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Australia

Queensland tenants under pressure as rents rise amid calls for compassion from landlords

Queensland is sold to the world as the sunshine state, rich with resources and the golden future home of the Olympics.

Last year, the state’s population swelled by 50,000 interstate migrants, and at the same time a two-speed property market drove a nightmare market for renters.

In the 12 months to July, Brisbane tenants faced an average rent rise of 9 per cent for apartments and 13 per cent for houses.

Throw in the return of overseas migration, low vacancy rates and a building supply crisis, and the state’s tenants union says it is facing a rental crisis where landlords hold all the power.

Cairo Sauvage is in his 20s and lives in a share house in Morningside with his partner and housemates.

They are about to move out after two months of uncertainty after their landlord asked them to renew their lease but did not give them a price.

Fearing the worst, the housemates began looking for new accommodation. At the last minute, the landlord asked for an extra $40 a week, Mr Sauvage said.

“In that time frame of him taking so long to come back, me and my housemates were like ‘we feel like it’s going to be going up’. [In the end] we thought it was going to go up more than it did,” he said.

“We started applying for new places. We got approved for a place so we decided to move.

“Living with other people has its ups and downs, but it drives the cost down. Finding a place that’s a one-unit bedroom is [more than] $350, so it wasn’t doable.”

‘Rent-vesting’ as mortgages too hard to maintain

Mr Sauvage has a unique perspective to the rental crisis as a “rent-vester”, where he lives in a rental but owns a home in the inner-Brisbane suburb of Windsor.

He bought at the peak of the property boom last year with money he had received through an inheritance.

But he cannot afford to live alone in the home and considers it more of a long-term investment.

“I managed to secure something that was a little bit out of my price range, and that is the reason I have turned it into an investment,” he said.

Now a landlord himself, he said tenants hold little power in the arrangement.

“It’s really up to the discretion of the landlord, and that’s what I don’t think is right… how much they want to care for their property and for the tenant’s general wellbeing,” he said.

“If the tenant is terrible, the landlord has powers based on our current legislation to kick them out. If a landlord is terrible, the tenant doesn’t have much to fall back on.”

Townhouses
Rents have increased by more than $60 a week in Brisbane.(ABC News: Nic MacBean)

How COVID changed the rental market

CoreLogic economist Kaytlin Ezzy said COVID reshaped the way Queenslanders chose to live and it was having lasting consequences.

“Through COVID, we saw household size shrinkage. There are more individual households, because people didn’t want to be locked down with roommates, so that has a really strong impact,” she said.

“Anecdotally over COVID, we saw a lot of first home buyers move out of the family home and purchase their first property at the same time that rental yields were at some of their lowest on record.

“For the housing market, the outlook really depends on how hard and how fast the RBA increases interest rates. I do think that Brisbane will be slightly more resilient compared to Sydney and Melbourne markets.

“We do expect that the value declines will become more broad-based and as such will affect more Brisbane markets as we move forward into that downward cycle.”

She said pressure on the rental market was not likely to ease for the foreseeable future.

“Especially as overseas migration returns to that pre-COVID level,” she said.

Headshot of Tenants Queensland CEO Penny Carr.
Tenants Queensland CEO Penny Carr.(ABC News: Michael Lloyd)

Queensland’s tenants union, Tenants Queensland, operates an advice call center — QSTARS — for renters, and its chief executive Penny Carr said it was fielding daily calls from tenants in distress.

“Just today on our advice service we had an aged pensioner call us and tell us her rent is going up from $305 to $450 per week,” she said.

“People want to keep a roof over their head so they’ll often prioritize the rent, so they’ve got to not turn the heater on, or not have lunch, or not go out.

“For those people even on moderate incomes now it really is a hard choice… because they’re not having many things that they don’t need already.”

She said there were some avenues of appeal for tenants offered unreasonable rent rises, including raising the issue with the Residential Tenancies Authority and the Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal.

“The problem with doing that is as a consumer you have to have a fair bit of market knowledge, but the other thing is if the court doesn’t agree with you, you have a fixed term agreement that you’ve just signed.

