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Australia

Aussie dad misses out because his wife is Irish

New dad Dale Lander was looking forward to taking a few months off work to care for his firstborn son.

But, last month, a week before baby Liam was born, a conversation with Centrelink scuttled those plans completely.
Lander, from Gippsland, Victorywas told he wasn’t eligible for the federal government’s Parental Leave Pay – which provides 18 weeks’ pay at minimum wage and is worth almost $15,000.
New parents Meadhbh Ni Fhlannagain and Dale Lander with baby Liam.
New parents Meadhbh Ni Fhlannagain and Dale Lander with baby Liam. (Supplied: Dale Lander)

Instead, Lander was informed he will only qualify for two weeks of Dad and Partner Pay.

It was money the 38-year-old mature age plumbing apprentice and his wife Meadhbh Ni Fhlannagain had been counting on.

“I initially wanted to take 12 weeks off and then use the rest of the Parental Leave Pay over the next two years,” Lander said.

“Now, I can only take six weeks off, two of it is paid from the government and the rest of it is unpaid.”

The reason Lander does not qualify for paid parental leave is complex and involves a two-year waiting period for new migrants to access the scheme.

Although Lander is an Australian citizen who was born and raised here, his wife is Irish.

Ni Fhlannagain, a primary school education support officer, came to Australia nine years ago, and the pair married in 2017.

After their marriage, Ni Fhlannagain applied for a partner visa and – following an 18-month wait – was granted permanent residence in 2020.

When Liam was born 12 days ago, Ni Fhlannagain was just a few weeks shy of the two years she needed to spend as a permanent Australian resident before qualifying for Parental Leave Pay.

Current social services regulations allow a mother to “share” Parental Leave Pay entitlements with her partner, but only if her application for the allowance is accepted first.

Lander said he was told there would only be one situation in which he would qualify for Parental Leave Pay.

“They said the only way I could qualify was if we could provide a medical reason why my wife was unfit to be the primary carer for my son,” he said.

“It was a bit disheartening.

“They do have the mechanism to make those payments, but the fact that we had to prove my wife was medically unfit, that seemed a bit shit,” he said.

April Tole missed out on Parental Leave Pay after her baby was born four weeks premature.
April Tole missed out on Parental Leave Pay after her baby was born four weeks premature. (Supplied: April Tole)

Ni Fhlannagain said she was also shocked by the situation.

“Dale is an Australian citizen, so I was a bit thrown by that,” she said.

“It seems really unfair for him not to be able to take time off and get that payment unless I am deemed medically unfit.”

The proposed changes – slated to begin in March 2023 – aimed, in part, to address this disparity.

Under the budgeted plans, Parental Leave Pay and Dad and Partner Pay would be merged into one scheme, which would be lengthened to 20 weeks.

This would mean both parents could apply directly for the 20 weeks Parental Leave Pay and share it between them.

After Labor’s election win, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese confirmed in June his government would be examining the Parental Leave Pay scheme.

“Changes proposed to the Paid Parental Leave Scheme in the 2022-23 Budget have not been legislated,” a spokesperson for the Department of Social Services said.

“The Government will continue to consider enhancements to the Paid Parental Leave scheme, to ensure it is working in the best way for families.”

The current waiting periods for migrants to receive government benefits varies.
The current waiting periods for migrants to receive government benefits varies. (Graphic: Tara Blancato)
Meanwhile, some new migrants have called for changes to be made to the two-year waiting period for permanent residents to access Parental Leave Pay, saying it often leads to distressing situations.

UK citizen April Tole has lived in Australia for five years and is the partner of an Australian citizen.

The data analyst, from the Gold Coast, was in line to qualify for Parental Leave Pay, according to her daughter’s due date in July last year.

However, in a harrowing and traumatic experience, Tole’s daughter was born four weeks prematurely via an emergency caesarean after she developed sepsis.

“I was rejected for Parental Leave Pay because my daughter was born more than two years before I was granted my visa,” Tole said.

“However, if she had been born on time, or even just nine days later, I would have been eligible.

“I ended up having to go back to work after seven months due to money issues and my daughter had to go to daycare.

“I was not ready, and it was very upsetting.

“It is outrageous to be penalized for having a premature baby, when you already feel bad enough about the situation and having to care for a tiny baby.

