Category: Australia

  • MIL-OSI USA: News 04/30/2025 Blackburn, Ossoff Bill to Prevent Sexual Abuse of Prison Staff Passes Senate

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn)
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Yesterday, the Senate passed the Prison Staff Safety Enhancement Act introduced by U.S. Senators Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) and Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) to help address the increasingly pervasive sexual assault and harassment of Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) employees by inmates:
    “No law enforcement officer or federal employee should fear for their safety on the job, and we need to eradicate sexual assault and harassment of vulnerable staff members in our prison system. The Prison Staff Safety Enhancement Act is a critical move toward protecting prison staff, and I’m pleased to see it one step closer to becoming law,” said Senator Blackburn.
    “I remain focused on oversight of the Federal prison system and ending sexual abuse in prisons and jails, including the abuse of prison staff. Senator Blackburn and I brought Republicans and Democrats together to pass this bipartisan bill to help end sexual abuse in Federal prisons,” said Senator Ossoff.
    BACKGROUND
    According to a February 2023 report by the U.S. Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General (DOJ OIG), a staggering 40% of 7,000 surveyed BOP staff stated they had been sexually harassed or sexually assaulted by an inmate.
    The 2023 report found that the BOP has inadequate data on inmate-on-staff sexual harassment and assault and has not been able to fully ascertain the scope of this widespread problem.  The report also made a number of significant recommendations for the BOP to implement to help the agency better understand and mitigate this nationwide problem.
    THE PRISON STAFF SAFETY ENHANCEMENT ACT
    The Prison Staff Safety Enhancement Act would require:
    The BOP to fully implement the recommendations in the Inspector General’s 2023 report regarding mitigating inmate-on-staff sexual harassment and assault and fully ascertaining the scope of the problem; 
    The DOJ OIG to conduct an analysis of punishments for sexual harassment and sexual assault in BOP facilities; and
    The U.S. Attorney General to promulgate a rule adopting national standards for prevention, reduction, and punishment of sexual assault and harassment of BOP staff by inmates. 
    Senators Blackburn and Ossoff sent a letter to former BOP Director Colette Peters requesting that BOP release information about inmate-on-staff sexual assault and harassment reporting procedures, correctional methods, and staff assistance programs.
    Council of Prison Locals 33 National President Brandy Moore White wrote a letter expressing support for this legislation, as did Fraternal Order of Police National President Patrick Yoes. The American Correctional Association and the National Association of Police Organizations have also endorsed this critical bill.
    RELATED
    Click here for bill text.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: News 04/30/2025 Blackburn, Warner Introduce Bill to Lower Costs and Improve Access to Care for Rural Medicare Patients

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn)
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senators Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn) and Mark Warner (D-Va.) introduced the Rural Patient Monitoring (RPM) Access Act to ensure Medicare patients in rural and underserved communities have access to remote physiologic monitoring services, which lower costs and improve access to care by using technology to collect and transmit patient health data to healthcare providers:
    “Medicare beneficiaries in rural and underserved areas often face serious barriers to health care, and they deserve better,” said Senator Blackburn. “The Rural Patient Monitoring Access Act would ensure Tennessee Medicare patients have access to high-quality remote physiologic monitoring services to manage chronic conditions and help patients eliminate unnecessary hospital visits.”
    “Too often, patients are struggling to receive the medical care they need because of how difficult it is to see a doctor in person,” said Senator Warner. “Remote monitoring services offer a life-saving solution, expanding care options and allowing individuals to regularly receive the medical consultations they need, all while lowering costs and hospital admissions. I’m proud to introduce the Rural Patient Monitoring Access Act to improve health care services for our seniors.”
    U.S. Representatives David Kustoff (R-Tenn.), Mark Pocan (D-Wisc.), Troy Balderson (R-Ohio), and Don Davis (D-N.C.) introduced companion legislation in the House. 
    BACKGROUND
    Rural Medicare patients face high rates of chronic conditions like heart failure, hypertension, and diabetes. 
    In particular, Medicare patients living in rural areas have limited access to healthcare because of roadblocks like lack of transportation.
    Remote Physiologic Monitoring (RPM) helps patients manage chronic conditions and eliminates unnecessary hospital visits.
    A recent study of over 4,000 hypertension patients found that RPM decreased patients’ total monthly cost of care by more than 50%.
    Current lack of adequate Medicare reimbursement leads to not implementing RPM programs in rural areas, reducing access to cost-saving and patient-centered care.
    THE RURAL PATIENT MONITORING (RPM) ACCESS ACT
    The RPM Access Act would ensure high-quality remote physiological monitoring services are established and maintained for Medicare beneficiaries in rural and underserved geographies; allow rural areas to provide RPM services at the national average rate; and decrease patients’ total monthly cost.
    Under the RPM Access Act:
    RPM providers must be capable of responding to data anomalies detected by the monitoring service;
    RPM providers must be capable of promptly transmitting captured vitals and treatment management notes to electronic health record of the supervising provider; and
    The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services may require providers of RPM to report data to the Secretary of Health and Human Services in order to facilitate the evaluation of cost savings generated to the Medicare program through the proliferation of remote physiologic monitoring services.
    ENDORSEMENTS
    This legislation is supported by National Rural Health Association, American Association of Nurse Practitioners, HIMSS, American Telemedicine Association, Alliance for Connected Care, Ascension, LifePoint Health, Marshfield Clinic, SSM Health, the University of Virginia Center for Telehealth, and the Bipartisan Policy Center.
    “Technology-enabled care is crucial to ensuring seniors in rural areas are able to safely manage their chronic conditions. Remote physiologic monitoring allows for chronic disease complications to be captured early – saving lives, reducing health care costs, and helping to mitigate common rural barriers such as longer distances to in-person treatment,” said Alan Morgan, CEO of National Rural Health Association.
    “On behalf of HIMSS, we applaud Senators Blackburn and Warner, and Representatives Kustoff, Balderson, Pocan, and Davis for introducing the Rural Patient Monitoring (RPM) Access Act. Remote patient monitoring is a critical digital health tool that helps providers and patients work together to improve patient access and outcomes. We urge Congress to take action to advance the safe and effective use of RPM for millions of Medicare beneficiaries,” said Hal Wolf, President and CEO of HIMSS.
    “Patients in rural and underserved communities deserve the same opportunity to manage their health as those in more resourced areas. At Lifepoint, we’ve seen firsthand how high-quality remote patient monitoring can help bridge long-standing access gaps and drive meaningful clinical improvement, especially for chronic conditions like hypertension and diabetes. This bill is an important step forward in ensuring fair reimbursement for rural providers, empowering them to deliver high-quality, proactive care to the patients who need it most,” said Dr. Chris Frost, Chief Medical Officer and Chief Quality Officer at Lifepoint Health.

