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Coronavirus Australia live update: Victoria records 278 Covid cases and eight deaths as one death reported in NSW | |
(32 minutes later) | |
NSW authorities are concerned about a number of Covid-19 cases in the past six weeks where the source was unknown. Follow live | NSW authorities are concerned about a number of Covid-19 cases in the past six weeks where the source was unknown. Follow live |
We had fireworks to celebrate the end of 2019. I’m just saying. | |
But yes, it it has been “a pretty shitty 2020”, Stuart Ayres. | |
You can find all the international Covid news here, with Helen Sullivan | |
The transport minister, Jacinta Allan, is asked by Nationals MP Danny O’Brien to name which minister was “ultimately responsible for the hotel quarantine program”. | |
Allan: | |
Mr O’Brien, you and your colleagues have canvassed this on multiple occasions during the course of this week. You will know that I have nothing to add to the comments that have been made already over the course of this week on that matter ... | |
O’Brien: | |
“It’s a pretty simple question – which minister was responsible – and yet no minister wants to say who it was, or seems to be able to say. | |
“Earlier you said you were ‘very clear on your roles and responsibilities as a minister and the accountabilities that go with that’. So you were very clear on yours, that’s fine. I’m just trying to find out who was responsible for what?” | |
Allan has previously said her role in the quarantine program was to organise transport of returned travellers to the hotels using the private transport company SkyBus. | |
53 people have died in NSW since the beginning of the pandemic. | |
We are still waiting on the official update from NSW, but this is terrible news. | |
Queensland has recorded no new cases of Covid-19 in the past 24 hours. | |
Further to Matilda’s post on this a little earlier: | |
The Nationals MP and regional education minister, Andrew Gee, is just one of those against the changes to university loan funding Dan Tehan has put forward. | |
Here was Tehan talking about why the changes were necessary, on ABC radio: | Here was Tehan talking about why the changes were necessary, on ABC radio: |
Tehan: Well, research has shown that nearly 6% of university students fail every subject in their first year. What this is designed to do is to make sure that universities and students understand that they need to work together to make sure that the student is suitable for the course that they’re undertaking and then to make sure that throughout their course, that they get the guidance, support and help that they need to complete their studies. | |
Q: I’m just thinking, minister, about the cuts universities have had to make during this pandemic, and staff numbers, of course, being well down. How will they ensure that this new legislation, put forward by the federal government, will actually be enacted the way you want it to be? | |
Tehan: Well, we’re obviously working with the sector. We’re putting in place reforms which puts the focus back on making sure that we’re looking after our domestic students, and we’re preparing our domestic students for the challenges that they’re going to face as we come out of this Covid-19 pandemic. And, I think, that the way our universities go about educating young Australians, they’re up to the challenge to making sure that we’re getting students enrolled in the right courses, and that they can complete those courses. | |
Q: So, how will they do that, minister? What exactly will universities need to do to make sure students are academically suitable and also engaged with the course they propose to do? | |
Tehan: So when a student, for instance, say, is struggling, and might fail a couple of units, they can talk to that student, talk to them about whether the choice they’ve made about the degree that they want to undertake is the right one for them. They could suggest to them that, maybe, there is another more suitable degree that they might want to look at ... This is just a commonsense approach that we want both universities and students to take to make sure that we’ve got students in the right degrees, and that universities are working with students to help them complete those degrees. | |
Chris Bowen has backed calls by doctor groups to extend the subsidised telehealth program: | |
It’s been found correct, because it is. | |
Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi has responded to Dan Tehan’s announcement that failing students may face having their university loan access cut (this is after announcing that those loans for arts degrees will increase, and all during a pandemic): | Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi has responded to Dan Tehan’s announcement that failing students may face having their university loan access cut (this is after announcing that those loans for arts degrees will increase, and all during a pandemic): |
Today’s inquiry into the Victorian government’s response to the pandemic has started off with a little spice, in fact, 90 seconds in and the word “pathetic” has already been thrown around. | Today’s inquiry into the Victorian government’s response to the pandemic has started off with a little spice, in fact, 90 seconds in and the word “pathetic” has already been thrown around. |
Liberal MP Richard Riordan has suggested committee chair Labor’s Lizzie Blandthorn failed to disclose a conflict of interest during yesterday’s hearing. Her husband is the chief of staff for jobs, precincts and regions minister Martin Pakula. | Liberal MP Richard Riordan has suggested committee chair Labor’s Lizzie Blandthorn failed to disclose a conflict of interest during yesterday’s hearing. Her husband is the chief of staff for jobs, precincts and regions minister Martin Pakula. |
Riordan: | Riordan: |
This was a situation that should have been made known to all members of the committee before we started, particularly considering what turned out to be a most interventionist approach to our questioning of the minister yesterday, as noticed by members of the opposition. | This was a situation that should have been made known to all members of the committee before we started, particularly considering what turned out to be a most interventionist approach to our questioning of the minister yesterday, as noticed by members of the opposition. |
Labor MP Tim Richardson interjected saying this was “pathetic”: “This isn’t the 1950s mate. Women can think for themselves.” | Labor MP Tim Richardson interjected saying this was “pathetic”: “This isn’t the 1950s mate. Women can think for themselves.” |
Blandthorn said she did not agree there was a conflict of interest. | Blandthorn said she did not agree there was a conflict of interest. |
Blandthorn: | Blandthorn: |
“His chief of staff is my husband … I don’t actually believe that there is any conflict of interest, in and of itself, in who a female or male may actually be married to and this suggestion is actually quite offensive.” | “His chief of staff is my husband … I don’t actually believe that there is any conflict of interest, in and of itself, in who a female or male may actually be married to and this suggestion is actually quite offensive.” |
Anthony Albanese finishes on this point: | Anthony Albanese finishes on this point: |