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Categories
Business

10 Fun Facts You Might Not Know About Flying

Air travel is not the mystery it used to be, although there are many interesting things to still find out. Of course, anyone working in aviation may be familiar with some of these things, but perhaps there are still a few surprises in store.



SIMPLEFLYING VIDEO OF THE DAY

10 There is no row 13

Certainly, in most of the world, you will not find a row 13 in the aircraft cabin. Thirteen is considered unlucky, so it is thought that passengers would not be so happy to sit there. As such, many aircraft manufacturers have removed it. In China, they don’t have a row 4 for the same reason, and you won’t find row 17 in Brazil.

9 Water is essential

Hydration is so important when flying. In just a three-hour flight, the body can lose 1.5 liters of water, so it’s a good idea to stay topped up.

8 flying is safe

Statistics prove that flying is safer than driving, and the most dangerous part of your journey is the drive to the airport.

Be more concerned about your drive to the airport. Photo: Air North

7 lavatory

You can never lock yourself in the lavatory. The cabin crew know that there is a hidden button they can press to immediately release the door in an emergency.


6 meal time

It is not an official rule, but many airlines do use this practice … the flight crew on your flight, will not eat the same meal and mostly not at the same time. This is just to be on the safe side, as if a meal was contaminated, at least only one pilot would be incapacitated at any time.

5 Tomato-juice

The humble tomato juice is the second most requested drink onboard by passengers, after water. Although it might not be so tasty on the ground, we lose a third of our taste buds in the air, so a tomato juice (or a bloody Mary) becomes very sweet and tasteful.

Who knew tomato juice could be so popular? Photo: Tui

4 ashtrays

Due to legalization and the aircraft minimum equipment list, a removable ashtray has to be fixed on or near the lavatory door. This is due to the fact that smoking used to be allowed on board the aircraft, and passengers could potentially throw a cigarette into the lavatory waste bin and cause a fire. Of course, now smoking is completely banned, but the rule is the same; if there is no ashtray, the aircraft will be grounded until a replacement is found.


3 turbulence

Light turbulence that we most encounter, the aircraft only moves a few feet. In moderate turbulence where the cabin crew have been seated, the aircraft moves between 10 and 20 feet, although it might feel like a lot more!

two On the wing

The left wing has a red light and the right wing a green light. Sometimes it can be hard for the pilots to see an aircraft completely clearly. So these lights for the pilots are helpful to see which way other aircraft are facing or which direction it is going.

1 number crunching

Did you know that at any given time, there are 9,700 aircraft and 1.2 million people in the friendly skies?

Any surprises for you here? Let us know in the comments.

Categories
Entertainment

Martha Stewart addresses wild Pete Davidson dating rumor

Martha Stewart has responded to viral memes suggesting a budding relationship between her and Kim Kardashian’s ex, Pete Davidson.

Despite being snapped holding hands with the former Saturday night Live star at the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner in April, the 81-year-old said she’s not about to become Davidson’s next love interest, reports the new york post.

“Pete Davidson is like the son I never had!” the famous domestic diva told the Daily Mail with a laugh at the opening of her first-ever restaurant at the Paris in Las Vegas on Friday.

However, even though a hot new relationship isn’t on the horizon, she said she enjoyed meeting the 28-year-old performer.

“He is a charming boy who is finding his way,” she said.

It might not be the last time eager fans get the chance to hear the pair together — with Stewart dropping an offer she extended to Davidson.

“I’ve invited him to come on my podcast and I look forward to hearing what he has to say,” she revealed.

Davidson split from Kardashian, his girlfriend of nine months, in early August, citing reasons including his filming schedule and Kardashian being busy raising her children and running her business.

“They have a lot of love and respect for each other, but found that the long distance and their demanding schedules made it really difficult to maintain a relationship,” a source told Page Six.

Stewart — who was married to publisher Andrew Stewart for 29 years before they called it quits in 1987 — is regularly the talk of social media with her thirst trap snaps.

