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Australia

WA Supreme Court hears man allegedly attempted to kill partner of 35 years

A 58-year-old Perth man armed himself with a large knife and tried to kill his wife after becoming angry at her for ending their 35-year relationship and taking out a restraining order against him, the WA Supreme Court has been told.

The man, who the ABC has chosen not to name, is on trial accused of attempting to murder his wife as she lay sleeping the room of her Beeliar home, with her four-year-old granddaughter beside her, just after midnight on September 25 , 2020.

The court was told the couple’s adult son, who was staying with his mother to protect her, heard his mother’s cries for help and rushed into the bedroom.

He managed to grab his father in a bear hug and eventually forced him to drop the knife, while the woman called the police.

She had suffered injuries to her hands, including a ruptured tendon, because she grabbed the knife when her husband jumped on top of her, after entering the bedroom and turning on the light.

State Prosecutor Brett Tooker said the man had been holding the weapon at his wife’s chest while yelling things like “you’re dead, I’m going to kill you.”

A silhouette of a woman as she looks out of a window
The woman ended the relationship with her husband after he started drinking and psychologically verbally abusing her.(ABC Far North: Holly Richardson)

Mr Tooker said the problems in the relationship started in about 2017, when the accused man started drinking alcohol heavily and mixing it with prescription medication.

The court heard the man first physically assaulted his wife in early 2018, when he put his hands around her neck, but she decided not to call the police because he promised not to do it again.

‘You better sleep with one eye open’, wife told

However, Mr Tooker said the man continued to verbally and psychologically abuse his wife who, by mid-September 2020, decided to end their relationship.

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Australia

Former NSW deputy premier John Barilaro told Dominic Perrottet, Stuart Ayres and Matt Kean he wanted US job, inquiry hears

Former NSW deputy premier John Barilaro has told an inquiry he wishes he did not apply for a lucrative New York role he was controversially awarded, describing the process as a “s**tshow”.

Mr Barilaro is giving evidence for the first time to an upper house inquiry into the recruitment process that saw him appointed the state’s Senior Trade and Investment Commissioner to the Americas.

He has since withdrawn from the $500,000-a-year role, which is based in New York.

Mr Barilaro told the inquiry he flagged his interest in the role to Premier Dominic Perrottet on a phone call in November after his resignation from cabinet, to which he claimed Mr Perrottet responded “great”.

Mr Barilaro said he spoke to then-trade minister Stuart Ayres and texted Treasurer Matt Kean about the role, too.

He told the inquiry he expected to clear his name and has refuted any suggestion he sought any special treatment.

LIVE UPDATES: Read our live blog as John Barilaro gives evidence

A man speaking into a microphone
Daniel Mookhey closely questioned Mr Barilaro.(AAP: James Gourley)

Mr Barilaro was asked about a briefing note sent to his office stating a candidate for the job, Jenny West, had been selected for the role in August 2021.

He said he didn’t recall seeing the note, but accepted it contained an electronic signature of his in accordance with a process in his office for when he was away.

Mr Barilaro said he had “no issue” with Ms West, who described him as a “strong professional”.

Ms West has previously given evidence to the inquiry that she was told on August 12 she was the successful candidate.

She claims that offer was later revoked and she was told the job would be a “present” for someone.

“I didn’t know that Jenny West was offered a contract … this inquiry has really opened that up,” Mr Barilaro said today.

He denied the government was seeking to create a bunch of “pork barrels” in changing the position to become a ministerial appointment.

“I will say this, if I knew what I know now, I wish I never had applied,” Mr Barilaro said.

“If I knew what I know now, I wouldn’t have walked into what was as**tshow.

“I’m going to use those terms, I’m sorry to say, because the trauma I’ve gone through over the past six to seven weeks has been significant.”

‘An error’ to offer Barilaro the job

a woman wearing glasses looking and sitting behind a desk
Amy Brown appeared before the inquiry for a third time.(abcnews)

In her third time answering questions before the inquiry, Investment NSW chief executive Amy Brown said that, “in hindsight”, it was an “an error” to offer Mr Barilaro the US job before a panel report was signed.

