Categories
Sports

Collingwood Magpies and Richmond Tigers face injury concerns; Jack Silvagni no certainty to return

The decision to drop Silvagni, squeezed out by Marc Pittonet’s return, and relegate him to the medi-sub role has been debated by the Blues, and been a major public talking point.

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The versatile Silvagni, predominantly utilized as a forward and an under-sized back-up ruck, has had his best season but the Blues wanted to play frontline ruckmen Tom De Koning and Pittonet, along with key forwards Harry McKay and Charlie Curnow, while maintaining their three small forwards.

The pairing of De Koning and Pittonet, the latter back for his first match since round six, didn’t provide the punch the Blues needed but coach Michael Voss said it was difficult to judge their partnership on “a very small sample space”.

Pittonet had 30 hitouts but only eight disposals and one mark, while De Koning, who also spent time forward, had 13 hitouts, eight touches and three marks but was goalless on a night the Blues again managed only 55 points – as they had done in the loss to Geelong a fortnight earlier.

Silvagni was among the Blues’ best (13 touches, including a key goal midway through the third quarter) when injected into the game after Durdin was subbed out.

Garry Lyon, a long-time friend of the Silvagni family, questioned whether the Blues had pulled the wrong lever by dropping a man considered one of the team’s emotional heartbeats.

“People can say what they want, [that] this is a nonsense, I am not saying it’s the sole reason they lost, but when you have got a team that is still trying to establish their credibility and bona fides coming off a couple of years of disaster, or longer than that, then there is something to be said for maintaining the bloke whose gap between his best and worst is as narrow as probably anyone in the team’s. [Sam] Walsh is up there as well,” Lyon said on SEN on Monday.

Tom De Koning, Patrick Cripps, and Marc Pittonet against the Crows in round 20.

Tom De Koning, Patrick Cripps, and Marc Pittonet against the Crows in round 20.Credit:Getty Images

“So, you know what you get – he goes out, he is heart and soul, he is a worker, he is a competitor, at a ground that you can’t, or haven’t been able to, win [at] and you just take him out of the team.

“Michael Voss is absolutely within his right to say: ‘We wanted to try this’, but I just wonder on the back of it, whether or not it had a bigger impact on the psyche of their team and the emotional connection, and the emotional investment as opposed to structurally and wanting to see different things.”

The Blues are keen for robust midfielder George Hewett to return as soon as possible, but his back issues have meant he has been unable to train fully. Hewett has missed the past fortnight and will again be assessed through the week. He has played a key role since crossing from Sydney, averaging almost 29 touches per game, and is behind only Patrick Cripps for most tackles.

Kennedy’s absence could help Paddy Dow return after 17 touches in the VFL, but the Blues will debate whether Will Setterfield and Zac Fisher take on more minutes through the midfield.

Defender Caleb Marchbank, with 16 touches in the VFL, is another subject for selection debate, having succumbed to injury against Essendon in round 13 – his first senior match since round 16, 2019.

Voss lamented that his team had been “out-worked” by the Crows. This, in part, was shown in the Blues’ 23 missed tackles – the most by any team this season.

However, the seventh-placed Blues, having slipped from an 8-2 win-loss record to 12-7, are determined to hit back against the Lions. They need one win from their final three matches – they also face Melbourne and Collingwood – to secure a September berth for the first time since 2013.

‘Warriors down’: The round 20 injury ward

Nell Geraets

Collingwood and Richmond are waiting to learn how long some of their players will be sidelined after a round in which several key players went down with injury.

Tigers co-captain Dylan Grimes and Magpies’ leader Taylor Adams await the outcome of further tests.

Hard-nosed midfielder Adams was subbed off before half-time with a groin injury during the Pies’ six-point defeat of the Power. Despite some good news after defender Jeremy Howe was declared “fine” for selection this week, the club confirmed the 28-year-old Adams would undergo scans in the coming days to assess the extent of the damage.

His availability is up in the air ahead of the Pies’ clash with reigning premiers Melbourne on Friday.

Taylor Adams' availability is in doubt following a groin injury.

Taylor Adams’ availability is in doubt following a groin injury.Credit:AFL Pictures

Howe spent the last half of the final term against Port Adelaide on the bench after suffering a knee to the backside, but coach Craig McRae said after the game that the 32-year-old had suffered no significant injury.

Richmond’s thrilling comeback win over Brisbane on Sunday was marred by Grimes’ suspected hamstring injury, which the player, himself, was not optimistic about.

“I have [Grimes] seems to think it was bad, so we’ll wait and see what that’s like,” coach Damien Hardwick said after the game.

“That’s the challenging thing about AFL football, isn’t it? It’s such a tough game and warriors go down – especially brave ones like Dylan.”

Richmond has expressed concern over Dylan Grimes' hamstring injury.

