Riverwall repairs provide rock solid future for popular running route

A shared pathway home to one of the largest parkrun events in Australia will be preserved into the future as part of City of Newcastle’s $350,000 investment into the Throsby Creek riverwall.

The project will repair a 200m-long section of the rock riverwall at Wickham, ensuring the ongoing stability of the heavily used pathway that runs adjacent to the western bank of Throsby Creek.

Deputy Lord Mayor Declan Clausen with representatives from parkrun, City of Newcastle and Soil Conservation Services checking in on the progress of the Throsby Creek riverwall repairs.

The shared pathway provides a key link in the inner-city cycleway and forms part of the 5km-long Newy parkrun course, which is traversed by more than 400 runners and walkers every Saturday morning.

Deputy Lord Mayor Declan Clausen said these important repairs will ensure the riverwall continues to be an environmental, recreational and visual asset valued by all members of our community.

“Moving across the city with ease is important to the liveability of Newcastle, which is why City of Newcastle is investing in pedestrian safety, enhanced accessibility and linked movement within local neighbourhoods,” Cr Clausen said.

“Repairs to the Throsby Creek riverwall will provide stability to the nearby shared pathway, which has been utilised more than 224,000 times by Newy parkrun participants alongside countless cyclists, walkers and café lovers who live and work in the surrounding Wickham, Maryville and Carrington communities.”

The repair work will involve the recovery and reinstallation of the original igneous pink rocks displaced from the wall into the creek waters over time, supplemented by around 210 tonnes of newly sourced rock, which will be used to repair and stablise the riverwall where it had degraded over time.

The project will also provide formalised pedestrian recreation access to the artificial beach on the southern and northern end of the work area.

Works are being delivered for City of Newcastle by Soil Conservation Services. City of Newcastle has worked with local suppliers to gain access to appropriate rock resources, which have been in short supply, delaying the commencement of permanent restoration works.

The original rock wall was delivered more than 20 years ago by a private developer on behalf of the NSW Government. The reconstructed wall will be built to a higher standard, to reduce the likelihood of future councils needing to undertake further restoration.

Newy parkrun Co Event Director, Penny Redhead said the Throsby Creek loop is a fantastic resource, with one of the best flat scenic routes Newcastle’s inner-city has to offer.

“Over the past 10 years, Newcastle has experienced a running movement. This is highlighted by the continued growth in participation not only at Newy parkrun but across the 13 parkruns in the Greater Hunter Region,” Ms Redhead said.

“The focus of parkrun is getting people of all ages, shapes, and abilities together as a community to move continuously, at their pace, for 5km. With the riverwall repairs, the shared pathway will be safer and more accessible for everyone including parkrun.

“Even on non-parkrun days it’s great to see the volume and variety of people enjoying the path, demonstrating real respect and courtesy amongst all users.”

The project is being delivered as part of City of Newcastle’s citywide creek rehabilitation program, which is designed to improve our blue green grid, through revegetating riparian vegetation, stabilising creek beds, reducing bank erosion, improving water quality, and enhancing amenity for our local communities.

City of Newcastle will invest more than $1.25 million into the program during the 2023/24 financial year, with repairs and rehabilitation projects also planned for the Claremont Reserve creek line at Adamstown, Ironbark Creek at Elermore Vale, Wilai Creek at Elermore Vale, and Dark Creek at North Lambton.

Families to benefit from $500 of preschool fee relief

Families of up to 64,000 NSW children will benefit from $500 in fee relief under the Minns Labor government’s push to boost preschool education and provide cost of living relief.

This is part of a more than $100 million package of initiatives to invest in early learning and enhance the sector’s workforce, after opportunities in this important sector were missed by the Liberals and the Nationals.

Investment in quality early childhood education and care has lifelong benefits for NSW’s youngest learners and is a key to enabling parental workforce participation.

