Planning reform to provide a leg up for farmers

Proposed changes to the NSW planning system are set to make it easier for regional landholders to build sheds and carry out earthworks without the need for a development application (DA).

The Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure is inviting feedback on the changes to the complying development codes for rural earthworks and sheds to align the Rural Housing Code and the Inland Code.

The changes would remove the need for an application to be lodged for certain development types, clearing the path for critical housing and public infrastructure DAs to be assessed by councils faster.

There are currently inconsistencies between the Rural Housing Code, which operates in the 38 LGAs east of the Great Dividing Range, and the Inland Code, which applies to the 69 LGAs to the west. This includes different definitions and size controls for sheds based on whether they are on the coast or in the outback.

The proposed changes would create a shared set of rules so that all rural and regional LGAs are subject to the same provisions. Subject to specifications, the complying developments would include:

  • Hay, machinery, and shearing sheds.
  • Storage tanks and retaining walls.
  • Stormwater drainage works and rehabilitation of eroded or disturbed land areas.

The changes are on public exhibition from today until Friday, 14 June 2024 at 5pm.

Find out more on the NSW Planning Portal

Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Paul Scully said:

“We inherited a confused and confusing planning system, and this policy reform is the latest measure in a series of changes to correct inconsistencies and get things moving.

“The changes would provide consistency around the types of development farmers can carry out without needing to lodge a complex application and wait for a lengthy council assessment.

“We are committed to removing red tape and allowing councils to focus more on the assessment and delivery of key housing and infrastructure.

“I encourage everyone to have their say on this important reform.”

Looking to the future: improving wildlife rehabilitation and care

The NSW Government is launching statewide consultation on the wildlife rehabilitation sector to gain a detailed understanding of how NSW can improve the way we care for our native animals.

The consultation will examine the challenges facing the sector, identify best practices and recommend next steps.

Parliamentary Secretary for the Environment Trish Doyle will lead the consultation and provide a report on the outcomes to Minister for the Environment Penny Sharpe within 12 months.

In NSW, 40 wildlife rehabilitation groups involving more than 8600 people rescue an average of 110,000 animals a year.

The sector is mostly made up of dedicated and passionate volunteers who respond to more than 180,000 calls for help from the community each year.

This work is supported by specialised wildlife hospitals and many local veterinary services.

The value of the sector’s work is estimated at $27 million a year.

The consultation will consider a range of areas:

  • challenges for the sector
  • resourcing
  • connections within the sector
  • service gaps and duplication
  • involvement in emergency response and significant wildlife events
  • administrative and legislative provisions
  • support for wildlife hospitals and veterinary practices.

Our state is home to animals which live nowhere else on this planet and the NSW Government is committed to ensuring sick and injured native wildlife receive the best care and rehabilitation. The government recently invested $8 million into wildlife hospitals and care facilities across NSW and another $500,000 to support wildlife rehabilitators in Sydney’s South West.

This consultation will inform next steps for the NSW Volunteer Wildlife Rehabilitation Sector Strategy 2020-23. That strategy will be extended until 30 June 2025 while this review is underway.

Minister for Climate Change and the Environment Penny Sharpe said:

“Wildlife rescuers and rehabilitators are essential to the care and survival of native animals across NSW.

“We need to build on the achievements of the previous strategy and ensure the sector is supported for the future.

“I look forward to receiving this review, which will help inform and guide this important work.”

Parliamentary Secretary for the Environment Trish Doyle said:

“The NSW Government values the contribution of wildlife rehabilitators, who provide valuable work for the community by rescuing and caring for sick, injured and orphaned native animals across the state every day.

“I look forward to listening to their experiences to understand the challenges and opportunities facing the sector.

“We need an integrated, future focused strategy to support the wonderful people who care for our native animals, while ensuring wildlife rehabilitation services are well connected and sustainable.”

Labor must come clean on school funding cuts

The NSW Opposition has called on the Minns Labor Government to deliver the school upgrades it promised before the election, after parents raised concerns about funding shortfalls.
 
The Capital Commitment to Other Schools program included 11 projects across the state, with $4 million to go towards a multi-purpose hall for Sutherland Public School.
 