The former model especially caught fans’ attention after posting a sultry selfie from her pool in 2020 — with users even suggesting she start an OnlyFans account.

However, for the time being, Stewart appears to be single, jokingly telling Chelsea Handler on her podcast recently that it’s been “a while” since she dated.

This article originally appeared in the New York Post and was reproduced with permission.

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Categories
Sports

‘Absurd’ penalty robs Wallabies of try

The Wallabies were left scratching their collective heads after an “absurd” penalty saw a try overturned in their second Rugby Championship match against the Pumas.

James O’Connor crossed the chalk in the 20th minute at Estadio Bicentenario after an offload from Jordan Petaia as Australia thought they had taken a 15-14 lead.

However, on review, it was deemed captain James Slipper had infringed after flipping Pablo Matera in the ruck.

Watch every match of the Rugby Championship on the home of rugby, Stan Sport. Continue this weekend with Pumas vs Wallabies (Sunday 4.45am AEST). All matches streaming ad-free, live and on demand

All Blacks legend turned Stan Sport commentator Andrew Mehrtens questioned the legitimacy of the penalty, bemoaning the decision.

“Surely there’s nothing wrong with that? There’s no other way that James Slipper can make this clean out,” said Mehrtens.

“Matera has gone there, he’s got him around the shoulders, it’s Matera’s fault that he’s got himself in that position.

READMORE: ‘Mocked’ All Blacks take down world champions

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Koroibete’s freakish try saver

“No, he hasn’t flipped his legs over guys, surely.”

Slipper also questioned the penalty, suggesting Matera hadn’t supported his own weight and had landed on a Wallabies player.

“It’s the fact that he’s gone over, he’s gone horizontal, which is a penalty,” said referee Karl Dickson.

“You can’t flip him over in a ruck. The first player has cleared their leg, lifting the leg, and you’ve flipped him over.”

De la Fuente’s bizarre ‘sniper’ try

Mehrtens duly doubled down in his assessment.

“No, this is absurd,” he said.

“Slipper has only got one target there or one opportunity to clean out Matera who is wrapping himself around the ball carrier, by the way, which is illegal, and he’s cleaned him out the only way he can. This is an absolute absurdity.”

The penalty brought the score back in Argentina’s favour, 14-10.

At halftime, Argentina led 26-10 after tries in the 24th and 32nd minute to Jerónimo de la Fuente and Juan Martín González respectively.

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Categories
Australia

St Aloysius’ College accused of trying to ‘shoehorn’ Inner West campus at Rozelle

“Residents are right to be concerned that an exclusive private school is trying to shoehorn a campus into what is already a very tightly packed part of our community with limited parking and narrow streets,” he said.

An artist's impression of a classroom at St Aloysius' College's proposed Rozelle campus.

An artist’s impression of a classroom at St Aloysius’ College’s proposed Rozelle campus.Credit:St Aloysius’ College

Parker said residents had been “pounded” by years of roadworks associated with WestConnex, which had brought noise, disruption and road closures.

“If it goes ahead we could see almost 200 cars brought to bear on a quiet, narrow local road during pick-up and drop-off every day,” he said.

A number of nearby residents objected to the school’s plans, warning surrounding streets were narrow and would become gridlocked during school drop-off and pick-up.

Residents would be inconvenienced by traffic jams and parking congestion, which also posed a risk to schoolchildren.

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Inner West Council also lodged an objection to the proposed new campus because of its impact on parking and traffic, but reversed its opposition after council officers met with planning bureaucrats and the school.

“While the issues were not satisfactorily addressed in the additional information, we are continuing to work with DPE on conditions that will minimize the impacts to the community,” a council spokeswoman said. “Council has withdrawn the objection subject to the inclusion of the conditions.”

St Aloysius’ was overfunded by $1,652,961 in 2021 by the NSW government, according to a report by education economist Adam Rorris commissioned by the NSW Teachers Federation – one of more than 200 private schools given extra state government money.

