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Sydney news: Plan to pay ‘outstanding’ teachers up to $130,000 in NSW

Here’s what you need to know this morning.

Resignation letter to go public

a man wearing a hard hat looking
David Chandler was the first building commissioner for NSW.(ABCNews)

The NSW government today will release the former state building commissioner’s resignation letter after questions were raised about why he left the job.

David Chandler abruptly resigned last month saying it was time for a “reset.”

There have been reports he may have resigned due to a breakdown in his working relationship with former cabinet minister Eleni Petinos.

Ms Petinos was sacked from the NSW ministry last month over bullying allegations which she denies.

Yesterday, Labor successfully moved a motion in the upper house to compel the government to produce the letter within 24 hours.

The Premier also revealed the letter had been referred to the NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) out of an “abundance of caution”.

New teacher salary plan revealed

A woman wearing glasses and a white jacket
Education Minister Sarah Mitchell says good teachers often have to leave the classroom to receive pay.(ABC News: Rani Hayman)

The NSW government is considering a plan to increase wages for high-achieving teachers in a bid to promote excellence in the classroom.

John Hattie, a world-leading expert on education outcomes and student learning, is providing advice to the government as it seeks to reform the sector.

Under the plan, being finalized by the Department of Education, “outstanding” teachers could receive up to $130,000 per year.

Teachers in NSW start out with a salary of $73,737 and can earn just over $117,000 for lead teacher duties.

To earn more, they need to move into management roles.

Education Minister Sarah Mitchell said the reforms were designed to keep “more of our best teachers in the classroom.”

“This model is not ‘performance pay’, this is about expanding the career options for teachers and keeping our best in the classroom,” she said.

It is hoped a better system for rewarding and retaining top teachers could also help attract more people to the profession.

Meeting over rail union dispute

Rail union leaders are due to meet with the state government later today in a bid to resolve a long-running dispute over the safety of new trains.

The dispute centers around the new intercity fleet (NIF), which arrived in Sydney in 2020 but has been sitting in storage since.

Members of the Rail, Tram and Bus Union have refused to operate the trains, saying guards on them cannot adequately monitor platforms and check that gaps are clear to ensure passengers’ safety.

Earlier this year, the NSW government offered to spend more than $260 million on changes to the new trains.

But the union wants the government to sign an agreement guaranteeing the modifications before negotiations over a new pay deal are completed.

It comes amid a month of industrial action planned by the union, with the first of four planned strikes held yesterday.

New stadium threat to Penrith showgrounds

The NSW upper house has condemned plans to acquire the Penrith Showgrounds to make room for a new football stadium.

One Nation leader Mark Latham moved a successful motion last night denouncing the possible takeover of the 177-year-old showgrounds as “callous.”

He said it would leave many local organizations without a home.

The Penrith showgrounds currently host a harness-racing club, the RSL, the Penrith Agricultural Society and weekly markets.

Last month the showgrounds were served a notice of compulsory acquisition from Infrastructure NSW but the government is adamant no final decisions have been made.

Although other stadium upgrades were recently ditched by the state government, a new stadium to the tune of $300 million is still promised by Penrith.

Man stabbed, car stolen

A bloody rag left lying on the footpath
A man was rushed to hospital after the incident.(ABCNews)

NSW police are investigating a stabbing of a man at a sports field car park in Western Sydney last night.

Emergency services were called to The Kingsway at St Marys at about 11pm.

They found a 32-year-old man with stab wounds to his legs and arm.

He was treated at the scene by paramedics before being taken to Westmead Hospital in a stable condition.

Police were investigating the alleged incident as an assault and carjacking, as the victim’s car was also stolen.

Whale tails pop up around harbor

whale sculpture
Aunty Joanne Selfe with Uncle Graham Toomey and his artwork Whale Dreaming.(Supplied: Whale Tales)

An exhibition featuring 30 two-metre-high whale tail sculptures around Sydney’s western harbor will launch today.

Waterfront Whale Tales, which is expected to attract half a million visitors, is presented as a 6-kilometre harborside trail with sculptures individually created by a diverse collective of 30 artists, including Archibald prize winner Blak Douglas and street artist Scott Marsh.

All tails have a different story or message, with many focusing on the need for environmental protection and action on climate change.

