Seven other Sydney postcodes were in the top 10 for average incomes, including those of Bellevue Hill ($195,204), Dover Heights ($186,025) and Mosman ($177,645). Last year’s best-paid suburb, Double Bay, suffered a $32,500 drop in average income to $170,051.
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The only Melbourne suburb to reach the list in 2019-20 was Toorak at almost $185,000, down $16,000 on 2018-19.
Across the country, the average taxable income for all Australians increased by 2.1 per cent to $63,882. The median taxable income increased by a similar rate to $48,381.
The average incomes of women increased by 2.8 per cent to a record high of $52,798 while for men it lifted by 1.8 per cent to $74,559.
Australians, on average, paid $19,790 in income taxes in 2019-20, at $446 or 2.3 per cent increase over 2018-19.
The statistics also show the burden of the tax system is increasingly falling on middle-income earners.
There were 545,000 people who earned more than $190,000 through the year. Their average tax bill was $130,421 while the median tax paid was $81,554.
It was the lowest average tax paid by the nation’s highest income earners since 2012-13 and the lowest median on record.
By contrast, the 2.5 million people earning between $90,000 and $180,000 paid, on average, $33,655 in tax or a combined $83 billion.
It was the highest average tax bill for middle-income earners on record and an 8.2 per cent increase over the collective tax they paid in 2018-19.
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Lower-income earners also paid more tax in total and on average. The largest group of taxpayers, the 6.2 million people who earned between $37,000 and $90,000, paid a combined $67.2 billion in tax at an average of $10,818 each.
The legislated stage three tax cuts, which the federal government has committed to keeping despite their substantial cost to the budget, will deliver their largest benefits to middle and high-income earners. They begin from the middle of 2024.
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Foreign Minister Penny Wong has hit back at China for singling out Australia over calls to restore stability in the Taiwan Strait.
Senator Wong joined her counterparts from the United States and Japan on Saturday to condemn Chinese military escalation which saw high-powered missiles launched towards Taiwan and Japan’s exclusive economic zone.
The reaction drew the ire of the Chinese government which accused Senator Wong of “finger-pointing” while claiming it was the “victim” of “political provocation”.
But the Foreign Minister doubled down on her concerns on Monday and said Australia and regional partners would continue to “urge restraint”.
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“What is most critical at the moment is that the temperature is lowered and calm is restored when it comes to cross-strait tensions,” Senator Wong said in a press conference in Canberra.
“Australia continues to urge restraint, Australia continues to urge de-escalation and this is not something that solely Australia is calling for.
“The whole region is concerned about the current situation, the whole region is calling for stability to be restored.”
Over the weekend, the Taiwanese government accused Beijing of simulating an attack after the first trip to the island from a US House Speaker in a quarter of a century.
The Defense Ministry said China used 66 plans and 14 warships in the exercise on Sunday and had launched 11 ballistic missiles during live-fire drills on Thursday.
The US, Japan and Australia responded on Saturday with Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Japan Foreign Minister Hayashi Yoshimasa and Senator Wong calling for China to “immediately cease” its military exercises.
The trio also expressed concerns that China’s actions would “gravely affect international peace and stability”.
“They condemned the PRC’s launch of ballistic missiles, five of which the Japanese government reported landed in its exclusive economic zones, raising tension and destabilizing the region,” a joint statement said.
The Chinese Embassy in Canberra on Sunday defended the central government’s military exercises, describing them as actions to “safeguard state sovereignty and territorial integrity”.
But the statement singled out Australia and said Canberra had “condemned the victim”.
Senator Wong hit back and said Australia was “not the only country concerned about escalation” and raised concerns of potential conflict in the Pacific.
“The region is concerned about the risk of conflict,” she said on Monday.
“We will continue, in a calm and considered way, to articulate our national interests.”
“Our interests are the interest of the region and that is restraint and de-escalation.”
Taipei was forced to scramble fighter jets and put shore-based missiles on stand-by with the Chinese Defense Ministry saying it was “testing the capabilities” of assault systems.
China has never ruled Taiwan but considers the island its territory.
“Someone you are in relationship with… clearly was aware about the various processes associated with the advertising and the nature of this position,” she said.
The inquiry heard Lugsdin was copied into an email thread on December 9 about advertising the trade job, which was eight days before the public advertisement.