“The system needs to be reviewed and for paternity leave pay to be awarded based on a baby’s due date … not birth date.”

A departmental spokesperson said the Parental Leave Pay rules for new migrants reflected “the longstanding expectation that migrants support themselves and their families when they first become permanent residents in Australia”.

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US

Hawaii man, 75, nabbed for 1982 rape and murder of 15-year-old girl whom he stabbed 59 times: Officials

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A man living in Hawaii was arrested for abducting, sexually assaulting and repeatedly stabbing a 15-year-old girl as she was on her way to a bus stop in California nearly 40 years ago, officials have announced.

Gary Ramirez, 75, was arrested at his Makawao home on the Hawaiian island of Maui on August 2 for the vicious Sept. 2, 1982, killing of 15-year-old Karen Stitt, officials announced Tuesday. He appeared in Hawaii court on Wednesday, when he waived his extradition.

Stitt, from Palo Alto, had taken a bus to Sunnyvale earlier in the evening on Sept. 2, 1982, to see her boyfriend. Hours later, around midnight, he walked Stitt part of the route back to the bus stop but did not go the full way out of fear that his parents would punish him for being out past curfew, the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office said .

The boyfriend last saw Stitt alive in the area of ​​El Camino Read and Wolfe Road, walking toward the bus stop for her ride back to Palo Alto.

KRISTIN SMART PROSECUTORS HAVE A DECENT CASE WITHOUT A BODY: ATTORNEY

Karen Stitt, 15, in this undated photo;  Gary Ramirez in his booking photo

Karen Stitt, 15, in this undated photo; Gary Ramirez in his booking photo
(Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office; Sunnyvale DPS)

A truck driver discovered Stitt’s naked body the next morning – brutally injured and hidden “in the bushes” behind a blood-riddled “cinderblock wall” about 100 yards from the bus stop, state officials and court records.

FLORIDA SERIAL KILLERS CHARGED IN A PAIR OF 1983 RAPE AND MURDER COLD CASES

“Behind every old murder file in every major police department, there is a person, heartbreak, and a mystery,” District Attorney Jeff Rosen said in a prepared statement. “The mystery of Karen Stitt’s death has been solved thanks to advances in forensic science and a detective that would never, ever give up.”

Gary Ramirez in 1979

Gary Ramirez in 1979
(Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office)

Investigators determined Stitt was sexually assaulted and stabbed 59 times. An autopsy found she died from “stab wounds to the chest and neck.” But the killer was allegedly sloppy, and left his own bodily fluid and blood at the scene.

But then the case went cold.

“A review of the crime scene photos and videos showed that leaves and dirt around her feet had been disturbed and kicked, suggesting that she was still alive when her body was left there,” court records state. “[I]t appears her murder was committed while the perpetrator was engaged in the commission of a kidnapping.”

TEXAS MAN ARRESTED 34 YEARS LATER FOR ALLEGEDLY STABBING HIS GRANDMOTHER 51 TIMES

This undated photo shows Karen Stitt

This undated photo shows Karen Stitt
(Santa Clara County District Attorney)

Police had initially suspected her boyfriend, but he was ultimately cleared with the help of DNA evidence.

FLORIDA AUTHORITIES ARE PROBING THE MYSTERIOUS 2011 MURDER OF A BELOVED AIRLINE PILOT

In 2019, Sunnyvale Department of Public Safety Det. Matt Hutchinson received a tip that pointed to one of four brothers from Fresno, California, as being the killer. Hutchinson zeroed in on Gary Ramirez by April 2022, identifying him “as the likely source of blood and bodily fluid” discovered at the scene, officials said.

Gary Ramirez in this undated photo

Gary Ramirez in this undated photo
(Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office)

The district attorney’s office confirmed his suspicions last week.

Ramirez was raised in Fresno and served in the US Air Force before moving to several places throughout the country, and landing on Hawaii.

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He faces charges of murder, kidnapping and rape. A spokesperson for the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s office said Ramirez does not yet have an attorney assigned to the California case.

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Business

Victoria Bass Strait wind farm ‘can be ready in six years’

The Victorian government has pledged about $40 million for feasibility studies and pre-construction development for three major offshore wind proposals, including Seadragon, Star of the South, and a 1-gigawatt project backed by Macquarie Group.