Classified as a state-significant development, the school’s development application is being assessed by the planning department, which has requested additional information.

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But St Aloysius’ is already recruiting staff for the Rozelle campus, which is owned by the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney.

“Term three is when schools throughout Sydney seek to recruit roles for the following year,” Tannock said. “To attract the best candidates possible, it is important to have our leader of this campus in place soon.”

School pick-up and drop-offs are often a contentious issue, with residents complaining that private schools cause traffic congestion and dangerous driving by parents.

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The head of SCEGGS Darlinghurst last month said police would be deployed to monitor parents dropping off and picking up children from the prestigious girls school as well as hiring a traffic warden in response to traffic complaints from its inner-city neighbours.

Tannock said the school had worked hard over recent months to respond to concerns about traffic and parking from nearby residents and the council.

“We want to be a good neighbor and to ensure that our impact on traffic and parking is limited,” he said. “We believe that our plans will ensure this.”

Tannock said the school was planning to “integrate successfully” into the local community and regenerate a facility that has been mostly vacant for a long time: “We will be prioritizing the use of public transport for our students given their age.”

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Categories
Business

How should I plan for my inheritance?

I retired in 2014 at age 60 and rolled over my superannuation into an allocated pension, drawing down $40,000 a year. My pension account is now at $443,000 – I’ve lost $40,000 since January. I own 40 per cent of my home as tenant-in-common with my partner, who is 76 and has $200,000 in his super pension from him, paying $25,000 annually. Our house is valued at $1.8 million and we each receive a Centrelink part-age pension of $223 per fortnight. My mother recently passed away, leaving me $587,000. I am thinking of putting $200,000 into my allocated pension, and buying another 10 per cent share of the house, so that my partner has additional funds. I’d use the remainder for long-overdue renovations on our home and the rest on travel. Is this the best strategy? vs.

It seems a well-thought-out use of your inheritance. However, you are probably aware that you will likely lose the age pension, as the upper assets threshold for a homeowning couple is $915,500.

What should you keep in mind when planning to spend a sizeable inheritance?

What should you keep in mind when planning to spend a sizeable inheritance?Credit:Michael Kempf

If your assets later diminish, and you reclaim a part-age pension, your allocated pensions would be classified as “post-2015” and subject to deeming.

Looking down the track, you also need to consider what would you do if one of you succumbs to illness and needs to move into an aged-care facility. The lump sum refundable accommodation deposit – required on entry – varies, but $500,000 could be seen as an average figure.

Each of you would probably be able to only put down part of this, from which the interest on the unpaid portion can be withdrawn.

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So, I would prefer that you use the new ability (since July 1) for people over the age of 67 to contribute as much as $330,000 as a three-year forward non-concessional contribution into super. You cannot add it to a super pension fund, so simply open another account.

And, yes, renovations that keep your house in good nick, and a long holiday, are both wise and reduce the assets test count.

My elderly mother-in-law inherited shares in a Malaysian company in the 1960s and they are now worth about $50,000. She wishes to sell them – a process we have found to be frustrating. Her financial advisor to her has asked the Malaysian broker who holds the shares a number of times. Recently, the broker advised of the requirements to be met, many of which were irrelevant and assume she is living in Malaysia. My mother-in-law is a UK citizen and a permanent resident of Australia. One form she asks for details of a Malaysian bank account, which she does not have, although she has an ANZ account into which the dividends have been deposited for years. We asked the Malaysian embassy in Canberra for some guidance. They were polite but essentially could not assist us. Can you point us towards a successful sale of the shares? FM

Categories
Entertainment

Olivia Newton-John and the Grease casting choices we almost got to see

Her role as Sandy in grease remains her most resonant film work and provided her with a string of hits, but it was also a film that had to overcome many obstacles to get made, including convincing Hollywood studio bosses that people would see it.

A testament to its success is grease‘s ability to transcend generations. Last week’s prime-time broadcast of the film on Nine the day Olivia died managed to draw one of the evening’s biggest audiences, while songs from the film have soared to the top of streaming charts.