Barilaro insisted he was successful in securing the role through merit but granted parts of the process have since proven to be problematic.
“It hasn’t been as clean as it should have been and I’m the victim out of that, not the perpetrator,” he said.
He also said he wished he never applied for the trade commissioner role after the “personal hell” he has endured in the seven weeks since his appointment and subsequent withdrawal from the role.
“If I knew what I know now, I wish I never had applied,” he said on Monday. “If I knew what I know now, I wouldn’t have walked into this shitshow … because the trauma I’ve gone through over the last six, seven weeks has been significant.”
Barilaro confirmed he had contacted Premier Dominic Perrottet, then-trade minister Stuart Ayres and Treasurer Matt Kean before he applied for the lucrative New York role, but that no concerns were ever raised.
“[Kean] would have told me bluntly if he thought it was going to be an issue, for sure. And he never did,” Barilaro said, adding that Kean was “supportive”.
Barilaro also maintained his push to have trade appointments made by ministers, not the public service, was unrelated to his post-politics plans.
A key point of contention in the drawn-out job saga that has plagued the NSW government has been an urgent submission which Barilaro took to cabinet in September last year to change the commissioner roles from public service decisions to ministerial appointments.
While the transition ultimately never occurred, it had the support of his cabinet colleagues.
Barilaro on Monday rejected any suggestion the cabinet submission was designed to benefit him.
The inquiry heard Barilaro lodged the cabinet submission on September 16, less than a week after giving private evidence to the anti-corruption commission about then-premier Gladys Berejiklian.
On September 24, Barilaro told the Federal Court in a defamation trial that he had decided to resign from politics, before then formally taking the submission to cabinet on September 27.
Berejiklian resigned on October 1 and Barilaro quit three days later.
Labor’s Daniel Mookhey said: “It does look like that cabinet submission was being put forward urgently because you knew that at some point [Berejiklian] was likely to have to resign.”
Barilaro rejected Labor’s suggestion that he knew about Berejiklian’s resignation in advance.
Department secretary Amy Brown gives evidence for the third time.Credit:Kate Geraghty
“I will absolutely refute that disgusting slur and accusation. You’re making me out to be corrupt,” Barilaro said.
Mookhey said: “If we’re to believe your version of events, Mr Barilaro, we have to basically conclude that you’re one of the luckiest men in NSW politics.” Barilaro disagreed, suggesting he was “the unluckiest man in NSW politics … because of those series of events.”
Barilaro also revealed he contacted Brown, the Investment NSW boss, to recommend former state Labor leader Jodi McKay and former Liberal minister Pru Goward be permitted to belatedly apply for trade commissioner roles.
The pair were interviewed for roles but were not successful.
Barilaro launched a fierce defense of his right as a private citizen to apply for the US trade role, despite being the minister responsible for the positions when he was still in cabinet.
He maintained he was appointed by “apolitical public service personnel”, and denied he had an advantage over others, with former NSW Liberal premier Barry O’Farrell and former federal Liberal senator Arthur Sinodinos among his referees. Ayres was also an informal referee for his application of him.
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The trade job scandal has engulfed the Perrottet government and resulted in the forced resignation of Ayres from cabinet over concerns about his role in the saga. He has denied any wrongdoing.
Barilaro said interactions between Ayres and Brown, revealed through the inquiry, had surprised him “as much as it surprised anybody else”.
However, he said he “genuinely believed” Ayres had done nothing to help him secure the role.
Kean is expected to be endorsed as deputy Liberal leader at a party room meeting on Tuesday after Transport Minister David Elliott said he would not contest the position.
An Investment NSW spokesperson said Lugsdin was hired by an external recruitment agency last year and worked in a contract role as part of a contingent workforce. She was reviewed as the most qualified and skilled candidate put forward by four pre-qualified suppliers.
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missing South Australian grandmother Colleen South has been found dead in a paddock in rural Victoryher loved ones have confirmed.
Tonight, her family confirmed the news they had been fearing ever since she disappeared.
Colleen South has been missing since July 1. (Supplied)
“We are heartbroken and in shock,” Courtney Rose, who has been providing regular updates on efforts to find South, posted to the Bring Colleen South home Facebook page.
“Colleen’s body has unfortunately been located in a paddock tonight, five kilometers from where her car was found,” she wrote.