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While offshore wind is one of the fastest-growing sectors of renewable energy across the globe, most projects are located in waters where the turbines’ foundations can be affixed to the seabed.

Floating wind farms, such as Flotation’s Seadragon, are built on floating structures and are stabilized by moorings and anchors, meaning they can be located in much deeper waters where winds are stronger and more reliable. Developing wind turbines further offshore could also reduce the risk of projects facing objections from nearby communities concerned about visual and environmental impacts.

Because Gippsland is also home to all of Victoria’s coal-burning power stations and the 50-year-old Bass Strait oil and gas fields, the looming prospect of a large-scale renewable energy industry dawning in the area could help to generate new employment opportunities eleven those industries wind down. EnergyAustralia’s Yallourn coal-fired station is due to close in 2028, while the oil and gas fields are in rapid decline.

Federal Energy Minister Chris Bowen is planning to create a national network of zones where offshore wind power generation is allowed, last week naming six areas it will seek to declare “suitable”.

Shortly before the last federal election was called, the former Morrison government announced that the blustery waters off the Gippsland coastline would be the first “priority area”, but did not launch the consultation process because the underpinning legislation had not yet come into effect.

“We’re way behind the game, way behind the rest of the world, in producing wind off our coastline,” Bowen said.

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Entertainment

Olivia Wilde slams Jason Sudeikis’ ‘outrageous’ public move

Olivia Wilde believes ex-partner Jason Sudeikis was trying to aggressively embarrass and “threaten” her when she was publicly served legal papers during a panel in April.

Wilde claims that Sudeikis used “outrageous legal tactics,” according to new court documents obtained by the DailyMail.

“Jason’s actions were clearly intended to threaten me and catch me off guard,” Wilde, 38, alleged in the filing, Page Six reports. “He could have served me discreetly, but instead he chose to serve me in the most aggressive manner possible.”

Wilde further claimed that Sudeikis, 46, was intentionally trying to air their personal matters to the public in a way that isn’t fair to their two children: Otis, 8, and Daisy, 5.

“The fact that Jason would embarrass me professionally and put our personal conflict on public display in this manner is extremely contrary to our children’s best interests,” Wilde argued. “Since Jason has made it clear that we will not be able to work this out for our children’s sake outside of the court system, I filed a petition for custody in Los Angeles.”

the ted lasso star notably served Wilde legal documents concerning child custody while she was on stage in front of nearly 4000 people at CinemaCon.

Page Six reported at the time that Wilde was mortified and confused.

“Olivia was confused when she was handed the envelope, and she was even more confused when she opened it,” the source told us, adding, “It seemed unthinkable to her, and it took a moment to set in, but as mortifying as it was, she did not want to give a reaction.”

However, a source close to Sudeikis had insisted to Page Six exclusively that he “had no prior knowledge of the time or place that the envelope would have been delivered … and he would never condone [Wilde] being served in such an inappropriate manner.”

Sudeikis and Wilde had been co-parenting their kids since calling off their engagement and breaking up in 2020, but the actor decided to launch the custody battle when the pair couldn’t agree on a permanent city to raise their children.

In court documents, Wilde alleges that they agreed to send their children to school in Los Angeles for the upcoming year as Sudeikis was set to film the final season of ted lasso inLondon.

“Recently, however, Jason decided that he wanted to go to New York for the next year while he is not working, and wanted the children to be with him there during this time off,” the actress claimed. “When I did not agree, since the children have not lived in New York for several years, Jason filed these papers.”

Sudeikis fired back in a declaration to the court, saying that their Brooklyn home has always been the family’s permanent residence.

“For better or worse, I am a New Yorker,” Sudeikis said in the filing, adding that it was best for their kids to grow up in Brooklyn.

He added that he was reluctant to pursue legal action against Wilde but that he was worried she would take their kids away from him after she allegedly told him she would only let him see their children on weekends and holidays if he didn’t permanently live in LA and that she also allegedly had plans to relocate to London, where her boyfriend, Harry Styles, lives.

Sudeikis further asserted that the legal documents were supposed to be served to Wilde at an airport or at her hotel. But after several failed attempts, she was located at the event thanks to a tweet where the process server handed her the confidential envelope.

“I understand that the process server had only done her job; however, I deeply regret what happened. Olivia’s talk was an important event for Olivia, both professionally and personally, and I am very, very sorry that the incident marred her special moment, ”Sudeikis said.

