Latest news with #HawthornEast

News.com.au
4 days ago
- Business
- News.com.au
Hawthorn: Home inspected by 200 people snapped up
A Hawthorn apartment inspected by hundreds of buyers has been snapped up by a purchaser who made a dramatic entrance to the auction. On Saturday, the two-bedroom home at 2/51 Denham St went under the hammer after being checked out by more than 200 buyer groups. The Agency Victoria's Luke Saville said that apart from the stylish and light-filled interiors, many buyers were attracted to the property because it is part of a company share title. This essentially means the 10-unit complex, where the apartment is located, is considered a company which homeowners buy into by purchasing a tenth of a share in the entire building and land. Nowadays, this is a rare arrangement with most modern apartments on strata titles. A mix of mainly first-home buyer couples and singles were interested in the home which went to auction with four bidders, starting with a $470,000 bid. Mr Saville said that one of the buyers, a woman who has sold her family home, had decided on Friday that she no longer wanted to bid. The woman was also in Perth, meaning she would miss the auction. However, the buyer contacted her daughter on Saturday, asking her to get to the auction within 30 minutes – as the mother had changed her mind and wanted the apartment. The daughter, who was out cycling, raced home and jumped in her car to get to the auction to bid on behalf of her mum. 'She got there five minutes into the auction, bid and bought,' Mr Saville said. The property ended up selling for $565,000, a sum $35,000 higher than the $530,000 reserve. Despite the rain, about 60 onlookers turned out to watch the auction. Further out of the city, a four-bedroom house at 16 Diamond Creek Rd, Greensborough, also went under the hammer on Saturday. Set on 859sq m, the home features three bathrooms, a lounge room with a timber-lined cathedral ceiling and two decks with views across the surrounding trees. Jellis Craig Greensborough and Hurstbridge's Daniel Cobern said more than 100 people had inspected the property. Two bidders contested the auction, with the house selling for $765,000 after being placed on the market at $760,000. 'A young couple bought while the underbidder was looking to do a renovation and flip,' Mr Cobern said. The buyers liked the home's size and location near parklands, public transport and Greensborough Plaza, he added.

