Firing bricks and making mortar and cement is very costly, but organic chemists at Flinders University are working on more sustainable alternatives — focusing on building materials made from waste products.
In another move into the circular economy, researchers from the Flinders Chalker Lab have used low-cost feedstocks to make lightweight but durable polymer building blocks which can be bonded together with an adhesive-free chemical reaction.
Their latest study tested the strength of these materials and explored ways they can be reinforced in construction.
Matthew Flinders Professor of Chemistry, Justin Chalker, says the need to develop sustainable building materials is increasingly important, with cement, iron and steel production accounting for more than 15% of global COtwo emissions each year.
“In this study, we tested a new type of brick we can make from waste cooking oil, mixed with sulfur and dicyclopentadiene (DCPD). Both sulfur and DCPD are byproducts of petroleum refining.
“The bricks bond together without mortar upon application of a trace amount of amine catalyst.
“All the starting materials are plentiful and can be classified as industrial waste.
“This research is part of a larger effort to move towards a sustainable built environment,” says project leader Professor Chalker.
The Chalker Lab’s new polymer research team at Flinders University’s College of Science and Engineering is collaborating with Clean Earth Technologies for further development. scale-up and possible commercialization.
The latest study, published as a cover feature in a special issue on Sustainability in the journal Macromolecular Chemistry and Physicsexpanded the research to test the new bricks’ mechanical properties and look at ways to reinforce them in construction, including with carbon fiber fillers.
Chalker Lab research associate Dr Maximilian Mann says as well as repurposing waste materials into value-added construction materials, the polymer bricks’ sulfur-sulfur bond means they can be bound together without mortar like traditional building method.
“The bonding in this novel catalytic process is very strong, producing a sustainable construction material with its own mortar which will potentially streamline construction,” Dr Mann says.
First author Paris Pauling says the research is an excellent example of new scientific developments in sustainable materials science.
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Materials provided by Flinders University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
James Packer invited some of his famous friends to board his $250million superyacht in the South of France last Tuesday.
The Australian billionaire, 54, was joined on the luxury vessel by long-time pal Karl Stefanovic, his wife Jasmine and their two-year-old daughter Harper.
It was a family affair with Jasmine’s sister Jade Yarbrough also on board with her new boyfriend, the former Australian cricket captain Michael Clarke.
James Packer (left) invited some famous friends to board his $250million superyacht in the South of France last Tuesday. He is seen here with Karl Stefanovic’s wife Jasmine (second from left), her sister de ella Jade Yarbrough (right, carrying her niece Harper) and another friend (centre)
Jasmine, 38, a former model-turned-shoe designer, looked breezy in a white shirt and designer sunglasses as she chatted to James on deck.
A bikini-clad Jade, 30, stood nearby carrying her Niece Harper on her hip.
Michael, 41, was also spotted enjoying a day on the water with the cashed-up crowd, clad in a black T-shirt and shades.
The retired batsman, nicknamed ‘Pup’, has been dating interior designer Jade for several months now.
Former Australian cricket captain Michael Clarke (seated, bottom right) was also spotted enjoying a day on the water with the cashed-up crowd, clad in a black T-shirt and shades
Today host Karl, 47, kept it casual in a black shirt left partially unbuttoned, and completed his look with a matching cap.
Meanwhile, James, who recently sold his stake in Crown Resorts for $3.3billion, looked slimmer than he has been in years in a loose black T-shirt and sweatpants.
The troubled businessman appears to have put a series of health issues behind him.
Michael (right) has been dating interior designer Jade (left) for several months now
In the last few months, he has lost 33kg (72lbs or 5.2st) and has also ditched the psychiatric medication that for so long altered his mood.
Packer told The Weekend Australian in June he was ready to start the ‘third act’ of his life, including a planned return to his home city of Sydney
‘I’m roughly 130kg now and want to be back to 100kg by the end of 2022. I want to swim with my kids at Bondi when we’re all in Sydney together next year and be 100kg,’ he said from his home in Mexico.
