Categories
Business

Aussie TikTok user goes dumpster diving for fresh fruit and vegetables

An Australian TikToker has shown off the crazy amount of fruit and vegetables he salvaged after going dumpster diving behind a supermarket.

Luca Corby filmed himself dumpster diving in Canberra to prove just how much fresh produce gets thrown out each day, captioning the video: “Anywaysss f**k big corporations.”

Mr Corby and two friends donned head torches before heading to a nearby store and taking a look in the bins.

“Food is expensive at the moment, so let’s go dumpster diving” he said.

First off, the group managed to salvage a number of potatoes, carrots, leeks and a huge knob of ginger, which Mr Corby estimated to be worth about $20.

“Look at this lettuce, it is literally fresh. There is a couple of dead leaves on the outside but the inside is all fresh,” he said.

The group also found rhubarb, mandarins, capsicums, oranges, grapes and asparagus.

Mr Corby filmed himself the following day explaining once they game home they washed all the fruit and vegetables and put them in the fridge.

“Our fridge is stocked for the next week. Our groceries for this week were essentially free,” he said.

“It’s crazy because we just went to a small supermarket, but you can imagine Coles and Woolworths would be throwing out so much stuff while families are struggling to buy fresh vegetables.”

A few weeks earlier, Mr Corby shared a picture of the huge amount of fresh produce his friend sourced after it was thrown out at a local IGA.

“Literally so many people are struggling to buy fresh produce at the moment and this is how much food my friend got dumpster diving yesterday,” he said.

“That was all going to go in the bin. That’s f**ked.”

The first video has clocked up more than 70,000 views, with many people shocked at how much fresh produce had been thrown away.

“This is so heartbreaking to see. The food looks so fresh. People are struggling right now,” one person said.

“So much wastage!” another wrote.

Another added: “Well done! It’s an absolute crime that those perfectly good foods can be thrown in the trash.”

Both Woolworths and Coles have initiatives in place to reduce food waste in their stores.

Woolworths has implemented a Food Rescue and Recycling Program to help stores identify and divert surplus fresh food away from landfill, instead using it for things like hunger relief, animal stock feed at local farms and zoos, or for commercial composting.

The supermarket giant works with OzHarvest, Foodbank and FareShare to make left over edible food available to local hunger relief agencies.

Coles has introduced its Together to Zero Waste initiative to help reduce food waste across its stores.

“Our first choice for unsold, edible food is to donate it to food rescue organizations such as SecondBite and Foodban,” the supermarket states in its website.

“Following that, we have other food waste solutions including donations to farmers and animal or wildlife services, organics collections and in-store food waste disposal equipment.”

Coles also uses produce that would typically not be sold in other products, such as bananas being used in frozen banana pieces, banana bread and muffins.

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Categories
Sports

Australia’s Oscar Piastri could move from reserve driver to F1 seat for Alpine after Fernando Alonso signs with Aston Martin for 2023

Highly rated young Australian motor racing ace Oscar Piastri appears on the cusp of securing a prized Formula One seat after the shock defection of veteran Alpine teammate Fernando Alonso.

Alonso has signed a multi-year deal with British-based F1 team Aston Martin and Piastri is considered the two-time world champion’s obvious successor at Alpine for the 2023 season.

A winner of the 2021 Formula Two championship, Piastri has been Alpine’s reserve driver this season amid speculation he could be loaned out to another Formula One team in 2023.

But the 41-year-old Alonso’s switch from the Renault-owned Alpine — as a replacement for retiring four-times world champion Sebastian Vettel at Aston Martin — makes Piastri a warm favorite to join Daniel Ricciardo in bolstering Australia’s presence in the F1 ranks.

Piastri — who is managed by Australia’s former Formula One star Mark Webber — is considered a rising talent in motor racing.

Australia's Oscar Piastri drives a Formula 1 car in testing, with his back left wheel just off the track.
Oscar Piastri is a reserve driver for the Alpine F1 team, but he could grab a prized seat for the 2023 season. (Getty Images: Formula 1/Joe Portlock)

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The 21-year-old from Melbourne claimed the Formula Three championship in 2020 to announce his arrival on the world stage.

