Netball NSW Launches Flood Appeal to Support Devastated Regional Communities

Netball NSW has launched a statewide Flood Appeal in partnership with the Australian Sports Foundation, aimed at supporting regional netball Associations in northern NSW affected by the devastating May 2025 floods.

“We have lost so much – the flood destroyed our administration building and our canteen, wiping out our stock which is the main source of revenue for the Association,” Jenny Anderson, Manning Valley Netball Association President said.

“We managed to salvage the trophies, a few balls and a couple of post pads. We need to recoup all our equipment.”

The two-week fundraising initiative – running from Friday 30 May to Friday 13 June – will rally the entire netball community to support three of the hardest-hit Associations:

Manning Valley Netball Association
Nambucca Valley Netball Association
Macleay Netball Association
Funds raised will help these communities rebuild their netball facilities, replace equipment, and support the volunteers and athletes who have been impacted. Any additional Associations that have been affected by the floods can also contact Netball NSW for support.

“We’ve had overwhelming interest from across the netball community asking how they can help,” Tracey Scott, CEO Netball NSW said.

“This Appeal is a way to act together – with heart and unity – to support our netball family and provide real relief to those affected by this disaster.”

With many families displaced, courts damaged, and local infrastructure disrupted, the Appeal is a critical initiative to help restore access to the game that is such a vital part of community life across NSW.

“This is not just about netball,” Scott said.

“It’s about helping communities recover and reconnect – and giving our regional Associations the tools to bounce back.”

The launch of the Appeal will coincide with the lead-up to the HART Senior State Titles, one of the largest netball events in the Southern Hemisphere, to be held from 7-9 June across Campbelltown and Camden. With more than 220 teams and thousands of spectators expected, the event provides a powerful platform to raise both funds and awareness.

How to Donate
Donations can be made securely online via the Australian Sports Foundation:
👉 Netball NSW Flood Appeal

All donations $2 and over are tax deductible. For more information on the Appeal, contact Janyne Hogan, Head of Foundation, Netball NSW via email – jhogan@netballnsw.com.

Officer charged – Northern Region

An off-duty police officer has been charged after allegedly refusing to leave a licenced premise in the state’s north.

About 12.55am Saturday 28 December 2024, police were called to a licenced premises in Shoal Bay, following reports a group were refusing to leave.

Officers attached to Port Stephens-Hunter Police District arrived and were told three people were physically removed by security after they allegedly refused to leave the property when directed.

Police commenced an investigation into the incident and, following extensive inquiries, a 41-year-old male senior constable attached to Northern Region, a 41-year-old woman, and an 18-year-old man were yesterday (Friday 30 May 2025), charged with excluded person fail to leave premises when required.

The woman was also charged with common assault.

All three were issued court attendance notices to appear before Raymond Terrace Local Court on Monday 7 July 2025.

Appeal to locate teen missing from Raymond Terrace

Police are appealing for assistance to locate a teenage boy missing from state’s Hunter region.

Kieren Nean, aged 13, was last seen on Cook Street, Raymond Terrace, about 12pm on Wednesday 14 May 2025.

When he could not be located or contacted, officers attached to Newcastle Police District were contacted yesterday (Thursday 30 May 2025) and commenced inquiries into his whereabouts.

Police and family hold concerns for his welfare due to his age.

Kieren is described as being of Aboriginal/Torres Strait Islander appearance, about 165cm, of thin build, with brown hair.

He is known to frequent the Raymond Terrace and Newcastle areas.

If you see Kieren, please call Triple Zero (000) immediately.

Adoption of World Health Organization Pandemic Agreement

The Australian Government welcomes the adoption of the World Health Organization (WHO) Pandemic Agreement.

The Agreement is a significant step towards strengthening pandemic prevention, preparedness and response.

The Agreement takes account of lessons learnt during the COVID-19 pandemic and supports collective action to address pandemic threats, including by strengthening multi-sectoral disease surveillance and access to vaccines.

While the Agreement has been adopted by the World Health Assembly, there are further steps remaining to finalise technical details. Australia will only commence our treaty making process after the Agreement opens for signature, which is not expected until at least mid-2026.

Once the Agreement has entered into force, Australia and our region will be better positioned to reduce pandemic risks and respond swiftly if a pandemic occurs, saving lives and mitigating the impacts on our economies. Australia will retain full sovereignty in making public health decisions which promote the interests of Australians.

Australia is proud to have served as Vice-Chair of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Body for the Pandemic Agreement, representing our diverse Western Pacific region.

This outcome reaffirms the value of multilateral solutions to shared global challenges.

Australia will continue to play our part to ensure the international community is better prepared to respond to future pandemics

Minister for Foreign Affairs, Senator the Hon Penny Wong:

“We need international cooperation on health to help keep Australia, our region, and the world safe. The adoption of the WHO Pandemic Agreement demonstrates the value of the international community working together to find solutions to shared global challenges.”