    “We are proud to support the Rural Patient Monitoring Access Act, which will help to ensure rural practitioners can provide remote physiologic monitoring services. RPM supports coordinated chronic disease management and acute and chronic disease risk reduction, while improving health outcomes helping patients remain healthy at home,” said Michael Richards, System Vice President at SSM Health.
    “The Alliance for Connected Care applauds Senators Blackburn and Warner for their leadership to ensure rural patients have access to high-quality, innovative patient-centered care. Remote patient monitoring has a huge potential to empower rural seniors with technology to better take accountability for their own health,” said Chris Adamec, Executive Director of The Alliance for Connected Care.

    “This proposed legislation will incentivize healthcare systems in rural areas to establish remote monitoring programs and ensure sustainability of existing programs. We are grateful for Sen. Warner and Sen. Blackburn’s leadership on this issue. Remote monitoring has been shown to improve outcomes and ultimately lower the cost of care,” said Karen Rheuban, MD, Director of the University of Virginia Center for Telehealth.

     Click here for bill text.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: 137-2025: Version 3.0 of the Methyl Bromide Fumigation Methodology is now in force and approved arrangement class conditions have been updated

    Source: New South Wales Government 2

    1 May 2025

    Who does this notice affect?

    Import-related biosecurity treatment stakeholders, including all importers, brokerages, onshore approved arrangement holders, overseas government and industry treatment providers, relevant domestic state and territory government agencies, and other shipping, freight, and logistics peak industry bodies.

    What has changed?

    Methyl Bromide Fumigation Methodology (version 3.0)

    Version 3.0 of the  Methyl…

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Melbourne Rooming house operator faces charges

    Source: Australian Capital Territory Policing

    A director of a rental accommodation services company is facing court on charges of operating a rooming house without a licence.

    A rooming house is a building where one or more rooms is available to rent by four or more people. They are an affordable and comfortable rental option for many people but some of their residents are among the state’s most vulnerable.

    It is alleged that Susan Trinh, the sole director of Impactz Pty Ltd, and the company, committed several offences under the Rooming House Operators Act 2016 and the Residential Tenancies Act 1997.

    Along with operating a rooming house without a licence, it is alleged they also failed to:

    • lodge bonds with the Residential Tenancies Bond Authority
    • complete signed bond lodgement forms and provide them to the renter
    • provide renters with two copies of the condition report before they moved in, which an operator must do if they accept a bond from a resident.

    Consumer Affairs Victoria Director Nicole Rich said that Trinh and her company dealt largely with international students and workers.

    Rich said the renters in these cases were particularly vulnerable, often living in a foreign country away from family and other support networks, and would likely find it more difficult to voice a complaint or pursue their rights.

    Operating a rooming house without a licence is a serious criminal offence with significant penalties.

    There are currently 1,650 registered rooming houses and 1,294 licensed rooming house operators in Victoria.

    If you’re concerned a rooming house does not meet the minimum standards, you can report it. If your concern is about health standards, contact your local council.

    This matter is listed for a mention on 23 June 2025 at the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Major YouGov poll has Labor easily winning a majority of seats in election

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Adrian Beaumont, Election Analyst (Psephologist) at The Conversation; and Honorary Associate, School of Mathematics and Statistics, The University of Melbourne

    A YouGov MRP poll has Labor clearly winning a majority of seats in the federal election – 84 of the 150 seats in the House of Representatives.

    Labor also leads the Coalition by 53–47% in new polls from Redbridge and Spectre Strategy.

    Respondent-allocated preference flows from various pollsters do not imply a big Coalition gain from the 2022 election preference flow method.

