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Race walker Jemima Montag embodying ‘Australian values’ as a role model to inspire next generation of athletes

Australian race walker and reigning Commonwealth Games champion Jemima Montag says she’s embracing the pressure of defending her crown just days away from competing at the Birmingham Games.

The Gold Coast 2018 Commonwealth Games gold medalist is shaping to be the walker to beat at the event, aiming to become the first woman since Jane Saville in 2006 to successfully defend a gold medal in walking.

The event distance has been shortened from a 20km road race and will now be contested as a 10km track race inside Alexander Stadium.

“I’m keen for it to be half the distance,” Montag said.

Jemima Montag crosses the line as she celebrates her gold medal in the Women's 20km Race Walk Final at Gold Coast, 2018.
Jemima Montag is aiming to defend her 2018 Commonwealth Games gold medal at this years’s 10km Race Walk Final in Birmingham.(Getty Images: Michael Dodge)

“I really feed off the crowd’s energy and excitement. I remember back to 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast and there were so many Australians … just giving us their energy for that entire hour and a half.”

In February, Montag broke Saville’s long-standing 18-year 20km Australian and Oceania record by 13 seconds. It’s a moment in which she reflects on, after her ‘turning point’ when pulling on the green and gold four years ago at Gold Coast.

“Representing Australia means embodying the Australian values ​​of mateship and a fair go and giving our all to something. I think that’s what the Australian audience really want to see us doing,” she said.

“Crossing the line and hitting the tape at the 2018 Commonwealth Games was the first moment I believed in myself as capable of competing on the world stage and representing my country well.

“I tried to enjoy the final couple of laps and interact with the crowd and grab the flag, and crossing that line, hitting the tape, and then having Nathan Deakes pop the medal around my neck.

“It felt like a real rite of passage and a sense of belonging after years of struggling with self-belief.

“I feel pressure and expectation to bring some medals home (at Birmingham), but I remind myself that all the Aussies and my family just want to see us going out and being leaders, setting a good example for the younger generation and embodying those values .”

Australian race walker Jemima Montag stops her watch and smiles after crossing the finish line.
In February, Montag broke Jane Saville’s 18-year record for the Australian 20km race walk event.(Athletics Australia / Steve Christo)

Change in mentality for national record

Montag said the Australian and Oceania record — at a time of 1:27:27 — came about from a motivational shift in mental techniques. The change lifted the weight of her off her shoulders, going on to reset goals for the remainder of the year.

“We got to the finish line about 30 seconds quicker than the national record,” Montag said.

“I’ve done a lot of reflecting since then about the power of values-based motivation as opposed to fear-based motivation.

“It was a very special day, I think that it was bigger than winning the Commonwealth Games or making it to the Olympic Games or anything.

“Being the fastest woman in the country to cover that distance is pretty cool.”

It was only a matter of minutes after the race that an exhausted Montag received a call from her idol, Saville, who celebrated the achievement with her.

“It was amazing. I was in the tent half-dead on the physio table, and she was there on the phone, so supportive,” she said.

“I think that’s a true sign of an excellent sportswoman when they just want to see their sport moving forward … and she had the record for a couple of decades or whatever it was and she was she was so happy.”

The importance of role models

Despite the accolades on the track, winning doesn’t appear to be everything for Montag. The near misses are cause for just as much celebration, after coming fourth at the World Athletics Championships by just 19 seconds in July.

“Humans have just decided that 1-2-3 get medals and fourth is one spot away from that. I think that fourth rocks, it doesn’t suck,” Montag said after the meet in Eugene, Oregon.

Being successful off the track and showing there’s a human behind every athlete is just as important as Montag inspires the next generation of athletes.

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Australian racewalker Jemima Montag talks about the impact her Nana has had on her

A medicine student who loves to cook and spend time with family, the 24-year-old also talks about superstitions; like the lucky number three, her her lucky pajamas, and a lucky golden bracelet she wears from her late grandmother.

“I lost my nana about a year ago, just before the Olympic Games, and it’s only in the months that have followed that we’ve really been able to unpack her story as a Holocaust survivor,” Montag said.

“It’s something that understandably she didn’t want to talk about much, and there was a lot of pain and trauma there.”

A golden necklace became a keepsake for Montag and her two sisters, who split it into three bracelets to continue her nana’s legacy.

“I wear my nana’s bracelet as a lucky charm now. And it reminds me of that strength and resilience,” she said.

“It’s just a really tangible reminder of what she sacrificed for dad and then me to even be alive. Sometimes, you know, sport is hard and it comes with its challenges.