Richmond has expressed concern over Dylan Grimes’ hamstring injury. Credit:AFL Pictures

Hardwick said he was concerned by the look of the tumble, but the club maintained no official decision had been made yet over Grimes’ availability against Port Adelaide on Saturday, noting the 31-year-old would be further assessed early in the week.

“I don’t want to speculate, but it’s not great at the moment,” Hardwick acknowledged.

“It’s a little bit challenging at the moment, and emotional for all of us because he’s such an important player to the fabric of our footy club.

“We hope it’s not too severe. We’ve got our fingers crossed at this stage.”

Melbourne narrowly avoided a major injury blow of their own as star ruckman Luke Jackson passed all concussion tests after sustaining a knock to the head, clearing him of any further concussion protocol requirements and setting him up for selection against Collingwood on Friday.

Phillips to helm the Power

Nell Geraets

Port Adelaide has named AFLW star Erin Phillips as captain of the expansion side’s inaugural season.

Despite beginning on the basketball court, Phillips has become a hot commodity on the field for her ability to kick goals. The 37-year-old joined the Power for their first season in 2020 after leading the Crows alongside Chelsea Randall since 2017.

Port Adelaide captain Erin Phillips and her father, former Port Adelaide player and AFL hall of famer, Greg Phillips.

Port Adelaide captain Erin Phillips and her father, former Port Adelaide player and AFL hall of famer, Greg Phillips.Credit:Port Adelaide Football Club

“It is a huge honor to be named captain of Port Adelaide,” Phillips said.

“I feel incredibly privileged to be trusted to lead this amazing group of women, both on and off the field this season.

Phillips’ captaincy allows the powerful midfielder to continue the legacy of her father, Greg, who played 343 games for the Power between 1976 and 1993, including a stint as captain.

“My dad always said to me the only thing better than playing for this club is being captain of this club, and he was right,” Phillips said.

“Telling him the news that I had been named captain was a very special and emotional moment for both of us.

“I’m so excited to be following in his footsteps and can’t wait to lead the team on to the ground for the first time. It will be yet another special moment for this group and for Port Adelaide.”

The two-time WNBA champion and Olympic basketballer made her transition to the AFLW in 2016, quickly becoming known as a prolific ball-winner and a consistent contender for best on ground.

Soon to follow in Port Adelaide’s footsteps are fellow expansion sides Hawthorn, Essendon and Sydney as they decide who will take the helm of their teams ahead of their own highly anticipated inaugural seasons.

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Categories
Australia

More signs could prevent selfie deaths

More warning signs at a popular lookout spot in Victoria’s west could have prevented a woman’s deatha coroner has found.

Rosy Loomba was taking a photo with her husband at the Grampians’ Boroka Lookout in December 2020 when she fell to her death.

Mother Rosy Loomba tripped over the edge of the Boroka Lookout in Halls Gap. (Supplied)
The Boroka Lookout in Halls Gap. (Nine)

Mrs Loomba died from multiple injuries, including skull fractures and a dislocated spine.

While the lookout spot is fenced off, Ms Hawkins said it was common for people to climb over the “easily scaled” wire fence to take photos on the rock ledge.

At the time of Mrs Loomba’s death, there were 30 other people waiting to take their photo.

Ms Hawkins recommended Parks Victoria install extra signage in the area that expressly stated people have died and been seriously injured at the location.

A map of the location of the Boroka Lookout. (Nine)

“Mrs Loomba’s death is a reminder of the dangers associated with ignoring signage and fencing which is put in place to keep people safe.”

The coroner’s report noted Parks Victoria installed additional infrastructure and signage at Boroka Lookout this year.

Parks Victoria will provide a written response to the coroner within three months, setting out how the recommendations will be addressed.

“We’re reviewing the existing signage at the Boroka Lookout, including reviewing the recommendations from the Coroner’s Court,” a spokesperson told AAP in a statement.

Categories
US

Ex-Putin adviser Chubais reported to be in European hospital

Anatoly Chubais, who resigned as a high-ranking adviser to Russian President Vladimir Putin and left Russia shortly after the invasion of Ukraine, was reported to be in intensive care in a European hospital for a neurological disorder

Anatoly Chubais, who resigned as a high-ranking adviser to Russian President Vladimir Putin and left Russia shortly after the invasion of Ukraine, was reported to be in intensive care in a European hospital on Sunday for a neurological disorder.

Ksenia Sobchak, a Russian television personality and family friend of Chubais, said on Telegram that she had spoken with his wife, Avdotya, and that he was suffering from Guillain-Barre syndrome. She did not say which clinic he was in.

Guillain-Barre is a rare disorder in which the body’s immune system attacks the nerves. Sobchak said Chubais’ condition was “unstable,” but she quoted him as saying it was “moderate, stable.”

Although Chubais did not state his reason for resigning in March, it was presumed to be because of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24.

