Nick Kyrgios has delivered another masterclass to put Alex de Minaur to the sword and scorch into the quarter-finals of the Canadian Open.
De Minaur entered the first-time showdown with his Davis Cup teammate as Australian No.1, but copped a nasty reality check in a 6-2, 6-3 mauling at the hands of the hottest player on tour.
Kyrgios needed barely an hour to wrap up a 15th win from his past 16 matches and guarantee himself another important rankings boost ahead of the US Open starting on August 29.
At times it looked like Kyrgios was toying with de Minaur, who barely won a point in the opening four games.
He finally got on the board but Kyrgios, mixing stylish serve-volley plays with ferocious power from the back, effortlessly took the opening set in 23 minutes before immediately grabbing an early break in the second.
He briefly lost composure after failing to serve out the match at 5-2 but regained his cool to clinch victory with a ruthless fourth break of de Minaur’s serve.
Nick Kyrgios will head to the season’s final grand slam as one of the world’s top 30.Credit:The Canadian Press
“After yesterday’s big high, today was really hard mentally for me to go out and play Alex,” Kyrgios said. “We’re such good friends, he’s been having such a good career and carrying the Australian flag for so long. It was just tough mentally, it’s never easy to play a friend like that especially if they’re an Australian so I just got out here and got the job done.
“I played the way I had to play – he’s a hell of a player. If you play to his strengths he’s one of the best players from the back [of the court] in the game and he’s so fast, he’s going to have a hell of a career.”
As teacher shortages hit classrooms across the country, the federal education minister, Jason Clare, is meeting his state and territory counterparts on Friday to address the problem. Their challenge is how to find more than 4000 new secondary teachers by 2025.
A solution might be hiding in plain sight, as evidenced by the experience at various schools not far from where the ministers are meeting.
But does the distribution of teachers add up?
Two disadvantaged high schools, just over the border in Queanbeyan, have about one teacher for every 10 students. Such a level of support is critically important in these schools. But at nearby Canberra Girls Grammar, the ratio is under 10. And there are low student/teacher ratios, too, at Canberra’s Daramalan Catholic College, Radford College and Canberra Grammar. How have Australia’s poorest and richest schools, with their very different needs, ended up being staffed at similar levels? And, in any case, do the advantaged students truly benefit from such close attention?
If Australia’s teachers were more equitably distributed, our teacher-supply problem would be significantly eased. This would be especially so in NSW, Victoria and Western Australia. Public schools and some Catholic schools are being starved of teachers while, in number terms, wealthier independent schools have a surplus.
The numbers tell the story. Independent schools in major cities had an overall student-teacher ratio of 11.72 to one in 2018 – the last year before teacher shortages began to be noticed. In the same year, government schools had an average ratio of 14.73 to one, although it could be as high as 16.
If independent schools were staffed at the same level as government schools, they would have required about 32,000 teachers. But they employed about 40,000 – 25 per cent more than would have been needed if the same staffing standards had been applied to them as applied in public schools and, for the most part, in Catholic systems. At an average salary of about $80,000, those 8000 additional teachers would have cost more than $500 million. In the light of overall needs, was it a good investment?
Some might say it pays off in better results. But it doesn’t. The evidence shows that schools with similar demographics produce similar results. Anyone can use the My School website to see the impact of socio-economic status of school enrollments on students’ results. Comparisons of apples with apples show public schools achieve much the same results as independent schools, at a lower cost and with less favorable student/teacher ratios. Imagine what most public schools could achieve with better teacher resourcing.
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Others might say the funding of independent schools comes from parents, and if this helps pay for more teachers in those schools, so what? But private schools also receive taxpayer funding, and the bigger question is how much should that public money prop up a system that distributes more of a scarce resource – in this case teachers – to those who need them least?
Lt. Nathan Dennis said that after negotiations failed, law enforcement officers tried to take suspect into custody, but the suspect raised a gun at authorities and was fatally shot.
The man was identified as Ricky Shiffer, according to three federal law enforcement sources.
The FBI is investigating Shiffer’s social media presence and whether he had ties to right-wing extremism, one of the sources said.
