logo
As it happened: Brisbane on Wednesday, July 30

As it happened: Brisbane on Wednesday, July 30

The Age2 days ago
Key posts
1.47pm Falling inflation points towards interest rate cut
11.21am The Wiggles' Tree of Wisdom to take centre stage in Brisbane
11.16am 'Still come to school': Education Minister promises student safety during teacher strike
11.03am Qld minister under 'conflict management plan' over husband's Queen's Wharf role
10.14am Parents urged to keep their kids home as teachers prepare to strike
10.01am 'It's going, it's ...': Queensland rocket meets fiery end
9.32am Cache of guns, child exploitation material allegedly found in hoarder's den
9.01am Kids who show up at school during strike will be supervised
Hide key posts
Go to latest
Qld minister under 'conflict management plan' over husband's Queen's Wharf role
By
The husband of Queensland's Assistant Finance Minister was appointed secretary of the consortium behind Brisbane Queen's Wharf development earlier this year, estimates hearings have revealed.
But Finance Minister Ros Bates has rebuffed questions about any conflict of interest involving her deputy.
Lawyer Adam Stoker – the husband of Assistant Finance Minister Amanda Stoker – was appointed in April as the secretary for two companies: Destination Brisbane Consortium Integrated Resort Holdings Pty Ltd and Destination Brisbane Consortium Integrated Resort Operations Pty Ltd.
The consortium, which comprises the embattled Star Entertainment Group, Hong Kong-based Chow Tai Fook Enterprises and Far East Consortium, is behind the massive Queen's Wharf development fronting the Brisbane River.
Loading
Bates was quizzed during today's budget estimates hearings by shadow treasurer Shannon Fentiman about her role in negotiations around the financial position of Queen's Wharf.
Company extract information from the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, tabled by Fentiman, shows Adam Stoker was appointed to the roles on April 28.
Bates repeatedly declined to directly answer whether she knew of the 'huge conflict of interest', but said 'a conflict management plan is in place, and the assistant minister has had no contact [with the companies involved].'
3.22pm
Former MP looks set to keep top development job
By Matt Dennien
Former federal Liberal MP Julian Simmonds will likely be made the permanent chief executive of the Queensland government's property development agency, Economic Development Queensland – without any formal recruitment process.
Simmonds, who sat on Brisbane's LNP city council for nine years before his term as the federal member for Ryan, was given the role in an acting capacity in April after his predecessor Debbie McNamara's resignation.
Deputy Opposition Leader Cameron Dick used much of his time in today's estimates hearings to quiz both Simmonds and State Development Department director-general John Sosso, whose role places him on the EDQ board.
Simmonds said that, while he could not recall the timeline, he approached Deputy Premier Jarrod Bleijie's chief of staff to express his interest in the role and was told to speak to board chair Brendan O'Farrell.
Sosso, a veteran public servant of LNP governments whose recent appointment to a group responsible for the redistribution of state electorates sparked impartiality concerns from Labor, said O'Farrell then recommended Simmonds for the job, 'satisfied that his skill set and personality would be advantageous to the future success of EDQ'.
Asked whether a national executive recruitment process for the role had begun, Sosso said it had not, and that based on Simmond's current performance and unanimous support of the board, he may be appointed permanently 'without further advertisement' in coming months.
Before Simmonds' appointment to the public agency role, he was the executive director of Australians for Prosperity, which ran attack ads against federal and state Labor governments.
2.05pm
'Build, baby, build': Bleijie apes Trump at estimates hearing
By Matt Dennien
Today's estimates hearings have moved on from Ros Bates to the varied portfolios of Deputy Premier Jarrod Bleijie.
The minister for state development; infrastructure and planning; and industrial relations is no stranger to performance – both in and outside parliament.