Should Piastri secure a seat with Alpine in 2023, he will become the first Australian driver to make a Formula One debut since Ricciardo stepped up in the 2011 British Grand Prix.

While confirming Alonso’s departure, Alpine says it is premature to add to speculation that Piastri will be his replacement.

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“The team will announce its driver line-up for the 2023 Formula One season in due course,” Alpine said.

“We look forward to finishing the remainder of the 2022 season with Fernando in blue, and we’ll keep pushing to the maximum until the final lap in November.”

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Categories
Australia

Drouin South airstrip permit rejected after Baw Baw Shire hears about noise concerns

A private airstrip in Drouin South that has operated without planning approval for 42 years has had a retrospective permit application rejected after the council received 67 objections from neighbours.

While the owner of the airfield on Yuulong Road, Terry Williamson described the airstrip as a community asset, opponents complained to the council about noise from small aircraft and potential biosecurity issues for neighboring farmland from people retrieving recreationally launched rockets.

“I thought I was doing a good thing and a few years ago, I thought the community all were for it — but times change,” Mr Williamson said.

Baw Baw Shire Council has been trying to manage conflict between airstrip users and neighbours, and last week was considering whether it could retrospectively approve some of the modifications made to the airstrip.

Mr Williamson said he has submitted the planning application at the council’s request.

He said the permit was initially for an authorized landing area, which was amended by council to an airfield.

The council’s director of planning and development Leanne Hurst said no planning permit had ever been issued to use the land for either an airfield, airstrip or authorized landing area.

Last week councillors unanimously voted against the application.

The application was refused on a number of grounds including failing to respond to the purpose of the farm zone and failing to provide sufficient information in the application.

In the foreground is a red plane wing with white stripes and stars which is in the air, you can see a grassy landing strip below
Pilot David Hooke says the airstrip is not used often.(Supplied: David Hooke)

Neighbors say they’ve suffered for years

Dairy farmer Jennifer Clough told the council the plans using the airstrip were so noisy if you were outside you would often have to stop conversations.

She told the meeting the Victorian Rocketry Association’s use of the airstrip also caused issues on her farm.

“They have GPS [on the rockets] and the owners come looking for them with no regard for privacy or security or WorkSafe issues … in this current climate security on dairy farms is of paramount importance,” Ms Clough said.

A small plane is pictured above grass and trees with the corner of a brown brick house and gray shed to the right
Some residents told councillors plans would take off and land at 15 minute intervals on a clear day.(Supplied: Jane Moss)

Another resident Jane Moss told the meeting some residents had sold their houses and moved away because of the airfield.

“It’s been years of us objecting and years of the emotion, with us putting up with the impact on our livelihoods for somebody’s hobby,” she said.

‘We did everything they asked’

Mr Williamson, who is not a pilot himself, said he may appeal the council’s decision at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT).

“We did everything that they [the council planners] asked [in the planning application process]. We got new sound reports,” Mr Williamson said.

“The whole idea of ​​an airfield is good for community, for the whole region, that argument was left behind [at the meeting].”

Pilot David Hooke, who owns a hangar at the airfield, said the argument about the number of plane movements had been overblown.

An older man with white hair stands next to a younger tall boy in front of a red aerobatics plane in a hangar
David Hooke (left) with the co-owner of his aerobatics plane. (Supplied: David Hooke)

“There would be only five of us who regularly fly our aircraft, and when I say regularly, once a month, once a week, once a fortnight what [the objectors] were saying about multiple aircraft coming and going all day every day is patently false,” Mr Hooke said.

He said pilots must fly certain circuits set down by the Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) to practice take-offs and landings.

“In many ways, there’s nothing much we can do differently to appease the neighbours,” he said.

Council’s concerns

Baw Baw Shire Mayor Michael Leaney told last week’s meeting he was concerned the site had changed and was not meeting existing use rights.

Councilors heard that Mr Williamson was paid $40 a week to store Mr Hooke’s plans.

Man with brown long sleeve shirt and necklace standing in front of old buildings in Walhalla
Michael Leaney says the community has been concerned about the airfield for a long time.(Landline)

“I remember some years ago, when this was before council previously, we were told that there … was no money changing hands at all,” Mr Leaney said at the meeting.