A separate federal law enforcement source tells CNN that authorities are looking into whether the suspect had ties to any group that participated in the January 6th attack on the US Capitol or if he participated himself.
A Truth Social account bearing Shiffer’s name referenced his attempt to storm an FBI office, and also encouraged others online to prepare for a revolutionary-type war, CNN has learned.
“Well, I thought I had a way through bullet proof glass, and I didn’t,” the user posted on Donald Trump’s social media site at 9:29 amAuthorities say the attack took place at 9:15. “If you don’t hear from me, it is true I tried attacking the FBI, and it’ll mean either I was taken off the internet, the FBI got me, or they felt the regular cops while.”
It’s unclear whether the user was attempting to write more, as the post stops after the word “while.” Authorities said the suspect fled in a car after attempting to get in the FBI office.
Authorities have not yet confirmed that the account belongs to the suspect. However, a law enforcement source told CNN a photo on the account matched a government ID photo of the suspect.
The FBI declined to comment on the account and its postings, citing their ongoing investigation.
State troopers chased suspect, took fire
The hourslong standoff followed a vehicle chase with the suspect.
Earlier, Dennis said an armed man tried to enter the FBI office in Cincinnati Thursday morning. The suspect was unsuccessful, however, and fled the area.
An Ohio state trooper spotted the suspect’s vehicle at a northbound rest stop along Interstate 71 about 20 minutes after the attempted breach, Dennis said, and tried to initiate a traffic stop before the suspect fled.
“The suspect vehicle did fire shots during that pursuit,” Dennis said in the earlier news conference. The suspect then exited onto State Route 73 and traveled east to Smith Road, where he headed north before eventually coming to a stop.
“Gunfire was exchanged between officers on scene and the suspect,” Dennis said.
At the time of the news conference, no officers had been injured, Dennis said.
The FBI said “an armed subject attempt to breach” the facility’s Visitor Screening Facility.
“Upon the activation of an alarm and a response by armed FBI special agents, the subject fled northbound onto Interstate 71,” the statement said. “The FBI, Ohio State Highway Patrol, and local law enforcement partners are on scene near Wilmington, OH trying to resolve this critical incident.”
A federal law enforcement source told CNN the suspect was believed to be armed with a nail gun and AR-15. Another federal law enforcement source with knowledge of the incident told CNN FBI facilities around the country are reviewing their security posture in the wake of the incident.
FBI director condemns violence and threats
The incident follows violent rhetoric posted online after the FBI went to former President Donald Trump’s Florida home to serve a search warrant.
In a message reviewed by CNN on Thursday, FBI Director Chris Wray told the bureau’s employees their “safety and security” was his “primary concern right now.”
“There has been a lot of commentary about the FBI this week questioning our work and motives,” Wray said. “Much of it is from critics and pundits on the outside who don’t know what we know and don’t see what we see. What I know — and what I see — is an organization made up of men and women who are committed to doing their jobs professionally and by the book every day; this week is no exception.”
He released a public statement Thursday evening after the incident in Cincinnati.
“Unfounded attacks on the integrity of the FBI erode respect for the rule of law and are a serious disservice to the men and women who sacrifice so much to protect others,” he said. “Violence and threats against law enforcement, including the FBI, are dangerous and should be deeply concerning to all Americans.
In remarks Thursday announcing the US Justice Department has filed a motion to unseal the search warrant served to Trump’s Florida home, Attorney General Merrick Garland said he could not “stand by silently when their integrity is unfairly attacked. The men and women of the FBI and the Justice Department are dedicated, patriotic public servants.”
Every week we will break down, debunk and demystify your rights as a shopper in Australia. This week we are looking at whether it’s legal for shops to offer a cheaper price if a customer offers to pay in cash?
We all know life is getting more expensive than ever before and how important it is to stretch every dollar you make.
That’s why each week we’ll answer a question surrounding what shoppers are – and aren’t – entitled to when dealing with retailers and manufacturers.
What’s your best price for cash? Many consumers wonder if it’s legal for retailers to knock down prices for cash payments. (Getty Images/iStockphoto)
Thanks for the weekly column. Maybe I’m too young for this, but I have a question about shops that knock money off for customers who pay in cash.
