A Melbourne grandmother has won $20 million in Powerball after her husband said “don’t bother” buying a ticket.
The woman, from Truganina in the city’s west, held the only division one winning entry in the country on Thursday’s draw and checked her ticket just before bedtime.
After finding out she was now a multi-millionaire, she said she could only sleep for about 40 minutes over the whole night.
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“I was sitting in the lounge room, and I checked the winning numbers before going to bed, and I didn’t believe it,” the winner told The Lott on Friday morning.
“I couldn’t get out of the chair. I couldn’t go to the toilet. I couldn’t move. It was so surreal.”
The woman, from Truganina in the city’s west, held the only division one winning entry in the country on Thursday’s draw and checked her ticket just before bedtime. Credit: The Lott
The winning numbers in draw 1369 were 30, 23, 9, 22, 5, 28 and 18. The Powerball number was 3.
When the grandmother went to purchase her ticket at Wyndham Village Lotto & News in Tarneit she said her husband told her not to bother as there was no chance they would win.
“I guess I’ve proved him wrong,” she said.
“I decided to mix things up, and instead of putting my usual three to four games on, I decided to get a Powerhit consisting of special numbers that mean the most to me.
A Melbourne grandmother has won $20 million in Powerball after her husband said ‘don’t bother’ buying a ticket. File image. Credit: File image/ The Lott
“I’ve never expected to win anything big. I usually land three numbers, but never anything more.”
The woman said she wants to use some of her win to travel around Australia via train.
She is also keen to help all her children and grandchildren buy houses.
The owner of the shop where the ticket was purchased said he had not slept either after learning of the win.
“It’s truly a special day for us, and we’re absolutely over the moon,” Mahesh Thakur said.
“We’ve sold division one winning entries in all other lottery games, except for Powerball. It’s been a long time coming, and now we have a full set of division one wins.”
The Lott’s division one winning tally has now reached 272 so far this year.
The reason behind Jason Horne-Francis’ shock axing has been revealed with the young star failing to meet standards at the club.
North Melbourne’s decision to drop the number one draft pick ahead of his first AFL game back in South Australia, his home state, left fans around the league scratching their heads.
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On Friday night however the reasons behind the decision to ax him where detailed by Channel 7 journalist Mitch Cleary.
Cleary said the 18-year-old was left out of North Melbourne’s squad for “disobeying his coach” last weekend.
“The star teenager was called out by interim coach Leigh Adams and senior players on Sunday for failing to complete his proper ice baths and recovery in front of their very eyes,” Cleary reported.
“I have spent this morning with a dozen teammates training in Melbourne (instead of traveling with the squad).”
Horne-Francis will now run out in the VFL after failing to live up to the club’s “Monday to Friday” expectations.
Former North Melbourne great Brent Harvey opened up on the Horne-Francis axing.
“There’s some stuff that we call Monday to Friday, it’s preparation stuff – you need to tick the boxes,” Harvey said on RSN Radio.
“This is not just about Jason … (Caretaker coach) Leigh Adams has got very good standards, I’ve got to be a little bit careful … but we’ve got players not playing in our team and I’ll name one right now : Kayne Turner.
“He would run through brick walls for every single one of his teammates and every single one of his supporters – he does everything right.
“If he’s not playing, he’s playing in the reserves at the minute, you’d want to be doing everything right to make sure you’re holding up your end of the bargain. We call that Monday to Friday and if you haven’t got your Monday to Friday in order, that’s just not good enough right now.
“Was it good enough in Round 3, Round 4, Round 5? Maybe.
“But with Leigh Adams in charge, the standards have gone to another level and players have to play their part. Monday to Friday is just as important as performing on game day for us.
“There’s not just one incident where we’ve just said (to Horne-Francis): ‘Nah, you’re not playing because of this’. It’s not that at all, everything comes into calculations, the form side of it, what he’s doing after stoppage. There’s so much that comes into it.”
Horne-Francis immediately postponed contract extension negotiations after he was drafted by the club last year.
His two-year draft deal expires at the end of the 2023 season and both Adelaide and Port Adelaide are said to be heavily circling the teenage star.
The dust on the massive Woodside deal only settled 74 days ago, but already Henry has steered BHP into another M&A maelstrom via an $8.3 billion bid for copper, gold and nickel producer OZ Minerals.
