logo
Wage increase for Australia's lowest-paid workers

Wage increase for Australia's lowest-paid workers

SBS Australia6 days ago

Major investment into domestic violence services as numbers surge
White House imposes fresh deadline on trade offers
Daria Kasatkina out of the French Open Listen to Australian and world news, and follow trending topics with SBS News Podcasts . The New South Wales government says more than half a billion dollars will go towards dealing with domestic violence as it increases spending on jails and courts. About half of the money is set aside for a $227 million injection into the state's victims support service to help victim-survivors access counselling and financial assistance. While advocates welcome the funding, some say it fails to address the reality that these services are stretched to breaking point. State Minister for the Prevention of Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault, Jodie Harrison, says the services will have more certainty around funding. "We're going to be providing the certainty and the continuity for those services through five-year contracts for the majority of them. We're also going to be working with the non-domestic violence specialist workforce. So, people outside the DV specialist workforce, to help them recognize and respond to, and refer people who are experiencing domestic and family violence." A landmark study has found more than one in three Australian men aged 18 to 65 have committed violence of some form against an intimate partner, in their lifetime. The report by the Australian Institute of Family Studies, which surveyed men and boys in 2013/14 and again in 2022, found a stark increase in the rate of abuse. Emotional abuse was the most common form of intimate partner violence, with 32 per cent of men in 2022 reporting they had made a partner feel frightened or anxious. Nine per cent reported physically abusing their partner. Mental ill health and poor father-son relationships are revealed as key factors that could contribute to men's violence against women. Social Services Minister Tanya Plibersek told ABC Radio National it is important to record these numbers. "The number of men who have ever used violence has increased from one in four to one in three. That equates to about 120,000 extra men every year in Australia using violence for the first time in intimate relationships, an obviously that's a trend that's going in the wrong direction." If you or someone you know needs support, you can seek 24-hour assistance by calling 1800 RESPECT. That's 1800 737 732. Australia's lowest-paid workers have been handed a 3.5 per cent wage increase by the Fair Work Commission. The change will impact one in five Australian workers on an award wage, from the 1st of July. The wage review panel came to the decision, after assessing submissions from the government and other stakeholders as part of the annual review process. Labor had pushed for an increase above the rate of inflation, which was 2.4 per cent at the end of March. Unions had been calling for a 4.5 per cent increase to the minimum wage, but the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry had cautioned against anything greater than a 2.5 per cent rise, saying it would impact businesses. The US Government has imposed a deadline for countries looking to do a deal over tariffs. The Trump administration has set tomorrow as the last day for nations to submit their best trade offers. The US President - Donald Trump - wants to lock off trade deals with multiple countries in the next five weeks. It's a tight turnaround for deals, after Mr Trump pressed pause on his Liberation Day tariffs on most countries for 90 days, triggering weeks of negotiations with trading partners. The latest talks are between the U-S and Italy, with US Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins, meeting with Italian counterpart Francesco Lollobrigida. Ms Rollins says the goal is to support American farmers importing products to Italy, while lowering barriers to trade for Italian producers. 'Our relationships with Italian buyers and consumers foster tens of billions of dollars in bilateral trade and investment. So American farmers and ranchers want to ensure that EU regulations do not get in the way of that mutually beneficial trade relationship between the United States and Italy." The US threatened to lay tariffs on European goods from June but has moved the deadline forward. Talks between Russia and Ukraine have not resulted in a ceasefire, with Ukraine saying Russian president Vladimir Putin is not interested in peace. The warring sides met for about an hour in Istanbul. They agreed to exchange more prisoners of war and return the bodies of 12,000 dead soldiers. Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy has asked United States President Donald Trump to impose stronger sanctions on Russia. "They said they're ready for a 2–3-day ceasefire to collect bodies from the battlefield. I think they're idiots, because the whole point of a ceasefire is to prevent people from being killed in the first place. Therefore, I really want our American partners to take strong steps to impose a package of sanctions and to pressure the Russians into a ceasefire with strong sanctions. They won't understand any other way." To sport, Daria Kasatkina has been eliminated from the French Open in a tough fourth round match against Russian teenage phenomenon Mirra Andreeva. The 17th seed went down at Roland Garros 6-3 7-5, the result making Andreeva the youngest player to reach back-to-back French Open quarterfinals in nearly three decades. Kasatkina had hoped to become the first Australian woman to reach the quarterfinals since Ash Barty's 2019 triumph, just two months since being granted permanent residency. But she says she has no regrets - especially because of the support she has received from tennis fans.
"I heard many times that Aussies were - I don't know if everyone who was screaming 'Aussie' was from Australia. But you know I felt this support. And on social media, I am getting a lot of support from the Australians that they are so happy to welcome me and are so happy for me."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How creative writing can aid healing process to create happy ending
How creative writing can aid healing process to create happy ending

