NSW Government to allocate further resources to Coroners Court following Bondi Junction incident

The NSW Government will allocate up to $18 million in additional funding to the Coroners Court allowing an extensive and timely inquest into the Bondi Junction incident.

The tragic events will be the subject of a mandatory inquest by the NSW State Coroner, Her Honour Magistrate Teresa O’Sullivan.

This funding will allow the inquiry to proceed with trauma-informed care for victims and families, including appropriate family liaison supports.

This allocation will give the court certainty and ensure other inquests and inquiries are not delayed.

It is expected the funding will allow an additional Deputy State Coroner to be appointed to oversee other inquests and inquiries during the course of the Bondi Junction inquest.

This is consistent with the approach taken following the Lindt Café siege.

The thoughts of our state and nation are with those impacted by this tragedy, and the NSW Government is committed to ensuring victims and their families are supported over the days and months ahead.

Bondi Junction tragedy

Tonight we are shocked and saddened by today’s tragedy at Bondi Junction. The NSW Police have advised that the situation is now under control. 

Our hearts go out to the victims, their families and loved ones. 

The NSW Opposition expresses our gratitude to our police, health workers, other first responders and members of the public, and particularly to those who displayed extraordinary bravery in the face of tragedy. 

We pray for the speedy recovery of those in hospital tonight. 

Now, and in the coming days and weeks, it’s important that those affected by this tragedy receive the care and support they need. 

As a community we’ll need to come together to support those who have suffered injury, loss and trauma today. 

Iran’s attacks on Israel

Australia condemns Iran’s attacks on Israel this morning.

Iran has ignored our call, and those of many other countries, not to proceed with these reckless attacks.

Anyone who cares for the protection of innocent life must stand against these attacks.

This escalation is a grave threat to the security of Israel and the entire region. It risks greater instability and devastation across the Middle East. Australia continues to support regional security, including that of Israel.

Iran’s ongoing flouting of international law, its egregious human rights abuses and threat to international security is why this Government has imposed targeted financial sanctions and travel bans, including Magnitsky-style sanctions, on 85 individuals and 97 entities.

Australia will continue to work with the international community to increase pressure on Iran to cease its destabilising actions and to prevent the conflict from spreading.

Australians in the region should monitor local media for public safety updates and follow the advice of local authorities.

Australians in need of emergency consular assistance should contact the Australian Government’s 24-hour Consular Emergency Centre on +61 2 6261 3305 (from overseas) or 1300 555 135 (from within Australia).

Fatal crash – Lake Macquarie

A passenger has died following a crash at Lake Macquarie overnight.

About 12.15am (Sunday 14 April 2024), emergency services were called to Freemans Drive, Cooranbong, following reports of a crash.

A Subaru Impreza was reportedly travelling northbound when it lost control and crashed into the rear of a Hyundai Santa Fe – a fully marked mobile speed camera vehicle – parked on the side of the road.

The passenger – a 18-year-old man – was treated by NSW Ambulance paramedics; however, he died at the scene.

The driver – also aged 18 – was freed by emergency services and taken to John Hunter Hospital for treatment. He also went mandatory testing.

The 43-year-old man seated in the Hyundai, suffered minor injuries and did not require treatment.

Officers from Lake Macquarie Police District established a crime scene which will be forensically examined by specialist officers from the Crash Investigation Unit.

An investigation is underway into the circumstances surrounding the crash and a report will be prepared for the information of the Coroner.

Critical incident declared after man shot by police – Bondi Junction

NSWPF Commissioner Karen Webb will address the media after six people were fatally stabbed and a man was shot by police in Sydney’s Eastern Suburbs earlier today.

About 3.30pm (Saturday 13 April 2024), emergency services were called to Westfield in Bondi Junction, following reports multiple people had been stabbed.

An officer attached to Eastern Suburbs Police Area Command attended and was allegedly confronted by a man with a knife.

The man allegedly lunged at the officer, before he was fatally shot.

The officer conducted CPR until the arrival of NSW Ambulance paramedics, who worked on the man; however, he could not be revived.

It has been confirmed the man fatally stabbed six people in the centre before he was shot.

The centre remains closed, and a crime scene has been established.

A critical incident team comprised of State Crime Command’s Homicide Squad and the Central Metropolitan Region will now investigate the circumstances surrounding the incident.

The investigation will also be subject to an independent review.

7 people have been confirmed dead.

LABOR REFUSES ACTION ON SCHOOL REFUSAL

The Greens have called on the Education Ministers Meeting to put action on school refusal at the top of its agenda, after Labor squibbed its response to a Senate report into the crisis.

The government has agreed or supported in principle two of the 14 recommendations in the Education and Employment Committee’s report into “The national trend of school refusal and related matters”, which was tabled in August 2023.

A national Lonergan poll commissioned by the Greens found that two in five families experienced what advocates prefer to call “school can’t” in the last 12 months.

Greens spokesperson on Primary & Secondary Education, Senator Penny Allman-Payne:

“Parents, carers and advocates have been crying out for help and action on school can’t for years, but those cries have fallen on deaf ears.

“This is a national issue that requires a national response and Labor has thrown it in the too-hard basket.

“The inquiry’s report recommended a range of very basic measures to begin to address this issue and provide much-needed assistance to families in crisis – including developing a national action plan and providing funding for a peer support group – but Labor’s response will leave those families without much hope.