His was the highest-level of a series of official resignations. Chubais had most recently been Putin’s envoy to international organizations on sustainable development. He is well-known in Russia, having held high-profile posts since the early 1990s, when he oversaw privatization efforts under Boris Yeltsin.

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Categories
Business

Atlassian (NASDAQ: TEAM) billionaire Scott Farquhar’s bid for Genex Energy (ASX: GNX) falls over

Australian renewable energy company Genex Power has rejected a proposed $300 million takeover offer from a consortium led by Atlassian co-founder Scott Farquhar’s private investment firm, but says it remains open to a revised proposal.

ASX-listed Genex Power, which has $1 billion of renewable energy assets across Australia, told the market on Monday the 23¢ a share bid from Farquhar’s Skip Capital and global alternative investment firm Stonepeak undervalues ​​the company.

Scott Farquhar's investment fund has had its bid for ASX renewable energy company Genex rejected as too low.

Scott Farquhar’s investment fund has had its bid for ASX renewable energy company Genex rejected as too low.Credit:Brent Lewin/Bloomberg

“However, the board is willing to constructively engage with the consortium to explore whether the consortium can submit a revised proposal that is capable of being recommended to Genex shareholders by the board,” the company said.

Genex Power is the only pure renewable energy and storage company on the local sharemarket, with a key asset being its Kidston pumped hydro storage project in far-north Queensland within its Kidston Renewable Energy Hub.

The company also operates solar, wind and battery storage projects in the state, while also managing the Jemalong solar project in NSW.

Billionaire suitor Farquhar – who started software giant Atlassian alongside fellow clean energy advocate Mike Cannon-Brookes – co-founded Skip Capital with his wife and former investment banker Kim Jackson, who now heads the fund, in 2017. The investment firm says it invests in high-growth technology companies and “future-aware infrastructure projects”.

Genex Power said it would now provide the bidding consortium with “certain limited due diligence information” to help submit a revised takeover offer for the company. The company said it had an attractive future with 100 megawatts of existing solar projects benefitting from currently high energy prices, while it had 300 megawatts of renewable energy storage under construction.

Genex Power's pumped hydro storage project repurposed the abandoned Kidston gold mine.

Genex Power’s pumped hydro storage project repurposed the abandoned Kidston gold mine.

The renewable company’s shares rose significantly after the takeover bid was announced at the start of last week, jumping from about 13¢ a share to 22¢ – a price not seen since October last year. Genex Energy shares were relatively unchanged on Monday after the company announced the bid had been politely rebuffed, eventually closing 2.3 per cent lower at 21¢ a share.

Categories
Technology

Explorations in UI/UX design: The link between technology & art | The Advertiser – Cessnock

Explorations in UI/UX design: The link between technology & art

As humankind continues to shape digital technologies to behave as an extension of their own almost instinctual thought processes, designing user interfaces has morphed from being perceived as a scientific process filled with linear pathways, to a more creative and perhaps even intuitive, multi-dimensional art form in its own right.

Admittedly, not all UX designers will readily refer to UI or UX design as an ‘art form’, particularly because there is a fair amount of behavioral psychology that goes into producing intuitive user interfaces.

Even so, there’s no denying that this branch of technological design requires just as much imagination and ‘outside-the-box’ thinking as it does require critical thought.

But how does UX differ from UI, and is it right to label either avenue as more technical or artistic as the other? We’ll be taking a closer look at these two interlinking disciplines in order to help Aussie students learn how best to hit the ground running when starting a career in either UX or UI design.

The role of the UX designer

While user interface design is isolated to creating two-dimensional or purely digital products, UX (or ‘user experience’) can involve developing both physical and digital creations.

Regardless of whether you’re building a physical product or digital interface, UX design projects are naturally concerned with maintaining a user-centric or ‘human-first approach’ to the design process.

This user-oriented process is what enables UX designers to produce structural design solutions that actively cater to user needs and address common user pain points that were observed in past implementations.

Simply put, it is the responsibility of the UX designer to use design theories in accordance with historical data and findings from user testing and prototyping to create the best possible technological solution to fulfill a set of defined user needs.

The preliminary stages of any UX design project will always involve the process of UX mapping. The nature of UX mapping generally requires user experience designers to also be good spatial thinkers, with an ability to map out and follow a wide selection of ‘pathways’.

As UX design also often involves connecting pre-existing pathways up to sections of an interface that’s still being developed, UX designers are also expected to think in the abstract on a regular basis.

If you possess the skills we’ve outlined above and hold a passion for the technical side of the design process, chances are you may just have what it takes to be a talented UX designer.

Dabbling in UI design & development

But what if you’re more passionate about the aesthetics of interactive elements over the formatting and functionality of those elements? Well then you’re likely to be more aligned with UI design over the highly technical process of UX design.

