Leading pathologist wins state’s top cancer research prize

World-renowned pathologist and researcher, Professor Anthony Gill AM, was awarded NSW’s highest accolade for cancer research at this morning’s NSW Premier’s Awards for Outstanding Cancer Research.

A global in the field of cancer diagnosis and pathology research, Professor Gill helped put Australia on the map in pancreatic research and is known for discovering new types of cancer tumours which are helping improve early diagnosis and survival rates for people with a range of rare hereditary cancers.

Minister for Health, Ryan Park, and Minister for Medical Research, David Harris, helped present the following 7 prestigious awards at today’s annual event, which celebrate the research achievements of individuals and teams working to improve cancer outcomes in NSW.

  • Outstanding Cancer Researcher of the Year – awarded to Professor Anthony Gill, Professor of Surgical Pathology at the University of Sydney and senior staff specialist in Anatomical Pathology at Royal North Shore Hospital, for making a significant and long-lasting contribution to cancer research in NSW and beyond.
  • Outstanding Mid-Career Researcher – awarded to Associate Professor Alexander Menzies, Medical Oncologist and Associate Professor of Melanoma Medical Oncology at Melanoma Institute Australia, The University of Sydney, and Royal North Shore and Mater Hospitals, for demonstrating exceptional research progress and accomplishment in melanoma, immunotherapy and neoadjuvant therapy.   
  • Outstanding Early Career Researcher – awarded to Dr Anna Singleton, Senior Research Fellow, the University of Sydney, for demonstrating exceptional research progress and accomplishment in the development of digital health interventions to improve the health of cancer survivors. 
  • Rising Star PhD Candidate – awarded to Rebecca Simpson, PhD candidate, Melanoma Institute Australia (MIA) and the University of Sydney, for making significant progress and showing the potential to make an impact in melanoma research. 
  • Outstanding Cancer Clinical Trials Unit – awarded to Wollongong Hospital, for its cancer research unit’s performance and work in supporting local communities living with cancer, including a world-first clinical trial for adults with multiple myeloma. 
  • Improving Equitable Outcomes through Cancer Research – awarded to CanEngage Project Team, Macquarie University, for making an impact in improving cancer outcomes in communities that continue to have poorer cancer outcomes.
  • Consumer Engagement in Cancer Research – awarded to Cancer Voices NSW, for making a significant and sustained contribution to cancer research in NSW, supporting people living with or impacted by cancer.  

The Rising Star PhD Candidate, Consumer Engagement in Cancer Research and Improving Equitable Outcomes through Cancer Research are new awards in 2023. These recognise the invaluable contribution students and community members play in improving cancer outcomes. 

Each winner received funding boosts as part of their prize, with Professor Gill receiving $50,000 to further his cancer research.

The NSW Government, through the Cancer Institute NSW, has awarded more than $324 million in cancer research over the last decade.

Find out more details about the award recipientslaunch.

Premier of NSW Chris Minns said:

“NSW is a global leader in cancer research, and we’re committed to supporting the life-saving efforts of our state’s cancer researchers.

“On behalf of the people of NSW, I’d like to thank our incredible cancer researchers and congratulate today’s winners for helping better understand and treat this devastating disease.”

Minister for Health Ryan Park said:

“Cancer touches all of us, with 1 person in NSW diagnosed with cancer every 10 minutes.

“Helping more people survive cancer is impossible without the passion, dedication and commitment of people like Professor Gill and I’d like to thank every person working behind the scenes to reduce the impact of cancer.”

Minister for Medical Research, David Harris said:

“For people with cancer, research and clinical trials provide options and hope, where often there are none.

“Helping develop safer and more effective cancer treatments is a true team effort, with countless researchers, clinicians and consumers working together to make a difference to the lives of the thousands of people diagnosed with cancer in NSW each year.” 

NSW Chief Cancer Officer and CEO of Cancer Institute NSW, Professor Tracey O’Brien said:

“NSW has some of the best cancer survival rates in the world and our excellence in cancer research is a key reason for these outstanding outcomes.