Minister for Health and Ageing, Minister for Disability and the NDIS, the Hon Mark Butler MP:

“The next pandemic is not a matter of if, but when. We have a collective responsibility to protect public health in all of our countries. The adoption of the WHO Pandemic Agreement is an important step forward.”

Committee report into government’s proposed workers compensation changes reveals widespread lack of support

NSW Parliament’s Law and Justice Committee has just handed down its report into the NSW Labor Government’s proposed changes to workers compensation entitlements. This follows a mammoth hearing just last Friday where the Committee heard from almost 40 witnesses across nine and a half hours of evidence. 

The evidence contained in the report details near universal opposition to the major elements of the government’s proposed reforms from witnesses and stakeholders. 

The inquiry into the government’s legislation follows only two years after the Committee conducted a fulsome and comprehensive inquiry into the drivers and impacts of workplace psychological injuries resulting in compensation claims. The majority of recommendations, including key prevention and management recommendations, from that report remain unfulfilled. Despite the NSW Labor government agreeing or agreeing in principle to all of those recommendations, many of the elements of the government’s proposed reforms are in direct contradiction to those recommendations. 

Abigail Boyd, Greens Spokesperson for Treasury, Work Health and Safety, and Industrial Relations: 

“The evidence received by the committee in our one-day hearing painted a damning picture of what the government proposes to do to injured workers in this state. 

“Everything we heard pointed to just how ill-conceived and incomprehensibly cruel the Minns Labor Government’s proposed curtailment of support for psychologically injured workers is – these reforms will be actively harmful to thousands of injured and deserving people. 

“The government’s inability to present coherent modelling and financial analysis of either the scheme liabilities or the impact of these proposed changes is cause for great concern. Projected future rates of growth of psychological injury are based on heroic assumptions that only an actuary could love, and a highly motivated one at that. It’s on these shaky projections that the supposed crisis the government claims to be responding to is based. 

“But even if you are to believe that there is to be some catastrophic blowout in costs from psychological injuries, the answer is not to pretend those injuries don’t exist – we have to focus on stopping people getting injured at work in the first place and, if they are injured, doing everything we can to get them quickly back on their feet. Anything less is not only dangerous to workers’ lives and morally wrong, it’s also an incredibly naive way to manage the State’s longer-term finances, dependent as they are on a productive and resilient workforce. 

“The proposal to increase the threshold for accessing long-term support to a level that would require a worker to be rendered essentially catatonic or in need of permanent around-the-clock professional care was identified by experts as being particularly cruel and without basis or justification. If allowed to go through, these changes will cost lives.” 

CLIMATE BETRAYAL: GREENS NORTH WEST SHELF MOTION DEFEATED AS VIC LABOR BOASTS ‘BILLIONS’ OF NEW GAS INVESTMENT IN VICTORIA

This morning, a Victorian Greens request to urgently debate the Albanese Labor Government’s decision to approve the extension of the North West Shelf gas project in the Victorian Parliament was denied.

The Victorian Greens used a tool that allows MPs to bring matters of urgent public importance forward for debate in the Parliament at short notice – arguing that as the state faces worsening drought and NSW reels from once-in-500-year floods, the project’s 6.1 billion tonnes of emissions will fuel climate chaos impacting every Victorian, harming public health, driving up insurance costs, and endangering future generations.

The request was denied. In response, the Greens say: if Labor approving a climate bomb with projected emissions of up to 6.1 billion tonnes isn’t a matter of urgent public importance, then what is?

It comes on the same day that state Labor has made comments boasting of billions of dollars in new gas investment in Victoria this year alone.

The Greens have accused the Victorian Labor Government of following in Albo’s footsteps, saying that Labor is guilty of ‘climate betrayal’ at both levels of government.

The North West Shelf Project will release more emissions than every coal-fired power station in Australia combined, locking in fossil fuel use until 2070 – decades beyond the climate deadlines set by the IPCC and Paris Agreement.

The Victorian Greens say that the Parliament shouldn’t be avoiding scrutiny and debate on such an important matter that will impact every Victorian.

Leader of the Victorian Greens, Ellen Sandell:

“Woodside’s massive new gas project is a climate bomb – the equivalent of opening 12 new coal-fired power stations. Labor’s approval of this disastrous project will blow our climate targets, supercharging floods, bushfires and extreme weather already hitting Victorians. If that’s not a matter of urgent public importance for Parliament to debate, I don’t know what is.”