I recently moved out of home for the first time and my dad was helping me buy a fridge. We managed to get $200 off the price simply by telling them we could pay cash on the day.
This really feels dodgy – is it legal for shops to do this?
Hi there, to answer your questions – it’s not illegal but it is a little antiquated.
Fundamentally it’s between a business and a customer to set the terms of the transaction.
If both parties are happy for a lower price with cash, so be it.
Whitegood retailers are one of the few “big box” retailers that may offer a discount for cash. (Getty Images/iStockphoto)
Once upon a time cash was cheaper to process for businesses than some other methods of credit.
But these days paying with a card – whether it’s credit or debit – is so ubiquitous that the real challenge is getting the sale, not how it’s paid.
Remember cash is not totally cost-free either. Businesses still need to pay the wages of staff to count it, and to have someone drop it off at the bank. But you could argue that those wage costs are already accounted for.
So why does it feel dodgy?
This may stem from increased knowledge around the “shadow economy”. That’s what the tax office describes as the cash-only economy where businesses don’t record those transactions as income, and therefore don’t pay any tax.
As the old adage goes, cash is king. (Getty Images/iStockphoto)
It’s perfectly acceptable for a business to accept “cash only” – but they must keep good records and report all income, regardless of how it comes in.
At the end of the day, as long as you get an invoice or a receipt for your fridge, you still have your consumer rights.
Getting $200 off because your dad had cash on him is just the icing on the cake.
Do you have a consumer question you want answered? You can get in touch with reporter Stuart Marsh at[email protected].
The information provided on this website is general in nature only and does not constitute personal financial advice. The information has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on any information on this website you should consider the appropriateness of the information having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs.
Flip phones are back, but not as we’ve ever known them. Photo: Supplied
This is branded content for Samsung
Samsung Electronics has today delighted fans with the announcement of their latest generation of premium, foldable smartphones and wearables within the Galaxy Series.
The latest additions to the Galaxy family includes a range of Galaxy Watches, buds and the highly anticipated smartphones, featuring the latest foldable technology.
The Galaxy Flip4 and Galaxy Fold4 have been long awaited by eager and curious consumers, and they challenge everything preconceived about the possibilities of hand-held tech.
The Galaxy Flip4 features an upgrade thanks to a larger screen and enhanced performance, all with the unrivaled portability and style that Samsung is renowned for.
Available in 128GB, 256GB and 512GB and in four beautiful colours, including the iconic new Bora Purple, Pink Gold, Graphite and Blue, the Flip4 redefines the art of self-expression through a powerful design that slips right into your back pocket.
The Galaxy Flip4 retails from $1,499 and comes in either the base or Bespoke model, for a more personalized experience.
Its cousin in the Galaxy series, the Galaxy Fold4, pushes all limits in smartphone technology, pairing convenience with luxury where other manufacturers have compromised.
As one of Samsung’s most premium designs, the Z Fold4 provides the ultimate one-hand experience with a slim, reengineered hinge for the thinnest, lightest Galaxy Fold yet.
The Z Fold4 provides the ultimate one-hand experience with a slim, reengineered hinge for the thinnest, lightest Galaxy Fold yet. Photo: Supplied
The Galaxy Fold4 gives consumers the best of both worlds, with an extra large immersive screen to work with that folds in half, providing portability, and dual screen capabilities that allow for seamless integration between apps.
“The new Galaxy Z Series range is the generation of foldables that will see the category become mainstream. Adoption cues are steadily growing from the volume of foldable devices ‘in the wild’, increasing consumer online search trends, indication of purchase intent, app optimization and more,” said Garry McGregor, Vice President of Mobile Experience division at Samsung Australia.
“We know there’s been a doubling in consideration for foldables among 18 to 45 year olds, and generation Z specifically showing a colossal 273% increase since last year.
“Without a doubt foldables have more than emerged, they’ve arrived and have a bright future.
“The foldables market is predicted to continue its rapid growth, more than doubling in 2023, and the fact Samsung Australia has maintained year-on-year pricing we see this being very much the case in this market,” said Mr McGregor.
