If Minister Bowen is serious about climate change, he must release missing climate risk report

The Greens are demanding the government immediately release the final report of the National Climate Risk Assessment in the wake of yesterday’s Pabai v Commonwealth decision, where the Federal Court acknowledged the devastating climate impacts facing Torres Strait Islander communities — but disappointingly found the government had no legal duty of care.

The second phase of the National Climate Risk Assessment was due to be completed in 2024 to inform Australia’s upcoming National Adaptation Plan, yet the government has failed to release the final report or explain the delay, with its own website stating updates should have been given throughout 2024. 

This follows the government;s refusal to release a separate 2023 report by the Office of National Intelligence on climate change and national security, claiming it is classified.

Australian Greens Assistant Spokesperson for Climate Change and Energy, Senator Steph Hodgins-May 

“This vital report identifies the most pressing climate risks facing our country, and it’s nowhere to be seen.

“While the waves are literally lapping at the doors of our Torres Strait Island family, the government is withholding crucial information needed to respond to the urgent threats to their livelihoods, homes and culture..

“The government has both the power and the responsibility to protect climate vulnerable communities, but how can they do that if the climate risk report is being kept from the very people it should be protecting?

“Australians, especially Torres Straight Islander and Aboriginal communities, deserve the truth. They deserve to know what the climate risks are, and what their government is doing about them. 

“With Parliament returning next week, our message to the government is simple: show us this report, and work with us on real, urgent climate action for current and future generations.” 

Greens call on ACT Government to outline pathway to first safe injecting site in territory

Opening the ACT’s first safe injecting room should be a priority during this term of government, says Leader of the ACT Greens, Shane Rattenbury.

Leader of the ACT Greens, Shane Rattenbury:

“In cities like Sydney and Melbourne, safe injecting rooms have been operating for years. But despite Canberra at times recording the highest rate of drug-induced deaths per capita in the country, we still don’t have one.

“A commitment to investigate a safe injecting room was hard-won by the Greens in the last Parliamentary Agreement—but Labor dragged their feet for most of the term–having done no work on this while holding the portfolio.

“It wasn’t until three years in, after a cabinet reshuffle handed the drug harm reduction portfolio to Greens Minister Emma Davidson, that this critical work finally began–with a review into how, not if, but how this work would happen.

“The fact is, this reform is thirty years overdue. Every delay, every review, means more preventable overdose deaths—and that is simply unacceptable.

“If we’re serious about saving lives, we need to treat drug use as a health issue, not a criminal one. That means backing evidence-based, community-led harm reduction services—not leaving people to use alone on the streets.

“Right now we need outcomes— the Greens are flexible on location for this site, but we’re absolutely clear on the need for action. No matter whether it’s co-located with the fixed-site pill testing clinic in Civic or some other location that suits users, what matters is getting it done–and getting it done soon.

“The Greens are really clear: today we’re calling on the government to set-up a safe injecting room in this city before the end of the year. This morning I have written to the Health Minister outlining this ask, and offering the Greens’ support for a collaborative, cross-party approach to making this a reality

Greens say housing approval numbers underscore need for government developer

This morning’s reporting that housing approvals have reached an all-time low underscores the urgent need for a government-owned housing developer, says ACT Greens Leader Shane Rattenbury.

A draft report from Pegasus Economics has identified workforce shortages as the greatest barrier to meeting the government’s target of building 30,000 homes over the next decade—none of which are currently price-capped or guaranteed to be affordable.

Quotes attributable to Leader of the ACT Greens, Shane Rattenbury:

“If the government is serious about building affordable housing in Canberra—and I stress affordable—then it should be leading the charge by hiring and retaining its own workforce to build it.

“Relying solely on the same private market that caused the housing crisis to fix the housing crisis is a recipe for disaster. This is the same sector that drove prices up in the first place–and now we’re kidding ourselves that they’ll fix it.

“The government’s goal to build 30,000 new homes is certainly commendable, but without a plan to retain a workforce and ensure those homes are actually affordable to someone on minimum wage, it’s really a drop in the ocean.

“During the election, the Greens commissioned independent modelling that showed how a government developer can help us avoid tradie shortages while providing housing at prices everyday people can actually afford—by offering steady, secure work through a consistent pipeline of public builds.

