logo
The little-known Centrelink hack that allows some Aussies to get free flights

The little-known Centrelink hack that allows some Aussies to get free flights

Daily Mail​06-08-2025
A university student has lifted the lid on a little-known Centrelink hack to help those studying away from home.
Lea Šimić, 20, left her family in Sydney to study at the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts in Perth three years ago.
Although she was determined to go to the world-renowned school, which boasts alumni like Hugh Jackman, she was worried about being separated from her family and the high cost of flights across the country.
However, she couldn't pass up the opportunity to study at WAAPA—especially as it offered a directing component to undergraduate students, a rarity.
Fortunately, last year she discovered Centrelink Fares Allowance.
As Ms Šimić receives a Centrelink allowance, she can claim the cost of flying to Perth at the start of the academic year, back to Sydney at the end, and a return flight in between.
The allowance is available to those who receive Youth Allowance, Austudy, or the Pensioner Education Supplement for more than three months a year.
'To have the option to see your family and a reminder of why you're doing these programs, I think it's really beneficial,' Ms Šimić told Yahoo.
Those who receive eligible Centrelink payments less than three months a year can only claim two flights, one to their place of study and one home.
Ms Šimić recently used the Fare Allowance to claim back a $600 flight from Sydney to Perth.
While she tries her best to book flights in advance, she said one-way fares across the country can cost more than $1,000.
Services Australia will also reimburse the cost of standard luggage fees, in addition to 'the least expensive and most available' transport.
That includes people taking public transport back to their university.
It could apply to claiming the cost of a train trip from your home to the airport on top of the airfare.
It could also be used to reimburse the cost of taking a train from Sydney to Bathurst, a nearly four-hour trip.
Ms Šimić is glad she accepted her position at WAAPA as it opened 'so many avenues and opportunities' and is still able to regularly see her family.
'Being able to come back and forth was really vital for me, because I have a very close connection to my family, and they're part of the reason why I want to create a very specific art,' she said.
'Centrelink has definitely helped me out in that regard.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘You can't run a certification based on vibes' – does B Corp still signal a business that cares?
‘You can't run a certification based on vibes' – does B Corp still signal a business that cares?

The Guardian

time9 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘You can't run a certification based on vibes' – does B Corp still signal a business that cares?