    YouGov conducted a national MRP poll (multi-level modelling with post-stratification) from April 1–29 from an overall sample of 35,185 people. MRP polls are used to estimate the outcome in each House electorate using huge samples and modelling.

    YouGov’s central forecast is Labor winning 84 of the 150 lower house seats, an 18-seat majority. The Coalition would win 47 seats, the Greens three, independents 14 and others two.

    Since YouGov’s previous MRP poll that was taken from late February to late March, Labor is up nine seats, the Coalition down 13, the Greens up one and independents up three.

    And compared to the first YouGov MRP poll conducted before mid-February, Labor is up 18 seats and the Coalition down 26.

    The high forecast in the new MRP poll is 85 seats for Labor and 53 for the Coalition, while the low forecast is 76 for Labor (just enough for a majority) and 45 for the Coalition.

    On national voting intentions, Labor led the Coalition by 52.9–47.1% in this MRP poll, a 2.7-point gain for Labor since the previous MRP poll. Primary votes were 31.4% Labor (up 1.6 points), 31.1% Coalition (down 4.4), 12.6% Greens (down 0.6), 9.3% One Nation (steady), 8.1% independents (down 0.2) and 7.6% others (up 3.7).

    By 2022 election flows, Labor would lead the Coalition by 54.1–45.9%.

    Labor won the 2022 election by 52.1–47.9% from primary votes of 35.7% Coalition, 32.6% Labor, 12.3% Greens, 5.0% One Nation, 4.1% United Australia Party, 5.3% independents and 5.1% others.

    In this poll, the major parties combined are winning just 62.5% of the vote, down from 68.3% in 2022, which was already a record low for the combined major party vote.

    Unless the Coalition surges in the final days before Saturday’s election or the polls are overstating support for Labor, Labor will win the election. The graph below includes the Redbridge poll, but not the Spectre Strategy one.

    Labor takes 53–47% lead in Redbridge poll

    The final national poll by Redbridge and Accent Research for the News Corp tabloids, conducted April 24–29 from a sample of 1,011 people, gave Labor a 53–47% lead over the Coalition by both respondent and 2022 election flows.

    This is a one-point gain for Labor since the previous national Redbridge poll in early April.

    Primary votes were 34% Labor (up one), 34% Coalition (down two), 12% Greens (steady), 8% One Nation (up one) and 12% for all others (steady). One Nation’s preference flows to the Coalition had increased in this poll compared with 2022, but Labor’s flow increased from other sources.

    On type of government desired, 24% wanted a majority Labor government, 12% a Labor minority government with the Greens and 10% a Labor minority government with the teals (comprising a total of 46% who wanted Labor to govern).

    For the Coalition, 30% wanted a majority Coalition government, 2% a Coalition minority government with the Greens and 7% a Coalition minority government with the teals (a total of 39% who wanted a Coalition government).

    New pollster Spectre Strategy gives Labor 53–47% lead

    A national poll by new pollster Spectre Strategy, conducted April 24–28 from a sample of 2,000 people, also gave Labor a 53–47% lead over the Coalition by respondent preferences from primary votes of 34% Coalition, 31% Labor, 15% Greens, 10% One Nation and 11% for all others.

    By 2022 election flows, this poll would give Labor about a 52.5–47.5% lead over the Coalition.

    Women voters (71%) and men aged 18–34 (64%) both massively favoured Labor. Among voters aged 35–54, 61% of women supported Labor, compared to just 49% of men. Both men and women aged 55 and over favoured the Coalition by 58–42%.

    Anthony Albanese led Peter Dutton as preferred prime minister by 47–35%.

    DemosAU polls of Melbourne and Sydney seats

    DemosAU collectively polled the Labor-held seats of Dunkley, Bruce and Hawke in Melbourne from April 13–22 from a sample of 924 people. Labor led the Coalition by 53–47%. The party won the three seats by 56.5–43.5% in 2022.

    Primary votes in the poll were 32% Labor, 31% Liberal, 13% Greens, 10% One Nation and 14% for all others.

    DemosAU collectively polled the Labor-held seats of Parramatta, Reid and Werriwa in Sydney from April 13–27 from a sample of 905 people. Labor led the Coalition by 56–44%. The party won the three seats 54.7–45.3% in 2022.

    Primary votes in the poll were 36% Labor, 28% Liberal, 10% Greens, 5% Libertarian, 4% One Nation, 11% independents and 6% others.

    Preference flows

    Phillip Coorey wrote in the Australian Financial Review Tuesday that JWS polling of some seats had right-wing party preferences flowing at 80 or 90% rates to the Coalition. If this is true, the Coalition would do better than expected from current polls.

    But respondent preferences were used in the Redbridge poll above, giving the same result as the 2022 flow result. The Spectre respondent result was actually 0.5 of a point better for Labor than the previous election method.

    The polls I covered on Tuesday from Resolve, Essential and Morgan used respondent preferences. The Coalition was up one point in the Morgan poll compared to the previous election method and up 0.5 of a point in the Essential poll. There was no difference between the two methods in Resolve.

    JWS has given the Coalition very strong results in many of its seat polls. All other evidence suggests only a small gain for the Coalition from using respondent preferences as opposed to the 2022 election flows.

