Major redevelopment of Gillieston Public School reaches new heights

The Minns Labor Government is delivering another long overdue school upgrade for regional NSW, with Gillieston Public School’s major redevelopment reaching a major construction milestone.

The Member for Maitland, Jenny Aitchison MP, inspected Gillieston Public School today following the topping out of the new three-storey school building.  

Surging demand for public education in Maitland left Gillieston Public School bursting at the seams under the Liberals and Nationals, with most of the school’s students learning in demountable classrooms.

Once the work is complete all the school’s 24 demountables will be replaced with 32 modern permanent classrooms and three support classrooms.

The upgrade will increase the permanent capacity of Gillieston Public School, which currently has only two permanent classrooms, by more than 650 students, future-proofing the school for further growth.

Additional redevelopment work includes a new outside of school hours care facilities, a covered outdoor learning area, upgraded sports facilities, as well as a new library, school hall, and canteen.

The school will also benefit from a co-located fee-free public preschool, as will nearby Tenambit Public School.

Work is underway on the delivery of both these new co-located public preschools, which will accommodate up to 200 children per week between them.

The upgraded school and the two public preschools will open from Day 1, Term 1, 2027 as the Minns Labor Government continues its work to rebuild public education across NSW.

The new public preschools are part of the government’s commitment to build 100 public preschools by 2027, the biggest expansion of public preschools in NSW history.

This is part of a record $9 billion investment in new schools and upgrades, including $2.1 billion for regional NSW, giving our children access to a world class public education, right where they live.

The Minns Labor Government has also delivered the biggest pay rise in a generation to attract the best teachers and keep them in the classroom, resulting in teacher vacancies falling to the lowest level in 12 years, halving the number of merged and cancelled classes in NSW schools.

This is all part of the Minns Labor Government’s plan to deliver better schools and more teachers to give our kids the world class education they deserve.

Deputy Premier of New South Wales and Minister for Education and Early Learning Prue Car said:

“This is a major investment in the future of public education for Maitland families, providing local students with the world class facilities they deserve.”

“For far too long, the Gillieston Public School community was neglected by the Liberals and Nationals.

“The Minns Labor Government, with the tireless advocacy of local MP Jenny Aitchison, have listened to the community, and students can look forward to learning in their new classrooms from the beginning of next year.”

Minister for the Hunter Yasmin Catley said:  

“This is great news for families in Gillieston Heights and right across Maitland.

“The Hunter is growing quickly, and communities rightly expect the essential infrastructure to keep up – including great local public schools.

“For too long, families at Gillieston Public School had to make do with temporary classrooms and overcrowding. This upgrade is about giving them the permanent, high-quality facilities they deserve.”

Member for Maitland Jenny Aitchison said:  

“It’s no secret that Gillieston Heights is a rapidly growing suburb, and the public school has been bursting at the seams for over a decade.

“This redevelopment would not be happening without the strong advocacy of the school community. We’ve been calling for upgrades to this school for years.

“This is a much-needed upgrade, that will ensure this fantastic school can continue to serve this community well into the future.”  

Gillieston Public School Principal Lauren Fernando said:

“It’s exciting to see our upgrade underway. Our students are looking forward to modern, permanent classrooms and facilities.  

“This upgrade is going to make a big difference to our students, our staff and our whole school community.” 

Labor’s tax grab hits NSW families

The latest ABS Taxation Revenue data confirms what families and businesses across New South Wales already know: under Labor, taxes are going up and households are paying the price. 

Under the Minns Labor Government, a disturbing trend of runaway tax increases has emerged. Between the 2022-23 and 2024-25 financial years, NSW has endured the highest per capita state and local government taxation growth of any jurisdiction in the country of 15.7 per cent, compared to 6.7 per cent growth across all levels of government.   