“We don’t have any answers on what has happened yet, but we will update you all once we do.
“We want to thank everyone from the bottom of our hearts for your endless support, calls and messages for the past five weeks. We are so grateful.”
Police said a farmer found a body in a paddock south of Mackies Road, on Swan Hill-Charlton Road, Bunguluke, about 4pm.
They said it was yet to be formally identified and investigations were ongoing.
South’s family had been convinced foul play was involved in her disappearance, saying she was on her way to visit relatives in Swan Hill when “something terrible happened.”
“It appears that she’s got out of her car and walked about 20 meters away, sat under a tree,” South’s niece Farah Mak told Today last month.
“Her journal was there and later my mother found her pen at the back of her journal (with) the note ‘help me please.'”
Colleen South had written ‘help me please’ in her journal, her family says. (Supplied)
Mak said the note looked like it had been written in a hurry.
“We believe that she sat under that tree, (has) written in her journal, someone has come up to her, whether they were just driving past and potentially she has got in the car… and from there that’s where we feel that foul play is involved.”
At the time, Superintendent Rebecca Olsen said South’s disappearance was not being treated as suspicious and the note might have been written before she vanished.
“At this stage, there is nothing to suggest that this is suspicious and will take everything into consideration,” Olsen said.
Tonight’s development comes a day after South’s family shared fresh CCTV footage of the grandmother at Sunraysia Petroleum at Berriwillock on July 3.
Previously, she had been seen driving a 2006 silver Hyundai Getz sedan at Renown Park on July 1 about 3.30pm.
Police and the State Emergency Service had used drones, horses and dogs to search dense bushland in the area where South’s car crashed, to no avail.
The Federal Government has promised to pick up the bill for any potential pay rise for aged care workers in a submission to the Fair Work Commission (FWC).
Key points:
The government has stopped short of nominating how much aged care wages should increase
It says existing rates do not reflect the modern skills and demands of the role
Aged Care Minister Anika Wells says gender pay equity is a priority
The independent wages umpire is considering a case brought forward by the unions, calling for a 25-per-cent pay increase for 200,000 residential and home care workers.
While stopping short of nominating how much wages should rise, the Commonwealth argued in its submission that the existing award rates do not reflect the value and skills of the sector.
Minister for Employment and Workplace Relations Tony Burke said the COVID pandemic had exacerbated pressures on the workforce and underlined the case for a pay increase.
“Right now, there is no doubt their work is undervalued. We need to change that,” he said.
“Our government is prioritizing these workers as we fight to get wages moving again.”
Unions celebrate commitment
The Health Services Union welcomed the government’s submission, arguing the aging population and changing expectations had made the roles more complex.
National president Gerard Hayes said the government’s submission was a shot in the arm for the sector.
“Older Australians will not get the care they deserve until we can attract and retain a workforce to look after them,” he said.
“The Government has understood this and taken action.
“We are hopeful the Fair Work Commission will make a decision that recognizes the work value of aged care.
“A decent pay rise is beyond overdue.”
Health Services Union president Gerard Hayes says Australia has allowed aged care workers to be exploited and overworked for too long.(ABC News: Laura Brierley Newton)
The Interim CEO of employer group Aged and Community Care Providers Association Paul Sadler said the case for a pay rise was strongest for registered and enrolled nurses and personal care workers.
“It would not surprise me to see that the increase for these key workers will be certainly up towards that 25 per cent level,” he said.
“The sooner this decision is made the better, but we do support a staged implementation of the increase.”
An election promise
Lifting the pay of aged care workers was a key recommendation of the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety’s final report last year.
During the election campaign, Labor promised if it won the government it would make a submission to the FWC in support of a pay rise for the workforce.
The commitment was criticized by then-prime minister Scott Morrison, who questioned how Labor would fund any increase, instead opting to give aged care workers across the country two standalone payments of $400.
Workforce shortages
Unions and industry groups have argued pay increases are needed to attract and retain skilled workers for the sector.
Aged Care Minister Anika Wells said a pay rise was the first step to addressing workforce shortages.
“We need more staff in aged care and a pay rise is the start of ensuring workers are rewarded for the crucial roles they play,” she said.
“One of the main causes of the gender pay gap is low pay and poor conditions in care sectors like aged care, where the majority of workers are women.
