Categories
US

Orban addresses conservative confab in Texas, setting the stage for Trump speech this weekend

The right-wing European leader hit guaranteed applause lines — including telling the Texas crowd that “Hungary is the Lone Star State of Europe” — and criticizing liberals, the news media and the Democratic Party.

Trump, who is weighing when to announce his expected third run for the Republican presidential nomination, will give the final speech of the multiday CPAC Texas, an offshoot of the annual Conservative Political Action Conference. The confab began Thursday and is organized by the American Conservative Union.
Among the others slated to appear in Dallas are Republican elected officials and GOP candidates in the upcoming midterm elections.
CPAC and its organizers remain friendly to Trump, and the conservative activist attendees have been overwhelmingly supportive of his political future. He has easily won the informal straw polls held at events like this since leaving office, including at the 2022 CPAC in February and the 2021 CPAC Texas last summer.
Yet Trump’s speech comes as his position within the broader GOP is strong but slightly diminished. Months of uneven results for his preferred candidates in Republican primaries have shown small cracks in his otherwise overwhelming loyalty among GOP voters. And the summer’s televised hearings by the House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol have highlighted the public case against Trump’s actions ahead and during the riot.
Since then, Trump has seen others emerge as potential rivals for the Republican nomination in 2024 — including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former Vice President Mike Pence.
Neither DeSantis nor Pence will be speaking this week, but other potential GOP candidates for president are scheduled to appear, including Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who is running for a third term in November, and Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Rick Scott of Florida.
Also appearing will be several Republican candidates on the ballot in the November midterms, including Senate nominee JD Vance of Ohio, gubernatorial candidates Kari Lake of Arizona and Tudor Dixon of Michigan, and House candidate Sarah Palin of Alaska — all of whom were endorsed by Trump.

Orban’s appeal to conservatives

Among the more controversial figures invited to speak at CPAC Texas is Orban, who has been embraced by elements of the American conservative movement in recent years.

The nationalist European leader has pushed forth restrictive immigration policies and clamped down on democratic institutions in Hungary while consolidating his own power.

In his Thursday afternoon address in Dallas, Orban argued that his nationalist agenda in Hungary aligns with the goals of the American conservative movement — sounding a lot like Trump.

“Progressive liberals didn’t want me to be here because they knew what I would tell you, because I am here to tell you that we should unite our forces,” Orban said.

Orban has also faced condemnation for remarks seen as racist, anti-immigrant and anti-Semitic. Last month in Romania, Orban delivered a speech that a longtime aide denounced her as a “pure Nazi text” in her subsequent resignation letter.

While he largely stayed away from that sort of inflammatory rhetoric in Dallas, he did mock the criticism of him being racist and anti-Semitic. “A Christian politician cannot be racist,” Orban said.

Orban defended his 16-year tenure as prime minister, touting his hardline immigration policies and his calling his fight against democratic institutes part of a “culture war,” going after same-sex marriage and transgender rights.

Prompting the loudest standing ovation of his speech, Orban said: “To sum up: the mother is a woman, the father is a man, and leave our kids alone. Full stop, end of discussion.”

Orban’s nationalist rhetoric has won him some admirers among conservatives in the United States, including Trump, who met with Orban recently at his Bedminster, New Jersey, golf club. Trump endorsed Orban’s bid for another term earlier this year and has repeatedly praised the Hungarian leader — including during a 2019 visit to the White House.
Another fan of Orban’s is Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who traveled to the Central European country last year and anchored his show from Budapest. And earlier this year, Orban praised Carlson during a speech at CPAC Hungary, an event in Budapest co-sponsored by the ACU.

This headline and story have been updated with additional details.

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Categories
Business

Australians To Be Flying On Electric Planes From 2024, Experts Say

Forget getting Teslas as Ubers or zipping around town on electric scooters – aviation experts agree that Australians will be able to travel on electric aircraft from 2024…


While things might seem a bit doom and gloom at the moment – ​​the world just went through a massive pandemic, monkeypox is running rampant and Australia’s recently faced detrimental flooding, with more to come – there have actually been some incredible advances in technology lately.

For example, regular joes (with a spare $50,000) can soon travel to space, and Australians will be able to fly on electric aircraft, which will produce far fewer carbon emissions than your average passenger plane, from as early as 2024 – at least according to aviation experts.