After the exhibition concludes, all the sculptures will be auctioned in September, with the net proceeds going to The Kids’ Cancer Project.

Alex Lehours paints
Artist Alex Lehours paints Poseidon, one of the 30 life-size whale tails.(Supplied: Alex Lehours)

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Police investigate alleged child abduction at Adelaide school

Police are seeking a masked man after he allegedly tried to abduct a young girl at an Adelaide primary school.

Police were called to Glenelg Primary School yesterday at about 10am after reports the man allegedly grabbed a girl on the arm and then fled the area.

It is believed he broke into the school and walked through the grounds, into the school building, up two sets of stairs and outside a toilet block.

Police are investigating after a man broke into Glenelg Primary School in Adelaide and allegedly tried to abduct a child. (Nine)

The man allegedly grabbed the girl on the arm before he left the area.

Parents from the school told 9News they had been sent a text from education officials about the incident.

“It’s pretty scary… It is a massive concern that anybody from the outside can walk in and get the kids,” one parent said.

Police described the man as being about 180cm tall, bald and was wearing a knee-length light blue shirt, black pants, black face mask and carrying a beanie.

The man allegedly grabbed the arm of a girl at Glenelg Primary School in Adelaide. (Nine)

Officers have spoken with students, staff and parents who were at school at the time of the incident, but are yet to identify any witnesses.

Anyone with information should contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

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Retired train driver backs union calls to divert Rockhampton’s ‘dangerous’ city freight line

Paul McKenna can still feel the dread in his stomach when he thinks about driving his locomotive along Rockhampton’s Denison Street.

“It’s sheer luck that there hasn’t been more people killed down that street,” he says.

For a two-kilometre stretch through the middle of Rockhampton, freight trains travel down the middle of Denison street after leaving the Rockhampton station yard.

It’s one of the only freight lines in Queensland that still runs through the middle of a city, according to the Rail Union.

Mr McKenna, a retired train driver from Yeppoon who spent 33 years in the industry, said he would encounter a near-miss almost every second time he would drive along the Denison street line.

A train travels through the center of a city, with cars driving on either side of it.
For a two-kilometre stretch through the middle of Rockhampton, freight trains travel along Denison street after leaving the Rockhampton rail station yard.(Supplied: Jacob Howard)

“People seem to pull up at the stop signs and they don’t look for trains, they look for traffic and they just take off in front of you and you pretty well haven’t got a chance to stop,” Mr McKenna said.

“You’ve got pedestrians that just walk out in front of you.

“You’d come home and you’d stay awake at night if you got close to hitting people.

“It was pretty scary… It needs to be moved.”

Earlier this year, data from the Department of Transport and Main Roads released by the RACQ revealed that the intersection of Denison and Derby St was one of the worst intersections for serious crashes in the state.

The intersection ranked fourth, with seven serious crashes and 11 people seriously injured between June 2018 and May 2021.

Calls to move rail freight line for safety

The Rail, Tram and Bus Union’s Craig Allen says the Dennison Street rail level crossing is the largest in the southern hemisphere and is unique in that it runs through the middle of a city.

The union is calling on Queensland Rail to bypass Rockhampton city, in line with the city’s ring road project.

“Members have identified the whole of Denison Street as one of the most dangerous level crossings they’ve ever encountered,” Mr Allen said.

“From our driver’s perspective, they see the horror in these people’s faces when they’re in the train and they’re about to collide with them.

A car drives beside a rail line.  A stop sign and railway crossing crossing is in the center of the road.
The Denison Street rail level crossing in Rockhampton.(ABC Capricorn: Rachel McGhee)

“The freight infrastructure around Rockhampton is still 19th century… it still hasn’t been upgraded. It’s time we got rail into the 21st century and eliminated all these dangerous rail crossings.”

It’s a call Mr McKenna supports.

“Eliminate the risk… it takes its toll over the years,” he said.

“You nearly can pick which one’s going to come out in front of you. They appear to look up the road for cars, but they don’t see the train and then they take off and you can’t stop.

“If there’s an opportunity to change it, they should jump at it.”

‘No plans’ to upgrade Denison Street level crossing

Queensland Rail head of regional, Jim Benstead said he was committed to level-crossing safety through investment in education, engineering upgrades and working closely with the police on enforcement.