“School can’t is a crisis of exclusion. Students are being forced out of rigid, commodified and under-resourced educational systems that are not fit to meet their complex needs.

“Families experiencing school can’t aren’t able to access appropriate support for their children or themselves, and their physical health, mental health and financial well-being suffer as a result.

“The next Education Ministers Meeting must put this issue squarely at the top of the agenda.”

LABOR’S COAL AND GAS ADDICTION IS HOLDING CQ BACK

The Greens say that Labor must stop approving new coal and gas projects that divert critical skilled workers away from new industries, if regions like Central Queensland are to reap the benefits of the energy transition.

Labor yesterday unveiled its new plan for direct public support to speed up the energy transition. While legislation has not yet been circulated, the Greens have typically been in the Senate balance of power on similar bills before this Parliament.

Gladstone-based Greens spokesperson on Transition & Regional Development Senator Penny Allman-Payne:

“When it comes to climate, Labor is speaking out of both sides of its mouth.

“They need to pick a lane. We can have an Australia powered by wind and solar and all the green jobs that creates, or a dirty coal- and gas-powered future that threatens us all.

“Skilled workforce shortages mean that we can’t choose both coal and gas and clean green jobs, and if Labor tries to do both, we’ll miss the green jobs boom and make the climate crisis worse.

“Public investment in renewables is a must. Leaving our energy and industrial future up to unaccountable mega corporations is precisely why we’re facing a global climate crisis.

“Many industrial centres, like my home of Gladstone, bear the scars of multiple boom-and-bust cycles caused by corporations chasing profits with no regard for the shattered communities they leave in their wake.

“That’s why the renewable transition needs to be government-led, with full and transparent community engagement, including the free, prior and informed consent of Traditional Owners, and protections for workers.

“Communities like Gladstone know that coal and gas are on the way out, and thousands of workers stand ready to embrace the opportunities presented by the transition.

“Labor’s support for coal and gas is holding them back.”

Albanese lets the cement dry on Labor’s housing crisis

Australians already know the Albanese government will fall far short of its promise to build 1.2 million homes over the next five years, and new ABS data released today has cemented this, revealing approvals for the construction of new dwellings dropped to a twelve-year-low in February.

Labor’s housing crisis is just getting worse. With 20,000 homes required per month to meet the 1.2 million homes promise, it’s clear the 12,520 construction approvals confirmed for February just won’t cut it.

There is already so much evidence that Labor will not meet its 1.2 million homes promise by a mile, with an estimated shortfall of more than 400,000 dwellings, yet the Prime Minister continues to blatantly lie to Australians.

With first-home buyers at their lowest levels in over a decade, rents up by 26 per cent since Labor came to office, an extra $2,000 per month on an average mortgage, and now, overseas arrivals running at four times the pace of new home builds – Australians are being locked out of the housing market.

The Prime Minister must now wave the white flag and admit he’s broken another election promise and given up on home ownership.

Gallagher asleep at the wheel on finance bungle

An independent review into the leak of sensitive data from the Department of Finance has found that Minister Gallagher’s department “appears to have twice breached the same confidentiality provisions that it now asks suppliers to abide by.”

The review, commissioned after two leaks of confidential and commercially sensitive supplier information under Labor within a three month period, found that “the two breaches taken together are also likely to meet the threshold for a significant non-compliance with the Finance law in relation to the general duties of officials under the PGPA Act.”

In relation to the second breach, in which information was sent to 239 suppliers, the Report states that 15 suppliers are yet to execute the Department’s Confidentiality Undertaking Deed Polls. The Report refers to Deed Polls as “a critical part of the containment strategy to ensure that the information contained in the Supplier Matrix was not further disclosed”.

Senator Hume called on Minister Gallagher to explain why a second breach could have occurred so soon after the first, and why her department did not consider whether a broader procedural or policy review was necessary after the first breach.

“Not only should this not have happened in the first place, but there remain 15 businesses that received the commercially sensitive information who have not returned the required paperwork to ensure the information leaked is protected.

“It has been more than a month since the second of two incredibly serious leaks of confidential and commercially sensitive information, and some recipients of this information have yet to provide the appropriate assurances to the Government. What is Katy Gallagher doing about this?

“Labor has been so focused on enforcing standards of behaviour on suppliers of services, but have now fallen short of their own standards twice. Yet again, it’s ‘do as I say’ not ‘do as I do’ from this Labor government,” she said.

“Minister Gallagher should focus on giving government suppliers certainty that confidential information leaked on her watch will not damage them commercially,” Senator Hume concluded.

Albanese government must release report on Optus outage

The Albanese Government must release a key report into the massive Optus outage which saw nearly 2700 calls fail to get through to the triple zero emergency line.

Communications Minister Michelle Rowland has been sitting on the Bean Review into the national Optus outage since 21 March.

A parliamentary inquiry into the Optus Network Outage has stalled while it waits for the Minister to release the report now on her desk.

As part of its terms of reference, the Senate inquiry is examining the steps taken by the Federal Government to ensure proper access to the triple zero service during the outage.

It was originally supposed to report to Parliament on 28 February, but that date was pushed back to 9 May while they waited for the Bean Review to be released so they could consider that report as part of its investigation.

The Committee is expected to recall Optus and call Telstra, ACMA and the department, particularly given new information about the scale of calls that didn’t get through to the triple zero service.

It is well past time for Minister Rowland to release the Bean Review.