Categories
Australia

Once-feral donkeys restore confidence to Hunter Valley sheep sector demoralized by dog ​​attacks

When Diane Parnell woke up one morning to find 25 sheep dead at her Hunter Valley property, she was devastated.

Wild dogs had been lingering for years but the attack that night was the worst.

“They just ran them down, killed them, didn’t eat them, didn’t tear them to bits or anything — it’s just a sport for them.”

Ms Parnell would wake up at night to check the sheep, she invested in cameras to monitor them and even tried alpacas to keep the dogs away.

“And the dogs got the alpacas.”

A lady in a white jumper stands smiling to camera, while a donkey and its foal are in the background with some sheep.
Diane Parnell hasn’t seen a wild dog in months since buying a protection donkey.(ABC Upper Hunter: Amelia Bernasconi)

The savior was an animal perhaps known best for its stubborn nature, but donkeys have an incredible ability to bond with other livestock and protect them from predators.

“She’s lovely… [the sheep] just follow her like she’s their mum,” Ms Parnell said of her donkey.

“If I hear anything I’ll go out at night with the torch, but I’m more relieved because I’ve been out here at night when there’s a fox around and she’s got the sheep all herded together, watching them.”

Worth their weight in gold

Quiet donkeys like Ms Parnell’s are hard to find in New South Wales.

Hers came from the Last Stop Donkey Program (LSDP), a Hunter Valley charity working to handle and rehome feral donkeys as guardians.

A woman stands between two young donkeys smiling to camera.
Brooke Purvis founded the program with hopes of helping feral donkeys and farmers.(ABC Upper Hunter: Bridget Murphy)

LSDP founder Brooke Purvis said she knew there had to be something more that could be done with donkeys after learning the extent of how they were culled in outback Australia.

“Out on stations, the donkeys really are classified as feral because they’re taking up prime livestock feed; for farmers they’re of no value and to muster them is pretty interesting, so there are a lot of costs there in mustering.

“They’re too handy to be shot.”

A donkey stands in a paddock looking away towards a small flock of sheep.
Donkeys have an incredible ability to bond with other livestock.(ABC Upper Hunter: Amelia Bernasconi)

So Ms Purvis began learning how to break in donkeys and support local farmers to find their confidence again.

“There was a lot of sheep farming going back a generation or so and a lot of people went out of that due to stock losses,” she said.

“They’re just soul-destroyed and they’re not confident and the donkeys have brought that back.

“Through lambing and calving they’re really worth their weight in gold.

“If something comes into their paddock, they’re quite territorial and they actually go towards the danger instead of running away, so if a dog does come in to attack, a donkey just stomps it or runs it off.”

A donkey with big ear looks to the camera while others stand behind, some wearing head collars
Students have played a key role in handling the donkeys.(ABC Upper Hunter: Jake Lapham)

Back to school for everyone

The Last Stop Donkey Program took shape at St Catherine’s Catholic College in Singleton, where agriculture students were a key part of training the once-feral animals.

“We made the assumption that the donkeys were probably quite similar to breaking in cattle, so we just applied that sort of learning and it was just … no,” agriculture teacher Joanna Towers said.

“So it was just learning on the job and just gaining an appreciation for their personalities and how they like to be treated, that whole reward system.”

A teenage boy crouches on one knee cuddling a donkey foal.
Jacob Merrick lives next to the school farm and would be first to spot new foals.(ABC Upper Hunter: Jake Lapham)

Student Jacob Merrick often can’t believe how far the donkeys have come.

“They were feral,” he said.

“They’d come straight out of the Northern Territory, no human contact, been mustered in helicopters, quads; they’ve never had facilities like at St Catherine’s, so it’s really different for them and different for me.

“I’m quite impressed, quite proud I guess of what we’ve achieved.”

A teenage girl stands behind a donkey with her arm over his neck, patting it.
Jaslin Boyd has a real bond with the herd jack, Cracker Jack.(ABC Upper Hunter: Bridget Murphy)

Jaslin Boyd worked alongside the initial team and she and Jacob have become a crucial part of the LSDP outside of school.

“At the start I really had no clue what to expect, but now they’re completely different to anything I’ve worked with,” Jaslin said.

“They have their days off or when they want to work with you and when they don’t, but we just work around that.

“They love to play. They surprised me… from being wild donkeys to now quiet donkeys who will come up to you for pats and cuddles.”

A donkey and his foal soak up a sunset.
The Last Stop Donkey Program has welcomed dozens of foals in recent months.(Supplied: Brooke Purvis)

Lessons linger beyond the farmgate

The LSDP team quickly learned that gaining the donkeys’ trust was one of the most important things.

Most farmers considering donkeys worry they don’t know how to care for them, which Ms Purvis said was why she started doing training days too.

“The donkeys’ welfare has to be taken into account because we do hear a lot of stories where farmers just turn them out in the paddock with their sheep, and their teeth, feet, all of that is ignored.”