Leader of the Opposition Mark Speakman, Shadow Minister for Education Sarah Mitchell and Shadow Minister for Finance Eleni Petinos visited the school this morning.
“This Minns Labor Government told Sutherland Public School it would be given a hall big enough to accommodate the entire student population, but now Prue Car is refusing to guarantee whether the allocated funding will be enough,” Mr Speakman said.
 
“Labor stood before this community and made this promise, yet parents and students can’t even get a straight answer a year after the election.”
 
The concerns come after $148 million was ripped from school budgets across the state on the eve of the school holidays.
 
“All this Government has shown us is that it is never upfront when it comes to school spending, and teachers, parents and families deserve better,” Mrs Mitchell said.
 
“Labor wasn’t transparent about the true cost of its union pay deal and now it isn’t being transparent about this program and it’s always our kids that pay the price.”
 
Despite calls to Labor’s Member for Heathcote Maryanne Stuart, parents are still in the dark and unable to get a guarantee that the promised multi-purpose hall will be delivered.
 
“As the neighbouring Member of Parliament, I have been receiving calls from concerned parents asking legitimate questions about the delivery of this election promise,” Ms Petinos said.
 
“If it’s good enough for Maryanne Stuart and Prue Car to stand here and make promises before the election, then it’s good enough for them to front up and explain the true impact of their cuts to school funding.”

NSW Labor’s transport service cuts begin

The NSW Opposition is calling on the Minns Labor Government to come clean on the level of services cuts across Sydney’s bus and rail network in the lead up to the Metro City line opening this year.
 
With media reports outlining potential cuts to bus services, it is critical for commuters be provided with certainty on what level of service they can expect in the coming months.
 
The cuts to bus services follow the Labor Government receiving the Bus Industry Taskforce final report in February 2024 which requested over $1 billion over the next three years to service the network.
 
To date, the Government has not provided any new funding to meet this recommendation or any of the recommendations for bus services in Greater Sydney. 
 
The Taskforce did not recommend any specific service cuts in the final report.
 
Shadow Minister for Transport Natalie Ward said “This is Labor 101, promise the world then start cutting services.”
 
“This Government’s cycle of reviews has now proven to be farce, the bus industry requested funding to support commuters and instead the Government is beginning to cut services.”
 
“The number one transport issue in Sydney at the moment is getting a reliable bus service. I don’t understand why the Government would be cutting services.”
 
“There has been no consultation and this is only the beginning, the next cuts will be to your local bus route.”

One Nation: Labor’s dud budget jacks up interest rates

The sad news from Labor’s weak and poorly-received Budget is that economists have all broadly predicted that inflation will only get worse because of federal government policies.

The primary problem with the Budget is that it hands out subsidies to cover to the cost of rising household and business costs – subsides needed because government policy is increasing the price of everything.

Economist Chris Richardson said: “You can’t subsidise your way to low inflation”. 

As Senator Malcolm Roberts said on Sky News’ panel during budget night: “Subsidies add to inflation because sellers know the subsidies exists and just raise their prices to eat that subsidy up.” 

The Reserve Bank has stated that rent subsidies add a serious component to the rate of housing inflation. 

At every turn, every Labor government policy setting is adding to the cost of living, the cost of housing and the cost of doing business. This Budget just kicks inflation down the road for a few months. 

As one analogy goes, an attempt to spend your way out of a recession is like standing in a bucket and trying to lift yourself up. Subsidies is one way the government is trying to mask the fact Australia is in a ‘per capita’ recession. 

Like everything that Labor touches, people’s lives are suffering, and Labor only makes things worse.

Cost of living help and a future made in Australia

This is a responsible and restrained Budget which eases cost of living pressures and invests in a Future Made in Australia.

It provides a tax cut for every taxpayer and new help with energy bills, rent and the cost of medicines.

It builds more homes for Australians, reforms our universities, strengthens Medicare and the care economy, and broadens opportunity in our society.

Global economic uncertainty, high but moderating inflation and higher interest rates are contributing to cost of living pressures and combining to slow the economy.

This Budget strikes the right balance between keeping pressure off inflation, delivering cost of living relief, supporting sustainable economic growth and strengthening public finances.

