Categories
Entertainment

Shaquille O’Neal and Former InStyle editor Laura Brown in Australia on speakers’ circuit

Jarrod Scott and Briony Prior rubbed shoulders with Jamie Foxx.

Jarrod Scott and Briony Prior rubbed shoulders with Jamie Foxx.Credit:

The dazzling charity gala, hosted by the actor Jamie Foxxraised €8 million through an auction to support Ukrainian and Syrian relief efforts.

Jennifer Lopez blew guests away with a show-stopping performance, sporting a feather-adorned, animal-print Roberto Cavalli jumpsuit and her new wedding band.

Lopez treated star-studded guests to a jam-packed set list featuring her own hits, including Waiting For Tonight and on the floorplus disco classics such as Gloria Gaynor’s I Will Survive and Gloria Estefan’s cover of Turn the Beat Around.

Lopez’s big night marks her first major performance as Mrs Ben Affleck. The pair tied the knot in Las Vegas last month and jetted off to France to celebrate their honeymoon in Paris.

Scott himself did his bit for charity modeling a Hublot watch that sold for €75,000.

Scott himself did his bit for charity modeling a Hublot watch that sold for €75,000.Credit:

While the blushing groom was nowhere to be seen at the gala, it was attended by an extensive list of Hollywood celebrity guests such as Leonardo Dicaprio, Vanessa Hudgens, Jared Leto, Leni Klum, diplo, Karolina Kurkovathe Haim sisters, Caylee Cooper and Casey Affleck.

Scott did his bit for charity, modeling a Hublot watch that sold for €75,000.

Surprise couple build property portfolio

They were the talk of Sydney’s eastern suburbs when their age-gap romance set tongues wagging, now several years on, Andrew Spire and Julia Maguire are making their mark on Sydney’s property scene.

Emerald City can reveal the couple splashed $9 million on a four-bedroom Vaucluse home that boasts harbor views in October last year. The pair already shared 11 investment properties together including a Shoal Bay weekender and a block of apartments in Elizabeth Bay.

In 2020, the couple paid $3.41 million – $310,000 above reserve – for three two-bedroom apartments and a one-bedder at 72 Elizabeth Bay Road.

Spira, 23, is the son of a socialite Lizzie Buttrose – the snow of Ita Buttrose – and is the founder and chief of business-loan broker Pineapple Funding. Ms Maguire, 37, is the executive director of media relations agency The Capital Network.

Julia Maguire with Andrew Spira outside their Elizabeth Bay apartment.

Julia Maguire with Andrew Spira outside their Elizabeth Bay apartment.Credit:Louise Kennerley

The couple first made headlines in 2019 with Emerald City’s exclusive that the pair, who met through Buttrose, had begun a relationship. They are now understood to be engaged.

Shaquille O’Neal to take up residence at The Star

NBA hall-of-famer and pop-cultural giant Shaquille O'Neil is set to take over Sydney's very own Marquee club on August 27 for a mammoth EDM set.

NBA hall-of-famer and pop-cultural giant Shaquille O’Neil is set to take over Sydney’s very own Marquee club on August 27 for a mammoth EDM set.Credit:Getty

nba legend Shaquille O’Neal is heading Down Under this month for the first time in 20 years, for a series of speaking engagements and public appearances across Sydney and Melbourne.

While in town, Emerald City hears Shaq and his large entourage will take up residence at The Star’s Darling Hotel, residing in a penthouse suite that cost upwards of $5000 a night.

The Darling is the only hotel in the city with a Forbes five-star rating. Rumor has it he’ll be shooting hoops in the middle of The Star Sports Bar during his stay in the Harbor City.

While in town, he’ll dust off his DJ Diesel name for an exclusive DJ set at The Star’s Marquee nightclub.

Categories
Sports

Kookaburras show flaws, but find a way to beat England 3-2 in men’s hockey semi-final at Commonwealth Games

The Kookaburras are human.

It is not something we have often seen at the Commonwealth Games, where they have won all six gold medals in the competition’s history.

But they almost missed the gold medal match, after an aggressive, inspired, and amped-up England side threatened to pull off an incredible upset.

The Kookaburras sailed through the pool stage, as they so often do, racking up big score lines and making big statements.

It was different against the Englishmen.

They smothered the world’s top-ranked team and stifled their flow.

They walked a fine line, and at times stepped over it too, receiving two yellow cards and a green card during the game.