    Inflation increased in March quarter

    The Australian Bureau of Statistics released the March quarter inflation report on Wednesday. Headline inflation increased 0.9% in the March quarter, up from 0.2% in both December and September. This was the highest quarterly inflation since June 2024. Annual inflation was steady at 2.4% from December.

    Core inflation increased 0.7% in the March quarter, up from 0.5% in December. Annual core inflation dropped to 2.9% in March from 3.3% in December.

    The same principles with poll analysis can be applied to economic data. We’re most interested in the current polls, not in averaging these polls with those from months ago. The quarterly inflation numbers should be emphasised, not the annual numbers that include data from the June 2024 quarter.

    Adrian Beaumont does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Major YouGov poll has Labor easily winning a majority of seats in election – https://theconversation.com/major-yougov-poll-has-labor-easily-winning-a-majority-of-seats-in-election-255601

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Australia: 136-2025: Conclusion of the 2024-25 Brown marmorated stink bug (BMSB) Risk Season

    Source: New South Wales Government 2

    1 May 2025​ 

    Who does this notice affect? 

    ​​Stakeholders in the import and shipping industries—including Master Consolidators, vessel masters, freight forwarders, treatment providers, Biosecurity Industry Participants, importers, customs brokers and principal agents— associated with shipping or importing goods that require increased intervention during the 2024-25 BMSB risk season. ​

    What has changed? 

    The 2024-25 BMSB risk season ended on 1 May…

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Niger

    Source:

    We’ve reviewed our advice and continue to advise do not travel to Niger. There’s ongoing political instability following a military takeover in July 2023. Protests and civil unrest could occur and turn violent quickly without notice. Avoid government buildings, demonstrations, large crowds and political gatherings. The overall security situation remains highly volatile, and movement restrictions may be implemented at short notice.

    There’s a high risk of terrorism, and terrorists may target places visited by foreigners, government buildings and security facilities. There’s a high risk of kidnapping across Niger and foreigners have been targeted.

    Some land borders remain closed, and others may close without warning. Trying to leave Niger by land borders is likely to be dangerous. Authorities have been conducting increased security checks on foreigners arriving in Niger by air. This may result in your passport being held by authorities for several days (see ‘Safety’).

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Which medications are commonly prescribed for autistic people and why?

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hiran Thabrew, Senior Lecturer in Child Psychiatry and Paediatrics, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau

    Arlette Lopez/Shutterstock

    Autism is a neurodevelopmental condition. Someone may have social and communication differences, sensory issues and/or restricted, repetitive patterns of behaviour or interests.

    There has been increased awareness and an expanded definition of autism over the past couple of decades. Now around one in 40 people are thought to be autistic.

    Autistic people often have strengths such as focus, honesty and dedication. But due to a combination of genetic and autism-related factors, they also have higher rates of other health conditions.

    Common mental health conditions include anxiety, depression, attention-deficit and hyperactivity disorder or ADHD, obsessive-compulsive disorder, eating disorders and intellectual developmental disorder.

    Common physical health conditions include epilepsy, rheumatoid arthritis and heart disease.

    The core features of autism can’t and don’t need to be altered. But a range of talking therapies and medications can help manage these other health conditions.

    Commonly prescribed medications

    The increased awareness of autism and availability of new medications has seen increased rates of prescribing for autistic people and those with other chronic conditions over the past few decades. This is a trend we have seen internationally.

    The most common medications for mental health conditions among autistic people are:

    1. selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), such as fluoxetine (Prozac), for anxiety and depression

    2. low-dose antipsychotic medications, such as risperidone and aripiprazole, for reducing stress-related irritability and aggression

    3. stimulants such as methylphenidate (Ritalin) for ADHD

    4. melatonin and other sleep medications.

    The most common medications for physical health conditions among autistic people are:

    1. painkillers, such as paracetamol and ibuprofen, for pain and fever, especially in younger children. These are also the most commonly prescribed medication for non-autistic children

    2. antibiotics, such as amoxycillin, for suspected or confirmed infections (autistic children tend to have more infections)

    3. asthma and allergy medications, including salbutamol inhalers, loratadine and oral steroids (autistic people have similar rates of allergies to non-autistic people)

    4. laxatives, such as lactulose, for constipation. Autistic people are at increased risk of constipation due to limited food preferences, rigid toilet habits, and difficulty recognising when they need to use the toilet.

    Autistic people are prescribed a range of medications for physical and mental health conditions.
    CandyRetriever/Shutterstock

    Multiple medications, or not enough

    Prescribing multiple medications at the same time is known as polypharmacy. This has become more of an issue for autistic people in Aotearoa New Zealand and Australia.

    One study found autistic children and young people from Aotearoa New Zealand received a mean (average) four medications in one year (versus 2.9 medications for non-autistic people). Some 57% were prescribed three or more medications at a time.

    Medications may work as well for people with and without autism. However, autistic people are more likely to have side effects. This might be due to heightened sensory sensitivities and the way medications affect the nervous system.

    Polypharmacy increases the risk of medication interactions. It is also likely to contribute to autistic people’s higher chance of dying early. A 2024 study confirms this occurs at double the rate of non-autistic people.

