Appeal to locate woman missing from Mayfield

Police are appealing for assistance to locate a woman missing from state’s Newcastle area.

Margaret Leis, aged 83, was last seen on Crebert Street, Mayfield, about 10am today (Thursday 30 October 2025).

Officers attached to Newcastle City Police District were notified and commenced inquiries into her whereabouts.

Police and family hold serious concerns for her welfare due to her age and as she lives with dementia.

Margaret is described as being of Caucasian appearance, about 160cm tall, of thin build, with brown hair and blue eyes.

She was last seen wearing a grey/white jumper and a beige trench coat.

Margaret is believed to frequent Mayfield and Newcastle areas.

DHA delivers new properties for Canberra

Defence Housing Australia has completed two new developments in Canberra, adding 113 new properties to the region’s housing supply. 

The new properties comprise 76 properties for serving Defence members and their families with another 37 properties built to support the local private housing market. 

The Crossing development in the suburb of Coombs includes 46 new DHA-owned two- and three-bedroom townhouses for contemporary living close to amenities.

The Academy Close redevelopment in Campbell has seen DHA deliver 30 Defence-owned, three- and four-bedroom townhouses, and detached homes for Defence members and family. 

Homes at The Crossing are now available for the current posting cycle.

Both developments are well positioned for convenient access to the Australian Defence Force Academy, the Royal Military College, Defence Force College and Defence Russell Offices.

The DHA properties are integrated among the privately owned townhouses that were sold to support the region’s housing market.

Defence members began moving into the Academy Close properties earlier this month, while The Crossing will see its first Defence member resident move into the development tomorrow. 

The Crossing properties were recently added to DHA’s online portal for member selection ahead of posting movements. 

Local builder Monarch Building Solutions completed The Crossing development, with Canberra’s Projex Building Group delivering Academy Close. 

Upwards of 600 local workers were employed to construct these properties. 

Minister for Defence Personnel, the Hon. Matt Keogh: 

“Providing Defence members and their families with quality housing helps keep ADF members happy in the job and recognises the value we put on their service.

“The 76 properties in The Crossing and Academy Close will mean members moving to Canberra this posting cycle can access modern new homes that come with great lifestyle benefits. 

“That’s on top of the 37 brand new townhouses The Crossing development is adding to the private housing market in Canberra, helping support the local community.”

David Smith, Member for Bean:

“With so many of these homes available for the private market, this is a tangible way the Albanese government is helping ease pressure on Canberra’s housing supply.

“These homes will also see more ADF members taking advantage of the great lifestyle opportunities Canberra has to offer.

“These projects will only add to the shared sense of community Defence members feel when they make Canberra their home.”

Defence Housing Australia Managing Director, Andrew Jaggers: 

“Today, DHA proudly delivers a total of 113 new properties across two developments that not only support Defence members and their families posted to the Canberra region, but provides for the private housing market.

“We thank local builders in Monarch and Projex for the quality of work they have delivered at The Crossing and Academy Close. 

“We take pride in supporting Defence members and their families to find a place to call home during their Defence postings, and we know these properties will be thoroughly enjoyed by their new residents. 

“Tomorrow we will welcome the first Defence member into The Crossing, with more members and private owners to move in through to the end of the year, with settlement of the 37 privately owned properties planned for December.”  

Visit to Korea for APEC Ministerial Meeting

This week, I will travel to Korea to represent Australia at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Ministerial Meeting.

APEC meets at a critical time for our region and the world. Rising trade tensions and economic uncertainty mean Australia must continue to champion open markets and fair rules that deliver for Australian businesses and workers.

One in four Australian jobs rely on trade. At APEC, I will continue our work to keep markets open, reduce barriers and create new opportunities for Australian exporters.

Australia’s priorities include making cross-border trade more efficient through paperless trade, promoting policy reforms for trade in services, and advancing the economic empowerment of all peoples.

