PORT MACQUARIE: A block of units has been sold for a record price for the beachfront section of Matthew Flinders Drive. The Gleeson family from Orange bought the property for more than $1.6 million. Read on
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
FORSTER: The fixed charge for trailers and cars carrying waste into local tips will be scrapped, with a new fee system adopted as part of the Great Lakes Council budget adopted recently. Read on
WINGHAM: An unexpected item has been donated to the Manning Valley Historical Society and is on display at Wingham Museum. The working model of a sawmill is currently drawing the crowds as it sits temporarily in the window display. Read on
KEMPSEY: The council has prepared a proposal to amend the Kempsey Local Environmental Plan to permit Macleay Valley farmers and rural land owners to build another house on their property. At the most recent council meeting, councillors were asked to endorse a planning proposal to the NSW Department of Planning and Environment to allow detached dual occupancy dwellings and secondary dwellings to be built in various rural zones. Read on
NAMBUCCA: With the deadline for local councils gone, now the state waits for the impending local government reform. Associate Professor Roberta Ryan, director of the Centre for Local Government within the University of Technology, Sydney, said the stakes are high, especially so in rural and regional communities. Read on
BELLINGEN: NSW Member for Oxley, Melinda Pavey said major remediation works on the old Urunga antimony processing site will commence on 6 July and the local community is invited to an information session for a briefing on the works. Read on
STATE OF THE NATION
HORSHAM: An investigation is underway to determine the cause of a fire that has left a Horsham business with a $400,000 damage bill. MORE.
WAGGA: Culcairn farmer Scott Mitchell has been embroiled in controversy for the past week but it has not deterred him from looking for love. Mr Mitchell, 36, seemed like a done deal as one of the next farmers on reality show Farmer Wants a Wife but a phone call last week has thrown that in turmoil.
Mr Mitchell wants to close this chapter of his life and move onto the next. Mr Mitchell was told by a representative of Freemantle Media that he was one of the final six farmers they pitched to Channel Nine but that he was replaced by Married At First Sight’s Lachlan at the last minute. MORE.
BALLARAT: A teenager who died after he was hit by a car in Black Hill has been remembered as an “amazing” and “unbelievable kid”. Patrick Bell, 17, was tragically killed while crossing Chisholm Street on Tuesday. The Ballarat East Secondary College student recently celebrated his 17th birthday with his twin-sister. MORE.
MOUNT ISA: A NEW dam is not off the radar for the North West, despite a specific site not being named for the region in the federal government’s Northern White Paper. MORE
BUNBURY: Reoprts of more West Australians falling victim to the ATO scam have escalated in recent weeks, prompting another urgent warning from Consumer Protection.
In the latest case, an 81-year-old Perth man who is nursing his ill wife has lost $110,000 to the scam, the largest loss to this type of scam ever reported in WA. MORE
NATIONAL WEATHER RADAR
NATIONAL NEWS
Joe Hockey has become the first Australian politician to successfully sue for defamation over a tweet.
The decision highlights some of the legal pitfalls of social media, which rewards rapid-fire, snappy missives stripped of context.
But there is very little else that is novel about the Federal Treasurer's $80,000 payout for two tweets from The Age's Twitter account in May last year – or indeed his $120,000 payout for the same words on a newspaper advertising placard.
Aboriginal children are being removed from their families and placed with drug-dealing carers who are demanding that their parents pay to see them, the royal commission into child sex abuse has heard.
Australia's largest new coal project, one hailed by Prime Minister Tony Abbott as a poverty-busting "miracle", is unbankable in the assessment of Queensland's Treasury, which also has question marks over the development's transparency.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
SYRIA: A second Australian man has reportedly died fighting with Kurdish forces in Syria, less than two months after he joined the battle against the Islamic State group.
Described as a "beloved brother who came from far away to do what had to be done," 23-year-old Reece Harding reportedly died on June 27 when he stepped on a land mine during night operations with the YPG (People's Protection Units) in north-eastern Syria.
CHINA: China, the world's biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, has submitted a new carbon intensity reduction target to the United Nations while reaffirming its goal to curb carbon emissions by 2030, or "even earlier".
Premier Li Keqiang made the announcement while during a visit to Paris, where the global climate conference will take place at the end of the year.
TUNISIA: At a makeshift memorial on the site of last Friday's deadly attack, a steady stream of tourists and locals gathered to lay flowers and notes to remember the victims of Tunisia's worst ever terror attack.
With their backs to the deep blue of the Mediterranean Sea, they faced a swathe of sun lounges that now sit mostly empty on the beach in front of the Hotel Imperial Marhaba where so many lost their lives.
FACES OF AUSTRALIA - Rideika Wright
An Albion Park teenager is proud to have helped launch a new national clothing label and can't wait to see people wearing her design.
Rideika Wright, 16, took part in the Australian Indigenous Mentoring Experience and was invited along with 21 others to participate in a paid internship, with her artwork featured on AIME Apparel T-shirts.
The square graphic features a lizard to represent the year 10 student, as well as showing four "communities" in each corner to depict the different places she has lived - Walgett, Newcastle, Batemans Bay and Wollongong. MORE.