    Possible reasons for polypharmacy include:

    • lack of agreement between doctors and clear guidelines for prescribing medication

    • insufficient access to non-medication options to manage health conditions

    • greater likelihood of being treated during crises. For instance, behaviour that escalates to the point of personal or property damage and family burnout may require medication to allow a child to stay at home.

    However, at times, autistic people may not receive appropriate medications. This may be because doctors do not have clear prescribing guidelines or vary in how they prescribe. It can also be because someone or their family are concerned about side effects.

    Sometimes there are concerns about medication side effects.
    Bee Bonnet/Shutterstock

    The right dose for the right time

    We should aim to use the appropriate medication for the appropriate period of time for the growing number of people diagnosed with autism.

    It’s essential prescribers have clearer prescribing guidance, aim for the lowest possible dose of medication, actively address polypharmacy and regularly monitor autistic people with a view to weaning medications as soon as possible.

    Earlier identification and support for autistic children and their families would reduce the chance of crises and stress-related health conditions.

    We need health services that can better meet the needs of autistic people. Flexible, tailored care should be provided in an environment that matches someone’s sensory needs. For instance, an environment should not be too bright or loud, or overstimulating. Ideally, this will have been designed with autistic people.

    We also need an adequately resourced health system to provide autistic people with timely, appropriate, safe and equitable care.

    Hiran Thabrew is a child and adolescent psychiatrist, paediatrician, autism researcher and New Zealand Chair for the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists. He has never received any pharmaceutical company sponsorship for his clinical or research activities.

    ref. Which medications are commonly prescribed for autistic people and why? – https://theconversation.com/which-medications-are-commonly-prescribed-for-autistic-people-and-why-251715

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Australia: CFA firefighter remembered at national memorial service

    Source:

    Garry Mallen’s family received a Memorial Medallion

    This morning (1 May) the family of CFA Portland Fire Brigade volunteer Garry Mallen was presented with an AFAC Memorial Medallian.

    The AFAC National Memorial Service, held in Canberra, is an annual event to honour fire and emergency services personnel who have died in the line of duty.

    During the service, AFAC Memorial Medallions were presented to families of those being commemorated, including Garry. The service also acknowledged those people who have been added to the memorial wall. 

    CFA CEO Greg Leach AFSM and CFA Chief Officer Jason Heffernan attended the service, along with members of Portland Fire brigade and Garry’s family.

    • Garry Mallen’s family with members of Portland brigade and Chief Officer Jason Heffernan
    Submitted by News and Media

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: How do candidates skirt Chinese social media bans on political content? They use influencers

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Fan Yang, Research fellow at Melbourne Law School, the University of Melbourne and the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making and Society., The University of Melbourne

    This election, social media has been a major battleground as candidates try to reach younger voters. As Gen Z and Millennials now make up the dominant voter bloc in Australia, securing their support is more electorally important than ever.

    This effort has also played out on Chinese social media platforms, namely WeChat and RedNote. Thousands of Australians use these apps, often as a main source of news.

    The RECapture research team has been tracking political activity on these platforms for years. Between October 2024 and April 2025, we observed 319 Liberal Party advertisements, 68 Labor Party advertisements, and 258 ads from independent candidates on WeChat. More than 20 Australian politicians used RedNote for self-promotion. Both platforms are becoming increasingly popular among politicians.

    But there’s a catch: political communication on these apps is either banned or hidden. So how do candidates work around the rules?

    We’ve found they use influencers and third parties, blurring the lines between authorised political advertising and undisclosed campaigning.

    Skirting the rules

    Platforms such as Facebook and Google maintain public ad repositories to document political advertising.

    On WeChat and RedNote, however, such content is not formally registered or subject to public scrutiny.

    Since 2019, WeChat has been a key platform for Australian politicians trying to reach Chinese-Australian voters.

    From 2022 onwards, our research has observed the rising political popularity of RedNote, driven by its low entry barriers and emphasis on visual content.

    Chinese app RedNote is increasing in popularity.
    Shutterstock

    In January, a shift of US-based users from TikTok to RedNote further elevated the platform’s prominence. Now, candidates of all stripes are using it.

    But WeChat bans political advertisements and campaigning. RedNote uses shadowbanning (the covert hiding of specific content) to limit the visibility of political accounts.

    As a result, political figures in democracies globally often bypass these restrictions by working with Chinese-language media or influencers to reach Chinese-speaking voters.

    This tactic enables political messaging outside platform and regulatory oversight. It undermines transparency and accountability in political communication.

    How do political ads work on WeChat?

    Political advertising on WeChat isn’t transparent. WeChat requires official account registration through Chinese businesses recognised by Chinese tech conglomerate Tencent.

    In Australia, Chinese-language media outlets serve as intermediaries. They distribute political campaign materials on behalf of candidates.

    Political advertising on WeChat is presented in three main formats:

    • embedded within articles

    • as sponsored content

    • and as short videos distributed via WeChat’s Channel function.

    Advertising costs are typically negotiated between media outlets and campaign teams, ranging from a few hundred to several thousand dollars, depending on the outlet’s influence and the ad’s target demographic.