Wilde has been dating Styles since January 2021. Meanwhile, Sudeikis has been romantically linked to model Keeley Hazell.

This story originally appeared on Page Six and is republished here with permission

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Categories
Sports

The issue with Adelaide’s Cox interest, why pursuit of Dee “doesn’t make sense”

Fremantle’s Brennan Cox is believed to be on the radar of Adelaide.

The Crows have been linked with Cox previously and it is understood that they are showing plenty of interest once again.

SEN SA Breakfast’s Andrew Hayes reported the Crows’ interest earlier this week.

“He’s absolutely gettable, he’s a Woodville-West Torrens junior,” Hayes said.

“There have been some half murmurs for a while. He would top up their backline beautifully.

“As it stands right now, Nick Murray and Jordon Butts are doing a good job, but Brennan Cox would come in and lead that defense.”

7 News Adelaide later suggested the Crows will “dangle the carrot” in front of the Dockers defender who hails from SANFL club Woodville-West Torrens.

However, Cox is contracted until 2024 which presents somewhat of a problem according to Matt Rendell.

The former AFL recruiter says Fremantle’s desire to bring in Luke Jackson from Melbourne, along with Griffin Logue’s out-of-contract status, Rory Lobb’s strong links to the Western Bulldogs and Adelaide’s interest in Gold Coast’s Izak Rankine makes the Cox situation a fascinating one.

“The really interesting thing with Freo is, maybe they’ve got to tip a few players to fit Jackson in,” Rendell said on SEN SA’s The Run Home.

“We know Lobb is going, but I would have thought Lobb would just about cover it.

“Griffin Logue isn’t contracted yet and I really like him, and Brennan Cox is contracted so this is a really interesting situation.

“If they (the Crows) can get him, great, but they’re not going to be able to get him and Rankine, I wouldn’t have thought.”

Kym Dillon suggested Adelaide’s salary cap would easily accommodate both Cox and Rankine.

“Really? They’ve got plenty of money in their cap,” he said.

Rendell doesn’t see it as an issue cap-wise, but cannot see how the Crows bring both players in from a trade viewpoint.

“Financially, not a problem, they’ll fit them both in easily,” he replied.

“They’ve got a war chest there. But how are you going to trade for him? He’s in contract.

“You’re going to lose a hell of a lot of picks for Rankine if you get him. He’s obviously the first choice.

“They (Freo) have all the cards for Cox.”

Cox, 23, has enjoyed a career-best season for the Dockers in 2022.

Melbourne forward Sam Weideman was also floated as a potential target for the Crows, but Rendell cannot work out why they would pursue him.

The Crows have seen Darcy Fogarty excel in the second half of the season and with Taylor Walker playing on and Riley Thilthorpe expected to get more opportunity, they would have no use for Weideman in the eyes of Rendell.

“It doesn’t make sense to me at all,” he said of the Demons forward.

“He is in contract as well. I think if Melbourne could find him a home, they would.

“The Crows don’t need Weideman, not with their forward line.

“We’ve seen Fogarty and how much he has improved. He’s 22 and he looks a gun.

“Thilthorpe is obviously going to come back in and Tex is going to play at least one (more year) and possibly two.”

Weideman, 25, is contracted with Melbourne until next year.

He has played 10 games in 2022 for a career total of 59 across seven seasons.





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Categories
Australia

Some New Zealand politicians want to crack down on gangs. That’s no way to solve the problem | Morgan Godfery

The US has its mafia. Australia has its bikes. New Zealand, a country often understood as more innocent than its larger, more dangerous English-speaking partners, has its street gangs.

Members of the Mongrel Mob, New Zealand’s largest gang, are a familiar part of most provincial towns and cities on the North Island. Tourists who arrive in Rotorua might find it strange to spot Mob men, wrapped in black leather with bulldogs inked across their faces. But locals would hardly register a gang member.

In 2018 The Economist reported that gangs were recruiting higher numbers than the army. Last year the Gang Intelligence Center found that membership numbers had doubled in the previous five years, rising from a little over 4,000 members in 2016 to just over 8,000 in 2021. This, in a country of 5 million, means New Zealand might take home the curious honor of the highest per capita gang membership rate in the world.

