaints processes be examined and enhanced by working with students, staff and student bodies.

Recommendation 10: That the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency’s Higher Education Standards Framework be amended to include a consultation framework for how universities meaningfully involve, consult and work with students and staff as partners in major change proposals and governance, prior to decisions being made.

Recommendation 11: That to limit the use of consultants and outsourcing at universities, an appropriate Federal government agency develops principles for this purpose that prioritise in-house expertise.

Recommendation 12: That Federal government funding to public universities be increased in order to fully fund universities and make them free, starting by increasing funding to at least the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development average.

Recommendation 13: That universities implement protections for whistleblowers and student activists, including the establishment of a Whistleblower Protection Authority, and protect the right of students and staff to protest on university campuses.

Recommendation 14: Require all public universities to adopt transparent ethical investment and procurement policies, with binding commitments to divest from weapons manufacturers, fossil fuel corporations, and gambling industries.

Recommendation 15: Establish a publicly accessible register of all university partnerships, sponsorships, and funding arrangements with corporations and external entities, including the nature and value of the partnership.

Recommendation 16: Increase PhD stipends to above the minimum wage.

Labor’s ocean acreage handout exposes fossil fuel state capture

The Greens have slammed the Albanese government for handing out new ocean acreage to their donor mates in the fossil fuel industry to exploit in a time of climate emergency. 

Labor’s disgraceful decision has nothing to do with everyday Australians and everything to do with the state capture of our government by fossil fuel corporations.

Australia is the second biggest exporter of fossil fuels in the world, after Russia. Yet Labor has no plan to deal with our exports, and is content with 56% of all Australia’s gas being exported without paying any royalties or resource rent tax. That’s $170 billion dollars worth of free gas over the next five years for big gas companies. 

There’s no plausible excuse for Labor to risk destroying marine ecosystems with seismic blasting only to lock Australia into more fossil fuel pollution and accelerate climate-driven disasters for the sake of a few profit-driven interests – but that’s exactly what this shameful government continues to do, over and over again. 

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

“Labor’s two-faced climate act is wearing thin. How on earth is ripping open new gas fields for fossil fuel companies to plunder, pollute and profit from in a time of climate emergency consistent with transitioning to a clean energy future?

“Australia has decades of gas left in our proven reserves system. There is no need to put marine wildlife and livelihoods that depend on healthy oceans at risk by using destructive methods to search for new gas fields. 

“Australia is the second biggest exporter of fossil fuels in the world. Clearly, we don’t have a gas supply problem, we have a political problem. 

“Oil and gas corporations come to our shores and take billions in government handouts, pay less tax than a nurse or a teacher, and then leave us to foot the bill of cleaning up their polluting rigs when they’re done. It’s a complete rort. 

“Labor is taking Australians for fools, but coastal communities aren’t so easily conned. Last year one of the largest seismic blasting proposals in Australian history was withdrawn by its proponent following immense community pressure. It was a siren call to all the fossil fuel companies eyeing off our oceans that their time is up. But clearly Labor is either too arrogant or too greedy to care.”

Greens Resources Spokesperson, Senator Steph Hodgins-May:

“Labor’s new ocean acreage handout is an environmental betrayal and an early Christmas gift to the fossil fuel companies driving the climate crisis.

“We have an export crisis, not a supply crisis. Labor is pre-empting the Gas Market Review by opening up new supply instead of fixing the existing broken system that allows big gas companies to export $170 billion dollars of free gas over the next five years.

“By incentivising decades worth of new gas, this government is ignoring science, setting us up to miss critical climate targets, and accelerating environmental disasters here and across the globe.

“The way to fix this crisis is to implement a 25% Gas Export Tax, which will deliver real cost-of-living relief instead of more of the same climate-wrecking gas projects.”

MYEFO the time for Labor to back investor tax shift: Greens

The Greens have urged Labor to commit to winding back tax handouts for rich property investors at the upcoming minibudget, saying fixing the CGT handout would help bring soaring housing prices under control, and be a massive Christmas gift for renters and first homebuyers. 

Experts say the capital gains tax discount pushes up house prices, as it encourages speculation by wealthy property investors, enabling them to bid further against would-be first homebuyers.

The government has previously modelled changes to the CGT discount, and momentum for change is growing. 

The Greens have established two Senate Inquiries which will put the unfair tax handout in the firing line – one on intergenerational housing inequality in Australia; and one focused solely on the CGT discount itself, which reports in March.  

With the Treasurer flagging that this MYEFO may be one forcing hard choices, the Greens say there is no excuse for winding back supports for everyday people while leaving wealthy investors untouched. 

Sen. Larissa Waters, Australian Greens Leader & Climate spokesperson said:

“The best gift for any renter this Christmas is a fix to the utterly cooked housing market. Millions of people have given up on the prospect of ever owning their own home.

