The Sydney Mardi Gras parade began in 1978 as a march and commemoration of the 1969 Stonewall riots in New York. This is the parade’s 44th year and it was held at the Sydney Cricket Ground due to Covid-19 restrictions
Continue reading...Category Archives: Sydney
Australia news updates live: fresh flood warnings for NSW as more rain due, Qld schools stay shut
Hundreds of thousands of NSW residents are still under evacuation warnings or orders as Hawkesbury-Nepean region remains a major concern; Victoria records 26 Covid deaths, NSW records two. Follow all the day’s news
- NSW floods: Hawkesbury-Nepean River ‘still a major concern’ as rain starts to dissipate
- Are the catastrophic floods really a one-in-1,000 year event?
- ‘We won’t reopen’: NSW flood destroys $5m of stamps and notes
- ‘Black hole’: telecommunications outage hampering flood rescues
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Resilience NSW commissioner Shane Fitzsimmons has told ABC radio that flooding across the state was worst than predicted:
Unprecedented levels [of flooding] experienced up in northern NSW, flood levels that came in well above what was forecasted … And at the same time we’ve still got serious flooding concerns in Hawkesbury and Nepean ...
We’ve also formed up a significant taskforce, comprising of firefighters … the Australian defence force. So working shoulder to shoulder with business owners, with property owners, homeowners ...
Continue reading...NSW floods: Sydney and Illawarra dodge east coast low after 500,000 people faced evacuation across state
Newcastle and Hunter region now in firing line and subject to severe weather warnings as clean-up begins further north
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Sydney and the Illawarra region of New South Wales have avoided the worst effects of the devastating east coast low that instead eased and shifted west over Newcastle and the Hunter region.
Newcastle remains under a severe weather warning with falls of 60 to 100mm possible over six hours and the associated risk of flash flooding.
Continue reading...NSW flood: Sydney residents in west and north-west evacuate as Warragamba Dam spills
Residents in Camden, Chipping Norton, Georges Hall, Lansvale, Milperra, Moorebank, Warwick Farm and other suburbs told to evacuate with thousands more preparing to leave
New South Wales authorities have warned communities at risk of major flooding in the Sydney region to evacuate or prepare to evacuate as the Hawkesbury, Nepean and Georges rivers continue to rise.
Warragamba Dam, Sydney’s main reservoir, was spilling at a rate in excess of 70 gigalitres a day on Wednesday after torrential rainfall over its catchment exceeded earlier predictions, according to a NSW government official.
Continue reading...Australia news live update: fourth NSW flood death confirmed; Ballina mayor calls for help; more ‘high impact’ storms forecast for Queensland
Fourth NSW flood death confirmed; residents in parts of north-west Sydney told to prepare to evacuate their homes; Ballina mayor calls for ‘desperate help’; Queensland premier warns ‘high-impact’ storms could lead to more flash flooding; Warragamba Dam spills; drivers still stranded on M1; at least 59 Covid-related deaths recorded. Follow all the day’s news
- Flood map satellite images and rain charts show extent of Queensland and NSW disaster
- Ballina flood: wall of water racing to town amid warning NSW conditions remain ‘very dangerous’
- East coast low menaces Sydney and vast stretch of NSW coast with ‘life-threatening’ flash flooding forecast
- ‘Nothing to sell’: Queensland and NSW flood waters hit supermarkets and grocery supplies
- Western Australia border reopening tests McGowan as Covid peak looms
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My colleagues Josh Butler and Sarah Martin have an interesting story this morning on how the Australian anti-vaxxer groups are pivoting to pro-Putin messaging and Ukraine conspiracy theories.
Here’s a bit more on the second death in Lismore, via AAP.
Continue reading...East coast low menaces Sydney and vast stretch of NSW coast with ‘life-threatening’ flash flooding forecast
Severe weather warning issued for damaging winds and rain for region stretching from near Newcastle to almost the Victorian border
- Farmers reeling from third disaster in three years
- Disaster agency defends not listing Lismore as priority area for funding
- Drivers stranded by floods set up food kitchens for fellow travellers
- Flood of help: how the disaster has brought neighbours closer together
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The “rain bomb” that soaked Brisbane and triggered record floods in northern New South Wales will develop into an east coast low and dump as much as 150mm of rain on Sydney with “life-threatening” risks on Wednesday.
The Bureau of Meteorology has pared back its earlier forecast for the daily rain total from as much as 150mm to 200mm to 100mm to 150mm, but reissued its severe weather warning for damaging winds and torrential rainfall for a coastal region stretching from near Newcastle down to almost the Victorian border.