    Spending on political ads on WeChat isn’t disclosed anywhere, so it’s very hard to track how much money is being spent this way.

    What do these ads look like?

    For example, we identified Scott Yung, a Liberal candidate for Bennelong, and Andy Yin, a former Liberal Party member now running as an independent for Bradfield. They both published between two and eight political advertisements on WeChat daily in April.

    These ads were in addition to their self-promotional content and other campaigning activities via short videos.

    This content sometimes includes celebrity endorsements. In 2019 and 2025, respectively, Yung and Yin used third-party media and marketing companies based in China to recruit celebrities to endorse their campaigns.

    However, such strategies are criticised domestically due to concerns about potential “Chinese influence” and perceived links to the Communist Party of China.

    But behind the public political ads lies a semi-private form of campaigning.

    By attaching a QR code to their political ads, candidates direct their campaigns to private group chats, enabling a more targeted form of engagement (observed in the case of Liberal candidate for Reid Grange Chung’s sponsored content).

    What about RedNote?

    Non-Chinese Australian politicians often get around shadowbans on RedNote by signalling their connection to Chinese communities through symbolic gestures. This includes posts showcasing their visits to Chinese restaurants or photos taken at Lunar New Year community events.

    Candidates of Chinese background often highlight their connections with prominent white Australian politicians, such as former prime ministers Tony Abbott and John Howard, to show their standing and political credibility within the party.

    Discussions of party policies, especially controversial ones such as Australia-US-China relations, are rare. When they do occur, they are often selectively focused on matters of concern to Chinese migrants or those deemed safe for discussion on RedNote.

    Chinese-Australian candidates often organise their offline campaign events to target Chinese-Australian influencers. The influencers then disseminate relevant content on RedNote.

    As a result, candidates rely on content creators, influencers, supporters, migrant businesses and Chinese-language media outlets to promote their campaigns.

    Regulations falling by the wayside

    Candidates usually follow authorisation disclosure rules on their English social media pages.

    These rules, however, are often disregarded on RedNote or WeChat.

    Candidates often outsource their campaigning work to Chinese media and marketing agencies. This means the candidates have minimal oversight of the activities taking place on these platforms, raising concerns about whether electoral regulations may be inadvertently violated in the process.

    We’ve found instances of unauthorised pages of politicians and candidates that have gone unnoticed by the Australian Electoral Commission (AEC).

    These are hard to find because the content is largely shadowbanned. If users or the AEC searched a particular candidate’s name, they wouldn’t be able to find much.

    In April, the AEC advised rules around authorising this sort of content. It said electoral communications distributed by people or organisations that are not political entities still require authorisation if monetary or gifts-in-kind transactions are involved.

    The AEC’s guidance further says political parties should include an authorisation if they repost collaborative content. The general principle is: “when in doubt, authorise it”.

    The key challenges here are identifying who collaborates with whom, on which platform, how content is remixed, and whether the collaboration is voluntary or involves monetary or in-kind transactions.

    The AEC doesn’t actively monitor Chinese social media platforms. This makes enforcing any regulations almost impossible.

    Given how much political candidates are using these apps, there needs to be better regulatory oversight of what happens on them.


    We thank researchers Robbie Fordyce and Mengjie Cai for their contributions to this project.

    The project is funded by the Susan McKinnon Foundation between 2024 and 2025.

    Dan Dai, Luke Heemsbergen, and Stevie Zhang do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. How do candidates skirt Chinese social media bans on political content? They use influencers – https://theconversation.com/how-do-candidates-skirt-chinese-social-media-bans-on-political-content-they-use-influencers-253847

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: Who would win in a fight between 100 men and 1 gorilla? An evolutionary expert weighs in

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Renaud Joannes-Boyau, Professor in Geochronology and Geochemistry, Southern Cross University

    Hung Hung Chih/Shutterstock

    The internet’s latest absurd obsession is: who would win in a no-rules fight between 100 average human men and one adult male gorilla?

    This hypothetical and strange question has taken over Reddit, TikTok, YouTube and Instagram. Some argue that humans once hunted mammoths so, clearly, we would win. Others point out that a silverback gorilla can lift close to 1,000kg and could throw a grown man like a rag doll.

    To be honest, it’s not really a question we need to answer – and yet, as usual on the internet, everyone has an opinion.

    But, beyond the jokes and memes, this silly debate provides an opportunity to reflect on human evolution. What are the real strengths of our species? What have we sacrificed? And what can a gorilla, our majestic, powerful and endangered distant cousin, teach us about our own nature and evolution?

    Gorillas and humans: two branches of the same evolutionary tree

    Gorillas are one of our closest living relatives. Along with chimpanzees, bonobos and orangutans, they belong to the great apes or Hominidae family. Chimpanzees share about 98.8% of their DNA with us, while gorillas come a close second, sharing around 98.4%.

    The last common ancestor between humans and gorillas lived roughly 10 million years ago, and it is also the same ancestor for chimpanzees.

    Since the evolutionary split, humans and gorillas have followed very different paths. Gorillas have adapted to dense forests and mountainous terrains, while humans have evolved to live in the open, but realistically to multiple and various environments.

