Price of puppies to surge under NSW Labor

Today the Companion Animals Amendment (Puppy Farms) Bill 2021 passed the Upper House supported by NSW Labor. 

Minister for Agriculture Dugald Saunders said the bill is a serious concern, not only to the entire pet shop industry but to any NSW household who wishes to buy a new dog or cat.  

The NSW Government voted against the bill. 

“The Leader of the Opposition Chris Minns has instructed his colleagues in the Upper House to support a bill that would take man’s best friend out of the family home,” Mr Saunders said.  

“This bill restricts the sale of new puppies and kittens from pet shops, which could spell the end of a thriving small business sector.” 

Under this legislation pet shops would only be allowed to sell animals from a rehoming organisation or an approved breeder, making it harder for families to find their next furry friend. 

The legislation will also increase the price families pay for a new pet at a time where they are already facing extreme cost of living pressures. 

“Under this bill, Labor has made the joy and privilege of owning a new pet unaffordable. This will inevitably push more pet sales underground and encourage unscrupulous black market behaviour.” 

The bill also allows officers and animal inspectors to indiscriminately drop into family homes without warning to check on pets. This would give them greater entry powers than the NSW Police Force who must have an objectively reasonable belief before entering a home.  

“This legislation is working against the very outcomes it is seeking to achieve and will result in unintended negative animal welfare consequences.” 

NSW already has some of the most severe penalties for animal cruelty offences in the country. 

More key worker housing for Redfern

A new urban renewal project within walking distance of Redfern station will include up to 600 build-to-rent and affordable homes, a new public parkland and the adaptive reuse of the heritage-listed Clothing Store building.

Expressions of interest are open for industry partners to jointly develop and operate the site within the Clothing Store sub-precinct of Redfern-North Eveleigh.

Minister for Infrastructure, Cities and Active Transport Rob Stokes said 90 per cent of the homes would be build-to-rent or affordable housing, located within metres of the burgeoning Tech Central precinct.

“The people that make our city function shouldn’t have to commute for hours to get to work, which is why we’re building more key worker housing in the inner city,” Mr Stokes said.

“This Government has committed to set aside 30 per cent of all residential stock on our urban renewal precincts for affordable and diverse housing and on this project we’ll deliver triple that target.

“This will provide much-needed secure housing for renters, with 75 per cent of the homes earmarked for build-to-rent housing and 15 per cent as affordable housing for key workers.

“This is another city-shaping precinct that will create 3,000 square metres of new, green public parkland, reimagine the heritage-listed clothing store into a space for the community, and play a critical role in bolstering Sydney’s status as a 24-hour global city.”

Transport Asset Holding Entity (TAHE) CEO Benedicte Colin said the precinct was being delivered in partnership with Transport for NSW and had been subject to community consultation.

“We’ve worked with the community on the vision for this precinct and will continue to do so over the coming months,” Ms Colin said.

“This proposal highlights TAHE’s ability to deliver innovative housing models, ideally located next to public transport, while maintaining long-term ownership for the people of NSW.”

The selected proponent will manage the site on a 99-year ground lease. Eligible organisations can express interest until 4pm, Monday 19 December, 2022 via this link. .  

Unemployment rate hits record low while women’s participation reaches record high

The NSW unemployment rate has reached a record low, falling to 3.2 per cent (3.0 per cent seasonally adjusted) in October, the lowest across the nation this month and the lowest since monthly records began in 1978.
 
According to the latest ABS data released today, the NSW jobless rate was down 0.3 percentage points from September, driven by a rise in full-time employment of 42,200 people.
 
Overall, NSW created 34,600 jobs in October, helping keep the nation in positive territory with 32,200 jobs created across Australia.
 
The State’s participation rate increased strongly by 0.3 percentage points to a record high 66.3 per cent. Women’s participation is also at a record high of 62.1 per cent.
 
Treasurer Matt Kean said the NSW Government’s strong economic management put the State in a position to continue to create full-time jobs despite the current economic headwinds. 
 
“The pace of employment growth has increased month on month with October the strongest rate of growth since May 2022,” Mr Kean said.
 
“Our robust NSW economy means our record low unemployment rate continues to sit below the national unemployment rate of 3.4 per cent.
 
“The record high women’s participation rate comes on the back of the 2022-23 Budget measurs to increase women’s economic opportunities.
 
“NSW is maintaining the lowest levels of unemployment on record, despite the challenges of rising interest rates and inflation.” 