Watch Landline on ABC TV on Sundays at 12.30pm or anytime on iview.

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Categories
Business

Kawasaki Europe Reveals 2023 Z650RS, Z900RS, And Z900RS SE

2022 marked a monumental year for Kawasaki’s retro-leaning RS range. The flagship Z900RS celebrated the Z1’s 50th anniversary with a stunning, throwback “Fireball” colorway. The special-edition livery wasn’t the only addition to the Z900RS lineup, though, with Team Green introducing the up-spec 2022 Z900RS SE variant as well. Still, the RS series lacked a true entry point and the 2022 Z650RS filled the void.

After such an eventful 2022, we can’t fault Kawasaki for taking it easy in 2023, and the RS lineup returns largely unchanged for the new model year. Starting with the Z650RS, the classically-styled standard retains its iconic Candy Emerald Green paint scheme but adds a new Metallic Spark Black to the repertoire. Under the surface, the Z650RS still champions Kawi’s liquid-cooled, 649cc parallel-twin that’s good for 67 horsepower and 47 ft-lb of torque.

Up the ladder, the Z900RS follows the same tactic as its smaller sibling, bringing the 1975 Z1-inspired Candy Tone Blue paint job from 2022 back for another go-around. Kawasaki’s design team pairs that returning paint option with the new Metallic Diablo Black/Metallic Imperial Red in 2023, however. Of course, the 948cc inline-four engine still produces 109.5 horsepower at 8,500 rpm and 72.3 foot-pounds of torque at 6,500 rpm, marrying the model’s vintage-styled aesthetics with modern performance.

While the 2023 Z900RS SE carries over that same street-tuned four-banger, it stands apart from the pack with an Öhlins S46 rear shock and revised front suspension. Brembo M4.32 front brake calipers, Brembo disc rotors, and steel-braided front brake lines encourage riders to push the pace.

Unlike the base Z900RS and Z650RS, the SE doesn’t earn a new graphic in 2023, but the Metallic Diablo Black is just as eye-catching as last year, especially with the matching gold wheels. Kawasaki’s Z range may arrive short on updates and upgrades, but the charming, retro colorways keep the Z650RS, Z900RS, and Z900RS SE attractive propositions in 2023.

Categories
Entertainment

First DJ had exclusive interview rights touring alongside the Beatles

I stuck it up my jumper, kept playing it on the station and it was beginning of a whole new life for me. I found that in no time at all I got the station 60 sponsors! From there we went to Brisbane and I walked into the station 4BH and said to the manager, “I’m a disc jockey,” and he thought I rode horses! The term wasn’t well-known then. In some ways I was Australia’s first disc jockey, and the rest is history.

Fitz: And one of the most interesting parts of that history is by the mid-1960s when you’re at Sydney’s own 2SM, they send you to London for three months to tour with The Beatles as they make their way to Australia!

Rogers with the Beatles who he went on tour with in Australia in 1964.

Rogers with the Beatles who he went on tour with in Australia in 1964.Credit:Archive

BR: Yes, the deal was I would tour with them, and I would have exclusive rights to interview them every two days.

Fitz: How extraordinary.

BR: We got to Darwin at two o’clock in the morning, in June 1964, and 200 people came to greet them. But truly, The first sign of just how big Beatlemania was came in South Australia, when more than half of Adelaide turned out.

Portrait of Bob Rogers at his broadcast desk at radio station 2CH in Pyrmont, 2010.

Portrait of Bob Rogers at his broadcast desk at radio station 2CH in Pyrmont, 2010.Credit:Fairfax

Fitz: And there’s Bob Rogers, in the middle of it. When you were with John Lennon, did you feel like, “I’m in the presence of genius?”

BR: No, I didn’t feel that. But he didn’t act like that.

Fitz: And the moment with Lennon that always comes to you first, when you think of him?

BRIn Melbourne, I got a phone call from John and he said “I’m in room 711. Come around and have a drink.” It was seven o’clock in the morning. John was sitting in bed with a bottle of red wine and we drank it a bottle of red wine together.

Fitz: And what did you talk about?

BR: I forget. But there are a lot of stories of the Beatles I can’t tell.

Fitz. Yes you can! It’s sixty years ago!

BR: In those early days in Melbourne I kept getting sick of all the women trying to get to them. They’d ring me up and say, “Would you tell the boys we’re in room 612?” or whatever. And I rang the management of the hotel, and said “Would you please stop sending girls up to my suite! I can’t get them to the Beatles!” And I can remember 40 years ago playing tennis down at White City, taking a call at four o’clock in the afternoon saying that John Lennon had been shot dead. It was just disastrous.