“Increasing wages in aged care is essential to ensuring that men and women are paid equally.”
The Albanian government has committed to funding any proposed wage increase.(ABC News: Matt Roberts)
If the unions’ case is successful, the FWC would vary the aged care award, the document outlining minimum pay rates and conditions for the sector.
That change could see the minimum wage for aged care workers rise by at least $5 an hour.
The minimum wage of a qualified personal carer would be bumped up from $23.09 to $28.86 an hour, dependent on salaries when the application was lodged.
Under the union’s proposal a level 1 aged care worker could see their weekly pay increased from just over $800 to more than $1,000.
The case has been before the FWC since 2020.
It is due to hear from the government and unions when it holds hearings this month.
The gunman who allegedly murdered three members of the same family in a rural Queensland town last week was banned from owning a gun license by police more than a decade ago before he successfully overturned the decision.
Queensland Police refused to renew Darryl Valroy Young’s gun license in 2010 after it found he was “not a fit and proper person” to hold firearms.
It added an approval for a license to own four rifles and a shotgun “was not considered to be in the public interest”, The Courier Mail reported.
But the 59-year-old appealed to the Civil and Administrative Tribunal in the same year he needed the weapons to kill feral animals on his sprawling property in Bogie, south-west of Bowen, in northern Queensland’s Whitsundays region.
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Young argued he had not broken laws that would prevent the Queensland Police from renewing his firearms license – which was first acquired in 1998.
“I would like the Tribunal to over turn the rejection notice as I have not broken any laws to stop me having a gun license,” Young wrote.
“…There is no were (sic) in the laws of the gun laws that I have broken to stop me having a gun license… I need my gun license for my business.
“I hope the Court overturns the decision so I can have my license.”
He was charged with three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder on Friday following the shooting incident that rocked the town one day earlier.
Police will allege in court three family members – couple Mervyn, 71, and Maree Schwarz, 59, and their son Graham Tighe, 35 – were fatally shot on Thursday by Young at the boundary of their huge properties after the parties agreed to meet the night before.
The other son, Ross Tighe, was left in a critical condition after a shotgun wound to the abdomen. He was able to escape about 40 kilometers in a ute and raise the alarm.
Young appeared at Proserpine Magistrates Court via video link on Monday morning. His legal team did not apply for bail.
He will remain behind bars at a Queensland correctional facility until the case is mentioned again in just under three months on November 1.
Neighbors of the Schwarz’s traveled more than an hour from their town to the courthouse to support the alleged victims and their families.
The Schwarz’s had moved next door to the Young’s in the town with a population of about 200 people after purchasing the 29,000 hectare farm in May 2021.
Police will allege the couple and one of their sons were murdered at the front of the Shannonvale Rd property over an ongoing dispute about boundaries of the homes.
Anyone in the area with information who has knowledge, information of any issues in the area, or spoke with either family, should contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.
A woman in sydney’s eastern suburbs has been allegedly stabbed at her doorstep after opening her front door to a man believed to be known to her.
A crime scene was established on the cliffs of Dover Heights after the 46-year-old was treated for stab wounds this afternoon.
It’s alleged a 46-year-old man, believed to be a friend of the woman’s husband, knocked on the woman’s door before stabbing her around 3pm, leaving her with a severe chest wound.
A woman in Sydney’s eastern suburbs has been allegedly stabbed. (Nine)
Three builders working nearby heard the woman’s screams and rushed to the scene, disarming the alleged attacker.
The knife was dropped and the man allegedly fled.
A neighbor witnessed the aftermath of the incident.
“My understanding was she opened the door because he was familiar to her,” witness Marina Bassin said.
The three builders are being credited with potentially saving the woman’s life.
“There were three of them. They were so brave… extremely brave,” Bassin said.
“She was also extremely brave, screaming for help.”
A crime scene was established on the cliffs of Dover Heights. (Nine)
Paramedics stabilized the woman before taking her to St Vincent’s Hospital in a critical condition.
“This was a very traumatic scene to arrive at with a significant, life-threatening stab wound,” NSW Ambulance Inspector Giles Buchanan said.
“Paramedics administered IV fluids, stemmed the bleeding and provided pain relief to stabilize the patient.
“Stabbing wounds are generally confronting incidents and this patient has suffered a very serious injury.”