We are committed to strengthening the World Trade Organization and the transparent, rules-based trading system that underpins our economy. These rules protect smaller economies and ensure Australian producers and exporters have fair access to global markets.

APEC economies make up over 60 per cent of global GDP, are home to 3 billion people, and account for around 75 per cent of Australia’s total two-way trade. By participating in APEC, we strengthen Australia’s economic relationships and build new export opportunities and trade diversification.

Australia and Korea are longstanding partners, with closely aligned strategic interests, a significant and complementary trading relationship and vibrant people-to-people links.

Australia strongly supports Korea as the 2025 APEC Chair with its focus on addressing shared challenges, embracing digital innovation, and prioritising inclusive growth, which reflect our shared values and goals.

Queensland Government’s cruel ban on gender-affirming care

The Greens have responded to Queensland Health Minister Tim Nicholls reinstating a ban on gender-affirming care for young trans folk, just hours after the Supreme Court ruled the LNP’s first ban unlawful.

Senator Nick McKim, Australian Greens LGBTIQA+ spokesperson:
 

“This decision is hateful and cruel, and goes against everything we know about gender-affirming care and its ability to save lives.”

“The LNP’s actions here are truly disgusting, placing young trans folk in the middle of a culture war of their own creation, using them as a public punching bag, and knowingly risking young lives in the process.”

“Gender-affirming care saves lives. It helps trans and gender diverse people thrive, live with dignity, and be themselves. It should never be used as a political football.”

“The LNP must immediately reinstate gender-affirming care, and stop playing politics with people’s lives.”


Greens MP for Maiwar Michael Berkman:

“Premier Crisafulli’s cabinet unlawfully overrode Queensland Health by directing it to ban gender affirming healthcare for young people, after just 22 minutes of so-called “consultation” – this is clearly about politics, not evidence. 

“This is a shameful doubling down on the LNP’s political interference in healthcare. 

“If the LNP has any respect for healthcare professionals and patient autonomy, it’ll drop its political fixations and get on with funding our public healthcare system properly.

“The LNP needs to learn that healthcare is a choice for an individual, their family and their healthcare team, not for politicians.”

Greens move vote on legislation to fix accountability gap in child abuse law

This afternoon Leader of the ACT Greens, Shane Rattenbury will move a vote on Greens legislation to broaden legal liability for institutions who have harboured perpetrators of child abuse.

“This legislation directly responds to a High Court ruling that institutions may not be liable for people who represented their organisation, enabling them to defeat legal claims from people who were abused when they were children,” said Mr Rattenbury.

“In a modern and caring society, Canberrans rightly expect organisations like churches, sports groups and scouts to take responsibility for the abuse that occurred within their institution. But instead, we have seen examples of using legal technicalities to avoid that responsibility. This legislation will close those loopholes.

“For affected communities and survivors, the passing of this legislation could not come soon enough. This is not just another piece of legislation in a place made for legislating. For those seeking justice and redress, this legislation will ensure they can get a fair hearing.

“It will mean survivors who were abused by people in volunteer positions as part of their engagement with an organisation like a church or scout group will be able make legal claims against the organisations who had responsibility for the offenders.

“Really, this bill is about ensuring victims have access to justice for the crimes committed against them as children, and it is about ensuring institutions make amends for the harms caused on their watch. It’s as simple as that.

“The passage of this change is fundamentally, first a foremost, a story of community. It is a story of people from Canberra and around Australia, making the clear case for reform, and bringing their expertise and experience to ensure this Bill does the job it needs to.

“If this bill passes, it is these people, these members of our community that are responsible for this change more than any politician in this place. It is people like these who have campaigned over the past year who should feel proud of their part in history.

“If this legislation passes, powerful and wealthy institutions will no longer be able to arm themselves to the hilt with lawyers and worm their way out of compensating the people who were abused in their organisations. That ends today.