Urban design experts balance supply and demand for City of Newcastle

Tackling the housing shortage while ensuring quality of life for residents guided the Urban Design Review Panel’s (UDRP) decision making as they assessed $1.45 billion in developments in Newcastle during the past 12 months.

The UDRP completed a total of 67 individual design review sessions in 2024, offering guidance to City of Newcastle staff and applicants on 49 different development proposals.

The Store developmentThe Store development The projects are included in UDRP’s 2024 Annual Report, which will be tabled at next week’s Council meeting.

The Report highlights several significant developments, as well as smaller projects that benefited from design advice.

Proposals reviewed include the DOMA Group’s $130 million twin-tower luxury apartment complex known as The Store, as well as developments such as a $19.4 million educational establishment on University Drive at Callaghan, a $6.1 million residential building in Hamilton and co-living housing on Denison Street in Newcastle West worth almost $12 million.

City of Newcastle’s Executive Director Planning and Environment Michelle Bisson said the UDRP plays a vital role in improving the design quality of new developments.

“The panel provides independent, impartial, and expert advice to City of Newcastle and applicants about the quality of the urban design and amenity of development proposals and strategic design projects,” Ms Bisson said.

“The increase in demand for their services has seen the panel increase to seven members, plus the Chairperson, which has helped to cover the large number of applications.”

“The collective experience of the UDRP members consistently grounds the advice in real-world experience, while balancing the practicalities and challenges of property development and construction.”

East End developmentEast End developmentChairperson Dr Philip Pollard said the panel enjoys providing input into smaller projects as much as high-profile applications.

“We continue to see the face of Newcastle change and develop in an exciting manner, but we’re mindful of the wonderful Indigenous and colonial heritage we’ve inherited,” Dr Pollard said.

“We’re delighted to see an increase of instances where applicants are presenting designs prior to the Development Application stage, proving applicants value of our advice.”

The UDRP also acts as the Design Integrity Panel for some developments in Newcastle to ensure their quality and original detail is maintained or improved through to construction completion.

In 2024, the UDRP oversaw progress on 17 projects such as the Dairy Farmers Towers in Newcastle West, a 16-dwelling project on Church Street in Mayfield and Stages 3 and 4 of the Hunter Street development, part of the East End project by Iris Capital.

New Housing Pattern Book designs that can be approved in ten days are launched

The Minns Labor Government is today launching the NSW Housing Pattern Book of low-rise designs, alongside a a world-first new Complying Development pathway, that will speed up the delivery of new homes significantly.

Housing remains the single biggest cost of living pressure people across NSW are facing with a recent NSW Productivity Commission report finding that Sydney is losing twice as many young people as it is gaining, putting us at risk of becoming a city with no grandchildren.

Following the launch of an international pattern book design competition in 2024, the Government Architect has now endorsed eight terrace, townhouse and manorhouse designs for families, young people and downsizers that will be available for $1,000 a design.

However, for the first six months, the Government is significantly subsidising access to these world class designs with each pattern being made available to everyone for $1 per pattern.

The price for each design is a significant discount on the professional fees that potential builders or homeowners would usually pay for a custom architecturally designed home that could be estimated to cost over $20,000.

The Pattern Book was created to be affordable, easy to build, and sustainable. With each design to be adaptable for different family sizes and housing needs, this includes different room formations and layout, helping to create vibrant, diverse communities that reflect the people who live in them.

Every purchase of a design, also comes with a complimentary Landscape Pattern to help new home-owners design their own garden that maximises biodiversity and suits the climate they’re living in.

A new ten-day approval pathway has been developed by the NSW Government alongside the Pattern Book to fast-track these high-quality homes, cutting major costs and delays that normally plague home-builders.

This new, fast-tracked pathway will create the opportunity for these architect designed homes to commence construction within ten days of an application being made, subject to all appropriate assessments being completed.

The Complying Development pathway will be available from 30 July 2025.

The delivery of homes through the NSW Housing Pattern Book is further supported by the Minns Labor Government’s Low and Mid-Rise Housing reforms that have made terraces, townhouses and manorhouses broadly permissable across NSW.

This laid the groundwork for the arrival of the Pattern Book, unlocking expansive opportunities for the designs to be adopted and built around transport hubs and town centres.