    22-23  23-24 24-25 22-23 to 24-25    
  
  $ $ $ % change   
State and local government       
 New South Wales 5,519 6,005 6,383 15.7%   
 Victoria 5,810 6,367 6,605 13.7%   
 Queensland 4,746 5,060 5,481 15.5%   
 South Australia 4,307 4,689 4,956 15.1%   
 Western Australia 5,303 5,598 5,933 11.9%   
 Tasmania 3,651 3,985 4,153 13.7%   
 Northern Territory 3,424 3,604 3,839 12.1%   
 Australian Capital Territory 5,555 5,494 5,725 3.1%   
 Average 5,266 5,692 6,023 14.4%   
Commonwealth government 23,475 24,083 24,652 5.0%   
All levels of government 28,705 29,735 30,633 6.7%   

The 2025-26 NSW Budget Half-Yearly Review confirms that under the Minns Labor Government, every tax is going up with land tax revenue increasing by more than 47 per cent, transfer duty revenue up nearly 45 per cent, and payroll tax surging by over 20 per cent since the 2022-23 budget year. 
 
NSW Shadow Treasurer Scott Farlow said the figures expose a clear pattern: higher taxes, rising cost of living, and a government that keeps taking more. 
 
“Since the Minns Labor Government was elected, NSW has taken the mantle of the State with the fastest growing taxes. That’s not something to be proud of, it is a burden families are feeling every single day.” 
 
“There is barely a tax that has been spared. Whether you’re buying a home, running a business, or just trying to get ahead, Labor is taking more.” 
 
“Labor has no plan to help the families of NSW, but has a plan to continue growing taxes with the Half-Yearly Budget Review predicting taxation will hit nearly $60 billion by the 2028-29 financial year – a more than 50 per cent increase on the yearly tax burden the people of NSW faced under the last year of the Coalition Government.” 
 
“At a time when people are cutting back, the Minns Labor Government is cashing in.” 

One Nation: Labor’s NDIS changes lacking detail

For many years, One Nation has been warning the government to reign in out-of-control spending on the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) or else risk support for the very existence of the scheme among the Australian taxpayers who pay for it.


As they watch NDIS costs spiral beyond $50 billion a year – well beyond projections – it appears the Albanese Labor government is listening (a bit). As far as One Nation is concerned, just about the only thing Labor is getting right at the moment is trying to make the NDIS more sustainable.

This week, Labor has announced a move to reduce the number of NDIS participants from 760,000 to 600,000 by 2030. There’s no detail about tightening eligibility requirements, better standards for providers, or cracking down on fraud. And there’s no word whatsoever about one of the biggest problems with the NDIS blowout: pay rates.


Whether you’re a specialist or an unskilled worker, you’ll get around three times as much working in the NDIS than you would in a different health sector. Not only is this costing taxpayers much more than it should; it’s creating shortages of these workers in public health and aged care.


One Nation supports the NDIS. We want it to survive to deliver on its original purpose: providing reasonable and necessary support for Australians living with significant or severe disability.
The NDIS shouldn’t be funding home improvements and renovations, vehicles bought by providers to transport clients, services outside of medical requirements, holidays for clients or carers, sex workers or recreational activities dressed up as ‘therapy’. All providers should be registered and audited, and much bigger penalties should be in place for compliance breaches.


And the NDIS should be means-tested. Currently any billionaire can claim it. Labor appears to have ruled this out, and that’s a mistake.

Government’s take joint action to support Liberty Bell Bay workers during sale process

The Albanese and Rockliff Governments are protecting jobs and critical manufacturing capability at Liberty Bell Bay during its administration process.  

EY have formally accepted both Governments offer to jointly provide a $3 million loan, on a 50:50 basis, to support workers while administrator EY continues to conduct an expedited sale of the facility.  

This support is about providing workers with more certainty in what has been a very difficult time for the community.   

It will keep the workforce in place, protecting jobs and specialist skills, as well as giving the facility the best chance of a successful sale and faster restart under a new owner.   

Liberty Bell Bay is Australia’s only domestic producer of manganese alloy, a critical input into steelmaking for defence, construction and mining.   

This support follows the Tasmanian Government providing a $20 million loan to purchase ore after commitments from GFG, the smelter’s owner, it would restart operations at Liberty.  

Despite the commitment from GFG, Liberty remained in limited operations until the administration process began. 

The Commonwealth and Tasmanian Governments will continue to work closely to support workers, safeguard Australia’s industrial resilience, and secure the best possible outcome for the facility and the Bell Bay community.  

Anthony Albanese, Prime Minister 

“We’re backing the workers, their families and the community through this sale process because this facility and these jobs matter.  