“While there are no current plans to upgrade the level crossing or track infrastructure through the Denison and Derby Street intersection in Rockhampton, Queensland Rail is working with council to identify any potential safety improvements,” Mr Benstead said.

“In the last financial year (2021-2022) we saw 94 near misses on the network across regional Queensland.

“Since 2017, there have been nine incidents at the Denison and Derby Street level crossing, including one traffic incident earlier this year.”

A train travels along a street in the middle of the road.
There are calls for the rail line to be diverted around Rockhampton, in line with the city’s Ring Road project, out of safety concerns.(Supplied: Jacob Howard)

Mr Benstead said all level crossings were fitted with signs and signals to warn of an approaching train and people had to take responsibility and heed the warnings.

“There is also an $18 million regional level-crossing program underway, which has so far delivered upgrades to level crossings in Portsmith, Edmonton, Chinchilla and Cardwell in North Queensland,” he said.

“Queensland Rail is asking everyone in the community to prioritize their own safety around trains.”

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Luxury car stolen from Woodvale home crashes in Balga after failing to stop for police

A luxury car stolen from a home in Woodvale — which is linked to the investigation into whether two teenagers were being followed in a vigilante chase before they came off a stolen motorcycle in Hillarys — has crashed in Balga after it failed to stop for police.

The white BMW hatchback crashed into a civilian van after a short police pursuit about 4pm on Wednesday on the corner of Princess Road and Princess Way.

Three people in the BMW have been taken into custody and nobody was injured.

The white BMW hatchback crashed into a civilian van after a short police pursuit about 4pm on Wednesday.
Camera IconThe white BMW hatchback crashed into a civilian van after a short police pursuit about 4pm on Wednesday. Credit: simon santi/The West Australian

A Princess Road resident, who did not want to be named, said it was lucky her five-year-old son and eight-year-old daughter were not playing outside at the time.

The crash happened within meters of the family’s backyard where there is a children’s swing set.

The crash happened within meters of the family's backyard where there is a children's swing set.
Camera IconThe crash happened within meters of the family’s backyard where there is a children’s swing set. Credit: simon santi/The West Australian

“I got home from work and made (the kids) go in the house straight away, the biggest frustration is just how close it was to going through my fence,” she said.

“It would be a whole different ball game had it gone further in, we might not be standing here today.”

Another resident said he was watching TV about 3pm when he heard what sounds like “bombs had gone off”.

A man is arrested by detectives.
Camera IconA man is arrested by detectives. Credit: simon santi/The West Australian

Police allege the BMW was stolen during a home burglary in Woodvale in the early hours of Monday.

A Woodvale couple and their two children were asleep inside their home when the BMW was allegedly stolen.

Read the full story at The West Australian.

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Six-figure salaries for teachers to stop sector haemorrhage

Teacher salaries could rise to up to $130,000 a year as Australia battles an increasing shortage in the sector.

The new plan follows a number of strikes in recent months as teachers walked off the job to demand better pay and working conditions.

One recent report suggested that huge numbers of teachers were planning to leave the education sector in the next five years due to the difficult environment.

Should we increase salaries for top teachers to $130,000?

Rear view of large group of students raising their arms to answer the question on a class at elementary school.
Australia is considering radical steps to stop teachers leaving education. (Getty)

Education Ministers from around Australia will meet tomorrow to discuss plans to shore up the sector, including retaining current teachers and attracting new talent.

Among the ideas being flagged are salaries of $130,000 a year, and lowering university fees to make it more affordable to join the profession.

An apprenticeship-style system of on-the-job training is also being mooted.

Catholic and public school teachers strike in Sydney
Teachers have gone on strike in recent months to demand better pay and conditions. (Brook Mitchell)

NSW Teachers Federation head Angelo Gavrielatos said recently that an entire generation of students were missing out on a proper education because of the teaching sector woes.

Every day, he said, thousands of students were reporting that they had their classes merged, forgotten, or cancelled, as schools scrambled to plug teaching gaps.

Gavrielatos said while the pandemic had exacerbated the issue, the teacher crisis predated COVID-19 by years.

Surprise find upends human history in North America

He said that teachers had not had their working conditions changed for, in some cases, seventy years.

“The government has got thousands of pages of research and analysis that says the two most important factors here are unsustainable workloads and uncompetitive pay,” Gavrielatos said.