“Wealthy property investors get a leg-up from the government at auction, which supercharges house prices and locks first renters and homebuyers out.

“Labor must use next week’s mini budget to announce that the free ride for wealthy property investors is over.”

Sen. Nick McKim, Greens Treasury spokesperson said:

“The CGT discount is turbo-charging wealth inequality and intergenerational inequity. 50% of the benefit goes to the top 1% of income earners, and 71% of the benefit goes to people over 50.”

“It means that people who work to earn a living are paying twice the tax than someone making the same money flipping investment properties.”

“Labor can’t continue to hand over billions in tax breaks for wealthy property investors that are locking first home buyers out of the market, then claim at MYEFO that there’s no money to help renters.

“There’s no better time to commit to change. Ending the era of property hoarding would help renters, first homebuyers and the national budget, and be the talk of every Christmas lunch.

“It shouldn’t take the Ghost of Christmas Future for Labor to see that this unfair measure has got to end.”

Sen. Barbara Pocock, Greens housing spokesperson said:

“Every year, wealthy property investors wake up to billions of dollars worth of gifts under the Christmas tree, while renters and first homebuyers get lumps of coal. That needs to end next week.

“Labor’s unfair tax breaks for wealthy property investors are fuelling the housing crisis by turbocharging speculative investment while locking renters and young people out of home ownership.

“With house prices forecast to increase by 9 percent next year after soaring 6 percent% this year, there’s no time to waste.”

CLP and Federal Labor do nothing to cut power bills, everything to fund Beetaloo gas profits

The Greens have condemned Beetaloo Energy Australia’s Final Investment Decision (FID), arguing the decision is a direct consequence of the Northern Territory and Federal government’s financial and regulatory greenlight for another climate bomb.

Empire Energy’s (now Beetaloo Energy) own ASX statement from May this year reports the company received $43 million in government funding across tax incentives and drilling grants. This is on top of millions of dollars provided by the Commonwealth and NT governments to support gas companies’ operations in the Beetaloo basin. 

The project expects to start selling gas as soon as next year.

Senator Steph Hodgins-May, Greens Spokesperson for Resources:

“The Labor government hasn’t just approved Beetaloo, it’s spent millions of taxpayer dollars to push it over the line. This project is an environmental disaster that should never have been allowed to go ahead.

“We have a gas export problem, not a supply problem. The Labor government must respond to the gas market review by taxing exporters and prioritising existing LNG for the domestic market to bring down bills.

“Labor needs to stop letting gas corporations write the rules and claim millions in tax offsets that belong in our schools and hospitals, and actually deliver for families. 

Kat McNamara, NT Greens MLA for Nightcliff:

“This is an environmental crime against the Territory. The Beetaloo FID ignores the overwhelming opposition from Traditional Owners and poisons the water source that our communities depend on.

“The Federal Government has betrayed Territorians. Our land is being sacrificed for profits, not for our energy security or our future.

“The CLP Government continually makes decisions for the benefit of their mates in the gas industry rather than for the Territorians they are supposed to serve. The Federal Labor Government’s continued support and investment in the Beetaloo demonstrates that they are no better.”

NSW koala baseline survey to drive conservation action

The NSW Government has completed its first comprehensive statewide koala survey, providing the most accurate picture to date of where koalas live and how populations are distributed across the state.

Using new tools such as heat-detecting drones and acoustic recorders, scientists surveyed more than 1,000 locations across national parks, state forests and private land.

The updated estimate of 274,000 koalas reflects improved technology and more extensive survey work.

Koalas in NSW remain endangered and there are many places in NSW where koalas no longer exist in the wild. Populations in NSW continue to face significant risks, including habitat loss and fragmentation, climate impacts, disease and vehicle strikes.

These threats are expected to intensify over coming decades, underscoring the importance of protecting key habitat and wildlife corridors.

This new baseline data comes as the Minns Government continues to prioritise koala conservation, including progressing the Great Koala National Park, which will protect habitat for more than 12,000 koalas, along with Greater Gliders and other threatened species.

Other koala conservation achievements include establishing the Warranmadhaa National Park along the Georges River in South-west Sydney. The NSW Government has also invested $8.5 million to support koala care and wildlife rehabilitators and establish a new koala care centre in the Macarthur region.

The NSW population estimate is in line with the recently released National Koala Monitoring Program, led by the Australian Government in partnership with the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO). The results will contribute to the Australian Government’s National Koala Monitoring Program and help strengthen long-term monitoring across the country.

The monitoring of koalas in NSW and across Australia will continue to evolve as more comprehensive surveys and analyses are conducted by state and federal agencies.

Previous estimates of NSW’s koala populations were conducted through more traditional survey methods such as visual sightings and scat analysis.

The sheer scale of this survey and use of advanced techniques helped scientists detect more koalas, faster, and with greater accuracy than ever before.