$905 million Taxi licence financial assistance package passes Parliament

The NSW Government’s Point to Point Transport (Taxis and Hire Vehicles) Amendment Bill 2022 has passed Parliament, guaranteeing taxi licence holders an additional $760 million in financial assistance from early next year, taking the combined package value to $905 million.
 
Minister for Transport, Veterans and Western Sydney David Elliott said the Government can now complete the deregulation of the NSW Point to Point industry and deliver taxi licence holders a record package of financial assistance.
 
“The financial assistance comes after significant consultation with the taxi industry, including the NSW Taxi Council and A2B Services, and I’m pleased both industry bodies have backed in the package unconditionally,” Mr Elliott said.
 
“The Opposition has no position on the Government’s policy. They did not put forward a single financial assistance package. Yet they lined up to take the credit when the Government passed the Bill to provide taxi licence holders with a record amount of funding.”
 
Minister for Regional Transport and Roads Sam Farraway said payments from the $905 million taxi financial assistance package will be in the bank accounts of taxi licence holders as early as February 2023.
 
“The NSW Government has offered the most generous assistance package in the country, if not the world,” Mr Farraway said.
 
“I am glad the NSW Taxi Council accepted our final offer and it was good to see roughly 90 per cent of members of Parliament vote in favour of this Bill giving certainty to taxi licence holders and their families.”
 
Transport for NSW will continue to work with the NSW Taxi Council concerning an ATO ruling on the Capital Gains Tax treatment arising from this package.
 
Under the Bill:

  • Taxi licences will be available on application for an administrative fee and be able to operate anywhere across the State
  • There will be a seamless transition process for existing taxi licence holders to the new licensing system
  • Financial assistance will be offered to the owners of ordinary perpetual taxi licences, which will have zero value as a result of these reforms, and will be cancelled.

 
The new package provides $150,000 for every Sydney metropolitan taxi licence holder with a cap of six plates. Each regional taxi plate will be paid between $40,000 and $195,000, with no cap on the number of plates.
 
The industry financial assistance package is funded by the ongoing operation of the Passenger Service Levy for every point to point transport journey.

New reconstruction authority bill passed

Legislation to establish a new authority responsible for overseeing the State’s preparedness, resilience and recovery from natural disasters, has been passed by NSW Parliament today.

Premier Dominic Perrottet said the passing of the historic Bill, will enable the NSW Reconstruction Authority to be set up with the powers needed to ensure communities can be better prepared for and recover more quickly from the impact of flooding, fires, droughts and more.

“As soon as I received the Independent Flood Inquiry from Professor Mary O’Kane and Mick Fuller, I knew that passing the legislating and establishing the Reconstruction Authority was vital to achieve this year,” Mr Perrottet said.

“This is one of our last – but one of our most important – pieces of legislation this year. We have worked constructively with all members of parliament to achieve this outcome that ensures in the future, protecting communities and helping them rebuild is at the forefront of our Governments’ response to natural disasters.”

“Setting up the Authority means will be able to act quickly and decisively in helping affected residents get back on their feet – and one which can provide immediate on-the-ground support without getting caught up in unnecessary red tape.”

Deputy Premier Paul Toole said the Authority would be an advocate and ally for the people of regional NSW.

“Floods have damaged around 10,000 homes in northern NSW in recent times, with hundreds more homes, communities and businesses devastated in the central and far west,” Mr Toole said.

The authority will draw on the experiences of the Northern Rivers Reconstruction Corporation which is focused on Lismore and surrounds and ensure we have a state-wide body with the right powers to prevent and recover from the impact of natural disasters.”

Minister for Planning and Minister for Homes Anthony Roberts said one of the authority’s first tasks will be to develop a new set of appropriate flood planning levels across the State.

“Targeting our planning responses to the local risks, rather than using a blanket approach, is our commitment to better align disaster management with strategic land use planning, and was a recommendation of the Independent Flood Inquiry,” Mr Roberts said.

Minister for Emergency Services and Resilience and Minister for Flood Recovery Steph Cooke said establishing a Reconstruction Authority will help communities to be better prepared for natural disasters.

“While our emergency services organisations continue to lead the response to natural disasters, the new Reconstruction Authority will focus on the crucial tasks of long-term rebuilding and risk mitigation,” Ms Cooke said.

The NSW Reconstruction Authority is the centre piece of the Government’s response to the 2022 Independent Flood Inquiry, with the full response to be released in coming weeks.