So it was that the staunch monarchist tried his best impression of US President Donald Trump in summing up his introductory comments for the state development portfolio.
Loading
'If I were to sum up the role of the department of state development, it is this: build, baby, build. And we will,' Bleijie said, aping Trump's 'drill, baby, drill' slogan calling for a boost to oil and gas production.
Bleijie used his appearance today to make a range of announcements, declaring the North Harbour site at Burpengary, north of Brisbane, a priority development area, and providing further detail of the looming CFMEU Commission of Inquiry.
Terms of reference for that inquiry have now been finalised, Bleijie said, with the expected 12-month probe to consider evidence of, and allegations around, the 'systemic nature' of misconduct involving the current and former union leadership.
Any involvement of organised crime or other criminal elements will feature, as will irregularities in the union's financial dealings and the impact of any misconduct on the productivity of specific projects, the construction industry in general, and the wider economy.
Falling inflation points towards interest rate cut
By Shane Wright
Lower than expected inflation figures just released points to the Reserve Bank delivering an interest rate cut next month.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics this morning reported that headline inflation was 0.7 per cent in the June quarter, taking the annual rate down to 2.1 per cent. It had been 2.4 per cent in the March quarter.
The important measures of underlying inflation showed a 0.6 per cent increase in the quarter, with the annual rate easing to 2.7 per cent.
The underlying inflation result was the lowest since December 2021.
In announcing a surprise decision not to cut rates earlier this month, Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock noted that these quarterly inflation numbers would be a key factor in determining when home buyers would enjoy further interest rate relief.
12.53pm
Magnitude 8.7 earthquake in Russia sparks tsunami warnings
A powerful magnitude 8.7 earthquake struck off Russia's Far Eastern Kamchatka Peninsula on Wednesday, generating a tsunami of up to 4 metres, prompting evacuations and damaging buildings, officials said.
A Russian official said a tsunami with a wave height of between 3m and 4m was recorded in parts of the Kamchatka region.
The Japanese government raised its tsunami alert and issued an emergency warning. It said it expected a tsunami as high as 3m to arrive at large coastal areas along the Pacific Ocean.
The US National Tsunami Warning Centre, based in Alaska, issued a warning for parts of the Alaska Aleutian Islands, and a watch for portions of the West Coast, including California, Oregon, and Washington, and Hawaii. The advisory also includes a vast swath of Alaska's coastline.
12.51pm
Chalmers celebrates 'absolutely outstanding' inflation numbers
By Brittany Busch
Treasurer Jim Chalmers is celebrating the latest inflation figures, which mark the lowest annual inflation rate in four years and mounts pressure on the Reserve Bank to deliver an interest rate cut in the next fortnight.
'These are very pleasing, very welcome, absolutely outstanding inflation numbers when you consider how far Australians have come together in this defining fight against inflation,' he told reporters in Canberra.
'When we came to office, headline inflation was three times higher than what it is in these numbers today.'
The Australian Bureau of Statistics reported this morning that headline inflation had fallen from 2.4 per cent in the March quarter to 2.1 per cent in the June quarter.
Chalmers said key metrics of inflation have all come down.
'This is the lowest inflation in almost four years.'
11.21am
The Wiggles' Tree of Wisdom to take centre stage in Brisbane
By Brittney Deguara
Fans of The Wiggles' energetic Tree of Wisdom will be pleased to hear he's headlining a show in Brisbane.
The iconic children's group have announced a new Australian tour at the end of the year, but there's just one Brisbane show on the schedule.
The show celebrates Dominic Field's viral Tree of Wisdom character.
'The Tree of Wisdom started as a bit of fun, but what's blown me away is how much people, young and old, have embraced the character,' said Anthony Field (the blue Wiggle).