The Galaxy Fold4 comes in Phantom Black, Beige or Greygreen and offers multiple memory options, with 256GB, 512GB and 1TB memory variants. The Galaxy Fold4 retails from $2,449, and both Z series smartphones are available for pre-order from August 11, 2022.
Samsung foldables are engineered to be strong, with Gorilla Glass Victus and aircraft-grade strength Armor Aluminum. Photo: Supplied.
But smartphones weren’t the only gadgets unveiled in the latest product lineup.
Samsung’s expanded Galaxy Watch 5 Series and Galaxy Buds2 Pro also made their Australian debut this week.
The Galaxy Watch5 Pro is a brand new addition to the range, with toughness and durability at its core. Made with the adventurous athlete in mind, it acts as the perfect sidekick to an active lifestyle. The Watch5 on the other hand, is a customizable addition to enhance everybody’s everyday life.
“We know there is a clear desire for an ecosystem of connected products. That is why we are especially excited for our latest additions to the Galaxy portfolio of wearables as well as the all new Watch5 Pro,” said Mr McGregor.
“They offer our customers supreme audio and improved health and well-being functionality – bringing the best of the best.
“It is a very exciting time for the category and with the full support from our partners, offering complete ranges of color skews, memory variants at the best value, we know our customers in Australia are going to love these new devices.”
Pre-orders for all devices begin on August 11, with on-sale launching on September 2. Retailers have various different pre-order offers, with fantastic savings to be made.
The Galaxy Z Series smartphones will be available from the Samsung eStore and Experience Stores, as well as all Samsung retail and telco partners.
For more information about the latest Samsung Galaxy devices, including the Z Series, visit https://www.samsung.com/au/smartphones/galaxy-z/
Yot was around 1999 when Neil Gaiman first heard someone else mention the name Jake Thackray. Growing up in East Grinstead, West Sussex, in the 60s and 70s, the British-born author and Sandman creator had perceived Thackray as a vague voice on the peripheries of childhood, this lugubrious wooly jumpered raptor of a man, his voice a foggy, owlish hoot steeped in dark Yorkshire bitter, who doled out droll topical songs on such lighthearted TV consumer affairs shows as Braden’s Week and That’s Life!.
“I was exactly the wrong age to like or appreciate him,” Gaiman told author and Thackray fan Paul Thompson in 2019. “Then, 20 years ago, I was talking to [singer-songwriter] Thea Gilmore about great songwriters and she just happened to mention [a song by Thackray called] The Castleford Ladies Magic Circle.” Gaiman ordered a Thackray CD from Amazon and, as he puts it, it was “all of a sudden in love”.
What Gaiman fell for was the utter uniqueness of Thackray’s voice. “The intelligence, the absolute naked emotion,” he continued. “That willingness both to be funny and sad. Once you’ve heard enough of his songs from him you realize there was nobody else like him.
Since his death in 2002, at the age of 64, his TV and singing career long since over, the cult of Jake Thackray has remained a small, steady and exclusive one. And while famous fans such as Gaiman, Gilmore, Alex Turner and Cerys Matthews have all been vocal in their praise for this northern balladeer and his soft-sung alliterative narratives of lovelorn boozers, lonely widows and spurned country girls, the man himself has remained something of an enigma.
That’s about to change with the publication of the first Thackray biography, Beware of the Bull: The Enigmatic Genius of Jake Thackray. Co-authored by committed fans Thompson and John Watterson, it’s a book that seeks to unravel the mysteries surrounding Thackray’s life. These range from his poor, Catholic upbringing in Kirkstall with a violent father to his formative years teaching in France and traveling Europe, his meteoric rise as a TV performer and recording artist in the 60s and 70s and, ultimately, his gradual rejection of it all. in the 80s.
“The ultimate problem was that Jake didn’t fit,” says Thompson. “He’d spent four years in a Catholic seminary and then from 1960, aged 22, he lived and worked in France and Algeria. He wrote poetry, fell in love, and was influenced by the French singer-poets, or chansonniers, most significantly Georges Brassens who wrote elegant songs about the outcast, the underdog and the poor. By the time Jake returned to England in 1963, he’d found his inspiration for him to become a poet-songwriter. But England in 1963 wasn’t really a home for a chansonnier.”