The offer was vigorously rejected this week by an OZ board that was convinced the $25 per share offer seriously undervalued the long-term opportunity that could come by combining the two companies’ copper mines in South Australia and nickel assets in Western Australia.
But few think the matter ended with that rejection.
“There are no sureties here, but you would think that [$25 bid] was the opening except for BHP if they were seriously considering OZ Minerals, which they obviously are,” said Blackmore Capital chief investment officer Marcus Bogdan.
Blackmore’s blended Australian equities fund owns both BHP and OZ shares.
Bogdan said he was pleased to see BHP acting opportunistically amid a slump in copper prices and the share prices of copper producers.
But he would be happy for BHP to spend more on a higher bid for OZ.
“I am not sure it needs a three in it [an offer priced above $30 per share] but it certainly needs to be materially above where it is today,” he said.
“We don’t have a definitive price on it, but it is certainly higher than the $25.”
‘Sharp focus’ on critical areas
Power is floating at the best of times and that was reinforced to Henry when he assumed the role of chief executive on January 1, 2020 and immediately had his first year in the job hijacked by the pandemic.
The word filtering out of BHP through 2020 was that Henry was frustrated by the situation; Melbourne’s strict lockdowns served as an apt metaphor for the way his plan to reinvent BHP had been put on hold by the immediate priority of managing a global workforce through a health crisis.
A disciple of thorough, data-driven process, Henry would buckle at the suggestion that an earthly emotion like frustration could influence strategy at a huge multinational like BHP.
But in February, Henry said the pandemic had left him with a “sharp focus on the critical few things, and getting them done super quickly.”
“As a big organization, too often we’ve failed into trying to do lots of things in parallel over a longer timeframe,” he said then.
“I’m a big believer that you should do fewer things, but get them done more quickly, then move on to the next few things.”
An extraordinary boom in iron ore and coking coal prices over the past three years has left BHP’s balance sheet in rude health, meaning Henry can move as quickly as he likes on deals.
Unification of the corporate structure also means BHP will find it easier to offer scrip when acquiring.
Two and a half years in, the Henry era is clearly about decarbonising BHP’s portfolio and gaining more exposure to the commodities that will thrive in a future focused on electrification and environmental sustainability.
Simplistically, the OZ bid is on-strategy because it would provide BHP with more copper and nickel; two metals that are expected to enjoy strong demand as the world urbanises, buys more household appliances and tries to decarbonise through electric vehicles, batteries and other means.
On closer inspection, it’s also about solving two problems; BHP doesn’t dig up enough nickel ore to run its Kalgoorlie nickel smelter at full capacity and buying OZ would give it extra volumes through the West Musgrave nickel, copper and cobalt project, which is ready to be turned into a mine costing more than $1 billion.
Aside from volume, West Musgrave’s ore contains the right balance of magnesium and iron that the Kalgoorlie smelter needs to run well; a chemistry conundrum that has increasingly occupied BHP’s nickel division in recent years as the profile of its ore has gradually changed through depletion.
Another effort to make Olympic Dam work
The other puzzle that BHP could solve by acquiring OZ – and the biggest motivation behind the deal – lies at South Australia’s Olympic Dam.
There are many reasons why Olympic Dam has been a difficult mine for BHP and delivered close to zero return on capital employed (ROCE) since it was obtained via the acquisition of Western Mining Corporation 17 years ago.
High uranium levels are the first challenge; state, federal and international governments have strict rules about the transport of radioactive materials such as uranium.
An aerial view of one of the Olympic Dam mines. AP
Olympic Dam’s high uranium content forces BHP to fully process the ore right through to the end of the energy-intensive process that makes red sheets of metal, about one square meter in size.
Most other copper miners, including OZ, have less uranium in their geology so can transport and export their copper as a gray concentrate that looks like soil.
OZ’s concentrate is an intermediate product and so requires far less processing; the Adelaide company’s customers do the smelting of the concentrate to turn it into pure metal.
Uranium is not the only challenge; the orebody at Olympic Dam is enormous but very deep underground and the copper occurs inconsistently throughout it, which is the opposite of what mining companies prefer.
Bringing the high-grade concentrate from OZ’s two nearby mines and blending it with the stuff BHP digs up at Olympic Dam would enable BHP to deliver a more consistent and predictable product into its smelter and refinery.
The blended product would also likely contain more copper than BHP sometimes puts into the system; the same volumes of a higher grade feedstock would derive more copper out the back end of Olympic Dam.
