Defence and Veterans’ Service Commissioner Bill passes Parliament

Today marks an important milestone in the Albanese Government’s implementation of the recommendations of the Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide. 

The Parliament has passed the Defence and Veterans’ Service Commissioner Bill 2025 and the Defence and Veterans’ Service Commissioner (Consequential and Transitional Provisions) Bill 2025. 

This realises the full intent of Recommendation 122 – the recommendation the Royal Commission deemed it’s most important – to establish a new statutory entity to oversee system reform across the whole Defence and veteran ecosystem, the Defence and Veteran Service Commission (DVSC).

The Commission is focused on improving suicide prevention and wellbeing outcomes for current and former serving Australian Defence Force members by providing independent oversight and evidence-based advice to the Australian Government and Parliament.

The passage of this legislation is consistent with the Government’s commitment to enacting standalone legislation for the Defence and Veterans’ Service Commissioner and Commission, following the swift passage of the enabling legislation in February 2025.

The Bill also reflects the Government’s response to the recommendations of the Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Legislation Committee report of 29 August 2025 on the current enabling legislation, including that the Government transitions the DVSC into standalone legislation, the Commissioner is appointed by the Governor-General and that the Commissioner’s functions include veterans’ families. 

The Government’s response to the recommendations of the Royal Commission involves the most comprehensive reform ever undertaken to the systems, culture and processes across Defence and the Department of Veterans’ Affairs.

Defence estate community consultation sessions begin

Community consultation sessions will begin in Tasmania next week as part of the Albanese Government’s nationwide response to the independent Defence Estate Audit. 

The Audit, delivered in 2023 by Ms Jan Mason and Mr Jim Miller, undertook a comprehensive review of Australia’s Defence estate – including bases, training areas and rifle ranges – to ensure it is fit-for-purpose and provides our Australian Defence Force (ADF) with the facilities and capabilities they need to keep Australian safe. 

Following careful consideration of the Audit’s recommendations, the Government released its response last month. Community consultation sessions have been identified as a key part of the implementation process, with local community organisations, key stakeholders and the broader public invited to provide input on the proposed divestment of 67 sites.

The consultation process will support discussions about how surplus Defence land can best deliver benefits for surrounding communities, reaffirm protections for history and heritage including through the Environment Protections and Biodiversity Conservation Act, and capture the broad range of views from the community.

Many of these Defence sites have served Australia proudly, hold great sentimental value, and are a reminder of our past sacrifices and achievements. The Government deeply understands the emotional attachment that current and former Defence personnel have to the history of our Defence Force. 

That’s why the Albanese Government is committed to preserving and enhancing public access to historically significant sites and collections, so Australians can continue to recognise and celebrate our proud military history.

The community consultation sessions will also provide an opportunity for the public and interested parties to better understand the Department of Finance’s role in managing the divestment process.

While consultation sessions will commence in Tasmania next week, sessions in Queensland, the Northern Territory and Victoria are scheduled to take place in April. These sessions will build on ongoing, site-by-site engagement with Defence people, including cadets and reservists, which is already underway. 

Further information on the planned community consultation sessions, including dates and details and how to participate, is available here: https://www.defence.gov.au/about/locations-property/delivering-future-estate/defence-estate-audit-community-information-sessions 

A full list of sites selected for divestment is available here: https://www.defence.gov.au/about/locations-property/delivering-future-estate

the Assistant Minister for Defence, Peter Khalil:

“Australia’s Defence estate is the largest property portfolio in the country. Implementing the independent Audit’s recommendations will ensure our bases and training areas are fit for purpose in a rapidly changing world.”

“Community consultation sessions start today in Tasmania, and we look forward to hearing directly from communities about how the Defence estate can best support Australia’s security while also strengthening the regions in which Defence operates.”

“By engaging directly with communities across the country in the months ahead, we can ensure the Defence estate is modern, efficient and positioned to support the ADF well into the future.”

Two years since the death of Zomi Frankcom

Today marks two years since Australian aid worker Zomi Frankcom was killed in an Israeli strike while delivering vital humanitarian aid in Gaza.

Zomi was driven by passion and a purpose to assist people in need. People like Zomi are rare and their selflessness should not only be celebrated but protected.

The Albanese Government has made clear our expectation that there be transparency about Israel’s ongoing investigation into the deaths of Zomi and her six World Central Kitchen colleagues. We continue to press for full accountability, including any appropriate criminal charges.