Rex Airlines have announced that it’s going to retrofit some of its plans with electric-propulsion engines and will be the first Australian airline to trial the new technology on selected commercial regional flights.

“We will be doing trials in 2024, with a real aircraft, where we’ll swap out the existing engine, which burns jet fuel… we’ll put in an electric motor that will be supported by a combination of both batteries and hydrogen, ” John Sharp, Rex’s Deputy Chairman, told abcnews.

“Between the batteries and the hydrogen, the electric motor will drive the airplane through the air and get you from A to B.”

John Sharp, Rex Airlines Deputy Chairman

The first Australian electric plane, Pipistrel’s Alpha Electro (pictured above), took off in 2019. Image Credit: Richard Charlton

And it’s not just Rex getting in on the electric action. Keith Tonkin, managing director of Aviation Projects, also spoke to abcnews, sharing that multiple Australian airlines and aircraft manufacturers are developing and investing in electric aircraft. Tonkin also believes that within two years, Australians will have the option to fly on electric aircraft for short trips.

“The technology is working. It’s been proven in trial flight, and we can do a lot in two years.”

Keith Tonkin, Aviation Projects Managing Director

Center for Aviation Chairman Emeritus Peter Harbison agrees, and further added that while electric aircraft won’t be capable of traveling long distances anytime soon, short flights will definitely be an option in the not too distant future.

“The problem with electric operations in aircraft is that they basically rely on batteries, and batteries are heavy. If you wanted to fuel an A380 for a long-haul flight, you need a battery that weighed something like 500 tonnes, which is more than the weight of the aircraft itself at the moment.”

“But on smaller, shorter sectors, it is going to be possible quite soon… within the next two to five years, to have aircraft that can operate short-haul on electric power.”

Peter Harrison, Center for Aviation Chairman Emeritus

It’s unclear at this stage whether fares for electric aircraft flights will be more expensive than fares for regular aircraft flights but considering that electric cars are currently more expensive than those that guzzle petrol, it may be a likely possibility… At least in the short to medium term.

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Categories
Technology

Researchers create first artificial vision system for both land and water

Giving our hardware sight has empowered a host of applications in self-driving cars, object detection, and crop monitoring. But unlike animals, synthetic vision systems can’t simply evolve under natural habitats. Dynamic visual systems that can navigate both land and water, therefore, have yet to power our machines – leading researchers from MIT, the Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology (GIST), and Seoul National University in Korea to develop a novel artificial vision system that closely replicates the vision of the fiddler crab and is able to tackle both terrains.

The semi-terrestrial species – known affectionately as the calling crab, as it appears to be beckoning with its huge claws – has amphibious imaging ability and an extremely wide field of view, as all current systems are limited to hemispherical. The new artificial eye, resembling a spherical, largely nondescript, small, black ball, makes meaning of its inputs through a mixture of materials that process and understand light. The scientists combined an array of flat microlenses with a graded refractive index profile, and a flexible photodiode array with comb-shaped patterns, all wrapped on the 3D spherical structure. This configuration meant that light rays from multiple sources would always converge at the same spot on the image sensor, regardless of the refractive index of its surroundings.

A paper on this system, co-authored by Frédo Durand, an MIT professor of electrical engineering and computer science and affiliate of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL), and 15 others, appears in the July issue of the journal Nature Electronics .

Both the amphibious and panoramic imaging capabilities were tested in in-air and in-water experiments by imaging five objects with different distances and directions, and the system provided consistent image quality and an almost 360-degree field of view in both terrestrial and aquatic environments. . Meaning: It could see both underwater and on land, where previous systems have been limited to a single domain.

There’s more than meets the eye when it comes to fiddler crabs. Behind their massive claws exists a powerful, unique vision system that evolved from living both underwater and on land. The creatures’ flat corneas, combined with a graded refractive index, counter defocusing effects arising from changes in the external environment – ​​an overwhelming limit for other compound eyes. The crabs also have a 3D omnidirectional field of view, from an ellipsoidal and stalk-eye structure. They’ve evolved to look at almost everything at once to avoid attacks on wide-open tidal flats, and to communicate and interact with mates.