“Often times, when people think about growth, it’s all around growth in production. Now, growing production is a big lever, but really we should be thinking about growth as being growth in value, ”said Henry in February, when talking about his attitude from him to M&A.
‘Single point failures’
Other challenges at Olympic Dam are man made; Western Mining built infrastructure befitting a mid-tier miner.
BHP would have done it very differently if it had built the mine.
The mine design, where the capacity of the mine is roughly the same as the capacity of the refinery and the smelter, means that if one part of the system fails or underperforms, the whole system underperforms.
In that sense, Olympic Dam runs more like an integrated steel mill than a mine; there is “just in time” delivery from one part to the next unless it struggles.
Insiders refer to this as Olympic Dam’s series of “single point failures”.
If BHP had access to extra copper concentrate volumes from OZ, the smelter and refinery at Olympic Dam would be the bottleneck in the system; a much better scenario than the mine being the bottleneck.
BHP could fix Olympic Dam’s “single point failure” problem by building new mine shafts, concentrators, smelters and refineries, but it would be expensive; we can reasonably deduce that spending $8.3 billion buying OZ is the cheaper option.
There might also be productivity benefits at the two OZ mines – Prominent Hill and Carrapateena – if paired with Olympic Dam’s smelter and refinery.
OZ must mine selectively to avoid patches of ore that contain high levels of uranium because its regulators and customers won’t tolerate transportation of a concentrate with high uranium levels.
There have been numerous occasions in the past decade when a batch of ore from Prominent Hill was processed at Olympic Dam because it contained higher than normal levels of uranium.
Many believe uranium will become a bigger issue for OZ as its mines get older, the easiest bits of the resource have already been cherry-picked.
A full combination with BHP would reduce the need for Prominent Hill and Carrapateena to be mined selectively to avoid uranium, and that would probably deliver a productivity benefit and extend mine life.
OZ and BHP have talked on numerous occasions over the years about establishing a regular offtake agreement for OZ’s concentrate to be processed at Olympic Dam.
OZ has traditionally been reluctant to become too reliant on its big neighbor, and transactions have been sporadic.
If a merger can’t be struck, a deal for BHP to buy more of OZ’s concentrate could be a consolation prize.
“I think it makes strategic sense for BHP as it de-weights its exposure to iron ore and brings in a commodity that will become a more significant part of the portfolio,” says Bogdan.
“You want to be exposed to those metals that are going to be beneficiaries of decarbonisation and both copper and nickel form a key part of that.
“I think this transition that we are seeing is probably one of the most significant themes of the next decade.”
It was touted as a heavyweight bout between two sides who hate each other and it even featured some late biff in the Riff, but it was Melbourne who issued a Storm warning that should strike fear into the rest of the NRL.
It was less than a month ago that Craig Bellamy said he was unsure whether the Storm could turn things around to go on a famous premiership run after they’d just lost their fourth game on the trot.
But the legendary Storm coach might need to be a bit more arrogant after three-straight wins, including a statement victory over the defending premiers on Thursday night that has them primed for a top-four finish.
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“It was important for us because we’ve been hanging around the bottom of the top four,” Bellamy said.
“I thought that was our best performance for quite some time. That’s as well as we’ve defended for a year or two.”
The Storm were without halfback Jahrome Hughes (shoulder) but they smelled blood in the water and feasted on the makeshift Panthers spine in a performance reminiscent of years gone by when they were the NRL’s apex predators.
It was a night to remember for the small contingent of Storm fans at BlueBet Stadium, and it was Melbourne’s biggest human who stole the show with a brutal display in an unfamiliar role.
Nelson Asofa-Solomona was like a wrecking ball on the right, terrorizing Penrith’s edge defenders while at the same time blunting Viliame Kikau’s impact by simply clogging up gaps in the line.
The man mountain relished the extra room out wide with 62 meters, five tackle busts and three offloads in a barnstorming 37-minute stint as the visitors racked up an insurmountable 16-0 lead by halftime.
While he did plenty in attack, his most telling play was in defense when he somehow denied a rampaging Kikau over the line, which then led to David Nofoaluma’s first try in Storm colors from the ensuing set.
Injuries mount for mountain men
They’ve enjoyed one of the smoothest years imaginable, but things are starting to look a bit rough for the Panthers just a few weeks out from the finals.