The initiatives include:

  • Fee relief: $64 million over 2 years to provide $500 in fee relief per child, per year for parents of 3-year-olds in long day care preschool programs.
  • Flexibility for families: $20 million for the Flexible Initiatives trial to expand access to early childhood education and care, extended hours and assist parents re-entering the workforce.
  • New services: $20 million in capital funds to support new not-for-profit services in high-growth and regional communities.
  • Workforce: $22 million over 5 years to recruit and retain essential early childhood workers including providing professional development and scholarships for tertiary education of early childhood workers.

Premier of NSW Chris Minns said:

“We were elected with a mandate to reinvest in essential services – and that includes giving children the best possible start in life, and a great education.

“Today’s announcement is an important step towards ensuring all children in NSW have access to early education.

“We know how important early education is to a child’s development. These are big reforms that will impact the way we deliver early education in NSW.”

Deputy Premier and Minister for Education and Early Learning Prue Car said:

“This government is committed to making sure all children in NSW get the best start in life.

“Achieving that goal includes making the investments necessary to make preschool more affordable and accessible for all families.

“We also need to usher in a strong and reliable pipeline of early childhood workers, so our system is supported now and into the future.

“Attending preschool is so important for young children’s development, and the investments we make today will make a world of difference for these children’s futures.”

Milestone success heralds new era of competitive eConveyancing

A major milestone has been reached which will allow for competition in eConveyancing, with Commonwealth and state ministers today welcoming the first successful property transactions taking place between Electronic Lodgement Network Operators (ELNOs).

Currently all lawyers, conveyancers and banks involved in electronic conveyancing (eConveyancing) property settlement transactions must use the same ELNO.

Interoperability will allow for competition and is the next stage in eConveyancing reform, bringing together industry and government stakeholders to deliver a competitive market of ELNO operators.

This week, Day 1 Transactions were successfully completed allowing for 2 properties to be refinanced in Queensland, testing the interoperability technical solution developed by ELNOs over several years.

The 2 ELNOs, Property Exchange Australia Limited (PEXA) and Sympli Australia Pty Ltd (Sympli), along with Commonwealth Bank of Australia, National Australia Bank and Titles Queensland, participated in the transactions and ensured they were successfully completed.

The transactions pave the way for the next stage of the reform, which is to deliver interoperability functionality into the market that will eventually be rolled out Australia-wide. ELNOs have until July 2025 to reach this milestone and are expected to develop all functionality by December 2025.

More information on the Day 1 Transactions are available on the Australian Registrars’ National Electronic Conveyancing Council (ARNECC) websitelaunch.

NSW Minister for Customer Service and Digital Government Jihad Dib said:

“I’m very pleased the Day 1 Transactions have been a success, as a first step towards competition in the electronic conveyancing market to ensure competitive prices and enable more innovation for customers.

“The Minns Government is fully committed to this critical reform and achieving this milestone is the result of significant work and collaboration over several years across jurisdictions.”

Federal Assistant Minister for Competition Andrew Leigh said:

“This milestone represents a significant step towards unlocking much needed competition in the eConveyancing market. A move away from a monopoly service provider to robust competition is great news for consumers, who will likely see the benefits of cheaper and more innovative services.

“I would like to thank all stakeholders for their ongoing dedication to the reform which could not have been achieved without considerable contributions from industry and governments, working together through the Australian Registrars’ National Electronic Conveyancing Council.”

Wyangala Dam project not viable and not going ahead

The NSW Government will not proceed with the Wyangala Dam Wall Raising Project because of the billions of dollars in construction costs and the potential catastrophic environmental impacts.
 

Minister for Water Rose Jackson said both the project’s final business case and an extensive independent review by Infrastructure NSW have recommended not raising the dam wall because it doesn’t stack up financially or environmentally.

“Robust investigations show that while raising the wall by 10m is technically feasible, it could cause substantial and irreversible environmental impacts,” Ms Jackson said.

“Hydrological modelling also found raising the wall, with a 5m flood mitigation zone, was also likely to have devasting impacts on the internationally significant downstream environment, resulting in excessive biodiversity offset costs.

