Connecting Good Samaritans to defibrillators will save lives

Good Samaritans can now be guided to automated external defibrillators (AEDs) to help them respond to people experiencing cardiac arrest, while they wait for paramedics to arrive.

The GoodSAM app works by alerting registered responders when someone near them goes into cardiac arrest and a Triple Zero (000) call has been received.

The app guides the volunteer to administer cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) while an ambulance is dispatched, buying precious time.

The incorporation of the NSW public access defibrillator registry into the free, life-saving GoodSAM app means responders will now be able to see if an AED is located near a person experiencing cardiac arrest and use it to improve that person’s chance of survival.

There are already over 4,300 AEDs on the GoodSAM AED registry.

Thirty lives have been saved thanks to the assistance of GoodSAM volunteers, with more than 7,300 people signing up to be responders.

Twelve of those 30 patients benefited from a lifesaving AED prior to the arrival of NSW Ambulance paramedics.

Thousands of Australians will experience an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest each year and statistics show that only 12 per cent of people who receive resuscitation survive.

In 2021, 9,273 cardiac arrest patients were attended across NSW.

In 2022, the NSW Government announced a $2.5 million partnership between NSW Ambulance and the GoodSAM responder app. To register, please visit: ambulance.nsw.gov.au/goodsam

Find more information about GoodSAM or to register as a responder.

You can register as a GoodSAM responder if you’re 18 years old or over, and able and willing to perform CPR.

Find out more about registering your AED with GoodSAM and watch the explainer video.

Minister for Health Ryan Park:

“AEDs alone don’t save lives, people with AEDs do.

“I encourage everyone who has an AED to register it online with NSW Ambulance so GoodSAM responders can see it in the app.

“It’s all well and good to have defibrillators around the community, but if people don’t know their location, they’re going to be of little help in a life and death situation.

“By guiding these volunteers to these devices, we can significantly improve the survival rate of people experiencing cardiac arrest.”

Parliamentary Secretary for Health & Regional Health Dr Michael Holland:

“Every minute counts when someone is in cardiac arrest and for every minute that a patient is in cardiac arrest and does not receive CPR, their chance of survival drops by seven to ten per cent.

“The survival rate improves significantly if chest compressions begin in the first few minutes and improves significantly if an AED is also utilised.”

NSW Ambulance Chief Executive Dominic Morgan:

“This publicly accessible network of over 4,300 AEDs registered with the GoodSAM app in NSW will help responders provide life-saving care to people experiencing cardiac arrest before paramedics arrive.

“The addition of the NSW AED registry to the GoodSAM app delivers increased capability to the Triple Zero (000) connected GoodSAM program to save more lives right across the state.”

Housing Pattern Book design competition heats up

Architects from across the world and Australia are fighting it out to have their designs shape the face of our suburbs with entries to the Pattern Book design competition exceeding expectations.

The competition has attracted 212 entries, with 176 from Australia and 36 coming in from Europe, the UK, Asia, Africa, the US and South America.

The Opera House international design competition attracted 230 entries and the new housing Pattern Book is not far behind, setting the bar for good designs to shape the housing future of Sydney and NSW.

In addition to good designs, anyone who uses a pre-approved design from the new Pattern Book will get access to a fast-track through the planning system so construction can get underway more quickly.

That means keys in doors faster while maintaining high standards, with the NSW Government Architect’s stamp of approval.

The Pattern Book competition complements the biggest planning reforms NSW has seen in a generation as part of the Minns Labor Government’s efforts to confront the housing crisis.

With housing the largest cost of living issue facing the people of NSW, the Pattern Book will help add more diversity of housing types in our towns and suburbs.

This way young families can choose a home for their growing families, while downsizers have more choice to stay in the communities they love and have helped build.

These new designs will not only help to build houses, they will build communities as more people get into homes that will suit them through the different stages of life.

These are homes for people who open businesses, have families, build our communities, volunteer and contribute to local economy.

The next phase of the competition will be to select 15 professional and six student competitors to move through to Stage 2 with the next milestone to be announced early September.

Design submissions will be due by Friday 11 October 2024.

Learn more about the Pattern Book Design Competition.

Minister for Planning and Public Spaces, Paul Scully said:

“In some great news for those trying to get into a home, architects and students of NSW and the world have embraced this home design competition.