For a country with a seeming gang “problem”, though, there are few conflicts to point to from the last three decades. In the mid-to-late 20th century short, intense conflicts between rival gangs (and police) were common. In the 1970s public fights, including all-in brawls in central Auckland in 1971 and Christchurch in 1973, led to a moral panic over a gang scene growing unacceptably bold.

Yet from the 1990s to late 2010s a social approach to gang management, an aging membership, and increasingly professional structures within the gangs themselves meant conflicts were comparatively rare. Gang membership is not a crime, and in the 2000s the leading “gang story” had nothing to do with gang members at all, but with politicians. In 2009 the Whanganui district council implemented a bylaw banning gang patches in public places.

But 2022 is different. Within a single fortnight in June there were 23 drive-by shootings in Auckland. In one night in May there were seven drive-bys. In Canterbury police attended more than 2,000 gun-related incidents between 2016 and 2021, more than 15% of all callouts in the region. Granted, not every firearms callout is a gang callout, but it contributes to a perception that gang warfare is returning after a 30-year peace.

This is grim news. And it’s a development politicians should take deadly seriously. Unfortunately, opposition politicians are reaching for all the exhausted troops since the 1980s. At the National party’s northern regional conference Chris Luxon confirmed that his party would ban gang insignia from public places – including the exteriors of gang pads and club houses. The party would also, somehow, ban insignia from social media.

That final policy – ​​banning gang members from TikTok or Instagram – is obviously unenforceable. But the vibe is important. The opposition is squaring up for a fight with “the gangs.” The trouble is that social workers, sociologists, historians, lawyers, and police know that “cracking down on gangs” only confirms the very alienation that led them to gang life in the first place.

What works to decrease gang tensions and decrease membership numbers is negotiation between police and gang leaders, and investment in the housing, health, and education of gang members’ children. Gangs aren’t a criminal phenomenon. They’re a social phenomenon. This is why gang membership is a mirror on poverty – “gang towns” are those where unemployment is higher than the national average and median incomes are lower.

Or at least this is true of the traditional gangs such as the Mongrel Mob. It’s a little less true of the newcomers such as the Australian Comancheros or Bandidos. And those are the gangs who are responsible for a good deal of the violence happening in Auckland, Canterbury, and the central North Island.

As sociologist Jarrod Gilbert notes, these gangs are bringing their foreign contacts and networks, their professional structures and their violence – and seizing greater and greater control of the local drug trade. But even this is more of a social phenomenon than a criminal one. Under the ultra-conservative Peter Dutton, Australia’s former home affairs minister, hundreds of “501s” – criminals convicted in Australia who were born elsewhere – were sent back to their birth country where they, more often than not, were completely without connections. Some 501s hadn’t visited New Zealand since they were toddlers. Others had no family or friends in the country at all.

In this social context what choice did these gang members have other than to stick together in a strange new country? This isn’t to mount a defense of those members. Where they import, manufacture, and deal drugs they deserve a full-throated condemnation. Where they employ violence as a means to their financial ends they deserve the same condemnation.

But it’s important to note how public policy choices led to the situation New Zealand finds itself in. That lesson in public policy serves as a warning to opposition politicians and the government. Gangs and gang members are more complex than the criminality we associate them with. They’re people with the same societal and community needs as anyone else – good quality housing, well paid and secure jobs, and future opportunities for their children. Where those factors are absent, foreign and domestic gangs will flourish.

Categories
US

Fauci vents about Americans’ opposition to forced masking: ‘It’s almost inexplicable’

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Dr. Anthony Fauci complained during a Tuesday evening talk that many Americans see forced masking policies as a violation of their liberties.

During the talk, Fauci, who is President Biden’s chief medical adviser and the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, expressed concern about Americans’ aversion to both forced masking and receiving the COVID-19 vaccine. I have characterized individuals’ concerns with such policies as “unexplained.”

“When you tell people they need to mask in an indoor congregate setting when you’re in a zone that has a high dynamic of infection — that is looked upon by a lot of people, not everybody, as an encroachment on your freedom,” Fauci remarked during the event hosted by the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center campus in Seattle.

“We’ve never had that before,” he added. “It’s almost inexplicable.”

FAUCI ADMITS THAT COVID-19 VACCINES DO NOT PROTECT ‘OVERLY WELL’ AGAINST INFECTION

Prior to his comments on mask mandates, Fauci also lamented that while the majority of Americans have been vaccinated against COVID-19, most people haven’t received a booster shot.