“(But) it’s a reminder that I choose to be out there day in, day out at these competitions doing what I do. And it’s hard, but it should be fun.”

Australian race walker Jemima Montag competes on the race track at night.
Jemima Montag became the first Australian track and field athlete to be nominated for the Commonwealth Games for the UK campaign.(Athletics Australia / Steve Christo)

Walking is ‘much bigger’ than just a sport

Montag is using walking as the ‘vehicle’ to create positive messages as a role model.

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“Race walking to me is much bigger than the physical sport. It’s somewhere I belong and it’s a vehicle through which I can explore my values ​​of the pursuit of mastery, of challenging myself, of inspiring the next generation of boys and girls, and just exploring my mental and physical limits,” Montag said.

The Australian champion was chosen as one just 25 athletes across the globe — the sole representative from Oceania — in the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Young Leaders Program from 2021-2024.

“We’re choosing a pressing local issue that we’re passionate about that connects to the sustainable development goals, and we’re building a sport-based solution,” Montag said.

“I’ve chosen to focus on the decline of young women and girls in sport and physical activity, which is something I’m passionate about because I’ve seen how much sport and physical activity has brought to me.

“I’ve also seen friends that I’ve made through sport gradually face barriers and drop out and how challenging it’s been for them and how I was almost driven out of the sport.

“I was able to get to the bottom of: what are the unique barriers to women and girls in sport, what’s driving them out at twice the rate of boys?

“Then the tricky part was what do we do about it? Because if we had all the answers, then I’m sure they’d be being enacted already.”

Through Montag’s program ‘Play On’, a vision of creating enabling environments through education and training for young women is changing perceptions.

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Racewalker Jemima Montag on navigating adolescence and puberty as a female athlete

“So often I found that girls and women are blamed for being lazy or just not committed enough for choosing to drop out of sport,” she said.

“And we’re not really questioning whether the environments are made for them or welcoming them or attuned to their needs.

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“I built a team of 14 women experts who are very diverse — some Paralympians and Olympians, some are community leaders, some are doctors, some in the political space.”

With four topics to address positivity — female athlete health, mental health, nutrition, and inclusivity — Montag is aiming for a stronger connection between schools and parents, who often rely on one another to address responsibility gap issues of retaining women in sport.

“We challenge the idea that there has to be a cookie cutter image of what a female athlete looks like that’s tall, blonde, thin, able-bodied, neurotypical of a certain race,” Montag said.

“I’m hoping that by listening to the experts in those four areas, 15-year-old girls have what I wish I had at their age, and that they’re armed with the tools to navigate any challenge that might come up for them and to help themselves.

“Having the opportunity to be a role model for the younger girls and women coming through has added a whole new layer of meaning and enjoyment to my sport.

“No longer is it a lonely individual pursuit, it’s something that I can really leverage and use to make a difference to other people’s lives, which feels amazing.”

That pursuit this weekend at the Birmingham Commonwealth Games is something Montag is hoping to use as inspiration for future walkers who will be watching her race.

“It’s something that’s a really important biological marker of health that we should celebrate and just learn how to navigate on the track and in life,” she said.

“I’m really careful with the legacy that I’m leaving to the next generation and the words I choose and what I say to them.

“It really doesn’t matter what any of us do, it’s really about ‘why’ behind it.

“And so that ‘why’ is belonging to a community and being a good leader and inspiring younger women and girls to take up whatever physical activity it is that feels good for them to look after their physical and mental health.”

Montag will compete in the women’s 10,000m Race Walk Final on Saturday at 7:30pm AEST.

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Categories
Australia

the violent shadow that lays over a country town

Knowles threatened Cashmore with a knife and launched a campaign of terror against a local woman. This was Knowles’ way of el-to take a dislike to someone and make their lives miserable with a dogged determination he failed to replicate in any lawful activity.

Jailed for a short time for threatening her – “I’m going to kill you and your kids, your days are numbered”, he said – once released he began again.

With no local police, Knowles could make his threats and disappear before patrols from the 24-hour Warrnambool station could drive the 25 kilometers to Kirkstall.

Cashmore went to police complaining that on July 20, Knowles breached an intervention order (yet again) against the woman. There was no immediate response, perhaps because Knowles was due at Warrnambool Court on Monday, July 25, to answer similar charges.

On Friday, July 22, less than 48 hours after reporting Knowles’ latest breach, Cashmore took a chainsaw to the neighbours’ trees in Chamberlain Street, hopped in his white van and drove until he found Knowles, 49, and his sidekick Ben Ray, 48, walking about six kilometers to Koroit.