This Budget forecasts a second surplus in 2023-24, which would be the first time a government has delivered back-to-back surpluses in nearly two decades.

The Budget also forecasts lower debt to GDP and lower inflation, which Treasury forecasts could return to the RBA’s target band by the end of 2024 – earlier than previously expected.

Our responsible Budget responds to the pressures people are under now and lays the foundations for future prosperity by:

  • Easing cost of living pressures.
  • Building more homes for Australians.
  • Investing in a Future Made in Australia and the skills and universities needed to make it a reality.
  • Strengthening Medicare and the care economy.
  • Broadening opportunity and advancing equality.

Easing cost of living pressures

Many Australians are under pressure, which is why the Government is delivering responsible cost of living relief without adding to inflation. This Budget delivers:

  • Tax cuts for all taxpayers, with a bigger tax cut for 84 per cent of taxpayers.
  • $300 energy rebates for all households, and $325 rebates for eligible small businesses.
  • An increase in the maximum rate of Commonwealth Rent Assistance by a further 10 per cent.
  • Cutting $3 billion in student debt for more than three million Australians.
  • Cheaper medicines through a new Community Pharmacy Agreement.
  • A more competitive economy and fairer prices.

More homes for Australians

The Budget builds more homes for Australians, with more social and affordable housing, more infrastructure and removal of red tape, better transport for more accessible cities and suburbs and increased housing for students:

  • $1 billion to get homes built sooner, with funding for states including to provide roads, services and parks, essential for additional housing supply.
  • A new five-year National Agreement on Social Housing and Homelessness for states and territories to deliver crisis support and social housing.
  • $1 billion directed to support women and children experiencing domestic violence, as well as youth.
  • Training more tradies and construction workers to build more homes by boosting construction skills with fee-free TAFE places.
  • Expanding the Affordable Housing Bond Aggregator program.
  • Bolstering community housing providers to support the first tranche of homes to be delivered under the Housing Australia Future Fund and National Housing Accord.
  • Delivering funding for new and existing infrastructure projects.

Investing in a future made in Australia

A Future Made in Australia is about maximising the economic and industrial benefits of the move to net zero and securing our place in a changing global economic and strategic landscape.

The Budget invests $22.7 billion over a decade to build a stronger and more resilient economy powered by clean energy, create more well-paid jobs and facilitate the private investment we need to make the most of this generational opportunity.

It is a core part of our broader growth plan in this Budget, which includes a focus on:

  • Attracting and enabling private investment.
  • Making our country a renewable energy superpower.
  • Strengthening our defence capabilities and economic security.
  • Supporting small businesses to grasp the opportunities of our transforming economy.
  • And expanding and reforming tertiary education for a more skilled workforce.

Strengthening Medicare and the care economy

The Budget invests in Medicare and better health outcomes, aged care and disability services, delivers essential services, and supports workers:

  • 29 more Medicare Urgent Care Clinics.
  • Free access to mental health care for more Australians.
  • An additional 24,100 home care packages.
  • Essential funding for in person and online service delivery.
  • Getting the NDIS back on track.
  • Provisioning for wage increases for aged care and early childhood education and care workers.

It also delivers better outcomes for women and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians, including through super on Paid Parental Leave, support for victim-survivors of domestic violence, and improved education, jobs, housing and essential services for First Nations people.

Continuing our record of responsible economic management

Through responsible economic management, the Budget keeps pressure off inflation and strengthens public finances over time.

Following a surplus of $22.1 billion in 2022-23, the Budget is forecasting a surplus of $9.3 billion in 2023-24.

Fiscal pressures intensify after that, with a deficit of $28.3 billion forecast for 2024-25, but progress has been made in strengthening the Budget over time.

This Budget:

  • Returns 96 per cent of revenue upgrades to the Budget in 2023-24 while inflation is above the band, with 82 per cent of revenue upgrades returned since coming to government over the forward estimates.
  • Identifies $27.9 billion in savings and reprioritisations, taking the total to $77.4 billion since coming to government.
  • Limits real spending growth to an average of 1.4 per cent per year over the period since we came to government to 2027-28 – less than half the average of the last 30 years and around a third of our predecessors’.
  • Improves the Budget position by a forecast $214.7 billion over the six years to 2027-28 compared to the time of the election.
  • Reduces debt as a share of the economy, with gross debt projected to peak at 35.2 per cent of GDP, almost 10 percentage points lower than at the time of the election.
  • Improves Australia’s debt position with gross debt $152 billion lower in this financial year than was forecast at the time of the election.
  • Avoids $80 billion in interest costs over the decade due to the improved budget position compared to what we inherited at the election.