The NSW Housing Pattern Book will be advertised to potential home-buyers and builders through an advertising campaign that is also being launched today, highlighting the benefits of using a pattern book design.

The NSW Housing Pattern Book, together with the Low and Mid-Rise Housing policy, is designed to make the housing system fairer by increasing housing supply, giving people more choice in where they want to live and supporting communities that have been locked out of housing for too long, held back by rising costs and a planning system that made it too hard to build homes.

This is all part of the Minns Government’s plan to build a better and fairer NSW with more homes and services, so young people, families and downsizers have somewhere to live in the communities they choose.

To choose your next home, please visit – https://www.planning.nsw.gov.au/nsw-housing-pattern-book

Premier of New South Wales Chris Minns:

“For too long, too many people in NSW have been locked out of the housing market by rising costs and a system that made it too hard to build. We’re changing that.

“This Pattern Book is about giving people more choice, faster approvals, and affordable, high-quality homes – whether you’re a young person trying to get in, a family needing more space, or a downsizer looking to stay close to the community you know.

“This is a practical step to make the housing system fairer – and make sure NSW remains a place where the next generation can afford to live and thrive.”

Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Paul Scully said:

“The NSW Housing Pattern Book allows people to select an architect designed home, that comes with a landscape plan and an approval pathway that only takes a week to complete so they can start building almost immediately.  

“Much of Sydney was built on pattern books. They look great, they’re simple and cost-effective. We’re accelerating these designs with their own approval pathway so those wishing to build can get an approval in one week.

“The NSW Housing Pattern Book takes the guesswork and the delay out of home-building. These designs are high-quality, easy to build, and for the first six months, they’ll cost $1.

“These designs offer choice, with less complexity, making it easier to build homes in NSW.”

Government Architect NSW Abbie Galvin said:

“I am excited to be able to share these patterns that can be used by the development industry, architects, planners, councils and communities.

“The pattern book offers practical and sustainable designs that can be adapted to suit many neighbourhoods, positively contributing to the character of a street.

“We are making it quicker and easier to build new low-rise homes that offer housing diversity for the whole community.”

Bunnings Chief Financial Officer Michael Howard said:

“This is a great step toward making sustainable, affordable homes more accessible, and I’m sure will be welcome news for those looking to build.

“At a time when the construction sector is doing it tough, this initiative will provide much-needed support and boost housing options across NSW.

“Bunnings is ready to help builders, developers and homeowners bring these architect-designed homes to life.”

First tenants call public modular housing home

The state’s first tenants of public modular housing have moved into their new homes marking an important milestone as the Minns Labor Government continues to pull every single lever to deliver more, well located homes sooner.

Over 150 people will have a safe place to call home, as the NSW Government delivers 90 modular homes over the next year. This is part of the Minns Labor Government’s record $6.6 billion Building Homes for New South Wales Program.

After the first three modular homes were brought online last month in Wollongong, residents have officially moved in.

Modular housing provides a cost effective and time efficient alternative to traditional building methods, meaning homes can be brought online faster. Modular homes can be delivered approximately 20% faster than traditional methods with time savings expected to increase over time.

Further, this program delivers on the Minns Labor Government’s agenda to promote local manufacturing jobs by creating over 4,000 quality jobs in factories and on building sites across Sydney and regional New South Wales.

Shortly after forming government the Minns Labor Government convened the Modular Housing Taskforce, an expert cross industry panel who provided advice to government on barriers to the utilisation of and ways modular housing could be harnessed to deliver more homes, sooner in New South Wales.

This follows twelve years of privatisation, sell offs and neglect under the former Liberal National Government who oversaw a net reduction in our states public housing from 110,805 in 2014 to 95,765 in 2023.  Further, between 2017 and 2021 their completion of 2,257 social homes, paled in comparison to the number they sold off or removed – 3,269.

Since being elected the Minns Labor, Government has been working to build a better New South Wales, with more, quality housing, located near the essential infrastructure people rely on.

In the past year the Minns Labor Government has delivered 1,711 new social and affordable homes, the largest increase in government-built public, community homes in over a decade.

A further ten modular social homes are expected to be delivered by the end of this year, with five in Shellharbour and five in Lake Macquarie. Planning for an addition 80 to be delivered by this time next year is well underway.

Chris Minns, Premier of New South Wales said:

“Housing affordability and availability is the single biggest pressure facing the people of New South Wales.