“We have had a record turn-out from our Australian architects but I am also pleased to see entries from Spain, Sweden, Belgium, the Netherlands, UK, US, Canada, Colombia, South Africa, India and Iran.

“With 171 expressions of interest submitted by professional architects and 41 from architecture students, this is an opportunity for all designers to create homes for the future.

“Sydney and NSW need affordable, quality and sustainable homes.

“I hope these designs respond to our climate and our lifestyle, are sustainable and improve energy, thermal and water efficiency.

“The Pattern Book will be a useful resource for industry, architects, planners, councils and the community for years to come.”

NSW Government funds commercial fishing industry’s first single peak body

The Minns Government has delivered on another election commitment by providing $1,050,000 towards the establishment of a peak body for the commercial fishing industry to deliver an effective advocate to work with Government in promoting a viable commercial fishing sector.

The commercial fishing industry is a powerhouse in NSW’s economy contributing $170 million annually and directly employing more than 1,600 people.

It is a vital industry on NSW’s coast and one that the NSW Government is committed to supporting.

The NSW Government made an election commitment to establish a single united commercial fishing peak body and over the last 10 months worked with the fishers and their businesses to foster the setting up of the new peak body which has been named the NSW Wild Harvest Fishers’ Association Incorporated (WHFA).

The WHFA will receive $350,000 per year for three years to assist the association to actively engage with the state’s commercial fishers and allow the industry to speak with one voice.

The seed funding will assist the WHFA to become a self-sustaining peak body for the industry that can effectively represent and advocate for the sector.

The WHFA has been developed through an industry-facilitated process, involving consultation between two standing industry organisations to establish a single united peak industry body.

The WHFA appointed Mr John Wilson as the inaugural independent Chair in April 2024.

The peak body is now operational, with a constitution and is in the process of engaging a Chief Executive Officer.

Discussions and stakeholder meetings at the industry level have been ongoing throughout the year to bring commercial fishers from the two separate industry bodies together, adopt a constitution, and determine how the body can assist industry.

Minister for Agriculture Tara Moriarty said:

“The NSW Government wants to ensure we have a viable, productive and sustainable commercial fisheries sector now and for future generations.

“We recognise the challenges facing the industry and that’s why it’s important to have a united peak body, to advocate and work with Government to sustainably grow the sector which plays a major role in many of our coastal communities.

“The NSW Wild Harvest Fishers’ Association will be engaging with commercial fishers across NSW to build its membership and will also undertake elections to replace the interim board.

Chair of NSW Wild Harvest Fishers’ Association, John Wilson said:

“I welcome the NSW Government’s funding towards the newly established peak fishing industry body for three years, it is crucial for the new peak body.

“The board is very grateful to the Minister for honouring the government’s election commitment to contribute funding for the peak industry body.

“We are looking forward to working closely with the Minister and her Department to make a positive difference for NSW wild harvest fishers and the NSW economy.

Active Transport links around Sydney Airport ready for take-off ahead of Sydney Gateway opening

A new three-kilometre shared path built as part of the Sydney Gateway project will open on Friday 16 August.

The new paths complete a network of walking and cycling links around the airport, providing critical and direct connections for the 30,000 workers in the airport precinct, and commuters walking, running and riding through to nearby suburbs.

The first kilometre of new paths on the north side of Alexandra Canal opened in early 2023, replacing a shared path alongside Airport Drive that cantilevered out over the Alexandra Canal.

The new section opening at the end of the week extends the shared pathway along Qantas Drive, completing to the Domestic terminal and the eastern edge of the airport precinct.

New shelters, complete with seating lights, bubblers and a bike pump light sit alongside the Alexandra Canal and the new paths, providing a front row seat for plane spotters.

The active transport links are part of a major inter-regional route for people walking and riding which will link the CBD in the north to Sans Souci’s Captain Cook Bridge in the south, once the future M6-Stage 1 is completed.

Transport Minister Jo Haylen:

“These new links will give people a safe way to walk and cycle around the airport precinct.

“While I doubt we’ll see a cavalcade of travellers lugging their suitcases on foot or on bikes to the airport anytime soon, these new paths will provide a valuable active transport option for the thousands of people who work at the airport every day.