“You play the Aussies, they come out hard, they look to throw punches, to knock you down, and kill the game,” England captain Zach Wallace said.

“The plan was to go out and throw punches back, and we did that. We got them running the other way. I just went at them, it was like a boxing match.”

If it went to a points decision, it might have gone in England’s favour, but the Kookaburras found a way to land the knockout blow, and come back from 2-0 down, to win 3-2.

Kookaburras grind to ‘ugly’ win

The hosts started with intent and looked especially dangerous on the counterattack.

Phil Roper put them ahead in the first quarter, then a penalty stroke in the second quarter saw Wallace give them a 2-0 lead.

“They play a bit different, a bit more of a marking team, so they definitely put us under pressure early,” Kookaburras midfielder Daniel Beale said.

“Ideally, we don’t like to go two goals down that early in the game. (But) we trust in this group to be able to come back from anywhere.”

And the comeback arrived, in a slow, measured grind, rather than in a blaze of glory.

The Australian men's hockey squad gather in a tight circle with their arms around each others' shoulders.
The Australians said they always believed they could come back to win the match.(Getty Images: Tom Dulat)

“Things don’t go your way, you have to crawl your way out, fight a little bit, you probably need a bit of luck” co-captain Eddie Ockenden said.

“I didn’t question that we would be able to do it. It’s not like we got on a big run, we just had to edge our way through a bit of attrition.”

“They started the game very well, and we were certainly on the backfoot,” Kookaburras coach Colin Batch said.

“I think they got a lot of confidence from that situation, so it was a huge challenge just to get up to our level and it took a long time to get there.”

One of the Kookaburras’ most reliable sources for goals, Blake Govers, again delivered when needed from a penalty corner to make it 2-1 at half-time.

And Jacob Anderson’s tomahawk drew them level, but the winning goal was the most contentious.

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Anderson took a quick free hit to penetrate the circle, and Beale capitalized to score.

It was reviewed to see whether Anderson had stopped the ball dead before taking the hit, and the goal stood.

“Probably one of the most timely goals in my career, very glad to put that one in the net and for the referral to stand,” Beale said.

England raided the Kookaburras in the final minutes, even substituting their goalkeeper for an extra field player to try and force a shootout.

And while overall the Kookaburras weren’t at their best, they still produced what was required when needed.

There were crucial saves from goalkeeper Andrew Charter, Flynn Ogilvy alerted on the post to bat away an attempt off a penalty corner, Jeremy Hayward blocking a shot on goal at the death, and Ockenden an overall calming presence to take the sting out of England’s bite .

An England hockey player in red lies on the astroturf with his hands over his face and his hockey stick lying next to him.
England captain Zach Wallace was distracted after losing the match.(Getty Images: Clive Brunskill)

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Categories
Australia

Queensland Country Women’s Association celebrates 100 years, sets sights on the future

Drive through any regional town in Queensland and you’ll be sure to find a Country Women’s Association hall.

They have been a home away from home for thousands of women across the farming state to meet for a cuppa and a chat while living in some of the most remote areas of the country, often on isolated stations or farms.

Now, 100 years on, members of the Country Women’s Association (CWA) across Queensland are celebrating the colossal impact of rural Australia’s largest advocacy group.

A black and white image of women
Women from the QCWA unpack cakes entered a cookery competition in 1962. (Supplied: State Library of Queensland)

Working to attract young women

A blue cake in the shape of '100' number
The QCWA is celebrating 100 years since it was formed in 1922. (Supplied: QCWA)

Traditionally renowned for their culinary prowess, the scones and cakes made by Queensland Country Women’s Association (QCWA) members have saved lives — raising millions of dollars for those struck by natural disasters and drought, women and children’s health, rural education, mental health, and disease.

Their long-established connections to communities and passion for coming together have seen armies of volunteers rally at the drop of a hat to effect change.

A black and white picture of a group of women
The QCWA state conferences remain a significant event for members of the organisation.(Supplied: Facebook)

As events launch across the state to mark the group’s centenary this August 11, QCWA state president Sheila Campbell says the organization has come a long way from “just scones.”

She says while cooking and craft remain a big part of the QCWA, the organization is working to attract younger women to the association.

“We’ve seen new branches start up in city areas that we didn’t have before, so it has evolved,” Ms Campbell said.

“The misconception is that we are just scones. We are not just scones, we advocate, we make things happen.”