“The fact is we need to increase our supply of public housing stock. Today is an important milestone in our work to do that, sooner through nontraditional methods.

“Modular housing allows us to deliver high quality homes in less time. It allows us to build more homes and create more skilled construction and manufacturing jobs.

Rose Jackson, Minister for Housing and Minister for Homelessness said:

“We are directly building public housing again and we are doing it fast.

“These 90 modular homes are just the beginning. We are rebuilding the public housing system after a decade of sell-offs and neglect.

“This is about building homes and creating jobs. It means more work for tradies, manufacturers and apprentices right across the state.

Work to begin on renewed Nowra government workplace

The Minns Labor Government is investing more that $5 million to redevelop one of its key regional workplaces in Nowra creating a modern, whole-of-government workplace hub for the city.

The existing office building at O’Keeffe Avenue will be transformed into over 1,800 square metres of flexible, contemporary office space accommodating more than 260 government employees.

The redevelopment will deliver a modern, sustainable and flexible workplace, enabling public servants to provide high quality services to the people of the South Coast. The new design includes 147 work points as well as collaboration zones and meeting rooms.

Intermain Pty Ltd has been appointed to deliver the project, with works scheduled to commence at the end of July 2025. Around 30 local subcontractors will be engaged throughout the project.

Once the work is completed, staff from six departments currently based in the building will be located across two of the three floors, providing space to expand the hub to include additional government agencies or a private sector tenant in future.

The upgraded building will be energy efficient, including achieving 5.5 Star NABERS Energy, 3 Star NABERS Water and 4.0 Star Greenstar ratings. It will also meet the latest NSW Government workplace design standards which include a focus on providing accessible workspaces that meet a range of user needs.

Minister for Lands and Property Steve Kamper said:

“This is a major milestone for Nowra and the broader Shoalhaven region. As a critical regional workplace for hundreds of public servants, this project will deliver the modern, sustainable and efficient office space our workforce deserves.

“The Minns Labor Government is committed to delivering fit-for-purpose government workplaces across NSW. We’ve already seen the benefits of this approach in Maitland, and we’re proud to bring that same vision to Nowra.”

Member for South Coast, Liza Butler said:

“This is a major investment in Nowra’s future. Redeveloping this site means more than 260 government workers can stay and grow their careers here — and with 30 local subcontractors on board, it’s work that directly benefits our local economy.”

“People on the South Coast deserve high-quality services, and that starts with giving our public servants a modern, flexible, and accessible place to work. This upgrade will help our frontline staff do their jobs better — and it shows real commitment to regional NSW.”

Cootamundra-Gundagai Regional Council gets Minister’s support to prepare for a demerger

The Minister for Local Government has today announced that the demerger of Cootamundra-Gundagai Regional Council into two separate councils is to proceed.

On 3 October 2023, the Minister announced his support to split Cootamundra–Gundagai Regional Council provided it could develop a robust implementation plan for two separate councils.

The implementation plan developed by the Council would then be subject to a Public Inquiry and recommendation of the NSW Local Government Boundaries Commission. This was the only legislative option available to achieve a demerger of the Council.

The Minister met with Mayor Abb McAlister and the Member for Cootamundra in Gundagai earlier today to release the Boundaries Commission and Public Inquiry reports.

The path is now clear for the Council to commence the detailed transition work needed to initiate the dissolution of Cootamundra-Gundagai and establish two new councils.

The Council will establish a transition management office to prepare the specifics of the demerger, including allocation of assets, liabilities, funding, shared service arrangements, staffing and governance arrangements.

Completing the detailed planning and transition work is essential to ensure each Council has the best start following proclamation.

This work will also inform the drafting of legal instruments by the NSW Government required to establish the two new councils.

The Office of Local Government will continue to support Cootamundra-Gundagai including monitoring the implementation of Council’s demerger proposal, and work with the Council to identify funding sources to support the transition to two new council areas.

Minister for Local Government Ron Hoenig said:

“Cootamundra and Gundagai are two councils that should never have been merged.

“The work by the Boundaries Commission confirms what the Council had been saying since 2016 and what I had been saying since 2012 – the former government’s ‘Fit for the Future’ policy was only a ruse to effect widespread amalgamations.