Cashmore blasted Knowles in the back of the head with a shotgun before reversing over what remained of the dead man’s skull.

He ran over Ray before shooting him twice. Cashmore drove home, walked into his backyard and ended his life with the same gun.

The scene of the crime.

The scene of the crime.Credit:Nine News

In many ways Knowles’ death freed his small community. “We have lived in fear for 10 years. People talked about selling up and moving,” says one resident.

A resident holding a small party heard Knowles yelling “I hope you die” from the street. Locals drove and walked different streets to avoid him. Garage sales stopped and functions were planned to avoid the local powderkeg.

In 1991, career detective Col Ryan transferred to Warrnambool and made it his home – serving 12 years as a shire councilor and two stints as mayor.

As a policeman in Richmond he had confronted drug dealer and killer Dennis Allen, at the armed robbery squad it was bandits with guns, and he was part of the task force that investigated the 1988 Walsh Street murders of police officers Steven Tynan and Damian Eyre.

Senior Detective Colin Ryan, who moved to Warrnambool and became a major of Moyne Shire.

Senior Detective Colin Ryan, who moved to Warrnambool and became a major of Moyne Shire.Credit:Damian White

When he first arrived Kirkstall was not much more than a pub and a bus stop, he says, but “in the early 2000s sea and tree-changers began to discover the quaint little location, five kilometers from Koroit and 14 from Port Fairy”.

The 2016 census showed Kirkstall had become a family community, with a population of 366 that included 69 children under 10 years old.

“The sense of community was strong, with the local progress association developing a park with tennis courts, playgrounds and barbecues,” says Ryan. “They also renovated the local hall, which was the venue for community functions. Over the road is the local pub, fondly known by locals as the ‘Kirky’.”

But Kirkstall “had a shadow cast over it when evil arrived, in the form of Kevin Knowles, who purchased a house in town… Knowles, a criminal, bully and thug, whose many victims were usually female, soon became well known and almost immediately was banned from the pub.”

Knowles, who had over 40 pages of priors, arrived in Warrnambool in the early ’90s, after a quick exit from Melbourne following the death of his then partner.

Ryan said when a local magistrate refused Knowles bail he “stacked on a turn in the court, which took five coppers to forcibly remove him but not before capsicum spray was used like fly spray”.

On the night of Knowles’ death a local band played at the “Kirky” and they served around 150 meals – three times more than usual.

As a criminal Knowles was an abject failure because he was invariably caught. His police record of him listed 300 offenses.

These are the offenders police hate. Their convictions don’t justify long jail terms, but they are vicious enough to damage a community.

There are three reasons most of us obey the law: We don’t want to hurt people; we don’t want to be arrested; and we don’t want to go to jail.

Knowles wasn’t concerned with those consequences, which made him impossible to control.

Which may be why that quiet Friday morning Cashmore (known in Kirkstall as “Trav”) snapped.

Benjamin Ray was killed in the attack at Kirkstall.

Benjamin Ray was killed in the attack at Kirkstall.

Cashmore murdered two people, yet many locals see him as a victim, pushed beyond his limits by Knowles. “As far as I am concerned, he is a hero,” one says.

Ray, who returned to the district a few days earlier, was with Knowles when he threatened Cashmore’s female friend. Intellectually disabled, Ray was caught in a dispute beyond his comprehension of him.

Knowles subjected women to unrelenting family violence. One relationship resulted in 35 police reports, with his partner finally stabbing him in the face with a wooden stool leg. In another, a woman smashed him in the face with a kettle.

He threatened people with knives, turned up for a court appearance in a stolen car, trashed cells, stole someone’s beloved dog, and sped from police at 150 km/h.

When locals saw flashing blue lights they knew police were heading to Knowles’ house. On the police computer his name he raised flags for assaulting police, weapons, family violence and drug use.

He was also a killer, who was not charged with homicide as the only potential witness died in circumstances that still have some wondering.

On December 7, 2016, Knowles and partner Amanda Bourke had a giant drinking session with Stephen Johnston in his backyard in Suzanne Crescent, Warrnambool.

Johnston was later found dying with 101 wounds, including a fractured skull.

The couple took Johnston’s credit card to buy cigarettes and Bourke destroyed the CCTV hard drive that probably showed Knowles beating the drunk and defenseless Johnston.

CrimeStoppers received a tip the fatal injury was inflicted by Bourke, who hit Johnston on the head with a vase. Police believe Knowles organized the call-which came from the home of one of his best friends of him-throwing his girlfriend under the bus to save himself.

On February 12, 2020, Coroner Simon McGregor found Knowles responsible for Johnston’s death, asking the Director of Public Prosecutions to consider charging him.