A woman smiles for the camera
Sheila Campbell says the QCWA has come a long way. (ABC Features: Peter Gunders)

More recently, the work of the QCWA has involved making birthing kits for women in Papua New Guinea to create more hygienic labor environments.

The group also sends classroom supplies to schools in the South Pacific.

morella qcwa sign in front of old iron shed
QCWA’s Morella branch, north of Longreach, was formed in 1944 with 29 members.(Supplied: Gayle East)

Since 1990, the QCWA has provided payments for Queensland women and families suffering from natural disasters or other crises.

In some of the more remote QCWA branches, members are using the centenary to reflect on the impact they have made in their communities during difficult times and the difference they have made in the lives of each other.

A group of smiling women in a hall
The Cloncurry branch of the QCWA is one of the most remote branches in the state. (ABC North-West Queensland: Alexandra Treloar)

Cloncurry teacher and mother Tania Laffey didn’t know much about the QCWA when she joined.

Now it is an important part of her life.

“I really enjoy the atmosphere and the friendliness and casual side of it,” Ms Laffey said.

“As a mother, sometimes I needed to be somewhere other than at home.

“Especially in the wet season when you’ve been inside for days and you just want to get out to somewhere that is still clean, safe and dry… but it’s the friendships that keep me coming back.”

woman with boy sitting on lap play toy kitchen in background
Tania Laffey enjoys taking her 5-year-old son Gideon to local QCWA meetings. (ABC North-West Queensland: Alexandra Treloar)

Throughout the years, the Country Women’s Association has remained a constant, working to stay relevant to the modern times, as well as honoring the century-old traditions of the institution.

“I’m not sure the CWA has changed much over the time, its a different era… but we still do the same things we did 100 years ago,” QCWA state president Sheila Campbell said.

“Admittedly we are in cars these days not horses, but it still appeals to rural women.”

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Categories
US

1 killed in Sacramento County shooting, police say

One man is dead after a late-night shooting in Rancho Cordova, authorities said. The shooting happened on Friday around 11:21 pm in the 3000 block of Ramsgate Way, which is just off of Mather Field Road and near Folsom Boulevard, the Rancho Cordova Police Department said in a release on Saturday. Officers arrived after receiving a call from a woman that said her boyfriend had been shot and was lying on the ground. Life-saving measures were administered when authorities arrived and he was taken to an area hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said. It’s unclear what led up to the shooting. No details on a suspect were released by police. Detectives are asking anyone with information relating to the shooting to contact the sheriff’s office at 916-874-5115 or Sacramento Valley Crime Stoppers at 916-443-HELP. Tip information may also be left anonymously at www.sacsheriff.com or by calling 916-874-TIPS (8477). This is a developing story, stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.

One man is dead after a late-night shooting in Rancho Cordova, authorities said.

The shooting happened on Friday around 11:21 pm in the 3000 block of Ramsgate Way, which is just off of Mather Field Road and near Folsom Boulevard, the Rancho Cordova Police Department said in a release on Saturday.

Officers arrived after receiving a call from a woman that said her boyfriend had been shot and was lying on the ground. Life-saving measures were administered when authorities arrived and he was taken to an area hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said.

It’s unclear what led up to the shooting. No details on a suspect were released by police.

Detectives are asking anyone with information relating to the shooting to contact the sheriff’s office at 916-874-5115 or Sacramento Valley Crime Stoppers at 916-443-HELP. Tip information may also be left anonymously at www.sacsheriff.com or by calling 916-874-TIPS (8477).

This is a developing story, stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.

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Categories
Technology

Fitbit will end support for PC syncing this fail

Fitbit is discontinuing support for PC and Mac syncing. On a spotted by , the company said it would remove the option for users to sync their trackers over its Connect app on October 13th, 2022. After that date, the only way to transfer your data off your Fitbit wearable will be through the Fitbit mobile app. While the shutdown is unlikely to affect many people, it does mean there will be one less way to transfer your favorite songs to your wearable for offline playback.

“On October 13, 2022, we’re removing the option to transfer playlists to your Fitbit watch through your computer,” the company says on a . “You can continue to play personal music stored on your watch and transfer music to your watch with the Deezer app and Pandora app.”

In other words, if you use your Fitbit tracker or smartwatch for listening to music, you’ll need to depend on two music services that aren’t the most popular options out there. With the set to offer deep Fitbit integration, that probably won’t be much of an issue with new Fitbit wearables, but it is something current users will have to consider.