“I thank the State Government and all local MPs for working with us to support Australian manufacturing.  

“We need to build more things here as a country – and that includes in Northen Tasmania.” 

Jeremy Rockliff, Premier of Tasmania 

“We are in the corner of workers, their families and impacted small businesses. 

“Liberty is the only manganese smelter in the country, and we have invested to support the workers and keep this sovereign capability in Northern Tasmania. 

“Our Government established the Bell Bay Response Team and we provided a $20 million loan for ore to restart operations at Liberty. 

“We have been in regular communication with the Federal Government and worked with them to deliver this employee support package.  

“Tasmanian manufacturing jobs are critical to our community, our State and our Nation.  

“Recognising that there is still more to do, I want to thank everyone from all sections of the community for rallying around the workers to save Liberty Bell Bay.  

“Strong cooperation between State, Federal and Local Government has been really important to date and I want to thank our Liberal Members for Bass, Bridget Archer, Rob Fairs and Michael Ferguson, and local members for Windermere, Nick Duigan, and Rosevears, Jo Palmer, for their very strong advocacy and focus on the wellbeing and jobs of the local workers.” 

Tim Ayres, Minister for Industry and Innovation and Minister for Science

“This is good news for the Bell Bay community – but I know there is more work to be done.  

“I look forward to a successful sale of Liberty Bell Bay – and welcome a new owner who will look after this facility for what it is: a critical part of the steelmaking supply chain.  

“I thank Jess Teesdale for advocating for her community, as well as the workers, unions and local suppliers, and the State Government, for pulling together to get this positive outcome.”  

NDIS reforms must work for people with terminal illness

Palliative Care Australia (PCA) welcomes the Federal Government’s NDIS reform agenda but says the changes must deliver coordinated support for people with disability linked to a terminal (life-limiting) illness or risk worsening “bed block” in hospitals. 

PCA Interim CEO Simon Waring said the palliative care sector will seek to work constructively with government on the reforms, while ensuring the needs of people with life-limiting illness remain front and centre. 

“We recognise the Government’s commitment to strengthening the NDIS and improving its long-term sustainability,” he said. 

“These are significant reforms, and Palliative Care Australia wants to engage positively with government on how they are designed and implemented.  

“It’s essential people with terminal illness are not overlooked in the process. For this group, the key issue is not simply whether they can access the NDIS. It is whether they can get the practical, day-to-day functional support they need, when they need it, regardless of which system provides it,” Mr Waring said. 

PCA National Policy Director Josh Fear said the proposed shift away from diagnosis-based access and towards functional assessments would create uncertainty for many people with life-limiting illness. 

“People with terminal illness often have complex needs that can change quickly,” he said. 

“The NDIS can provide very important support for some people in this group, but it will never meet the needs of everyone. That is why reform must also address the longstanding gap in supports outside the Scheme – so the NDIS is not the only lifeboat in the ocean.” 

Palliative Care Australia is calling on governments to work with the palliative care sector on the design of alternative systems of functional support for people with disability linked to life-limiting illness who cannot access the NDIS. 

“This is an opportunity to build a better and more coordinated response, including through a new system of Foundational Supports and stronger supports through mainstream health systems,” Mr Fear said. 

“We want to sit down with government and contribute constructively to that work.” 

Mr Fear said the palliative care peak body would be advocating strongly on several key issues as the reform process progresses. 

“First, people with terminal illness must not be left in limbo as access pathways change,” he said. 

“Second, people whose health is deteriorating quickly need to have their support needs met rapidly, regardless of which system is delivering that support.  

“Third, clarifying the boundaries between the NDIS and mainstream services must lead to better coordination of care, and not more gaps, confusion or cost-shifting between systems. 

“If we don’t get this right, more patients will be stranded in hospital, adding to those who can’t be safely discharged right now.”  

Mr Fear said the community must have confidence that people with life-limiting illness are not forgotten as major changes are made to the disability system.  

“We call on governments to confirm that this group will be a priority. People with life-limiting illness should not miss out on essential support because they do not fit neatly into one system, or because broader cost pressures are being felt elsewhere in the NDIS,” he said. 