“The way these roles were set up as public service appointments, but with a high degree of ministerial interest, made it difficult to run an optimal process,” she said.

Ms Brown recalled hearing from Mr Barilaro in August 2021, when he recommended his then-senior-media-adviser, Jennifer Lugsdin, for an upcoming opening at Investment NSW.

Mr Barilaro and Ms Lugsdin are in a relationship, which did not commence while he was deputy premier, and Ms Brown said the only comment from him in that call about a relationship was regarding a professional one.

Ms Brown was presented with a chain of emails from December 2021 showing communication about the recruitment process for the US role.

The position was re-advertised publicly, on December 17, however the emails were sent about a week prior. The email chain was forwarded to Ms Lugsdin.

Ms Brown agreed it was a fair inference that Ms Lugsdin would have known by at least December 10 about a decision to commence advertising the role that year, “assuming she read that email”.

Elliott bows out of race for deputy Liberal leader

a man looking and smiling
David Elliott avoided answering whether he discussed the role with Mr Perrottet. (AAP: Dan Himbrechts)

Meanwhile, the upper house inquiry’s terms will be extended to include other trade roles, after allegations Mr Perrottet offered to create a job for Transport Minister David Elliott.

This afternoon, Mr Elliott announced he would not run for the deputy leadership of the NSW Liberal Party after the resignation of Stuart Ayres from cabinet last week over “concerns” about his conduct in the appointment of Mr Barilaro.

Mr Elliot told Nine radio he would not contest the role, due to be determined on Tuesday, after a discussion with Mr Perrottet.

“I don’t think that’s going to be in the best interests of the party and I think it’s in Dominic’s best interests for us to have some unity for the parliament over the course of the next eight months as we go to an election,” he said.

Earlier today the Premier hosed down the job claims, telling Nine radio he had spoken to Mr Elliott about several roles — including NSW’s agent-general position in London — but that he was “never promised a job outside of politics”.

“That is deeply offensive and wrong,” the Premier said.

“But people always say, from time to time, discussions will be had in relation to when someone withdraws what they would like to do. That is normal.

“What I don’t do, as Premier, is say that I will ever make those appointments or offer anyone a job.”

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‘Offensive’ allegations: NSW Premier denies offering trade job as sweetener

Mr Perrottet said the conversations he had with ministers were private.

“I am not going to go into details in relation to parliamentary secretary roles or a role in the ministry,” he said.

He did not deny an allegation that Mr Elliott had requested to be made NSW governor if he retired.

“From time to time, members of parliament will always say to their colleagues what they would like to do after politics,” the Premier said.

“People come to me, or come to my colleagues and say, ‘When I leave parliament I’d like to do A, B, and C’.”

Dominic Perrotte
A spokesperson for Mr Perrottet says any appointments are a matter for the Premier.(AAP: Bianca De Marchi)

NSW Shadow Treasurer Daniel Mookhey said Mr Perrottet had many questions to answer.

“The allegations about the Premier allegedly offering David Elliott an appointment to the agent-general position in London are deeply serious,” Mr Mookhey said.

“Labor as a result will seek to expand the inquiry’s term of reference so we can examine the agent-general’s position as well as other roles across the world.”

The Premier said he would adopt the recommendations of a review into the hiring process for trade roles, which is due to be finished within days.

Treasurer Matt Kean confirmed he would run for the position of Deputy NSW Liberal Leader.

The Premier’s office has been contacted for comment.

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Australia

Jacinta Price claims Peter FitzSimmons allegedly accused her of ‘giving racists a voice’ after refusal to support Indigenous Voice

Aboriginal Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price has alleged newspaper columnist Peter FitzSimons accused her of “giving racists a voice” during an interview last week.

Senator Price – who has refused to support the Albanese Government’s Indigenous Voice to Parliament – made the claims on social media on Sunday night after the interview between the pair was published in the Sun-Herald newspaper.

She told FitzSimons the bipartisan support was due to the “Kool-Aid Australians have been drinking” and defended One Nation leader Pauline Hanson who claimed the Voice was “Australia’s version of apartheid” and walked out of the Acknowledgment to Country.

In a Facebook comment, the proud Warlpiri woman alleged FitzSimons accused her of “giving racists a voice” during the telephone chat but it was not printed in the article.