The Wiggles' Tree of Wisdom Arena Tour will be taking over the Brisbane Entertainment Centre on December 6, with tickets available via presale from today, and general sale from Friday.
In other Wiggles-related news, the group's chief executive, Kate Chiodo, was recently sent by YouTube to lobby the federal government over its social media ban, after it was announced the video website would be off limits for children under 16 in Australia.
11.16am
'Still come to school': Education Minister promises student safety during teacher strike
By Felicity Caldwell
Education Minister John-Paul Langbroek has promised students who turn up to state schools during next week's teacher strike will be safe and supervised.
It comes as the Queensland Teachers' Union has asked parents to keep their children at home as members go on strike for the first time in 16 years.
There are more than half a million students who attend state primary and high schools in Queensland.
Speaking from Caloundra this morning, Langbroek said the Education Department and principals would make sure there would be adequate supervision for children at schools.
'Your children are our number one priority when it comes to safety,' he said.
And despite the union urging parents to keep their kids at home, the minister says they should go to school.
'Students will be safe, they'll be supervised, and we're encouraging students to still come to school,' Langbroek said.
11.03am
Qld minister under 'conflict management plan' over husband's Queen's Wharf role
By Matt Dennien
The husband of Queensland's Assistant Finance Minister was appointed secretary of the consortium behind Brisbane Queen's Wharf development earlier this year, estimates hearings have revealed.
But Finance Minister Ros Bates has rebuffed questions about any conflict of interest involving her deputy.
Lawyer Adam Stoker – the husband of Assistant Finance Minister Amanda Stoker – was appointed in April as the secretary for two companies: Destination Brisbane Consortium Integrated Resort Holdings Pty Ltd and Destination Brisbane Consortium Integrated Resort Operations Pty Ltd.
The consortium, which comprises the embattled Star Entertainment Group, Hong Kong-based Chow Tai Fook Enterprises and Far East Consortium, is behind the massive Queen's Wharf development fronting the Brisbane River.
Loading
Bates was quizzed during today's budget estimates hearings by shadow treasurer Shannon Fentiman about her role in negotiations around the financial position of Queen's Wharf.
Company extract information from the Australian Securities and Investments Commission, tabled by Fentiman, shows Adam Stoker was appointed to the roles on April 28.
Bates repeatedly declined to directly answer whether she knew of the 'huge conflict of interest', but said 'a conflict management plan is in place, and the assistant minister has had no contact [with the companies involved].'
10.14am
Parents urged to keep their kids home as teachers prepare to strike
By Felicity Caldwell
Queensland parents are being encouraged to keep half a million state primary and high school students at home next Wednesday as teachers walk out.
About 95 per cent of Queensland Teachers' Union members voted to walk off the job for 24 hours on Wednesday next week amid negotiations over pay and conditions with the state government.
This morning, the union urged Queenslanders to 'stand with us at this crucial time', arguing schools were critically understaffed and teachers and school leaders were burning out.
'If you have children, please keep them at home on Wednesday,' the union said on social media.
'We do not do this lightly. We have been left with no choice, because education in this state is at breaking point.'
Loading
The union said the government's offer showed little respect for teachers' essential work and would reduce them to some of the lowest paid in Australia.
'The state government's offer, if accepted, would compound an already critical teacher shortage,' the union's statement says.
Yesterday, an Education Department spokeswoman said it was focused on maintaining safe, operational schools and minimising disruption for students and staff.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Copper mine closure shocks Mount Isa with thousands of jobs at risk
Copper mine closure shocks Mount Isa with thousands of jobs at risk