“Unfortunately cancer still takes the lives of more children and adults in NSW, than any other disease. Thanks to research and innovation, we know NSW will be on the forefront of discoveries that will save lives and keep families and communities safe and supported.”

Central’s new entry on Chalmers Street opens following Surry Hills inferno

The doors have opened at Central Station’s landmark new Chalmers Street entrance today, 6 months after it was damaged when a fire took hold of a neighbouring building on Randle Street in Surry Hills.

The new entrance – with 2 new lifts and 6 escalators – was 4 days from opening when the fire emergency began. 

The intense inferno was just 6 metres away from Australia’s busiest railway station, with a small laneway, Randle Lane, separating Central Station from the 7-storey abandoned warehouse engulfed in flames.

Six members of the Rail Fire and Emergency team were part of the emergency response. They were on-site within 3 minutes and based themselves in the Chalmers Street entry to help extinguish the flames and protect the station.

The bricks and debris, along with the amount of water needed to battle the blaze caused extensive structural and water damage to the entrance.

After the damage was assessed, a long list of rectification works were required to fix the building, including installing a brand-new roof, re-tiling stairs and replacing windows.

The new lifts and escalators – which were yet to carry commuters in and out of Central Walk – were flooded with water, resulting in mechanical and electrical services needing to be replaced.

Opening the new entrance for passengers required a mammoth effort from firefighters, clean-up crews, Sydney Metro and contractors Laing O’Rourke. It marks the completion of all major Sydney Metro upgrade works at the station.

Central Station’s upgrades include:

  • A new entrance at Chalmers Street, providing direct access from the east and allowing easy interchange from CBD and south-east light rail services. 
  • Central Walk, a new underground pedestrian concourse connecting all areas of the station. 
  • Significant accessibility upgrades via 14 new lifts and 42 escalators.
  • A revitalised Northern Concourse, with transformed pedestrian thoroughfares and a stunning new roof canopy.
  • A brand-new North-South Concourse where, in 2024, commuters will have access to metro platforms and metro services every 4 minutes in the peak.

When metro services start through the city in 2024, new metro platforms below Central Station will welcome 21,350 commuters in the morning peak, alleviating pressure on other transport modes. Metro will also provide fast journey times from Central to Chatswood in 15 minutes, North Sydney in 9 minutes, and Sydenham in 7 minutes. 

For more information, visit the Sydney Metrolaunch website. 

Transport Minister Jo Haylen said:

“More than 130 firefighters and 20 fire trucks responded to the intense Randle Street fire as it burned metres away from Australia’s busiest station.

“Not only were they able to protect the station, we were able to keep rail services up and running through the afternoon to ensure people were able to get home.

“The Chalmers Street entry was a bit battered and bruised, but it was carefully rebuilt and is now open to the public.

“The new Chalmers Street entrance welcomes commuters to a transformed Central Station that is more accessible than ever before.

“Central’s significant Metro makeover will help more than 67,500 people flow through this station and change between metro, rail, bus, light rail and intercity services.

“Commuters are now benefiting from the significant Sydney Metro upgrades to Central Station and the countdown is on as we look forward to the icing on the cake, metro services starting below our feet in 2024.”

Manager Fire and Emergency Operations at Rail Fire and Emergency Brett Richardson said:

“In a demonstration of dedication and expertise, the teams of the Rail Fire and Emergency unit swiftly responded to the Randle Street fire, underscoring their commitment to protecting our critical infrastructure, notably Sydney Metro’s newly constructed Chalmers Street entrance at Central Station.”

Acting Fire and Rescue NSW Deputy Commissioner – Field Operations Paul McGuiggan said:

“The Surry Hills fire required a large and immediate response from emergency services but our people were up to the challenge.

“The unstable nature of the site after the blaze led to a protracted operation over several days that affected many neighbouring businesses and projects, such as the Sydney Metro.”