“I don’t know if I’d do another interview with the bloke again. He accused me of giving racists a voice but that wasn’t printed,” Senator Price wrote before it was later deleted.

FitzSimons has denied all allegations made by Senator Price.

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She later elaborated and said the interview started off “quite well” before claiming FitzSimons became “aggressive, condescending and rude.”

“I’m not a wilting violet but he’s a very aggressive bloke, his interview style is very bloody aggressive, he doesn’t need to launch in,” she told The Australian.

“Accusing me of somehow giving power to racists because the issues I raise are confronting – he loses the point completely.

“I said to him, ‘Get down from the blood ivory tower and come out to one of my communities'”.

Senator Price also compared it to “having a conversation with a brick wall.”

FitzSimons was later contacted by the same publication that reached out to Senator Price for his version of events from last Thursday’s one-hour interview.

The author and columnist denied the allegations leveled against him and described the claims as “complete and utter nonsense”.

He said it was a “professional exchange” with the Senator and he had written “every single word recorded, as I told her.”

“Not even a raised voice. And she approved the entire final result,” he told The Australian in a text message.

“This is not remotely a matter of interpretation. Friendly interview, nice text exchange at its conclusion.”

Senator Price had been quizzed about the history of Australia, the Indigenous Voice to Parliament and her upbringing during the chat.

He asked how the advisory body would “drive a wedge between us all” after she argued in her maiden speech to Parliament in late-July it would divide Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians “further”.

“With a progressive mood sweeping the land, we’re far more unified now than we’ve ever been in our history, and the most prominent wedge, I respectfully submit, Senator, is people like you and your supporters,” FitzSimons posed.

“I don’t accept that,” Senator Price hit back.

“How is having a bureaucracy based on race placed into the Constitution, not driving a wedge? That peddles racial stereotypes of Indigenous Australians being a homogenous separate entity, and we’re not.

“They can call me a “coconut” – (black on the outside, white on the inside) – or an “Uncle Tom” because I’m expressing my views, but I don’t care.

“I’m an individual in my own right, with Indigenous heritage, but I am the first and foremost an Australian, and have no desire for the Constitution to treat me differently.”

She also defended Senator Hanson during the chat after she was quizzed about the One Nation leader’s maiden 1996 speech in Parliament.

“Does it not bother you that she is the most vocal critic of First Nations people in the country, and on this very day, she cites you as proof she’s right?” FitzSimons asked.

“No. I look further and a bit deeper than what is on the surface,” Senator Price said.

“And look, I know Pauline can certainly come across as though she is racist. But I don’t think that she is.

“I think she cares deeply for Indigenous Australians, and that her concern is more about taking more practical approaches towards solving some of our problems.”

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Australia

Federal government to advocate for ‘meaningful’ pay rise for aged care workers in wages submission

The federal government has declared it will call for a “meaningful” pay rise for aged care workers in its submission to the independent wages umpire on Monday, but has stopped short of nominating a specific dollar figure.

The Fair Work Commission (FWC) is considering a case brought forward by the unions, which are calling for a 25 per cent pay increase for 200,000 residential and home care workers.

Aged Care Minister Anika Wells said while the government would push for a pay rise in its Fair Work submission, it would not call for a specific wage increase.

“We support a significant, meaningful pay rise,” she told Sky News on Sunday.

“We haven’t put a number to it because traditionally governments don’t put numbers to it, that is for the commission to decide exactly what percentage the work value case is worth.

“But we have agreed we will fund it, no matter what the decision.”

Increasing the pay of aged care workers was one of the key recommendations of the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety’s final report last year.

Since that report was released, unions and industry groups have argued the pandemic has exacerbated funding and workforce issues, and say pay increases are needed to attract and retain skilled workers.

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Australia

Giant hole near Robe obelisk prompts safety warnings as erosion causes cliff collapse

A coastal council in South Australia is warning the public to watch out for further cliff collapses around a giant hole that is growing near a popular tourist attraction.

What used to be a small blowhole opening near the Robe obelisk has expanded into a significant gap after the surrounding cliff collapsed for a second time in recent months.