“The other major issue is the billions of dollars to build the dam wall. We have a responsibility to taxpayers to only fund infrastructure projects that provide maximum bang for the buck and, in this case, the capital costs are too high, and the benefits are too low. 

“While Wyangala is not viable, I recognise the challenges of water security, reliability and flood mitigation for Lachlan communities do not go away. We know there’s a drought knocking on our door threatening the water security of towns across NSW which is why we are reviewing our strategies as a priority.

“The former government wasted time and money on business cases instead of undertaking any real drought preparedness work. The NSW Government is now taking action because we know the region needs a multi-faceted approach to protect against uncertainties and balance the competing needs of our environment, towns, and farmers.”

The NSW Government will be seeking feedback on how it plans to address these issues in the draft Lachlan Regional Water Strategy, which will go on public exhibition before the end of September.

It will allow people to have their say on water security and will put forward a shortlist of proposed actions to help support local communities, so they’re in the strongest position to manage a more variable climate over the coming decades.

Minister Jackson said the decisions are made about the future of water in the Lachlan region will be based on evidence and state-of-the-art climate modelling.

“We want to support economic growth and balance different water needs, ensuring there’s the right amount of water for the right purpose at the right time,” she said.

“I encourage everyone across the Lachlan region to provide their input when the draft strategy goes on exhibition, because feedback from councils, industry and the community will play a vital role in helping us determine the best way forward.” 

Minns government budget rescues NSW child protection system from looming funding crisis

The Minns Labor government will commit $200 million to ensure thousands of vulnerable kids are kept safe.

The state’s out-of-home care (OOHC) system supports approximately 15,000 vulnerable children who are unable to live safely at home, through foster care, kinship care, and residential care arrangements.

Following the election, the Minns Labor government discovered a significant budget shortfall within the OOHC system – part of the former government’s $7 billion in unfunded programs.

The Liberals and Nationals left behind an out-of-home-care budget due to run out next April– more than 2 months before the end of the 2023–2024 financial year, which would leave the NSW Government failing to meet its statutory obligations to vulnerable children.

The NSW Labor Government’s budget will deliver a $200 million rescue package to sustain out-of-home care throughout 2023–2024.

The NSW Government is also committing to fixing the broken child protection system in NSW.

Despite the number of children in the OOHC system remaining relatively stable, a series of policy failures by the former government created a spiralling OOHC budget crisis combined with worsening outcomes for vulnerable children and young people.

A recent review into the child protection system found vulnerable children were holed up in motel rooms without enough food or clothing, despite non-government providers being paid more than a million dollars for their care.

Over the 3 years from 30 June 2020 to 30 June 2023 there has been a tripling in the number of children in expensive emergency arrangements, including hotels and motels, and an increase in the average length of stay for all placement types.

The Minns Labor Government is setting out long-term plans to reform the child protection system and repair the budget, as part of its plan to rebuild essential services we all rely on – and looking after vulnerable kids is an essential service.

And it will be done without privatising essential public assets or imposing an unfair cap on the wages of our essential service workers.

Minister for Families and Communities Kate Washington said:

“The Minns Labor government inherited a broken child protection system and a massive black hole in the out-of-home care budget.

“It’s shocking that the former government managed to make a mess of the child protection system so badly for young vulnerable children, and for taxpayers too.

“This $200 million rescue package means the state’s most vulnerable kids will be kept safe through foster care, kinship care, and residential care arrangements.

“We are committed to repairing the budget and reforming the child protection system to give children and young people the best chance of a brighter future.”

Fairer democratic elections to return for City of Sydney

The NSW Government is returning democracy and fairness to the City of Sydney by removing rules that favour the votes of businesses over residents in local government elections.

The City of Sydney Amendment Bill 2023 introduced by the Government seeks to reinstate the voting rules for non-residential electors that apply in all other LGAs across NSW.

In 2014, the City of Sydney Act 1988 was amended to give eligible businesses two votes in council elections, compared to one each for residents.