Back to basics: Social housing maintenance call centre back in public hands

The NSW Government will overhaul how social housing maintenance is conducted across 95,000 of the State’s social housing properties with a new and ‘simpler’ back to basics model that will focus on quality, accountability, better outcomes for tenants and better value for taxpayers.

The NSW Government will establish a new one stop ‘Maintenance Hub’ within Homes NSW that will streamline requests for maintenance under one roof.

The current arrangement – privatised by the former government, has a left a maintenance system that is confusing, disjointed and unworkable.

Tenants are bouncing between departments with requests being stalled by bureaucracies and a lack of accountability. 

Homes NSW will triage, scope and issue work orders while the contractors will be the ones to attend site for work delivery.  

Today’s announcement will mean improved responses, with trained experts who can better address tenants’ questions, coordinate work orders and deliver better outcomes for tenants.

For the first time ever, tenants will be able to see the status of their requests with development of a new Maintenance App.

This is about making the process easier to navigate for our tenants while simultaneously allowing maintenance contractors to deliver works under a simplified approach.

The new model will deliver better results for taxpayers by determining costs through a pre-agreed schedule of rates, rather than under a scope and quote process which causes delays to work being undertaken. 

This approach will provide better oversight by putting ‘boots on the ground’ with technical and inspection staff to return to the field to improve processes and engage with tenants to realise improved maintenance outcomes.

There will also be a strong focus on supporting small businesses, local tradies, and local jobs especially in our regions.

As well as new jobs created for disability and community service providers, Aboriginal trades and businesses and social housing tenants.

The new maintenance hub and app will be operational by mid-2024. 

This is on top $35 million announced in the NSW Budget to help ease the maintenance backlog.

Over the coming months, the NSW Government will begin to actively seek out a number of key partnerships to deliver maintenance for the state’s social housing portfolio, with a specific and simplified directive to focus on the quality and timeliness of delivery of maintenance and repairs.

Premier of New South Wales Chris Minns said:

“This announcement is an important step in simplifying the social housing maintenance system to deliver better outcomes for residents and taxpayers. 

“Everyone deserves access to safe and secure shelter without having to jump through hoops to ensure essential maintenance is done.

“We have a housing crisis in New South Wales, and we are working across the government to address the challenges, including maintaining the liveability of our social housing properties.”

Minister for Housing and Homelessness Rose Jackson said:

“Today’s announcement will restore dignity, respect and hope to our social housing tenants and the social housing system in NSW.

“It is clear the Liberal experiment of out-sourcing jobs and contracts to private providers has failed with soaring wait times for basic maintenance and breeches of contacts rife.”

“We acknowledge that there have been flaws in how maintenance has been addressed in the past and it’s our job to fix that, for now and into the future and that’s why we’re overhauling the current system to ensure a better outcome for our residents.

“This is about putting residents of our social housing properties at the heart of what we do because everyone deserves to live in a safe and secure home and this new approach to how we deliver maintenance will play a vital role in ensuring basic requests are actioned in a timely manner to stop the risk of homes falling into disrepair.

“Homes NSW will bring social housing delivery, maintenance and tenancy management under the one roof, to ensure tenants no longer fall through the cracks trying to get basic issues resolved.

Member for East Hills Kylie Wilkinson said:

“Fixing the maintenance system will play a vital role in rebuilding our broken housing system. For too long residents have had to navigate a heavily bureaucratic and confusing system to have basic maintenance requests addressed.

“This announcement today is a strong step in the right direction to creating processes that put people first.”

Government can’t cost a $60 toll cap, expects people to believe it can forecast 40 years accurately

The Labor Government couldn’t even cost its $60 toll cap correctly, but now expect people to believe it can forecast 40 years of toll road revenue – this is a made up number.

If NSW Treasury and Transport for NSW were so precise why does the NSW Budget change its forecasts every six months?