Today show host Karl Stefanovic (left) kept it casual in a black shirt left partially unbuttoned, and completed his look with a matching cap
Packer revealed he’d quit the antidepressants and antipsychotic drugs he was taking, and was now looking to ‘rehabilitate’ his reputation in Australia.
‘I am very much looking forward to seeing Crown Sydney… it hasn’t been appropriate for me to be in Australia for the last few years,’ he said.
In a subsequent interview with The Sydney Morning Herald, Packer said he had lost a total of 33kg and counting by quitting alcohol, following a strict diet and exercise regimen, and limiting his daily calorie intake.
James Packer (pictured in October 2017) said in a recent interview he was excited to begin his ‘third act’ and plans to ease back into public life in Australia
He told the newspaper his life was ‘pretty good right now’, adding: ‘My mental health is the best it’s ever been.’
Packer sold Crown to private investment company Blackstone for $8.9billion in a deal that was finalized in June, pocketing $3.3billion in the process.
The sale marked the end of a major chapter in his life which at times was mired by controversy amid inquiries into the company and allegations of money laundering.
Despite the investigations, the father of three credited his casinos in Melbourne, Perth and Sydney with changing the cities ‘for the better’.
Packer is seen here at Sydney’s Bondi Beach on December 21, 2003. He recently said he hopes to visit Bondi with his children next year after getting his weight down to 100kg
Georgia Godwin has continued her breakthrough Commonwealth Games, with another gold medal in artistic gymnastics in Birmingham.
A day after winning the women’s all-round individual title, the 24-year-old again produced her best to claim the vault.
And it was as tight as you can get.
Godwin and Canada’s Laurie Denommee finished on the same score after their two vaults.
After a difficult few years for women’s gymnastics, Georgia Godwin has given the sport in Australia a ray of hope.(AAP: Dean Lewis)
However, the Queenslander won on the tie-break rule, with the highest scoring single vault.
“Coming off of two days of comp, I am feeling it a little bit, so I just gave 110 per cent of what I had left into that first vault,” she said.
And straight after the final vault, she backed up for the uneven bars, and this time grabbed silver.
While gold might seem to shine brightest, Godwin was most emotional when talking about sharing the silver medal in the team final earlier in the week.
“The team one means so much to me,” she said.
“To go through everything we have with the other four girls, and to come away with a silver, I’m so proud of them.
“I’m just proud of myself and everything I’ve had to go through. And everyone who’s helped me get here. It takes a huge village.”
Georgia Godwin now has won two gold and two silver medals at the 2022 Games.(ABC News: West Matteussen)
Godwin is the advertisement gymnastics needs after a report last year showed serious issues in the sport.
And she’s willing to help the sport move forward.
“I like to see myself as the mother figure. I am older,” she said.
“This team I was honored to be the captain of — and I’ve really just tried to take everyone under my wing, show them what sportsmanship looks like and try [to] guide them in the right direction at the end.
“I do my best to try [to] show that gymnastics is a safe sport, and that everyone should feel safe when doing gymnastics, and we’re heading in the right direction.”
Godwin still has one more event to come: the women’s beam final.
Glaetzer ‘over the moon’ to win after rollercoaster competition
Track cyclist Matthew Glaetzer has had one of the wildest rides of all athletes at the Commonwealth Games.
He started competition with gold in the men’s team sprint, then was involved in a scary crash in the keirin, which threatened to end his campaign.
He was left fuming after being denied a bronze medal in the men’s sprint upon review.
Matthew Glaetzer’s Birmingham campaign almost came to a premature end after a heavy crash in the keirin.(Getty Images: Justin Setterfield)
Then, to throw another spanner in the works, just hours before the men’s 1000m time trial, AusCycling released a statement saying the Australians would have to use different handlebars, due to them being ruled unsafe.
So, among that dramatic backdrop, Glaetzer still somehow managed to summon a phenomenal performance to win the time trial, using equipment that would’ve added at least a second to his time.