7NEWS

time9 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

Copper mine closure shocks Mount Isa with thousands of jobs at risk

A historic chapter has ended, with Glencore's copper mine shutting down after seven decades of operation. Just before midnight on Wednesday, workers emerged from nearly two kilometres underground for the final time in Mount Isa, Queensland. The deepest mine of its kind in the country is no longer financially viable to run, according to the Swiss-based operator. 'A lot of people, I'm sure it'll be a sad time, but it'll be a good time for them as well, new beginnings,' one miner told 7NEWS. 'It's going to impact the town big time,' said another. 'But life moves on. I know mine is.' As one worker shouted from a car window: 'All over. Woohoo!' About 500 people have lost their jobs. Some are relocating. 'I'm moving ... going down to work at a new mine in the Northern Territory,' said one miner. 'There's people who've been here 20, 30 years,' another added. 'It's sad for them, but a chance to retire and move on.' What the closure means for Mount Isa The city has long been tied to mining. Local businesses are already feeling the change. 'A lot of the people who've lost their jobs are locals who've been here a long time,' Robert Burow from Colonial Convenience Store said. Mount Isa's population dropped 18 per cent between 2001 and 2021, now sitting around 19,000. City leaders expect further decline if more operations close. Property prices have taken a hit, but not everyone is rushing to leave. 'We're at the lowest amount of properties for sale that we've seen since 2013,' real estate agent Kieran Tully said. Smelter future in doubt with 17,000 jobs at risk Attention has now turned to Glencore's copper smelter, Mount Isa's last major employer, and the Townsville refinery it supplies. As the company reviews their future, up to 17,000 jobs across North Queensland could be affected. Mayor Peta Macrae warned Mount Isa's 'economic ecosystem would enter a death spiral' without it. A delegation is in Canberra calling for urgent federal support. 'It's five minutes to midnight,' Townsville Enterprise CEO Claudia Brumme-Smith said. 'We need a deal between the government, the state government and Glencore — right now.' 'Towns and cities are really facing peril if we don't save this,' Katter's Australia Party Leader and Traeger MP Robbie Katter said. Mount Isa turns to tourism and tech The city is now eyeing a shift toward tourism, agriculture and technology. 'While one chapter is certainly drawing to a close, our future is still very healthy,' Councillor Dan Ballard said. 'We are optimistic,' Renee Johnstone from Bambino Espresso said. 'I've seen this sort of thing before in the town. It's out of our control, so we just have to stay positive.' There are concerns fewer residents could mean reduced demand for essential services like health and education. But Queensland Education Minister John-Paul Langbroek assured 'there'll be no reduction and no intended reduction of funding.' 'This is not about a company or politics,' Glencore employee Cameron Gibson said. 'It's about saving a community. It's about saving rural and remote Australia.'

Tech firm Atlassian axes 150 staff over video, says they won't be replaced by AI
Tech firm Atlassian axes 150 staff over video, says they won't be replaced by AI