As a result, businesses that own, lease, or occupy rateable land in the City of Sydney can currently nominate two people to vote on their behalf in council elections.

The Government’s new bill will remove this unfair weighting and bring balance back to the system.

The changes will also remove the automatic enrolment of non-residential electors, which does not exist anywhere else in the state, and currently applies regardless of whether these electors wish to vote in City of Sydney elections or not.

Eligible people will still be able to apply to become non-residential electors, however, only one person will be entitled to be enrolled on behalf of corporations or multiple owners, lessees or occupiers.

The 2014 amendment being reversed by this bill cost City of Sydney ratepayers $9.7 million to establish and approximately $1 million per year to maintain.

It also resulted in an increase in the number of fines issued by the NSW Electoral Commission.

Following the 2021 council elections, 18,501 failure to vote notices and fines were issued by the Electoral Commission to non-residential electors. This equates to 39 per cent of all non-residential electors for the area.

If passed, this bill will:

  • ensure the same rules that govern voting by non-residential electors in all other LGAs in NSW will apply to the City of Sydney
  • make the preparation of non-residential elector rolls much less onerous and costly and relieve the City of Sydney of a significant administrative burden
  • deliver cost savings for the City of Sydney that can be redirected towards services and infrastructure for the local community

Quotes attributable to Minister for Local Government, Ron Hoenig:

“The current City of Sydney Act gives businesses two votes in local government elections in a deliberate decision orchestrated by the former government to suit its political agenda.

“The amendments were made by the Liberals in a brazen attempt to oust Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore from office and give the party an electoral advantage in controlling the Sydney Town Hall.

“As expected, the amendments have clearly missed their target with thousands of non-resident ratepayers being slugged with fines for not voting instead.

“For nearly a decade, City of Sydney ratepayers have also been forced to foot an annual bill of approximately $1 million to maintain the non-residential electoral roll.

“Nowhere else in this state do we see one group of voters favoured in this way. It erodes the democratic process and undermines the vital importance of giving residents and ratepayers a balanced voice in local council elections.

“The Labor Government is proud to return the balance to the City of Sydney democratic process, and plan to have the new laws passed and implemented for the September 2024 council elections.”

1112 nurses and midwives made permanent by Minns Labor Government

The Minns Labor Government is delivering on its commitment to support essential health workers and their patients by saving the jobs of 1112 nurses and midwives in NSW hospitals.

The government is investing an additional $572 million in the 2023–24 NSW Budget to make the 1112 nurses and midwives permanent.

The $572 million will be spent over 3 financial years from 2024–25.

The Labor Government’s decision delivers certainty to nurses, midwives and their families, along with local hospitals and patients.

The commitment will also ensure the continued delivery of healthcare services and support health outcomes for patients.

These hardworking nurses and midwives are already embedded in the public health system, working in metro and regional hospitals across NSW.

More than 750,000 patients presented to emergency departments across NSW in the second quarter of 2023, with a record number (117,949) of life-threatening triage category 2 cases.

But data from the Bureau of Health Information reveals just over half (54%) of those triage category 2 patients started their treatment on time.

The nurses and midwives work across 15 local health districts (LHDs) along with the Children’s Hospital Network.

This massive funding black hole included no funding allocated for:

  • 138.2 nurses in the Hunter New England LHD
  • 119.2 nurses in South Western Sydney LHD
  • 109.1 nurses in Western Sydney LHD
  • 104.4 nurses in South Eastern Sydney LHD
  • 99.4 nurses in Sydney LHD
  • 82 nurses in Northern Sydney LHD
  • 61.4 nurses in Illawarra Shoalhaven LHD
  • 57.1 nurses in Central Coast LHD
  • 56.1 nurses in Western NSW LHD
  • 51 nurses in Northern NSW LHD
  • 50 nurses in Nepean Blue Mountains LHD
  • 43.3 nurses in Mid North Coast LHD
  • 41.6 nurses in Murrumbidgee LHD
  • 41 nurses in Children’s Hospital Network
  • 26.6 nurses in Southern NSW LHD
  • 6.5 nurses in Far West LHD.