‘He had his own way of doing everything.’ Photograph: David Magnus/Shutterstock
Instead, Jake became a teacher at the Intake county secondary school in Bramley, Leeds, where he taught himself to play a nylon-strung guitar (like Brassens), wrote musicals and started performing in the local pubs. It was there, in 1965, that he was spotted by BBC scout Pamela Howe. Within three months of his first radio recording, Thackray landed a slot on regional TV and, through the persistence of Howe and the BBC’s head of radio light entertainment, Roy Rich, scored an EMI recording contract and made his first national TV appearance, on the highbrow 1968 BBC sketch show Beryl Reid Says Good Evening.
“The first time I saw Jake was on TV,” says the singer Ralph McTell, who would befriend Thackray on the 70s folk circuit. “He was extraordinary looking. His appearance of him stopped you in your tracks before you even heard his voice of him. His playing of him, his punctuation, his timing of him, the way he phrased, had nothing to do with American or British folk music. He had his own way of doing everything. Anywhere else he might have been treasured for that. Here he was compared to Pam Ayres.”
McTell believes that, in another world, Thackray would have been celebrated in the cafes and concert halls of France and Belgium, where they understood his clever, poetic European wordplay: “Instead he became part of the 70s pub circuit, up next after a bunch of sea shanties. The audience wouldn’t always be able to absorb the nuance, the subtlety. Jake ended up liking that pub circuit world but intellectually he was miles ahead of it.”
“I genuinely regard him as one of the greatest songwriters this country has ever produced,” says friend and fellow folk singer Mike Harding. “He’s up there with Richard Thompson for me.” Harding singles out songs such as The Castleford Ladies Magic Circle (about a group of suburban witches “frantically dancing naked for Beelzebub” while “their husbands potter at snooker down the club”) and The Hair of the Widow of Bridlington (about a free- living woman punished by her neighbors “for she was wild as blackbirds are and they were in a cage”). “These could be feminist songs,” says Harding. The singer also cites another more contentious song, On Again! OnAgain! in which the song’s protagonist, a self-confessed misogynist, complains about certain women’s propensity to talk at length (“I love breasts and arms and ankles, elbows, knees / It’s the tongue, the tongue, the tongue on a woman that spoils the job for me”).
Despite the singer’s protest that he was writing about “the folly of incontinence in conversation … not a generalization about women”, this lyrical, fluid masterclass in the Thackray style drew accusations of misogyny that stuck. One of the theories that Thompson puts forward in the book is that Thackray was writing in character, in the manner of an English Randy Newman. It’s a theory strengthened by a story of McTell’s: “After one London gig we sat up late and I dug out my Randy Newman albums. Jake sat there with his jaw dropping at each song. I particularly remember the effect [1974 deep south concept album] Good Old Boys had. It was such a buzz to see how instantly these two writers connected. Beneath [their] exquisite observations lie a deep love of humanity and its frailties.”
One question Thompson set himself to solve while writing the book is why, when Thackray was writing at his absolute peak and most Newmanesque in the late 70s and early 80s, did his output and live appearances start to diminish?
“His greatest studio album was his swan song,” Thompson says of 1977’s On Again! OnAgain! “TV work dried up because formats were changing but also his audience was getting smaller because that 70s folk era was in a process of change. He also found himself trapped by a job he didn’t enjoy any more.”
Thompson also cites Thackray’s increasing lack of self-esteem, which, he believes, could relate to his violent upbringing or his faith. Towards the end of his life the singer grew increasingly reliant on drink to banish anxiety.
“I was drinking with him one night and he talked about how his father was a fucking awful bully,” says Harding. “Then he told me: ‘I’m an alcoholic.’ I said: ‘You’re fucking joking.’ We were all fairly heavy drinkers but it turns out when Jake went to go to the bar to get a round in he’d also have two large ones off the top shelf. So if you’re drinking five pints, he’s up to 10 vodkas. I hid drink all over the house. I was poleaxed.”
Gradually, Thackray stopped turning up to gigs, and bookings started to dry up, along with the money. “He was hopeless with money,” says McTell. “I sometimes wonder if it was the recklessness of a lifestyle he was denied, breaking out from that religious encumbrance.”