UI (or ‘user interface’) design is the yin to UX’s yang. The two processes work together in order for user interfaces to be highly user-friendly, both with regards to their structure and their presentation.

That being said, UI design does entail so much more than just fine-tuning color palettes. There are also elements of strategy behind good user interface design, with UI designers also tasked with pinpointing where best to include visual elements to enhance or draw user attention to specific functions.

For instance, mobile apps with swiping mechanics are likely to include a small animation to denote to users that they can swipe between pages. But what happens when a user swipes to the ‘end’ of a swipe side menu?

And what about what happens when users interact incorrectly with other navigational styles? UI designers are actually the ones who decide here. All the animations or small responsive actions created by your interactions with an app are likely to have been created by UI designers.

As UI designers are concerned with designing a user interface’s intuitive responses, typography, button design, imagery, and all other visual elements, UI design is generally considered to be a more ‘right-brained’ approach to digital design.

And whilst UI design is arguably less technical than UX, this design discipline still possesses its fair share of theory, including explorations within the realm of behavioral psychology.

The art of problem solving in UX/UI design

Believe it or not, but the way we interact with our digital interfaces says more about the human brain than it does our collective design thinking capabilities.

UX and UI design principles were actually developed to revolve around user behavior over user expectations, which is precisely why some user interfaces can feel like an extension of your mind and thought processes.

The whole mechanism of swiping down to move down a screen and vice versa is in itself, a natural response that the majority of human brains are likely to have.

Alongside this, designing in accordance with behavioral theories can also inspire users to perform certain actions both within and surrounding a user interface. A great example here is an app using emotive language or imagery to elicit a sympathetic response from users, or sending notifications with rhetorical questions or calls to action to inspire user engagement.

This is precisely the reason why many UX and UI designers believe that the process of interface design is far more scientific than it is artistic. And to be fair, they aren’t wrong here either.

Even so, there is a level of undeniable artistry in the way that both UX and UI designers go about solving user problems. Finding the most novel and still intuitive pathways in order to fulfill a user need or inspire a desired user interaction requires creative thinking just as much as it does critical thinking, which is why UX and UI design still fall under the umbrella of digital design rather than ‘development’.

How to get started in UX & UI

If human-first approaches to design sounds like a fascinating area of ​​study for you, then we highly encourage you to enroll in a UX or UI design course. There are an abundance of UI/UX courses available to students who are eager to learn, including both on-campus and online programs.

Alongside enrolling in tertiary courses, students can also take full advantage of all the physical and digital learning resources available to them.

There are a growing number of UX design blogs, digital magazines, and online forums that can be accessed anywhere in the world so that students can engage in self-study alongside seeking academic and professional opportunities.

As user interface and experience design are both fairly young disciplines that are growing rapidly alongside the digital transformation of global industries, there truly has never been a better time than now to start picking up these highly employable and highly ‘future-proof multidisciplinary skills.

Categories
Entertainment

Jamie Lee Curtis Absolutely Roasts Lea Michele In Viral Resurfaced Clip

A viral clip from 2021 is doing the rounds again in the midst of all the read Michele / Funny Girl hooplah.

In the clip, the glee star appeared on Jamie Lee Curtis’ podcast Good Friend with Jamie Lee Curtis.

The pair previously met when they starred on the second season of scream queens together.

Jamie asked about Lea starring in Spring Awakening on Broadway.

“Was the show nominated? [for a Tony]?” Jamie asked.

“We won eight Tony Awards,” Lea replied.

“But you didn’t, Lea,” Jamie fired back, with emphasis on you.

It’s as if she’s implying that Lea is quick to take credit for work that isn’t entirely hers.

It’s equal parts brutal and hilarious.

The moment was shared by podcaster Danny Pellegrino and at the time of reporting, it has 1.3 million views.

Lea Michele is set to take over from beanie feldstein as the lead in the Broadway musical Funny Girl v. soon.

Feldstein recently departed the lead role as Fanny Brice in the iconic Broadway musical following heinous reviews.

Her replacement was later announced as none other than controversial actress Lea Michele.

In the same announcement where it was revealed that Feldstein was being replaced, it was also revealed that Michele’s former glee Cost jane lynch (who played Coach Sue in the cursed series) was also leaving.

Following mass speculation from fans that Lynch had quit because she did not want to work with Michele again, after she infamously terrorized the glee set, Lynch has now released a statement.

“We have been in touch about it,” Lynch told Deadline when probed about Michele and her abrupt departure.

“You know, it was just a really strong idea to have Feldshuh and Lea premiere together. That’s the only reason [we won’t appear together.] I adore her. She’s just going to take this show and make it her own. I’m so glad she’s getting the opportunity in real life to do the show and not just on glee.

Sounds like a bunch of BS to me, but sure…

Her sudden departure the literal day that Michele was cast speaks volumes!