“I’m making a habit of bouncing back at the Commonwealth Games,” he said.
“I’d rather not have such lows to come back from, but it shows there is always a new day and we can always try again.”
Glaetzer has now equaled Anna Meares’s track cycling record of five Commonwealth Games golds.
“It was special, but I was surprised I won, given how bad I felt out there,” he said.
“Last night I said I’d be over the moon just to get a medal, considering everything that’s happened.
“To come home with a win in such a special time, shows how strong we are as a nation.”
Another bright star emerges on the green
Ellen Ryan, 25 — the youngest member of the Australian lawn bowls team — took out the gold medal in her debut Games women’s singles final, overcoming Guernsey’s Lucy Beere 17-21.
However, in the men’s triple final, while Australia’s men almost pulled off one of the great comebacks, they had to settle for silver..
Barry Lester, Carl Healey and Ben Twist were trailing 12-1, with two ends to go.
They managed to get back to 12-all but England edged ahead to win 14-12, leaving the Aussies with a silver medal.
“We used every bit of Aussie spirit we could and put ourselves in a position [to win],” Lester said.
“ButJamie [Chestney, England] and the boys played really well and they’re worthy winners.”
Weightlifting gold out of reach
Kyle Bruce was in the gold medal position in the men’s 81kg weightlifting category after a Commonwealth Games record of 183kg in the clean and jerk.
He was given three white lights by the judges, however, on review, officials ruled his arms didn’t fully extend in the overhead position and, so, he was left with silver behind England’s Chris Murray.
Kyle Bruce accepted the judges’ decision as he claimed silver in the men’s 81kg category.(AAP: Darren England)
“A lot of people at home that don’t know weightlifting that will would be cheering and screaming like ‘Wow, that’s the gold, he’s got it,'” Bruce said.
“And then, a few minutes later, to say it’s a ‘No lift’, some people wouldn’t understand that.
“But, as a weightlifter, that’s the rules. I understand that.”
The boss of travel company Flight Center has predicted more “pain” for domestic travellers, explaining airport chaos will continue for some time yet.
Flight Center’s Managing Director Graham Turner said travelers will need to exercise “patience” as airlines navigate inexperienced staff and absenteeism due to the latest COVID-19 wave.
Crowds at Sydney Airport have become a regular fixture as IT glitches, wild weather and COVID-19 staff shortages take its toll. (Louis Kennerley)
“It is a tough period,” Turner said, adding inexperienced staff are also contributing to the issues being felt.
“I will improve, but it is going to take some time.
“I would suggest six or eight weeks before all of this really settles down and there is going to be pain for domestic travelers in that time.
“Domestically, it will improve and we predict certainly by October/November, assuming the Omicron does settle down, it will be much better off, we think.”
Flight Center’s Managing Director Graham Turner told Today domestic delays should improve by October, November. (Today)
With borders now open, the state of Australia’s airports is garnering worldwide attention.
Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport has been ranked among the worst 10 airports for flight delays globally.
CNN used FlightAware data from May 26 to July 19 to determine 34.2 per cent of flights out of the facility were delayed over the survey period.
The worst 10 airports for flight delays around the world
This marked a decline of 24.6 per cent, compared to the corresponding period in 2019.
Sydney Airport CEO Geoff Culbert said the number of passengers was creating issues within the facility.
“The increasing demand for travel is encouraging but it’s clearly creating challenges for an industry that is still trying to rebuild operationally.
“With the June long weekend and school holiday peak behind us, we will continue to work on our operational recovery alongside our airline partners and each of the 800 organizations across the airport.”
Australian shares are set to open lower, ahead of the Reserve Bank’s widely-expected interest rate hike this afternoon which will lead to another sharp rise in mortgage repayments.
Key points:
The ASX 200 has dropped 6.1pc since the year began
On Wall Street, the S&P 500 has lost 14pc of its value since January 1
The RBA has lifted interest rates by 1.25pc in the past three months
ASX futures were down 0.3 per cent, to 6,880 points, by 8:25am AEST.