Mr Williamson said the money collected from plane owners goes to hangar insurance and maintenance on the grounds.

“The money we collect is virtually the cost of running that airfield, there’s no real profit,” Mr Williamson said.

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Categories
US

Trump splits MO Senate endorsement between Greitens, Schmitt

donald trump

donald trump

Associated Press file photo

Former President Donald Trump hedged his endorsement in the Republican primary for the US Senate in Missouri, giving his support to “ERIC,” without specifying which one — the scandal-plagued former governor or the state attorney general who appears to be leading in the polls.

After a day of speculation among political operatives in Missouri and Washington, DC, that Trump was poised to endorse either former Gov. Eric Greitens or Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, Trump chose both in a statement shortly after 5 pm

The split decision came a little more than 12 hours before polls open — and set Trump up to claim credit if either candidate wins Tuesday.

Trump said he wanted a candidate who will fight for border security “election integrity, the military and military veterans.

“We need a person who will not back down to the Radical Left Lunatics who are destroying our Country,” Trump wrote. “I trust the Great People of Missouri, on this one, to make up their own minds, much as they did when they gave me landslide victories in the 2016 and 2020 Elections, and I am therefore proud to announce that ERIC has my Complete and Full Endorsement!”

While the endorsement had been widely anticipated by Republicans, it is unlikely that Trump’s coy statement will have a substantial impact on the eve of the tight race, where he appeared unwilling to put his full weight behind any candidate.

Last month, Trump knee-capped US Rep. Vicky Hartzler, who has consistently polled as one of the top three candidates in the race, saying he would not be giving her the endorsement because he didn’t feel that she “had what it takes to take on the Radical Left Democrats.”

In March, Trump praised US Rep. Billy Long, but stopped short of endorsing him. Long never broke into the top tier of candidates in polling.

Both Erics immediately moved to seize on Trump’s statement. Greitens posted a graphic to Twitter saying the former president had endorsed him. Soon after, Schmitt released a statement saying it was “truly an honor” to have Trump’s endorsement and calling himself the only “America First” candidate in the race.

“He was smart for saying Eric. It was ingenious. That’s Trump!” said Rene Artman, chair of the Republican Central Committee of St. Louis County.

Polling in the race’s final weeks showed Schmitt gaining in the race, with several surveys showing him leading. Meanwhile, recent polls showed Greitens in third.

Greitens has come under withering attack over past allegations of sexual assault and blackmail, which led him to resign as governor in 2018, as well as allegations by his ex-wife that he was physically and emotionally abusive toward her and their young children.

The split endorsement comes after Trump indicated he was upset by a poll conducted by Remington Research Group, a firm founded by Schmitt’s campaign consultant, Jeff Roe, that showed Schmitt winning the race with 34% of the vote. The poll also looked at the 2024 Republican presidential primary and had Trump with 42% of the vote, ahead of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis who had 18%.

After Breitbart, which has written favorably about Greitens throughout the campaign, said the poll was “fake” and underestimated Trump’s support in the state, Trump posted the outlet’s article on his site Truth Social, decrying “dishonesty in politics.”

This is a breaking story and will be updated

This story was originally published August 1, 2022 5:21 PM.

Profile Image of Jonathan Shorman

Jonathan Shorman is The Kansas City Star’s lead political reporter, covering Kansas and Missouri politics and government. I have previously covered the Kansas Statehouse for The Star and Wichita Eagle. He holds a journalism degree from The University of Kansas.

Profile Image of Daniel Desrochers

Daniel Desrochers covers Washington, DC for the Kansas City Star. He previously covered politics and government for the Lexington Herald-Leader in Kentucky and the Charleston Gazette-Mail in Charleston, West Virginia.

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Categories
Business

Egg shortage: Latest product to vanish from supermarket shelves

Australians are being hit with a national egg shortage, as consumers move towards free-range eggs amid rising production costs, extreme weather events and worker shortages.

Supermarkets across the country are back to implementing purchase limits, with farmers grappling to keep up with demand after they decreased their chicken numbers during lockdown.

Owner of Chooks at the Rooke, a free-range egg farm southwest of Melbourne, Xavier Prime told 3AW Radio that part of the problem was the cold weather that affected how often the birds laid eggs.