The Fact is Labor committed to tabling in Parliament the Toll Road contracts – The former Coalition Government disagreed with that approach, but Labor were elected and they should meet their commitment.

If Labor disagree with a user-pay approach why are they still committed to tolling the M6 Stage 1 and Western Harbour Tunnel, which are both Government owned projects they could remove the toll on tomorrow.

ENDS

Background

  • The M6 Stage 1 and Western Harbour Tunnel are two road projects in delivery by Transport for NSW and 100% owned by the NSW Government.
  • A decision to toll either project is a policy decision of Government just like the tolling arrangements for the Sydney Harbour Bridge and Tunnel.
  • Earlier this year the Labor Government increased tolls on the Sydney Harbour Bridge and Tunnel after promising that “Tolls would be cheaper under Labor”. 

Labor Commitment to Table Toll Contracts: https://amp.smh.com.au/politics/nsw/nsw-labor-gets-all-clear-to-release-secret-toll-contract-details-if-it-wins-govt-20230322-p5cubl.html

Toll Roads commissioned under each Party

LaborLiberal
Sydney Harbour TunnelEastern DistributorCross City TunnelM7Lane Cove TunnelM5 South WestM2North ConnexWest ConnexM6 Stage 1

NATIONAL APOLOGY AND RECOGNITION FOR THALIDOMIDE SURVIVORS AND THEIR FAMILIES

On Wednesday, 29 November 2023, the Australian Government will issue a formal national apology to all Australians impacted by the Thalidomide Tragedy.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will deliver the apology on behalf of the Australian Government, Parliament and the Australian people, in the House of Representatives.

Thalidomide survivors, their family members, carers and supporters will attend the historic apology, followed by a reception in the Great Hall of Parliament House.

A National Site of Recognition will also be unveiled on the shores of Lake Burley Griffin at a ceremony on Thursday, 30 November 2023. This important event will also be attended by thalidomide survivors and their families.

The apology and the creation of a memorial site are in response to key recommendations of the Support for Australia’s thalidomide survivors final report, delivered by the Senate Community Affairs References Committee in March 2019.

Thalidomide was the active ingredient in a sedative drug widely distributed to many mothers in Australia and around the world in the early 1960s. It was later found to cause malformation of limbs, facial features and internal organs in unborn children.

While there are 146 thalidomide survivors registered with the Australian Thalidomide Survivors Support Program, the exact number of those affected is unknown.

Prime Minister Albanese said:

“The thalidomide tragedy is a dark chapter in the history of our nation and the world.

“I recognise that the survivors, their families, friends and carers have advocated for this apology with courage and conviction for many years. This moment is a long overdue national acknowledgement of all they have endured and all they have fought for.

“In giving this apology, we will acknowledge all those babies who died and the families who mourn them, as well as those who survived but whose lives were made so much harder by the effects of this terrible drug.”

Minister Butler said:

“So many mothers and their babies were let down by systemic failures that led to the thalidomide tragedy, and we should reflect on that and apologise for it.

“While we cannot change the past or end the physical suffering, I hope these important next steps of recognition and apology will help heal some of the emotional wounds.

“It is difficult today, to think a tragedy like thalidomide could happen, and it’s a sobering reminder of our duty to put in place measures to protect people from harm.”

Bee workshops helping to turn Newcastle into pollinator-friendly city

City of Newcastle (CN) has created a buzz at the beginning of Australian Pollinator Week by hosting two fully booked native bee workshops at the Hunter Wetlands Centre.

Run by native bee expert, Dr Tobias Smith, the workshops focused on bee diversity, lifecycles and management, and the process of hive splitting and propagation.

Dr Tobias Smith conducts a native bee workshop at the Hunter Wetlands Centre

Residents also had access to a free plant giveaway as part of CN’s Natural Connection program, which aims to build community understanding and stewardship of Newcastle’s pollinators and their habitat.

Lord Mayor Nuatali Nelmes said CN was one of the first councils in Australia to commit to being a pollinator-friendly city.