Minister for Climate Change and the Environment, Penny Sharpe said:

“This survey gives us a clearer understanding of where koalas remain in NSW. It is an important tool to guide conservation decisions.

“The Minns Labor Government has a strong record on koala conservation, and this survey shows we have been making the right decisions to ensure their survival.

“Koalas are still endangered, and the threats they face are real. This work helps ensure we are targeting the right areas so that future generations can continue to see koalas in the wild.”

Agreement reached on workers compensation reforms

Businesses and community sector providers will be spared significant increases to workers compensation premiums after agreement was reached on reforms to the state’s workers compensation scheme.

The agreement builds on the breakthrough compromise put forward by crossbench members in the Lower House.

The compromise agreed to includes:

  • A legislated 18-month restriction on average premium increases.
  • Retaining the Whole Person Impairment (WPI) thresholds moved by Lower House crossbenchers.
  • A new “Return to Work” intensive program that provides an additional year of medical benefits and income replacement.
  • New powers enabling the Treasurer to lower the WPI threshold, if in the public interest.
  • A replacement program to Business Connect.
  • Changes to terminology surrounding the reasonable management action defence.

Without these reforms, premiums for employers facing no claims against them were expected to rise by at least 36 per cent over three years.

The most significant reform to workers compensation in a generation will prioritise prevention and improve return to work. This work over the past year includes:

  • Giving essential public-sector workers the right to seek court orders and damages to stop workplace bullying and sexual harassment.
  • Agreeing to a definition for psychological injury
  • Establishing a $344 million workplace mental health package.
  • Funding to appoint 50 new SafeWork inspectors, including 20 new psychosocial focused inspectors and five psychosocial investigators.
  • Commissioning the Chief Psychiatrist to devise a better system for psychiatric assessment in workers compensation claims.
  • Clarifying and strengthening the Industrial Relation Commission’s powers to resolve industrial disputes and facilitate return to work for injured employees in the public sector.
  • $15 million funding focused on delivering wraparound psychological services to provide earlier, more tailored support for injured workers to return injured workers back to work.

The announcement follows extensive consultation with business and unions, as well as the community and not-for-profit sector over the past year.

Charities, community organisations and business groups who have supported the reform include:

  • The St Vincent de Paul Society
  • The Mental Health Coordinating Council
  • The NSW Council of Social Services
  • National Disability Services
  • Royal Australian College of GPs
  • The Pharmacy Guild of Australia
  • Business NSW and the Business Council of Australia
  • Australian Hotels Association
  • Clubs NSW

The agreement will allow the Workers Compensation Legislation Amendment (Reform and Modernisation) Bill 2025 to pass the Upper House in February.

Treasurer Daniel Mookhey said:

“This compromise position allows us to stabilise the workers compensation system and return it to a secure footing.

“The scheme has been in dire need of modernisation. It has been failing injured workers, employers, the non-profit sector and taxpayers for too long. Continuing to do nothing was not an option.

“I want to thank all those members of parliament who have worked collaboratively with the Government to help solve this diabolically complex problem. Especially Alex Greenwich and the other independent members of the Lower House crossbench.

“I also want to acknowledge Business NSW, and all of the state’s major business organisations, as well as NCOSS and the state’s leading charities and not-for profits for their strong and relentless advocacy.

“Finally, I acknowledge the massive role the Labor caucus has played in delivering this reform. As well as the state’s union movement for its professionalism and engagement through many difficult conversations we had during 2025.“

Minister for Industrial Relations Sophie Cotsis said:

“This agreement ensures early support to injured workers, a road to recovery and return to work.

“It puts the scheme on the path to sustainability so that it can continue to care for injured workers and be affordable for business to fund.

“The reforms will help small businesses and not for profits, especially in regional areas, retain staff and create jobs.

“They are supported by a $344 million investment in injury prevention and a more person-centred claims management process.

“The hard work of implementation has already begun, and we will work in collaboration with all stakeholders to ensure the reforms are delivered effectively for workers and businesses.”

Minister for Customer Service and Digital Government Jihad Dib said:

“We are providing certainty to ensure workers have the cover they need and through this sensible reform they can now get on with the job knowing that a secure safety net is in place.

“We welcome support to enable us to protect the scheme for generations to come. We can now get on with reform, as we scale up prevention efforts and wraparound support services for people navigating the claims process.

“It’s important that we continue to support injured workers and help them recover. To achieve this goal we are delivering a sustainable workers compensation scheme and we will continue to work with all stakeholders to deliver exactly that.”

Grant unlocks funding to keep faith communities safe

The Minns Labor Government has today announced that faith-based organisations can share in $5m of funding to enhance the safety and security of religious communities across the state. 

Illustrating the government’s continued commitment to support NSW’s diverse communities, the funding helps ensure that every faith community can practice their religion safely.