Princess Polly, available on Asos in the UK, has a lot in common with other ultra-fast fashion brands. Although a little more expensive than Boohoo and PrettyLittleThing, the Australian-American multinational offers the same kind of trend-driven, low-priced clothes, mostly made from polyester. At the time of writing, shoppers can peruse more than 2,000 dresses, from a £6 pink mini dress to an £82 cream maxidress. There are bikini bottoms for £3 and barrel-leg jeans from £8. But there is one key difference between Princess Polly and its competitors. In early July, it became B Corp certified, bringing the certification's integrity into question. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more. B Corp is the world's most recognisable corporate responsibility certification and, since its inception in 2006, has been awarded to businesses that meet its 'high standards of social and environmental performance, accountability, and transparency,' including Patagonia, the Body Shop and the Guardian. The B stands for 'beneficial'. The B Corp label has long symbolised a business dedicated to caring for people and planet. Through a rigorous, months- or even years-long verification process, it is intended to hold companies to high standards by measuring positive impact on workers, community, environment and customers. However, at the time of writing, Princess Polly is running a buy-one-get-one-60%-off promotion, pushing excess product in a way that doesn't seem to align with B Corp values. Dale McCarthy, whose carbon-neutral certified swimwear label Bondi Born was awarded B Corp status in 2020, says the news left her 'deeply disappointed ... It makes a mockery of it.' '[Now] it seems any company can get certified if they issue enough policies and tick enough boxes, even if the fundamentals of the business are a major contributor to environmental damage,' she says. Another B Corp fashion brand, New Zealand designer Kowtow, takes issue with Princess Polly's business model, which relies on producing vast volumes of clothing. 'It contributes to a hyperconsumerist culture,' says its managing director, Emma Wallace. 'The root [problem] of overproduction … needs to be addressed.' A new report from the Apparel Impact Institute (pdf) attributes the apparel industry's 7% emissions increase to ultra-fast fashion, overproduction and a reliance on virgin polyester. On its website, Princess Polly says: 'We're on a mission to make on-trend fashion sustainable', and notes it has introduced a range of measures, including using 'lower-impact materials' such as recycled polyester and organic cotton in 30% of its 'new arrivals'. Sustainability campaigners and industry observers voice scepticism. 'It's greenwashing,' says Alden Wicker, the founder of the Substack EcoCult, which reports on sustainability issues in the industry. 'You can't run a certification like this based on vibes. Anybody who wants a better world when it comes to how we purchase and consume fashion would have values that clash with the ethos of this brand.' B Corp has found itself on shaky ground recently, not just because of Princess Polly. In February, after the certification of several companies not usually associated with good environmental practice, the famously ethically minded soap company Dr Bronner's dropped the certification, stating: 'Sharing the same logo and messaging … [with] companies with a history of serious ecological and labour issues, and no comprehensive or credible eco-social certification of supply chains, is unacceptable to us'. David Bronner, the company's CEO, is unimpressed with the certification of Princess Polly. 'It's just single-use plastic. You could be doing all kinds of good stuff, but if that's your product offering, then that's inherently not better for the world.' Princess Polly says it's 'proud of its environmental, social and governance progress', and highlights that its focus is on two areas: ethical sourcing (100% of its mostly Chinese garment manufacturers have a 'valid ethical manufacturing audit') and environmental impact (it has pledged to reduce carbon emissions by 2030). But its circularity initiatives are scant (you can read its policy here) and it only has a vague commitment to paying living wages. In a statement provided in response to specific questions about Princess Polly's certification, B Lab, the business behind B Corp, wrote: 'B Corp certification is holistic; it doesn't evaluate a product or service, nor is it exclusively focused on a single social or environmental issue.' With about 10,000 companies certified, now including various well-known multinationals, B Lab says the movement is 'intentionally diverse'. But to some, this broad-church approach reveals another shortcoming. 'If your theory of change is engaging big and questionable players and helping them be marginally better, you need to distinguish companies that are going way beyond that,' says Bronner. Sign up to Fashion Statement Style, with substance: what's really trending this week, a roundup of the best fashion journalism and your wardrobe dilemmas solved after newsletter promotion Companies that apply for status answer more than 200 questions to measure positive impact across governance, workers, community, environment and customers, and are then given a score. The minimum score for certification is 80 points but critics point out a business can be weak in one area and make up for it in another. Businesses must reapply for certification after three, and then five, years. At least some of the contention is with using a points-based system that brands can leverage by hiring consultants able to help them navigate the application process. In other words, says McCarthy: 'large companies can afford teams of lawyers and document writers', which are resources less likely to be available to smaller businesses. Change is coming. After a five-year consultation process, the certification is due to be updated next year. Under B Lab's new standards, companies will need to meet minimum requirements across seven areas including: climate action, environmental stewardship and circularity. Since 2024, the sustainable fashion designer and activist Amy Powney has been pursuing B Corp certification for her new label, Akyn. She says the new B Corp standards are more onerous for circularity, waste, overproduction and human rights, so 'it will be interesting to see if [Princess Polly] pass in three years'. As for the ongoing desirability of the B Corp label and its ability to signal brand value to conscious consumers, the jury remains out. Powney will still apply and at Kowtow the certification remains useful. 'It has empowered our team to work on the tough stuff, ask questions of our suppliers and collaborate on solutions,' says Wallace. For Bronner, who won't be returning, the new standards are 'directionally getting better but still failing in certain fundamental ways'. Bondi Born's McCarthy remains sceptical: 'I'll wait and see whether B Corp as a brand continues to dilute itself until it's meaningless – or not.' To read the complete version of this newsletter – complete with this week's trending topics in The Measure – subscribe to receive Fashion Statement in your inbox every Thursday.

Accenture to buy Australian cybersecurity firm CyberCX for reported $650 mln
Accenture to buy Australian cybersecurity firm CyberCX for reported $650 mln

Reuters

time9 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Accenture to buy Australian cybersecurity firm CyberCX for reported $650 mln

Aug 14 (Reuters) - Accenture (ACN.N), opens new tab said on Thursday it will buy Australian cybersecurity firm CyberCX in its largest-ever deal in the sector, with the Australian Financial Review valuing the transaction at more than A$1 billion ($650 million). A wave of devastating cyberattacks has battered Australia, including a 2022 breach at telecom major Optus that exposed the personal data of up to 10 million users, and a hack on health insurer Medibank affecting nearly 10 million customers. In July, Qantas Airways disclosed that criminals had infiltrated one of its call centres, accessing personal information of six million customers. Private equity firm BGH Capital, which is selling CyberCX, has not disclosed any financial terms. Accenture declined to provide additional details, while BGH Capital didn't respond to Reuters' requests for comment on the reported valuation. The deal underscores the surging demand for advanced digital security services as businesses worldwide face increasingly sophisticated cyber threats that disrupt operations and compromise sensitive data. Melbourne-based CyberCX was formed in 2019 through the merger of 12 smaller cybersecurity firms backed by BGH Capital. The company now employs about 1,400 people and runs security operations centres across Australia and New Zealand, with offices in London and New York. CyberCX is led by John Paitaridis, formerly managing director of Optus Business, and Chief Strategy Officer Alastair MacGibbon, Australia's former national cybersecurity coordinator. The leadership's ties to Optus are notable, given the telecommunications company's 2022 data breach, which exposed names, birth dates, addresses, phone numbers, email contacts and passport and driver's license numbers. Since 2015, Accenture has completed 20 security acquisitions, including recent purchases of Brazilian cyber defense firm Morphus, MNEMO Mexico and Spain-based Innotec Security. On the domestic front, the firm entered into a $700 million collaborative agreement with Telstra in February, aiming to implement AI capabilities across the telecommunications company. ($1 = A$1.5385)