“Part of it is the time of the year as well.” he said.

“Free-range eggs, in that sort of space the birds are open to the elements, and with the daylight hours being shorter, that has a lot to do with how many eggs the chickens lay.”

Mr Prime said “to lay the optimum”, hens needs 15-16 hours of daylight every day, but at the moment they are experiencing just 10-11 hours.

A Woolworths spokesman said the scarcity of eggs was due to a production shortage on farms, with the cost of young hens laying eggs increasing by 20 per cent.

“The market-wide supply of locally produced eggs in some regions has recently been impacted by reduced production on a number of farms,” they said.

“While we continue to deliver eggs to our stores regularly, customers may notice reduced availability at the moment and we thank them for their patience and understanding.

“We’re in close contact with our suppliers and are working to increase the availability of eggs in stores as soon as possible.”

The supermarket giant has installed a two-carton limit in some stores.

Mr Prime said he hoped the supply shortages did not push consumers back to caged eggs.

But free-range eggs aren’t the only product Australian shoppers are being stripped of, with supermarkets reporting bare shelves for other household items such as chickpeas, lentils, lettuce, tissues and cold and flu tablets.

“We’re experiencing reduced availability across some of our lentil and chickpea products due to supply chain delays,” a Woolworths spokesman said.

The supply chain issues are a combination of the war in Ukraine, flooding and other extreme weather events on Australian shores.

Read related topics:Weather

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Categories
Technology

all the deals you need to know

It’s the first birthday of Telstra Day, and you get the presents. Here’s what we’ve got on offer.

Remember: the deals on this page are only valid for one day! They’re way too hot to last. Telstra Day August 2022 kicks off from 1am on Thursday 4 August, which is in:

Telstra Day has been happening for one year today! It’s our very first birthday, and we’re giving you the presents, including a gift with purchase worth $792 when you buy any Samsung Galaxy S22 series.

Read on for the FAQs!

Here’s what’s on offer this month:

Telstra Day: device deals

Buy any Samsung Galaxy S22 series, get bonus Xbox All Access with hundreds of games for 24 months and an Xbox Series S

We’re not playing games with the first anniversary of Telstra Day.

Purchase any Samsung Galaxy S22 series device from us on Telstra Day and you’ll get a bonus Xbox All Access bundle, which includes an Xbox Series S and hundreds of games, valued at $792 RRP with your purchase.

If you need to find out what the deal is with the different Galaxy S22 models, we’ve got everything you need to know on Telstra Exchange.

Things you need to know

Xbox All Access redemption criteria apply. After 24 months roll onto Xbox Game Pass Ultimate standard monthly subscription fees (currently $15.95 per month), unless you change or cancel beforehand. Redeem Xbox by 19 August 2022.

Samsung Galaxy S21 FE 5G

And the fans go wild!

The Samsung Galaxy S21 Fan Edition has all the gear you love from the Galaxy S21 series, turned up to 11.

Samsung Galaxy A53 5G

The Galaxy A53 5G is designed to stand out. With the Ambient Edge blending the camera with the body seamlessly, your Galaxy A53 5G is entirely beautiful and fully functional with a large battery capacity inside a slimmer, matte frame.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra 5G

This one is a tablet that has to be seen to be believed. If you’re a fan of state-of-the-art screens, you’ll fall in love with the Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra, which has a Super AMOLED display with a smooth 120Hz refresh rate, and a brand new S-Pen bundled in the box.

Telstra Day: accessory deals

Samsung Galaxy Watch4 – 44mm

Samsung Galaxy Watch4 Classic Edition – 46mm

Sony WF-1000XM4 noise-canceling headphones

Telstra Day: more accessory deals

And the deals don’t stop there!

We also have:

Telstra Day: prepaid deals

If you’re looking to get connected for less, we’ve got you!

FAQ’s

When does the Telstra Day come out start?

Telstra Day August 2022 officially kicks off at 1am AEST on Thursday 4 August 2022.

The sale will run until midnight AEST on Thursday 4 August. These deals are far too hot to keep around for longer than a day!

What is Telstra Day?