The hole was the size of half a tennis court when it suddenly appeared last year, and has widened since, with residents calling it the “Woe Hole” due to the concern it has caused.

District Council of Robe chief executive James Holyman said the collapses were “part of the natural cycle.”

“From time to time, we have pieces of the coastline fall,” he said.

A man in a cardigan standing in front of a cliff hole
James Holyman says the safety of the public is paramount.(ABC South East SA: Grace Whiteside)

But Mr Holyman said the “key thing” was that the public was safe.

“I want them to be very aware that we’ve roped off the Woe Hole,” he said.

“So that’s not a reason to jump the fence and go and have a look, because most people wouldn’t be aware where the key weak areas are.

“Don’t walk too close to the cliff face anywhere in Robe, because the worst outcome for us is that somebody is injured or killed because they’re not behaving in the right way.”

Mr Holyman said he had witnessed a person cross over the barrier and head towards the edge of the hole.

“Because I was there at the time, I was able to say to the individual, ‘Please, sir, come away from there, that area’s extremely unsafe’,” Mr Holyman said.

“But there’s not somebody there all the time.

“Individual decisions and individual behavior needs to be from a safety perspective.”

The hands of a man holding a pamphlet with 3D images
Mr Holyman with the results from the LiDAR aerial monitoring of the Robe blowhole.(ABC South East SA: Grace Whiteside)

He said the limestone cliffs made it “very difficult” to erect more permanent safety barriers.

“We would struggle because it’s all limestone and it is porous in some areas, so putting posts and things in is very difficult,” Mr Holyman said.

“We are also reasonably certain — but we will continue to monitor — that it is going to continue to erode.

“So you could put a reasonable amount of infrastructure in but it would need to be replaced fairly quickly.”

The council has employed light detection and ranging (LiDAR) survey technology to determine the locations of weak spots in the cliffs.

“We’re very fortunate to have LiDAR, which has mapped the whole of the cave there,” Mr Holyman said.

“We know it’s getting reasonably close to the coastal trail, so we want to be proactive and plan where the trail goes in the future.”

More likely erosion

Flinders University strategic professor for coastal studies Patrick Hesp said these types of collapses were “likely” to continue.

“The continual erosion of the limestone along the Limestone Coast is occurring due to wave activity, and also solution by rainwater and groundwater,” he said.

“While there is a surface calcrete — which is this highly cemented, very lithified, very hard layer across the top of the limestone — it’s been very significantly excavated underneath into a cave by waves over time.”

A laminated paper sign reading 'Danger do not enter' with rocky cliffs behind
Mr Holyman says the limestone cliffs make it difficult to erect permanent safety barriers. (ABC South East SA: Grace Whiteside)

Professor Hesp said continuous monitoring was key.

“We have, for example, [a] 2018 LiDAR flight along the coast and it’s critical to keep that kind of monitoring going,” he said.

“Unfortunately, it’s enormously expensive.

“It gives you incredible digital detail of the coast and so it’s a brilliant monitoring mechanism in terms of being able to see how the coast is changing.

“Certainly the rate of erosion that we see, for example, at Cape Dombey [in Robe] and other areas where we have some monitoring would indicate that, yes, the erosion is continuing everywhere.”

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Australia

The data reveals 18 people died on ventilators

“For nearly everybody, it’s just tipping the balance of their underlying medical condition much like any other infection would do, but just with a bit more vigor.”

The median age for a person who has died while infected with COVID-19 in Australia is 84.7 years old.

Deakin University chair in epidemiology Professor Catherine Bennett said the older age explained why most of WA’s COVID-19 deaths were occurring outside hospitals, with some people in aged care homes choosing not to be transferred.

“When people are very frail sometimes a cold could be enough to tip someone over, it doesn’t take much for a system that is really just coping to be overwhelmed,” she said.

“COVID-19 is a more severe infection, even in a mild form, so it’s still going to lift the number of deaths we are seeing and we’re seeing it outside of the normal flu season so if someone gets through a flu season, they might survive to the next, but now they might be exposed to COVID-19 all year round and that’s an extra challenge.”

Statistics compiled by Bennett showed WA’s death rate for COVID recently was 25 per cent less than the national average.