“Jake was also an ardent socialist, anti-capitalist,” says Thompson. “He refused point blank to do a commercial for Dulux paint, even in the depths of his financial problems when his family were begging him to do it.”
By the 90s, Thackray had separated from his wife, Sheila, and lost the family home. I have moved into rented accommodation in a small flat above a greengrocer’s on Monmouth high street.
In the hands of other biographers, these final years might read like tragedy, but it is to Thompson and Watterson’s credit that they focus on the positives, including the columns Thackray wrote for the Yorkshire Post and The Catholic Herald, his involvement with a group of committed fans planning a Jake Thackray musical, Sister Josephine Kicks the Habit, and the discovery of a cache of never publicly performed Thackray lyrics. Regardless, the final few chapters, up to his death from him from a heart attack on Christmas Eve, 2002, make for difficult reading.
“There was undoubtedly a sadness writing the book,” says Thompson, “but it’s a life that deserves to be celebrated without denying the sadness, and a chance to shine a light on a remarkable songwriter.”
The light-shining continues later in the year with the November release of a two-disc DVD, Jake Thackray at the BBC, plus a “Jakefest” in Scarborough in October, and the reissue of his long-deleted 1981 live album, Jake Thackray and Songs.
“I think Jake would find it amusing and intriguing that his songs are being valued and enjoyed again,” says McTell. “You always wanted to tell him, ‘They’re brilliant. You know they’re good. I know how hard you’ve worked on them. They’re little treasures, all of them!’ But he wouldn’t have any of that.”
Nick Kyrgios’ stunning purple patch has continued, with the Wimbledon runner-up comprehensively defeating compatriot Alex de Minaur in the Montreal Masters on Friday morning (AEST).
The Australian, currently sitting at No. 37 on the ATP rankings, topped his Davis Cup teammate in straight sets 6-2 6-3, securing victory in just 62 minutes.
Kyrgios was at his absolute best during the entertaining round of 16 contest, registering 22 winners and only nine unforced errors in front of a packed-out stadium.
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However, he carried on with constant backchat towards his players box, giving almost a running commentary of his state of mind on the court in a display that seems second nature to him.
Minaur’s World No. 21 hardly won a point in the opening four games, fighting back in the second set by breaking Kyrgios twice, but struggling to hold serve himself.
It was the first time Kyrgios and de Minaur had met in an ATP event.
“After yesterday’s big high, today was really hard mentally for me to go out and play Alex,” Kyrgios said.
“We’re such good friends, he’s been having such a good career and carrying the Australian flag for so long. It was just tough mentally, it’s never easy to play a friend like that especially if they’re an Australian so I just got out here and got the job done.
“I played the way I had to play — he’s a hell of a player. If you play to his strengths he’s one of the best players from the back (of the court) in the game and he’s so fast, he’s going to have a hell of a career.
Kyrgios will next face Poland’s Hubert Hurkacz in the quarter-finals. The pair faced off two months ago on grass, with Hurkacz the victor on that occasion.
This Montreal Masters campaign will give Kyrgios an important rankings boost ahead of the US Open, which gets underway on Monday August 29.
He is expected to climb 10 spots in the ATP rankings, and could crack the top 15 if he wins the Canadian tournament.
Fresh from winning the Citi Open title in Washington, Kyrgios came back from a set down to top world No. 1 Daniil Medvedev 6-7 6-4 6-2 on Thursday.
It’s the second time in his career he’s beaten a world No. 1 and he now boasts a 3-1 head-to-head record against Medvedev, the 2021 US Open champion.
Since landing in the United States for the American hard court swing a couple of weeks ago, Kyrgios is 16-0 across singles and doubles.
He has now won 15 of his past 16 singles matches, stretching back to his run into the Wimbledon final, which he lost to 21-time grand slam champion Novak Djokovic.
“It’s rewarding to beat the world No. 1,” Kyrgios told The Tennis Channel after the victory over Medvedev.
“It’s a reflection of all the hard work I’ve done in Sydney.