The Australian dollar was trading at a six-week high of 70.2 US cents, following a 0.6 per cent rise overnight.
According to many Australian economists, the most likely outcome of today’s RBA announcement will see the central bank lift it cash rate target by a larger-than-usual 0.5 percentage points.
This would take the new rate to 1.85 per cent, a big jump since the record low of 0.1 per cent in May. It would also be the highest cash rate since April 2016.
The central bank is expected to keep lifting rates aggressively over the coming months, as it desperately tries to bring inflation down from its 21-year high.
Effectively, it will do so by lifting rates to a level that makes consumers feel poorer so they visit the shops less, and spend more on their loan repayments.
House prices are also feeling the crunch. Since interest rates begin to rise sharply in May, property values have dropped by 2 per cent — the fastest drop since the onset of the global financial crisis in 2008, according to figures from CoreLogic.
‘A lot of questions’ about the economic downturn
The local share market is also likely to follow a weak lead from Wall Street, which we see-sawed on Monday, local time, as crude oil prices plunged and the looming possibility of US recession curbed the appetite for taking risks.
All three major US indexes were modestly lower on the first day of August, coming on the heels of the S&P 500’s and the Nasdaq’s biggest monthly percentage gains since 2020.
“There are still a lot of questions about whether we are really out of the woods, economically, and we probably aren’t,” said Tom Martin, a senior portfolio manager at GLOBALT Investments in Atlanta, Georgia.
“We’re not even close on the [economic] effects of the [Federal Reserve] raising interest rates.”
The S&P 500 declined 0.3 per cent, to end the session at 4,119 points.
The Nasdaq slipped 0.2 per cent, to 12,369, while the Dow Jones index fell 0.1 per cent, to 32,799.
Energy stocks pulled European markets into the red as fears of weakening demand and economic contraction on the heels of disappointing data from the euro zone and China.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index lost 0.2 per cent overnight.
Crude oil prices headed lower as traders braced for this week’s meeting of OPEC and other oil producers concerning world crude supply.
Brent crude fell 3.9 per cent, to $US100.03 per barrel.
Gold prices edged higher after the US dollar softened, as investors looked to economic data for clues regarding the pace of interest rate hikes from the US Federal Reserve.
Spot gold added 0.2 per cent, to $US1,768.73 an ounce.
Telstra’s carbon neutral MVNO, Belong, has announced that it has partnered with Kingfisher to launch Second Life Phones which will offer pre-owned smartphones for value and environmentally conscious consumers.
The pre-owned and refurbed device program offers both various and limited devices, mainly Apple’s iPhone but a few Samsung Galaxy devices at reasonable prices and is being marketed via new TV ad running across the major TV networks, YouTube and social media apps as an eco -friendly alternative to purchasing a brand-new device.
Belong head of product and marketing, Aaliah Eggins-Bryson has stated at the launch of Belong’s Second Life services that:
“Too many Australians believe mobile phones have no material impact on the environment than other things in their lives but in fact, every year, the world throws away around 44.7 million tonnes of tech. This is why we’ve launched Second Life Phones; because the most sustainable phone is the one that already exists.”
So what devices are on offer, well here is a full list:
Samsung Galaxy S20+ 5G in cosmic black – 128GB – $649
Samsung Galaxy S20 FE 5G in either cloud lavender, cloud navy, cloud red or cloud white – 128GB – $559
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G in either phantom black or phantom silver – 128GB – $949
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G in either phantom black or phantom silver – 256GB – $999
Manzana:
iPhone 11 64GB in white or black – $599
iPhone 11 Pro in space gray – 64GB – $699
iPhone 11 Pro in space gray – 256GB – $789
iPhone 11 Pro Max in space gray – 64GB – $799
iPhone X in space gray or Silver – 64GB – $439
iPhone X in space gray or Silver – 256GB – $489
iPhone XR in either black, Product (Red), yellow, white, blue or coral – 64GB – $459
iPhone XR in either black, Product (Red), yellow, white, blue or coral – 128GB – $489
iPhone XS in either space grey, gold or silver – 64GB – $479
iPhone XS in either space grey, gold or silver – 256GB – $539
You can check out the link here to see how Belong’s second life phone system in partnership with Kingfisher works and check out the deals listed above if you’re in the market for a phone but don’t want to break the bank in getting some high end and mid range devices at bargain prices.