The only way to build a case against Knowles was for Bourke to give evidence. That option disappeared when Bourke and Knowles went swimming at a poorly signed local beach on January 18, 2018.

Even though the temperature was bumping 40 degrees, there were no swimmers because the beach was notorious for rips and shifting sands.

The evidence was that the couple were about 30 meters from shore, with Bourke affectionately climbing on Knowles’ back. Two weeks earlier she told police he had punched her, leaving her with a black and swollen eye.

They stepped out of their depth and were caught in a rip. Knowles said he tried to grab Bourke’s hand from her but she slipped free from her. A man walking on the beach jumped in and battled strong currents to reach her, and it took him 10 minutes to swim the 50 meters to bring her back to shore. She could not be revived.

Coroner Caitlin English said: “While I am satisfied that there was a history of violence committed by Mr Knowles against Mrs Bourke, there is no evidence to suggest he took any action to bring about Mrs Bourke’s death.”

There are some, including local police, who hold a different view.

Ray was an innocent victim and Cashmore is greatly missed in the tiny community he tried to protect. Knowles will never hurt anyone again.

If you or anyone you know needs support, call Lifeline 13 11 14, Mensline 1300 789 978, or the National Sexual Assault, Domestic and Family Violence Counseling Service on 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732).

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US

Sinema will move forward with Senate Democrats’ climate, health and tax bill : NPR

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) said Thursday that she would “move forward” with Senate Democrats’ spending bill to tackle climate change, health care and tax reforms.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP


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Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.) said Thursday that she would “move forward” with Senate Democrats’ spending bill to tackle climate change, health care and tax reforms.

J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema announced late Thursday she will “move forward” with Democrats’ massive climate, prescription drug and spending bill, after Democrats appeared to reach an agreement about Sinema’s concerns with the legislation.

Sinema’s announcement all but locks in the bill for Democrats, who need all 50 Democratic votes on board in order for the bill to pass, with a tie-breaker vote from Vice President Kamala Harris. The legislation solidifies key portions of President Biden’s domestic agenda.

In a statement, Sinema said, “We have agreed to remove the carried interest tax provision, protect advanced manufacturing, and boost our clean energy economy in the Senate’s budget reconciliation legislation. Subject to the Parliamentarian’s review, I’ll move forward.”

In recent days, Sinema had expressed concern over the portion of the bill about narrowing the carried interest tax loophole. Democrats say the measure would have added about $14 billion in funding.

Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement that the agreement reached among Democratic senators maintains major components of the bill.

“I am pleased to report that we have reached an agreement on the Inflation Reduction Act that I believe will receive the support of the entire Senate Democratic conference,” Schumer said.

“I have had many productive discussions with members of our conference over the past three days and we have addressed a number of important issues they have raised.”

Schumer added that the final bill will be introduced Saturday, when the Senate is back in session.

President Biden, in a statement late Thursday, said “we’ve taken another critical step toward reducing inflation and the cost of living for America’s families.”

“I look forward to the Senate taking up this legislation and passing it as soon as possible,” Biden said in a statement from the White House.

The legislation is getting passed through a budget reconciliation process, which circumvents the 60 votes usually needed to pass a bill. The Senate Parliamentarian is still combing through the text to make sure the legislation can be voted on through the reconciliation process.

Once the bill gets introduced on the floor — which Schumer says will happen Saturday afternoon – up to 20 hours of debate, split evenly between Democrats and Republicans, will begin.

After debate over the bill ends, the process known as vote-a-rama starts, and senators can introduce as many amendments as they want, a process that typically goes late into the night.

Categories
Entertainment

Duchess of York’s $8.7 million change of fortune

The Duchess of York is the new owner of a £5 million ($8.7 million) terrace in one of London’s best suburbs.

Sarah Ferguson – now a busy author – has purchased the property in Mayfair after a change of fortune.

The address is in the Grosvenor Estate and was owned by the Duke of Westminster, who is a close friend of the Royal Family and godfather to the future King, Prince George, according to The Sun.

The British newspaper confirmed the property, which was formerly apartments and is now a single luxury dwelling, has been transferred into Fergie’s name.

Her representatives confirmed the purchase to The Sun, which broke the story. No photos are available as it was not a publicly advertised listing.

READMORE: Miranda Kerr and Evan Spiegel finally close the deal on their new LA home

Sarah Ferguson and Princess Eugenie
The Duchess of York and her daughter Princess Eugenie. (Getty)
Historic mansions line the streets of Mayfair, London.