“These community skill-building events form part of the broader Newcastle Environment Strategy, which was adopted by Council at our October meeting,” Cr Nelmes said.

“As part of the Strategy’s four-year delivery plan, we’re working on nature-based solutions to expand our urban forest and improve vegetation cover for movement of pollinators and other wildlife through connected habitat corridors.”

Councillor Elizabeth Adamczyk said creating awareness of the plight of pollinators is vital for our future, with her notice of motion at April’s Council meeting attracting unanimous support.

“We are excited to kick off Australian Pollinator Week by celebrating the crucial role our thousands of native pollinators play in producing food, increasing biodiversity and protecting human and ecosystem health with two fully booked native bee workshops at the Shortland Wetlands,” Cr Adamczyk said.

“Habitat destruction through carbon emissions, pollution, pesticides, urban heat island effects, and impacts of drought, bushfire, flood, and the recent varroa mite incursions have exacerbated declining pollinators in Australia and locally, and City of Newcastle is committed to collaborating with the community to restore pollinator habitats and reconnect broken biodiversity corridors in the city.

“We are proud to host and support a range of events this Australian Pollinator Week where anyone can get involved in the way that best suits them, whether it’s a powerful pollinators webinar with leading entomologists, learning how to create a pollinator-friendly backyard or verge garden, or becoming a ‘citizen scientist’ by taking part in the pollinator census.

“Media coverage has highlighted the situation regarding honeybees, especially after the varroa mite was detected in our region, but in Australia up to 2000 native bee species are also crucial as pollinators of our crops and gardens.”

Sydney alights with poppies on Remembrance Day

Sydney harbour was alight with red poppies at sunrise this morning as the sails of the Sydney Opera House projected the iconic image to mark the commencement of Remembrance Day.

Minister for Veterans, David Harris was joined at a Remembrance Day sunrise service by incoming RSL NSW President Mick Bainbridge, who recited the Ode before the Last Post rang out across the harbour in front of the poppies on the Opera House.

For more than a century, red poppies have been used as a symbol of community respect and recognition, marking the end of fighting in the First World War. Poppies have been projected onto the Opera House since 2014 and will light up the sails once again at 8pm tonight.

Large crowds are expected to gather with the Premier and Minister Harris at the State’s Remembrance Day Service at the Cenotaph in Sydney’s Martin Place, as well as local memorials throughout the state to honour the service and sacrifice of Australia’s servicemen and servicewomen.

A minute’s silence will be held at 11am to mark the moment on 11 November 1918 when the guns fell silent on the Western Front at the end of the First World War.
 
This year we also particularly acknowledge the service of our Korean veterans following the 70th anniversary of the signing of the Armistice of the Korean War, as well as our Vietnam veterans who commemorated the 50th anniversary of the extraction from Saigon.

Schools across NSW received a resource pack from the NSW Office for Veterans Affairs with activities to educate the younger generation on the importance of commemorating Remembrance Day each year. Lest we forget.

Applications for Round 2 of the 2023/24 Community War Memorials Fundlaunch also open today with $125,000 available for restoration of our local war memorials.

The grant round will close at 5pm on Sunday 11 February 2024. To be eligible for funding, the memorial must be listed on the NSW War Memorials Register.

Premier, Chris Minns said: 

“This Remembrance Day, we reflect on those who bravely laid down their own lives to preserve our way of life and defend our country.

“We acknowledge those who currently serve in our defence, at home and abroad. There is no example of a higher public service than offering your own life to protect your country.

“Our nation also owes recognition to those who have lost a parent, child or family member in the defence our country. They profoundly know the value commemoration of our fallen and recognising those who returned.

“Australia’s free and democratic society is built upon the shoulders of these brave men and women for which we commemorate today. Lest we forget.”

Minister for Veterans, David Harris said: 

“Today, on Remembrance Day, we remember the men and women who have made the ultimate sacrifice in serving our country in wars, conflicts and peacekeeping missions, as well as their families.