The defending premiers were missing starting halves Nathan Cleary and Jarome Luai as well as powerhouse prop James Fisher-Harris, while they were also dealt a massive blow before kick-off when courageous fullback Dylan Edwards was ruled out after he copped a battering in Canberra last week.
Things got worse on Thursday night with NSW representative Liam Martin rolling his left ankle so badly that he had to be helped from the field by two trainers and was on crutches in the dressing room.
Penrith’s depth is the envy of the league but even they can’t win the comp if they continue to rack up injuries every week, and Thursday’s performance will give their rivals hope that they are in fact fallible.
The mass changes took their toll with the Panthers producing their worst half of football at home since 2017.
They enjoyed the bulk of possession and territory after the break but couldn’t cross the stripe as they were held scoreless at home for the first time since 2015 against who else but the Storm.
“I thought there were some combination issues for us tonight,” Ivan Cleary said. “It was a good lesson for our younger guys.”
Precious Olam
Justin Olam has failed to match his dazzling form of 2021, but the center built of granite produced his best game of the season as a replenished Storm backline showed how potent it can be when the troops are back on deck.
The hitman produced two monstrous shots in defense that Jaeman Salmon and Brian To’o will be feeling for weeks, but it was his dazzling speed that caught the Panthers by surprise.
Olam scorched his way down the sideline to set up the returning Nick Meaney with a pinpoint chip kick and nearly produced an identical play for Cameron Munster to end the half.
oh so close
Waqa Blake produced the finish of the year last week but it would’ve been a short time at the top if Xavier Coates had been able to pull off the most miraculous grounding of all time.
The Storm winger’s body was in Melbourne yet he somehow managed to stretch his arm towards the line, only for the ball to come free an inch from the line after a big shot by Charlie Staines.
It wasn’t the only unique piece of play with Tui Kamikamica playing a big part in Brandon Smith’s try when he pushed ‘the Cheese’ into a hole before he sped straight past Staines.
GPs have warned that a push by pharmacists to allow access to COVID-19 antivirals treatments without a prescription could jeopardize patient safety.
Photo: Diego Fedele/AAP
There are two oral antivirals available in Australia, and while early treatment is critical to lessen the effects of the virus, access is restricted.
All Australians over 70 and people over 50 at risk of severe disease from COVID-19 are eligible to access the treatments, and patients need a prescription from a GP or a nurse practitioner.
Australia’s pharmacy body is asking the federal government to consider allowing the medications to be supplied over the counter to allow people to have faster access to them upon infection.
Pharmacy Guild president Trent Twomey said patients were frustrated with wait times for GP appointments which led to delays in being able to access the treatments.
But patient safety must always be prioritised, the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners said.
While more action must be taken to ensure treatments are provided to those who need them quickly, over the counter dispensing is not the answer, RACGP president Karen Price said.
“Allowing pharmacists to prescribe and dispense antivirals will not improve access and there are significant risks to patients,” Professor Price said.
“These drugs have what we call ‘contraindications’ which is the term used to describe when a particular treatment should not be used, as well as interactions with other common medications.”
General practitioners know the health history of their patients and can assess the potential impacts of the antivirals while pharmacies can’t, Price said.
“Pharmacies should keep their focus on the job at hand, which is availability of stock, rather than the supply of oral antivirals without a prescription,” she said.
“There should be a website showing where stock is available, as they have previously done for rapid antigen test stocks.” Price said the antiviral treatments can be the difference between a patient having mild effects from the virus or ending up in hospital.
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“However, we must proceed with caution because the last thing we want to do is potentially endanger patients,” she said.
Following antiviral treatment access being expanded in July, Health Minister Mark Butler said prescription rates almost tripled.
Australia recorded more than 27,000 COVID-19 cases and 133 deaths on Wednesday and there are nearly 4,500 people in hospital with the virus.
-AAP
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A CEO has sparked a major debate online after posting a selfie of himself crying on LinkedIn following layoffs he made at his company.
Braden Wallake, who runs the Ohio-based business-to-business marketing agency Hypersocial in the US, shared the picture on Wednesday.
The post has since received more than 6,700 comments and nearly 33,000 reactions.
“This will be the most vulnerable thing I’ll ever share. I’ve gone back and forth whether to post this or not. We just had to lay off a few of our employees. I’ve seen a lot of layoffs over the last few weeks on LinkedIn. Most of those are due to the economy, or whatever other reason. Ours? My fault.” Wallake wrote alongside the picture that shows tears streaming down his face from him.