Humanitarian workers in Gaza, Lebanon and other conflict zones globally continue to face unacceptable risks in their delivery of critical assistance to civilians.

The death of any aid worker anywhere is unacceptable.

In Zomi’s honour, Australia launched the Declaration for the Protection of Humanitarian Personnel, along with eight other countries, at the United Nations in September last year.

The Declaration is now a shared commitment by more than 110 countries – more than half the United Nations – for stronger accountability, safer access, and better protection for aid workers everywhere.

Honouring Zomi’s legacy means turning commitment into action. We will continue to work with international partners to drive action to protect aid workers in conflict zones.

Albanese Government fails its own rules for deploying troops to the Middle East

The Albanese Government has breached its own rules for deploying Australian Defence Force personnel to conflict zones when it sent forces to the UAE earlier this month. 

The Memorandum on Government Conventions Relating to Overseas Armed Conflict Decision Making was adopted by the Albanese Government on 27 November 2024. It sets out the rules establishing what the Government must do when it “deploys the ADF in a major military operation as a party to an armed conflict overseas.” 

The requirements include providing an unclassified written statement to both Houses of Parliament outlining the objectives of the deployment, the orders made, its legal basis and setting aside a day of debate in Parliament.

The rules clearly state this must be done within 30-days of the deployment, which was announced on March 10, 2024. The Albanese Government has failed to do any of this and this sitting week is its last chance to comply. 

The Greens wrote to the Albanese Government last week seeking it adhere to these rules in the deployment of a E-7A Wedgetail, some 85  Australian personnel and missiles to the UAE in the middle of the war in Iran. The letter from the Greens can be found here, and the Government’s reply here

Senator David Shoebridge, Greens Spokesperson for Defence and Foreign Affairs, said:“The Albanese Government after refusing to support war powers reform in the last Parliament, put forward this memorandum instead. Now they have failed to meet even this extremely low standard. 

“A key requirement of the memorandum is that the Government must provide the legal basis for the deployment of Australian military forces. Labor has now refused to do this, almost certainly because there is no lawful basis for Australia joining this war. 

“The Memorandum also requires regular reports, public statements on the aims and a day of debate in Parliament. All of that has been scrapped so Albanese could be first in line to support Trump. 

“The violence that is spreading through the Middle East, the resulting chaos here in Australia, all of it shows why these decisions need to be under public scrutiny. It absolutely proves how dangerous it is for Australians to be sent into a war zone by a handful of government ministers who have never said no to Trump or the US. 

“The response from the Defence Minister is embarrassing for Labor. The idea that the deployment to the UAE is in any way comparable to the sending forces to Poland is ridiculous. Poland is not an armed conflict zone, as the Gulf is today, which is what this Memorandum is based on. 

“The Labor Government treats the public with contempt when it comes to foreign policy. They ram through a secret defence committee that excludes the public, then demand we applaud them for it. They cheer in Trump’s war and now refuse to tell the public why.

“The war parties of Labor, the Coalition and One Nation aren’t protecting the Australian public with their reckless support of this illegal and damaging war. 

“Labor’s refusal to even debate the war, their refusal to meet their own low standards of transparency, proves once more that they are delivering for their masters in Washington, not their voters in Australia.”

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FWC scraps junior rates for 18-20 year olds

The Fair Work Commission’s decision today to scrap unfair junior rates for young adults aged 18-20 is a big win for our workers.

The Greens have long campaigned for removing the discriminatory practice of imposing junior rates on Australia’s young workforce.

The real wages of workers have gone backwards as inflation has soared, leaving our young workers behind in a cost-of-living crisis.

The Greens welcome the FWC’s decision for young adults. However, its exclusion of 16-17 year olds is disappointing.

Greens spokesperson for finance, employment and workplace relations Senator Barbara Pocock:

“Scrapping unfair junior rates is a big win for young workers. For too long 18-20 year olds have been doing the same work as their 21 year old colleagues but for less pay.

“Rising inflation is eroding real wages, pushing young workers further behind in the cost-of-living squeeze.

“Low-paid workers are already facing an uphill battle as wages have failed to keep up with the inflation. 

“The Greens believe workers’ pay should reflect their skills, not their age. We need to continue to raise the wages of under-18s who do the same work for less pay.

“It’s not fair that a 16 year old fast food worker earns $16.60 per hour less than their 21 year old colleague doing the same job. 

“Junior pay rates guarantee an endless supply of cheap labour for employers willing to exploit the skills and talents of young people newly entering the workforce.”