“Yet the government appears to be wanting to do everything else other than dealing with the root cause of the issue.”

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Bigger salaries for teachers to stop classroom exodus

“This model is not ‘performance pay’, this is about expanding the career options for teachers and keeping our best in the classroom,” she said.

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The NSW Teachers Federation is locked in a long-running pay dispute with the state government and its members have walked off the job three times in just over six months. Negotiations over an enterprise agreement are at a stalemate, with the federation calling for a pay rise of 5 per cent a year with an extra 2.5 per cent to recognize extra experience, as well as two more hours of planning time a week.

In a discussion paper to be debated at Friday’s meeting, the Commonwealth has described teacher shortages as unprecedented with demand for high school teachers set to outstrip graduates by about 4,100 in the next three years.

Earlier this month, federal Education Minister Jason Clare said chronic shortages of maths and science teachers were most acute in high schools.

The national Quality Initial Teacher Education Review report released earlier this year found that lifting top teacher pay by $30,000 would help attract high-achieving students who are avoiding a career in teaching because of its low status. About three per cent of high achievers choose teaching for their undergraduate studies, but the report found lifting pay would make students 13 percentage points more likely to choose to be a teacher.

Despite the NSW HALT program running for years, only 280 teachers have been accredited and many have avoided applying due to a complicated and expensive application processes.

Initial recommendations into the state’s higher paid teaching jobs are expected later this year in a NSW Department of Education policy paper.

Hattie, who led one of the world’s biggest studies into the factors which improve student learning, will give independent advice.

“The rewarding of excellence and expertise is the right topic to realize high standards and maximize positive impacts on students,” Professor Hattie said. “It is exciting to be part of these NSW discussions and I look forward to hearing the views of the profession.”

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Education program director at the Grattan Institute Jordana Hunter said research shows higher pay rates for expert teachers could be a powerful incentive for high-achieving school-leavers to choose teaching.

“High-achieving school-leavers are worried about the maximum pay rates at the pinnacle of their careers. If the government wants to attract the strongest applicants into teaching it will be important that pay rates keep pace with other professions,” Hunter said.

The Grattan Institute has previously recommended that two new expert teacher positions be created – instructional specialists and master teachers – with much higher salaries.

Hunter said the roles would be designed for expert teachers who can demonstrate exceptional subject-specific knowledge, skills and could mentor others. The jobs could pay between $40,000-$80,000 more than the highest pay rate for regular classroom teachers in NSW, she said.

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Student jobseekers say $7b Centrelink changes are ‘penalizing’ them for studying

Rebekah Maslen has been working hard to prepare herself for a new career.

The Ocean Grove-based student is completing a diploma of early childhood education and care, which includes 24 hours per week on placement, plus about 15 hours of study and two days of classes.

She is also one of many Australians struggling to come to grips with the biggest overhaul of unemployment services in decades.

“I would say the transition has been appalling,” she said.

“The way I’ve been treated … and the lack of information around how to use the system in detail [has] not been a very good experience.”

At the start of July, more than 800,000 jobseekers transferred to Workforce Australia, which has been pitched as a more flexible alternative to the much-maligned jobactive system.

The changes were passed under the Morrison government with Labor’s support prior to the May election. Contracts with job service providers — private companies paid by the government to get people into work — worth $7 billion were also signed.

To continue receiving the JobSeeker payment, most people need to perform mutual obligations — tasks set by the government aimed at enhancing employability.

Under jobactive, mutual obligations most commonly revolved around job applications, and jobseekers needed to submit 20 a month. That requirement could be waived if a jobseeker was completing a Certificate III course or above, which includes diplomas.

Now, those required to complete mutual obligations have transitioned to a system where they earn points for completing a wider range of activities, such as short courses, getting a drivers license or attending a job fair.

If they do not receive a certain number of points each month, their payments can be suspended.

A white woman with blonde hair and red overalls sitting next to a computer screen that says 'how to earn points'
Rebekah Maslen has had trouble getting her placement hours recognized.(ABC NewsNorman Hermant)

Ms Maslen said she was told by her job provider that to comply with the new system she must apply for at least four other jobs every month on top of her diploma and placement.

She also said she had consistent difficulty finding a way to get points credit for her placement hours through the online portal.