Permanently funding these positions will help the Minns Labor Government implement its commitment to Safe Staffing Levels in NSW hospitals, starting with emergency departments.

Safe Staffing Levels are designed to improve health outcomes, reduce waiting times, take pressure off NSW hospitals and help retain experienced nurses and midwives in our health workforce.

The Minns Labor Government has also committed to hiring an additional 1200 nurses and midwives during its first term, beyond today’s announcement, to implement this important reform in our hospitals.

NSW Premier Chris Minns said:

“We are doing what the previous state government failed to do – making these nurses and midwives permanent.

“The NSW health system is under immense pressure. We can’t afford to lose hardworking nurses and midwives.

“Today, we are making good on our commitment to support our essential frontline health workers so they can continue to deliver the health services our communities need and deserve.”

Health and Regional Health Minister Ryan Park said:

“I am as committed to investing in our frontline healthcare workers as I am about bricks and mortar infrastructure.

“The Minns Labor Government made a commitment to support our frontline nurses and midwives and recognise their enormous contribution to our health system by building the workforce and improving their pay and conditions.

“The implementation of Safe Staffing Levels will mean more nurses and midwives working in our hospitals and is a significant step forward in delivering on the Government’s commitment to help rebuild essential services.”

Surveillance Devices Amendment Regulation Disallowance

The Labor Government together with the Greens have voted down an opportunity to improve a recent regulation which provides the Independent Commission Against Corruption with overly broad powers to use illegally made recordings.
 
The Opposition had attempted to reach out across the political divide to improve the Labor Government’s rushed regulation, whilst still enabling the ICAC to conduct its current investigation without any limitations.
 
Leader of the Opposition Mark Speakman said the powers granted under the Labor regulation, rather than legislation, have enormous scope beyond any one investigation.
 
“Our proposed regulation provided everything that ICAC needed for the conduct of Operation Rosny. However, Labor and Greens have teamed up to block the disallowance motion that would have allowed for the amended regulation to be put forward,” said Mr Speakman. “Instead ICAC can now use or publish any existing or even new surveillance recordings made by private citizens without a warrant on any matter for years.”
 
Shadow Attorney General Alister Henskens said that while the Liberal Party supports a strong ICAC the current regulation gives it free rein to completely ignore the Surveillance Devices Act and encourage future illegal conduct in the nature of “digital vigilante-ism” even if it doesn’t relate to the investigation that it is conducting.
 
“It should alarm law abiding citizens that the Government has allowed powers broader than was necessary for the investigation without any judicial oversight.”
 
“For more than two years ICAC will be able to obtain any illegal surveillance recording and use it in any investigation, because the Minns Government refused to limit the regulation to only apply to the operation that ICAC had asked it for,” Mr Henskens concluded.

GREENS INTRODUCE BILL TO FINALLY END NATIVE FOREST LOGGING IN AUSTRALIA

Today Senator Janet Rice, Greens spokesperson for forests, will introduce the Ending Native Forest Logging Bill 2023 into the ParliamentThis Bill seeks to put an end to native forest logging in Australia by repealing the Regional Forest Agreements Act 2002 and closing a loophole in our national environmental laws.

The Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 sets out the Commonwealth’s responsibility to protect our environment. This Act is supposed to reflect the Australian Government’s international commitments to preserve the places we love and protect biodiversity.

However, under the Regional Forest Agreements, established between state and federal governments, logging operations are given a special exemption. This means that the regulation and protection of Australia’s precious forests are effectively left to state governments. 

These are the same governments who own the Forestry Corporation NSW and so called Sustainable Timber Tasmania – logging agencies who time and time again have recklessly destroyed irreplaceable forests.