Second restaurant linked to MasterChef star Reynold Poernomo's enters administration just months after trendy cocktail bar folds
Second restaurant linked to MasterChef star Reynold Poernomo's enters administration just months after trendy cocktail bar folds

Daily Mail​

time40 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Second restaurant linked to MasterChef star Reynold Poernomo's enters administration just months after trendy cocktail bar folds

Melbourne 's KOI Dessert Bar, founded by MasterChef star Reynold Poernomo and his brothers, has entered voluntary administration little more than a year after opening its doors. The Queen & Collins venue launched in July 2024 with a 42-seat dining room, retail patisserie, and high-end dessert sculptures. It marked KOI's first expansion outside Sydney, where the brand has two outlets. Administrator reports show the Melbourne operation's parent company, Poernomo Enterprise, owes creditors more than $1.6 million, much of it to related parties including family members and affiliated businesses. Managing director of KOI Dessert Bar, Reynold's brother Ronald, told News Corp that the establishment was continuing to trade during the administration process. 'KOI Dessert Bar has since begun the process of seeking a new licensed retailer to take over the Melbourne location, in line with our commitment to uphold the quality and reputation of the KOI brand,' he said. 'The site is currently under the control of an administrator, who has listed it as a potential franchise opportunity,' he said, noting that this is a 'common commercial strategy' used to attract buyers. 'The viability of other alternate options to preserve KOI's presence in Melbourne will also be discussed with the administrator in good faith,' he added. Ronald assured that all creditors, including staff and suppliers, have been paid in full, with nothing owing. KOI's Sydney operations in Ryde and Chippendale remain open and unaffected. It's not the first blow to the Poernomo hospitality empire this year. In May, a Japanese-inspired bar called Monkey's Corner - opened by Reynold and his brothers Arnold and Ronald - was also placed into liquidation. The restaurant had actually closed in March 2024 after seven years in operation. According to documents filed with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), the company owed more than $500,000 in outstanding debts. At the time of the closure, the team shared a message on social media hinting at future plans for the site, writing they were 'cooking up something new.' However, no new venue operated by a Poernomo opened in the space. It is not suggested Reynold held financial, legal or operational responsibility for Monkey's Corner. The collapse followed the restructure of another separate Poernomo family business, Art Plate Pty Ltd, in 2024. Art Plate along with another company, JRP Desserts Pty Ltd, oversees KOI Dessert Bars. Reynold's eldest brother Ronald and mother Ike Malada are listed as directors of those companies, while Reynold is associated as the face of the business. Reynold Poernomo is not a director of any of the companies mentioned in this article. His website states he co-founded KOI Desserts Bars and Monkey's Corner. Reynold shot to fame as a contestant on the seventh season of MasterChef Australia, finishing fourth. He reprised his role on in the Channel Ten series' 12th season in 2020, going one better with a third place berth. He then tried his luck a third time, in the first season of spinoff Dessert Masters Australia in 2023. Victory was not to be however, with Reynold named as runner up behind winner Gareth Whitton. Following his defeat, Reynold took to Instagram to share his disappointment and said he was devastated he had never received an award for his culinary delights, or even been reviewed. Alongside a gallery of photos of him hard at work in the kitchen creating a variety of delicious pastry desserts, he wrote a heartbreaking caption. 'Although I may not have won, my head is still held high. My two best desserts I've ever done for Experiential may not have the been the best for tonight,' he began. He added he was eager to one day receive an award for the delicious desserts he spends hours in the kitchen making. 'It has been quite challenging to even gain the attention of the food media in Australia. Going eight years of never being reviewed or winning an award, he said. 'It's the reason why I've chosen to come back on and put myself out there for the world to see as well as challenge myself amongst peers. 'I am incredibly thankful for the opportunity and hold great pride being a self-taught chef, so once again thank you all.'

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