“You have people who don’t want to get vaccinated for any of a variety of reasons, ranging from pure anti-vax to just because we’re telling them to get vaccinated,” Fauci said. “We’re in a very difficult situation.”

FAUCI SOUNDS ALARM ON ‘NEED’ FOR COVID VACCINES THAT ‘PROTECT AGAINST INFECTION’

He continued: “We have 67% of our population vaccinated. Of those, one half are boosted. That means a third of the people in the country are vaccinated and properly boosted. How could that possibly be when you have a disease that’s killed one million Americans and you have a hesitancy to use a life-saving intervention, which is a vaccine and a booster?

“It seems like—what world are we living in?”

Dr. Anthony Fauci during a White House meeting on Jan. 4, 2022.

Dr. Anthony Fauci during a White House meeting on Jan. 4, 2022.
(Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

New COVID-19 cases nationwide have steadied to between 300-400 cases per million people over the last several months compared to the mid-January peak of 2,396 cases per million, according to Johns Hopkins University data. COVID-19 deaths have stayed below 1.70 deaths per million since April.

Nearly 80% of Americans over the age of 5 have received one dose of the vaccine, while 67% are fully vaccinated, 32% have received a booster and 10% have opted for a second booster.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Fauci, meanwhile, recently suggested that the pandemic wouldn’t go away anytime soon.

“I think we’re going to be living with this,” Fauci told Politico in July.

Categories
Business

Egg shortage: Reason free-range cartons missing in Woolworths, Coles

If you have been struggling to find a carton of eggs at your local supermarket, you are certainly not alone.

Shoppers have been left frustrated by yet another staple item disappearing from supermarket shelves, with Coles even introducing a two-carton limit for customers.

Australia is in the midst of a national egg shortage, meaning supply is patchy and prices are on the rise.

But what is behind the egg supply crisis?

Suppliers have claimed part of the problem stems from lockdowns, when farmers had to decrease their chicken numbers.

However, Edith Cowan University senior lecturer and WA president of the Australasian Supply Chain Institute (ASCI), Flavio Macau, said the shortage is a reflection of customers preferring free-range eggs over caged eggs.

The production of free-range eggs is more affected by the colder and short days of winter, I have explained in an article for The Conversation.

Sales of free-range eggs have shot up over the years, leading many farmers to invest heavily in increasing their free-range production.

“Like many agricultural industries where farmers respond to price signals and predictions, this led to overproduction, leading to lower prices and profits,” Associate Professor Macau said.

NSW’s total flock size peaked in 2017-18 but the overproduction and lower profits led to a 10 per cent drop in egg production the following year.

Then came increased compliance costs, with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) in 2018 introducing rules around what is classified as free range.

Under the rules, hens need to have “meaningful and regular access” to an outdoor area during the daylight hours of their laying cycle.

“This experience has likely influenced farmers’ reluctance to increase their flocks based on predictions of higher demand,” Associate Professor Macau explained.

It isn’t only the increased land requirements that make producing free-range eggs more expensive, it is also the less consistent laying.

Unlike cage or barn hens, free-range hens don’t live in optimized conditions to stimulate laying, such as consistent temperatures and being exposed to 16 hours of light every day.

“Free-range hens are affected by hot or cold temperatures, wind and rain, and length of daylight,” Associate Professor Macau said.

“In winter months they have less energy and produce (on average) 20 per cent fewer eggs than a chicken confined indoors in controlled conditions.”

He said economic and environmental events in 2022 have made things difficult for farmers, who are facing time lags and cost pressures.

“Increasing a laying flock takes about four months. An egg takes about three weeks to hatch. Under ideal conditions, chicks need another 17 weeks before they are ready to begin laying,” he said.

“Any farmer who has begun this process in the past month will be producing more eggs by December. But then it will be summer, when they won’t need 20 per cent more hens to make up for their winter slump.”

The rising cost of living also means feed, electricity and transport costs have shot up, forcing many farmers to be careful about how they conduct their business.

“It is preferable to undersupply than to go bankrupt through oversupply,” Associate Professor Macau said.

The notion of the winter slump has been backed up by farmers.