Recent weeks have shown that endangered native species are under heightened threat, from the Greater Gliders in NSW to the Swift Parrots in Tasmania. Habitat for these endangered animals have been destroyed by native forest logging for centuries, and until native forest logging is permanently outlawed, Labor’s pledge of zero extinctions is impossible.

Senator Janet Rice, Greens spokesperson for Forests said:

“The time for native forest logging is over. 

“Just a few days ago, it became clear that the Swift Parrot recovery plan announced by Minister Plibersek on threatened species day isn’t actually a recovery plan, it’s just a plan for a plan, and completely ignores the main threat to the species – native forest logging.

“With only 750 Swift Parrots left in the wild, protecting their habitats and ending native forest logging is non-negotiable.

“Two weeks ago, a dead, endangered Greater Glider was found in the Tallaganda State Forest in NSW after a logging operation. Despite the significance of this forest as a habitat this and other endangered species, for being unceded Country for traditional owners, for its role in soaking and storing carbon and as a destination for hikers, mountain bikers and keen bird watchers – our national environmental laws failed to stop the initial destruction of the Tallaganda. 

“It’s time for native forest logging to end. State logging agencies cannot be trusted, and neither can their state government owners. 

“Ending native forest logging is a win for First Nations heritage and culture, and for the threatened species and wildlife.

“Importantly, ending native forest logging will also be a huge win for the climate. Logging native forests continues to be a huge driver of emissions. It is estimated that the end of native forest logging in Victoria alone will save 3.35 million tonnes of carbon emissions per year. 

“To reach zero extinctions and zero emissions, then this Bill must urgently be passed.”

Senator Sarah Hanson-Young is Greens Environment Spokesperson said:

“We cannot protect our threatened wildlife while we continue to log their homes.

“In 2023 in the midst of a global extinction and climate crisis there is no excuse for Australia to keep logging our great forests.

“Spin and selfies will not save threatened species, for that we need to fix our environment laws and stop native forest logging.

POOR CONDUCT SHOWS PARLIAMENTARY STANDARDS BODY NEEDED URGENTLY

Following new revelations by female MPs Karen Andrews and Kylea Tink about poor parliamentary behaviour, the Greens say progress on enforcement of the parliamentary codes of conduct is desperately needed.

Recommendation 22 of the Set the Standards report was that the Houses of Parliament should establish, within 12 months, an Independent Parliamentary Standards Commission (IPSC) to enforce codes of conduct. The IPSC was initially expected in October 2023, but that timeframe has since been updated to February 2024

Greens leader in the Senate and spokesperson on Women, Larissa Waters said:

“It was disappointing overnight to hear from further women in parliament who have experienced inappropriate behaviour from their colleagues in this place.

“When female MPs are still being subject to sexist intimidatory behaviour, you can only imagine how much worse it is for staff – indeed the Set the Standard report showed more than half of those surveyed had experienced at least one incident of bullying, sexual harassment or actual or attempted sexual assault.

“One of the hurdles identified in Set the Standards was that staff are reluctant to come forward if there is no real prospect that an MP will be sanctioned. Consequences are crucial.
 
“The PWSS has been a huge step forward but, without enforcement powers, it cannot solve the problem.
 
“The Greens have been calling for an enforceable Code of Conduct for politicians and senior staff for years.  Without genuine consequences – such as suspension from parliament, loss of entitlements or directions to provide a public apology – there is little to deter against bad behaviour.
 
“Both Houses of parliament have now endorsed Codes of Conduct for behaviour, but there is still no independent body to investigate breaches and enforce the Codes.  Work to set up that body that will enforce those Codes, the Independent Parliamentary Standards Commission, is complex, but there is no doubt it’s been too slow.  

“The Greens are disappointed that the original timeframe to establish the IPSC has blown out from October 2023 to February 2024, and we will continue to insist that no further delays occur.
 
“While that work to establish the IPSC is being done, it is a responsibility of every MP to act consistently with the commitments they made when endorsing the Codes, and for all parties to act quickly in response to complaints.”