ABC News

time37 minutes ago

  • ABC News

How creative writing can aid healing process to create happy ending

Renee Hayes was leading an "ordinary" suburban life when a back injury up-ended her plans, rendering her bed-bound. "I was an active 30-year-old who went from having a busy life to being stuck in bed for [six] months," she said. She had been working in a dental surgery in the Atherton Tablelands when one morning she woke in excruciating pain after a disc burst in her back. She tried countless options to manage the constant, chronic pain, but was ultimately unable to move or work, and the sudden changes in her life made it difficult to cope. "Anyone who has been in chronic pain knows it is incessant and it's very hard to escape from," she said. Hayes eventually found an escape in the written word. Initially, without a laptop, Hayes hand-wrote the first draft of her self-published fantasy trilogy, the Rim Walker series, while flat on her back. "After being stagnant for so long trying to heal, it felt like a gift and that I hadn't wasted that time," she said, reflecting on how writing gave her a fresh start. Now a published author of three novels, Hayes credits the creative writing process as a therapeutic outlet that allowed her to find joy again, despite the pain. "It helped me through an incredibly tough time mentally and physically and I no longer felt like I'd lost anything or life was punishing me." Creative writing expert Edwina Shaw isn't surprised. The writer, educator and tutor in the University of Queensland's creative writing department said the therapeutic benefits of writing went far beyond the stereotypical journalling exercise. "It's about using the craft of writing to create something beautiful from the pain, trauma or loss someone has suffered," she said. She said research had shown that the process of handwriting was very calming on the body and a subduer of our stress systems, while creativity was "a natural calmer of the vagus nerve". She said writing could help to avoid internalising powerful emotions such as anger, which was associated with experiences of grief or trauma. "We need to separate ourselves from what's happening in our lives and reframe the way we think about it," she said. "Creative writing can help us do that, whether writing a poem, a song, a novel or even writing comedy." That was singer-songwriter Greta Stanley's experience when she lost her home and contents in the December 2023 flood that ripped through Far North Queensland. "Songwriting was a big part of my healing process, 100 per cent," Stanley said. At the time, she felt lost, anxious and completely overwhelmed, was trying to manage a debilitating autoimmune disease and write her third album. Stanley said she tried meditation, reiki healing, a therapist and even a visit to a psychic to help her manage her mental health and chronic pain, but songwriting was the most cathartic outlet. Stanley, 27, said using the lyrics as a tool to express herself on the album about navigating mental health gave her hope. "The album has definitely been my way of putting all the noise and stuff going on in my head, into something that makes sense for me." But creative writing expert Ms Shaw said the writing did not have to be an autobiographical piece to be effective, and acknowledged that for some, that would be too confronting. "Sometimes life is too close or too hard to write about it as yourself, so you can invent a character … and give your experience to someone else … change the ending." Canberra-based widow Emma Grey took that approach in her novel after the death of her husband Jeff. "I found incredible comfort in writing about grief and it was a very cathartic process for me." She said using writing to navigate the trauma of losing her husband allowed her to manage the myriad of feelings that would creep up, often without warning, and channel them into something "useful". The Last Love Note, her novel written while grieving, sold more than 100,000 copies in the United States alone, becoming a beacon of hope for many who had lost loved ones, Grey said. "I have since been inundated with messages from around the world from readers sharing their stories of loss and how my novel helped them through tough times," she said.