A spokeswoman for the Duke of York, Fergie’s former husband, told The Sun he was not a party in the transaction.

Fergie and Prince Andrew, both 62, still live together in a house in Windsor – when she is based in the UK – which is owned by the Queen and on a long-term lease to Andrew.

Their 1996 divorce – they share daughters Eugenie and Beatrice – has been regarded as amicable. Given the house they occupy has 30 bedrooms, there is a comfortable amount of space.

Mayfair is the most upscale area of ​​London, with fine restaurants and swish real estate, and the border nudges Buckingham Palace.

Fergie told US media in 2010 that she was “continually on the verge of financial bankruptcy.”

READMORE: Mirror image mansions built for identical twins for sale

Apartment above a chip shop
Mayfair is known for its high-end restaurant scene as much as its swish real estate.
Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson divorce
Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson attending the races. (UK Press via Getty Images)

However, she has signed major book deals in the last couple of years, including a contract for 22 titles with Australian publisher Serenity Press, and agreements with romance publisher Mills and Boon.

Prince Andrew is facing monumental legal costs after reaching a settlement over assault allegations brought in a civil suit by Virginia Giuffre.

Categories
Sports

Schoolboys rugby league made Nathan Cleary, Campbell Graham, Zac Lomax and Blayke Brailey. But what about those who don’t make the grade?

It has produced stars such as James Tedesco and Jack Wighton. Former captains include Nathan Cleary and Campbell Graham.

But not every player gets their fairytale ending.

“I wasn’t ready to deal with it until I was probably in my late 20s or early 30s. I didn’t deal with it properly,” said Auremi. “I’ve never been able to replace the feeling of playing rugby league.”

Even though he regained feeling in his arms and legs, and was able to walk, his neurosurgeon ruled out ever playing again.

“I have [the neurosurgeon] broke the news to Tim,” said Kerry Auremi, Tim’s mother.

“Speaking from his heart he said ‘you cannot play a contact sport again. It’s too risky’.”

“That road back to health was terrible.”

Tim Auremi (left) with Albert Kelly and Paul Sironen at the ASRL team announcement in 2008.

Tim Auremi (left) with Albert Kelly and Paul Sironen at the ASRL team announcement in 2008.Credit:Helen Nezdropa

It’s something Kerry still thinks about because, although Auremi’s injury was an exception, the reality is that most young players will never make it professionally. When that time comes, she says, they aren’t prepared for what they will do after a life in rugby league.

“It was like a death in his life. And you have to grieve,” she said.

“I have [a sports psychologist] said to Tim, ‘on the 24th of April [day of the injury] your life was going in one direction, and on the 25th of April your life has gone in another direction. And until you can come to terms with that, you’re not going to move on’.”

Brendan Barlow, principal of MacGregor High School and coach of the 2008 Schoolboys side, said that Tim was an intelligent player and empathetic leader.

“He was always a dream [to coach],” Barlow said.

“He was the sort of player that you always wanted to coach. He extremely well-disciplined, he had great values, and he was a really good leader of the side. His actions from him were his words from him, and he brought the best out of other players… He was a pleasure to coach.

Adjusting to life after league was difficult for Auremi, and taking up an apprenticeship in a trade job was also out of the picture because of the physical nature of the work.

However, he was thrown a lifeline. That came in the way of a traineeship with NSW Rugby League, after family friend and former Bulldogs player, Tas Baitieri, contacted the Men of League Foundation and was able to organize funding for the position.

Since then, Auremi has worked across the NSWRL in development positions, and is currently working for NRL Victoria as a pathways and coaching manager.

Ash Nisbet decided to chase his entrepreneurial dreams instead of his NRL ones.

Ash Nisbet decided to chase his entrepreneurial dreams instead of his NRL ones.

For other players who make their way to the NRL through the Schoolboys system, it’s a dream come true. But other dreams start to take over and, suddenly, rugby league isn’t the be all and end all.

Ashleigh Nisbet captained the 2014 Australian Schoolboys side when they toured England and France, and went on to play under-20s and reserves football for Cronulla, Wests Tigers and St George Illawarra.

But when Nisbet tore a pectoral muscle, he was left wondering what he would do if he couldn’t play rugby league.

“When I did that [the injury] I was like, ‘OK, I have to have something else going for me’,” Nisbet said.

“So I just started doing a little bit of personal training work for someone … and then my girlfriend and I started our own business, a little PT business, and then we ended opening up a gym.”

For a while, Nisbet balanced playing and running the gym with his partner Alanna, but his entrepreneurial ambition took over. When the gym started to take off, he picked the business over the NRL. It’s a decision he doesn’t regret.