This is the third and final round of the $15m Safe Places for Faith Communities Grants program. The first two rounds delivered $10m in funding to 258 religious organisations, with applications now open for this latest round of grants.  

Successful applicants could put the funding toward increased security measures – like CCTV and secure fencing, for example – the development of risk plans, or support services to build resilience, among others.

The funding is open to non-profit sharing organisations and could be put toward measures around places of worship, but also religious educational institutions, places of religious significance and faith-based community centres, among others.

Grant funding will support faith communities to:

  • upgrade security and surveillance systems
  • train staff and religious leaders to improve preparedness and risk mitigation
  • build the resilience of faith groups.

The Safe Places for Faith Communities Grants program is administered by Multicultural NSW and this latest round of funding is open for applications until 4pm, Friday, 30 January 2026.

For more information visit https://multicultural.nsw.gov.au/safe-places-for-faith-communities-program/

Minister for Multiculturalism Steve Kamper said:

“Everyone deserves the right to come together to practise their faith. No one in NSW should ever feel unsafe when attending their place of worship or engaging with their religion – a central part of so many people’s lives.

“The Minns Labor Government is committed to supporting our diverse faith communities and this further round of funding illustrates that ongoing commitment.”

Multicultural NSW Chief Executive Officer Joseph La Posta said: 

“The program supports faith communities in taking proactive steps to safeguard their spaces and strengthen their resilience.  

“By investing in prevention, preparedness, response and recovery, we’re helping religious organisations to build their own capacity to protect their people, their values, and their right to gather in peace.”

NSW Government delivers $7.76 million boost for disability care in Hunter region

The Minns Labor Government is investing $3.38 million in a key project in the Hunter to improve disability care for people with cerebral palsy under the Regional Development Trust.

This investment will see the Cerebral Palsy Alliance transform an existing warehouse in Beresfield into a customised, fully accessible centre with multi-disciplinary therapy rooms, multi-use spaces for group programs, and an early diagnosis clinic.

The Minns Government’s Regional Development Trust will provide funding of $3.38 million, in addition to the recipient’s investment of $4.38 million to deliver a total investment of $7.76 million into disability care in the area.

The project will help meet the growing demand for services and programs for people with disability of all ages and support them in meeting their goals for independence and inclusion.

The new Centre will provide access to evidence-based therapies, services and programs, and innovative technologies and equipment to enhance the lives of regional babies, children and adults with disability and their families.

It will also provide a dedicated training space for more than 300 disability sector workers from across the region.

The Cerebral Palsy Alliance has a 42-year presence in the Hunter, with existing facilities in East Maitland and Croudace Bay.

The Alliance operates 16 group homes in the Newcastle region housing more than 80 adults with complex disabilities and supports an additional 80 independent living clients.

This funding is part of the Minns Government’s approach to delivering sustainable and strategic investment with a focus on priorities that make a difference to regional communities.

The Regional Development Trust has delivered a total investment of $60.9 million to 28 projects via its Regional Economic Development and Community Investment Program passing the initial funding allocation of $50 million because of the large number of projects demonstrating merit and need.

For more information on successful projects from the Regional Economic Development and Community Investment Program, go to: nsw.gov.au/regionaldevelopmenttrust

Minister for Regional NSW, Tara Moriarty said:

“This funding backs the Minns Government’s plan to invest in projects in our regional and rural communities that create jobs, boost local businesses and improve community services.

“This investment in the Hunter Disability Centre reflects our government’s commitment to ensuring that people living with disability in regional communities have access to world-class support services and this new centre will be a game-changer for families across the Hunter region.

“By supporting the Cerebral Palsy Alliance, we’re not just building infrastructure—we’re building futures.”

Minister for the Hunter, Yasmin Catley said:

“People living with cerebral palsy in our region haven’t always had easy access to the services they need, being forced to travel long distances that are costly and add pressure to an already demanding situation.

“Everyone deserves support close to home. This investment gives families the services and learning opportunities they need to fully participate in everything our region offers, delivering the essential services we committed to when we came into Government.

“The Hunter is fast becoming one of the most liveable regions in the state. A place where families can build their futures with confidence and today’s announcement is yet another reason why.”

Minister for Disability Inclusion, Kate Washington said:

“We are making this important investment because it will be a game-changer for people with disability, their families and the disability services workforce of the Hunter.

“Our government is proudly partnering with Cerebral Palsy Alliance, a trusted organisation that’s been supporting people with disability and their families for 80 years, to deliver a new Hunter disability hub.”

Cerebral Palsy Alliance Chief Operating Officer Paul Henderson said:

“This project is a key part of the Alliance’s vision to create a world of opportunity for people with disability and their families.

“Support from the NSW Government will allow the Cerebral Palsy Alliance to deliver a world-class, contemporary facility in a regional area, creating a hub of disability support and connection now and for decades to come.”