Alice Pung’s young adult novel Laurinda opens with a simple epigraph: “Life is nothing but high school.” This quote, from the US writer Kurt Vonnegut, distils a confronting truth: the things that happen to us as teenagers can, and often do, follow us through our lives.
Melbourne Theater Company’s adaptation of Laurinda, co-written by comedian Diana Nguyen and Petra Kalive (who also directed), magnifies this phenomenon by splitting Pung’s much-loved book between past and present. Her protagonist, Lucy Lam, is both 15 and 35 in this version: we see her as a teenager in the 1990s as she navigates her eponymous private school, where an elite group, The Cabinet, reigns supreme. Always present is Lucy’s friend from Ella Linh, the only person who really gets her from Ella.
But we also see Lucy looking back, exploring all the ways in which being a member of the Asian diaspora in Australia, and experiencing casual and explicit racism, has irrevocably shaped and changed her. There is both light – the daggy joys of 90s music, an energetic cast – and darkness in this adaptation; it’s a little bit Mean Girls and a little bit Fight Club, with a distinctly Asian-Australian feel.
Nguyen remembers being a child in 1996 when Pauline Hanson made her infamous maiden speech in which she claimed that Australia was being “swamped by Asians”. When Nguyen began adapting Laurinda in 2020, waves of anti-Asian sentiment were again washing over the world after China was identified as the origin of Covid-19.
“#StopAsianHate was in the media, and just before the Comedy festival in 2020, I experienced racism in the comedy room,” she remembers. “That was living inside of me – how was it possible that in 2020, even though I was writing this play set in the 1990s, it was still traveling through the generations?”
The idea for the adaptation had been sitting on the shelf for years when Kalive started at the MTC in 2020, right as the first lockdown hit. She tore through the novel in 24 hours; as a Greek-Australian, she could relate to some of the feelings it described. Kalive was keen to adapt it, and when it came to a co-writer, Nguyen immediately came to mind. “I thought there was a fabulous humor in the work and lived experience that Diana would be able to speak to and understand intrinsically,” she says.
The intersection of class and race is a recurring topic in Pung’s work, which the author feels Kalive and Nguyen inherently understand. “They have the insight that some people don’t have if they don’t live, or don’t have parents or family, who come from a very working class background, and then are thrust into this world of privilege,” says Pung .
Nguyen had read Laurinda years ago. “I was quite triggered by it,” she says. “It’s not overt racism but subtle racism, and I felt Alice did such a great job of naming what Lucy went through. When I think about the courage of any young person who has ever faced racism, that’s what we’ve created – an enduring play about a woman who lives it through school, but it travels with her through her life.
The comedian, who created the web series Phi and Me about a Vietnamese teenager and her overbearing mother, brings this same understanding of intergenerational dynamics to Laurinda. Scenes with Lucy’s refugee parents are spoken in untranslated Vietnamese – an authentic depiction of the domestic lives of immigrants.
“What’s so beautiful about this show, and the grounding parts, are the conversations Lucy has with her mum,” Nguyen says. “For me, to hear the Vietnamese language on stage is mind-blowing. The gift I’m giving to myself is to hear my home language spoken on stage.”
“Diana has always been really invested in realizing the home as three-dimensionally as possible to really ground Lucy as a fully rounded person, not just a caricature,” Kalive adds.
Both writers didn’t have the language as teenagers to describe or understand their experiences with racism or xenophobia; Words and concepts such as “microaggression” simply didn’t exist in the everyday lexicon. “As a young person, you’re just trying to exist in the world and all your energy is spent trying to deal,” Kalive says. “I definitely don’t feel like my peers were equipped with the nous that young people are now.”