The Age
4 days ago
- Politics
- The Age
Tasmania cannot beat the $1b cost of an AFL stadium
Alternative universe In what world did Peter Dutton think it was a good idea to appoint Alan Stockdale and Richard Alston as administrators to run the NSW division of the Liberal Party (″ Ley slams reverse quota talk ″, 5/6)? Having these two gentlemen lead any aspect of reforming the Liberal Party to ensure its relevance in the 21st century seems to be a great example of why the ″back on track″ slogan and strategy was such a disaster in the 2025 election campaign. Alex Donaldson, Hawthorn East See merit in reform Age chief political commentator James Massola puts forward a convincing argument as to why Jim Chalmers should cede some negotiating ground with the opposition on the question of superannuation reform (Comment, 6/6). However, the arguments put forward by the opposition on behalf of a small number of rich Australians have insufficient substance to be accepted. Superannuation is designed to provide a comfortable living in retirement. It is not a tax haven for a family farm nor expensive artwork. Adding to this point, it is disingenuous to project forward the impact of these changes 30 years, when an estimated 1.2 million people will have more than $3 million in their super accounts. As with our tax scales, adjustments will occur as time passes. It should also be noted that, Paul Keating in achieving significant economic reforms, didn't negotiate with John Howard. Rather, the opposition saw the merit of the Hawke-Keating reforms and didn't oppose them. If the opposition wants to seen to be more relevant, its challenge is to negotiate with Chalmers, not the other way around, and certainly not by pursuing a public relations campaign on behalf of rich Australians who just don't like paying tax. James Young, Mount Eliza Parental responsibility I can see that principals might be concerned about the introduction of disciplining students for out-of-school misbehaviours. Perhaps one way of reducing the need might be to tell boys and their parents when they start the school that this might occur if they misbehave in any serious way. And then, if the government follows the American tendency to give parents of such children's activities some legal responsibility for the child's behaviour, the number of such incidents might, over time, decrease. Anthony Whitmarsh, Bulleen Different in government In 2020, the ALP opposition decried – rightly – the Morrison government's 'gas-led recovery'. Now very securely in government the ALP has continued very strong support for the gas industry. Supporting the science and our environment was easy in opposition; in government apparently less so. The Woodside North West Shelf extension (until 2070) is outrageous. The emissions released will totally negate any reductions from our welcome but too slow transition to renewables. Peter Moore, Clifton Hill Not capital idea While there is some justification in increasing the tax on superannuation balances over $3million, there is absolutely no justification to attempting to tax 'unrealised' capital gains. It is inherently unfair. Those smug people who think that this is a tax on the super rich, be aware. Be really aware. Once it is established in the tax system that a such a tax is applicable where will it end? Why not tax share portfolios, investment properties, farms and, dare I say it, the family home. All may have unrealised capital gains and the principle has been established. Be aware. Be really aware. Vince Vozzo, Elwood History lesson The article ″ Trump fears Harvard's excellence ″ (5/6) outlining the critical value of universities, should be read in tandem with Cardinal Newman's The Idea of a University, first published in 1852. Though canonised as a saint in 2019, much of the Part 1 titled ″University Teaching″ focuses on the universal, secular issues confronting universities today. Elizabeth Douglas, Melbourne Silent epidemic Thank you for drawing attention to anorexia as the deadliest mental health condition (″ Anorexia a deadly illness but treatment is lagging ″, 5/6). It is unbelievable that more Australians die from this than they do from the road toll, and yet nothing seems to be being done to improve those terrible statistics. One can't help wonder if the disease wasn't perceived as something that just affects teenage girls, whether we would have a cure by now, instead of relying on 50-year-old treatments. It really is a silent epidemic that no one seems to acknowledge or care about. Anne Clisby, Alphington End UN veto power The US has blocked a resolution calling for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza by exercising its veto power on the UN Security Council as a member of the permanent five big powers. If it's not the US doing this, then it's member Russia stopping effective UN support for Ukraine's struggle against its invader. The UN could be an effective force for world peace but it urgently needs reconstruction to become fully democratic, with the General Assembly the final decision maker and the veto power of the big five – China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the US – rescinded. A large UN combat force is also required, not just to maintain peace after the blood is shed, like the current UN peacekeeping force, but one capable of rapid deployment to take the side of oppressed peoples like the Gazans and those heroically fighting imperialism like the Ukrainians. 'Peace through strength' based on collective security is why the UN was set up in 1945. Barry York, O'Connor, ACT How low can it go? Each day's news from Gaza leaves many of us wondering how the suffering could possibly worsen, yet it does. The recent deaths of 27 people waiting for food marks a horrifying new low. They were parents desperate to feed their children. What kind of war justifies the shooting of the starving? Beyond those points, Israel's leaders have stated their intent to destroy Gaza, and their conduct matches those words. If a state shows no willingness to limit its own violence, the world must act. Sanctions, an arms embargo, the deployment of peacekeepers, or even military intervention must be urgently considered. Waiting for a sudden outbreak of conscience is not a strategy. Zoe Kenny, St Kilda East No Israel is their plan Your correspondent (Letters, 6/6) says that the creation of a separate Palestinian state is the only solution to resolving Palestinian resentment at their plight. But he ignores the fact that this is precisely what they were offered not just in the 1947 UN Partition plan, but several times thereafter. That this has never been achieved has ultimately been because the leadership of one or more of Israel's neighbours until this day have only been prepared to accept a Palestinian state that was instead of, rather than alongside the Jewish state. Geoff Feren, St Kilda East Indefensible act Since when did starving innocent people to death become 'self-defence'? Jody Ellis, Thornbury Stakes are high No matter how much American beef hits these shores, I for one will never be persuaded to buy anything that comes from Trump's America (″ US beef on the table in Trump trade-off ″, 6/6). Dudley Chamberlain, Beaumaris English in express lane After reading student essays, a colleague remarked to me: 'I have to concede that English is changing, but not that fast.' James Goding, Princes Hill AND ANOTHER THING Politics Alan Stockdale's template for a Liberal Party preselection process: assertive women and non-assertive men to the left; short, assertive men with bushy eyebrows to the right. Bernd Rieve, Brighton There may be one dinosaur in the room (Letters, 6/6), but they are not extinct. There are still many circling the house, mouths gaping, roaring prehistoric ideas to the Liberal Party in what is a new world. Anne Carroll, Brighton East Alan Stockdale turns to the standard reply of those caught out by something they've said: 'It was just a joke.' Tim Durbridge, Brunswick I wish columnists like Shaun Carney (Comment, 5/6) would stop writing advice to the Liberal Party about how to recover support in the electorate. I'm very happy with their present position. Peter Hepburn, Claremont, Tas Trump/Musk Donald Trump and Elon Musk with their clashing outsized egos live in an echo chamber that must be cacophonous. Barrie Bales, Woorinen North The reality show between Donald Trump and Elon Musk ″Ugly and uglier' has finally gone to air after many previews. Take a seat and enjoy. Ruth Davis, Carrum Furthermore I withdrew $1000 from my account in the High St last week. There is no ATM. Later, I was staggered to find I was charged $2.50 for a ″staff-assisted service fee″. Have banks no shame? George Stockman, Berwick The AFL has made an overdue Tasmanian team dependent on building an expensive stadium. This has helped bring down the Tasmanian government. Malcolm McDonald, Burwood