To be sure, biomimetic cameras aren’t new. In 2013, a wide field of view (FoV) camera that mimicked the compound eyes of an insect was reported in Nature, and in 2020, a wide FoV camera mimicked a fish eye emerged. While these cameras can capture large areas at once, it’s structurally difficult to exceed 180 degrees, and more recently, commercial products with 360-degree FoV have come into play. These can be clunky, though, since they have to merge images taken from two or more cameras, and to enlarge the field of view, you need an optical system with a complex configuration, which causes image distortion. It’s also challenging to sustain focusing capability when the surrounding environment changes, such as in air and underwater – hence the impetus to look to the calling crab.

The crab proved a worthy muse. During tests, five cutesy objects (dolphin, airplane, submarine, fish, and ship), at different distances were projected onto the artificial vision system from different angles. The team performed multi-laser spot imaging experiments, and the artificial images matched the simulation. To go deep, they immersed the device halfway in water in a container.

A logical extension of the work includes looking at biologically inspired light-adaptation schemes in the quest for higher resolution and superior image-processing techniques.

“This is a spectacular piece of optical engineering and non-planar imaging, combining aspects of bio-inspired design and advanced flexible electronics to achieve unique capabilities unavailable in conventional cameras,” says John A. Rogers, the Louis Simpson and Kimberly Querrey Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, Biomedical Engineering, and Neurological Surgery at Northwestern University, who was not involved in the work. “Potential uses span from population surveillance to environmental monitoring.”

This research was supported by the Institute for Basic Science, the National Research Foundation of Korea, and the GIST-MIT Research Collaboration grant funded by the GIST in 2022.

/University Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) may be of a point-in-time nature, edited for clarity, style and length. The views and opinions expressed are those of the author(s).

Categories
Entertainment

HBO Max and Discovery merger could mean fewer streaming services to pay for

You know how you’re always complaining that there are too many streaming services and it seems like you have to pay for about five different platforms just to watch the 10 shows you hear about?

That may be about to change. The long-promised consolidation of the sector seems to finally be happening.

This morning, Warner Bros Discovery announced it will combine the media conglomerate’s two existing streaming services, HBO Max and Discovery+, into one service.

While neither HBO Max nor Discovery+ operates in Australia, the significance of today’s news could herald forthcoming changes within the industry that will eventually affect locally available services.

In Australia, there are close to two dozen subscription video on demand platforms. The high number of services has led to frustrations among consumers who are asked to shell out more and more money to access a fractured slate of programming.

The growth in the number of streaming services is approaching unsustainable levels, especially as customers began to evaluate household budgets during a challenging global economic environment.

The number of streaming services has been steadily increasing, ranging from niche platforms such as the horror-focused Shudder to broad appeal brands such as Disney+.

A consolidation of services within the industry has long been mooted and the Discovery+ and HBO Max merger could be the first in a coming wave as the sector evolves.

HBO programming, including Succession and the upcoming Game of Thrones prequel House Of The Dragonand Discovery shows such as Deadliest Catch are distributed in Australia through Foxtel and Binge* while some HBO Max originals titles go to Stan.

Warner Bros Discovery’s announcement was light on details on what the combined streaming platform might look like, only that it would roll out in the US in mid-2023. The current timetable for global plans are Latin America in late-2023, Europe in 2024 and Asia-Pacific in mid-2024.

There’s no confirmation on whether Australia would be one of those Asia-Pacific markets. Warner Bros currently has a multi-year content deal with Foxtel, which it signed in 2020 with no publicly disclosed end date.

Warner Bros Discovery chief executive David Zaslav said of the combined streaming service: “We think that product is going to be superb.”

According to The Verge, Zaslav hinted that the new streaming platform would be built on Discovery’s technology platform, referencing the technical glitches that have beset HBO Max.

The changes to Warner Bros Discovery’s current multiple streaming platforms were pre-empted earlier this week with the revelation the studio was to shelve several projects that had either wrapped filming or delivered finished work.

The most prominent of the canceled titles was DC movie batgirlwhich reportedly had a $US70 million ($A100 million) production budget.

Early media reports suggested that batgirl had performed poorly with early test audiences and the studio was unwilling to spend the money for reshoots or the added cost of marketing.