The production’s all-Asian cast of seven includes Fiona Choi (The Family Law), Gemma Chua-Tran (Heartbreak High) and Ngoc Phan (Boy Swallows Universe). Between them, they play 20 characters, not all of whom are Asian; it’s a bold and significant casting choice in an industry that still struggles with meaningful representation. The personal experiences of the actors also inform what unfolds on stage. “The script continues to respond and adapt to include their perspectives, which is incredibly powerful,” Kalive says.
There’s a brief nod in the play to another 1990s-set Australian YA novel also recently adapted for stage: Looking for Alibrandi, which tells a similar story of a teenage girl from a migrant background struggling to find her place in a world of whiteness and privilege . These stories are more relevant now than ever, contributing to ongoing discussions about the place of private schools in Australia.
“Some of the culture of private schools needs to change – the insularity, the sense of entitlement,” Pung says. “It’s an unacknowledged and unaware sense of entitlement, which I hoped to bring out in the writing of Laurinda.”
There is reportedly a divide in the Manly dressing room between the players who played in the Pride jersey and the seven stars who boycotted their crucial loss to the Roosters.
The Daily Telegraph’s Phil Rothfield believes there is a lingering resentment between the players that played and those that chose to put their beliefs ahead of the team’s final aspirations.
“I think there is a split,” Rothfield said of the playing group on NRL 360.
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“I think the players that took the field cannot understand why the other seven didn’t.
“I think the meeting yesterday cleared it up a little bit, but you can’t repair a split of this magnitude with a bandaid in a 45 minute meeting.
“I think when something as drastic as this happens when seven men pull out of a finals crunch match over a view and an opinion and the other guys are totally on the opposite side.
“They put their views and opinions ahead of a finals berth almost.”
Paul Kent also believes there is a split between the Manly seven and the owner who incorrectly said they would backflip on their stance in time for next season.
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Daly Cherry-Evans and DesHasler.Source: News Corp Australia
“What about the owner coming out and saying the players had gone back on what they originally intended, which they have heavily refuted,” Kent said.
Braith Anasta agreed with Rothfield that as a player he would be frustrated with the seven players who put their beliefs above a goal the team has worked for since pre-season in November.
“I agree with and I’m just thinking now as a player the majority of the playing group you train from November all the way through,” Anasta said.
“You put your body on the line every week. You put your heart and soul into it. You make sacrifices every single day.
“These players have got a few teammates who have made a different decision than the rest of the team and it can cause a divide and it seems to be that way.
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Jake Trbojevic and Manly players process the loss to the Roosters.Source: Getty Images
“It could derail their season. We spoke about it before the game that it could happen and it is possibly happening right now.
“There are no winners and losers here. The fact is it doesn’t matter what they are arguing over or have a split of opinion over. It can cause a divide and it seems to be causing a divide.”
The Daily Telegraph’s Dean Ritchie has no doubt there is a rift between the seven players and the rest of the squad and it will take time to heal the wounds of the last week.
“There is divisions at Manly and anyone who tells you there is not telling a fib,” Ritchie said on The Big Sports Breakfast.
“The players that played were dirty on the players that didn’t play.
Sea Eagles players at training.Source: News Corp Australia
“They are trying to sort it out and understand each other’s religious beliefs and views, but there is a division there.
“You speak to one player and he will say we can move forward from this and you speak to others who say this is going to take a lot longer.”
Laurie Daley questioned how both sides of the split can come together with no common ground on the issue.
“You have got two parties that don’t agree and you talk about finding common ground, but where is the common ground in this?” Daley said.
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“There is no giving,” Ritchie replied.
“Both sides are quite staunch in their views. The players are dirty the others didn’t play and the seven players are saying, we are not backing down.
“To be fair to them they have been staunch from the beginning and have stuck tight through a lot of criticism, so they are not clearly going to apologize.