“Our message is constructive, but clear: we are ready to work with government on practical solutions, and we will continue advocating for a system that responds with flexibility and compassion to people with terminal illness and their families.” 

Man charged with alleged cultivate prohibited plant – Newcastle

A man has been charged after a large hydroponic cannabis set up was discovered in Newcastle yesterday afternoon.

About 3.15pm (Wednesday 22 April 2026), police attended a home on Morris Street, Birmingham Gardens, to execute a search warrant as part of an ongoing investigation.

At the home, officers from the Hunter Region Enforcement Squad allegedly located a large hydroponic cannabis set up.

As a result of the search, officers allegedly located and seized 331 cannabis plants, and 23kg cannabis leaf.

A 39-year-old man was arrested and taken to Waratah Police Station.

There he was charged with three offences,

  • Knowingly take part-cultivate (greater than or equal to commercial quantity prohibited plant)
  • Supply cannabis (greater than indictable and less than commercial quantity), and
  • Divert/use electricity for generating etc system without authority.

He was refused bail to appear before Bail Division Court 2 today (Thursday 23 April 2026), where he was formally refused bail to appear before Newcastle Local Court on Wednesday 17 June 2026.

Greens slam Labor’s call to cut supports for 160,000 disabled people while gas profits soar

The Greens have slammed Labor’s NDIS cuts, saying their decision to kick 160,000 people from the scheme and reduce supports for disabled people is a cynical and cruel decision while gas exporters’ untaxed profits soar. 

Labor’s declaration that more restrictive eligibility for the NDIS will remove 160,000 people from the scheme – ahead of the codesign process that would supposedly design those criteria, has left the disability community facing months or years of anguish and fear.

Under Labor’s NDIS cuts;

  • There will be a real cut to funding each year across the forward estimates, with growth caps stuck below inflation while corporate profits soar,
  • An estimated 160,000 people will be removed from the scheme entirely, leaving disabled people fearing whether they will be excluded,
  • Participants face an estimated $5000 reduction in funding for social and community participation supports that provide critical social contact,
  • Participants’ ability to request changes to their supports is reduced, with restrictions on unscheduled assessments
  • The move towards an approved list of Supported Independent Living providers also poses risks to the choice and flexibility under the scheme.

The government’s decision to announce reverse aged care cuts show the cynical calculation Labor has made about who it thinks should be able to have the basics required to live a good life.

Labor says people should move to other supports – but governments have failed disabled people for years, through lack of investment in publicly available supports, high-quality accessible public housing with shared supports, and mental health in Medicare, and the low rate of the Disability Support Pension.

The Greens say they will oppose Labor’s cruel cuts to the NDIS, saying that the government is cynically pitting people who need care against one another while letting rich gas exporters off the hook.

Senator Larissa Waters, Leader of the Australian Greens said:

“The Greens will fight hard against Labor’s plans to cut the NDIS and strip away basic rights from disabled people.

“Labor is today cynically booting 160,000 people off the NDIS while letting big gas corporations avoid $17 billion in tax. 

“How dare this Government, who promised they wouldn’t cut the NDIS, balance their budget by selling disabled peoples’ dignity.

“This is an extraordinary betrayal of disabled people by a Labor government that promised to protect the NDIS, not cut it. Australians with a disability and everyone who loves them are angry, and they’re not going to let Labor take away their dignity without a fight.

“Budgets are about choices, and Labor is choosing to cut the NDIS instead of taxing rich gas corporations. Labor needs to show courage, tax the big corporations and 1%, stand up to Donald Trump, and get these billions back into the essential services we all rely on.

Senator Jordon Steele-John, Greens Disability spokesperson said:

“Disabled people are disgusted with this betrayal by Labor. Labor promised to protect the NDIS, but they are cutting it instead.

“It’s shocking that Labor is choosing to cut vital services for disabled people rather than tax gas exports, make Clive Palmer pay a little more tax or buy one fewer AUKUS submarine.

“Disabled people are now left dreading whether they will be one of the 160,000 people Labor plan to kick off the NDIS – because their disability is too invisible, or because a computer predicts they will be fine without supports. 

“These supports enable us to get out of bed in the morning, to connect with community and to avoid social isolation, and the government has announced it’s their intention to slash them. 