Queensland government to begin social housing rent reviews to free up spaces for those in 'most need'
Queensland government to begin social housing rent reviews to free up spaces for those in 'most need'

ABC News

timean hour ago

  • ABC News

Queensland government to begin social housing rent reviews to free up spaces for those in 'most need'

Social housing recipients in Queensland earning more than they should will soon be evicted from their homes to make way for new tenants. The state government claims there are some recipients earning well above the income limit that determines who is eligible for social housing. This includes a couple in Brisbane taking home more than $200,000 a year while paying less than $200 a week to live in their social housing unit. The government says another family in Townsville is paying less than $190 per week in rent despite earning an annual income of more than $160,000. From July 1, the government will launch annual rent reviews to determine if social housing recipients are still within the income limit. In Queensland, the income limit for a single person with no children is $609 per week, while for a couple it is set at $755. Tenants pay 25 per cent of their income. Those who are found to earn more than the limit will be charged at market rental rates, before they are evicted and transitioned to other housing options. Tenants who are within the housing limit but not paying 25 per cent of their income will have their rent increased, but the increase will be capped at $15 per week. Housing Minister Sam O'Connor said the government wants to make social housing available for vulnerable people and families. "We're empowering our housing officers to do what they do best — support the Queenslanders who most need a roof over their heads," he said. "These are long overdue changes to fix the system so it's better targeted to help the people who need housing most." In a bid to free up properties that are underoccupied, the government will also introduce a scheme to incentivise tenants to downsize to smaller social homes. The government hopes this will allow more families to move into social housing. The incentives will include rent free periods, as well covering the costs of removalists. The government estimates thousands of bedrooms in the state's social housing stock are vacant. About 50,000 people were on Queensland's social housing register as of December last year.

Teens with machetes send Melbourne shops into lockdown
Teens with machetes send Melbourne shops into lockdown

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Teens with machetes send Melbourne shops into lockdown

A group of teens armed with machetes left shoppers 'terrified' at a Melbourne mall which was forced into lockdown last week. Footage of the incident showed store owners shutting doors and customers taking cover as up to six boys, some wearing masks, brawled at Caroline Springs Shopping Centre on Friday. It came just a week after the Victorian government fast-tracked a ban on the sales of machetes, following a shocking brawl at another shopping centre in Preston in May. Witnesses to Caroline Springs incident spoke of being 'extremely terrified' as the teens argued before squaring up with large knives. Pawan Kaur, who runs a cafe at the centre in Melbourne's west, was behind the counter when the brawl broke out about 6.40pm. 'I was so scared, like my heartbeat go … I just quickly go and shut my cafe and tell the staff 'don't leave'.' Another store owner, Hung Nguyen, urged the government to strengthen laws after yet another public display of violence. 'They just pulled out from their backpack a long knife, like a machete, and they just started fighting,' he said. No one has been charged over the incident so far, and no injuries were reported. Youth crime in the state has been thrust back into the spotlight in recent weeks after a string of high-profile incidents. Victoria's ban on machete sales was introduced on May 28, three days after a wild brawl at Northlands Shopping Centre during which teens used machetes. The state is due to outlaw possession of the knives in September, becoming the first state in Australia to do so. In announcing the ban on sales, Premier Jacinta Allan said 'we must never let places we meet become places we fear'. 'I hate these knives, and I will keep introducing as many laws as it takes to get them off our streets, out of our shops and out of our lives,' she said. Police Minister Anthony Carbines said the government's move had followed previous efforts in introducing 'Australia's toughest bail laws'. He said they were also 'toughening bail for knife crimes and expanding random knife search powers'. 'The community shouldn't have to deal with these weapons in their shopping centres. Neither should our police.' Victoria Police announced on Friday morning, hours before the Caroline Springs brawl, that it was on track to seize a record number of knives in 2025. Officers confiscated 6,876 edged weapons in 2025 – about 44 per day – putting it on track to beat 2024's haul of 14,805. Police were also targeting youth gang members as part of proactive operations, with Forest Hill Superintendent Matt Baynes saying officers worked quickly to identify those involved in public violence. 'While recent changes to machete laws will help choke the supply and double the penalties for possessing these weapons, the community should be assured police continue to relentlessly remove knives from the hands of criminals.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store