“The business got pretty full on, and it got to the point where I was juggling them both, and it was getting pretty hard,” said Nisbet.

“I’m pretty happy with what we’re doing. We live a pretty awesome lifestyle… I’m glad how it all worked out.”

As for Auremi, he is working with the NRL to expand the game in Victoria, and is helping young players achieve their dreams of making the grade.

“I’m probably at peace now, but for a long time I wasn’t,” Tim said.

“I get a kick out of helping and seeing young fellas enjoying themselves playing league.”

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For Barlow, making the schoolboys team “is an achievement within itself” and “something that they [people] can never take away from you.”

And he said that he wouldn’t be surprised to see Tim’s name alongside a schoolboys team again, but this time, as the coach.

Stream the NRL Premiership 2022 live and free on 9Now.

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Categories
Australia

Historic Kosciuszko hut rebuilt, ready to use after Black Summer bushfires

For more than two-and-a-half years the charred remnants of Sawyers Hill hut have served as a reminder of the harsh 2019-2020 bushfires that swept through the NSW Snowy Mountains.

Built as a travellers’ rest house in the 1900s, it was one of the most renowned historic structures in Kosciuszko National Park.

It is back in business and is the first of the 11 historic huts that burnt down during the Black Summer bushfires to be rebuilt.

NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service ranger Megan Bowden said it was the only hut in Kosciuszko that was built as a travellers’ rest hut.

She said it was significant because of its association with important historic transport routes through the mountains.

“From people who used it in the early days right through to people who used to use it until it was burned,” Ms Bowden said.

“They’re quite significant as being living museums, as markers of the past and for present use.”

She said it “really hurt” to see them destroyed by fire.

“Especially Sawyer’s Hut, which was actually burned down in 2003 and we rebuilt it,” she said.

“So, to see it go again was certainly pretty hard.”

A park ranger inspects the ruins of an old hut, where now just a brick chimney stands.
Sawyers Hill hut was destroyed by fire in 2020.(ABC News: Matt Roberts)

Rebuilt by NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service staff and volunteers, the timber was sourced from burnt trees that were felled during a roadside fire risk reduction program.

“We’ve used local millers to cut them to specific dimensions and shapes like splayed boards, which are actually hard to get now,” Ms Bowden said.

“So it’s nice to be able to use the timber that was burnt in the 2020 fires and then to see it being used in the huts today.”

It was estimated that hundreds of thousands of hectares of Kosciuszko National Park burned during the 2019-2020 bushfires.

Ms Bowden said the new huts had been built with “fire resistant strategies” to help protect them during future fires.

“We’ve used things like fire retardant in the timber,” she said.

“And we’ve wrapped the windowsills with iron and actually installed sprinklers as well.”

The huts — constructed by cattlemen, prospectors, and Snowy Mountains Scheme workers in the 1800s and 1900s — help paint a picture of survival in the region during that time.

Kosciuszko Huts Association president Simon Buckpitt said their origins were many and varied.

“Some were [for] stockmen, some were for soil conservation work, some were for hydrology, and some of them were for early survey works,” Mr Buckpitt said.

A hut in the snow with skiiers outside.
The huts have long been used by cross-country skiers and for shelter.(Supplied: Klaus Huenke)

In more recent times, the huts have been used by those seeking refuge from the harsh cold climate.

Two men sought shelter in Seaman’s Hut after becoming disoriented during a hike on Mount Kosciuszko in June.

“When people do get stuck in bad weather these huts have provided really important emergency shelter,” Ms Bowden said.

A landscape of burnt bushland.
Much of Kosciuszko National Park was badly burned during the 2019-2020 bushfires.(ABC South East NSW: Keira Proust)

Timber skills kept alive

Vickery’s Hut in Tumut is next in line for a rebuild and will require traditional timber practices in construction.

Ms Bowden said the project would run training courses throughout the rebuild process to help keep the historic timber skills alive, using broad axes and other traditional methods.

“A lot of these timbers you need the skills to know how to prepare them and install them in these places,” she said.

“We’re actually trying to run some training courses as well through this program.”

Two NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service staff rebuilding a historic hut
NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service staff and volunteers are working on the rebuild project.(ABC South East: Keira Proust)

The entire rebuild project is expected to be finished by 2025, pending weather conditions.

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Categories
US

Justice Department charges 4 Louisville police officers connected to Breonna Taylor killing

Washington — The Justice Department on Thursday filed federal charges against four current and former Louisville police officers connected to the 2020 death of Breonne Taylorwho was shot and killed by police in a raid on her apartment while she was sleeping.