All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Categories
Entertainment

King Stingray review – irresistibly joyful debut album from the Yolngu surf-rock kings | australian music

Yot would be an understatement to bestow the cliche “long-awaited” upon King Stingray’s self-titled debut album. The Yirrkala band from north-east Arnhem Land have teased us with five singles. The first of them, Hey Wanhaka – which means “what’s happening?” – was released in late 2020; Get Me Out, Milkumana, Camp Dog and Let’s Go have all followed.

Adding to the considerable hype are the band’s bloodlines: the singer, Yirrnga Yunupingu, is the nephew of the Yothu Yindi leader, Dr M Yunupingu, while the guitarist, Roy Kellaway, is the son of the same band’s bass player, Stuart. Both also play in Yothu Yindi themselves.

The aforementioned five singles make up a full half of this album’s 10 tracks, with Get Me Out and Milkumana both nominated for Apra awards as song of the year. They have been all over the airwaves – and deservedly so. The fact that their self-described Yolngu surf-rock will already be familiar to many listeners in no way detracts from this sparkling record.

Indeed, it’s great to have them together in one place, fleshed out by five more songs that sit well alongside one another. Most bands would be proud to have a collection like this on a greatest hits album. But there’s no loss of continuity or context, with a natural ebb and flow reflecting this band’s relatively short existence.

It also highlights their deep roots. Yunupingu and Kellaway, brothers by adopted kinship, have known each other since childhood and play like it. They make everything sound easy – listening to the instantly appealing hook of Lupa, the opening track, and it’s hard to believe it hasn’t been a single, too. (It was a B-side to the limited seven-inch of Hey Wanhaka.)

weekend app

The emphasis is on Yolngu pride and uptempo, joyful celebration. Get Me Out, a song about getting out of the city and back to country, has an irresistible driving momentum. Where the Warumpi Band’s My Island Home ached with homesickness, Get Me Out captures the moment of “feeling the cool breeze on your face again” and the warm embrace of family.

Like Yothu Yindi, they can construct a perfect dance groove – Milkumana, which contains the nimblest of funk bass runs, could have appeared on Tribal Voice – and like the Warumpi Band, they can rock hard when they want to: Raypirri verges on heavy metal but the energy is all positive, lifted up by Yunupingu’s ecstatic vocals.

Sweet Arnhem Land, one of the new tracks here, is another highlight. It’s a perfect fusion of rock and manikay (traditional song), Dimathaya Burarrawanga’s shuddering yidaki playing adding weight to a basic four-on-the-floor beat. Life Goes On is an acoustic gem with beautiful choral harmonies, closer in sound to Elcho Island’s brilliant Saltwater Band than Yothu Yindi.

Regardless of their family connections, the one thing King Stingray doesn’t sound like is a throwback. This is not a revival act. Everything here sounds contemporary, by a band living their own dream, radiating with happiness and infectious enthusiasm. It’s happening.

Categories
Sports

AFL news 2022: Kane Cornes slams Buddy Franklin for contract saga, Sydney Swans

Former Port Adelaide star Kane Cornes has accused Sydney Swans forward Lance Franklin of selfishness, suggesting the eight-time All-Australian’s contract saga is distracting his teammates ahead of the finals.

Earlier this week, Nine journalist Michael Atkinson reported that Franklin was considering turning his back on the Swans for a deal with the Brisbane Lions.

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But on Saturday, Franklin’s management released a statement confirming the 35-year-old was still “undecided” about his future in the sport, officially putting contract talks on hold and hinting at a possible retirement.

“At this stage conversations have been paused around my contract so I can put all my focus on playing footy,” Franklin said.

“No further comment will be made until the season is done and I have decided about my future.

“I am still undecided and need time after the season to make a family decision about whether I continue to play next year.”

Speaking on Channel 9’s AFL Sunday Footy ShowCornes argued that Franklin’s “very strange” statement didn’t stop speculation about his future in the sport, but rather fanned the flames.

“It was a very ‘me, me, me’ thing to do, I thought, from Buddy Franklin when the Sydney Swans are flying,” he said on Sunday morning.

“They’d paid him $10 million over nine years… I’m not sure you need to release a statement prior to the game.

“What was the point of Buddy doing that?

“It didn’t alleviate any of the talk. It made the talk fester more.

