Fire at Melbourne care home being treated as suspicious after residents rescued

Emergency services say 14 people were rescued at the facility on Mangan Street, Balwyn, on Sunday night

Firefighters have rescued residents who were trapped inside a burning care facility in Melbourne’s east, with the blaze being treated as suspicious.

Many residents made phone calls to triple-0 just before 10pm on Sunday as smoke filled the two-storey building in Mangan Street, Balwyn.

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NT chief minister allegedly assaulted – as it happened

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Semi-professional firefighters being considered: Watt

Watt is asked about whether Australia can continue to rely on a volunteer firefighting force to respond to increasingly larger and more threatening fires as a result of climate change.

That work will carry into the new year and I don’t want to pre-empt those recommendations but as I say, we are taking short-term steps in the meantime by investing in those kind of groups like Disaster Relief Australia. But it is possible in the future that we will have the need of turning to semi professional firefighter services like they have in California, where people can be paid just for the fire season, rather than the entire year. There are all those sort of options under consideration at the moment.

We do live in a more uncertain strategic world than we have in the past and it is important that the ADF can be focused on their core mission, with is the defence of the nation, and the reality is that every time we do call on the defence forces to assist in a disaster situation, that is taking them away from their training and their preparedness for their core duty.

I think in a situation like we faced in Lismore and the Northern Rivers of New South Wales, there is no doubt you would need the ADF deployed for that kind of thing and in the recent floods in the Kimberley, we were bringing people from across from Townsville, aircraft in Townsville and getting the But it is about making the balance right and not over-relying on them.

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Victorian man who survived suspected mushroom poisoning released from hospital

Three people died and Ian Wilkinson was taken to hospital in critical but stable condition after beef wellington lunch in July

A Victorian man who survived a suspected death cap mushroom poisoning that claimed the lives of three other people has been discharged from hospital.

Don and Gail Patterson, both 70, died in hospital after their daughter-in-law, Erin Patterson, cooked them a beef wellington at her Leongatha home in Victoria’s east on 29 July.

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By making a deal with developers on housing, Daniel Andrews may find it harder to negotiate with the Greens

Greens hold the balance of power in the upper house. They are also angered at the planned redevelopment of 44 public housing towers

In politics, optics are everything.

It’s why when the Victorian government unveiled its housing statement – an ambitious policy that it says will reshape the state by delivering 800,0000 homes over the next decade – it did so alongside the building and property sectors.

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Australian-first 7.5% levy to hit all Airbnb and short-stay accomodation in Victoria

Daniel Andrews also announces redevelopment of 44 public housing towers and more renter protections

Australia’s first widespread levy on short-stay accommodation and the redevelopment of 44 monolithic public housing towers have been announced by the Victorian government as part of an overhaul of policy.

The 7.5% levy on platforms such as Airbnb and Stayz, announced by the premier, Daniel Andrews, on Wednesday, is expected to raise about $70m annually to fund social and affordable housing.

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Gunman Stanley Turvey shot dead by Victorian police after three-day manhunt

Police say Turvey was armed when officers found him at an Ardmona house, near Shepparton

A gunman is dead after being shot by police after a dramatic three-day manhunt across Victoria.

Victorian police said Stanley Turvey was armed with a weapon when he confronted officers at a house in Ardmona near Shepparton on Wednesday morning.

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Court finds boy, 14, is too young to be held criminally responsible for death of Melbourne teen Declan Cutler

Supreme court says there’s reasonable possibility the child, then aged 13, didn’t know his conduct was ‘seriously wrong’

A Victorian judge has ruled a boy, who was aged 13 when Melbourne teenager Declan Cutler was killed, is too young to be held criminally responsible for his murder.

The boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, faced a judge-alone trial in July after he was identified as one of eight boys who attacked and killed 16-year-old Declan as he left a birthday party last year.

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Police hunt for gunman who allegedly kidnapped Victorian man before fleeing into NSW

Police allege Stanley Turvey fired a shot in the air during attempted arrest near Shepparton

An alleged gunman remains at large after evading police and kidnapping a Victorian resident before crossing the border into New South Wales.

The alleged gunman has been identified as Stanley Turvey, with police releasing an image of his tattooed face as part of a public appeal to track him down.

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‘Very unusual’ spring heatwave brings elevated fire risk to Australia’s south-east

Stretch of hot weather enters fourth day as temperatures climb significantly above average in NSW, Victoria and South Australia

A vast swathe of Australia entered its fourth consecutive day of well above average heat on Monday, delivering elevated fire dangers and an early start to an unusually hot and dry warm season.

Northern Victoria, inland New South Wales and inland South Australia were all forecast to record temperatures from 10C to 16C above average on Monday. Port Augusta in SA was predicted to reach 39C, Penrith in NSW was set to reach 37C and Sydney was forecast to hit 31C.

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Victorian government hired KPMG to consult on tobacco changes despite firm’s links to industry

Exclusive: transparency advocates condemn arrangement as ‘appalling’ while health department refuses to say how much consultancy was paid

The Victorian government paid a consultancy firm that has spent decades working for big tobacco to lead the state’s consultation on changes to tobacco and vaping laws, before the process was abandoned.

The state’s health department has repeatedly declined to say how much KPMG was paid for the work this year and did not answer questions about whether the international firm’s long association with big tobacco and its ongoing work for the industry were declared.