The charges against defendants Joshua Jaynes, Kyle Meany, Kelly Goodlett and Brett Hankison include various civil rights violations, conspiracy, use of force offenses and obstruction. Attorney General Merrick Garland said the civil rights charges against three of the officers stem from alleged falsification of the affidavit used to obtain the search warrant that authorized the early morning raid on Taylor’s apartment.

“The federal charges announced today allege that members of the place-based investigations unit falsified the affidavit used to obtain the search warrant of Ms. Taylor’s home, that this act violated federal civil rights laws and that those violations resulted in Ms. Taylor’s death, Garland said at the Justice Department.

Taylor, a 26-year-old EMT, was shot on March 13, 2020, when officers from the Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) stormed into her apartment where she was asleep with her boyfriend, Kenneth Walker. Walker thought the officers were intruders and fired his handgun at them as they were entering, striking one in the leg. The officers fired 22 shots into the apartment in response, one of which struck Taylor in her chest, killing her.

The LMPD fired Hankinson and Jaynes in the months after the Taylor’s death, and the department said Thursday that the police chief had begun “termination procedures” for Meany and Goodlett, who are still on the force.

In charging documents, prosecutors said Goodlett and Jaynes, both detectives, included false and misleading information in an application for the search warrant, specifically that a postal inspector had informed Goodlett that the target of their drug trafficking investigation was receiving packages at Taylor’s address. That was false, prosecutors allege, but Meany, a sergeant and their supervisor of him, approved the warrant application anyway.

Breonna Taylor-Federal Charge
This undated photo shows Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky.

Photo provided by Taylor family attorney Sam Aguiar via AP


“We allege that the defendants knew their actions in falsifying the affidavit could create a dangerous situation, and we allege these unlawful acts resulted in Ms. Taylor’s death,” Garland said, noting that none of the officers who executed the warrant “were not involved in the drafting of the warrant and were unaware of the false and misleading statements it contained.”

The attorney general said Jaynes, Goodlett and Meany also “took steps to cover up their unlawful conduct after Ms. Taylor’s death” and “conspired to mislead federal, state and local authorities who were investigating the incident.”

Jaynes and Goodlett allegedly met in Jaynes’ garage on the night of May 17, 2020, after seeing media reports that a postal inspector had contradicted the information in the search warrant application. The pair devised a scheme to tell investigators a false story about the affidavit, according to charging documents. They both told similar stories about a postal inspector casually mentioning the target was receiving packages at Taylor’s address, a claim they knew was false, prosecutors said.

Meany is also accused of lying to investigators about the officers’ unannounced entry into Taylor’s home. According to charging documents, Meany told the FBI that his officers executed the warrant at the request of the SWAT unit, when in fact he knew that the unit did not put in such a request.

In a separate indictment, Hankison was charged with two counts of deprivation of rights for firing 10 rounds through a window and glass door in Taylor’s apartment after she was killed. Hankison was acquired on state charges of wanton endangerment at trial earlier this year.

The charges come more than a year after the Justice Department opened a civil rights investigation into the patterns and practices of the Louisville Metropolitan Police Department, a probe that is separate and ongoing, a release from the department noted.

“The charges announced today are criminal against individual officers, while the ongoing pattern or practice investigation is a civil investigation that is examining allegations of systemic violations of the Constitution and federal law by LMPD and Louisville Metro,” the department said. “The civil pattern or practice investigation is being handled independently from the criminal case by a different team of career staff.”

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Categories
Technology

Former PlayStation Exclusive Hohokum Comes To The PC On Steam

Hohokum

screenshot: Hohokum

While a big deal has been made about someone former PlayStation exclusives coming to the PC—like Horizon and God of Warno deal was made last week whatsoever about a game with a much lower profile, but which I love regardless.

That game is Hohokumwhich was first released on the PlayStation 4 (and PS3, and Vita) in 2014, and which remains one of the most chill video game experiences available. A collaborative work between artist Richard Hogg, developers Honeyslug and the record label Ghostly, Hohokum is to beautiful 2D adventure where you play as a worm…kite…thing that just floats around its various levels, poking around a colorful landscape just to see what happens.

HOHOKUM | Now Available On Steam

It’s magic. I love this game so much that amidst all the hardware drama and blockbuster releases making up our roundup of the last console generation I wrote a whole thing just about this little game, which I described as being—in terms of meeting its ambitions—perfect.

You move a big snake thing around a floating landscape, and sometimes you run into things, and sometimes you fly through things. You’re never fighting, talking, not really doing much of anything.

Yet for Hohokum these aren’t limitations. They’re a canvas.