Fitz: Speaking of tragic deaths, this week we lost Olivia Newton-John. You had a key part in her discovery of her…

BR: In 1965, Channel Seven had a new show on television called Sing-sing-sing, hosted by Johnny O’Keefe. He’d had a few failures along the way – he went to America wanted to be Elvis Presley and failed – but he came back and started this show. He had a number of girls competing for prizes. And this night I was a judge and I noticed this one girl, Olivia Newton-John, and I picked her to win. I was always very proud of the fact that she became such a success. I am saddened by her death of her, just as I was saddened by the death of her. . . what’s the name of the girl in Melbourne who died this week..?”

Fitz: Judith Durham..?

BR: Judith Durham. Yeah, see, I’m nearly ninety-f—ing-six and I am forgetting a few things.

Fitz: How’s your health these days?

BR: Not good. But, if you don’t mind me saying, at least I’ve got all my hair. . .

Fitz: But you’re still here, still going strong! Is it amazing to you that so many of the people you knew and loved are no longer here and you still are…?

BR: And it is. Somebody the other day called me, asking for a phone number. of the former rugby league boss, Ken Arthurson. I went to my address book and going through, I would say that eighty percent of the people in there have died. So I guess I’m looking forward to my 96th birthday. But I do get a bit bored at times because I don’t get around much any more.

Fitz: One of your contemporaries who is still going strong is John Laws, and he’s still on air.

BR: We met in the late ’50s at 2UE. Fairfax had just sold it because they thought radio was about to be taken over by this new thing, television. But the head of the Lamb family had been to America, and realized that not only was radio surviving, it was thriving, playing popular music for young people, and so they had bought 2UE. The other fellow there had a beautiful voice, and that was John Laws. Now, since the days of Ghost Riders in the Sky, I had realized the value of having records no one else had., and I had organized for mine to be sent to me from America. So I could play songs like the Purple People Eater six months before anyone else could play it. I came in one Monday morning and was told that John had been playing all my important records on Saturday night.

Fitz: Did you have a falling out with him? Did you say, “How dare you?”

BR: Oh yeah. Fifty years later, Derryn Hinch was interviewing me at a restaurant at the Finger Wharf, while we had lunch, and John Laws came up, leaned over and said, “You two are the most despicable ^#&!” I have repeated it three times, before leaving. I said to Derryn, “Isn’t it good you got that on tape!” He said, “No, I turned it off.”

But 2UE has been my favorite station. Forty years ago, I used to follow Gary O’Callaghan doing breakfast. And I’d come on at nine o’clock and inherit his wonderful audience from him. That went well over several stints until one day many years later, I was doing afternoons and I said to my panel operator, ‘You’re a f—ing idiot’ and that was the end of my career at 2UE.

Fitz: Your most famous employer though, was probably John Singleton, at 2CH?

BR: Yes, I was at 2GB, doing mornings, and they wanted me to do afternoons and I didn’t want to. So I arranged with John Singleton to go to 2CH, and I stayed there for 20 years until he sold it.

Fitz: Your final day must have been tough?

BR: And it is. I was astounded by the reaction I got after I retired in October 2020, with letters from all over the world. Even in North America I had several listeners begging me to stay. They ask me to come back on occasionally, but I am too old.

Fitz: Bob, you sound so strong, I reckon you’ll cruise through 100 and knock over 105. But when the time comes, what do you want us to say of the life and times of Bob Rogers?

BR: Life was very good. Particularly after I got that record in 1949, called (Ghost) Riders in the Sky; then 73 years marriage, and the love of my life is still with me. I don’t think I’m the love of her life de ella any more … (A cheery protesting cry is heard in the room.) 73 years is pretty good in this business.

Matter of fact, One of the first songs I used to love in Hobart was called, The Folks Who Live on the Hill.

It goes:

“Someday we’ll build a home on a hilltop high,
You and I,

Shiny and new a cottage that two can fill,

And we’ll be pleased to be called

‘The folks who live on the hill’.”

And now we live on the best hill in town, one of the best in the world, looking down on Balmoral Beach. It’s been a great life.

joke of the week

I had a dream the other night. I was in the old West riding in a stagecoach. Suddenly, a man riding a horse pulls up to the left side of the stagecoach, and a riderless horse pulls up on the right. The man leans down, pulls open the door, and jumps off his horse into the stagecoach. Then he opens the door on the other side and jumps onto the other horse. Just before he rode off, I yelled out, “What was all that about?” He replied, “Nothing. It’s just a stage I’m going through.”

Quote of the week

“There is suddenly a very real risk of violent political instability in this country for the first time in more than 150 years.” – Joel B. Pollak, a senior editor of the right-wing outlet Breitbart News, after Donald Trump’s home at Mar-a-Lago was raided by the FBI, and Trump supporters rose in outrage.

What they said

“My beautiful home, Mar-A-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, is currently under siege, raided, and occupied by a large group of FBI agents. They even broke into my safe!” – Donald Trump complaining about being treated like a criminal.