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‘Find a spot on the floor’: overcrowding complaints grow as Victorians take advantage of rail fare cap

V/Line passengers are used to delays, slow journeys and rail-replacement buses. Now they face a new challenge: finding a seat

Travelling by train to Melbourne from her home in regional Victoria, Rhona Rose says she has grown accustomed to long delays, slow and bumpy journeys, and the dreaded rail-replacement bus.

But since the government capped the price of V/Line tickets at $9.20 a day, she has begun to face an entirely new challenge: finding a seat.

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Flyer distributor charged with 2,400 breaches of Victoria’s child labour laws

Ive Distribution allegedly hired more 400 children aged under 15 between July and September 2022

One of Australia’s largest catalogue distribution companies has been hit with more than 2,400 criminal charges for allegedly breaching Victorian child employment laws, by allegedly hiring youths aged under 15 without permits.

The state’s wage regulator, Wage Inspectorate Victoria, has filed the 2,425 criminal charges against Ive Distribution Pty Ltd in the Melbourne magistrates court.

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Man allegedly abducted and stabbed in vehicle in Melbourne’s north-east

Four people arrested – including a 16-year-old girl released without charge - after car allegedly stolen in Northcote

Four people have been arrested after a man was allegedly abducted and stabbed in Melbourne’s inner north-east, prompting a police chase.

A worker at a hire company at Northcote in the city’s north called police about 9.40pm on Sunday, after their silver Hyundai was allegedly stolen from Mitchell Street.

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Albanese pushes for EU free-trade agreement settlement by end of the year – as it happened

Talks on deal had been stalled due to impasse on geographic indicators for products such as feta and prosecco. This blog is closed for now

Asked what a no vote will say about Australia, Pearson says he withhold judgement until the night of the referendum.

I will make that judgement the day after the referendum. I believe we still have the capacity to do the right thing. I tell you one thing, though, I just don’t believe when the hand of friendship and reconciliation is extended from Indigenous people that at the end of the day, their love will be unrequited. I can’t believe that. I cannot believe we’re still in an Australia where that hand would be just slapped aside. This unrequited love is my worst nightmare. I just don’t believe Australians are capable of that at this time in our history.

The separation was there in 1901. The original separation, the original equality was in our constitution in 1901. What we’re going to do in 2023 is fix that exclusion, fix the omission, fix the lack of recognition and when we do that, our constitution will be whole. We will complete the commonwealth of Australia and it will be a great thing to do.

In relation to the scope issue, David, our opponents in the no campaign said that somehow we’d be dictating policy on nuclear submarines. That wasn’t reasonable. That wasn’t a fair representation of the scope.

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Melbourne crash: 26-year-old man charged with murder after Bourke Street incident

Melton West allegedly drove into cars and pedestrians, killing a 76-year-old man and injuring five others

Homicide detectives have charged a 26-year-old man with murder after he allegedly drove his car into pedestrians and vehicles in Melbourne’s CBD.

Police said on Saturday night the Melton West man had been charged with one count of murder, three counts of attempted murder, three counts of intentionally causing serious injury and two counts of conduct endangering life.

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Keilor shooting: man killed at Melbourne cafe in organised crime attack

Victoria police believe a shooting in the city’s north-west that left a man dead and another injured was targeted

Police in Melbourne have launched an investigation after a fatal shooting in the suburb of Keilor in the city’s north-west.

The man killed is yet to be formally identified.Officers say the shooting appears to have been targeted.

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Melbourne crash: Daniel Andrews says no additional safety measures possible for CBD mall

Police insist city is ‘tremendously safe’ following Friday night crash at same Bourke Street mall where six people were killed in 2017

The Victorian premier, Daniel Andrews, has said there were no feasible safety measures that could have prevented the fatal crash in Melbourne’s CBD on Friday night, as police assure residents the city is “tremendously safe.”

Police say a white Toyota Aurion struck three pedestrians near a tram stop on Bourke Street on Friday evening, before it continued along the street, T-boning another car and killing the 76-year-old driver.

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Top Indigenous academic quits University of Melbourne law school role and alleges institutional racism

Resignation of associate dean Dr Eddie Cubillo comes after he delivered speech on his encounters with racism at Melbourne Law School

A leading academic at the University of Melbourne (UoM) has resigned from his role heading Indigenous programs after public complaints over institutional racism at the faculty.

Dr Eddie Cubillo, a Larrakia, Wadjigan and Central Arrernte man, was working part-time as an associate dean and senior fellow at the university’s prestigious Melbourne Law School (MLS).

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Jason Roberts sues Victoria after being wrongfully jailed for police killings

Roberts seeks damages from the state for the 5,627 days he spent behind bars after winning retrial in court of appeal and being cleared by a new jury

For decades Jason Roberts was branded as a double police killer.

But after winning a retrial through Victoria’s court of appeal and a second jury found him not guilty, he’s now fighting for compensation.

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Teenager charged over attack on boy walking home from school in south-east Melbourne

A Frankston boy, 14, was charged with offences including armed robbery and intentionally causing serious injury

A teenager has been charged over a violent attack in Melbourne on a boy walking home from school that left him with life-threatening injuries.

The 14-year-old was confronted by a group as he left Glen Eira College in Glen Huntly on Monday afternoon.

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