Continue reading...Riveting, terrifying, completely singular: how Chrissy Amphlett changed the game
Growing up the daughter of a rock’n’roller, Lo Carmen was meeting stars at gigs from the age of 13. One left a life-changing impression
- This is an edited extract from Lovers Dreamers Fighters by Lo Carmen
I was 13 when I became enamoured with Chrissy Amphlett.
It was 1983 and I had just started working for our old family friend Vince Lovegrove in the school holidays. In the late 60s Vince had been a frilly-shirted bubble-gum pop singer with the Valentines, alongside AC/DC’s Bon Scott; in the 70s, he’d transitioned to hip music scene journalist, to TV producer, to compère; and now he was managing cutting-edge rock group the Divinyls, whose song Boys in Town I was already obsessed with.
Continue reading...Life-threatening floods forecast for Queensland as Sydney records wettest summer in 30 years
Some areas of northern NSW and south-east Queensland could receive 300mm amid more wild weather in coming days
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Sydney has experienced its wettest summer in three decades and the most humid season in 10 years, with more torrential rain forecast for the New South Wales north coast and south-east Queensland over the coming days.
The heavy rain and flooding has already led to three deaths – two in Queensland and one in NSW.
Continue reading...Australia news updates live: Morrison announces sanctions and travel bans for Russian individuals; 23 Covid deaths recorded
Scott Morrison announces targeted sanctions and travel bans for Russian individuals after Cabinet committee discusses Australia’s response to Russia’s actions in Ukraine; Victoria records 17 Covid deaths, NSW records six. Follow all the day’s news live
- Woman dies in Queensland flooding as stormy weather pummels NSW and south-east Queensland
- ‘Ministers are available 24/7’: NSW premier rebukes David Elliott over Sydney train shutdown
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The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners has called for a health-first approach to alcohol and other drug use.
This comes after reports of the Reason party’s Fiona Patten introducing a private member’s bill to institute a decriminalisation model in Victoria.
Instead of a punitive approach via the criminal justice system, Victorian police would instead issue a mandatory notice and referral to drug education or treatment to people possessing a drug of dependence or who are believed to have used a drug of dependence. Compliance with this process would result in no finding of guilt or criminal record.
It is similar to the Portuguese model introduced in 2001. Of the more than 32,000 drug arrests in Victoria in the year leading up to September 2021, 80% were for drug use or possession only rather than trafficking large drug quantities.
RACGP president Dr Karen Price said saving lives and reducing harm must always come first:
Alcohol and other drug use is, primarily, a health issue that should be managed by health professionals, including GPs.
Almost everyone knows someone who has been negatively affected by alcohol or other drug use in some form, it cuts across all demographics and all segments of society. So, if you declare a “war on drugs” you are declaring war on someone’s partner, family member, colleague, or friend – it just makes no sense.
Continue reading...Australia news live updates: Queensland and Victoria to lift mask rules as nation records 33 Covid deaths
Clive Palmer cancels press club appearance; foreign minister condemns Russia’s declaration of Ukranian separatist independence as PM says Russia should ‘step back’; defence responds to China’s claim about laser incident; NSW and Victoria both record 14 Covid deaths, Queensland records five; mask rules lifted in Victoria from midnight Saturday and in Queensland next week. Follow the latest updates live
- Ukraine crisis live: Putin rails against Kyiv and Nato in televised address
- NSW rail chaos: Sydney trains back on a limited service amid industrial dispute
- More strikes ‘inevitable’ in NSW as government ramps up anti-union rhetoric
- Why is a tech billionaire trying to buy Australia’s dirtiest energy company AGL?
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Jumping back to the Sydney train situation for a moment and the Rail, Tram and Bus Union state secretary, Alex Claassens, is discussing the return of limited train services with ABC News Breakfast:
Apparently, where we ended up late last night was we negotiated an outcome where trains will run today. We finally managed to get the management team to see some common sense and today they will be operating a service roughly around the half-hour to 15-minute mark.
They will then try and improve on that during the day. We will work together as much as we can to try to get as many trains on the tracks as we can, and you can imagine our disappointment yesterday morning when we got up like everybody else in Sydney to realise some genius had made a decision to cancel all of our train services.
Continue reading...Australia news live updates: Perrottet urged to work with union over NSW train dispute; international border reopens; 17 Covid deaths
Perrottet urged to work with union over NSW train dispute; Peter Dutton says all signs on Ukraine ‘pointing in one direction’; at least 17 Covid-related deaths; Australia’s international border reopen for the first time in nearly two years. Follow the latest updates live
- Josh Frydenberg ads appear on WeChat despite Liberal MPs calling for boycott
- Hugs, tears and Vegemite as Australia reopens international borders
- Expert panel to address Australia’s lagging Covid vaccination rates in children 5-11
- Sydney trains cancelled due to industrial action – but union insists workers aren’t on strike
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AGL Energy has rejected a takeover bid by tech billionaire Mike Cannon-Brookes and Canadian asset management giant Brookfield, saying the preliminary offer “materially undervalues the company”.