Other media reports hinted that batgirl and canceled projects such as Scoob: Holiday Haunted they were sacrificed in the name of tax breaks.

the batgirl axing fueled speculation of a significant announcement about HBO Max’s future, given the DC movie had been commissioned specifically for streaming and not cinema release.

HBO is an American pay TV network which has been responsible for some of the most acclaimed series over the past three decades, including The Sopranos, Succession, TheWire, Game of Thrones, Sex And The City and veep.

Even though HBO has never been directly sold to Australian viewers, the strength of its brand and its association with quality programming has made it an international phenomenon.

HBO Max also houses Warner Bros’ movies archives.

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Categories
Sports

Alex Winwood boxing loss, referee, video, highlights, reaction

Alex Winwood has been left shocked and devastated, after his boxing quarter-final was stopped early in the second round against Zambia’s Patrick Chinyemba.

After four of the five judges awarded Winwood the first round, the Australian was floored by a right-shot from his opponent. Winwood got up moments later, but his bout was waved off despite the 25-year-old appearing stable and his eyes still.

“I find that impossible to believe, absolutely impossible to believe. That fight should not have been stopped. That’s not a stop page. That’s an outrage,” Jon Harker said in commentary for Channel 7.

Harry Garside, who took bronze during last year’s Olympics in the boxing, agreed.

“That’s heartbreaking for Alex. No way that’s a stoppage,” Garside said.

Alex Winwood reacts following defeat in the men's 48kg-51kg (Flyweight) Quarter-Final fight at NEC Arena on August 04, 2022 in Birmingham.  Photo: Getty Images
Alex Winwood reacts following defeat in the men’s 48kg-51kg (Flyweight) Quarter-Final fight at NEC Arena on August 04, 2022 in Birmingham. Photo: Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

Winwood was close to tears as he wrapped up his interview, believing the fight was called off too quickly.

“It was a pretty fast call. I won the first round, and I thought I won it pretty easily,” he said.

Garside reflected the fight was called off too early, but Winwood had left the decision open as he looked away after getting up off the ground.

“He wasn’t hurt, he did turn his back which gives the referee some empathy, but you’ve got to wait for the person to get up and give them eight seconds,” he said.

“She waved it off way too soon.”

Patrick Chinyemba punches Alex Winwood on day seven of the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games at NEC Arena on August 04, 2022. Photo: Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

Social media agreed, with many raising their eyebrows at the early stoppage.

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Categories
Australia

Melbourne mum seeks quick-thinking ‘good Samaritans’ who helped toddler get urgent care

A Melbourne mother is seeking two “good Samaritans” who helped her 20-month-old son get urgent medical care after he had a seizure while she was driving.

Madeleine Crawford was driving her son Stirling to the Royal Children’s Hospital emergency department on Wednesday, August 3 about 1:50pm.

She told Virginia Trioli on ABC Radio Melbourne her son had been off food and drink for a day and a half, had a fever, chesty cough and was struggling to breathe.

“The GP had done a thorough examination and said sometimes even though you can’t treat the underlying virus, they need help with hydration and breathing,” Ms Crawford said.

“He recommended we get him checked by the pediatricians at the Royal Children’s Hospital.”

But while they were stopped at Churchill Ave waiting to turn right onto Ballarat Road in Maidstone, Ms Crawford noticed her son having a seizure in the rear-view mirror.

“I looked over my shoulder … eyes opening, closing, and rolling, legs jerking and convulsing — everything,” she said.

“It was very distressing. In that moment I thought I could lose him.”

‘Good Samaritans’ arrive to help

Ms Crawford jumped out of the car and got Stirling from the back seat.

Space to play or pause, M to mute, left and right arrows to seek, up and down arrows for volume.

PlayAudio.  Duration: 8 minutes 48 seconds

Melbourne mum searches for ‘good Samaritans’ who came to her aid when her son had a seizure

She cleared out her airways while “gesturing madly” at the traffic behind her.

Stirling then vomited on her and went limp.

“I just stepped onto the median strip and was just holding him not knowing really what to do,” Ms Crawford said.

She asked a man in the car behind hers to call an ambulance, but then a woman approached her.