“It’s incredibly disappointing to see Labor here in Victoria boasting about new gas projects the day after their federal Labor colleagues approved Woodside’s climate disaster. Future generations will never forgive Labor for this climate betrayal”

Mid North Coast Floods: “We are in a new climate reality – the Government must act”

As communities across the Mid North Coast and Hunter grapple with the aftermath of catastrophic flooding, NSW Greens MPs Tamara Smith and Sue Higginson have called on the NSW Government to urgently abandon its ongoing support for policies that fuel climate disaster, including coal and gas expansion and native forest logging.  

Tamara Smith MP, Member for Ballina and Greens NSW spokesperson for Disaster Relief said:

“No sooner have the people of the Northern Rivers marked the third anniversary of the devastating 2022 floods, than communities just south of us are facing another deadly climate-driven disaster,” 

“Some flood levels in the Hunter and Mid North Coast have exceeded those of 1929. These are not one-in-100-year events – they are our new reality, and they demand a serious response from Government.”  

Tamara Smith expressed her deep concern for affected residents, saying: 

“My heart goes out to those who have lost loved ones, the nearly 800 families who cannot return to their homes, to the townspeople and business owners whose lives have been upended, to the farmers who have lost stock and crops, and to the SES workers and volunteers holding these communities together. No one is untouched by this disaster.”  

Sue Higginson MLC, Greens NSW spokesperson for Climate Change, said the disaster must be a turning point for government action on climate.  

“The science has long warned us that climate change would drive more frequent and more intense flooding across the East Coast of NSW. We are now living that warning, and yet the Minns Government continues to approve new coal and gas projects, and allows the ongoing destruction of climate-critical native forests.”  

“The peer-reviewed attribution report produced by ClimaMeteras the floods were going on, demonstrate that the intensity of the floods were a direct result of human activity and climate change. The fact that the NSW Government approved the extension of a large coal mine during these climate fuelled floods, is a reckless act of harm against all communities living on the front lines of the climate crisis,” 

“The Government is committing acts of climate negligence. Every day they delay real action is another day it fails the people of NSW.”  

Both MPs have called for: 

  • An immediate end to new coal and gas approvals in NSW. 
  • A moratorium on native forest logging to protect carbon stores and natural flood mitigation. 
  • Urgent review of planning and housing approvals in flood-prone regions. 
  • Increased funding and permanent support for disaster preparedness and community resilience programs. 

“Climate change is not a future threat – it is here, and it is destroying lives,” said Tamara Smith.  

“To pretend these floods are simply freak weather events is wilful ignorance. The NSW Government must face reality and take responsibility.”  

Eden’s iconic Light-to-Light walk reopens after significant upgrades and restorations

Upgrades to the Light-to-Light Walk in Beowa National Park on Yuin Country, near Eden are now complete and open to the public, with the multi-day walk showcasing everything that makes the South Coast special. The works are part of a $14.9 million investment in the National Park.

Commencing in March 2023, the upgrade and restoration work stretches from Boyds Tower to Green Cape Lighthouse. Works include new and re-routed sections of the previous walk, as well as two new purpose-built campgrounds at Mowarry Point and Hegartys Bay.

These new campgrounds feature 10 new timber camping platforms and toilets to accommodate walkers on the upgraded track. 

Significant work has also been completed to repair damage after the 2019/2020 bushfires, including track repair, Boyds Tower precinct renewal, Green Cape precinct car park and Bittangabee Campground upgrades.

The funds for the upgrades and restoration work are jointly provided by the Regional Growth – Environment and Tourism Fund program and NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service.

The 32km Grade 4 Light-to-Light walk can be tackled on your own, or on a guided tour. Several local companies offer guided tours which include stories of the area’s rich cultural history and ensure you don’t miss a thing along the way.  

Before embarking on any long distance or multi-day hike, it’s important to hire a personal locator beacon and to fill in a trip intention form. Further advice on hiking safety is available via the NPWS bushwalking webpage

Further upgrade works are planned this year for the Green Cape Lighthouse precinct accommodation located at the southern end of the walk. Information on the Light-to-Light Walk is available via the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service website.

Minister for the Illawarra and the South Coast, Ryan Park:

“The Light-to-Light Walk is one of the crown jewels of the South Coast, and these upgrades ensure it remains a world-class experience for visitors.

“This investment reflects the Minns Labor Government’s commitment to sustainable tourism, regional jobs, and providing people with better access to nature and the stories of Country that make this place so special.”

Member for Bega, Dr Michael Holland:

“The Light-to-Light Walk is poised to bring great economic benefits to the region whether it is accommodation providers, tour companies, restaurants or cafes, we welcome visitors from across Australia and abroad to come and take in the beauty of the South Coast.”

New Strata and Property Services Commissioner appointed

Minister for Better Regulation and Fair Trading Anoulack Chanthivong has welcomed the appointment of the new NSW Strata and Property Services Commissioner.

NSW Fair Trading has announced the appointment of Angus Abadee as the state’s new Strata and Property Services Commissioner.