The Albanese Government is delivering a responsible budget that provides cost of living help now, builds a stronger and more resilient economy and invests in a future made in Australia.

Easing cost-of-living pressures

Helping Australians with the cost of living is our Government’s number one priority.

This Budget delivers a tax cut for every taxpayer, provides new energy bill relief for every household, cuts student debt and increases rent assistance for nearly 1 million households.

The Albanese Labor Government knows many Australians are doing it tough and is focused on easing those pressures.

Our Budget centrepiece is a tax cut for every one of the nation’s 13.6 million taxpayers, which will begin flowing in less than seven weeks.

These cost-of-living measures have been carefully designed to take pressure off Australians doing it tough and to directly reduce inflation.

For a family on a combined income of around $130,000 – with one partner earning $80,000 and the other $50,000 – their combined tax cut will be over $2,600 a year or about $50 a week. They will also be eligible for $300 in energy bill relief in 2024–25.

Energy bill relief and the increase to Commonwealth Rent Assistance are expected to directly reduce inflation by half of a percentage point in 2024–25 and not expected to add to broader inflationary pressures.

This Budget builds on the ongoing relief provided in our first two budgets, which includes making it easier to see a bulk billing doctor, making medicines cheaper, cheaper child care and higher JobSeeker and other working age and student payments.

Cost-of-living help in the 2024-25 Budget:

  • All 13.6 million Australian taxpayers will get a tax cut, with an average cut of $1,888 a year or $36 a week.
  • $3.5 billion in energy bill relief for all Australian households and one million small businesses.
  • $1.9 billion to increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance by a further 10 per cent, benefiting nearly 1 million households.
  • Cheaper medicines as part of the up to $3 billion agreement with community pharmacies.
  • Waiving $3 billion in student debt for more than 3 million Australians to make student loans fairer.
  • Getting a fairer deal for consumers at the supermarket checkout.
  • $1.1 billion to pay superannuation on government-funded Paid Parental Leave.
  • $138 million to boost funding for emergency and food relief and financial support. services
  • Provisioning for higher wages for aged care and child care workers.
  • Extending the freeze on deeming rates for 876,000 income support recipients.

Our responsible policies are helping address the cost of living pressures around the kitchen table and around our economy.

This Budget is not the beginning of our action on cost of living and it won’t be the end.

The Albanese Labor Government’s third Budget is designed to see people through these difficult times, stare down the inflation challenge and set our country up for the future.

What the 2024 Budget means for Newcastle

TAX CUTS
Newcastle’s 78,000 taxpayers will receive a tax cut from 1 July – 13,000 more than would have benefitted from Scott Morrison’s plan from five years ago. On average, Newcastle taxpayers will have an extra $1,642 in their pocket.

ENERGY BILL RELIEF
From 1 July 2024, every household will receive a $300 energy rebate, and there’s a $325 rebate for about 1 million eligible small businesses.

HECS-HELP RELIEF FOR STUDENTS
We’re making HECS simpler and fairer. The Government will cut $3 billion in student debt for more than 3 million Australians backdated to 1 June 2023. This change will support 25,398 people with a HELP debt in Newcastle.

PAID PLACEMENTS
The Commonwealth Prac Payment will support students undertaking mandatory work placements with $319.50 per week during their clinical and professional placements. This will help up to 5,200 students who are enrolled in teaching, nursing, midwifery and social work at the University of Newcastle.

CHEAPER MEDICINES
Pensioners and other commonwealth concession card holders in Newcastle won’t pay more than $7.70 for their PBS medications for the next 5 years, thanks to the Albanese Government’s commitment to delivering cheaper medicines. Everyone else with a medicare card will pay no more than $31.60 per script for PBS medicines.