    Despite the substantial difference in ecological niches, humans and gorillas share many traits, such as opposable thumbs, facial expressions, complex social behaviours and emotional intelligence.

    Mastering forest power

    In the recent Dune saga, to win, Duke Leto Atreides wanted to develop “desert power”. Well, gorillas have mastered forest power.

    And let’s be clear – in terms of raw power, the gorilla wins every time. An adult male silverback can weigh more than 160kg and lift about a tonne without going to the gym every day. Their upper-body strength is shocking. And that’s no evolutionary accident – it’s the result of intense competition between males, where dominance determines mating.

    Additionally, gorillas are extremely tough and resilient, yet gentle and calm most of the time. Gorillas, like many primates, have a strong social intelligence. They use a variety of vocalisations, gestures and even chest drumming to communicate across distances.

    They have shown the ability to use sign language, mourn their dead, and demonstrate empathy, attesting to sophisticated cognitive skills.

    Trading muscles for minds

    A fight between 100 men and one gorilla might lead to a lot of dead men, but we all know that men will come with weapons, strategies, drones, fire and other clever tricks.

    Humans are not physically strong in comparison to many other mammals. Our strength as a species is our adaptability and our ability to collaborate in very large groups.

    Our brains are, on average, three times larger proportionally than those of gorillas. This fantastic evolutionary adaptation has allowed us to develop abstract thinking and symbolic language, but most of all, to pass and build on complex knowledge across generations.

    And this is our greatest superpower, our ability to cooperate across vast groups, far beyond the average gorilla social unit, which usually ranges from a few family members up to a group of 30 individuals.

    Humans’ evolutionary history has led to trading brute force for social, cultural and technological complexity, making us Earth’s most versatile and dangerous species.

    So, who’s the winner?

    In a one-on-one brawl, the gorilla can make “human-mash” with one hand. There is no contest when discussing brute force and bare hands.

    But humans fight dirty. Judging by our evolutionary success, humans would likely lose many battles but ultimately win the fight. Mountain gorillas were not on the brink of extinction in the 1980s without our help.

    Our species has spread across all continents, all terrains, and all climates. We have reshaped ecosystems, walked on the Moon, and developed advanced technologies. But gorillas are another kind of success rooted in harmony with their environment, physical grace, and quiet strength.

    Perhaps the real takeaway message isn’t who wins in a fight, but to realise that two very different and yet very close cousins have walked two separate evolutionary roads, each in their own distinct way. And both are nature’s triumph and accomplishment.

    Renaud Joannes-Boyau receives funding from the Australian Research Council, the Leakey Foundation, National Geographic, and the European Research Council.

    ref. Who would win in a fight between 100 men and 1 gorilla? An evolutionary expert weighs in – https://theconversation.com/who-would-win-in-a-fight-between-100-men-and-1-gorilla-an-evolutionary-expert-weighs-in-255621

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Global: The global costs of the US-China tariff war are mounting. And the worst may be yet to come

    Source: The Conversation – Global Perspectives – By Kai He, Professor of International Relations, Griffith University

    The United States and China remain in a standoff in their tariff war. Neither side appears willing to budge.

    After US President Donald Trump imposed massive 145% tariffs on Chinese imports in early April, China retaliated with its own tariffs of 125% on US goods.

    US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said this week it’s up to China to de-escalate tensions. China’s Foreign Ministry, meanwhile, said the two sides are not talking.

    The prospect of economic decoupling between the world’s two largest economies is no longer speculative. It is becoming a hard reality. While many observers debate who might “win” the trade war, the more likely outcome is that everyone loses.

    A convenient target

    Trump’s protectionist agenda has spared few. Allies and adversaries alike have been targeted by sweeping US tariffs. However, China has served as the main target, absorbing the political backlash of broader frustrations over trade deficits and economic displacement in the US.

    The economic costs to China are undeniable. The loss of reliable access to the US market, coupled with mounting uncertainty in the global trading system, has dealt a blow to China’s export-driven sectors.

    China’s comparative advantage lies in its vast manufacturing base and tightly integrated supply chains. This is especially true in high-tech and green industries such as electric vehicles, batteries and solar energy. These sectors are deeply dependent on open markets and predictable demand.

    New trade restrictions in Europe, Canada and the US on Chinese electric vehicles, in particular, have already caused demand to drop significantly.

    China’s GDP growth was higher than expected in the first quarter of the year at 5.4%, but analysts expect the effect of the tariffs to soon bite. A key measure of factory activity this week showed a contraction in manufacturing.

    China’s economic growth has also been weighed down by structural headwinds, including industrial overcapacity (when a country’s production of goods exceeds demand), an ageing population, rising youth unemployment and persistent regional disparities. The property sector — once a pillar of the country’s economic rise — has become a source of financial stress. Local government debt is mounting and a pension crisis is looming.

    Negotiations with the US might be desirable to end the tariff war. However, unilateral concessions on Beijing’s part are neither viable nor politically palatable.

    Regional coordination

    Trump’s tariff wars have done more than strain bilateral relationships; they have shaken the foundations of the global trading system.

    By sidelining the World Trade Organization and embracing a transactional approach to bilateral trade, the US has weakened multilateral norms and emboldened protectionist tendencies worldwide.