“The things you’re asked to do for getting points, things like getting a forklift license … I don’t find very helpful as someone who’s studying,” she said.

‘It’s really demoralizing’

The government made a series of tweaks to the design of Workforce Australia days before it launched.

Employment Minister Tony Burke said at the time that the changes would ensure someone participating in full-time study or training that improved their long-term job prospects “would not be putting their qualifications at risk”.

However Ms Maslen said that was what she felt Workforce Australia was doing to her.

“I feel penalized for choosing to study and to do a placement,” she said.

A white woman with blonde hair and red overalls looking at a computer screen
Rebekah Maslen says her experience with Workforce Australia has been poor.(ABC NewsNorman Hermant)

Ms Maslen said she had also been frustrated by experiences with her job provider.

“I often come back from my interviews feeling very frustrated and often in tears because I don’t understand how to use the system,” she said.

“I kind of feel like I’m being made to do all these things just so someone in an office can tick a box. I don’t really feel like that’s fair and it’s really quite demoralizing.”

Asked about mutual obligations requirements for students, the Department of Employment and Workplace Relations (DEWR) said people undertaking approved full-time courses shorter than 12 months, such as Ms Maslen, should not have job-search requirements.

“Providers have been instructed to reduce the minimum job search requirement to zero for these participants. The department’s Digital Services Contact Center can also remove the job search requirement for those participants,” a spokesperson said in a statement.

‘Designed to punish people’

The overall transition to Workforce Australia has been heavily criticized, with jobseekers and advocates voicing confusion and concern ahead of the launch.

Outside those affecting students, a raft of other issues has surfaced since the scheme launched. The ABC has heard reports of jobseekers:

  • Being recommended jobs based in states they do not live in and requiring qualifications they do not have
  • Traveling hundreds of kilometers for short face-to-face appointments with providers which they said could have been done remotely
  • Entering information on the Workforce Australia app or website which was not later accessible to providers
  • Having to complete skills seminars on things they already know and complete questionnaires assessing whether “zest” was a character strength of theirs

Jay Coonan, a spokesperson from the Antipoverty Centre, said jobseekers were not being treated as individuals and had been left to “figure out the system themselves”.

“It’s much the same [as jobactive]. It was never about making it more flexible for people, even though that’s what they marketed it as,” he said.

A white man with brown hair sitting at a computer
Jay Coonan says the rollout of Workforce Australia has been “a mess”.(ABC NewsNorman Hermant)

Mr Coonan said many of the issues to arise were foreseeable and things overall were “a mess”.

“There are people out there who are pretty much working full time … but are still forced to do mutual obligations simply because the system is designed to punish people who need help from the government.”

The DEWR spokesperson said the app and website were continuously reviewed to ensure they “meet the needs of users”, and jobseekers concerned by how their appointments were being managed could contact it via the National Customer Service line.

‘Everyone needs to be aligned’

Mr Burke last week flagged concern with the rollout and granted user experience had varied “wildly”.

A parliamentary committee has been set up to scrutinize the program, but will not report back until September 2023.

Sally Sinclair, CEO of the National Employment Services Association, the peak body for the contracted employment services sector, said she thought the rollout was going “relatively well” given the scale of the transition.

“Everybody is working very hard to make this the most positive experience possible for both the participants and employers … but it’s going to take a bit of time to build,” she said.

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SA support service combatting workplace sexual harassment gets $2 million funding boost

Tessa Jones* was forced to give up a job she loved after a prolonged and traumatizing experience of sexual harassment.

The 28-year-old said her complaints went nowhere because her alleged harasser was a senior staff member who laughed when she asked him to respect boundaries.

“I just kept saying, ‘stop’ and kept saying, ‘I can’t take this anymore’ and there was no change in behaviour,” she told ABC News.

“Dealing with it was really, really difficult because I was so young, I had no tools to deal with it and I didn’t understand what was going on and why.

“I trusted this person completely — it was a bit of a nightmare.”

Ms Jones — who is now a self-employed creative director — turned to the Working Women’s Center in Adelaide for support after deciding to leave the toxic working environment.

“For me, I had to go through this, I couldn’t go around it, I couldn’t ignore it. I had to go straight through it and the center helped me do that,” she said.