It was larger-than-life, outrageously flamboyant, kaftan-wearing Hollywood producer Allan Carr who fought to bring grease to the big screen, convincing skeptical studio bosses at Paramount that the all-dancing, all-singing musical would find an audience at a time when the genre was considered a major risk in Hollywood. The movie musical had long been written off as passé, despite the slow-burn success of 1975’s The Rocky Horror Picture Show.

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But Carr would eventually come right. grease it became the highest-grossing movie musical of the 20th century, despite an erratic birth.

Production was mapped out in just five weeks and the film shot over two months with a modest US$6 million budget.

According to a Vanity Fair piece in 2016, Carr’s original vision for grease was considerably different from the classics so loved today.

The original treatment, submitted to the studio in December 1976, included Danny Zuko as a busboy and gas-station attendant (doing a song called Gas Pump Jockey); Paul Lynde (at that time best known as Uncle Arthur on television’s Bewitched) as the Rydell High principal, rather than Eve Arden as Principal McGee; Donny Osmond as Teen Angel; and the Beach Boys doing the showstopping garage production number, Greased Lightnin’.

The studio wanted Henry Winkler from Happy Days to play John Travolta's Danny Zuko.

The studio wanted Henry Winkler from Happy Days to play John Travolta’s Danny Zuko.

Paramount had wanted Henry Winkler, Fonzie on the popular sitcom Happy Days, as Danny, but Winkler, fearful of being typecast, passed.

Robert Stigwood, Carr’s co-producer, had a three-picture deal with the 22-year-old rising star John Travolta, already a TV hit with Welcome Back, Kotter playing school stud Vinnie Barbarino. After Travolta shot saturday night fever he signed on to star in grease Ace Danny.

The Beach Boys were considered to sing Grease Lightning instead of the T-Birds.

The Beach Boys were considered to sing Grease Lightning instead of the T-Birds.

Casting Sandy would prove trickier. Director Randal Kleiser saw rushes from a new film his old college buddy George Lucas was making,titled Star Wars, to see if its female lead, Carrie Fisher, could be a fit. She wasn’t.

Marie Osmond (left) and Carrie Fisher (right) were both considered for Olivia Newton-John's Sandy.

Marie Osmond (left) and Carrie Fisher (right) were both considered for Olivia Newton-John’s Sandy. Credit:

Kleiser and Carr mulled other possibilities, including The Partridge Family’s Susan Dey, model turned actor Deborah Raffin, and America’s Mormon sweetheart Marie Osmond, who became the front-runner until she objected to Sandy’s transformation from good girl to bad girl and dropped out in protest.

In 2009 Osmond told Fox News: “The script came to me, and [it] was much edger than what Olivia came up with.

Paul Lynde was a possible candidate to be principal, instead of Eve Arden.

Paul Lynde was a possible candidate to be principal, instead of Eve Arden.Credit:Getty Images

“But I was at a place in my life where I wanted to have children and I didn’t like the fact that the girl had to turn bad to get the guy. I think the guy has to work hard to get the girl, that’s what I believe.”

Donny Osmond was considered as Teen Angel instead of Frankie Avalon.

Donny Osmond was considered as Teen Angel instead of Frankie Avalon. Credit:Getty Images

With Osmond out, Carr set sights on Olivia, who sat across from him at a dinner party at fellow Aussie Helen Reddy’s house one night without realizing she was auditioning. Carr gushed that she would be perfect for the role, but the singer wasn’t so sure, fearing she was too old – 29 – to play a teenager, and nervous after the previous musical bomb she had appeared in.

Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta in Grease.

Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta in Grease.Credit:AP

Carr prevailed and rewrote the part to make Sandy Australian. Cinematographer Bill Butler used soft lenses to turn back the clock.

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grease was originally released in the United States on June 16, 1978 and was an immediate box-office success. At the time it became the highest-grossing musical ever, eclipsing the 13-year-old record held by The Sound of Music, with a worldwide gross of US$341 million, or well over US$1.5billion dollars in today’s money.