Last week Xavier Prime, owner of Chooks at the Rooke, a free-range egg farm southwest of Melbourne, told 3AW that “to lay the optimum”, hens needs 15-16 hours of daylight every day, but at the moment they are experiencing just 10-11 hours.

“Free-range eggs, in that sort of space the birds are open to the elements, and with the daylight hours being shorter, that has a lot to do with how many eggs the chickens lay,” he explained.

Associate Professor Macau said a short-term fix to the supply issues seemed “unlikely”, noting wet weather forecasts from August to October were not favorable laying conditions.

However, once the weather warms up, production should return to normal levels.

“Unless consumers are willing to pay more to ensure a constant supply in winter months, our shift to free-range eggs carries a higher likelihood of winter shortages,” he said.

“We must do what we have done through every disruption in recent times: endure, adapt and prepare for the next crisis.”

Read related topics:Woolworth’s

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Categories
Entertainment

Kyle Sandilands leaves mid-show as pregnant fiancée Tegan Kynaston goes into labor

Baby Sandilands is here!

Radio host Kyle Sandilands was seen frantically leaving the show mid-air after discovering his pregnant fiancée Tegan Kynaston had gone into labor on Thursday morning.

WATCH IN THE VIDEO ABOVE: Kyle Sandilands leaves radio show to welcome his baby boy

For more Celebrity related news and videos check out Celebrity >>

The 51-year-old quickly said his goodbyes to the KIIS team before removing his headphones – as he rushed out the door to be by Kynaston’s side in hospital.

Shortly after, co-host Jackie ‘O’ Henderson confirmed on the show the couple had welcomed their baby boy Otto after receiving a text message from Sandilands’ manager Bruno Bouchet.

“Little Otto was born this morning. Mum and bub both doing well,” the text from Bouchet read.

Kyle Sandilands from the hospital. Credit: Supplied

“Kyle’s beyond excited.”

Earlier on Thursday, Sandilands said he was broadcasting from home when he received the best personal news.

“I might have to leave the show and go to the hospital,” he abruptly said during the radio show.

“It’s time? Oh, it’s time!” co-host Jackie O Henderson was heard saying from the studio.

“It’s time,” Sandilands confirmed.

Jackie O Henderson reacts to the news. Credit: Supplied
Kyle Sandilands leaves the radio show. Credit: Supplied

The studio broke out in applause as the dad-to-be prepared to leave.

“Calm down, we don’t want the kid coming out too soon,” Sandilands joked.

“You ready?” he was heard saying off the microphone before telling the team, “Guys I’m so sorry, I feel very unprepared – I don’t even know if…”

“It’s okay,” Henderson reassured him, asking “Have you got your bag packed and everything?”.

Kyle and Tegan find out they’re having a boy. Credit: kyleandjackieoshow/Instagram

“Yes, I’ve got my bag,” he replied.

“I’ve got to run, I feel like I’m abandoning you,” Sandilands added, before rushing off.

Boy or girl?

After announcing the pregnancy news in February, Sandilands and Kynaston celebrated by throwing a gender reveal party on a boat in the middle of Sydney Harbour.

Courtesy of the Kyle and Jackie O Show’s Instagram, the excited couple was seen arriving on the boat as a live band played.

Pictures were shared of the four-tier gender reveal cake, ‘baby Sandilands’ decor, an elaborate candy bar – all in shades of blue and pink.

Kyle and Tegan before the gender reveal. Credit: kyleandjackieoshow/Instagram

The parents-to-be found out live on air that they were expecting a little boy.

The gender was announced by plans that flew over their boat spewing blue smoke.

Live on air, you could hear the crowd cheer as the plans flew past.

“We did expect a girl but we’re very, very happy,” Sandilands said after the plans flew past.

WATCH THE VIDEO BELOW: Kyle Sandilands announces the birth of his unborn child

Kyle Sandilands announces the birth of his unborn child.

Kyle Sandilands announces the birth of his unborn child.
Some snapshots from the gender reveal party. Credit: kyleandjackieoshow/Instagram

Sandilands and Kynaston, who began dating in 2019, shared that they already decided on potential baby names.

Announcing to his listeners on 13 February, Sandilands said: “We’re having a baby!” prompting the entire KIIS FM studio team to cheer.

“We are having a friggin’ baby. I couldn’t be happier,” he added.