Brookfield and Cannon-Brookes’ Grok Ventures made the extraordinary offer to take over Australia’s most polluting company on Saturday, with a goal to shut its coal power plants earlier than planned.
‘Today we rejoined the world’: hugs, tears and Vegemite as Australia reopens international borders
Emotional scenes at Sydney airport as families, friends and lovers reunite after 704 days of Covid restrictions
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There were tears, DJs, Vegemite and drag queens as families, friends and lovers reunited at Sydney airport after the resumption of all international travel to Australia.
While a number of expert bodies including the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the European Council have warned against travel to Australia due to soaring Covid-19 case numbers over summer, the federal government has vowed to keep the borders open.
Continue reading...Australia news live updates: WA hard border to come down on 3 March; nation records 39 Covid deaths
Premier Mark McGowan announces border reopening date; Bob Katter raises concerns over gun trafficking bill; at least 39 Covid deaths recorded; PM says federal government had no power ‘to prevent’ Port of Darwin sale; ACT to ease restrictions from tonight. Follow all the day’s news
- Ukraine crisis: Joe Biden accuses Russia of running false-flag operation to justify invasion – live
- ‘Deeply concerning’: British government picks Alexander Downer to review UK’s border force
- Queensland premier orders review into ethics of public service decision-making
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Deputy opposition leader Richard Marles was on Today earlier alongside Peter Dutton, discussing Ukraine and the week in parliament.
Karl Stefanovic:
Richard ... it’s been a big week. The PM labelled you in parliament the Manchurian candidate, you little Chinese spy, you, hey?
(Laughs) Well, obviously not. But I think tossing around patriotism in that way and using it as a political football, I mean ... I’m not particularly hurt by it but it does pay quite a disrespect, I think, to those men and women who we ask to put on a uniform each and every day and to literally put their lives on the line for that very concept.
These are really encouraging numbers and yes, of course, hours worked were down to the Omicron shock and the fact that more people have been getting more jobs. We can expect things to ramp up very quickly as we get the lifting of restrictions, the opening of international borders and get back to normal.
We’ve already got the borders open to those skilled moderate workers and backpackers ... this is all about making sure we get more jobs back, maintain the growth and get that 4.8% figure potentially even down to a number starting with three.
Continue reading...Uncertainty over jobs data due to Omicron as nation records at least 47 virus deaths – as it happened
Uncertainty over jobs data due to Omicron; Mark McGowan says WA border reopening still to be decided; Daniel Andrews announces LGBTQ+ support package; Victoria’s Covid rules under review as nation records least 47 Covid-related deaths; Scott Morrison condemns ‘bullying’ on Ukraine border. This blog is now closed
- NSW byelections: ‘disappointing across the board’, Perrottet says after Coalition suffers double-digit swings
- Australian embassy in Ukraine evacuated amid fears of Russian invasion
- ‘I can’t leave her there to get Covid’: home care demand soars amid aged care crisis
- Vaccine rollout and rates tracker; Cases and data tracker
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Things get trickier when Speers asked Keneally whether Labor believes schools should be allowed to hire and fire teachers based on whether they are gay or transgender under the law.
Keneally started by saying that “Labor also supports the right of religious schools, faith-based schools to be able to hire staff, whether it is teachers or other staff, that support the mission and the values of the school.”
And so it’s straightforward with children, we think there are some slight complexities with teachers and staff that should be looked at by the Australian Law Reform Commission.”
David, let’s look at what Labor did in the parliament this week. We do believe that people of faith deserve protection from discrimination and extending the law to do that and we think that should not come at the expense of increasing discrimination to other groups of people. We also believe that students at school should be protected and that reflected in the amendments we moved and supported.
So we would like to see the government now accept that amendment that has been supported by the House of Representatives with those five Liberals crossing the floor, and they should just get this bill done. The prime minister promised some years ago to people of faith he would provide this legislative protection. He promised in writing that he would protect children. He is – if he is going to break that promise, he needs to explain it to the Australian people.
Continue reading...Ping-pong tables and free transit: plan to re-energise Sydney’s city centre
NSW government to consider ambitious plan to make the city centre a safer and more appealing destination
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Free public transit within Sydney’s central business district to encourage commuters to explore the city is part of an ambitious CBD revitalisation plan the New South Wales government will consider.
Under the plan, Indigenous culture and history would be better integrated into the cityscape for both locals and tourists, with Aboriginal languages and stories embedded into street signs, and Indigenous art in public spaces.