Telstra Day is a our monthly event full of deals both onTelstra.comand in our Telstra Stores. Make sure you’re complying with local health guidelines before coming to see us!

Once a month, we will be offering deep discounts on all the latest tech. Deals are different every month, but previous Telstra Days have included smartphones, smart watches, headphones and other accessories.

We also have two-hour free delivery in Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne. Just order your new device and accessories on a plan from participating Telstra Stores and you can take advantage of having it in your hand within two hours. Make sure to check outour T&Cs for two-hour delivery on our website first.

You can choose to pay upfront for your purchases, or pay it off later on your Telstra bill. And if you find a cheaper price somewhere else,let us know within 7 days and we’ll refund you the difference on your Telstra post-paid account(conditionsapply, of course). You can even pay with yourTelstra Plusloyalty points!

And of course, none of our plans have lock-in contracts. You can cancel anytime, and all you need to pay is the amount remaining on your device.

This month’s deals are great if you’re in the market for a new smartphone!

Do I have to be a Telstra customer to shop Telstra Day?

You don’t need to be a Telstra customer, but you do have to have a Telstra ID to checkout at the store for Telstra Day.

New customers looking to take up Telstra Day device or accessory offers can just simply add it to their no lock-in plan online at purchase.

How can I get a Telstra ID?

If you’re already a Telstra customer, signing up for an account is easy. Simply follow the steps atour sign-up page.

If I order before midnight AEST on Telstra Day but my payment goes through after midnight, will I still get the deal?

Yes, if you order a product before midnight on Telstra Day, you will get the Telstra Day deal whether or not your payment is processed after the midnight cutoff.

Luke Hopewell
By Luke Hopewell

Senior Specialist Writer – Telstra

Luke Hopewell is an editor, tech expert and Senior Specialist Writer at Telstra Exchange. Luke joined Telstra in 2019 where he has had the privilege to help bring stories to life in a unique and human way. He was previously the head of editorial at Twitter Australia and the editor of cult tech site Gizmodo. For over a decade, Luke’s passion for technology has always driven him to seek out the latest gadgets and game-changers, and help others to understand how it all works. In another life he was a cyber security specialist where he sought to educate people about how to stay safe online. When he’s not writing, he’s getting outdoors and patting all the nice dogs he meets.

Categories
Sports

‘Disability isn’t a dirty word’: non-binary Paralympian Robyn Lambird on smashing stereotypes and setting agendas

“What happened to you?”

“Jesus can heal you.”

“Can you have sex?”

“You’re pretty for someone in a wheelchair.”

Believe it or not, these are all things Robyn Lambird says strangers have said to them.

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But they’ve embraced their profile as a Paralympian to shatter misconceptions and make their mark on and off the race track.

The beauty in disability and diversity

Lambird is a non-binary wheelchair racer from Perth, and made their Paralympic debut at Tokyo last year, winning a bronze medal in the T34 100m final.

Wheelchair racer Robyn Lambird pumps their fists after winning a bronze medal
Lambird won a bronze medal in their Paralympic debut in Tokyo. (AAP: Drew Chislett)

Their immediate focus is the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham where they’ll contest the women’s T33/34 100m.

It will hold special significance for the England-born sprinter to compete in front of family members, including both sets of grandparents, for the first time.

The 25-year-old also competes in the national wheelchair rugby league, studies digital and social media at university, and has built an impressive following online as a content creator and activist.

Lambird’s Instagram account is full of engaging posts, educating, entertaining, and illuminating.

It ranges from fashion tips to training diaries, to important messages around queer pride and disability awareness.

Lambird has cerebral palsy, and one of the clear messages they want to get across is that disability isn’t a dirty word.

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“I think on some level in our society, we still see disability as this inherently negative thing,” Lambird said.

“[The idea that] this tragedy happened to someone and that’s why we shy away from the word disabled, and all of these other euphemisms, differently abled.

“But, to me, the word disabled is a source of pride because I’m proud of who I am now. And everything that I’ve done in my life, I’ve done with my disability, not despite it.

“It’s not our bodies that make us disabled at the end of the day, it’s the opportunities that we don’t have or it’s because the world is not accessible to us.”

Lambird says it’s up to everyone to advocate for people with a disability.