And, despite her early misgivings, grease guaranteed Olivia’s major league celebrity status for the rest of her life, and beyond.

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Categories
Sports

AFL: ‘Go sit somewhere else’: Sydney Swans star Isaac Heeney’s road to 150

Isaac Heeney was 12 years old, nursing a broken hand and sitting in a mostly empty grandstand with his mother Rochelle.

A junior football carnival was playing out in front of them that he was supposed to be captaining an under-12s team in, before suffering his injury in one of the early games.

Then up walked a man, seemingly unaware of how many seating options he had, to slide in next to the Heeneys.

“We were like, ‘Go and sit somewhere else; you don’t have to sit in our laps’,” Heeney, 26, recalled, laughing about the memory, which he said made him “feel old”.

“Then he introduced himself: ‘I’m Chris Smith from the Sydney Swans Academy. I’ve been watching you for a little while.’”

Heeney’s life changed forever in that moment. The Swans had found a future superstar, one who will play his 150th AFL game at the SCG on Sunday against Collingwood.

Rochelle, a dairy farmer, started working half-days on Thursdays to drive Heeney and his brother, Beau, two-and-a-half hours each way from the outskirts of Newcastle to Sydney for a 90-minute Academy training session.

Their dad, Adam, a butcher, would sometimes drive them as well but also spent countless hours with his sons kicking the Sherrin on their hobby farm.

“I had the best childhood in the world. It was a really simple way of living but it was epic,” Heeney said.

“My parents were so supportive and loving and it was simple and cheap. We never had much money… we’d come home, eat sausages for dinner and always be outdoors.

“Mum and dad, being sporty people themselves, loved being outside and having fun with us, too.”

Their home doubled as a field of sporting dreams and was the scene of all sorts of other “sketchy” adventures, from tree parachuting to propelling into a dam at full speed on a bike.

Heeney only half-jokingly reflects on how Beau almost killed himself a couple of times.

“We built a ramp that we would go down on this hill and it was sort of like a quarter pipe but shooting off into the dam,” he said.

“You’d probably be a good four or five meters in the air with a pushbike that had a couple of milk cartons on it, so it didn’t sink to the bottom and just launches into the dam.

“Dad, Beau and I would also set these star pickets as goals and we’d just kick the footy to each other every afternoon and pretend to take hangers on each other – just like kids do.”

But not every kid is as gifted as Heeney.

He once kicked a ridiculous 68 goals in 12 games of junior soccer, and averaged 216 with the bat while playing up an age group but still in the top division.

A friendship developed in those soccer days with a boy who lived down the road, plus a family decision to delay him playing either of the rugby codes for fear of head knocks were critical in setting Heeney on his AFL path.

That friend was Will Quade, the grand-nephew of Rick Quade, the inaugural coach of the rebranded Sydney Swans’ team in 1982.

Will’s cousin also just so happened to be Charlie Dixon, who has played 187 games and counting for Port Adelaide and Gold Coast.

In a further twist of fate, big brother Beau ended up marrying Rick Quade’s niece, Amanda. But it wasn’t all smooth sailing.

Will wanted to start playing Australian rules football and asked Heeney if he wanted to join him, so they headed down to sign up for Wallsend Swans.

The problem was there weren’t enough players to field a team – participation numbers have skyrocketed in Newcastle in recent years – meaning they instead ended up at Cardiff Hawks, which now has bragging rights as Heeney’s junior club.

“I loved it from the get-go, and credit to Cardiff Hawks. It was a really fun, family sort of vibe and I think that’s why mum and dad loved it, too,” he said.

“Everyone knew each other and was really welcoming and they were amazing for me.

“At the same time, I was the only kid in my primary school who played it, then at high school there was only a handful of us out of like 1000 kids.”

Heeney’s star rose quickly but his Academy invitation came at just the right time, as he started playing rugby league at school.

But not rugby league or any of the gentle teasing about him playing “aerial ping pong” dissuaded him from chasing his AFL dream.