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Categories
Sports

Trade Whispers, Collingwood Magpies, Jamie Elliott, Melbourne Demons, Luke Jackson, Fremantle Dockers, Matthew Pavlich, Bailey Banfield, Dan McStay, Tim Taranto

Dockers great Matthew Pavlich claims Luke Jackson is Fremantle’s “answer for the future” and believes the club should be “going hard for him”.

Plus the Pies are confident on a new deal for a star for 2023 and beyond.

Get the latest player movement news and updates in AFL Trade Whispers!

Watch every blockbuster AFL match this weekend Live & Ad-Break Free In-Play on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

WHY JACKSON IS FREMANTLE’S ‘ANSWER’

Fremantle should be “going hard” for Luke Jackson, according to Dockers great Matthew Pavlich as he believes the 20-year-old is the “answer” for the future.

Jackson is out of contract at the end of this season, and has put talks on hold with the Demons. It’s fueled speculation he wants to return home to WA for 2023 and beyond.

While there’s plenty of debate over just how much the young ruckman is worth per season, with some estimates at $800,000, Pavlich says a partnership between Jackson and Sean Darcy is one Fremantle fans should get around.

“There’s the now and then there’s the future,” he said on SEN WA.

“The now, Luke Jackson would be a pretty good player in that Fremantle side. If you take out, I guess you’d have to give something to get something. So is it Rory Lobb for Luke Jackson? Is that part of the deal? I don’t know.

AFL investigating alleged racist slur | 00:24

“Whether he’s the answer right now, he’s a great player. We know what he’s capable of. He’s 20.

“In the context of young developing ruckmen, he’s a great young developing ruckman.

“Is he a great player yet? No. He’s got the potential to be a really great player.

“He’s the answer for the future. He can help Fremantle long-term.

“I would absolutely be going hard for him… him and Sean Darcy as a combination between ruck/forward – that’s a threat for a long time if you’re a Fremantle supporter.”

But what would the Dockers have to offer and where would Jackson fit into the line up?

Pavlich says Darcy would still remain the number one ruck in his eyes.

“What they miss is a dynamic leading forward at the moment,” he said.

“But if you wanted to look at Luke Jackson in a Fremantle jumper on Friday night then you’d take out something and it’d have to be one of the key forwards from the Fremantle line up.”

Despite all the contract talk surrounding Luke Jackson, Melbourne captain Max Gawn is confident his premiership teammate will knock back a huge offer to join Fremantle.

“Luke’s a talent and he’s got every right, as every player does, to look at any offer that’s coming his way,” Gawn told reporters on Monday.

“Most arrogant performance!” | 03:02

“I’m pretty confident he’s going to be a Melbourne player still and I know that’s very far from what the consensus is out in the media.

“He was the happiest person I’ve ever seen (last Friday night) beating Fremantle, who is the team that he’s supposed to be going to.

“I love playing with him, I love being his leader, I love being his friend, I love coaching him and I love seeing little bits that I’ve told him during the week come out on game day.

“I’m really excited, especially for the next seven weeks, to play with Luke and then hopefully for the next few years.”

Local fans in Perth taunted Melbourne players last Friday night by hanging a Fremantle jersey with “Jackson” written on it over the race. The jersey was snatched and then thrown away by Jackson’s teammate Jake Melksham.

FEET STAR SET TO LOCK IN NEW DEAL

Collingwood are looking to lock in Round 19 hero Jamie Elliott on a new deal for 2023 and beyond.

Elliott becomes an unrestricted free agent after 11 seasons with the club.

Magpies CEO Mark Anderson on Monday said he was pleased with progress on a new deal for Elliott.

“Discussions are going well with ‘Billy’,” Anderson said on SEN.

Bombers inflict more misery on Kangaroos | 01:11

“Graham Wright heads up that area and does a great job in that space.

“Discussions with Billy are going well.”

But he refused to be drawn into talk about potential offers for Lion Dan McStay or Giant Tim Taranto.

“We’re focused on our current playing group with four rounds to go,” he said.

“We’ve got a great list and they’re performing.

“So we are staying focused.

“We don’t talk about players at other clubs and it wouldn’t be appropriate to do so.”

Collingwood have a host of players out of contract including Jordan De Goey, the Brown brothers Callum and Tyler, Steele Sidebottom, Mason Cox and young Josh Carmichael.

FRINGE DOCKER URGED TO STAY PUT

Bailey Banfield is having a great season for the Dockers, and sits inside their top five goal scorers in 2022.

But the 24-year-old remains on the fringe, as an unused medi sub on five separate occasions and activated as the sub in other matches.

Round 20 MROnews | 00:43

WA commentator Tim Gossage argued Banfield would get a game at “four or five other clubs and play 20 games a year” if he left the Dockers in search of a more permanent role.