COMMONWEALTH RENT ASSISTANCE
We’re increasing the maximum rates of Commonwealth Rent Assistance by 10 per cent. This will benefit 7,810 households in Newcastle. This builds on the Government’s 15 per cent increase, which commenced in September 2023.

SUPERANNUATION ON PAID PARENTAL LEAVE
Eligible parents with babies born or adopted on or after 1 July 2025 will receive a superannuation payment of 12 per cent, as a contribution to their nominated superannuation fund. This will make the super system fairer, and benefit 180,000 families a year.

A DEDICATED WOMEN’S HEALTH PACKAGE
The health and care of women will be better met, with over $160 million to tailor services, tackle bias and improve access. This includes investing $49.1 million to introduce longer consultation items for patients with complex gynaecological conditions (such as suspected endometriosis, pelvic pain and PCOS) and $7 million over four years to support women and their families who have suffered miscarriage and pregnancy loss.

INFRASTRUCTURE
The Albanese Government is providing funding for infrastructure in Newcastle including:
$10 million of Australian Government funding for Critical Renewable Energy Zones Road Infrastructure (Port of Newcastle to Renewable Energy Zone)
An additional $30.6 million of Australian Government funding for Newcastle Inner City Bypass, Rankin Park to Jesmond
An additional $112 million of Australian Government funding for M1 Pacific Motorway Extension to Raymond Terrace
This Budget also locks in progressive increases to local roads funding. This brings the total five year investment in Roads to Recovery funding for the Newcastle electorate to more than $25 million.

The Regional Airports Program will be extended with an additional $40 million in competitive grant funding over three years from 2024-25.

We will invest $100 million in a new Active Transport Fund open to states and territories to fund new bicycle and walking paths across the country.

The Albanese Government’s election commitment for an Australian-flagged and crewed maritime strategic fleet has been advanced in this Budget. The strategic fleet will be established through a pilot program with three vessels.

We are providing $10.8 million in 2024-25 for a one-year National Road Safety Education and awareness campaign, and $21.1 million over four years from 2024-28 to improve the reporting of national road safety data via the National Road Safety Data Hub.

A FUTURE MADE IN NEWCASTLE
The Albanese Labor Government is building an economy that will position regions like ours to benefit from the opportunities in the decades ahead, bringing new jobs and opportunities to Newcastle.
We’re investing $3.2 billion over the next decade through the Australian Renewable Energy Agency to support the commercialisation of technologies that are critical to net zero, including through a new $1.7 billion Future Made in Australia Innovation Fund for the deployment of innovative technologies and facilities linked to priority sectors, including green metals, batteries and low carbon liquid fuel.

BUILDING A RENEWABLE ENERGY FUTURE IN NEWCASTLE
We’re investing $1.3 billion over the next decade in the Hydrogen Headstart program to provide additional support to early-movers investing in the industry’s development;
We’re implementing a Hydrogen Production Tax Incentive to provide a $2 incentive per kilogram of renewable hydrogen produced between 2027-28 to 2039-40, for up to ten years per project, at an estimated cost to the Budget of $6.7 billion over the medium term;
We’re investing $17.1 million to implement our National Hydrogen Strategy which will help Australia become a global hydrogen leader by 2030;
$27.7 million to better integrate consumer energy resources (like rooftop solar and household batteries) into the grid;
Unlocking $65 billion of renewable energy capacity through the continued roll out of the Capacity Investment Scheme.
$1.5 billion to strengthen battery and solar panel supply chains via the Solar Sunshot Program and Battery Breakthrough Initiative;
HOMES FOR MORE AUSTRALIANS
The Albanese Government is supporting the construction of more homes for home buyers and renters by:
$1 billion to get homes built sooner, with funding for states including to provide roads, services and parks, essential for additional housing supply.
Providing $88.8 million for 20,000 new fee-free TAFE places, including increased access to pre-apprenticeship programs, in courses relevant to the construction sector.
Doubling Commonwealth funding for homelessness support and building more social housing through offering a new $9.3 billion National Agreement on Social Housing and Homelessness with $423.1 million in additional funding.
Building more social and affordable rental housing with a $2.5 billion increase in the liability cap of Housing Australia, and an additional $3 billion in loans to Housing Australia to support ongoing delivery of the program.
Unlocking up to $1 billion for more homes through the National Housing Infrastructure Facility to be directed towards housing that supports women and children fleeing domestic and family violence and young Australians.