“I explained I was already on the way to the hospital, but my boy had a seizure, and I didn’t want to put him down,” she told ABC Radio Melbourne.

A selfie of a young mum with her toddler smiling at the camera
Ms Crawford wants to thank the couple who came to her aid.(Supplied: Madeleine Crawford)

The woman then suggested she could sit in the back seat holding Stirling while Ms Crawford drove to the hospital.

The woman’s partner escorted them in his own car, driving in front with his hazard lights on.

They made it to Footscray hospital where Ms Crawford ran inside, and Stirling was immediately triaged by the nurses.

“I could feel that moment slipping where I wouldn’t be able to get their details because my focus was obviously on my son,” she said.

“But I just looked at them and said, ‘Thank you so much, I’m forever in your debt’.

“And that’s where it was left.”

Wants to ‘thank them properly’

Ms Crawford said Stirling has returned home from hospital and is much better.

He was diagnosed with respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, which is rising among children across Australia.

But she cannot help but think about the “good Samaritans” who came to her aid.

She is calling out to anyone who may know the couple, who she believes are in their 50s, of Asian descent and driving a small black sedan, to get in touch.

“Their quick, clear thinking and calm demeanour helped ensure that I was able to get my son the medical attention he needed as soon as possible,” Ms Crawford said

“My husband and I are forever in their debt and want to be able to thank them properly.”

If you know this couple, please email [email protected].

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Categories
US

Mall of America lockdown lifted after shots fired: Police

Shoppers were sent running for safety at the Mall of America Thursday, after police said shots were fired at the Minnesota shopping center.

Police responded to an “active incident” on the northwest side of the mall Thursday evening, the Bloomington Police Department tweetedsaying at that time that “numerous officers are on scene.”

Within an hour, the police department said officers had secured the scene. A suspect has not been apprehended, and no injuries have been reported, police said.

PHOTO: The Mall of America in Bloomington, Minn., is under lockdown, Aug. 4, 2022.

The Mall of America in Bloomington, Minn., is under lockdown, Aug. 4, 2022.

Pool via ABC News

Bloomington Police Department Chief Booker Hodges said during a press conference that shots were fired near the Nike store, and that officers on the scene within 30 seconds.

“After looking at video, we see two groups getting into some type of altercation at the cash register of the Nike store,” Hodges said. “One of the groups left but instead of walking away, they decided to display a complete lack of respect for human life — they to fire multiple rounds into a store with people.”

The responsible individuals have not yet been located, the chief said.

“This is an isolated incident,” the department said on Twitter. “The suspect fled the MOA on foot and officers are in the process of interviewing witnesses.”

The Mall of America alerted via Twitter that it was on lockdown “following a confirmed isolated incident” at one of its tenant spaces.

Footage taken by shoppers showed people sheltering in place, including a large crowd in the basement of the mall.

The lockdown has since been raised. Shoppers on the mall’s second level have been asked to wait for an escort, while all others were advised to leave.

The mall will be closed for the rest of the evening.

The shopping mall is located in Bloomington, a suburb of the Twin Cities.

Categories
Business

Sydney’s City, South-West rail projects blowing out to $15ma day

Every day, thousands of workers toil on a new rail line under the heart of Sydney and two other mammoth train projects at various stages of construction across the city. The cost of these automated rail lines is enormous. Some $15 million a day is being spent on building the three lines, which are due to open progressively over the next eight years. On the latest estimates, they will cost a staggering $56 billion.

With its station entrances rising like tentacles from the depths of the earth, the City and Southwest metro rail line is becoming more apparent to commuters. A large underground walkway at Central Station, built to accommodate new train platforms for the metro rail line under Sydney Harbor and the CBD, will open to commuters within months.

Premier Dominic Perrottet and Transport Minister David Elliott tour the City and Southwest tunnels in February.

Premier Dominic Perrottet and Transport Minister David Elliott tour the City and Southwest tunnels in February.Credit:James Gourley

The City and Southwest line and the two other rail projects – a line from the Sydney CBD to Parramatta, and a 23-kilometre link to a new airport in western Sydney – form the country’s biggest public transport investment. They dwarf other rail lines built in Sydney in the last five decades such as the Eastern Suburbs line, the Airport Link and the South West Rail Link.