“I don’t know how one meeting is going to fix this problem at Manly.”
More warning signs at a popular lookout spot in Victoria’s west could have prevented a woman’s death, a coroner has found.
Rosy Loomba was taking a photo with her husband at the Grampians’ Boroka Lookout in December 2020 when she fell to her death.
The 38-year-old was trying to walk back from the “selfie rock” ledge to her children and friends but lost her balance and fell 30 meters, Deputy State Coroner Jacqui Hawkins found.
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Loomba died from multiple injuries, including skull fractures and a dislocated spine.
While the lookout spot is fenced off, Hawkins said it was common for people to climb over the “easily scaled” wire fence to take photos on the rock ledge.
A coroner recommends more warning signs at a Grampians lookout after a woman died taking a photo. (Pablo Mena/AAP PHOTOS) Credit: AAP
At the time of Loomba’s death, there were 30 other people waiting to take their photos.
Hawkins recommended Parks Victoria install extra signage in the area that expressly stated people have died and been seriously injured at the location.
“I note that adventurers and park attendees may continue to climb fences to access lookouts in order to get a photo or for their own curiosity,” the coroner said in her findings.
“Mrs Loomba’s death is a reminder of the dangers associated with ignoring signage and fencing which is put in place to keep people safe.”
Rosie Loomba. Credit: Herald Sun
The coroner’s report noted Parks Victoria installed additional infrastructure and signage at Boroka Lookout this year.
Parks Victoria will provide a written response to the coroner within three months, setting out how the recommendations will be addressed.
“We’re reviewing the existing signage at the Boroka Lookout, including reviewing the recommendations from the Coroner’s Court,” a spokesperson told AAP in a statement.
Democrats and Republicans are locked in a statistical dead heat as the parties race to gain seats in Congress months before the midterm elections, according to a new Harvard CAPS-Harris Poll survey released exclusively to The Hill.
Voters are split 50-50 when asked if they would vote for a Democratic or Republican candidate for Congress today. That’s a switch from May, when the same Harvard CAPS-Harris Poll survey showed the GOP was leading 51 percent to 49 percent.
The midterm elections are shaping up to be a close call as Republicans campaign on high inflation and a probable recession while Democrats seek to go on offense over the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade and GOP opposition to climate change legislation and gun control.
Mark Penn, the co-director of the Harvard CAPS-Harris Poll survey, said Republicans are losing ground they once held with swing voters — including moderate Democrats and independents who might vote for them.
“Despite poor ratings for the administration and big concerns about inflation, the Republican Party is still seen as too far to the right for these moderate Democrats and so they have not closed the sale on the midterms,” Penn said.
The president’s party generally loses seats in the House during their first midterm election, which has led many pundits to predict the House will flip to the GOP. Republicans need to pick up only a few seats to take the majority.
The Senate is a different situation, as a number of the competitive races are being held in states won by President Biden in 2020.
The most closely watched races include Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, where Republicans are seeking to hold seats, and Arizona and Georgia, where Democratic incumbents are seeking full terms. Biden won all four of those states in the 2020 election.
Amid polarized times, neither political party is seen as highly favorable. About 48 percent of voters approve of the Republican Party, according to the Harvard CAPS-Harris Poll survey, while 43 percent of voters approve of the Democratic Party.
The issue most expected to dominate the elections this year is inflation, a top concern for 36 percent of Democratic voters and 49 percent of GOP voters, the poll shows.
The second-most pressing issue is abortion rights, a major concern after the US Supreme Court eliminated what had been a 50-year constitutional right to abortion.
About 26 percent of voters are concerned about abortion access. Democrats, at 20 percent, are far more likely than Republicans, at 8 percent, to be concerned about abortion rights.
The Harvard CAPS-Harris Poll survey was conducted from July 27 to July 28 among 1,885 registered voters.
The survey is an online sample drawn from the Harris Panel and weighted to reflect known demographics. As a representative online sample, it does not report a probability confidence interval.