This Budget builds on the cost of living measures Federal Labor has already put in place, like cheaper childcare for families, as well as creating jobs and getting wages moving again. We know there’s more to do, and we’ll keep working every day to deliver for all Australians.

Targeted sanctions in response to Iran’s destabilising activities in the Middle East

The Australian Government is imposing targeted sanctions on an additional five Iranian individuals and three entities, in response to Iran’s destabilising behaviour.

Senior officials sanctioned today include Iran’s Defence Minister, Mohammad Reza Ashtiani, and the Commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ (IRGC) Qods Force, Brigadier General Esmail Qaani. The IRGC is a malignant actor that has long been a threat to international security, and to its own people. 

Those sanctioned also include Iranian senior officials, businesspeople and companies that have contributed to the development of Iran’s missile and Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) programs. Iran’s proliferation and provision of these technologies to its proxies has fostered instability across the region for many years.

Targeted entities include the IRGC Navy, which seized an Israeli-linked (Portuguese-flagged) civilian vessel in international waters on 13 April 2024. Australia continues to call for the immediate release of the ship and its crew.

Today’s listings mean the Albanese Government has now sanctioned 90 Iranian-linked individuals and 100 Iranian-linked entities and are a further demonstration of this Government’s commitment to taking strong action against Iran. 

This action is in line with sanctions measures taken by our partners in recent weeks, following Iran’s unprecedented drone and missile attack on Israel in April.

Australia will continue to deliberately and strategically apply pressure on Iran to cease its disruptive activities and adhere to international law.

ALP AND COALITION GREEN LIGHT AUKUS NUCLEAR WASTE DUMPS WITHOUT PUBLIC CONSULTATION

Labor and the Coalition are seeking to pass legislation that can make anywhere in Australia a nuclear waste dumping ground with no public consultation, no First Nations input and no warning.

The Senate report released today into the Australian Nuclear Power Safety Bill 2023 highlights the lack of protections for communities as Labor seeks to create a new defence nuclear regulator as part of their deal on AUKUS nuclear submarines.

Today’s majority Senate report supports giving the Defence Minister the power to designate anywhere in Australia a high-level nuclear-dumping ground with no public consultation needed.

The report highlights, but does not recommend addressing, the conflict of interest at the core of this new nuclear submarine regulator, due to it answering to the Minister of Defence who is also the Minister responsible for the operation of nuclear submarines.

The Senate committee report acknowledged that this Bill was drafted by the Albanese Government to allow the dumping of UK and US high-level nuclear waste in Australia. Since this Bill was introduced the Greens have been calling for this to be removed and, while it is positive to see this recommended as a change, the Albanese Government is yet to accept this amendment.

Senator David Shoebrdige, Greens spokesperson for Defence said: “This just shows the lengths the Albanese Government will go to try and keep the failing AUKUS nuclear submarine deal sputtering along.”

“Labor is more than happy to team up with the Coalition and start opening up nuclear waste dumps around Australia without any public consultation.

“If this Bill becomes law you could wake up tomorrow and have a nuclear waste dump as a neighbour, simply because the Defence Minister singled your suburb out.

“This runs roughshod not just over local communities, but also First Nations peoples who have a long history of protecting their land from nuclear waste from Muckaty to Kimba.

“Until the Greens pointed it out last year the Government was trying to quietly push this bill through Parliament and allow the US and UK to dump high-level nuclear waste here. With this nuclear-powered cat out of the bag, the question is will Labor amend the Bill to protect Australia from this toxic future?

“The Greens issued a dissenting report opposing the Bill that highlighted the dangers of international nuclear waste dumping in Australia and the multiple failures in the structure that undermine the proposed new regulator’s independence.

“Under this Bill, the supposed ‘independent regulator’ of Defence can be run by someone who the day before was in the Defence, staffed by the Defence, and reporting to the Minister of Defence. It is absurd,” Senator Shoebridge said.

Read the Greens Dissenting report here.