Yet as they reach critical stages of their development, the metro rail projects are running into massive challenges, exacerbated by supply chain bottlenecks, surging building costs and Australia’s east coast states competing against each other for contractors as they rush to live up to promises to build major infrastructure.

A trove of confidential documents released to the NSW parliament, as well as others leaked to the heralddetail the enormous risks and costs faced by Sydney Metro, the agency overseeing the projects, and the contractors building the new lines.

A “sensitive” strategic risk assessment in September last year warned of “high” and “very high” risks across almost all of Sydney Metro’s measures.

And in further signs of the mounting stresses, a Sydney Metro risk assessment dated April this year warns of “over 350 very high and high risks driven by project cost impacts”.

It culminated in the government granting two months ago that the cost of building the City and Southwest rail line will blow out by $6 billion – the equivalent of building two CBD and eastern suburbs light rail lines. “They have got massive sticker shock… and are under huge strain,” says an industry insider, who requested anonymity.

Les Wielinga, the head of the state’s transport bureaucracy between 2009 and 2013, fears the cost blowouts stem from insufficient preparatory work, investigations and risk contingencies in the early stages of the projects. “The first thing you have to do is properly investigate what you are going to build before you try to put a price on it. If you don’t do a proper investigation, you won’t get to the nub of all the problems,” he says.

“Bigger scope also creeps into these projects. As they start to add another car park or station, the costs start to get out of control.”

Wielinga was heavily involved in early work on what became known as Metro Northwest, a rail line which opened in 2019 between Rouse Hill and Chatswood. It was the first stage of Sydney’s emerging metro rail network, and opened $1 billion under the original budget.

While shocked at the size of the blowout in the City and Southwest project, he is a supporter of the metro rail lines because of the sheer number of people they will be able to move – 40,000 an hour compared with about 24,000 an hour for the existing double-deck railway line.

Double-deck trains have to spend longer at stations to let passengers on and off. Apart from shorter dwell times at platforms, automated metro trains can operate at closer distances to each other, increasing their passenger capacity. “It’s about moving a large number of people in a peak period. That is the beauty of metro systems,” Wielinga says.

With the City and Southwest line, and the new metro line to Western Sydney Airport due to be opened progressively over the next four years, the projects are reaching the critical stage of their development and showing signs of the same problems that have plagued the construction of new railways overseas.

Driverless trains for the yet-to-open City and Southwest Metro rail line are stored near Rouse Hill in Sydney's north-west.

Driverless trains for the yet-to-open City and Southwest Metro rail line are stored near Rouse Hill in Sydney’s north-west.Credit:Nick Moir

Dubbed Crossrail during its construction, and later renamed the Elizabeth line, London’s first major railway in decades has been repeatedly delayed and overshot its budget by billions of pounds.

The City and Southwest project shares the most similar characteristics of Sydney’s metro lines to the London rail project. Like Crossrail, the $18.5 billion City and Southwest line runs under the CBD and requires a greater integration into the existing railway system, which significantly raises its complexity.

The conversion of a section of the century-old Bankstown line into one along which driverless trains will run every few minutes has also become one of the biggest technical headaches for the project. It has been compounded lately by industrial action preventing power being cut to high voltage lines in areas where work was due to occur.

Former top NSW rail executive Dick Day says it has become a “fairly normal phenomenon” for rail projects around the world to blow their budgets. “People in the planning stages underestimate the cost of building these projects and their complexity,” he says.

He describes the spending on construction of Sydney’s metro lines as mind-boggling, and worries that the benefits of them will be underwhelming given their cost. “The bidding war to get limited capabilities means we are inviting a very expensive feast. I would be less worried if the metro rail lines were desperately needed,” he says.

Day was one of four former NSW rail executives to warn in 2017 that the City and Southwest line would lead to “degradation of the robustness and reliability” of Sydney’s existing heavy rail network. They feared that a “takeover” of the existing rail line between Sydenham and Bankstown for the metro trains would remove “the relief valve for the network”.

A new metro rail line will connect St Marys to Western Sydney Airport, which is under construction at Badgerys Creek.