The alleged attacker was tracked to Bondi Beach and arrested this afternoon.
China’s aggression after US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi visited Taiwan was “a bit over the top”, according to West Australian Premier Mark McGowan, who urged Beijing to “calm down”.
Ms Pelosi recently became the most senior US official to visit Taipei in decades and met with President Tsai Ing-wen, but it sparked outrage from China that does not recognize Taiwan as a nation.
Mr McGowan repeatedly clashed with the Morrison government – and especially former Defense Minister Peter Dutton – over their rhetoric towards China, which is WA’s biggest trading partner.
While he refused to say whether Ms Pelosi’s visit was appropriate, Mr McGowan said he was “obviously” concerned about tensions in the region.
“The reaction has been a bit over the top and I think there needs to be a calm down on the part of China,” Mr McGowan told reporters on Monday.
“I don’t know the circumstances as to why she went there… but I don’t think the reaction should have been as strong as it was.”
Since Ms Pelosi’s visit last week, the Chinese military has conducted sea and air exercises to show its ability to launch an attack on Taiwan.
Australia’s Foreign Minister Penny Wong has condemned China’s actions.
Meanwhile, Mr McGowan has backed WA Defense Industries Minister Paul Papalia in pushing for a greater military presence in the state.
It comes after retired Air Chief Marshal Sir Angus Houston and former defense minister Stephen Smith were chosen to review the Australian Defense Force’s capabilities.
Mr McGowan said having more army and air force teams in WA was appropriate “just in case in the long-term future something happened”.
“There’s huge amounts of army infrastructure and army units based in Victoria,” the Premier said.
“I would have thought that a more sensible deployment of those resources would be to WA.
“It’s not as though we’re going to be attacked by New Zealand.”
He then joked: “Well, maybe the All Blacks, but that’s about it … and they’re pretty fierce.”
Mr McGowan said he preferred most bases to be in Perth and the state’s south, but they should have “the capacity to deploy quickly” to the state’s north if required.
A family of four have gone missing whilst traveling from Queensland to New South Wales, sparking an urgent appeal from police.
Darian Aspinall, 27, her two kids Winter Bellamy, 2, and Koda Bellamy, 4, as well as their grandmother Leah Gooding, 50, were reported missing on Sunday.
Police say the family left Noccundra Hotel in Queensland between 12.30pm and 3pm on Sunday and were heading to accommodation in Packsaddle, a remote township in Far West NSW.
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Their stop in Far West NSW was part of the family’s journey to Adelaide, police believe.
However, when the family failed to arrive at the destination and could not be contacted, they were reported missing to police, who have commenced an investigation into their whereabouts.
A family of four have gone missing whilst traveling from Queensland to New South Wales. Credit: NSW PoliceDarian Aspinall, 27. Credit: NSW Police
It’s understood they are traveling in a charcoal Hyundai Tucson with Queensland Registration 729CV2.
They are all described as being of Caucasian appearance. Darian has dark brown hair, tattoos on her right arm and wears glasses. The children have brown hair and blue eyes.
Anyone who may have information is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.
One of the young men who allegedly escaped from Malmsbury Youth Justice Center in regional Victoria on Saturday night has now been tracked down by police.
Shamus Touhy, 22, and Matthew Piscopo, 19, allegedly broke out of the Mollison Street facility in Malmsbury about 11.30pm on August 6.
After allegedly being on the run for more than 24 hours, Piscopo was arrested on Monday at a residential address in Ballarat about 10.30am, police said.
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He was taken into custody without incident, and will face Ballarat Magistrates Court today before being returned to custody.
He faces charges of escaping lawful custody and criminal damage.
Touhy currently remains on the run.
He is described as 170cm tall with a thin build, and red medium length hair.
Shamus Touhy, 22 years old. Credit: Victoria PoliceMatthew Piscopo, 19 years old has now been located by police. Credit: Victoria Police
He is known to frequent the Ballarat area and is not believed to be violent.
Police however have still advised members of the public not to approach him.
“Any escape is taken very seriously and the safety of the community is of paramount concern,” a spokesperson from the Department of Justice and Community Safety said.
Anyone with information is urged to contact Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or submit a confidential report online at www.crimestoppersvic.com.au.
Man with 2 boomerangs smashes window in road rage incident.
Man with 2 boomerangs smashes window in road rage incident.