Harry James, Your Reference Ain’t Relevant:

“This reform is a critical step towards justice for survivors. For too long, institutions have avoided accountability through technical loopholes that denied responsibility for abuse that occurred under their watch. The ACT leading the nation in closing this gap sends a powerful message — that survivors deserve truth, responsibility, and reform that truly reflects the harm done.”

Josh Byrnes, survivor of institutional child sexual abuse:

“This bill is the warm glow of some light at the end of tunnel. Too long have victim survivors had to bear witness to their stories become evidence to a prosecution case only for institutions and perpetrators find yet another legal loophole to escape responsibility and accountability.

As an institutional survivor I welcome this change and hope we can continue to bring some equity back to a process that is so unfairly weighted towards offenders. I thank Shane, Kate and the entire team for raising this bill. I thank them for their continued advocacy and camaraderie in this fight for justice.”

Clare Leaney, CEO National Survivors Foundation:

“I commend the ACT Parliament for taking the lead in debating and hopefully passing this important legislation for Survivors in the ACT. This model legislation demonstrates the importance of vicarious liability laws in ensuring justice for Survivors. This legislation is an exemplar demonstration of law makers putting the interest of Survivors front and centre and I encourage other jurisdictions to adopt a similar nonpartisan approach.”

Joe Stroud, Chair National Survivors’ Day:

“This legislation will have a profound and meaningful impact for Survivors in the ACT and will ensure that Survivors of abuse can receive like justice, for like harms inflicted. National Survivors’ Day thanks the ACT Parliament for taking the lead to close the gap Survivors throughout Australia are facing in their pursuit of justice.”

Carol Ronken, Director of Research, Bravehearts:

“Bravehearts strongly supports the Civil Law (Wrongs) (Organisational Child Abuse Liability) Amendment Bill 2025, recognising that these reforms are vital to ensuring survivors of institutional child sexual abuse have equitable access to justice, whether the abuse was committed by employees or by individuals in positions of organisational authority, including volunteers, religious leaders, scout leaders, and coaches.”

Dr Judy Courtin, Principal and Advocate of Judy Courtin Legal:

“With the passing of this Bill, the ACT can stand tall and proud as the country’s forerunner with these critical legislative reforms for victims/survivors of institutional child abuse. The ACT parliament is courageous in standing up for the rights of victims/survivors. The ACT’s legacy will be enduring and provides the requisite type of leadership and mettle expected of our elected members of parliament.”

Hassan Ehsan, Special Counsel, Turner Freeman Lawyers:

“This Bill is about ensuring institutions are held accountable and survivors aren’t left fighting legal loopholes instead of being heard. It’s about time. I welcome the reform, it’s been a long time coming.”

Alessandra Pettit, Senior Associate, Stacks Goudkamp:

“The impact of institutional child sexual abuse is lifelong and, in my experience as a practitioner in this area, the reason survivors are coming forward is multifactorial. There is a justice element, there is an accountability element and then there is a financial element. To have a decision like Bird be handed down is devastating for all elements. The Civil Law (Wrongs)(Organisational Child Abuse Liability) Amendment Bill 2025 reflects the “new world” of this area and I commend the ACT Greens for being the leader of this change. I have no doubt that if the ACT is the first to follow the High Courts suggestion that this is a legislative fix, then other jurisdictions will do the same.”

Labor’s big business approval laws leave nature for dead

The Senate has today sent the Government’s controversial environment legislation to inquiry to report back in March next year, despite the Minister’s attempt to rush the pro-mining, pro-logging laws through the parliament.

Greens spokesperson for the environment, Senator Sarah Hanson-Young:

“Labor’s laws fail to protect our forests and fail to protect our climate. Despite the Government spin, this package leaves nature for dead.

“The Albanese Government’s proposed environment bill will make things worse for nature and the climate. It will take environment protections backwards while fast tracking approvals for business.

“Big business and the mining companies have had their grubby fingers all over this package, there’s no wonder the Government wanted to rush the laws through without scrutiny.