The South Australian Government will give the center $2 million over the next three years so it can employ more lawyers as its caseload continues to increase.

SA Attorney-General Kyam Maher said the funding was “really important” and aligned with recommendations made by federal Sex Discrimination Commissioner Kate Jenkins during her 2021 review.

“Many women don’t just suffer sexual harassment at work, there’s often underpayment of wages so it’s critically important that women have a resource like the Working Women’s Centre,” he said.

Abbey Kendall stands in front of a park bench and a tree.
Working Women’s Center director Abbey Kendall says the funding will help employ more lawyers for the service.(Supplied)

Center director Abbey Kendall said demand for the service was “huge”.

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Victim of paedophile John Wayne Millwood alleges compensation being avoided through diving of assets

A victim-survivor of Tasmanian paedophile John Wayne Millwood says his abuser has divested many of his assets to family members and third parties and declared himself bankrupt to avoid paying court-ordered compensation.

Millwood, 76 — a former Launceston businessman and art collector — sexually abused the survivor, known as ZAB, over a period of six years in the 1980s.

In 2021, ZAB won a civil Supreme Court case against Millwood, however, the victim-survivor said the compensation amount was now about $6 million — the original order was for a record $5,313,500 — because of interest on the unpaid amount.

ZAB said he made an application to the court to recover the compensation but was now hopeful he could recover the payment through provisions in the Bankruptcy Act.

While ZAB’s lawyers applied to the Federal Court to have Millwood declared bankrupt, before the case was due to be heard in that court, Millwood declared himself bankrupt.

According to a creditor’s petition filed with the Federal Court on behalf of ZAB, Millwood “failed to comply on or before 26 July 2022 with the requirements of a bankruptcy notice served on him on 5 July 2022”.

The case is listed for hearing on September 8, however, according to the National Personal Insolvency Index, Millwood declared himself bankrupt on July 21.

ZAB said he only found that out on August 8.

“Unfortunately, [Millwood’s] self-declaration of bankruptcy will prolong the trauma involved,” ZAB said.

ZAB said he and his lawyers had documents they planned to use in court to argue Millwood had divested assets while the civil court case was underway.

“As the major creditor — now owed $6 million in damages, costs and interest — I will, however, use the significant powers afforded under the Bankruptcy Act to claw back assets from those family members and other third parties,” he said.

“I have no doubt we will succeed in recovering the $6 million I am owed in full, and it will cost Millwood and his family far more in the long run.”

ZAB said law reform was needed “to ensure convicted paedophiles cannot avoid paying compensation to victims in this way.”

“Superannuation laws are in desperate need of reform, as they prevent us from accessing Millwood’s multi-million-dollar self-managed super funds to recover damages,” he said.

Lawyer Angela Sdrinis — who specializes in personal injury claims related to child sexual abuse — said that in her experience, successful plaintiffs often had trouble getting compensation from individual perpetrators.

“One of the things that have been flagged, but unfortunately hasn’t been acted, on was a proposal that legislation be passed whereby a perpetrator’s superannuation would be made available or accessible to successful litigants in matters like these, in cases of child abuse, Ms Sdrinis said.

She said that approach would be “a pretty good start”, but said not all perpetrators had large amounts of superannuation.

John Millwood at reception.
John Millwood was barred by the Parole Board from ever returning to Launceston.(Supplied: Old Geelong Grammerians)

Another reform Ms Sdrinis suggested was to make so-called freezing orders easier to obtain.

“One of the things that can be done in criminal prosecutions is that assets can be restrained, restraining orders can be made so that the assets are held safely, pending the outcome of the criminal process,” she said.

“There’s not really an analogous process in the civil law. Claimants can make applications for what are called freezing orders, but those orders are very expensive to obtain before a court.

“The law relating to freezing orders is pretty much that you’re only likely to get a freezing order if you can prove that the disposal of assets is absolutely imminent — like a ‘for sale’ sign on a house — you really have [to have] that situation.”

Ms Sdrinis said transfers of land and other assets could be reversed by order of the court, “if the evidence is that the defendant disposed of the assets in order to avoid having to pay, but that’s a difficult, expensive and complicated process”.

Record-setting compensation in civil trial

Millwood initially pleaded not guilty in the Supreme Court to multiple child sex offences. In the lead-up to his trial, he changed his plea to guilty.