As WA comes down from its third Omicron wave peak, Curtin University epidemiologist Archie Clements said the lower fatality rate was the result of the state’s high vaccine coverage and its dominant strain being the milder Omicron variant.

“I think we’re unlikely to see the health service being overburdened by COVID-19 in the near future unless there is a completely new variant that emerges that is more pathogenic and where there is no cross-protection,” he said.

“We’ll keep getting waves but I would expect that overtime the size of those waves will continue to decline and eventually, we will end up at some endemic state where we will have smaller numbers of cases that may cause outbreaks in the winter seasons.

“Overtime our vaccine immunity is going to wane in fact it already has for the majority of people in the population who haven’t had their third or fourth shot, but the majority of people have now been exposed which will induce some natural immunity and protect people.”

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WA Health statistics showed to date just over 1 million COVID-19 cases have been in the community this year, with 4814 people admitted to hospital with the virus, 213 of those in intensive care. The total number of deaths recorded was 500 (figures include those with incidental COVID-19).

Modeling released by the Telethon Kids Institute in April predicted up to 147,000 infections by the end of July, and up to 740 deaths.

Premier Mark McGowan conceded previous forecasts by the state government had also been inaccurate at predicting the severity of the virus.

“We don’t know where [the COVID-19 numbers] will go, but what I find with modeling is it’s always wrong and so I think you’ve got to actually take account of the lived experience,” he said.

“The best thing people can do is wear a mask in a crowded indoor environment and make sure you get tested and stay home if you are positive.”

NB: Hospitals were unable to provide the vaccination status of those who died on ventilators.

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Australia

Police pursuit in Mundizong ends after man is chased away by a herd of cattle

A man is facing a long list of charges after a bizarre police pursuit in Perth’s south on Sunday night – during which he was chased by a herd of cattle.

WATCH THE CHASE FOOTAGE IN THE VIDEO PLAYER ABOVE

The chase began somewhat slowly about 8.45pm when officers from Murdoch Police spotted a vehicle of interest being driven on Coolbellup Avenue.

Police tried to stop the car as it turned into Forrest Road however the driver failed to stop and drove at slow speed east along Forrest Road before turning right onto North Lake Road to head south.

The man appears to struggle in the terrain.
Camera IconThe man appears to struggle in the terrain. Credit: WA Police

The police helicopter above watched the man drive off before he abandoned the vehicle and fled on foot into a property on the eastern side of South Western Highway in Mundizong.

While running through a paddock the man changed direction after being chased by a herd of cattle.

“The man encountered some steep terrain and started to struggle. The Police Air Wing officers directed units on the ground to his location and he was arrested without incident, ”police said in a statement.

The 34-year-old White Gum Valley man has been charged with several offenses unrelated to the chase. He was refused bail and is due to appear in Fremantle Magistrates Court on Monday.

It is expected he will be charged with further offenses in relation to Sunday night’s pursuit.

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Australia

Sydney council finds 700 recycling bins are emptied into garbage trucks

A Sydney council investigation has found 700 of its residents’ recycle bins were regularly dumped into the same rubbish truck as garbage bins.

Canterbury Bankstown reviewed its waste system after Herald revealed the practice had gone on for decades, infuriating residents who had faithfully separated their landfill from recyclables without being told their efforts were pointless.

In response, the council has redesigned runs and added more trucks. It is also introducing new technology that will identify which households and streets are routinely contaminating recycling trucks, so education campaigns can be targeted.

The furore over the revelations has fueled a local push to split the mega-council of Canterbury Bankstown, which was created in 2016 as part of the Baird government’s controversial policy to merge Sydney’s local councils.

On Monday, Major Khal Asfour said the preliminary findings of the rubbish review, prompted by the Herald’s story, showed general and recycled waste were mixed in narrow streets and laneways because the street size posed a safety risk to larger trucks.

It affected 700 of the region’s 400,000 bins each fortnight.

“The issue was the massive side loaders, they’re big trucks, they don’t fit down these roads, there’s safety issues for motorists, pedestrians,” he said. As a result, council had added extra, smaller trucks to its fleet that could fit more easily into narrow streets.