“These beautiful new paths also include plenty of new places for people to pause and watch the planes fly in and out. It’s a great new link and a true plane-spotter’s boulevard.”

Murray and Riverina landholders tackle feral pig problem

More than 8,700 feral pigs have been culled in the Murray and Riverina regions since the $13 million 2023/24 Feral Pig Program began in October 2023.

The NSW Government is continuing to build on the success of the program, with an additional $13.1 million committed to tackling feral pig and pest numbers across the state over the next 12 months.

Since the start of the program, the Murray region has controlled almost 2,500 feral pigs, which has a focus on upskilling local landholders to use automated trapping technology.

Using cameras and motion sensors, the automated trap technology is a time-efficient and easy method for farmers to control feral pigs, allowing them to remotely activate traps using their phones from anywhere at any time.

From Wagga Wagga, to Griffith, Riverina landholders have also played a large role in the program, controlling more than 6,000 feral pigs across the region.

The program has resulted in a knockdown of pig numbers across the Murray and the Riverina and Local Land Services will continue to support and encourage farmers to participate in coordinated control programs with their neighbours to keep tackling feral pigs.

Since October 2023, across the Murray and Riverina regions:

  • 2,464 pigs culled in the Murray region
  • 6,280 pigs culled across Riverina
  • 723 properties involved
  • 8 information and training sessions held
  • 881 one-on-one consultations, and
  • 1,834kg of free bait issued to landholders.

A key part of the program has been providing farmers and landholders with the tools, education and support to get on top of the problem.

More than 112,888 feral pigs have been culled across the state since October 2023, with almost 8 per cent of these having been culled in the Riverina and Murray regions.

Agriculture Minister Tara Moriarty said:

“The NSW Government is committed to continuing the success of this program to ensure feral pig numbers continue to come down here in the Murray and Riverina.

“I want to thank farmers across the Riverina and Murray, who have worked with LLS biosecurity officers to reduce the impacts of these pest animals.

“It’s been a huge, shared effort, but we still have work to do. That’s why we’ve committed a further $13.1 million to build on the successes so far.

“I encourage landholders to continue to participate in these control programs. Landholder participation is essential to maximising the effectiveness of a program. 

Colin McCrabb, Wanganella farmer, 45km north of Deniliquin, said:

“Since having the opportunity to participate in the Feral Pig Program and learn the best methods to monitor and trap feral pigs, I now have the skills to protect my property from these pest animals.

“In the drought feral pigs were taking lambs and ewes, and there’s destruction of pasture and irrigation, but the biggest fear is biosecurity, with the transmission of disease including brucellosis.

“The last time I grew rice, as it matured, the pigs set nests up in the middle of the crop, just destroying it.

“Through the program, Local Land Services assisted us with technology, advice and information about trapping, baiting and providing 1080. They also let us know when other people were baiting so we could co-ordinate with neighbours who were also trapping.

“Every feral pig that is not here is a good feral pig. We should all do what we can. I couldn’t believe how many were there.”

Active Transport links around Sydney Airport ready for take-off ahead of Sydney Gateway opening

A new three-kilometre shared path built as part of the Sydney Gateway project will open on Friday 16 August.

The new paths complete a network of walking and cycling links around the airport, providing critical and direct connections for the 30,000 workers in the airport precinct, and commuters walking, running and riding through to nearby suburbs.

The first kilometre of new paths on the north side of Alexandra Canal opened in early 2023, replacing a shared path alongside Airport Drive that cantilevered out over the Alexandra Canal.

The new section opening at the end of the week extends the shared pathway along Qantas Drive, completing to the Domestic terminal and the eastern edge of the airport precinct.

New shelters, complete with seating lights, bubblers and a bike pump light sit alongside the Alexandra Canal and the new paths, providing a front row seat for plane spotters.

The active transport links are part of a major inter-regional route for people walking and riding which will link the CBD in the north to Sans Souci’s Captain Cook Bridge in the south, once the future M6-Stage 1 is completed.

Transport Minister Jo Haylen:

“These new links will give people a safe way to walk and cycle around the airport precinct.

“While I doubt we’ll see a cavalcade of travellers lugging their suitcases on foot or on bikes to the airport anytime soon, these new paths will provide a valuable active transport option for the thousands of people who work at the airport every day.