But Fremantle great Matthew Pavlich urged Banfield to “stick it out”.

“Would he get personal satisfaction and would he get a sense of purpose of being in a group and building and working his way into a team? No he would n’t (if he he left), ”Pavlich sad on SEN.

“He could go to, you’re right, half a dozen clubs, 12 clubs and be playing most weeks.

“But all his effort, his leadership, he’s rated really highly down there. It would not be necessarily worth his time if he chose to leave.

“He’s put all this effort in… I would stick it out but that’s just the way I look at those things.”

While statistics show Banfield has kicked 18 goals from 19 matches, he didn’t get on the field for five of those games.

Banfield was snapped up with pick five in the 2018 rookie draft after being named Claremont’s best and fairest in the WAFL in 2017.

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Categories
Australia

Victoria is in the thick of a COVID-19 surge. Here’s where authorities say we’re headed

Halfway through the year, and Victoria is in the grip of another COVID-19 wave.

It’s believed about half of people with the virus haven’t been officially recorded, leading to a worrying number of people in hospital during the state’s deadliest month on record.

But as the state inches out of winter, there are signs the worst could be behind us.

Here’s what authorities have had to say.

Only about half of cases are being reported to authorities

A group of pedestrians, all rugged up and several wearing masks, cross Flinders Street on a wet day.
The true number of COVID-positive people in the community could be about double the official number.(ABC News: Danielle Bonica)

Gone are the days when the number of people infected with COVID-19 each day dictated the level of public health measures in place across the state.

It is now estimated only about 45 per cent of people infected with the virus are officially reported to the Department of Health.

Authorities believe that it is due to a range of possible reasons — not everyone displays symptoms, not everyone with symptoms will test, the tests are not entirely sensitive, and not everyone who tests positive will report their test result.

“We don’t know what we don’t know,” Chief Health Officer Brett Sutton said.

“If people haven’t notified with a positive RAT to the department, we don’t know that they are COVID cases.”

About 10 per cent of the cases we do know about at the moment are people being infected for a second or third time, a much higher proportion than in the January Omicron arises.

“Maybe that doesn’t sound like a lot, but an additional 10 per cent burden for those who’ve already had an infection is quite significant,” Professor Sutton said.

But we appear to be past the peak of new infections

While the official infection rate may not be an accurate reflection of the exact number of people in the community with the virus, the Chief Health Officer is now optimistic of turning a corner.

“We’re certainly seeing a peak in our case numbers,” Professor Sutton said.

The seven-day average of new infections was last week 11,703, which had fallen on Monday to 10,199.

“We look to be on the downslope there with about a 10 per cent reduction in case numbers compared to last week, so that’s good news,” Professor Sutton said.

Hospitalizations are plateauing but tough times lie ahead

The state saw a significant spike in hospitalizations as winter took hold.

Burnet Institute modeling suggests one explanation for the recent spike is the number of cases going undiagnosed or unreported to the health department.

Once an infection is reported to authorities, Victorians can have access to a range of treatments and therapies which can significantly reduce the risk of serious illness.

“There’s too big a proportion of those presenting to hospital, clearly with COVID, and either testing positive on arrival either at the emergency department during their admission in hospital or as they’re arriving, who haven’t taken oral therapies,” Professor Sutton said.

Experts have repeatedly stressed that access to the antivirals at the start of infection is essential to slowing the illness.

The most recent modeling by the Burnet Institute suggested the state was approaching a peak of hospitalizations in early August, of between 900 and 1,000 patients in hospital with the virus.

But as case numbers have begun to decrease, Professor Sutton said the number of people in hospital was “plateauing, if not past the peak.”

He cautioned “the pressures on the health system will be substantial for some weeks to come.”

“Mask-wearing, meeting outdoors, ventilation, getting your vaccine if you’re eligible — they still make a difference on this downslope,” he said.

“So please see this through the lens of our healthcare workers who continue to battle at the frontline.”

Deaths are still surging, particularly in older Victorians

While the number of people in hospital is lower than in the January Omicron peak, July was the month with the highest COVID-related death toll since the pandemic began in both Victoria and the country.

Of the 4,661 deaths recorded in the state since the pandemic began, 3,050 were reported in 2022.

“We still do have a significant number of deaths, that average has gone up in recent weeks,” Professor Sutton said.

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Categories
US

A town’s housing crisis exposes a ‘house of cards’

HAILEY, Idaho — Near the private jets that shuttle billionaires to their opulent Sun Valley getaways, Ana Ramon Bartolome and her family have spent this summer living in the only place available to them: behind a blue tarp in a sweltering two-car garage.

With no refrigerator, the extended family of four adults and two young children keeps produce on plywood shelves. With no sink, they wash dishes and themselves at the nearby park. With no bedrooms, the six of them sleep on three single mattresses on the floor.