A new metro rail line will connect St Marys to Western Sydney Airport, which is under construction at Badgerys Creek.Credit:Brook Mitchell

Sydney Metro chief executive Peter Regan says the addition of more stations along the City and Southwest line at places such as Barangaroo and Waterloo, as well as rises in construction costs between 2014 and 2019, were part of the reason why the project’s budget was increased three years ago

Under the original plans, the line was also to be above ground between Chatswood and St Leonards, but was later altered to run through tunnels along that section. A further increase in the project’s budget recently reflects major disruption from the pandemic over the last two years.

“It wasn’t just that you couldn’t get people from overseas – you couldn’t even get people to come in from Melbourne. The level of disruption that COVID caused was right at peak construction in the project. All that compounded because the project is such an integrated series of contracts,” Regan says.

“It’s like turning on the power. All the stations have to be ready. So if one got delayed, all the others got delayed by the same amount of time and then all the contracts that came behind it got delayed.”

With costs escalating, the government put on ice several large infrastructure projects several months ago, including a new motorway to Sydney’s northern beaches. An Infrastructure NSW report in late May, which was used to justify the government’s decision, recommended the state’s focus on mega projects give way to a combination of smaller and medium-sized programs such as station upgrades and fixing road pinch points.

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Grattan Institute’s transport and cities program director, Marion Terrill, doubts there will be a reprieve from scaling costs for the rail projects for years, partly due to the scale of the infrastructure under construction or planned on the east coast. “NSW has slowed down some of their projects, but I don’t see any sign that is happening in Victoria and Queensland, and they are to some degree competing for the same resources,” she says.

Of the three projects, the 23-kilometre metro line to Western Sydney Airport, much of which involves tunneling under paddocks, has been in the firing line the most. The country’s peak infrastructure adviser warned last year that the project’s cost outweighed its benefits by $1.8 billion.

Terrill says the jury is still out on whether the pandemic will have a long-lasting influence on the way people work and travel, and whether the full benefits of the mega rail projects will be realized.

“Rail projects are more in the ‘questionable’ parcel because they are not very flexible. If you lay a rail line, you have it for 100 years,” she says. “There is no doubt that the scale of investment [in Sydney] is transformative, but it is clear that what is partly at stake is what we forgo by choosing this path.”

Regan says the pandemic has resulted in patronage on Sydney’s railways becoming spread more throughout the day, compared with it previously being clustered in the morning and afternoon peaks. “Because most of our [metro] stations are centered in activated precincts where you’ve got people coming and going for different purposes, we’re expecting … that you’ll still have very strong patronage right through the day,” he says.

“The broader benefits [of the metro lines] are still there. Different trips continue to be a big part of the benefit that it drives.”

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The Perrottet government has much riding on the metro rail lines. During the last election campaign in 2019, then premier Gladys Berejiklian used the projects repeatedly to support her proposition that the Coalition delivered on its promises to build much-needed transport infrastructure.

With the state election in less than eight months, a government looked at in a scandal over the appointment of former deputy premier John Barilaro to a top trade role in New York can ill afford its flagship rail projects running into more costly problems.

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Categories
Entertainment

Gigi Hadid soaks up sunshine in NYC donning bodysuit from her Frankies Bikinis line

Gigi Hadid soaks up sunshine in NYC donning bodysuit from her Frankies Bikinis line as she reveals new fashion endeavor Guest in Residence

Gigi Hadid was snapped in New York City on Thursday sporting a casual ensemble as summer begins to wind down.

The 27-year-old model paired a patterned bodysuit from her Gigi Hadid x Frankies Bikinis line with light blue Levi’s jeans and brown Birkenstock sandals as she toted a blue Prada Raffia tote bag.

The A-list model had her blonde locks pulled back into a ponytail and wore dark sunglasses and earrings on the daytime outing.

The latest: Gigi Hadid, 27, was snapped in New York City on Thursday sporting a casual ensemble as summer begins to wind down

The latest: Gigi Hadid, 27, was snapped in New York City on Thursday sporting a casual ensemble as summer begins to wind down

Hadid, who is mother to daughter Khai, one, with ex-boyfriend Zayn Malik, 29, on Thursday revealed she is working on a new clothing line called Guest in Residence.

She inserted the title ‘founder, creative director @guestinresidence’ onto her bio on the site, and shared a series of images of the knitwear line in the early stages.