“These beautiful new paths also include plenty of new places for people to pause and watch the planes fly in and out. It’s a great new link and a true plane-spotter’s boulevard.”

Promising signs but more to do in NSW as national NAPLAN report released

The 2024 NAPLAN National Report has been released today, with the NSW Government noting there are some positive signs, but more work to be done to raise education outcomes across New South Wales. 

Almost 400,000 primary and high school students, across more than 3,000 public, independent and Catholic schools sat their NAPLAN tests in March of this year.

Results for New South Wales have remained stable, with some promising results, including:

  • 81% of Year 3 students in NSW recorded Strong or Exceeding results in writing.
  • 70% of Year 5 and 7 students in NSW achieved Strong or Exceeding in numeracy.
  • 57% of year 9 students in NSW achieved Strong or Exceeding in grammar and punctuation.

While nationally, NSW has ranked first or equal first in most test subjects and year levels, the need for continued work is highlighted by the fact that NSW is ranked third for Year 3 and Year 5 in reading.

The Minns Labor Government is continuing work to rebuild the public education system and improve education outcomes across the state.

The most important tool in achieving this is ensuring there is a teacher at the front of every classroom in New South Wales. The Government’s work to address the chronic teacher shortage created by the former Government has seen a 20 percent drop in the number of public school teacher vacancies this year.

This work has included:

  • Scrapping the former Liberal National Government’s public sector wage cap and delivering NSW public school teachers the biggest pay rise in a generation.
  • Improving job security by exceeding the government’s commitment to transition 16,000 teachers and support staff on temporary contracts into permanent roles.
  • Improving the classroom environment by banning mobile phones and restoring authority to teachers and principals to manage student behaviour.

The NSW Government and Department of Education will analyse the NAPLAN results from both 2023 and 2024 to determine system-wide targets for improvement in literacy and numeracy which will be released later this year, for implementation in 2025.

The full 2024 NAPLAN national results are published on ACARA’s website.

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

“Congratulations to the students across New South Wales who sat their NAPLAN exams this year.

“These results show that NSW students overall are doing well, but there are gaps that need our attention.

“The Minns Labor Government has already begun rebuilding public education but we recognise that there is still much more to do.

“While there are some positive signs in these results, we cannot afford to take our eye off the ball.

“The impact of the chronic teacher shortage created by the former Liberal National Government cannot be undone overnight, but we will continue to build on the early successes we have had in boosting the number of teachers in our classrooms, which will ultimately drive better learning outcomes.”

Federal Member for Newcastle Sharon Claydon has joined calls for urgent action to address mobile phone and internet reception issues in Stockton.

Ms Claydon recently wrote to the community asking them to share their experiences and the response has been overwhelming.

The community’s fight for better services has now been taken to the floor of the Parliament with Ms Claydon delivering the following speech this week.

“Almost 5,000 people live in Stockton, which is just a few minutes by ferry from the city of Newcastle. It’s a tight-knit, strong and resilient community. But ongoing problems with mobile phone reception and poor wi-fi and internet connectivity are really taking their toll.

“Newcastle is Australia’s sixth-largest city, which makes these poor telecommunications experiences for Stockton residents especially shocking. In 2024, mobile phone reception, wi-fi and reliability of connectivity are essential services, yet too many people in Stockton have been let down.

“I recently met with Telstra and Optus to raise Stockton community residents’ concerns directly with them. I’m pleased that Telstra has agreed to investigate its telecommunications network in the suburb, and I’ve asked the same of Optus because we need to identify these problems and get them fixed. I’ve also written, with the support of Stockton Community Group, an expression of interest under the Peri-Urban Mobile Program for a grant aimed at improving coverage. Hopefully, that will be of help too.

“More recently, I’ve written to all residents of Stockton to ask them to share their lived experiences of the telecommunications services in the suburb. Residents have been inundating me with their experiences. They speak about fears of constant dropouts and not having reliable tools for study for their children. These are unacceptable in 2024, and we’re doing everything we can to fix them.”

ACT GREENS WILL BUILD FOOD HUB, BOOST LOCAL FOOD, CHALLENGE THE SUPERMARKET DUOPOLY

Today, the ACT Greens have announced an election initiative to scale-up our city’s capacity to grow and produce food, giving Canberrans more access to healthy local food while bringing real competition to the supermarket duopoly.