“Treaty will provide that mechanism for us to negotiate equal terms on how we can live together in the same country and celebrate us as well. We’ve made it clear that the Greens want to see progress on all elements of the Statement [from the Heart]. We support legislation that improves the lives of First Nations people, and I look forward to talking with Minister Burney about how we achieve that together in this Parliament.” Senate deputy Greens leader Lidia Thorpe saying the Greens will pursue a treaty with Indigenous Australians and a truth-telling commission in exchange for backing the Voice to parliament in negotiations with the Albanese government as it seeks to build cross-party support for the constitutional change.

“It’s bittersweet. I wanted the win but starting with a medal that’s what we wanted. There was a lot of pressure, a lot of anticipation. I think we lived up to it and that’s the first medal down. . . if we had maybe another 20 meters I could have won, but we’re only running 800 meters, not 820.” – Peter Bol after taking silver in the 800m at the Commonwealth Games.

Peter Bol (left) won silver in the 800m.

Peter Bol (left) won silver in the 800m.Credit:Getty Images

“Whatever the words, whatever the melody, whatever the tune, there is that sense of hope and joy and love that really blasts through. And that’s very much who she was.” – Xanadu director Robert Greenwald remembering Olivia Newton-John.

“If I had my time again, I would have asked him not to. If everyone knew what they knew now about the process, I mean, the whole situation has been incredibly disappointing for everyone who has been involved.” – Dominic Perrottet about John Barilaro and the whole damn mess.

“What you’re suggesting here is that I knew I was going to retire, therefore I was creating this job [trade commissioner in New York] for myself. I know where you’re going with this and it is absolute rubbish which I refute.” – John Barilaro before the parliamentary inquiry.

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“Classrooms have effectively become phone-free and this has allowed staff to focus on educating students. Finally, in eight weeks of the policy, there has been a 90 per cent reduction in behavioral issues related to phones in the school.” – Davidson High School principal David Rule, saying there had been significant changes since students in years 7 to 10 were banned from using mobile phones at school. The high school in Frenchs Forest requires students to put phones in a pouch that, once closed, cannot be reopened without breaking a lock.

Twitter: @Peter_Fitz

Categories
Sports

How university students are bringing gender equity to a 60-year-old sport called Inward Bound

Rhea Papadopoulos had just started at the Australian National University in Canberra when a third-year student at her college told her about Inward Bound (IB) — a mixed-gender ultramarathon orienteering race.

Drawn in by the stories of adventure and the training runs up Black Mountain, Rhea was initially excited to take part in Inward Bound, before becoming frustrated by rules stating teams needed a minimum of seven women out of 28 runners.

Despite her excitement, Rhea never felt like the sport was inclusive of women and gender-diverse people who wanted to be involved.

“Having that low quota of only seven [female runners], it was this constant struggle where you’re like, ‘am I one of the best seven girls?’ rather than ‘am I one of the best 28 runners?’ And I think that’s something that all girls could say they felt,” Rhea said.

Two young women smile after finishing a race
Women haven’t always felt welcome in Inward Bound.(ABC Sport: Julia Faragher)

“It’s this kind of weird impostor syndrome, which is such an awful feeling and it’s not what IB should be about.”

Rhea, now a 23-year-old political science and arts student, discovered the barriers that women were facing in the Inward Bound training program during her two years running the race for her residential college in Division 5 and later becoming a coach.

“In 2019, I was the only [female] coach out of seven [coaches] and even though I loved all my colleagues and we all had the best time and I never felt tokenistic by any means, it was really hard being the one who was in charge of pastoral care because I was the [woman],” she said.

“If a team member had problems they’d come to me and not one of the boys.”

Rhea wanted to do something about it.

“I didn’t want another girl to have to go through that again. It was such a bad feeling.”

What is Inward Bound?

A wide shot of runners going through bushland.
Inward Bound sees runners in teams of four navigate their way through the Australian bush.(ABC Sport: Julia Faragher)

Inward Bound is an ultramarathon orienteering race where ANU students compete in teams of four runners representing their colleges.

Runners are blindfolded and driven in circles before getting dropped off at a random location in the bush, usually somewhere in rural NSW, and given the coordinates of an endpoint that they must run to.

For runners in Division 1, this will involve approximately 100km. The divisions range down to runners in Division 7 which involves approximately 40km.

Four people in the distance run on the beach, with their backs towards the camera.
Students never know the course before they begin the race.(ABC Sport: Julia Faragher)

The exact distance run by each team depends on their ability to navigate the Australian bush and whether they get lost.

Across the seven divisions, each college puts forward a team of 28 runners, and a total of 280 students run in the race each year.

There is a winning team for each division, as well as an overall winner decided by adding up the results of all the divisions

‘I was told no, you can’t do it’

A young woman smiles at the camera
Erin Ronge was previously the 2021 equity officer and is currently the 2022 co-race director on the IB organizing committee.(ABC Sport: Julia Faragher)

Erin Ronge, a 22-year-old law and science student, had similar experiences to Rhea when she ran for her college twice in Divisions 6 and 7.