Heeney became not only the standout Sydney junior but arguably in the entire country for his 2014 draft year, when the likes of Paddy McCartin, Christian Petracca, Angus Brayshaw and Darcy Moore were also selected.

He has lived up to the hype and inked a bumper new six-year deal worth about $900,000 per annum on season eve this year that adds up to his growing importance at the Swans, which goes well beyond the field.

In Heeney, Sydney has a homegrown, Academy-bred star with an overflowing highlight reel to win over the masses.

The Swans now have a series of Academy graduates on their list, from Heeney to Callum Mills, Nick Blakey, Errol Gulden, Braeden Campbell, James Bell, Sam Wicks and more.

But does Heeney himself realize how meaningful he has become in the club’s bigger picture?

“I know there’s some significance there, absolutely. But I just look at myself as another player and whenever I can give back, whether that’s to the club or the fans, I definitely will,” he said.

“I know that I’m a decent role model to a lot of kids out there and I understand there’s a fair significance I’ve got around the club. I don’t know how to word it but it’s humbling.”

Read related topics:sydney

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Categories
Australia

Fears affordable housing project in Melbourne’s west will entrench isolation for new residents

Community leaders in Melbourne’s west have raised concerns a plan to convert a slice of land next to a freeway into more than 800 homes could result in social isolation for its new residents, unless major changes are made.

The proposed 41-hectare site in Cairnlea is just off the busy Western Ring Road and was part of the Albion Explosives Factory from the 1940s to the 1980s.

Development Victoria plans to build 840 homes on the site, 25 per cent of which will be affordable and social housing.

Graeme Blore has spent 17 years working in Cairnlea with communities dealing with social disadvantage.

He wants to see more social housing in the suburbs, but he is not convinced Development Victoria’s plans strike the right balance.

“It’s a vital issue, and really important to every community, but it actually needs to be done in a way that’s holistic, that embraces and enhances community,” he said.

A fence with a sign stating it is private property and dumping is prohibited
More than 800 new homes will be built at the Cairnlea site.(ABC News: Darryl Torpy)

One of his main concerns is the site’s proximity to late-night pokies venues on Ballarat Road.

The venues netted $80,000 per day in 2019-2020, according to Brimbank City Council data.

The council area, which covers Cairnlea and surrounding suburbs such as Deer Park and St Albans, has the highest pokies losses in the state — an average of $444,000 per day or $92 million per year.

“It has the potential to end up as a social housing ghetto, with a lack of opportunity,” Mr Blore said.

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Categories
Business

Adelaide auction sees bold buyer offer $395k less than asking price

A buyer has attempted to low-ball a vendor, hopeful of a bargain in a cooling market, before the time-warp house passed in at auction.

The 1910 home at 2 Northcote Street, Torrensville, in Adelaide’s western suburbs had a price guide of $895,000, but saw a registered bidder offer a measly $500,000 in private negotiations prior to the auction.

It was revealed to the crowd by the auctioneer on Saturday that $500,000 had been offered but was firmly rejected by the vendor.

Listed by Harcourts Sheppard and represented by Matilda Todman, the auction began with a vendor bid of $850,000 after minutes of awkward silence.

With prospective buyers and the vendor failing to come to an agreement, Nine understands negotiations for the four-bedroom family home will continue for at least another week.

Agent Darcy Harcourt of Harcourts Sheppard told Nine that the asking price remains at $895,000 but will likely change on Monday.

READMORE: A traditional Summer Hill home is the most-wanted property right now

A bold buyer tried to low-ball a vendor after this time warp house in Torrensville, Adelaide, passed in at auction on Saturday. (Harcourts Sheppard)
The 1910 four-bedroom home had a price guide of $895,000, but saw a registered bidder offer $500,000 in negotiations. (Harcourts Sheppard)

The property contains one bathroom, a generously-sized backyard and a two-car garage.

It requires extensive renovation with dated vinyl floor in the kitchen, cabinet doors falling off their hinges, and a garish green and red interior color palette.