Greens-led childcare inquiry results in more protections for children, interim report released today

Today committee chair and Greens spokesperson for Children, Anasina Gray-Barberio handed down the interim report for the Inquiry into the Early Childhood Education and Care Sector in Victoria. The Greens-led inquiry has already resulted in better outcomes for child safety. 

The inquiry received 99 written submissions and has held 5 days of public hearings so far.

This interim report released today gives an update on the evidence heard by the committee on issues such as quality of services, the growth in private, for profit-providers, child safety and well-being, and cultural safety for First Peoples.

Since the inquiry was established, the national and state governments have made several important changes including improvements to working with children checks, establishing a new regulator, a national early childhood worker register, new offences and penalties, and a CCTV trial in certain centres.

These welcome steps are thanks to advocacy from the Greens and the community.

The select committee will continue its work with further hearings in May before presenting a final report by the end of July.

Victorian Greens spokesperson for Children and Committee Chair, Anasina Gray-Barberio:

“This Greens-led inquiry has already been effective in getting the state and federal governments to act on child safety. We’ve seen tangible outcomes including improvements to working with children checks, establishing a new regulator, new offences and penalties and a CCTV trial in certain centres.” 

“Families deserve real answers, and this is exactly what the Greens-led inquiry is providing. 

“We’ve heard too many stories of children being harmed while 

Major parties collude to protect weak cash rules

The major parties have colluded to lock in a weak cash mandate that leaves Australians vulnerable to exclusion, the Greens say.

The Competition and Consumer (Industry Codes—Cash Acceptance) Regulations 2025 only applies to large supermarkets and fuel retailers, meaning most essential service providers are not required to accept cash.

“People should be able to use cash for essential goods and services across the economy, not just at a handful of big retailers,” said Greens Economic Justice spokesperson Senator Nick McKim

“Cash matters for inclusion, choice, access to essentials, and basic resilience when digital systems fail.”

“These regulations are far too narrow. They let most corporations off the hook while pretending to solve the problem.”

Consumer groups have warned the rules hit older Australians, people on low incomes, and regional communities hardest.

A disallowance motion that would have forced Labor to introduce a broader cash mandate was defeated by the combined votes of the major parties today.

“Yet again the Labor and Liberal parties have voted together to protect their corporate mates, and let most big corporations off the hook.”

Coalition will oppose expanding the size of Parliament

The Coalition will strongly oppose any move by the Albanese Government to increase the size of the Australian Parliament, warning it would come at significant cost to taxpayers at a time Australians are already under severe financial pressure.

Analysis from the Parliamentary Budget Office shows that expanding the Parliament could cost taxpayers more than $620 million, including salaries, staff, travel and office costs.

Leader of the Opposition Angus Taylor said the Government had its priorities completely wrong.

“At a time when Australian families are tightening their belts, the last thing they should be asked to fund is more politicians,” Mr Taylor said.

“This is a Government that cannot manage the economy, cannot control spending, and now wants to make Australians pay for a bigger Parliament.

“This is more spending, more bureaucracy, and more pressure on the budget at exactly the wrong time.

“We will protect Australians’ way of life and restore their standard of living, and that starts with living within our means.”

Leader of The Nationals Matt Canavan said the proposal showed how out of touch the Government had become.

“People in regional Australia are doing it tough. They are paying more for fuel, groceries and power,” Senator Canavan said.

“They do not want more politicians in Canberra. They want practical help with the cost of living.

“Now is the time to tighten the belt, not expand the bureaucracy.

“This Government is focused on itself. The Coalition is focused on Australians.”

The Coalition is calling on the Prime Minister to immediately rule out any expansion of the Parliament and instead focus on Australia’s declining living standards and cost of living crisis.

Project to breathe new life into Wickham

City of Newcastle has shared a first look at its plans to renew Wickham’s village heart as it calls for tenders to deliver pedestrian and public domain upgrades on Union Street.

The project will enhance safety for pedestrians and cyclists with traffic calming measures and the introduction of a one-way shared zone, while improved lighting, landscaping, seating and paving will reinvigorate the area’s appeal.

Artist's impression of Union Street upgradeAn artist’s impression of planned upgrades in Union Street, Wickham.

City of Newcastle CEO Jeremy Bath said the upgrades formed part of a broader Wickham Public Domain Plan developed in consultation with the community.

“This is the first project to progress as part of a long-term plan to transform Wickham while celebrating its unique character,” Mr Bath said.