‘Been workin on something …’ Hadid captioned an image of herself working with others as she sat in front of panels of color swatches.

In the post, Hadid showed off different samples from the line, including a hooded sweatshirt and gray pajama ensemble.

The A-list model had her blonde locks pulled back into a ponytail and wore dark sunglasses and earrings on the daytime outing

The A-list model had her blonde locks pulled back into a ponytail and wore dark sunglasses and earrings on the daytime outing

Gigi shared a selfie on the busy day as she worked on her brand

Gigi shared a selfie on the busy day as she worked on her brand

In an Instagram Stories clip, Hadid flashed a peace sign as she donned a lavender vest with a puka-shell necklace

In an Instagram Stories clip, Hadid flashed a peace sign as she donned a lavender vest with a puka-shell necklace

The model-designer shared shots of garments in a window sill on social media

The model-designer shared shots of garments in a window sill on social media

In an Instagram Stories clip, Hadid flashed a peace sign as she donned a lavender vest with a puka-shell necklace.

Gigi’s sister Bella Hadid said in the comments, ‘What we’ve all been waiting for,’ while fellow supermodel Hailey Bieber wrote, ‘So excited about this.’

The Guest in Residence Instagram account as of Thursday had more than 6,300 followers, with a bio reading ‘KNITTERS.’

A website for the fashion line featured a round gold shape with the brand’s name set against a cloudy background with the line ‘Coming soon,’ and an option to subscribe to an affiliated newsletter.

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AFL gives North Melbourne, GWS Giants a boost in Clarkson hunt; Tasmanian AFL license vote looms

“They can get them but not in the lead-in to an agreement. So, we need our coaches and players to market products, parts of the code, whatever, but they are never part of the agreement,” McLachlan said on 3AW.

“So, if you are talking about Alastair Clarkson, he will not be able to bank on, in dealings with North Melbourne or GWS, or whoever he might be talking to… other than to say he has to make his decision on terms offered to him in the salary cap within that framework. If he then signs with whoever that team is, if there is an opportunity or role to market something, then they come up, that’s the same way applies to all players and coaches.”

Giants chief executive Dave Matthews, who has been interviewed in the search for McLachlan’s successor, says his club should secure Clarkson, will push the AFL for the added payment. The Giants, struggling for public and media traction now they are out of finals contention, are in a rugby league and soccer heartland and believe they need Clarkson’s profile to “help grow the game”.

The Giants, with football director Jimmy Bartel playing a key role, have met with Clarkson three times but have also interviewed Richmond assistant Adam Kingsley, Melbourne assistant Adem Yze and caretaker coach Mark McVeigh.

The Kangaroos are predominantly focused on Clarkson, a former player with the club.

Clarkson, busy helping Tasmania’s push for a stand-alone side, while also taking in overseas fact-finding missions, has the option of spending another year out of the game but is keen to return next season.

Wayne Carey has backed North Melbourne's bid to land former teammate Alastair Clarkson.

Wayne Carey has backed North Melbourne’s bid to land former teammate Alastair Clarkson.Credit:Fairfax Media

Meanwhile, McLachlan said he still wanted a decision on whether Tasmania is granted the league’s 19th license by the end of the month.

“That was a commitment I made to have a resolution, whatever that looks like,” McLachlan, retiring from the top role later this year, said.

The 18 club presidents are due to vote this month, with two thirds needing to approve the bid for it to go ahead. Several presidents have grown frustrated with the lack of detail so far presented, particularly about the finances and the implications for the entire league.

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McLachlan has maintained the new bid must include scope for a new stadium to be built in Hobart, but the funding for this has become an issue, particularly with the Tasmanian government insisting it will only provide a maximum of 50 per cent of the funding should certain AFL conditions be met.

“There is always lumps and bumps and stuff like that, but that’s our game. We are sort of coming to the end of the road. The August deadline is where we are committed. It’s broadly going to be on that timeline, I am hopeful. These things aren’t easy and there has been a lot of work – it’s ongoing,” McLachlan said.

Although under the AFL constitution club presidents can only veto a decision by the commission to admit a new team if a two-thirds majority vote against the recommendation, McLachlan has made it clear he wants 18 clubs to back the bid with their support contingent on the proposal.