“After Washington I could easily come here and be content with what I did last week, but I wanted to empty the tank these two weeks.
“Obviously my ranking’s not where I want it to be, not getting those points at Wimbledon, but I’ve got to capitalize on this little window.”
Former NSW deputy premier John Barilaro has pulled out of today’s parliamentary inquiry, citing mental health reasons.
Key points:
John Barilaro was set to face questions about what his girlfriend knew about the US trade job
He withdrew from the lucrative position in June after intense media scrutiny over his appointment
Mr Barilaro took a month of mental health leave in 2020
The upper house inquiry has been investigating Mr Barilaro’s appointment as senior trade and investment commissioner to the Americas.
He was scheduled to give his second day of evidence today, after first facing the inquiry on Monday.
“John Barilaro has informed the committee that due to mental health reasons he is unable to attend today’s hearing,” a statement from the inquiry said.
Mr Barilaro was due to face questions about what his girlfriend, Jennifer Lugsdin, knew about the lucrative US trade job he was awarded earlier this year.
Ms Lugsdin worked for Investment NSW — the body responsible for hiring people for overseas trade roles — when the Americas job was advertised.
Last December she was copied in on discussions about a media release calling for applications for the trade envoy position.
Before taking the role with Investment NSW, Ms Lugsdin was the senior media advisor for Mr Barilaro between 2019 and 2021.
Jennifer Lugsdin was awarded a short-term role with Investment NSW in August 2021. (Supplied: Linkedin)
On Monday, Mr Barilaro expressed frustration about facing questions about his personal life.
Labor’s Penny Sharpe said she did not enjoy asking “uncomfortable” questions, but said it was necessary.
“Someone you were in a relationship with… was clearly aware of the various processes associated with the advertising and the nature of [the US trade] position,” she told the hearing on Monday.
Mr Barilaro withdrew from the New York-based trade role in June, saying intense media scrutiny made his appointment “untenable”.
The controversy surrounding his selection is now the subject of two inquiries and it led to the resignation of trade minister Stuart Ayres last week.
Although Mr Ayres is adamant he did nothing wrong, an inquiry by Graeme Head raised concerns he might have breached the ministerial code of conduct.
The upper house inquiry has heard Mr Ayres was not at “arm’s length” from the selection process.
Mr Barilaro resigned as deputy premier in October 2021, saying the pressure of public life had “taken a toll”.
He took a month off for his mental health in 2020 and said he thought he would never come back to politics.
The deluge in the DC area Wednesday night flooded roads and triggered traffic gridlock, with high water levels even stranding motorists — some needing rescue — and entering homes and businesses. Many areas saw an extreme of between 1 and 3 inches of rain in an hour.
The most exceptional rainfall reports concentrated in the zone around Bladensburg and New Carrollton in Prince George’s County, where about 3 inches poured down in an hour.
That hourly rainfall has a return interval of around 100 years according to National Weather Service data. In other words, that amount of rain has a 1 percent chance of happening in that area any given year. Another way to think about it is that such a 100-year rainstorm has a slightly greater than 1-in-4 chance of occurring within the term of a 30-year mortgage.
The concept of a thousand-year rainstorm is legitimate but limited. Here’s what you should understand about it.
It’s not a coincidence that there were multiple reports of flooding in the zone where these extreme rainfall rates occurred.
Near Bladensburg, the Weather Service reported that the northeast branch of the Anacostia River rose more than 7.5 feet in an hour. Along Kenilworth Avenue at Riverdale Road, a number of lanes were blocked by high water.
Just to the east, closer to New Carrollton, the Weather Service reported multiple water rescues were required between Lanham and Glenn Dale.
Storms sweep region, causing floods and delays
Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Department tweeted Thursday that it responded to 71 water rescue calls during the storm. Eleven county school buildings were affected by minor flooding according to district spokeswoman Meghan Gebreselassie. Building services staff from the school district responded and cleared standing water from all the areas, she said.
As storms rolled through Prince George’s County yesterday, the men & women of the #PGFD completed 71 Water Rescue calls between the hours of 2 and 8pm. Several occupants of vehicles & 2 residents of a multi-family dwelling were assisted to safety by career & volunteer personnel. pic.twitter.com/TcKUXFrVwv
— Prince George’s County Fire/EMS Department (@PGFDNews) August 11, 2022
All told, the Weather Service received more than two dozen reports of flooding.