Co-host Henderson – who’s a mother to daughter Kitty, aged 10 – told the couple she was “so happy”, and told them their lives would soon change forever.

Kyle Sandilands announces his baby’s gender in Sydney harbour.

Kyle Sandilands announces his baby’s gender in Sydney harbour.

‘He’s very emotional about it’

Speaking on air, Kynaston said Sandilands had been “excellent” since she’s fallen pregnant.

“He’s been very emotional… very happy about it,” she said.

Sandilands said his manager Bruno Bouchet found it challenging to deflect questions from the media after Kynaston was spotted on February 2 with a “slight bump”.

Kyle and Tegan, who began dating in 2019, have already decided on names for both genders. Credit: Kyle and Jackie O
Announcing to his listeners, Kyle said: “We’re having a baby!” prompting the entire KIIS FM studio team to cheer. Credit: KIIS

The couple announced their engagement live on air in January after he proposed in Port Douglas.

“I apologize to the women of the world, as I am officially off the market,” Sandilands said at the time.

He told his listeners Kynaston had “no clue” the proposal was coming.

The 50-year-old went into detail about his elaborate proposal plans that were set to feature fireworks, live music, an array of candles and a lavish meal.

However, not everything went according to plan.

A still from the proposal video posted to Instagram. Credit: kyleandjackieoshow/Instagram

The KIIS FM host had organized for singer-songwriter Conrad Sewell to fly in from overseas and perform the couple’s favorite song while Sandilands got down on one knee.

The radio host shared that “two days before the proposal, Conrad rang and he was very upset because he had caught COVID.”

“I couldn’t postpone it because there were chefs, fireworks and I had hired a venue,” Sandilands said.

Despite the complications, Sandilands told listeners the proposal went ahead without live music, explaining to then-girlfriend Kynaston that they were attending a pop-up art show.

Kyle Sandilands, left, and Tegan Kynaston, right. Credit: Getty Images/Facebook

“When we got there, we got out, I swung the door open and they played the Conrad song. There were candles and soft lighting,” Sandilands said.

Following the romantic proposal, the couple watched the fireworks display alongside close family and friends.

Kynaston, who is 15 years younger than her fiancé, met Sandilands as his personal assistant in 2019.

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Sports

AFL legend Adam Goodes joins Indigenous soccer advisory board

“I joined the Indigenous Football Australia council to share my life experience in sport and business to help others on a similar journey. I am looking forward to learning from other experts who are on the council. But most of all it is about the young people and giving them the best opportunity to achieve their dreams.”

While Goodes has rarely – if ever – spoken about the AFL since his retirement, he has occasionally opened up on his lifelong affinity for soccer, and once revealed he did not miss a moment of Alessandro Del Piero’s magical two-year stint at Sydney FC, which coincided with his final years at the Swans.

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“I even left [former Sydney Swans player] Benny McGlynn’s engagement party at the Clovelly Hotel halfway through,” he told a Fox Sports podcast two years ago when he was announced as a patron of the Moriarty program.

“The boys were like, ‘where are you going?’ I said, ‘Del Piero’s playing Adelaide tonight at the footy stadium, I’ve got to go watch.’ That’s just the passion and love that I have for the game, when these greats of the world come to Australia to play, albeit in the twilight years – for me, it’s incredible just to see the best.

“Here in Australia, we’re starting to develop some of the best players in the world – and what I want to see is some of those best players in the world being Indigenous players.”

IFA is not directly connected to Football Australia, which last year launched its own National Indigenous Advisory Group headed by ex-Socceroo Jade North. But John Moriarty Football is Australia’s longest-running and most successful Indigenous soccer initiative and has expanded across the country in recent years after starting out in Borroloola, the remote community where Moriarty was born.

Also on the majority-Indigenous IFA council are Goodes’ Waverley Old Boys teammate Craig Foster, ABC journalist and presenter Stan Grant, current A-League Women players Gema Simon, Allira Toby and Jada Whyman, and Danny Townsend, the chief executive of the A -Leagues.

“The diversity and strengths of this Indigenous-led Council are unparalleled,” Moriarty said. “Each member is more than a symbolic appointment. They all bring unique, lived experience plus skills, aligned values ​​and goals for Indigenous football in Australia. Each member is committed to creating tangible, equitable and lasting change.”

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