The Strata and Property Service Commissioner leads NSW Fair Trading’s oversight of the strata and property sector and is focused on raising performance and accountability standards across strata, property services, retirement villages, and residential land lease communities.

Mr Abadee will lead initiatives to enhance industry integrity and lift consumer confidence within the state’s strata and property services sectors, as well as providing strategic advice to Government on its policy reform agenda.

Mr Abadee brings extensive regulatory and sector experience, having held senior positions in NSW Fair Trading, Building Commission NSW and Liquor & Gaming NSW, and has performed the role of Interim Strata and Property Services Commissioner since the role was vacated in December 2024.

He has established and led the Strata and Property Taskforce since that time, with a regulatory focus on practices causing consumer harm, including targeting underquoting in the real estate sales sector, as well as the failure of strata managing agents to act in the best interests of owners corporations and meet disclosure obligations.

This work included a sector-first permanent disqualification of Result Strata Management Pty Ltd and its general manager Michael Lee from working in the NSW strata sector.

Before joining the NSW Fair Trading leadership team in July 2024, Mr Abadee was Director Policy in Building Commission NSW where he was responsible for the design of the NSW Government’s reform agenda across the building industry, including key reforms that aim to restore confidence in strata living.

For more information on the Strata and Property Services Taskforce, please visit the New strata laws ensure fairer rules for fees and charges web page.

Minister for Better Regulation and Fair Trading Anoulack Chanthivong:

“Protection for real estate consumers and those living in strata schemes is one of the top priorities for the Minns Labor Government.

“I would like to congratulate Mr Abadee on his appointment.

“This is a critical time in the development of regulations and responding to consumer concerns across a growing and changing industry which will see almost half of Greater Sydney’s population living in strata communities in 2040.

“Mr Abadee’s appointment underscores the NSW Government’s commitment to fostering a fair, transparent, and sustainable strata and property sector.

“We want people to feel confident and safe when purchasing a property, living in a strata property, and dealing with property professionals, and that is exactly what our reforms are doing.”

Strata and Property Services Commissioner Angus Abadee:

“I am absolutely thrilled to be appointed NSW Strata and Property Services Commissioner.

“We have an opportunity to drive proactive and visible regulation across the industry, focusing on improving agent behavior, cracking down on individuals and agencies and empowering consumers.

“Along with the Fair Trading team, I want to ensure that practitioners do not just see themselves as running a business – they recognise they are members of a profession that comes with benefits and obligations.”

NSW Health launches first Net Zero Roadmap

The delivery of a modern, low carbon, low waste, climate resilient health system is at the heart of a new Roadmap launched by NSW Health.

The NSW Health Net Zero Roadmap is a first for NSW Health and sets out how the NSW public health system plans to reach zero emissions by 2050 while delivering quality, value, innovation and equity.

The Roadmap aligns closely with Future Health: guiding the next decade of care in NSW 2022-2032setting the strategic priorities for the next decade and, in particular, the commitment to an environmentally sustainable footprint for future healthcare.

The Roadmap outlines six strategic priority areas which will support NSW Health to meet the ambitious net zero target, including:

  • Healthcare – transitioning to modern high quality, low carbon models of care.
  • Land and buildings – decarbonising design, construction, use and disposal of buildings and being stewards of land and waters
  • Energy and water – improving air quality and health by using natural resources in sustainable ways
  • Supply Chain – reducing environmental and financial supply chain costs through the purchase of goods and services and drive circularity
  • Travel and transport –improving air quality and health by shifting towards active modes of transport, electrifying NSW Health transportation, and exploring new ways to deliver care remotely
  • Food services –sustainable sourcing, production and provision of high quality, healthy food for patients, whilst minimising food waste

For more information on the plan visit the NSW Health website.

Minister for Climate Change, Penny Sharpe: 

“The NSW Health Net Zero Roadmap shows action is being delivered across the whole of government to deliver on our Net Zero targets.

“I commend NSW Health for their leadership to reduce the effects of climate change.”

Minister for Health, Ryan Park:

“The NSW Health Net Zero Roadmap will help us meet the ambitious goal of reaching zero emissions by 2050, all while clinicians and health care workers continue to deliver high quality care to the community.

“I’m grateful to everyone involved in the Roadmap’s development, taking a strategic and active approach to reducing waste and emissions, while maintaining and improving our high standards of care.

“The health of the planet is deeply linked with public health and this Roadmap will support a healthier and more sustainable community.”

NSW Health Secretary, Susan Pearce AM:

“The healthcare sector has historically been a significant contributor to greenhouse gas emissions, and we all need to play our part to create a cleaner and more sustainable future.

“To that end, NSW Health staff are implementing innovative programs, technologies, policies and practices towards the NSW Government’s net zero targets.”