“Instead, the Senate has today sent the Bills to an Inquiry, to ensure the laws are properly scrutinised and that the community is given a say.

“Now that we have seen the full bill, it’s clear the only thing being protected here is the profits of the mining companies and big business.

“These are meant to be environment protection laws, not big business approval laws.

“This bill is riddled with weasel words and carve-out clauses for big business. It makes approvals quicker and cheaper for the mining and big business lobby, and fails to provide proper protections for nature.

“The Greens have been clear from the start: we will not rubber stamp laws that fail to protect our native forests, wildlife and climate.

“We need laws that protect nature, not make way for big business to make big profits. The Greens cannot pass these so-called environment laws in their current state.”

Labor’s housing failure: cost blowouts, less homes, and an overwhelmed housing waitlist

The Victorian Greens say Labor’s own annual report has exposed a housing system that’s costing Victorians more and delivering less – with cost blowouts, falling delivery, and billions in long-term payments locked into private developers under secretive contracts.

The Department of Families, Fairness and Housing 2024-25 Annual Report reveals that the cost of delivering housing has blown out by almost 25 per cent in a single year, driven by Labor’s plan to demolish and privatise all 44 public housing towers through long-term deals with private consortiums.

Despite the huge spend, the number of new social homes delivered fell by almost 20 per cent in the last year, while people escaping family violence and others on the social housing waitlist are waiting an average of more than 17 months for housing – nearly seven months longer than Labor’s own target.

The report also shows more than $10.8 million in payments to private consultants, with the tower-demolition and privatisation program alone accounting for nearly half of all consultancy spending – including multimillion-dollar contracts with Ontoit, KPMG, EY and Anne Dalton & Associates.

A letter within the report from the Victorian Auditor-General Office (VAGO) has flagged the controversial ground lease delivery model for the demolition and privatisation of the public housing towers as a key audit matter, citing the significant financial cost and a complex payment structure, which lacks transparency.

Financial statements show that Labor has already approved billions of dollars in the form of “service payments” and “grants of right to operate” which basically sees public money siphoned to these private companies who get to profit off the use of public land.

the Victorian Greens housing spokesperson, Gabrielle de Vietri:

“Labor is handing over billions in taxpayer money to deliver fewer homes for the people who need them.”

“Even the Auditor-General has sounded the alarm – Labor’s Ground Lease Model is dodgy, locking Victorians into decades of payments to private developers and paying obscene amounts to hand over public land for private housing, with zero transparency about the cost or the benefit.”

“This is privatisation by stealth – a model that gifts public land and guaranteed income streams to private investors while the most vulnerable Victorians wait years for a roof over their heads. It’s completely broken.”

“Labor is throwing billions at private developers and consultants to demolish and privatise public housing. We’re seeing no new public homes built, nearly 20 per cent fewer public and community homes delivered, and an overwhelmed waitlist. Victorians are paying more for less.”

Shine a light on Newcastle’s local legends for 2026 Citizen of the Year Awards

City of Newcastle is providing the opportunity to honour the hard work of outstanding Novocastrians as part of the 2026 Citizen of the Year Awards. 

Nominations are now open for the prestigious annual awards, celebrating those who have made a significant impact in Newcastle’s community. 

Award categories include Citizen of the Year, Young Citizen of the Year, Senior Citizen of the Year and Community Group of the Year. 

Deputy Lord Mayor Charlotte McCabe said these awards are a chance to recognise people who make Newcastle a better place to live. 

“These awards shine a light on the everyday heroes who go above and beyond to support others, often without recognition,” Cr McCabe said.

“Whether it’s through volunteering, advocacy or simply lending a hand, these contributions strengthen our community and deserve to be celebrated.”

In 2025, the Community Group of the Year title was awarded to The Unforgettables, a choir dedicated to supporting people living with dementia and their carers.