“If you as an able-bodied person go into a cafe, and you realize that it’s inaccessible, maybe ask why that’s the case? Or what can be done to make that environment accessible?,” they said.

“And if you notice that there’s no disabled people in your workplace, maybe you should be questioning that, why isn’t there opportunities for people with disabilities to get into those spaces?”

Role model for queer community

Lambird is also passionate about standing up for the queer community, something which has taken more prominence since they became the first out non-binary athlete to win a Paralympic medal in Tokyo.

“I think afterwards, I realized how important that was… in terms of helping other people to feel welcome in the sporting environment and to know that they have a future in the sport, if that’s what they want, and that they can they can be themselves,” they said.

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“That’s the thing that I really love about sport is it has this opportunity to bring people together to create this great sense of community.”

Lambird’s positive experiences in sport started in wheelchair rugby, which is a mixed gender sport.

Robyn Lambird in action playing wheelchair rugby.
Lambird also plays wheelchair rugby at a national level.(Wheelchair Sports NSW/ACT: Karen Watson)

They think it’s worth exploring whether more sports can follow its lead, to make it more inclusive for trans and gender diverse people.

“I just think everyone should have the opportunity to go to reap the benefits of sport, both mentally and physically,” they said.

“Sport has changed my life and has given me so many things, and I couldn’t imagine not being in the position that I am now.

“So I think we really just need to start sitting down and having conversations about how we can open that up to everyone and ensure that everyone feels like they have a place.”

There is no normal: finding a community online

Social media is an important part of Lambird’s life, giving them the opportunity to tell their own story, which is often overlooked by the mainstream media.

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“Any media that focuses on disability and tries to accurately portray that experience is important, but the people that really know what it’s like to live with a disability and to navigate the world as a disabled person are disabled people.

“And having that opportunity to take control of that narrative, and to show what disability looks like for us, and what is our truth, it’s incredibly important.”

Lambird still has a long sporting career ahead of them, but they have an eye on the future as well, and their ability to create lasting change.

“I think I always just find the beauty in diversity. Diversity is one of the world’s greatest teachers, I think we can learn so much about the world and our place in it just by listening to others,” they said.

“I’ve been very lucky to find an amazing community online and on social media, people that are just trying to lift each other up regardless of their gender or sexuality or their disability.

“And I think it’s challenging that idea that, there is not normal.”

Lambbird will compete in the T33/34 women’s 100m at the Commonwealth Games on Wednesday August 3 AEST.

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Categories
Australia

Craigmore boy whose death is being investigated suffered stomach pains, cardiac arrest before dying, his family says

The father of a young Adelaide boy whose death is being investigated by police has spoken of the “saddest day” he laid his son to rest.

WARNING: This story contains content that some readers may find upsetting.

Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised this article contains the name of a person who has died.

Kaurna-Narungga boy Makai, aged seven, died on February 10 but police yesterday revealed they have been investigating his death — the second suspected neglect case brought before the taskforce in less than a month.

ABC has spoken to Makai’s family and has obtained permission to use his name.

In a social media post, Makai’s father wrote the boy has been laid to rest in the new Kaurna Repatriation area at Smithfield Memorial Park in March.

“My son, Makai, will be the first Kaurna person to be laid to rest in a new location, designated for the Kaurna People,” he wrote.

“What an historic moment this will be and yet it will be the saddest day for me.”

In an earlier post, I thanked close family and friends who supported him and his child through “difficult and challenging time”.

“No father should watch his son die. Wouldn’t wish this on anyone. Not even my worst enemy,” the father wrote.

“The system I put my faith and trust in, failed me and my son,” he wrote in a separate post.

“I miss him so much, I wish he was here with me. I LOVE HIM,” he wrote on a different day.

Makai’s heart stopped three times

Makai’s relatives have claimed on a fundraising page that the Craigmore boy had suffered stomach pains in his final days.

The primary school student visited a doctor and had x-rays after complaining of stomach pains on February 7.

His doctor reviewed the x-ray results the next day and prescribed Makai laxatives.

Police Commissioner Mal Hyde
Former police commissioner Mal Hyde will lead a government review into the agencies’ interactions with Charlie and Makai’s families.(abcnews)

However, Makai took a turn for the worse the following day, where he could not move and started to hallucinate, his relatives wrote on the fundraising page.

