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Program gives Indigenous kids free life-changing surgery

Program gives Indigenous kids free life-changing surgery

The Age5 days ago
Dozens of Aboriginal children in Perth's southern suburbs have avoided long waitlists to undergo free life-changing grommet surgery.
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Labor told 'implied carbon prices', fixing broken renewables approvals key to lowering emissions in Productivity Commission report
Labor told 'implied carbon prices', fixing broken renewables approvals key to lowering emissions in Productivity Commission report

Sky News AU

time9 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

Labor told 'implied carbon prices', fixing broken renewables approvals key to lowering emissions in Productivity Commission report

A new report from the Productivity Commission has called on Labor to introduce reforms which would produce a similar effect to an "enduring, national carbon price". The interim report, titled: "Investing in cheaper, cleaner energy and the net zero transformation", is part of a series requested by Treasurer Jim Chalmers ahead of the Albanese government's economic roundtable. In it, the Productivity Commission warns the government must move to address "the gaps and overlaps in emissions reduction incentives, speed up approvals for clean energy infrastructure, and create a resilience-rating system for all housing to meet our clean energy targets and adapt to climate change". By doing so, the report says Labor will be able to both lower the cost of cutting emissions, while also maximising the opportunities presented by the energy transition to boost the economy. The Commission places heavy emphasis on a market-based approach, arguing both the Renewable Energy Target and the Capacity Investment Scheme, both central to Labor's net zero agenda, be scrapped in favour of direct incentives in the electricity sector. It also calls for the creation of a new independent agency which would determine a set of "carbon values" against which all emissions reduction policies would be assessed. The agency would set "carbon values" based on the "implied carbon prices" needed to meet Australia's emissions. By doing so, the Commission argues Australia could meet its internationally agreed climate targets at the lowest possible cost. "Our recommendations align with many of the benefits conferred by a broad-based, enduring, national carbon price – a policy that many, including the PC, have consistently argued for," the report said. In addition to factoring in the price of carbon while assessing emissions reduction plans, the report also calls for major reforms to the approval process for renewables projects. "We need to build a large amount of clean energy infrastructure to meet climate targets and ensure reliable and affordable energy supply. But our sluggish and uncertain approval processes are not up to the task," Commissioner Martin Stokie said. "Getting to yes or no quicker on priority projects would meaningfully speed up the clean energy transition." The Commission argues for substantive changes to the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act, including the introduction of national environmental standards, improved regional planning and clear rules about engaging with local communities and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. It also recommends the appointment of an independent Clean Energy Coordinator-General to work across government and break through roadblocks, as well as the creation of a "strike team" to rapidly asses priority projects. Other recommendations included in the report include an increase to the number of facilities covered by Labor's emissions reduction program for industry, the Safeguard Mechanism, and the abolishment of a fringe benefits tax exemption for electric vehicles.

Sue-Anne Hunter: New role to close the gap after Garma Festival reveals ‘grim' statistics on youth in prison
Sue-Anne Hunter: New role to close the gap after Garma Festival reveals ‘grim' statistics on youth in prison

West Australian

time10 hours ago

  • West Australian

Sue-Anne Hunter: New role to close the gap after Garma Festival reveals ‘grim' statistics on youth in prison

The nation's first Commissioner for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children has described the task ahead as 'urgent' and statistics around Indigenous incarceration as 'grim.' Sue-Anne Hunter, a Wurundjeri and Ngurai Illum Wurrung woman, social worker and member of Victoria's truth-telling Commission, was appointed on Sunday night, to be a voice for children and young people. She said she was honoured. 'I recognise that we are at risk of losing another generation to systems that fail them, to removal, out of home care detention and a bleak future,' Ms Hunter said. 'The work is urgent and the statistics are grim. But our children are not statistics, they are our future. This role will elevate their voices and their concerns. They will be at the centre of everything I do.' At the annual Garma Festival on Saturday, Anthony Albanese was confronted over the high rate of imprisonment of indigenous youth in the Northern Territory. 'Don't be here to think your attendance here is enough,' Yothu Yindi Foundation chief executive Denise Bowden told the Prime Minister. National statistics show Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children are more than 10 times more likely to be in out-of-home care and 27 times more likely to be in youth detention. Minister for Indigenous Australians Malarndirri McCarthy called the status quo 'deeply distressing' and unacceptable. 'Under the National Agreement on Closing the Gap all governments have committed to reducing these rates, and states and territories must redouble their efforts,' she said.

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