“It’s disgusting that Labor would strip that sense of hope away from disabled people and their families when the ultra-wealthy are doing so well. 

“Labor is making these cuts because they believe we are an easy target. They are wrong. We are angry, we are organised, and we will fight back.”

PM must coordinate a rent freeze at National Cabinet: Greens

The Australian Greens are calling for the National Cabinet to implement a nationwide rent freeze and a moratorium on evictions for the duration of the fuel crisis.

Australian households are being pushed to the brink as a result of the fuel crisis driven by the US-Israeli strikes on Iran, with renters the least able to absorb the shock of price spikes in essentials.

Renters are already struggling with big rent increases and record low vacancy rates. Nationwide rents surged more than 5 per cent over the past year. Now, they’re facing higher prices for essential transport, food and services – with many households just one rent increase away from eviction or homelessness.

During the COVID pandemic, the Victorian government implemented a 12 month freeze on rent increases as well as an eviction moratorium, to ensure housing precarity didn’t become a homelessness epidemic at a time of global economic instability.

The Australian Greens are calling on the Federal Government to work with states and territories to again provide this critical security for renters during the fuel crisis.

Greens Leader Larissa Waters:

“Renters around the country are facing some of the worst housing insecurity in living memory,” said the Greens Leader on Thursday.

“The fuel crisis has turbocharged a housing affordability crisis, with rents soaring, vacancy rates plummeting and house prices continuing to skyrocket.

“There are queues around the corner for tiny, overpriced apartments in every capital city in the country and outside the city the situation is often even more dire. Many people are facing a really terrifying reality that in the coming months they’ll simply have nowhere to live.

“We saw a rare example during COVID of a government doing their job and protecting renters from the volatility of global economic circumstances by putting a ban on rent increases and evictions. There’s nothing stopping that happening again.

“If the PM doesn’t use national cabinet to coordinate these national protections for renters, he will have to answer for massive rent hikes and evictions on top of inflation and cost of living in the coming months of this crisis.”

Greens spokesperson for finance, housing and homelessness Senator Barbara Pocock:

“People are already experiencing financial stress, struggling to make ends meet. This sensible, immediate cost-of-living rent relief will support people with the least secure housing. 

“Too many households are just one rent increase away from eviction or homelessness. A rent freeze and ban on evictions will give people the security they need in a cost of living and fuel crisis. 

“Trump and Netanyahu’s war on Iran is causing economic pain for Australians. While Labor gives tax breaks to price gouging corporations and wealthy property investors, ordinary Australians are literally paying the price.

“Rents are rising at record rates forcing people to spend more than 30% of their income just to keep a roof over their heads.

“We’ve protected renters before and we can do it again. During the COVID pandemic, the Victorian Labor Government introduced a 12 month rent freeze and the Morrison Government coordinated a national eviction moratorium. There’s no reason why the Labor Government can’t do the same to help renters struggling right now.”

Greens Senator confronts Woodside CEO on why she won’t front tomorrow’s gas tax inquiry

Chair of the Select Committee into the taxation of Australia’s gas resources, Australian Greens Senator Steph Hodgins-May, has confronted Woodside CEO Liz Westcott at the company’s AGM in Perth over her decision not to appear at tomorrow’s Senate inquiry into gas taxation. 

Westcott has been invited to give evidence at the final hearing but will not appear, with other company representatives scheduled instead. 

Speaking from inside the Woodside AGM, Senator Hodgins-May questioned Westcott directly on her absence and the taxation of gas exports. Ms Westcott would not commit to attending the inquiry hearing. 

Executives from Woodside, INPEX, Chevron and Santos are scheduled to appear at the final hearing at the Mercure Hotel in Perth. Media will be permitted, with audio broadcast only via APH.

Senator Hodgins-May: 

“It says everything that the CEO of one of Australia’s biggest gas exporters has time to address shareholders, but not to front a public inquiry into whether other Australians are getting a fair return on their resources.

“CEO’s shouldn’t just be focussed on the boardroom and senior government ministers, they need to front parliament when called and address critical matters of public interest. 

“Tomorrow’s hearing will test the claims the gas industry has repeated every time reform is on the table. 

“We’ve heard the same scare campaign every time, that now is not the time. Somehow it’s never the time to be sharing their obscene profits with those who own the resources – the Australian people. Australians simply aren’t buying it anymore. 