News.com.au
15-05-2025
- News.com.au
Woman charged after car crashed into a Melbourne primary school, killing a boy
A woman has been charged after her car allegedly veered off the road and crashed through a fence, killing an 11-year-old boy in a school playground. Police have charged a 40-year-old Hawthorn East woman following the fatal crash in October last year at Auburn South Primary school in Melbourne's inner east. The woman was allegedly doing a U-turn on Burgess St just after 2.30pm when her Toyota SUV veered off the road and crashed through a fence into an outdoor table where five children were sitting. Jake Davey, 11, was taken to hospital with critical injuries, where he died. Two 11-year-old girls, a 10-year-old girl and a 10-year-old boy were also taken to hospital with serious injuries. It's understood the children were on an afternoon recess break when the incident occurred. The woman behind the wheel and her passenger – a primary school aged child – were not injured. Detectives charged the woman on Tuesday with careless driving and failure to have proper control of a motor vehicle. At the time, police arrested the woman and released her pending further investigation, including whether she had suffered a medical episode behind the wheel. The white Toyota brandished green P-plates when it crashed, but it is unclear if the woman had her full licence or not. She will appear at Melbourne Magistrates Court on July 15.

ABC News
15-05-2025
- ABC News
Woman charged with careless driving over crash into school fence that killed 11-year-old boy
Police have charged a woman, 40, with careless driving and failure to have proper control of a vehicle following a tragic crash through a school fence that claimed the life of an 11-year-old child. Jack Davey was sitting with four fellow students on the grounds of Auburn South Primary School on October 29 last year when a car crashed through the nearby fence and struck the children. Police allege the car veered off Burgess Street, Hawthorn East and went through the primary school's fence just after 2.30pm. Jack Davey was taken to hospital with critical injuries where he died. Four other children aged 10 and 11 were seriously injured in the crash. The driver's passenger — a primary school-aged child — was not injured. Police arrested the driver straight after the crash and released her pending further enquiries, however on Thursday afternoon — more than six months after the incident — Victoria Police announced that Major Collision Investigation Unit detectives had charged her two days ago on May 13. The woman is scheduled to face Melbourne Magistrates' Court on July 15.


Daily Mail
15-05-2025
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Major update after woman crashed her SUV into Auburn South Primary leaving 11-year-old boy dead and four students seriously injured
A woman has been charged after an 11-year-old boy died and four other students were seriously injured after she crashed her SUV into their primary school. The incident unfolded at Auburn South Primary School just after 2.30pm on October 29 when a white SUV travelling on Burgess Street n Hawthorn East left the road and crashed through the school fence, hitting 11-year-old Jack Davey and his friends. Paramedics rushed a critically injured Jack to hospital where he later died. Three girls - two aged 11 and one aged 10 - as well as a 10-year-old boy were also taken to hospital with serious injuries. The woman, 40, was arrested at the scene and released pending further inquiries. Her passenger, a primary school-aged child, was not injured in the crash. In a major update on Tuesday, detectives charged the woman with careless driving and failure to have proper control of a motor vehicle. She is scheduled to appear in Melbourne Magistrates' Court on July 15. More to come.