“I’m very anxious, depressed and scared,” said Bartolome, who makes her living tending to the homes of wealthy residents but cannot afford even the cheapest housing in the famous ski-and-golf playground.

Resort towns have long grappled with how to house their workers, but in places such as Sun Valley, those challenges have become a crisis as the chasm widens between those who have two homes and those who have two jobs. Fueled in part by a pandemic migration that has gobbled up the region’s limited housing supply, rents have soared over the past two years, leaving priced-out workers living in trucks, trailers or tents.

It is not just service workers struggling to hold on. A program director at the YMCA is living in a camper on a slice of land in Hailey. A high school principal in Carey was living in a camper but then upgraded to a tiny apartment in an industrial building. A City Council member in Ketchum is bouncing between the homes of friends and family, unable to afford a place of his own. A small-business owner in Sun Valley spends each night driving dirt roads into the wilderness, parking his box truck under the trees and settling down for the night.

The housing shortfall is now threatening to paralyze what had been a thriving economy and cherished sense of community. The hospital, school district and sheriff’s office have each seen prospective employees bail on job offers after realizing the cost of living was untenable. The Fire Department that covers Sun Valley has started a $2.75 million fundraising campaign to build housing for their firefighters.

Already, restaurants unable to hire enough service workers are closing or shortening hours. And the problems are starting to spread to other businesses, said Michael David, a Ketchum council member who has been working on housing issues for the past two decades.

“It’s kind of a house of cards,” he said. “It is close to toppling.”

Built as a destination ski resort to mirror the iconic winter appeal of the Alps, the Sun Valley area has grown into an exclusive enclave for the wealthy and famous, drawing Hollywood celebrities, political elites from Washington, DC, and business titans from Wall Street, many of whom gather each year for Allen & Co.’s annual media finance conference, known as the “summer camp for billionaires.” They have scooped up desirable vacation properties nestled next to winter ski lodges and summer golf courses, away from the gawking crowds of their home cities.

With the onset of the pandemic, the region saw an influx of wealthy buyers looking for a work-from-home destination with plentiful amenities, and the migration sent housing costs soaring even further. In Ketchum, the town next to Sun Valley, officials found that home prices shot up more than 50% over the past two years, with the median reaching about $1.2 million. Two-bedroom rentals went from less than $2,000 a month to more than $3,000. Those jolts came after two decades of minimal residential construction in the city and a dramatic shift in recent years that converted renter-occupied units into those that were either kept largely vacant by their owners or used as short-term rentals.

Similar trends are happening in resort towns across the Rocky Mountain West, including Jackson Hole, Wyoming; Aspen, Colorado; and Whitefish, Montana. Although some larger employers, including the Sun Valley Co., have developed dorm-style living options for seasonal workers, those have done little to change the housing trajectories for the broader communities.

People filed into a regional food bank in Bellevue, Idaho, one recent afternoon, ordering boxes of food from a warehouse stocked with cereal, fresh produce and Idaho potatoes. One family there said they were being evicted from the trailer park where they live because the land was going to be redeveloped. They had been unable to find a new place and were fearful about what was coming next.

The food bank has experienced a surge in demand in the past two years, serving about 200 families each week to nearly 500 with the number still climbing, said Brooke Pace McKenna, a leader at the Hunger Coalition, which runs the food bank.

“More and more, we are seeing the teachers, the policemen, the Fire Department,” McKenna said. Kayla Burton had grown up in the Sun Valley region and moved away after high school more than a decade ago. When she returned last year to take a job as a high school principal, she and her husband de ella, who is a teacher, were shocked at how hard it was to find a place to live. Home prices were spinning out of control, she said, even for places that were in desperate need of repairs. When rentals became available, the properties were flooded with applicants. The couple looked at trying to build their own place but found that the cost was far out of reach.

Burton and her husband moved into a camper on their parents’ property. The couple have since managed to find a unit inside an industrial building with no air conditioning, leaving them wondering if it is the kind of place where they would want to start a family.

“We are in this weird limbo spot in our lives right now,” she said.

With some job applicants unwilling to make the move, the region’s school district now has 26 job openings, some that have gone unfilled for months. The district is working on plans to develop seven affordable-housing units for employees.

Gretchen Gorham, co-owner of Johnny G’s Subshack sandwich shop in Ketchum, said that although it was vital to find housing for firefighters, teachers and nurses, she also worried about the many people who service vehicles, equipment and homes.

This year, Ketchum officials asked voters to approve a tax increase to fund affordable housing for hundreds of workers over the next 10 years. It did not pass.

“We live in a town of Wizard of Oz,” Gorham said. “People say one thing, and then behind a closed curtain, they’re doing another.”