“A minimum 25 per cent tax on gas exports would raise at least $17 billion a year. There would be no need to slash the NDIS, and we’d have money to fund cost of living relief and a rapid transition to a clean energy future.

“The Prime Minister and Premier Cook need to remember we don’t live in a petrostate, where our political system is captured by greedy, profit seeking corporations.   

“The political risk if Labor doesn’t act is growing by the day. The consensus is clear that Australians are demanding a fair return on their resources.”

Newcastle scores an early try in road to Rugby World Cup 2027

Preparations for the 2027 Rugby World Cup in Newcastle will ramp up early, with Japan and Ireland confirmed for an international rugby Test at McDonald Jones Stadium on Saturday 11 July 2026.

The match marks the first time both nations will play at Newcastle’s premier stadium, delivering another major sporting coup for the region and reinforcing its growing reputation as a leading destination for world-class events.

Japan's head coach Eddie Jones, Cr Peta Winney-Baartz and Venue Manager Dean Mantle at McDonald Jones Stadium with local rugby representativesJapan’s head coach Eddie Jones, Cr Peta Winney-Baartz and Venue Manager Dean Mantle at McDonald Jones Stadium with local rugby representativesJapan’s head coach Eddie Jones was in Newcastle today to make the announcement, with the fixture forming part of the lead-up to the team’s 2027 Rugby World Cup clash with Samoa at McDonald Jones Stadium.

This announcement reflects the Minns Labor Government’s commitment to delivering major events and real economic opportunities for regional communities. 

By backing world-class sport and entertainment in places like Newcastle, the Minns Labor Government is creating local jobs, investing in the regions, and ensuring communities across NSW share the benefits of a growing visitor economy.

Newcastle has firmly cemented itself as a major event destination, with a strong calendar of marquee sporting and live entertainment events.

Alongside the Japan-Ireland clash, the city will host the Women’s State of Origin, the 2026 Rugby League World Cup, and major concerts from global acts including the Foo Fighters, Robbie Williams and Guns N’ Roses.

The momentum will continue into next year, when Newcastle hosts four pool matches during the 2027 Rugby World Cup.

These world-class events are transforming Newcastle into a powerhouse for the regional visitor economy, creating local jobs, supporting local businesses and showcasing the Hunter to the world.

Councillor Peta Winney-Baartz, Council’s representative on Venues NSW Hunter Advisory Committee:

“Hosting a test between Japan and Ireland will further enhance our reputation as an events city, provide an opportunity to showcase our broader attractions to visiting players and fans, and deliver an economic boost to businesses.

“Having already secured four pool matches as part of the 2027 Rugby World Cup, we’re hopeful of being chosen as a home base for one or more international teams.

“With Japan set to face Samoa in Newcastle as part of next year’s tournament, the Brave Blossoms will get an early taste of what our city has to offer.”

Minister for the Hunter Yasmin Catley said: 

“You can feel the buzz for the 2027 Rugby World Cup already and it’s a big win for our region, especially for local kids who’ll get to see world-class rugby up close.

“This July’s a sneak peek of what’s coming – international rugby back in town and a taste of what could be our most exciting World Cup yet.

“This is massive for the Hunter – we’re set to welcome visitors from across the country and the globe, filling our hotels, cafes and coastline.

“With our international airport now open, this is exactly what it’s all about – more visitors, more opportunities and a real boost for our region.”

NSW Sports and Tourism Minister Steve Kamper said:

“Securing the Japan-Ireland international rugby Test is a huge win for Newcastle which has quickly become a powerhouse for major events.

“To have two world-class teams playing in Newcastle’s own backyard will give fans a taste of what’s to come when the 2027 Rugby World Cup comes to town.

“These major events are providing real benefit to the Hunter community, boosting the visitor economy and showcasing Newcastle on the global stage.”

Member for Newcastle Tim Crakanthorp said:

“Japan’s Cherry Blossoms and Ireland’s national team are two of the top teams in the game. It’s destined to be a great match and I know Newcastle will turn out for it.”

“This announcement, alongside the Rugby World Cup in 2027, further confirms Newcastle as a premier sporting destination.”