Residents of other councils also told the herald that they had caught rubbish collectors doing the same thing.

Tony Khoury, the executive director of the Waste Contractors and Recyclers Association of NSW, said councils were often forced into a situation in which they had to do bin collections in daylight hours due to complaints about noise overnight.

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Australia

2GB host Ray Hadley storms off during live broadcast from the Ekka in Queensland due to on-air ‘fiasco’

A fed up Ray Hadley has stormed off midway through a live broadcast after enduring 30 minutes of “technical difficulties”.

The 2GB host was presenting his program from the Ekka, the annual agricultural show of Queensland, in Brisbane when he became increasingly agitated that the show wasn’t running smoothly.

Hadley repeatedly apologized to listeners and threw ad breaks throughout the first 60 minutes of the three-hour long program.

“All I can do is apologize most sincerely for the first 30 minutes of the program which has been a complete and utter fiasco,” he said.

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“But I do apologize. I’m broadcasting from the Ekka, which I didn’t get a chance to tell you because nothing seemed to work.

“I hope it is currently working and we’ll see what happens from hereon… and obviously we’ll be having some discussions at midday about the fiasco I’ve presided over.”

The host threw several breaks telling listeners “there are people here trying to fix things – unsuccessfully I might mention”.

Another round of advertisements followed before Hadley decided to throw the towel in.

“Look, we are having some rather severe technical problems here at the Ekka to the extent that Mark Levy will be looking after the program after ten o’clock this morning, for which I do apologize to Mark and everyone else,” he said.

Hadley then went on to tell listeners he was making his way “back to Sydney” despite the program being scheduled to broadcast live from the showground until Friday.

“I’ll make my way back to Sydney and I’ll be broadcasting from the studio in Sydney tomorrow given the problems we’ve encountered this morning,” he told listeners.

Nine Entertainment refuted the claims, telling The Australian Hadley “will be on air at the Ekka for the rest of the week”.

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Australia

Australian weather: States brace for cold snap, rain and major flood warnings

Australians are bracing for a nationwide cold snap as some parts of the country battle temperatures below zero, rain, hail and flood warnings.

The Bureau of Meteorology told NCA NewsWire that Queensland’s August average so far this year had fallen between four and eight degrees since the same time period in 2021, plummeting to -2C temperatures in some parts of the state.

“It started off a lot warmer last year than it did this year,” meteorologist Livio Regano said.

The Darling Downs and Granite Belt regions were the coldest parts of the state, falling to -2C on Monday morning as a cold, dry air mass pushed north from South East Queensland.

A 1800km blanket of frost is also expected to hit Queensland, stretching between Stanthorpe and the far north.

The cold snap sweeping the nation has torn through NSW, ACT, Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania, bringing fog, rain and snow to some regions.

Widespread fog blanketed five states on Monday, triggering a weather warning for SA motorists.

The road weather alert was issued early on Monday, saying there would be reduced visibility and potentially dangerous driving conditions in Adelaide and the Adelaide Hills.

In Victoria, meteorologist Dean Narramore said temperatures in Westmere, in the state’s southwest, nosedived to -1.4C, while other regions were hit with zero degrees.

“The high pressure system has moved in from late last week, which is giving Victoria in particular those cold mornings,” he said.

NSW and the ACT are bracing for snow over their southern ranges, with a chance of thunderstorms on the slopes later this week.

There’s a flood warning in the southern NSW town of Gundagai following the highest recorded overflow from the Yass River into the Burrinjuck Dam.

Water releases from the dam increased to 98,000 megalitres a day over the weekend following heavy rain in parts of the region.

Down south, Tasmanian residents are feeling colder than forecast temperatures due to the cold northwesterly winds hitting the state.

Hobart sat at 1.5 degrees on Monday morning, although the temperature feels-like dropped to -4C.

Alongside Adelaide, the state has also issued road weather warnings and urged motorists to drive to the conditions following thick fog.

The east coast of Tasmania could also experience minor flooding over the weekend, with a Tasman low likely to form and bring heavy rain.

Residents living in Queensland, NSW, ACT, Victoria, SA and Tasmania are expected to experience milder mornings after Wednesday.

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