Continue reading...NT chief minister says Omicron ‘too infectious’ for lockdowns to work as nation records at least 88 Covid deaths – As it happened
Michael Gunner says lockdowns and lockouts no longer effective; At least 88 Covid deaths recorded around the country as Kerry Chant says Omicron sub-variant is circulating in NSW; Queensland reveals back-to-school plan. This blog is now closed
- NSW reports 52 Covid deaths in deadliest day of pandemic to date as ‘son of Omicron’ variant cases emerge
- Anthony Albanese accuses Morrison government of leaving business behind during Omicron wave
- NSW unveils $1bn support package for businesses hit by Omicron
- How is Australia’s Covid vaccine booster rollout going and is it fast enough for groups that need it most?
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Albanese says Labor will boost aged-care funding, but cannot specify by how much.
There has been a boost.
Two things they haven’t done: One is to tie that funding of actual delivery of better healthcare for aged-care residents in terms of some of the regulatory measures required that were recommended by the royal commission, but the big missing piece in this workforce, we still don’t have a commitment to have a nurse in a nursing home.
We still don’t have a commitment to increase in the number of other care workers in aged care, and we still don’t have a commitment to increases in wages and conditions so that aged-care facilities are able to attract the staff.
Quite clearly there will be a need for increased health funding, but there is a need also to look at the particular areas of funding.
GPs, for example. One of the reasons there is so much pressure on the hospitals is we have GP shortages in terms of training, we have GP shortages in terms of some of the changes that they’ve made to the Medicare schedule that have had an impact in our regions.
Continue reading...Australia news live update: at least 98 Covid deaths on nation’s deadliest day; PM responds to Grace Tame photo; Russia’s ambassador hits back at Dutton
At least 98 Covid deaths recorded across NSW, Victoria, Queensland, SA and ACT; Scott Morrison comments on viral photos of Grace Tame meeting; Russia’s ambassador to Australian condemns ‘propaganda’ reporting; additional Covid deaths in Sydney aged care homes confirmed. Follow all the day’s news
- Analysis: The simple numbers every government should use to fight anti-vaccine misinformation
- Melbourne hit by more thunderstorms after week of hot weather in Victoria
- Only one approved rapid test in Australia explicitly states it detects Omicron
- Vaccine rollout and rates tracker; Cases and data tracker
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Hazzard said NSW is supporting the Victorian government push to change the definition of fully vaccinated in Australia from two doses to three.
But he says there are some issues to be ironed out before that change can be made. He doesn’t know what issues, he says, because he is not a part of national cabinet.
I understand that most of these things require a range of medical expert input. In fact, they all require a range of medical expert input, and I think when you’ve got a committee of a large number of people, all giving their input, sometimes it takes a while to get there. Sometimes it is easier being a minister, I’ve got to say, than being on a committee.
So for everybody who is eligible, please go and get the booster as quickly as possible.
Continue reading...NSW Covid-19 update: Hazzard says it’s ‘ridiculous’ not enough people getting their booster – video
NSW health minister Brad Hazzard said the number of people turning up to get their Covid-19 boosters ‘are not where we need them to be’. Addressing the media outside Sydney’s Royal North Shore hospital, he said, ‘there are seven people in ICU and not one of them has had the booster'. Hazzard said it was 'ridiculous' that health staff were being diverted to work in vaccine hubs when only a handful of people were turning up. NSW Health deputy secretary Susan Pearce said appointments were ‘going begging’ but that doses were not being wasted
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Continue reading...NSW Covid-19 update: Hazzard urges people to ‘give a damn about someone other than yourself’ – video
NSW health minister Brad Hazzard has taken aim at the unvaccinated. ‘Can I just say to those people who have chosen not to get vaccinated, it’s time to give a damn about someone other than yourself', Hazzard said. ‘Give a damn about your community, your family and most particularly the health staff across New South Wales who you expect to be looking after you if and when you end up in our hospital system’. There were 29,504 new Covid-19 cases recorded from rapid antigen tests and PCR tests . However, 11,858 positive rapid antigen tests were from the previous seven-day reporting period, and were not necessarily detected in the past 24 hours. There were also 17 deaths, only one of which had received their booster shot
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Continue reading...Australian man pleads guilty to murdering American in 1988 gay hate crime
Scott White yelled in court during a pre-trial hearing on Monday that he was guilty, having previously denied the crime
An Australian man has pleaded guilty to murdering a US mathematician who fell from a Sydney cliff in 1988 in a homophobic hate crime that was dismissed by police at the time as suicide.
Scott White was charged in 2020 with murdering 27-year-old Los Angeles-born Scott Johnson, whose naked body was found at the base of North Head cliff on 8 December 1988.
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