Erin noticed that women weren’t being offered the same leadership opportunities as men and when she tried to volunteer, she said she was shut down.

A young woman smiles while studying a map with peers.
There have been changes to Inward Bound’s rules to ensure there are more female navigators in teams.(ABC Sport: Julia Faragher)

“I wanted to [navigate]. I was told no, you can’t do it. I wanted to coach. I was told no, you can’t do it,” Erin said.

Each IB team of four consists of two navigators and two scouts. As the navigators set the route, they usually also act as the leaders of the team.

“Female-identifying runners weren’t encouraged to come on the maps. If anything, male-identifying runners were hand-selected by coaches to be on the maps,” Erin said.

Eventually, Erin’s persistence paid off and she was taught how to read the maps.

But she knew that it shouldn’t have to take that much effort on her part and that other female runners shared her struggles.

Responsibility to bring about change

Erin and Rhea became the equity officers on the 2021 Inward Bound organizing committee to have an active role in making it as inclusive as possible.

“On a personal level, I felt it was important because I had many experiences in IB where I felt overlooked or that I unjustly had to advocate for myself and my abilities and skills where I was uncomfortable in certain contexts and I feel like that was to do with my gender,” Erin said.

This year’s Inward Bound race is set to feature the greatest number of female runners in its 60-year history at the ANU.

Seven young adults smile and pose for the camera
The Inward Bound organizing committee is made up of students from across the participating halls and colleges.(ABC Sport: Julia Faragher)

It’s the result of Erin and Rhea’s work to create a new 50:50 gender policy in consultation with other students.

Together with co-race director James Holley, they were inspired by the lack of substantial difference in performance between men and women in ultramarathons and the fact that Inward Bound is a mixed-gender event just like ultramarathons at the professional level.

“I felt as if that was an opportunity more than anything else. I really thought we had a responsibility to bring in that change,” James said.

In their roles as equity officers, Erin and Rhea spent a large portion of 2021 consulting with students from each of the 10 participating ANU colleges and halls to determine how they could introduce the 50:50 policy.

Erin found that everyone supported the policy in principle, but there was resistance to implementing it immediately rather than over a longer period.

“It made no sense to do it over a process of four years. It was delaying the inevitable and it just seemed tokenistic,” Erin said.

While the policy is colloquially referred to as the 50:50 policy, it uses gender-inclusive language.

Instead of instituting a quota for female runners, as has been the case in the past, halls and colleges now must pick a team where no more than 50 per cent of their runners identify as the same gender.

7 young adults run towards the camera
ANU students are looking forward to the return of Inward Bound in 2022 after COVID-19 forced the cancellation of both the 2020 and 2021 races.(ABC Sport: Julia Faragher)

Erin and Rhea spoke to queer officers from the halls and colleges to make sure that the policy included all students, such as non-binary and transgender people.

“We wanted our sport to also be representative of the community that it came from,” James said.

Inward Bound is for everyone

Erin, Rhea, and the rest of the organizing committee wanted the policy to be the first step in creating long-lasting cultural change.

One of their hopes is that the policy will encourage colleges and halls to think about female runners from the very beginning of their training program and implement the support that they need.

Four runners smile as they approach the finish line of a race
The 50:50 policy has helped make significant changes in a short space of time.(ABC Sport: Julia Faragher)

“Colleges and halls shouldn’t be panicking in September thinking ‘oh, we don’t have enough female-identifying runners. What should we do now?'” Erin said.

“It should be one of the first thoughts at the very start of the program: ‘How can we be as inclusive as possible to all people who want to run this program?’ Which I don’t think it has historically been.”

In fact, the 50:50 policy not only targets runners, but also sets out rules for coaches and navigators as well to tackle gender equality in all parts of Inward Bound.

Erin and Rhea never doubted the importance of what they were doing.

“It’s not only just a running race, it’s an experience that you’ll hold or carry with you for the rest of your life,” Erin said.

“It changed my life. It’s the best thing I have ever done, especially at university. I think it has so many flow-on effects in terms of confidence, resilience and perseverance,” Rhea said.

This year’s Inward Bound race is scheduled to go ahead on October 7–8 for the first time since the pandemic began in 2020, with Erin at the helm as one of this year’s co-race directors.

Julia Faragher is an artist and writer living in Canberra and is an intern with ABC Sport.

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Categories
Australia

Queensland tenants under pressure as rents rise amid calls for compassion from landlords

Queensland is sold to the world as the sunshine state, rich with resources and the golden future home of the Olympics.

Last year, the state’s population swelled by 50,000 interstate migrants, and at the same time a two-speed property market drove a nightmare market for renters.

In the 12 months to July, Brisbane tenants faced an average rent rise of 9 per cent for apartments and 13 per cent for houses.

Throw in the return of overseas migration, low vacancy rates and a building supply crisis, and the state’s tenants union says it is facing a rental crisis where landlords hold all the power.

Cairo Sauvage is in his 20s and lives in a share house in Morningside with his partner and housemates.