“We worked closely with a number of stakeholders including local community group Great Lifestyle of Wickham during the development of the Public Domain Plan and are pleased to now be moving forward with the first project. 

“By breathing new life into Union Street, we will create a sense of place and character for everyone who lives, works or spends time in Wickham.

“We are inviting tenders from experienced contractors to help City of Newcastle bring this vision to life, with a view to commence construction around October this year.”

Artist's impression Union StreetAn artist’s impression of planned upgrades in Union Street, Wickham.

The project, which takes in the area on Union Street between Station and Throsby streets, will also include improved stormwater infrastructure, upgrades to the roadway and new line marking for cyclists. 

Specialist heritage advice will be sought to guide the reuse of materials, such as patterned stone pavers that presently line Union Street, with work to preserve and restore the pavers expected to begin in June.

The main construction work is scheduled for later this year, following the award of the tender.  

Community consultation on the Wickham Public Domain Plan was undertaken in February 2023, with 74% of respondents supportive of the proposed pedestrian network improvements and traffic calming devices. 

The plan was adopted in November 2023 and sets out a number of improvements that will be delivered over many years by both City of Newcastle and third parties, including developers. 

Mr Bath said Wickham is playing a key role in the strategic shift of Newcastle’s business hub to the city’s west end, with connections to multiple modes of public transport.

“Wickham’s transformation is continuing from its semi-industrial past into a mixed-use urban neighbourhood, with ongoing interest from investors and developers and an increase in residents calling the suburb home,” Mr Bath said.

“The Wickham Public Domain Plan provides a clear, shared vision for future improvements to public spaces and aims to create a welcoming and positive environment while also improving safety and accessibility.”

East End Village evolution nears latest milestone

A key section of Wolfe Street has been reopened as City of Newcastle puts the finishing touches on the latest phase of the East End Village revitalisation project.

The multimillion-dollar upgrade includes the section of Hunter Street between Thorn and Wolfe Streets, and Wolfe Street between King and Scott Streets.

Daracon's Scott Myers and Gabriel Ascanio, City of Newcastle's Interim Executive Director City Infrastructure Robert Dudgeon and project manager Kate Summers, Daracon's Michael Rummery and Marc Veronese in the Hunter Street MallDaracon’s Scott Myers and Gabriel Ascanio, City of Newcastle’s Interim Executive Director City Infrastructure Robert Dudgeon and project manager Kate Summers, Daracon’s Michael Rummery and Marc Veronese in the Hunter Street MallNew footpaths, road surfaces and the latest stretch of a separated cycleway will make it easier to navigate this area of the former Hunter Street Mall, while significant stormwater and underground infrastructure upgrades have enhanced and future-proofed key services for residents and businesses. 

CEO Jeremy Bath said City of Newcastle’s vision for a more liveable and vibrant city centre is taking shape.

“Our East End Village project is reinstating the former Hunter Street Mall as a traditional high street, making it a better place to live for the growing number of residents that are calling the area home,” Mr Bath said.

“We are ensuring our city centre is more people-focused, making it easier to navigate and a much nicer place to spend time, which provides a boost to local businesses and our economy.”  

Since construction started on East End Village project in 2021, City of Newcastle has invested more than $16 million over three phases into the revitalisation of the former Hunter Street Mall. 

To date, this has delivered extensive streetscape upgrades to Hunter Street from Brown to Wolfe Street, and the block bound by Hunter, Wolf, King and Perkins Streets. 

City of Newcastle Interim Executive Director City Infrastructure, Robert Dudgeon, thanked residents and businesses for their support throughout construction.

“We’ve worked closely with local businesses and stakeholders to maintain access and continuity of trade, while delivering upgrades that will support the area into the future,” Mr Dudgeon said.

“I’m particularly pleased with how we’re making our city centre an attractive place for everyone to spend time by improving accessibility and landscaping in the area, and that will continue through future stages of the project.”

Final line marking works on the latest section of separated cycleway, along with finishing touches like paver installations and clean-up of the area, will be completed in April.

The focus will then switch to the next phase of the project, with upgrades on Hunter Street, Market Street, and Newcomen Street.

City of Newcastle is currently assessing tenders for this section of the revitalisation project, which is supported with funding from the Australian Government’s Regional Precincts and Partnerships Program.

The project is planned to start once these funding arrangements have been finalised.

For more on the East End Village project, visit https://newcastle.nsw.gov.au/east-end.