Prince George’s County was hardest hit, but substantial flooding also affected other areas. In Virginia, high water flooded roads between Vienna and Reston as well as in Alexandria — especially around Old Town.
Flooding was also reported in eastern portions of the District. Video went viral of water several feet high up against the door of District Dogs, a pet day-care center, along Rhode Island Avenue in Northeast Washington.
The owner of @dcdistrictdogs in NE says this is the 3rd time this new business has flooded in the last 3 weeks! Employees had to rush to move about 50 dogs to the back area after a few inches of water made it inside 1/2 pic.twitter.com/rK8Uh7bxch
The downpour in the DC area Wednesday joins several other notable rain events in the last two weeks. Even more extreme, thousand-year rainstorms occurred in St. Louis, eastern Kentucky, southern Illinois and Death Valley, Calif. There was also an exceptional and deadly flooding event this week in Seoul.
The torrents in the Washington region were set off by a slow-moving cold front as it clashed with a very hot, humid air mass. Precipitable water, an indicator of atmospheric moisture, was estimated up to 2.25 and 2.65 inches Wednesday evening between Alexandria and central Prince George’s County. Such levels are near records for the time of year.
Now that the front has passed, much cooler and drier air is settling into the DC region.
The most intense precipitation events around the world are increasing because of human-caused climate change. A warmer atmosphere is capable of holding more moisture and producing heavier rainfall.
The US government’s National Climate Assessment documented a 55 percent increase in the heaviest precipitation events in the Northeast between 1958 and 2016.
Heavy rain swept through the DC area on Aug. 10, causing manhole explosions and blocked roads. (Video: Washington Post)
It’s not a universal maxim, but in many cases, there’s no surer sign a game is alive and well than when waves of players start calling it a “dead game.” The most recent example is apex legendswhich just set an all-time player count record amid a coordinated — I use that word generously — social media campaign urging players to fall off the game for a month.
apex legendsa free-to-play first-person shooter some people still call Why Aren’t You Titanfall 3?, launched three years ago amid the industry’s battle royale boom. Though it initially seemed experimental, a fun if ephemeral multiplayer pitstop between developer Respawn’s blockbusters (like titan fall and Jedi: Fallen Order), Apex quickly adopted a seasonal model. It’s been riding the live service train ever since and is now on its 14th season. This brings us to #NoApexAugust, a community effort to highlight various issues fans have with the game.
#NoApexAugust has mostly organized around a hashtag on Twitter, though the genesis can be traced back to a Reddit post from last month. Initially, one player suggested a single-day strike against apex legends. The post blew up. Complaints about apex legends poured in (the initial post has more than 1,000 responses), and it eventually morphed into the idea that the community would take a whole month off from the game.
The idea of #NoApexAugust was to spur Respawn and publisher EA into action, addressing what players see as issues with the game: the high-ping servers…or the lack of cross-progression…or the overpriced cosmetics…or the lack or interesting cosmetics …or the slew of specific items some say are too powerful…or, look, players have a bunch of nonsense issues, many of which seem minor in isolation but coalesce into a larger “please fix game” rallying cry.
Right out of the gate, #NoApexAugust sputtered. Some people pointed out that the player base actually increased (if only marginally) over the first two days of the month, immediately after the campaign kicked off. And just yesterday — again, while #NoApexAugust was supposedly in full swing — apex legends set its all-time record number of players on Steam: 510,286 players, according to stat-tracking database Steamcharts. (The previous record of 411,183 was set in May. These figures don’t account for players on consoles, however.)
Some dead game.
Clearly, #NoApexAugust has failed spectacularly at its intended goal of getting players to abstain from playing apex legends. Due to the obvious irony, you are allowed at least one (1) chuckle. Still, that a social campaign — messy execution aside — was merited here in the first place calls attention to very real issues players have with the game. Those shouldn’t be ignored, even if players are coming out in record numbers.
Representatives for EA, which publishes apex legendsdid not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.