Appeal following assault and robbery on train carriage – Lake Macquarie PAC 

Police have released a CCTV images and are appealing for public assistance after an assault and robbery on the Central Coast earlier this month.

Just after 5.30am on Sunday 6 November 2022, a 28-year-old man boarded a southbound train from Broadmeadow Railway Station travelling towards Cockle Creek Railway Station.

As train arrived at Cardiff Railway Station, the man, who was seated at the time, was approached from behind by an unknown male who allegedly assaulted him then dragged him to floor, where three other men also began to assault him.

The men stole the man’s mobile phone before he was able to free himself and leave the train at Cockle Creek Railway Station.

Officers attached to Lake Macquarie Police Area Command were notified and commenced an investigation.

As inquiries continue, police have released an image of four men who may be able to assist with their investigation.

The first man is describe as being of Aboriginal/ Torres Strait Islander appearance, aged 18 to 20, with black hair cut in a long ‘mullet’ style and wearing a black t-shirt and red hat.

The second man is described as being of Aboriginal/ Torres Strait Islander appearance, believed to be aged in his 30s, wearing a black hooded ‘GANT’-brand jumper with white writing on the front, black jeans, red and black shoes.

The third man is described as being of Caucasian appearance, aged 18 to 20, wearing a black hooded jumper, red shorts, red shoes and a red hat.

The fourth man is described as being of Caucasian appearance, aged 18 to 20, with long brown hair, wearing green hat, black t shirt, blue jeans, and grey shoes.

Anyone with information in relation to this incident is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000..

UNIVERSITIES ACCORD MUST REBUILD HIGHER EDUCATION AND INVOLVE STAFF AND STUDENTS

Australian Greens Deputy Leader and Education spokesperson Senator Mehreen Faruqi has said that the Universities Accord process, expected to be announced later today, must begin the task of rebuilding and reimagining our public universities, and involve staff and students at every step.

Senator Faruqi said:

“After a decade of neglect, it’s refreshing to see the government take the future of our universities seriously. But we have to get this right.

“We can’t leave this task up to a few eminent people to run. Current staff and students should be brought into this process in a meaningful way from day one. Frankly, corporate voices should be deprioritised. 

“The review must really dig into university governance and democracy on our campuses. The corporate university model has been so damaging and corrosive.

Greens analysis has found that over the last two decades, there has been a 43 per cent reduction in the number of elected positions on university councils. We have to give power back to staff and students.

“Casualisation and enormous workloads are completely unsustainable and crushing for university staff. The Accord process has to address this head-on. 

“Ultimately the government has to accept that a big boost to public funding – including to research funding – will be required to set our universities up for the long term. Universities are a public good and should be treated as such.

“The Accord process should not be used as an excuse to delay changes that can and must be made now: scrapping Liberal-era fee hikes and funding cuts, and tackling the student debt crisis.”

GOVERNMENT’S 2040 RECYCLING PLEDGE IS A DISTRACTION

The Greens welcome the Government signing up to an aspirational 2040 recycling pledge, but stress Australians want evidence of urgent action now on reducing and removing plastics from the waste stream – especially given the shocking collapse of soft plastic recycler REDcyle.

Greens spokesperson for waste and recycling, Senator Peter Whish-Wilson said:

“The Government’s aspirational 2040 recycling target is welcome but should not be a distraction from the most important targets on the table: the 2025 packaging targets.

“Successive governments have spent decades delaying action on waste reduction, allowing big greedy companies to set voluntary waste reduction targets they had no intention of meeting, without any penalties or threats of regulation.

“We know voluntary approaches to reducing plastic packaging simply don’t work. The big plastic polluters have had their chance to clean up their act and they haven’t. Big packing companies care first about their profits, not the planet. 

“I think almost everyone agrees we need action right now, and that we can’t afford to wait until 2040. The only waste and recycling targets I want to hear about from the Minister are APCO’s 2025 packaging targets. 

“APCO is tasked with leading the development of a circular economy for packaging in Australia, and we are expecting an update any day now on whether it is meeting its 2025 packaging reduction targets. 

“The Minister must be transparent about whether APCO has failed to meet its voluntary waste reduction targets, and about what action she will take if this is the case. 

“Mandating recycling targets with regulation is the only way to get big businesses to take waste reduction seriously. It’ll also provide the recycling industry certainty to underpin investments and upgrades in technology and capacity.