He was sentenced to four years in prison and was given parole in 2019 after serving just over half of his jail time.

ZAB brought a civil action against Millwood in 2018. That case went to trial.

Millwood was unrepresented and did not make an appearance.

Chief Justice Alan Blow ordered Millwood to pay the abuse survivor a record-setting amount of $5,313,500.

In his decision, Justice Blow said the abuse “had devastating consequences for the plaintiff’s [ZAB’s] mental health”.

“His adult life has been affected by his complex post-traumatic stress disorder and his depression in practically every possible way. There are prospects for improvement, but certainly not full recovery.”

The ABC has attempted to contact Millwood through his trustee.

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China’s ambassador backs the right to take control of Taiwan by force

US President Joe Biden has said three times over the past year that the US would defend Taiwan with military force but officials in his administration have insisted each time there was no change in the deliberate ambiguity about how the US would respond.

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Xiao, who arrived in Canberra in April after four years in Indonesia and a long career in the diplomatic service, portrayed China as a stabilizing force in world affairs and a partner for Australia.

“When we cooperate we both win, when we don’t we both lose,” he said.

Asked about China’s intentions towards Taiwan, Xiao did not accept the proposition that the people of Taiwan should have a say in the outcome.

“The future of Taiwan will be decided by 1.4 billion Chinese people. At the same time I believe that the majority of the people in Taiwan believe they are Chinese,” he said.

“They believe Taiwan is part of China and Taiwan is a province of China. They are for reunification.”

In fact, the majority have favored some form of the status quo in surveys over two decades, according to the National Chengchi University’s Election Study Center. Its June survey found that 28.6 per cent said they wanted to “maintain the status quo indefinitely” and 28.3 per cent wanted the status quo to continue until a later date, while 25.2 per cent wanted to move toward independence.

Asked if China would re-educate the people of Taiwan after unification, Xiao said: “My personal understanding is that once Chinese Taiwan comes back to the motherland, there might be a process for the people of Taiwan to have a correct understanding of China. ”

He denied there was any re-education of people in Xinjiang despite reports from Human Rights Watch about the use of forced detention, torture and “political education camps” against the mostly Muslim population of the region in western China.

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Asked about the Australian journalist Cheng Lei, who has been detained in China for two years on vague national security claims, the ambassador acknowledged there were Australians in detention but said: “They are under custody according to Chinese laws and their basic rights are well protected , don’t worry about that.”

Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong raised concerns about Cheng and an Australian writer Yang Hengjun when she met her Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi, in Bali on July 8.

Xiao confirmed the interception of a Royal Australian Air Force P-8 surveillance plane by a Chinese J-16 fighter on May 26 – an incident that included the release of aluminum “chaff” that could have damaged the Australian aircraft – and defended it as a warning to stay away from Chinese territory.

“Just like you’re in your house, within your compound, somebody is driving around carrying a gun and trying to beat into your window, see what you’re doing with your family … you’re entitled to feel threatened, feel uncomfortable, ” he said.

“So you have to come out and tell those people to keep distant.”

He downplayed the chances of a meeting between Albanese and Xi at the G20 in Bali later this year, saying it would happen when there was confidence in a more positive relationship.

“As ambassador, I’m hoping for the best. And I’m going to make my own efforts toward that direction.”

Japanese ambassador Shingo Yamagami said he was “a bit surprised and concerned” at the remarks from his Chinese counterpart that missed an opportunity to reset relations.

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“I’m concerned at the increasingly loose usage of words,” Yamagami told journalists in the press gallery of Parliament House after watching Xiao’s speech.

“I think ‘use of force’ is the last word to be employed by diplomats, agents of peace. We are here to de-escalate tensions across the Taiwan Strait yet we are seeing an escalation of tensions. I’m increasingly worried.”

Japan was also concerned that Xiao claimed missiles fell into disputed waters when Japan claims those waters as part of its exclusive economic zone.

“How come missiles have to be shot across Taiwan into the East China Sea in response to a US politician’s visit to Taipei? I just cannot get it,” Yamagami said.

“This is the water between Taiwan and Japanese islands off the coast of Okinawa – it is the Japanese side of the median line. We are convinced five missiles landed in Japanese waters.”

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news, views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weekly Inside Politics newsletter here.