Officials in the region have been reaching for Band-Aid solutions. In Hailey, city rules prohibit RVs from parking on private property for more than 30 days, but council members have agreed not to enforce those rules for now; as a result, RVs can be seen in driveways and side yards across town. In Ketchum, officials considered opening a tent city for workers but decided against the idea. So, in an area whose main asset is its spectacular wilderness, some people have taken refuge in the woods.

Aaron Clark, 43, who owns a window-washing business, lost his long-term rental this past spring when the landlord sold the property for well beyond what Clark could afford. Knowing the exorbitant cost of all the other options around him, Clark moved into the box truck he uses to shuttle his ladders and washing equipment.

Inside the truck, he has a bed and cabinets, and he recently added amenities such as a sink with running water and solar power. He also got a refrigerator, so he no longer has to keep restocking an icebox for his food from it. Out the back is a shower hose with heated water.

Each night, when he’s done working, he drives out into the wilderness to park for the night. One recent day, he found a spot at the end of a potholed dirt road, next to a stream, where he spent a bit of time assessing the cryptocurrency market on his computer and then played fetch with his dog. Clark said he had found joy in the lifestyle, which at least has allowed him to save for when he eventually reenters the housing market.

But it has its challenges.

“It is a drain, every day, deciding, ‘Where am I going to park, where am I going to go?’” he said. “You get off work, you are tired, you are hungry, you are dirty, and now you have to decide what you are going to do next.”

For the region’s many Latino workers, about one-fourth to one-half are living in difficult situations, said Herbert Romero, co-founder of the Hispanic LatinUS Leadership Task Force of Blaine County, a group that works with the community. He said he had seen up to 10 people living in two-bedroom mobile homes. Others are living on couches. Some have been living in vehicles.

Ricky Williams, 37, grew up in the region before moving away and starting a career in firefighting. A year ago, he and his wife planned to return to the Sun Valley area, anticipating a high cost of living but still unprepared for what they would find.

He recalled checking out one dilapidated home that was on the market for $750,000 — well beyond their budget with him as a full-time firefighter and his wife as a small-business owner — and there was a rush of potential buyers on the day it was available to see. He said the couple was lucky to get one of the Fire Department’s existing housing units, paying discounted rent to live next to a fire station in exchange for being on call outside regular work hours.

Williams said he feared what was becoming of his hometown as he watched people priced out and moving away.

“It’s affected so many of my friends and family,” he said. “I came back here to this community to give back to the community. And I kind of see it slowly drifting away. It’s pretty heartbreaking.”

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Big spinning machines remove constraints on wind and solar

It seems that the four big spinning machines, known as synchronous condensers, installed in South Australia last year are doing the job they were designed to do – freeing up wind and solar and slashing the need to have gas generators operating in the background.

The latest data from the Australian Energy Market Operator shows that constraints on wind and solar output have failed to their lowest level in more than three years, little more than one per cent of output, and South Australia has been the biggest beneficiary.

South Australia leads the world in the share of wind and solar for a gigawatt scale grid – 64 per cent of local demand in the last year alone – but output from its wind and solar farms was capped and often heavily constrained because of concerns about insufficient “ system strength” to ensure the grid was stable.

AEMO’s previous solution to the system strength issue was to instruct gas generators idled because the market price was too low when there was lots of wind and solar production, to switch on.

Those directions came thick and fast, and it was a costly exercise, but the problem has been addressed with the installation of four synchronous condensers – big spinning machines that act like thermal generators but without burning fuel.

That has freed the reigns on the output of solar and wind in particular in South Australia, which are now allowed to produce up to 2,500MW in certain conditions with as little as 80MW of gas generation in the background.

The latest Quarterly Energy Dynamics report from AEMO shows that curtailment for system strength issues has virtually disappeared in South Australia, taking overall constraints down to their lowest level since early 2019, when the average constraint across the main grid was more than 180MW.

Constraints do still happen – now mostly due to transmission congestion or other security issues – and this has also reduced (although transmission constraints are still up from the same time a year ago because of the increase in wind and solar production).

And transmission remains a major issue, because it is the lack of capacity in the network that is causing delays in new projects and connections. This is being addressed, albeit slowly, with the roll out of new renewable energy zones and AEMO’s Integrated System Plan.

AEMO says that as a proportion of available variable renewable generation (wind and solar), curtailment represented a NEM-wide average of 1.1% of potential output, its lowest level since the first quarter 2019, and well below the five per cent level reached in the third quarter of 2021.

Wind and solar farms are often constrained for economic reasons – some are required by their clients to switch off if wholesale market prices fall into negative territory – but this has not been recorded in the latest quarter by AEMO.

The cost of directions to gas generators also reduced significantly, from more than $37 million in South Australia in the final quarter of last year to just $5.7 million this year.

That’s also because the high cost of gas, which flowed through to the electricity markets, meant that gas generators were happy enough to switch on without being told to do so by the market operator.