“A vague promise by the Government of regulation in three years is yet another three years of inaction. Everything should be built with its next life in mind. If it can’t be reused, repaired, refurbished, or recycled then it should be restricted, redesigned or removed from production.”

Supporting thousands of aspiring early childhood educators

More than 5,500 aspiring early childhood educators are set to receive a financial boost as the NSW Government announces a new scholarship program.  
 
The NSW Government is investing $23.5 million to provide scholarships worth up to $3,000 for students studying a Certificate III and up to $5,000 for a Diploma qualification.
 
Minister for Education and Early Learning Sarah Mitchell said the new VET scholarships are part of the NSW Government’s $281.6 million package announced in the Budget early this year to attract, retrain and support early childhood educators and teachers in NSW.  
 
“Our early childhood workforce is critical to delivering a quality early learning for our youngest learners, and these scholarships will help attract and retain this important workforce,” Ms Mitchell said.  
 
“The scholarships will work in conjunction with the 25,000 fee-free places for a Cert III or Diploma qualification, which means scholarship recipients will receive a cash boost to support their studies in addition to not having to pay course fees. 
 
“I encourage our existing Certificate III workforce to take up this extra support on offer, whether you’re in the public, private, long day care, preschool, family day care or outside school hours care (OSHC) sectors. 
 
“Early childhood education and care professionals make all the difference to the lives of children and families in NSW, and this new initiative will help this critical workforce to grow and upskill.”  
 
Minister for Skills and Training Alister Henskens said the scholarships will work in conjunction with the 25,000 fee-free training places for a Certificate III or Diploma qualifications.
 
“Since August, the NSW Government has delivered thousands of fee-free places to bolster the pipeline of skilled and job-ready workers for the early childhood education sector,” Mr Henskens said.
 
“These scholarships will help people upskill and provide a welcome cash boost to assist with their studies, which in turn supports their ongoing education and employment pathways.”
 
The scholarship round will be open from 15 November 2022 to 15 January 2023. 
 
The NSW Government has committed $15.9 billion to deliver a brighter future for every child in NSW through a revolutionary transformation of early childhood education, child development and women’s economic participation over the next decade. Through the introduction of a universal pre-Kindergarten year, the Brighter Beginnings initiative, workforce package and affordable preschool funding, the Liberals and Nationals Government are ensuring NSW is the best state to live, work and raise a family. 
 
Current and aspiring educators are encouraged to explore the new dedicated Early Childhood Careers section of the Department of Education’s website by visiting education.nsw.gov.au/EarlyChildhoodCareers

$75m for Wakehurst Parkway Improvements

The Wakehurst Parkway will undergo safety and traffic flow improvements as the NSW Government outlines how $75 million in funding will be spent along the Northern Beaches road.

This funding is in addition to the $18.1 million already provided to Northern Beaches Council to improve flood mitigation on Wakehurst Parkway.

Minister for Infrastructure Rob Stokes said works along the 9.5km section of the Parkway from Narrabeen to Frenchs Forrest would include localised widening and additional turning lanes to reduce crashes and improve the efficiency of the corridor.

“Sections of Wakehurst Parkway are some of the most dangerous black spots on the Northern Beaches, which is why we’re pressing ahead with our $75 million funding commitment,” Mr Stokes said.

“These works will help reduce crashes, improve access to Northern Beaches Hospital, and save commuters time by improving the overall efficiency of the wider road network.”

Minister for Metropolitan Roads Natalie Ward said the upgrades would have positive flow-on effects for the adjoining road network.

“The works will improve traffic signals at the Dreadnought Road intersection, upgrade the Oxford Falls Road West intersection, improve southbound lane capacity on approach to Frenchs Forest, and improve safety at Elanora Road,” Mrs Ward said.

“Wakehurst Parkway is nestled within an incredible bushland setting so these important safety improvements will be designed and delivered to minimise impacts on the local environment and community, with updates every step of the way.”

Member for Wakehurst Brad Hazzard said the first round of community consultation would occur in 2023.

“This is a key corridor for the Northern Beaches and these works will make the Wakehurst Parkway a safer and more reliable road,” Mr Hazzard said.
Essential roadworks, including the asphalting of a 2.8 kilometre section of the Wakehurst Parkway, are also being undertaken through the NSW Government’s $147 million Greater Sydney State Roads Assets Restoration Program.

The work will be carried out between Judith Street and Aquatic Drive from 23 November 23 2022.