On February 10, Makai — with a swollen belly — was rushed to the Lyell McEwin Hospital by his father.

His heart stopped beating and he went into cardiac arrest twice, and doctors were able to revive him.

Makai underwent emergency surgery and was placed into an induced coma to be transferred to the Women’s and Children’s Hospital.

During the ambulance trip, Makai’s father was told the boy might not survive the journey to the hospital.

After arriving, Makai’s heart stopped for a third time and doctors were not able to resuscitate him.

The coroner’s report released the following week showed the seven-year-old had died from pneumonia in both lungs, sepsis and the MRSA superbug, a drug-resistant form of golden staph.

A photo of Charlie wearing a cowboy hat
Police are investigating the death of Charlie for suspected neglect.(Supplied)

Makai’s relatives wrote the diagnosis was “a shock”, because pneumonia was not picked up at the Lyell McEwin Hospital nor by radiology.

The boy’s death is being investigated by Taskforce Prime, which was set up last month to investigate the death of six-year-old Charlie.

A government review — led by former police commissioner Mal Hyde — is underway to examine the interactions that agencies had with both children’s families and to identify any gaps in the child protection system.

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Categories
US

DHS watchdog halted efforts to obtain missing text messages from Secret Service, Trump officials

The watchdog at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) abandoned efforts to recover missing text messages from across its various agencies deleted in the wake of Jan. 6 and minimized its criticism of those that failed to produce them, according to emails released by lawmakers.

The evidence, released Monday by the House committees on Oversight and Homeland Security, was accompanied by a renewed call for Inspector General Joseph Cuffari to step aside from his investigations into how DHS agencies responded to the Jan. 6 attack.

“These documents raise troubling new concerns that your office not only failed to notify Congress for more than a year that critical evidence in this investigation was missing, but your senior staff deliberately chose not to pursue that evidence and then appear to have taken steps to cover up these failures,” the committees wrote in a letter to Cuffari.

The panel said it has also obtained evidence that Cuffari’s office has not attempted to seek records from a former DHS official’s personal cell phone.

The letter marks the second time in a week that Rep. Carolyn Maloney (DN.Y.), chair of the Committee on Oversight, and Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), chair of the Committee on Homeland Security, have asked for Cuffari to recuse himself from the investigation.

“Removing yourself from this investigation is even more urgent today,” they wrote.

The letter from the committees offers more details following a Friday report from The Washington Post outlining how Cuffari’s office halted efforts to recover or obtain text messages from the Secret Service or from top Trump-era DHS officials.

Cuffari first notified lawmakers earlier this month that some Secret Service agents’ text messages were “erased” as part of a device replacement program. (The agency contains any text messages that might be missing were lost through a software transition.)

Documents obtained by the Project on Government Oversight also indicate that Cuffari was unable to obtain text messages from acting DHS Secretary Chad Wolf or his deputy Ken Cuccinelli.

In each case, Cuffari knew for months that the messages were lost, and only informed lawmakers of the issues with the Secret Service, a potential violation of laws governing inspectors general that require rapid notification of “particularly serious or flagrant” abuses of public records laws. .

“Your July 13, 2022, letter failed to mention that a year earlier, and just six weeks after you initially requested text messages of Secret Service personnel, senior officials in your office instructed the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) that the Office of Inspector General (OIG) no longer needed Secret Service text messages as part of its investigation related to the January 6 attack,” the committees wrote.

The two panels obtained emails from Cuffari’s deputy, Thomas Kait, directing a liaison to halt efforts to obtain text messages.

“Jim, please use this email as a reference to our conversation where I said we no longer request phone records and text messages from the USSS [United States Secret Service] relating to the events on January 6th,” Kait wrote on July 27.

The Office of Inspector General (OIG) would reverse course roughly four months later and seek some of the messages, but as the watchdog hit a wall in obtaining them, it diminished the issue in an agency memo.

A February document initially noted that OIG had failed to obtain the requested information. But Kait and others tweaked the document, instead writing that they “received a timely and consolidated response from each component to our December 3, 2021 request; however, additional and clarifying information is needed before we can complete the reviews.”