Image: Associate Professors Michelle Kelly and Helen English, alongside the Unforgettables choir for people living with dementia, accepting the 2025 Community Group of the Year title at this year’s ceremony. The group meet every Saturday afternoon at the Newcastle Conservatorium of Music, providing a welcoming space where participants can engage with music.

Co-founder Associate Professor Helen English said the award meant a lot to everyone involved in the Unforgettables. 

“The choir was very proud to have been recognised as the Community Group of the Year, as recognition is so important when you are vulnerable and marginalised due to such an insidious disease,” Dr English said.

“As a result of the award the choir has been asked to sing at more events than it can possibly manage and has become an important icon for the University of Newcastle, singled out in our new Arts and Culture Strategy publication and performing as part of the 60th anniversary celebrations. 

“Dementia inclusive choirs are important for many reasons, including the social connections, joy in music and normalising through an accessible activity.

“Recognising our choir reinforces how vital these activities are for both cared-for and care-partners, and we thank City of Newcastle and the wider community.”  

Last year’s recipients also included Bailey Myers, who received the Citizen of the Year Award for his 4,500km journey across Australia on foot to raise funds for Indigenous literacy.

Sixteen-year-old Khuslen Batmandakh was named young Citizen of the Year for her dedication to improving literacy through the establishment of the book nook in Jesmond, providing free books to local families.

Nominations are now open online at newcastle.nsw.gov.au/citizenoftheyear and close on 11 December 2025.

A selection panel including the Deputy Lord Mayor, CEO, councillors and the 2025 Award recipients will determine the award winners, who will be announced at a ceremony early in 2026. 

Start Strong changes to drive quality standards as part of record early childhood investment

The Minns Labor Government is reforming early learning funding to link state investment to quality standards and direct it to areas most in need of better access to affordable, quality preschool.

As part of its ongoing reforms to the early childhood sector the Minns Government is introducing changes to its $900 million Start Strong preschool program, which forms part of a record $2 billion investment in Early Childhood Education and Care.

To ensure services receiving government funding provide the highest quality care, changes to Start Strong guidelines from 2026 will require services not meeting the National Quality Standard to lift their rating or risk loss of funding.

State government funding will be weighted towards services in regional and remote areas, and many areas that are currently undersupplied.

These reforms are the latest step in a suite of measures the Minns Government is taking to improve compliance with quality standards in the early learning sector in NSW, following our nation-leading legislation that passed NSW Parliament last week and is now law. 

The changes work hand-in-hand with the NSW Early Childhood Education and Care Regulatory Authority’s policy requiring approved providers to act immediately to address quality concerns.

Under this policy, the regulator can compel approved providers to take immediate action to address quality concerns. Those unwilling or unable to improve will face loss of funding, enforcement action, including possible suspension or removal from the sector.

These changes are consistent with the Commonwealth’s direction to suspend funding for services failing to meet national standards, particularly in relation to child safety and quality.

The Start Strong funding program is part of the Minns Labor Government’s commitment to ensure every child in NSW has access to 600 hours of quality preschool education before starting school. This investment also includes:

  • More than $60 million to support children with high learning support needs.
     
  • Up to $15 million for the 2026 Start Strong Pathways program that funds place-based initiatives to provide early educational supports for children prior to preschool enrolment and supports engagement with families.

In addition to Start Strong funding, early learning services will benefit from further NSW Government programs, including:

  • $100 million to help community preschools expand their hours and cater for more children through the Expanding Quality Access Program.
     
  • More than $7.5 million to increase participation in the Health and Development Check in Early Childhood Education and Care program.
     
  • Up to $7 million in additional targeted equity funding for community and mobile preschools.
     
  • $20 million for The Flexible Initiatives Trial which provides grants to services to test and trial new options for families – including extended operating hours or flexible pick-up and drop-off times.
     
  • $5 million to support the viability and sustainability of small and stand-alone Early Childhood Education and Care providers through the Building Capability Development Program.
     
  • $20 million for the Building Early Learning Places program to assist not-for-profit providers looking to create more spaces for children aged 0-6 in communities with the greatest need.