“Within several years of the merger I spoke with Mayor Abb McAlister and remember being impressed with the work the Council had done calculating the cost of the merger on the new Council. The community’s opposition was not just philosophical – it was financial and practical.

“It was for that reason in October 2023 that I decided I would do whatever I could within my power under the Act, to enable this demerger.

“Now, the detailed transition work needs to be led by the Council, and the councillors elected in 2024 who have the mandate to do it. They are best positioned to drive this process forward and should be the ones to shape the future of their respective communities.

“Demerging a council is significantly more complex than amalgamating one. The Council’s own implementation plan highlighted there is still a lot of work that needs to be done to get to a point where two new councils can be proclaimed.

“I am confident Mayor McAlister and the elected councillors can do what is required of them to reach this outcome so we can finally close this disappointing chapter in local government history.

“Let Cootamundra-Gundagai Regional Council serve as a cautionary tale for future governments and academics who believe that merged councils provide better economies of scale and better services.

“May it stand as the folly that it was, so we can finally discard forced amalgamations for amalgamations sake into the waste bin of history.”

Progressing a revitalised Gosford waterfront

The Minns Labor Government is progressing the revitalisation of Gosford’s waterfront with a focus on enhancing public space and improving connectivity in the short term while providing opportunities for longer term investment.

Following market sounding and feasibility studies on how to best revitalise Gosford’s waterfront in line with the $8.5 million election commitment, the NSW Government is designing and costing an active transport shared pathway between Gosford and Point Clare.

The shared pathway would cut the time to cycle and walk between the two destinations and improve connections further south to Tascott, Koolewong and Woy Woy via the Brisbane Water cycleway.

The Government will also prepare a targeted public domain plan and will deliver improvements to the public domain in the next 18 months.

From today, the community has an opportunity to say what features and projects they would like to see in the public domain plan and help prioritise their delivery on the Gosford Waterfront.

This could include features like better lighting and visibility, fitness equipment, children’s playground equipment, picnic tables and seating, or a boardwalk.

Please visit https://www.hccdc.nsw.gov.au/gosford to have your say by Sunday, 17 August 2025.

The Government is also identifying projects for the waterfront that can be delivered in the longer term.

Minister for Planning and Public Spaces, Paul Scully said:

“The Minns Labor Government has listened to the community and is revitalising Gosford’s waterfront with targeted improvements that can be delivered in the short term.

“We want to make sure we’re getting this right and enable Gosford waterfront to continue to evolve into a vibrant destination linked to the city and its surrounds that the fast-developing capital of the Central Coast deserves.”

Minister for the Central Coast, David Harris said:

“With $2.3 billion worth of development activity well underway and a dynamically changing skyline, Gosford is finally fulfilling its enormous potential.

“Activating the waterfront is a vital piece of Gosford’s revitalisation picture and I’m pleased to be part of a Government that’s progressing this project.

“Please take this opportunity to complete the survey on which public space improvements you would like to see prioritised on the Gosford waterfront.”

Member for Gosford, Leisl Tesch said:

“After years of glossy plans with no certainty over what can be delivered along the Gosford Waterfront, the Minns Labor Government is planning for Gosford’s future, informed by detailed market sounding and feasibility studies about the realistic short and long-term outlook for our city.

“Gosford is quickly transforming into a city that we can be proud of and it is important that our waterfront reflects Gosford’s place as the heart of the Central Coast.

“It is particularly exciting to see funding allocated towards design and costing for a shared pathway between Gosford and Point Clare, recognising our community’s vocal support for this vital active recreation link.”

Australia needs a Statement of National Principles

We live in an increasingly fractured, polarised world where principles and values we once took for granted in Australia are being undermined. 

There’s no single person, movement, organisation or country to blame and there’s no single date that can be pinned down as to where it all went wrong. Marxism and its unhinged modern adherents protesting everything from Israel to climate policy and ‘trans’ rights are certainly at the core of it, but it’s only fair to say conservative leaders of the past are as much to blame for failing to counter it effectively much sooner. 

Irrespective of blame, today the Albanese Labor government gets away with doing things that would simply not be acceptable in Australia a generation or two ago. 

They’ve allowed rising antisemitism to go unchecked, and even encouraged it by supporting terrorism over democracy. They defend the drugging and mutilation of children, and men invading women’s sports and private spaces, in the name of ‘trans’ activism. 