Other information obtained by the committee indicates that Cuffari’s office has been aware since January that Cuccinelli used his personal phone for DHS business, “yet your office did not seek to collect messages from this device,” it said.

Neither Cuffari’s office nor the Department of Homeland Security responded to request for comment.

The letter asks Cuffari to turn over all communications about the decision not to pursue the text messages, as well as all emails relating to their decision to finally notify Congress about the missing messages.

Concerns over Cuffari go beyond the two panels.

Senate Judiciary Chair Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) asked Attorney General Merrick Garland to intervene and overtake the Jan. 6 investigation at DHS. Thompson’s other committee, the House panel investigating the riot, also released a letter to Cuffari stating he likely violated the law by failing to ensure more timely notification of the missing records.

Updated: 5:18 pm

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Business

Gas giants hold emergency talks as minister threatens intervention

The ACCC on Monday said LNG exporters were contributing to the forecast 56-petajoule shortfall in 2023 by withdrawing 58 petajoules more gas from the domestic market than they expected to supply.

Gas producers on Monday disputed the suggestion a shortfall was looming, noting that the ACCC found that 167 petajoules of gas remained uncontracted and would be offered to local buyers first.

“This is more than enough gas to ensure that no shortfall occurs,” APPEA acting chief executive Damian Dwyer said. “Gas customers can be assured supply will be adequate next year so households and businesses can continue uninterrupted.”

A spokeswoman for APLNG, which the ACCC report noted was a “net contributor” to the east-coast gas market, urged governments to give greater attention to developing new sources of gas supply in southern states such as Victoria and NSW that need the fuel the most.

“We need to look beyond LNG producers, who invested billions of dollars to develop the LNG industry underpinned by long-term LNG offtake commitments to overseas buyers,” the spokesperson said. “To solve energy challenges on the east coast of Australia, it remains important to take steps to encourage investment in new supplies near southern markets closer to demand centres.”

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says the ACCC's latest report from its ongoing inquiry into Australia's gas supply “highlights some alarming features of the east coast gas market”.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says the ACCC’s latest report from its ongoing inquiry into Australia’s gas supply “highlights some alarming features of the east coast gas market”.Credit:James Brickwood

Major gas users on Monday declared the ACCC’s latest report had yet again painted an “alarming picture” for businesses that relied on the fossil fuel.

The Energy Users’ Association of Australia, whose members include ASX-listed fertilizer giant Incitec Pivot and building material supplier Brickworks, backed the decision to initiate the first steps of the gas security mechanism, but feared it would “not be enough”.

“It is time for governments and regulators to stop rattling the saber and to draw their sword,” chief executive Andrew Richards said. “It seems clear that threatening the gas industry with stronger actions is not enough.”

Credit Suisse energy analyst Saul Kavonic said the ACCC report appeared aimed at providing “ammunition” for the government to toughen up gas policies. But he said the situation was more likely to be resolved voluntarily rather than through formal market intervention.

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“We expect the government may declare a gas shortfall in 2023 and toughen up the regulatory framework, but ultimately pursue a ‘voluntary’ outcome whereby Queensland LNG producers agree to keep the market supplied for any shortfalls next year,” Kavonic said.

While Australia is one of the world’s top gas exporters, massive amounts are locked in to contracts to be sold to overseas buyers, or are in faraway parts of the country where it is expensive or impossible to supply demand centers in the south. Victoria’s offshore gas fields in the Bass Strait, which have traditionally supplied up to half of the eastern seaboard’s gas demand, remain in rapid decline.

“If we allow a disaster to happen because of a shortage of affordable gas – while we are the largest gas-exporting nation on the planet – this will represent a catastrophic failure,” Australian Workers Union secretary Dan Walton said.

While the ACCC’s report did not identify any wrongdoing, Treasurer Jim Chalmers said he encouraged the consumer watchdog to act if any anti-competitive behavior was uncovered in the future.

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“It’s critical that our domestic gas supply is secure and competitively priced, particularly when households and businesses are under extreme pressure,” he said.

“The ACCC has raised concerns about the level of competition in this market, and I welcome its commitment to look into this and take enforcement action as required.”

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