Wallake says he made a decision in February that eventually led to the layoffs. He has not yet explained what this decision was but said on LinkedIn that he planned to do so in the future.
Describing the layoffs as the “toughest thing” he has ever had to do, Wallake said he loved his employees and wished that he was “a business owner that was only money driven and didn’t care about who he hurt along the way”.
‘Yes, I am the crying CEO’
Some LinkedIn users mocked Wallake’s post, calling him “out of touch” and “cringe-worthy” or suggested that he should focus on helping his former employees rather than on how the situation had affected him.
“Por favor. Laying off people is horrific for you, but more horrific for them. It’s about taking care of their welfare, not grief posting for your own likes. This is ungracious, gratuitous, insensitive and tacky. Grow up, look after those people who you claim to be so worried about, own your mistakes privately and stop being so narcissistic,” one commenter wrote.
Others supported Wallake, saying they understood laying people off was an emotional process, and praised his openness.
This includes one of his former employees, Noah Smith, who defended his former boss and said he would only want to work for managers like him.
“To those who would look to hire me, I’m only interested in working for people like Braden Wallake who has a positive outlook on life. I’m not interested in working for you if you think working more hours ONLY to make more money is the most valuable way to spend your time.”
Wallake followed up his original message with a follow-up post, saying, “Hey everyone, yes, I am the crying CEO. No, my intent was not to make it about me or victimize myself. I am sorry it came across that way.”
“It was not my place to out the employees’ names publicly,” he continued. “What I want to do now, is trying to make better of this situation and start a thread for people looking for work.”
Hypersocial was not immediately available to comment when contacted by CNBC.
A broader trend?
André Spicer, professor of organizational behavior at Bayes Business School, told CNBC that the post is unsurprising considering current management trends.
“It’s a trend, CEOs and leaders have been encouraged to be authentic and bring their real selves to work,” Spicer said. “It’s showing your real emotions and real reactions and people are kind of encouraged to display this through a lot of current management thinking … so it’s not surprising.”
He added that Wallake appeared to be navigating a delicate balancing act between being too authentic and not authentic enough – sometimes referred to as bounded authenticity.
“So ideally, what this guy should have done is sort of used bounded authenticity, where he was a bit honest about the mistakes he’d made and he’ll admit to this, but then not turning it into a pity party about himself, basically.”
North Melbourne has reportedly tabled a “lengthy offer” to mastercoach Alastair Clarkson for 2023 and beyond.
The Age reports a contract of at least five years has been put to Clarkson to join the Roos and take over from caretaker Leigh Adams.
Fox Footy’s Mark Robinson said he believes the Clarkson-Kangaroos deal is “past the post.”
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“Everyone’s a little bit scared to declare it because Alastair Clarkson has got the ability to change his mind and say: ‘I’m not coaching’,” he said on 3AW.
“But the further this goes on, I find that can’t happen.”
Commentator Tim Lane said a deal between Clarkson and North Melbourne would be “exciting”.
“North Melbourne people will be ecstatic by this,” he said on 3AW.
“For them to get Clarkson back to the club, where he began his career, he also won a premiership in 2008 with a team that won before its time and that should never be forgotten.
McRae reiterates hope to re-sign De Goey | 00:36
“Clarkson’s won four flags – no ones won more since Norm Smith.
“To have him in the firing line and back at that battling club is brilliant.”
North Melbourne and GWS are both vying for four-time premiership coach’s services after he finished up at Hawthorn at the end of 2021.
Both clubs have met with Clarkson in recent weeks, with the Hawks’ mentor set to make a final call before the end of the home and away season.
It is understood the Giants are yet to officially present Clarkson with an offer.
They are reportedly still speaking with other candidates like Adem Yze (Melbourne), Adam Kingsley (Richmond) and their current caretaker Mark McVeigh.
Robinson said he believes Yze is the frontrunner to take the reins at the Giants, while Leigh Matthews said he didn’t think GWS were going as hard as the Roos for Clarkson.
Hinkley set to remain Port coach | 01:01
“North are head hunting Alastair Clarkson,” he said on 3AW.
“I don’t think the Giants are doing that.”
Clarkson has previously said he’d make a call on his future in August, which has just over a fortnight to run.