“The day before a game to release a statement like that, I thought it was very strange.”

Franklin has been in excellent form this season, kicking 41 goals in 17 games for Swans. However, the ongoing contract drama has become a significant distraction for John Longmire’s side as they approach September.

Lions coach Chris Fagan believes that if Franklin is considering a move to Queensland it would be more likely to be for retirement rather than continuing his football career.

“I would have thought if they are moving to Queensland, that’s perhaps an indication that Bud’s going to retire from AFL football,” he said on Friday.

“If it came to pass down the track that they do move here, and. someone reaches out from his camp and suggests that he still wants to play, then we would be remiss as a footy club not to go and have a conversation with him.

“As far I’m concerned he’s a Sydney Swans player, and if any of that was going to happen, it would happen when the season’s all over.

“My latest communication with him was a text message I sent to him when he kicked his 1000th (AFL) goal which was four months ago.

“I don’t know what will play out in the future but the way I see it right now is if he is moving to Queensland to live, I would suggest that he’s going to retire.”

Franklin joined the Swans from the Hawthorn Hawks in 2014 on a nine-year, $10 million deal.

While he has been injured prone in recent years, the scenes of fans flooding onto the SCG when he kicked his 1000th career goal showed he is still one of the sport’s biggest drawcards.

The Swans will face North Melbourne at Marvel Stadium on Sunday afternoon, with the first bounce scheduled for 1.10pm AEST.

Read related topics:AdelaideSydney

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Categories
Australia

SpaceX to ‘check out’ outback space junk site, saying fall to Earth ‘within expectations’

A SpaceX representative says a team will travel to Australia after the recent discovery of a large piece of space junk on an outback property, saying the incident is “within the expected analyzed space of what can happen.”

Fragments of the SpaceX Dragon capsule were found in the NSW Snowy Mountains, after locals heard a loud bang on July 9, believed to be caused by the spacecraft re-entering Earth’s atmosphere.

Addressing reporters during a live streamed media conference from NASA’s Johnson Space Center on August 4, senior director of the SpaceX Human Spaceflight Program Benjamin Reed acknowledged the incident.

“We did get reports of debris of the Dragon trunk that had landed in the outback of Australia,” he said.

“We actually have a team that’s going to check that out.”

Mr Reed told the conference SpaceX had been working with the Federal Aviation Administration and the Australian Space Agency as part of this process, saying the incident fell within expectations.

“The important news is of course there was no injury or damage,” he said.

“Also importantly is this was all within the expected analyzed space of what can happen.”

a dog looks at a piece of space junk
This piece of space junk is estimated to be about three meters long.(ABC South East NSW: Adriane Reardon)

Companies require permission from the US government prior to launching space craft, which includes filling out an orbital debris report.

Mr Reed alluded to that as part of his response.

“You have an expected path of where things may come down and this particular debris was within that analyzed space,” he said.

“It’s part of the process we do with NASA, with FAA, internally and we use models that are all jointly approved to predict and plan for these things.”

Mr Reed’s comments to the August 4 conference appear to be the only public comments that have been made by SpaceX about the incident so far. The ABC has contacted SpaceX.

so arrogant

The discovery of SpaceX debris has triggered both intrigue and concern from space experts about whether space activity needs to be better managed.

Space Law Lecturer at UNSW Canberra Duncan Blake says the explanation from Mr Reed about the incident was too vague.

“I’m not satisfied with that response,” he said.

“I think it’s a bit dismissive and I think that SpaceX ought to be doing more than simply saying that it was within their analysis.”

a man smiles at the camera sitting in a lab
Duncan Blake is a space law lecturer at UNSW Canberra.(Supplied: Duncan Blake/UNSW Canberra)

Mr Blake believes the comments imply that SpaceX was aware before hand of the possibility of space debris would land in somewhere like Australia, and decided the risk was acceptable.

He says the company needs to be more open and communicative with Australia if that’s the case.

“I wonder whether they coordinated with Australia when they made that risk assessment,” he said.

“If they didn’t, then that seems somewhat arrogant to make a decision that affects Australia without consulting Australians.”

Coverage cost

Confirmation that SpaceX will eventually visit Australia has been welcomed, with an expectation the pieces will have to be repatriated back to the US.

“They need to come to Australia,” Mr Blake said.

“The space object belongs to SpaceX and they may want the space debris returned to them.”