They are about to move out after two months of uncertainty after their landlord asked them to renew their lease but did not give them a price.

Fearing the worst, the housemates began looking for new accommodation. At the last minute, the landlord asked for an extra $40 a week, Mr Sauvage said.

“In that time frame of him taking so long to come back, me and my housemates were like ‘we feel like it’s going to be going up’. [In the end] we thought it was going to go up more than it did,” he said.

“We started applying for new places. We got approved for a place so we decided to move.

“Living with other people has its ups and downs, but it drives the cost down. Finding a place that’s a one-unit bedroom is [more than] $350, so it wasn’t doable.”

‘Rent-vesting’ as mortgages too hard to maintain

Mr Sauvage has a unique perspective to the rental crisis as a “rent-vester”, where he lives in a rental but owns a home in the inner-Brisbane suburb of Windsor.

He bought at the peak of the property boom last year with money he had received through an inheritance.

But he cannot afford to live alone in the home and considers it more of a long-term investment.

“I managed to secure something that was a little bit out of my price range, and that is the reason I have turned it into an investment,” he said.

Now a landlord himself, he said tenants hold little power in the arrangement.

“It’s really up to the discretion of the landlord, and that’s what I don’t think is right… how much they want to care for their property and for the tenant’s general wellbeing,” he said.

“If the tenant is terrible, the landlord has powers based on our current legislation to kick them out. If a landlord is terrible, the tenant doesn’t have much to fall back on.”

Townhouses
Rents have increased by more than $60 a week in Brisbane.(ABC News: Nic MacBean)

How COVID changed the rental market

CoreLogic economist Kaytlin Ezzy said COVID reshaped the way Queenslanders chose to live and it was having lasting consequences.

“Through COVID, we saw household size shrinkage. There are more individual households, because people didn’t want to be locked down with roommates, so that has a really strong impact,” she said.

“Anecdotally over COVID, we saw a lot of first home buyers move out of the family home and purchase their first property at the same time that rental yields were at some of their lowest on record.

“For the housing market, the outlook really depends on how hard and how fast the RBA increases interest rates. I do think that Brisbane will be slightly more resilient compared to Sydney and Melbourne markets.

“We do expect that the value declines will become more broad-based and as such will affect more Brisbane markets as we move forward into that downward cycle.”

She said pressure on the rental market was not likely to ease for the foreseeable future.

“Especially as overseas migration returns to that pre-COVID level,” she said.

Headshot of Tenants Queensland CEO Penny Carr.
Tenants Queensland CEO Penny Carr.(ABC News: Michael Lloyd)

Queensland’s tenants union, Tenants Queensland, operates an advice call center — QSTARS — for renters, and its chief executive Penny Carr said it was fielding daily calls from tenants in distress.

“Just today on our advice service we had an aged pensioner call us and tell us her rent is going up from $305 to $450 per week,” she said.

“People want to keep a roof over their head so they’ll often prioritize the rent, so they’ve got to not turn the heater on, or not have lunch, or not go out.

“For those people even on moderate incomes now it really is a hard choice… because they’re not having many things that they don’t need already.”

She said there were some avenues of appeal for tenants offered unreasonable rent rises, including raising the issue with the Residential Tenancies Authority and the Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal.

“The problem with doing that is as a consumer you have to have a fair bit of market knowledge, but the other thing is if the court doesn’t agree with you, you have a fixed term agreement that you’ve just signed.

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Categories
Business

10 Fun Facts You Might Not Know About Flying

Air travel is not the mystery it used to be, although there are many interesting things to still find out. Of course, anyone working in aviation may be familiar with some of these things, but perhaps there are still a few surprises in store.



SIMPLEFLYING VIDEO OF THE DAY

10 There is no row 13

Certainly, in most of the world, you will not find a row 13 in the aircraft cabin. Thirteen is considered unlucky, so it is thought that passengers would not be so happy to sit there. As such, many aircraft manufacturers have removed it. In China, they don’t have a row 4 for the same reason, and you won’t find row 17 in Brazil.

9 Water is essential

Hydration is so important when flying. In just a three-hour flight, the body can lose 1.5 liters of water, so it’s a good idea to stay topped up.

8 flying is safe

Statistics prove that flying is safer than driving, and the most dangerous part of your journey is the drive to the airport.

Be more concerned about your drive to the airport. Photo: Air North

7 lavatory

You can never lock yourself in the lavatory. The cabin crew know that there is a hidden button they can press to immediately release the door in an emergency.


6 meal time

It is not an official rule, but many airlines do use this practice … the flight crew on your flight, will not eat the same meal and mostly not at the same time. This is just to be on the safe side, as if a meal was contaminated, at least only one pilot would be incapacitated at any time.

5 Tomato-juice

The humble tomato juice is the second most requested drink onboard by passengers, after water. Although it might not be so tasty on the ground, we lose a third of our taste buds in the air, so a tomato juice (or a bloody Mary) becomes very sweet and tasteful.