Former Collingwood president Eddie McGuire said the Roos had gone “all in” trying to sign Clarkson earlier this month, and said the club was a “real chance” of landing his signature.
Clarkson’s manager James Henderson told McGuire that the meeting went “very well” and that it was “a worthwhile experience”.
“There is no Plan B (for North) at the moment,” McGuire said at the time.
North parted ways with former coach David Noble a month ago after just 38 games in charge and Leigh Adams has been caretaker in Noble’s absence.
Just last month reports emerged Clarkson was demanding a whopping $1.6 million a season to return to coaching, but he responded to that by calling the figure “bulls**t”.
A man has faced court in Ballarat after police discovered gold nuggets, illicit drugs, and hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash.
Key points:
Gold nuggets worth $17K are among the items seized
A man has been arrested and charged over the haul
He made no application for bail and will return to court for a committal mention in October
Police say they raided a motel on Main Road, Golden Point, about 11pm yesterday.
Mark McKay, 48, was arrested before police allegedly located stolen jewelry, more than $250,000 in cash, and gold nuggets worth about $17,000.
Officers said they also seized a large amount of methylamphetamine, cannabis, and cocaine.
They said the raid was part of a long-running drug investigation.
A Ballarat man has been charged over the discovery.(ABC Ballarat: Laura Mayers)
Mr McKay has been charged with trafficking a large commercial quantity of methylamphetamine, trafficking cocaine and trafficking cannabis.
He is also accused of three counts of possessing drugs of dependence, dealing with the proceeds of crime, and committing indictable offenses while on bail.
The 48-year-old was remanded overnight and faced the Ballarat Magistrates Court today.
He made no application for bail and will return to court for a committal mention in October.
An Australian TikTok identity and op-shop lover has called out second hand stores across the country for bumping up their prices as an op-shopping trend gains popularity.
Melbourne based influencer Jaclyn has raised awareness through her platform about prices skyrocketing in her local thrift stores, saying she is “over” the price tags on recycled goods.
She said the rise in prices, especially for brands like Shein and Zara, is turning people towards fast fashion retailers instead of them supporting recycled clothing outlets.
Thrift stores, unlike vintage stores, have their pieces donated to them, and shouldn’t be charging as much, according to Jaclyn.
“Is anyone else getting completely over Australian thrift store prices these days?” she asked her audience.
“They just charge an arm and a leg for absolutely anything.”
She said she has grown up shopping at thrift stores and has continued the trend into her adulthood.
“I used to like the thrill of the hunt and finding a really special piece for a bargain price, but it seems that it’s getting kind of impossible to do that now,’ she said.
She called out thrift stores for taking advantage of people, particularly younger shoppers, now that “thrifting is quite a popular thing to do”.
She said if she wanted to spend that kind of money, she’d rather visit a vintage store instead.
Thrifting, or op-shopping, has become popular in recent years as a way for young people to find cheap, recycled clothing.
Shoppers are able to find unique pieces, without feeling like they’re leaving an environmental footprint by shopping at fast fashion retailers.
Three children under the age of four walked out of a childcare center in Perth’s south and were found playing on a footpath, prompting a fine for the operators of the service.
Service provider ES5 Ltd, trading as Buggles Child Care Beeliar, was ordered to pay $22,000 and $2000 in costs by the State Administrative Tribunal for contravention of education and care service laws.
A Department of Communities investigation found that in August last year the children left the center through an outdoor gate.
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A mother who was leaving after collecting her child noticed the children and ushered them back inside.
The investigation found educators at the center had noticed the gate left open more than once during the day and failed to notify the responsible person.
They also failed to ensure the gate was securely locked while the center failed to notify the Department of Communities Education and Care Regulatory Unit about the incident within the required 24 hours.
“This is the ninth time over the past two years where disciplinary action has been taken against a service where children have left the service unattended, and staff have been unaware of them leaving,” Department of Communities Executive Director Phil Payne said in a statement on Friday.
“Childcare service staff must focus on active supervision of children in their care.
“Checks around outdoor areas should include a physical, not just visual, check of gates to ensure they are securely locked.”
In other unrelated incidents, a Mandurah center was ordered to pay $20,000 in penalties and costs after four young children climbed through a fence and were found on the verge of a four-lane highway, in August 2020.
While in November that year a childcare center at Thornlie left a two-year-old girl unsupervised on a bus for almost two hours.