“On this Remembrance Day, I am feeling grateful. The sacrifice and service of those in the Australian Defence Forces have made our way of life possible.  

“I encourage everyone in NSW to observe the minute’s silence at 11am, to remember those who have fought for our country. We owe them an immeasurable debt of gratitude for helping to make Australia the prosperous and free country it is today.”

SENATOR MEHREEN FARUQI’S STATEMENT ON SENATOR PAULINE HANSON

“The Senate has rightly forced Senator Hanson to withdraw her unacceptable racist comments and held her to account for once.

“This should send a strong message to Senator Hanson that she cannot continue to make this parliament an unsafe workplace for people like me day in, day out.

“Senator Hanson’s racist bile is extremely damaging and also unleashes vile hate and abuse from bigots. It must be nipped in the bud.

“If Parliament is to be a safe workplace, then it needs to set a standard that any form of bigotry and racism are unacceptable. Racist hatred should never be tolerated in any workplace, let alone one that is supposed to lead the way in standards of behaviour.

“People who look like me have all been told to ‘go back to where they come from’ at one point or another, and it is harmful and unacceptable every single time. I’ve copped it more times than I can count, and so have many others in the community. Enough is enough!

“The government needs to stop dragging the chain on Parliamentary behaviour codes and implement the codes and the consequences for breaching these without delay.”

REPORT FOR THE INQUIRY OF DISABILITY SERVICES AND INCLUSION BILL TABLED

The Community Affairs References Committee has today tabled a report on the inquiry into the Disability Services and Inclusion Bill.

The Disability Services and Inclusion Bill seeks to repeal the Disability Services Act 1986 and provide legislative authority for new and existing spending on disability-related programs outside the National Disability Insurance Scheme.  

Australian Greens Senator Jordon Steele-John welcomes the repeal of the Disability Services Act 1986, however, has submitted additional comments to the report that indicate his intention to move significant amendments to the legislation. 

Senator Jordon Steele-John, Australian Greens Spokesperson for Disability Rights and Services said:

“This bill requires significant amendments to do justice to the implementation of the recommendations of the Royal Commission into Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation of People with Disability. 

“It is imperative that this opportunity to replace the Disability Services Act 1986 does not pass by without doing everything we can to end the cycle of segregation that too many disabled people find themselves trapped within.

“It’s time for the government to put into law timeframes for ending the cycle of segregation. Disabled people will no longer accept being kept out of view; we will not accept government policies that reinforce segregated employment and education any longer. 

“We need to ensure that the human rights of disabled people are upheld in all services that would be funded under this bill, and we need to ensure that disabled people are included in the decision-making processes.

“Many in our community welcome the establishment of a Code of Conduct, however, what I have heard from the community is there is still concern about the independence of those reviewing breaches and the process for handling complaints. 

“Getting this Act right could be transformational in the lives of disabled people.”

GUARANTEES NEEDED IN MURRAY-DARLING BASIN PLAN

Responding to the release of the Senate inquiry report into the Water Amendment (Restoring Our Rivers) Bill 2023, Senator Hanson-Young, Greens spokesperson for the Environment and Water said:

“This Bill should not pass in its current form.

 “Extending deadlines for water recovery will just kick the can down the road. After a decade of inaction, there must be a guarantee in this Bill that will ensure the Plan will be delivered in full and on time, including the 450GL promised to South Australia and the environment.

“Without a guarantee of real water delivery, the Basin will continue to see more fish kills, species decline and degradation of ecosystems.

 “We can’t eat cotton, we can’t drink mud. There are no jobs on a dead river.

“As climate change gets worse and El Nino threatens a hot dry summer, it is crucial that we see water flowing before the next election.

 “The Greens will not rubber stamp this Bill. We will continue discussions with the Government in good faith. As it stands the Bill will not pass the Senate without a guarantee of environmental flows.”