The façade is also in need of some TLC with cracked white paint and basic wire fencing.

It comes as the national clearance rate last week hit the 50 per cent range for the 14th week in a row. At the same time last year it was almost 70 per cent.

READMORE: Penny lived on cheese and salami sandwiches to buy a home

Interiors are in major need of some TLC with dated vinyl floors in the kitchen and living area. (Harcourts Sheppard)
There is however a generously sized backyard that could be updated to a buyer’s content. (Harcourts Sheppard)

This is another indication that the housing market is slowing down, with nervous buyers holding off on purchasing amid mounting inflation and interest rates.

Meanwhile, a very different outcome occurred in another of Adelaide’s western suburbs.

Another time-warp house at 19 Whimpress Avenue in Findon, which the owner had held for around 50 years, hit the market for the very first time and sold under the hammer for $682,000.

Listed by Ray White Henley Beach and represented by Mark Bowden, the two-bedroom home had an opening bid of $550,000, with the auction between two bidders.

The price the owner paid for the property almost half a century ago is undisclosed.

Over in Findon, another of Adelaide’s western suburbs, this time warp house sold under the hammer for $682,000. (Ray White Henley Beach)
The dated property hit the market for the very first time and had an opening bid of $550,000. (Ray White Henley Beach)

Containing one bathroom, a decent-sized backyard and shed, the property was pitched to those who are wanting to renovate or build their dream home.

The interiors are in need of a refresh, with it currently boasting a retro color palette, a dated fireplace and old-fashioned carpet.

Over in Cheltenham, Melbourne, a vendor who held a family home for 18 years sold the property for $1.5million.

According to PriceFinder, the owner purchased the three-bedroom, one-bathroom home at 9 Herald Street for $369,555 back in 2004.

Interiors are also in need of a major revamp with a dated fireplace and unappealing carpet. (Ray White Henley Beach)

Listed by Hodges and represented by Pandelis Plousi, proceedings kicked off with a vendor bid of $900,000.

The indicative selling price of the property was between $1million and $1.1million.

Two bidders went head-to-head and when the reserve price wasn’t met at $995,000, the home was passed in.

After negotiations, the property was sold to the highest bidder at $1.5million.

The home is located in a desirable area of ​​Melbourne that’s close to schools and cafes, and boasts a picturesque lawn at the front.

Interiors are in need of a “modern makeover” as per the listing’s description, with dated tiling, carpet and paint color choice.

Also on Saturday, a three-bedroom property in Melbourne’s Cheltenham sold for $1.5million. (Hodge)
Two bidders went head-to-head and when the reserve price wasn’t met at $995,000, the home was passed in. (Hodge)

In Melbourne’s Mitcham, a 15-year old unit attracted plenty of buyer attention, with four bidders competing in a spirited and fast auction.

Listed by Philip Webb Real Estate Doncaster, the two-bedroom brick home at 3/38 Linlithgow Street sold for $775,000, which was $40,000 more than the reserve.

“The auction started with an opening bid of $650,000 and went up in $10,000 increments up until $750,000,” Anthony Webb, chief executive of Philip Webb Real Estate said. “The eventual buyer was very keen and a rapid-gun bidder, securing the keys after a 15-minute auction.”

As a whole, despite interest rate pain causing uncertainty elsewhere in the market, the number of properties going to auction continues to rise.

Domain’s latest auction report shows there were 1,324 auctions scheduled across the combined capitals this Saturday – an 8 per cent increase nationally from last week.

Brisbane and Adelaide have seen a decrease in the number of properties going under the hammer compared to last week.

Sydney, Melbourne and Canberra have more than last weekend. Sydney and Adelaide have a greater number of auctions than the same time 12 months ago, defying the overall trend.

3/38 Linlithgow Street in Mitcham collected $40,000 over reserve for the vendor.
3/38 Linlithgow Street in Mitcham collected $40,000 over reserve for the vendor. (Domain/Philip Webb)