It’s a game that understands the links between interaction, visuals and soundtrack to a terrifyingly perfect degree. Each is inspired by and reliant on the other two, to the point where once it gets going Hohokum is almost synaesthesic.

one thing Hohokum is now providing to also be is timeless. Eight years on from its original release its art style hasn’t aged a day, and technically looks as though it could have been released yesterday. The heavyweight soundtrack accompanying it also sounds as good in 2022 as it did in 2014, no doubt helped by the fact that many of the artists involved—like Tycho—are still killing it today.

So if you haven’t owned a PlayStation in a while and never got to check this out, I cannot recommend it highly enough. Annapurna has published this PC version (which, admittedly, is probably why less of a fuss was made than if Sony had released it), and it’s out on Steam now.

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Categories
Entertainment

Duchess of Cambridge Kate Middleton wears white suit by Alexander McQueen

The Duchess of Cambridge is inspiring our summer dressing for the second time this week, this time with the perfect seasonal suit.

Kate made an appearance at Sandwell Aquatics Center to watch the Commonwealth Games, accompanied by her husband the Duke of Cambridge and their daughter Princess Charlotte, wearing an elegant Alexander McQueen suit with a white tank top and Camilla Elphick pumps.

the cambridge family

Stephen PondGetty Images

cgames royals 2022

CHRIS JACKSONGetty Images

The duchess wore her hair in her trademark glossy waves, and finished her look with sparkling Mappin & Webb jewellery.

duchess of cambridge style

Chris JacksonGetty Images

Kate has always been an advocate for re-wearing and this outing was no different; she previously wore the pumps to the polo earlier this summer, while the Alexander McQueen suit made an appearance during her royal tour of Jamaica in March, and then again on Windrush Day in June.

It’s also not the first time we’ve seen that particular jewellery: she first wore the Mappin & Webb ‘Empress’ earrings and necklace at Princess Charlotte’s Christening – a fitting tribute for her daughter’s first solo public engagement with her parents.

Over the weekend the royal inspired our summer daywear wardrobes, in a nautical-inspired look for a visit to Sail Grand Prix in Plymouth.

duchess of cambridge

Samir HusseinGetty Images

Kate opted for a classic Breton striped top, worn with tailored white Holland Cooper shorts, gold hoops, and her favorite white Superga trainers. Her style de ella is a constant reminder of how relying on capsule classics and finding your own signature style is key to achieving a chic wardrobe.

It’s little wonder she opts to rewear pieces from her wardrobe so regularly: timeless classics never go out of style.

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Categories
Sports

All Blacks named to play South Africa » allblacks.com

All Blacks head coach Ian Foster has unveiled the match-day 23 for the opening Lipovitan-D Rugby Championship Test against South Africa at Mbombela Stadium.

Samisoni Taukei’aho has been named in the run-on side at hooker, alongside tighthead prop Angus Ta’avao in a new-look front row. New faces make up the front-row cover, with Tyrel Lomax and Ethan de Groot named for the first time in the 2022 international season.

The tight five welcome back lock Scott Barrett from injury, while Akira Ioane retains his spot at blindside flanker in the loose forward trio, alongside captain Sam Cane and Ardie Savea.

Another feature of the run-on side is the return of winger Caleb Clarke. Ruled out of the Steinlager Series due to injury, the 23-year-old will play in his first All Blacks Test since 2020.

“What a great way to start this year’s Lipovitan-D Rugby Championship. It’s always an exciting tournament to be part of,” Foster said. “This year’s draw means we have a massive challenge of two games here in the South Africa.

“We have settled in well in Mbombela and are preparing for what is always an intense game against our old foe.

“Many of our squad are here in South Africa for the first time. This gives us another opportunity to add new experiences and grow our game.”

All Blacks match-day 23:

1. George Bower (14)

2. Samisoni Taukei’aho (11)

3. Angus Ta’avao (22)

4. Sam Whitelock (134)

5. Scott Barrett (50)

6. Akira Ioane (14)

7. Sam Cane © (80)

8. Ardie Savea (62)

9. Aaron Smith (105)

10. Beauden-Barrett (104)

11. Caleb Clarke (5)

12. David Havili (16)

13. Rieko Ioane (50)

14. Will Jordan (15)

15. Jordie Barrett (39)

16. Dane Coles (81)

17. Ethan de Groot (4)

18.Tyrel Lomax (14)

19. Tupou Vaa’i (12)

20. Shannon Frizell (17)

21. Finlay Christie (6)

22. Richie Mounga (35)

23. Quinn Tupaea (9)