“Growing the food that ends up on our dinner tables locally rather than importing it from across the country is good for farmers, good for the environment and good for giving Canberrans greater choice to buy and support local businesses,” said Deputy Leader of the ACT Greens, Rebecca Vassarotti.

“The corporatisation of food production in Australia has created a food system that is vulnerable to climate change, unfair to farmers, and which sells food to Canberrans at exorbitant prices while big supermarkets rake in record profits.

“The ACT Greens plan will establish a new food hub in Fyshwick to ensure local farmers have the right equipment to pool, process and distribute the food they grow so that Canberrans can buy it straight from their local shops and markets, not from the supermarket giants.

“This food hub will empower Canberrans to boycott imports from the big supermarkets and buy more local food, giving them confidence in where their food has come from, who has grown it and why their food costs what it does.

“Under the ACT Greens plan, we will combine this new food hub with access to up to $1 million in interest free loans to support projects that help food producers get their food out to local shops so that they can more easily sell to Canberrans. 

“For example, farmers might like to get together and purchase an electric van for food deliveries to local shops and restaurants, or as part of a box scheme direct to the front doors of Canberrans.

“These sorts of programs are the foundation to helping local farms and local farmers thrive. Our suite of initiatives will be good for farmers, good for the environment and good for the bank accounts of Canberrans.

Some of the key initiatives the ACT Greens have announced today include:

  • Invest $3.5 million to establish a food hub which will allow local farmers to set up a base of operations for food production and distribution
  • Protect prime agricultural land and so farmers have fair, long-term leases 
  • Provide $1 million in interest free loans to empower local farmers to invest in collaborative local food logistics and enterprise-building projects 
  • Revitalise and refurbish the Canberra City Farm in Fyshwick 
  • Establish a farm training centre which will run training and jobs programs for people at risk
  • Provide $2 million over four years to fund five full-time equivalent primary school garden coordinators, to support school kitchen gardens
  • Invest $600,000 over 4 years to create new large community gardens for the suburbs, using the Community Garden Grants program for smaller projects

The full list of our initiatives for local food is available on the ACT Greens website.

ACT Greens Member for Brindabella, Laura Nuttall, said the ACT Greens will give farmers confidence in the future of their business, guaranteeing fair and long-term leases and establishing a new future farming training program. 

“For too long, farmers have been left in the lurch about how long they will be able to continue to run their business in the ACT. If we’re going to scale-up the role of farmers in growing affordable food for Canberrans, we need to give them certainty,” said Ms Nuttall. 

“The ACT Greens will make sure farmers can have confidence in the future of their business by recognising prime agricultural land as part of changes to zoning rules, and providing long-term leases to create a pipeline of affordable and sustainable food for many years to come.

“Securing the future of our farming workforce will be a key part of our plan to scale-up affordable local food production in Canberra. That’s why we will create a new education and training program to support people to become local growers.

“We will proactively open up this training scheme to Canberrans experiencing barriers to work, such as people who have experienced homelessness or have had contact with the criminal justice system, to provide them with stable employment and a pathway to learn about and succeed at being a local grower. 

“This is modelled on successful long-term programs overseas that have demonstrated that local food is a pathway for people to rebuild their lives” said Ms Nuttall. 

Greens to move for ban on gambling advertising, forcing Senate vote this week

The Greens will force a Senate vote this week for a ban on gambling advertising. The Greens will move in the Senate for a ban on gambling advertising in an amendment to the Communications Legislation Amendment (Regional Broadcasting Bill). The ban would apply to broadcast and online platforms.

Senator Hanson-Young is spokesperson for Communications and Manager of Greens Business in the Senate:

“Labor should honour the legacy of Peta Murphy, not the profits of parasites in the gambling lobby.

“Australia banned tobacco ads in this country because they did acute harm. Gambling companies profit from addiction and misery, targeting our kids and wrecking families. They must be banned too.

“It’s time for Parliament to listen to the experts, respect public opinion and back a full ban on gambling ads.

“The gambling lobby may have deep pockets, but the public want strong action. Our amendment will be a test for Labor and the Coalition this week.”