Who knew tomato juice could be so popular? Photo: Tui

4 ashtrays

Due to legalization and the aircraft minimum equipment list, a removable ashtray has to be fixed on or near the lavatory door. This is due to the fact that smoking used to be allowed on board the aircraft, and passengers could potentially throw a cigarette into the lavatory waste bin and cause a fire. Of course, now smoking is completely banned, but the rule is the same; if there is no ashtray, the aircraft will be grounded until a replacement is found.


3 turbulence

Light turbulence that we most encounter, the aircraft only moves a few feet. In moderate turbulence where the cabin crew have been seated, the aircraft moves between 10 and 20 feet, although it might feel like a lot more!

two On the wing

The left wing has a red light and the right wing a green light. Sometimes it can be hard for the pilots to see an aircraft completely clearly. So these lights for the pilots are helpful to see which way other aircraft are facing or which direction it is going.

1 number crunching

Did you know that at any given time, there are 9,700 aircraft and 1.2 million people in the friendly skies?

Any surprises for you here? Let us know in the comments.

Categories
Entertainment

Martha Stewart addresses wild Pete Davidson dating rumor

Martha Stewart has responded to viral memes suggesting a budding relationship between her and Kim Kardashian’s ex, Pete Davidson.

Despite being snapped holding hands with the former Saturday night Live star at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in April, the 81-year-old said she’s not about to become Davidson’s next love interest, reports the new york post.

“Pete Davidson is like the son I never had!” the famous domestic diva told the Daily Mail with a laugh at the opening of her first-ever restaurant at the Paris in Las Vegas on Friday.

However, even though a hot new relationship isn’t on the horizon, she said she enjoyed meeting the 28-year-old performer.

“He is a charming boy who is finding his way,” she said.

It might not be the last time eager fans get the chance to hear the pair together — with Stewart dropping an offer she extended to Davidson.

“I’ve invited him to come on my podcast and I look forward to hearing what he has to say,” she revealed.

Davidson split from Kardashian, his girlfriend of nine months, in early August, citing reasons including his filming schedule and Kardashian being busy raising her children and running her business.

“They have a lot of love and respect for each other, but found that the long distance and their demanding schedules made it really difficult to maintain a relationship,” a source told Page Six.

Stewart — who was married to publisher Andrew Stewart for 29 years before they called it quits in 1987 — is regularly the talk of social media with her thirst trap snaps.

The former model especially caught fans’ attention after posting a sultry selfie from her pool in 2020 — with users even suggesting she start an OnlyFans account.

However, for the time being, Stewart appears to be single, jokingly telling Chelsea Handler on her podcast recently that it’s been “a while” since she dated.

This article originally appeared in the New York Post and was reproduced with permission.

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Categories
Sports

‘Absurd’ penalty robs Wallabies of try

The Wallabies were left scratching their collective heads after an “absurd” penalty saw a try overturned in their second Rugby Championship match against the Pumas.

James O’Connor crossed the chalk in the 20th minute at Estadio Bicentenario after an offload from Jordan Petaia as Australia thought they had taken a 15-14 lead.

However, on review, it was deemed captain James Slipper had infringed after flipping Pablo Matera in the ruck.

Watch every match of the Rugby Championship on the home of rugby, Stan Sport. Continue this weekend with Pumas vs Wallabies (Sunday 4.45am AEST). All matches streaming ad-free, live and on demand

All Blacks legend turned Stan Sport commentator Andrew Mehrtens questioned the legitimacy of the penalty, bemoaning the decision.

“Surely there’s nothing wrong with that? There’s no other way that James Slipper can make this clean out,” said Mehrtens.

“Matera has gone there, he’s got him around the shoulders, it’s Matera’s fault that he’s got himself in that position.

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Koroibete’s freakish try saver

“No, he hasn’t flipped his legs over guys, surely.”

Slipper also questioned the penalty, suggesting Matera hadn’t supported his own weight and had landed on a Wallabies player.

“It’s the fact that he’s gone over, he’s gone horizontal, which is a penalty,” said referee Karl Dickson.

“You can’t flip him over in a ruck. The first player has cleared their leg, lifting the leg, and you’ve flipped him over.”

De la Fuente’s bizarre ‘sniper’ try

Mehrtens duly doubled down in his assessment.

“No, this is absurd,” he said.

“Slipper has only got one target there or one opportunity to clean out Matera who is wrapping himself around the ball carrier, by the way, which is illegal, and he’s cleaned him out the only way he can. This is an absolute absurdity.”

The penalty brought the score back in Argentina’s favour, 14-10.

At halftime, Argentina led 26-10 after tries in the 24th and 32nd minute to Jerónimo de la Fuente and Juan Martín González respectively.

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Categories
Australia

St Aloysius’ College accused of trying to ‘shoehorn’ Inner West campus at Rozelle

“Residents are right to be concerned that an exclusive private school is trying to shoehorn a campus into what is already a very tightly packed part of our community with limited parking and narrow streets,” he said.