“If there are any costs involved in doing that, in cleaning up, then they’re obliged to cover those costs.”

a man stands in a paddock holding space junk
Jock Wallace found this piece of space junk on his sheep farm.(ABC South East NSW: Adriane Reardon)

As part of the media conference, SpaceX’s Mr Reed noted that there was always room for improvement.

“We look very closely at the data, we learn everything that we can,” he said.

“We always look for the ways we can improve things but again, this was within analyzed space, within expectation.”

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Categories
US

Maryland police arrest man who allegedly vandalized a church and wrote offensive message

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Police in Maryland arrested a man on Friday who they believe vandalized a church and wrote an offensive message on its door.

The incident happened on Aug. 3 when Donald Eugene Hood, Jr., 66, allegedly vandalized Kingdom Celebration Center in Gambrills, Maryland, at about 9:15 pm, according to the Anne Arundel County Police Department.

When police officers arrived at the scene, they found an “offensive message” on the door of the church.

Police said the suspect was identified through surveillance cameras.

MAJOR CITIES SEE 50% INCREASE IN HOMICIDES SINCE 2019: POLICE ORG

The incident happened on August 3 when Donald Eugene Hood, Jr., 66, allegedly vandalized Kingdom Celebration Center in Gambrills, Maryland, at about 9:15 pm, according to the Anne Arundel County Police Department.

The incident happened on August 3 when Donald Eugene Hood, Jr., 66, allegedly vandalized Kingdom Celebration Center in Gambrills, Maryland, at about 9:15 pm, according to the Anne Arundel County Police Department.
(Anne Arundel County Police Department)

Hood was arrested on Friday and charged with malicious destruction of property, three counts related to destruction, harassment and targeting a group based on their racial, ethnic, sexual orientation or disability status.

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Police said Hood was released on his own recognizance after an initial hearing.

Categories
Business

It’s your life and your money, but financial advice can help

I am aged 59, my wife is 58 and our two adult children have moved out. I took a redundancy in 2020 and my wife and I do part-time contract work, earning about $80,000 and $40,000 a year, respectively. Our Melbourne home is worth about $1.5 million, and we have an investment property in regional Victoria, bought in 2011 for $290,000 and now worth about $850,000, but needing $30,000 in repairs. I have $680,000 in superannuation and my wife, $270,000, and we both plan to transition to retirement in the next 12-18 months. A financial advisor has quoted $3000 for a statement of advice and then ongoing fees of $200 a month each. We would like to renovate the investment property, move there for about 12 months, sell our Melbourne house and use that money to buy a smaller Melbourne property, as we have aging parents there. We would then sell the investment property. We need advice to time these various steps. Is this a sound strategy and is the price quoted for advice good value for money? AB

If you feel you need financial advice, the quote is roughly in line with the average for investment advice. It may appear high, but it is being driven up by the high costs of compliance, along with Australian Securities and Investments Commission fees.

The cost of obtaining financial advice is climbing.

The cost of obtaining financial advice is climbing.Credit:

As long as you do not take on any debt and can continue to earn your current income, which I assume meet your expenses, I cannot see why you should not do what you want to do. It’s your life and your money.

The one thing I would point out is that you do not appear to have enough in super on which to retire at a relatively young age and, if you start drawing transition-to-retirement pensions, you would be reducing your retirement savings. So, it is arguably important that you keep earning income and maximizing your savings.

If moving out of the city means giving up your incomes, perhaps it would be better not to do so, and thus not spend money on renovating a regional property at a time of falling prices.

In a recent column, you commented “Just ensure you have receipts” when referring to share trades. This is a real problem for will executors or those exercising a power of attorney over another’s affairs. Capital gains tax has been around for about 40 years. However, many shareholders have used a “set and forget” approach, especially for blue-chip shares paying regular dividends. Often, a solicitor or tax agent have sold their practice, or a stockbroker’s records do not go back that far. Does the Australian Taxation Office acknowledge these situations and provide any guidelines where it is almost impossible to turn up the original paperwork? rj

To the best of my knowledge, the ATO does not. When I have asked, the reply is simply that it requires taxpayers to keep good records.

Look for the taxpayer’s Securityholder Reference Number (SRN) or Holder Identification Number (HIN) on any correspondence.

The SRN or HIN is a unique identifier for shareholdings within a company. It can often be found on an initial holding statement, or on the butt of a dividend check or payment advice. Share register records should give a date of purchase.