They spend tens of billions of taxpayer dollars every year funding a net zero policy which achieves nothing but increase our electricity costs and cripple our economic productivity – they even defend the clearing of native rainforests to cover our landscape with their giant wind turbines. 

They are deliberately risking our critical military alliance with the world’s most powerful nation, the United States, and leaving Australia more vulnerable to international aggression than we have been at any time since the start of the Second World War. In the meantime they are deliberately cultivating and kowtowing to the power which primarily threatens peace and order in our region, communist China. 

Labor may have won the 2025 election, but that hasn’t made the problems Labor created go away. We still have a cost-of-living crisis. We still have a housing crisis. We still have declining economic productivity, record immigration, reduced defence capabilities, increasing debt and huge budget deficits. The Coalition – which ran just about the the worst election campaign in living memory this year – gives no Australian any hope of a strong alternative government to oppose Labor’s incompetent excesses. 

A generation or two ago, certain non-partisan principles were taken for granted: Australia is a democratic Western nation which supported other democracies like the US and Israel. Australia opposed tyranny, terrorism and authoritarian regimes because they violently denied self-determination and basic human rights. Australia supported those rights: voting; freedom of speech and religion; privacy and property rights. 

How certain of these principles are you today? 

Bringing this to a head in recent days is the Albanese Labor government’s effective ghosting of our major military ally while the Prime Minister flies off to China for six whole days to be wined and dined by our most potent military adversary. 

For decades, Australia’s defence has primarily been funded by American taxpayers. America’s nuclear deterrence has prevented global war between major powers, America supplies us with our military platforms and our advanced weapons, and under AUKUS America will hand over to Australia the most closely-guarded military technology on the planet: nuclear propulsion. 

Yet our current Labor government is publicly appearing less than grateful for this generous support from the ‘arsenal of democracy’, and is to all appearances sucking up to China – by far and away our largest trading partner, but also a country which routinely commits acts of aggression against Australia as if it’s entitled to do so and is not hiding its intentions to militarily and economically dominate our region. 

America wants the countries it has protected to step up and do some of the heavy lifting by increasing their defence spending. Nearly all of them have agreed to do so; Australia under Labor is one of the very few gambling that it won’t have to. Labor is gambling with our national security. 

The mistake Labor is making is purely political. It’s not principled. Labor – with its extreme left faction dominating the party – hates everything American and especially despises the current US president and his unique brand of politics. Labor fails to appreciate the relationship between our two countries will endure beyond the current occupants of the Lodge and the White House. 

It’s impossible to imagine Bob Hawke – Labor’s most successful and longest-serving Prime Minister – supporting this profound mistake. Hawke was a noted champion of the US alliance despite the fact the very conservative Reagan and Bush (senior) administrations were in the White House, and a major critic of communist China (especially after the massacre at Tiananmen Square in 1989). Hawke understood principles. Even Paul Keating – a vocal admirer of China – knew enough not to jeopardise our relationship with America. 

Albanese obviously didn’t get the memo, and now our relations with the United States are declining when we can least afford it. President Trump has demonstrated he is prepared to act decisively – even punitively – to prompt allies to start pulling their weight, and if Albanese doesn’t wake up he may find us way down the list of America’s priorities when it comes to defence and trade. We’re already facing increased American tariffs on steel, aluminium and pharmaceuticals. AUKUS is also under review by the Trump administration. This is not in our best interests. 

Australia needs a statement of binding national diplomatic principles to ensure transitory political partisanship does not risk important international relationships that must endure beyond every three-year Parliamentary term. 

At a minimum, these principles should include: 

  • aligning our national interests with those of countries with similar systems and values: secular representative democracy, the rule of law, international peace and order, protecting and promoting fundamental human rights and freedoms; 
  • opposing authoritarianism and supporting democratic movements; 
  • opposing and condemning terrorism both domestically and abroad; 
  • opposing communism, Marxism or any similar movement under the ‘socialist’ banner as anti-democratic; and 
  • having a defence force capable of deterring credible threats and aggression, able to deploy in support of allies and able to defend Australia independently. 

This statement needs to say who we are and what Australia stands for on the international stage. It needs to be binding on every government we get, every Prime Minister, every diplomat from the Foreign Minister down.