Herald Sun

time9 hours ago

  • Herald Sun

Tech firm Atlassian axes 150 staff over video, says they won't be replaced by AI

Aussie tech firm Atlassian has come under fire for axing 150 staff while shelling out tens of millions of dollars on its F1 title sponsorship. Billionaire CEO and founder Mike Cannon-Brookes appeared in a pre-recorded video to staff, announcing 150 of them – including 44 in Australia – would be losing their jobs. Cannon-Brookes appeared dressed in a hoodie and speaking from his home office in the video - which was titled 'Restructuring the CSS Team: A Difficult Decision for Our Future' - in an address some staff felt was 'frank and cold'. Reports from staff claimed termination emails arrived for the unlucky staff 15 minutes later, as their laptops were blocked from company systems. The cuts are understood to be to customer service roles, with Atlassian claiming improvements to its systems meant there would be fewer complaints to deal with. A statement from the Sydney-based tech firm said the 'roles are not being replaced by AI'. 'We made this decision after implementing improvements to the customer experience across our platform and tools, resulting in a significant reduction in support needs,' the statement said. 'While we're proud of this momentum, it leaves us with more capacity than needed to deliver strong customer support. 'These improvements include reducing the time spent on support tickets with more efficient ways to route work to the right experts who can resolve issues more quickly, better identification and resolution of error codes and more.' Atlassian said sacked staff would receive 'a generous severance package, healthcare benefits for them and their families, six months access to our EAP and mental health services, visa support if needed, internal mobility and outplacement services'. The video came hours after co-founder Scott Farquhar was praising the benefits of AI during a National Press Club of Australia address. 'The scale of the opportunity and risks of missing out demand a new kind of partnership – one that moves at the speed of technology, not at the speed of bureaucracy,' he said. When asked about the job cuts, Mr Farquhar said there 'will be jobs changes' as a result of AI but 'if, as a nation we want to stick and have the jobs of the past, that is not a good plan for us'. 'In these times, or any time, we should be helping our employees to make the transition at a company level but also at a national level,' he said. 'Particularly in Australia, I feel very privileged and blessed that we live in a nation that has a very strong social safety net and very strong skill training and opportunities for our people to re-skill into new areas.' The news of the axings was met online with contempt from tech workers, who lambasted the move as 'out of touch', with others criticising Mr Cannon-Brookes for buying a private jet. 'Using AI for business support is kinda stupid, one lost customer could cost way more,' said one disgruntled user. 'The billions they make personally means they could just absorb those 150 heads easily without them even putting a bump on their bottom line,' said another. 'If you have the cash to sponsor an F1 team and then sack people you're an asshole.' The company has not revealed what it paid for its 10-year stake in UK-based Atlassian Williams Racing, but marketing experts say a title sponsorship generally costs upwards of $90m a year. The deal means Atlassian's logo has been splashed on the FW47 race cars being driven by Alex Albon and Carlos Sainz, meaning it will be seen by a television audience of more than 1.55 billion viewers, plus billions more online. Atlassian has been contacted for comment. Shares in Atlassian, which is listed on the US-based Nasdaq, dipped 1.44 per cent after news of the job cuts broke, trading at $197.19 on Thursday, down from $200.05 on the previous day's market close. Despite the cuts, the company was still advertising 345 open positions globally on Thursday morning. It employs more than 13,000 people worldwide. Atlassian is scheduled to release its full-year results next Thursday. The company is currently building a new Australian headquarters near Sydney's Central Station, which it will house the bulk of its local staff. Other staff work remotely across Australia. Originally published as Atlassian savaged for 'frank and cold' video sacking as company spends millions on F1 sponsorship

NeuroScientific locks in deal to scale-up stem cell production
NeuroScientific locks in deal to scale-up stem cell production

Sydney Morning Herald

time11 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

NeuroScientific locks in deal to scale-up stem cell production

Perth-based stem cell therapy pioneer NeuroScientific Biopharmaceuticals has started transferring its patented StemSmart process to one of Australia's biggest and most experienced cell therapy manufacturers to scale up clinical-grade production. Queensland-based Q-Gen Cell Therapeutics will take over the manufacturing of StemSmart's specific mesenchymal stromal stem cells (MSC) from Royal Perth Hospital's Cell and Tissue Centre. NeuroScientific says the technology transfer will allow it to establish MSC manufacturing for its StemSmart infusions for further clinical trials and pursue commercial opportunities. The MSC technology was developed as a last-line infusion treatment for critically ill patients, including those experiencing severe immune complications from bone marrow transplants, kidney and lung transplant rejection and inflammatory Crohn's disease. 'This relationship will allow the company to scale the manufacturing of its StemSmart technology.' NeuroScientific Biopharmaceuticals chief executive officer Nathan Smith NeuroScientific acquired the StemSmart technology in late June via its $4.1 million acquisition of unlisted Perth-based stem cell company Isopogen. Isopogen had previously signed a manufacturing contract with QIMR Berghofer, under which Q-Gen undertook manufacturing process development to scale up clinical-grade production of the StemSmart platform. Q-Gen, located in QIMR in Brisbane, has more than 25 years of experience in cell therapy manufacturing for industry. The laboratory specialises in manufacturing cellular immunotherapies for national and international clinical trials from 13 cleanrooms dedicated to cell manufacturing and quality control. NeuroScientific Biopharmaceuticals chief executive officer Nathan Smith said: 'We are very pleased to be partnering with Q-Gen given their extensive experience in manufacturing, process development and GMP production of biologic products for clinical trials. This relationship will allow the company to scale the manufacturing of its StemSmart technology to address substantial market opportunities.' StemSmart offers a step up from traditional MSC manufacturing in that the cells are grown in a special medium, becoming activated in the process. The platform technology was developed at Royal Perth Hospital and manufactured using the hospital's processes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store