An artist's impression of a classroom at St Aloysius' College's proposed Rozelle campus.

An artist’s impression of a classroom at St Aloysius’ College’s proposed Rozelle campus.Credit:St Aloysius’ College

Parker said residents had been “pounded” by years of roadworks associated with WestConnex, which had brought noise, disruption and road closures.

“If it goes ahead we could see almost 200 cars brought to bear on a quiet, narrow local road during pick-up and drop-off every day,” he said.

A number of nearby residents objected to the school’s plans, warning surrounding streets were narrow and would become gridlocked during school drop-off and pick-up.

Residents would be inconvenienced by traffic jams and parking congestion, which also posed a risk to schoolchildren.

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Inner West Council also lodged an objection to the proposed new campus because of its impact on parking and traffic, but reversed its opposition after council officers met with planning bureaucrats and the school.

“While the issues were not satisfactorily addressed in the additional information, we are continuing to work with DPE on conditions that will minimize the impacts to the community,” a council spokeswoman said. “Council has withdrawn the objection subject to the inclusion of the conditions.”

St Aloysius’ was overfunded by $1,652,961 in 2021 by the NSW government, according to a report by education economist Adam Rorris commissioned by the NSW Teachers Federation – one of more than 200 private schools given extra state government money.

Classified as a state-significant development, the school’s development application is being assessed by the planning department, which has requested additional information.

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But St Aloysius’ is already recruiting staff for the Rozelle campus, which is owned by the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney.

“Term three is when schools throughout Sydney seek to recruit roles for the following year,” Tannock said. “To attract the best candidates possible, it is important to have our leader of this campus in place soon.”

School pick-up and drop-offs are often a contentious issue, with residents complaining that private schools cause traffic congestion and dangerous driving by parents.

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The head of SCEGGS Darlinghurst last month said police would be deployed to monitor parents dropping off and picking up children from the prestigious girls school as well as hiring a traffic warden in response to traffic complaints from its inner-city neighbours.

Tannock said the school had worked hard over recent months to respond to concerns about traffic and parking from nearby residents and the council.

“We want to be a good neighbor and to ensure that our impact on traffic and parking is limited,” he said. “We believe that our plans will ensure this.”

Tannock said the school was planning to “integrate successfully” into the local community and regenerate a facility that has been mostly vacant for a long time: “We will be prioritizing the use of public transport for our students given their age.”

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Categories
Business

How should I plan for my inheritance?

I retired in 2014 at age 60 and rolled over my superannuation into an allocated pension, drawing down $40,000 a year. My pension account is now at $443,000 – I’ve lost $40,000 since January. I own 40 per cent of my home as tenant-in-common with my partner, who is 76 and has $200,000 in his super pension from him, paying $25,000 annually. Our house is valued at $1.8 million and we each receive a Centrelink part-age pension of $223 per fortnight. My mother recently passed away, leaving me $587,000. I am thinking of putting $200,000 into my allocated pension, and buying another 10 per cent share of the house, so that my partner has additional funds. I’d use the remainder for long-overdue renovations on our home and the rest on travel. Is this the best strategy? vs.

It seems a well-thought-out use of your inheritance. However, you are probably aware that you will likely lose the age pension, as the upper assets threshold for a homeowning couple is $915,500.

What should you keep in mind when planning to spend a sizeable inheritance?

What should you keep in mind when planning to spend a sizeable inheritance?Credit:Michael Kempf

If your assets later diminish, and you reclaim a part-age pension, your allocated pensions would be classified as “post-2015” and subject to deeming.

Looking down the track, you also need to consider what would you do if one of you succumbs to illness and needs to move into an aged-care facility. The lump sum refundable accommodation deposit – required on entry – varies, but $500,000 could be seen as an average figure.

Each of you would probably be able to only put down part of this, from which the interest on the unpaid portion can be withdrawn.

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So, I would prefer that you use the new ability (since July 1) for people over the age of 67 to contribute as much as $330,000 as a three-year forward non-concessional contribution into super. You cannot add it to a super pension fund, so simply open another account.

And, yes, renovations that keep your house in good nick, and a long holiday, are both wise and reduce the assets test count.

My elderly mother-in-law inherited shares in a Malaysian company in the 1960s and they are now worth about $50,000. She wishes to sell them – a process we have found to be frustrating. Her financial advisor to her has asked the Malaysian broker who holds the shares a number of times. Recently, the broker advised of the requirements to be met, many of which were irrelevant and assume she is living in Malaysia. My mother-in-law is a UK citizen and a permanent resident of Australia. One form she asks for details of a Malaysian bank account, which she does not have, although she has an ANZ account into which the dividends have been deposited for years. We asked the Malaysian embassy in Canberra for some guidance. They were polite but essentially could not assist us. Can you point us towards a successful sale of the shares? FM