To support workforce supply and quality over the coming years, the NSW Government is also investing up to:

  • $27 million for the Early Childhood Education and Care Scholarship program to help 2,000 more aspiring and existing Early Education and Care professionals advance their careers in early learning.
     
  • $7 million to support more than 400 early childhood educators to turn their diplomas into degrees with university partners delivering the Early Learning Diploma to Degree program.
     
  • $10 million to provide fee-free professional learning courses for more than 4,000 ECEC professionals, in partnership with TAFE NSW.

Acting Minister for Education and Early Learning Courtney Houssos said:

“We’re introducing important changes for childhood education and care services in NSW to lift standards and improve access to quality preschool education in areas where it’s needed most.

“The Minns Labor Government is committed to ensuring early learning services in NSW provide the highest standards for our youngest learners and that every dollar of funding directly benefits families who need it most.

“While most early learning services provide excellent care, providers who are underperforming will be required to take swift action to lift their quality standards, or risk losing their funding.

“These changes are the latest step the Minns Labor Government is taking to ensure children in NSW have access to safe and quality early learning and care, as we work to rebuild trust in the sector.”

Unique program gives Northern Rivers students strength and skills to deal with disasters

Students across the Northern Rivers are invited to participate in a unique learning experience that nurtures critical thinking, collective action and creative expression, as part of a region-wide flood preparedness campaign.

The Future Feast in Schools, from Northern Rivers Performing Arts (NORPA), embeds disaster awareness through storytelling, fostering curiosity, connection and creativity.

The learning experience is underpinned by four key regional preparedness steps:

  • know your river and your risk
  • know the warnings
  • have a plan
  • look after each other.
     

NORPA is leading the Future Feasts in Schools workshops at Broadwater Public School, Empire Vale Public School, Stoker’s Siding Public School, Main Arm Public School and Palmers Island Public School from October 15 to November 12.

Guided by professional artists in Drama, Dance, and Visual & Video Arts, students engage in handson workshops that explore themes of disaster, resilience, and renewal. Through movement, storytelling, and collaborative performance-making, they draw on their lived experiences and hopes for the future.

The students’ artistic responses will also contribute to a broader regional project, a NORPA major creative work, Dinner Party at the End of the World, a multi-artform work inspired by local responses to natural hazards.

Teachers are also supported throughout with curriculum-aligned resources and opportunities for professional learning alongside experienced artists.

Future Feasts received funding from the Australian and NSW Government through the Northern Rivers Recovery and Resilience Program, administered by the NSW Reconstruction Authority. It is
also presented in partnership with the Diocese of Lismore Catholic Schools Office.

This program is an example of how the Minns Labor NSW Government is empowering young people to build the skills and traits they need to stay strong, resilient, and ready to face future disasters.

Minister for Recovery Janelle Saffin said:
“We recognise, more than ever, the need to harness the skills and voices of young people to be better prepared for disasters.

“This creative learning experience does just that, by empowering students to know the risks, to have a plan and look out for each other as we prepare for future disasters.

“This program shows our young people they have the power to create a more resilient Northern Rivers and build the kind of community they want to live in.

“I thank NORPA for their creative approach to ensuring young people’s voices are heard and for supporting them to be ready for disasters today and in the future.”

NORPA Artistic Director Julian Louis said:
“Future Feasts is a chance for students to unleash their imagination on a difficult subject for many people in their community.

“The idea of climate change is often abstract and hard to understand, but this gives young people the chance to express themselves among friends and peers in a creative endeavour and learning environment about very real events and issues that directly affected them and their school.”

Reconstruction Authority Executive Director Reconstruction Graham Kennett said:
“Dealing with natural hazards is a fact of everyday life in the Northern Rivers, where knowledge of the region and clear and calm thinking are essentials for navigating these turbulent events.

“Future Feasts helps young people to absorb these tools of local life and puts into practice how community can come together to wield them.”