    One unintended consequence of this instability has been the resurgence of regional arrangements. In Asia, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), backed by China and centred on the ASEAN bloc in Southeast Asia, has emerged as a credible alternative for economic cooperation.

    Meanwhile, the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) continues to expand, with the United Kingdom joining late last year.

    Across Latin America, too, regional blocs are exploring new avenues for integration, hoping to buffer themselves against the shocks of resurgent protectionism.

    But regionalism is no panacea. It cannot replicate the scale or efficiency of global trade, nor can it restore the predictability on which exporters depend.

    Looming dangers

    The greater danger is the world drifting into a Kindleberger Trap — a situation in which no power steps forward to provide the leadership necessary to sustain global public goods, or a stable trading system.

    Economist Charles Kindleberger’s account of the Great Depression remains instructive: it was not the presence of conflict but the absence of leadership that brought about the global economy’s systemic collapse.

    Without renewed global coordination, the economic fragmentation triggered by Trump’s tariff wars could give way to something far more dangerous than a recession – rising geopolitical and military tensions that no region can contain.

    The political landscape is already fraught. The Chinese Communist Party, for instance, has long tethered its legitimacy to the promise of eventual unification with Taiwan. Yet the costs of using force remain prohibitively high.

    Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te’s recent designation of China as a “foreign hostile force” have sharpened tensions. Beijing’s response has been calibrated – military exercises intended more as a warning than a prelude to conflict.

    However, the intensifying trade war with the US may become the final straw that exhausts Beijing’s patience, leaving Taiwan as collateral damage in a US-China final showdown.

    A role for collective leadership

    China alone is neither able nor inclined to assume the mantle of global leadership. Its current focus is more on domestic priorities – sustaining economic growth and managing social stability – than on foreign policy.

    Yet, Beijing can still play a constructive role in shaping the international environment through its cooperation with Europe, ASEAN and the Global South.

    The objective is not to replace American hegemony, but to support a more multi-polar and collaborative system — one capable of sustaining global public goods in an era of uncertainty.

    Paradoxically, a more coordinated effort by the rest of the world may ultimately help bring the US back into the fold. Washington may rediscover the strategic value of engagement — and return not as the sole leader, but as an indispensable partner.

    In the short term, other states may seek to gain an advantage from the great power standoff. But they should remember that what begins as a clash between giants can quickly engulf bystanders.

    In this volatile landscape, the path forward does not lie in exploiting disorder. Rather, nations must cautiously advance the shared interest in restoring a stable, rules-based global order.

    Kai He receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

    ref. The global costs of the US-China tariff war are mounting. And the worst may be yet to come – https://theconversation.com/the-global-costs-of-the-us-china-tariff-war-are-mounting-and-the-worst-may-be-yet-to-come-254583

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Who would win in a fight between 100 men and 1 gorilla? An evolutionary expert weighs in

    Source: The Conversation – Global Perspectives – By Renaud Joannes-Boyau, Professor in Geochronology and Geochemistry, Southern Cross University

    Hung Hung Chih/Shutterstock

    The internet’s latest absurd obsession is: who would win in a no-rules fight between 100 average human men and one adult male gorilla?

    This hypothetical and strange question has taken over Reddit, TikTok, YouTube and Instagram. Some argue that humans once hunted mammoths so, clearly, we would win. Others point out that a silverback gorilla can lift close to 1,000kg and could throw a grown man like a rag doll.

    To be honest, it’s not really a question we need to answer – and yet, as usual on the internet, everyone has an opinion.

    But, beyond the jokes and memes, this silly debate provides an opportunity to reflect on human evolution. What are the real strengths of our species? What have we sacrificed? And what can a gorilla, our majestic, powerful and endangered distant cousin, teach us about our own nature and evolution?

    Gorillas and humans: two branches of the same evolutionary tree

    Gorillas are one of our closest living relatives. Along with chimpanzees, bonobos and orangutans, they belong to the great apes or Hominidae family. Chimpanzees share about 98.8% of their DNA with us, while gorillas come a close second, sharing around 98.4%.

    The last common ancestor between humans and gorillas lived roughly 10 million years ago, and it is also the same ancestor for chimpanzees.

    Since the evolutionary split, humans and gorillas have followed very different paths. Gorillas have adapted to dense forests and mountainous terrains, while humans have evolved to live in the open, but realistically to multiple and various environments.

    Despite the substantial difference in ecological niches, humans and gorillas share many traits, such as opposable thumbs, facial expressions, complex social behaviours and emotional intelligence.

    Mastering forest power

    In the recent Dune saga, to win, Duke Leto Atreides wanted to develop “desert power”. Well, gorillas have mastered forest power.

    And let’s be clear – in terms of raw power, the gorilla wins every time. An adult male silverback can weigh more than 160kg and lift about a tonne without going to the gym every day. Their upper-body strength is shocking. And that’s no evolutionary accident – it’s the result of intense competition between males, where dominance determines mating.

    Additionally, gorillas are extremely tough and resilient, yet gentle and calm most of the time. Gorillas, like many primates, have a strong social intelligence. They use a variety of vocalisations, gestures and even chest drumming to communicate across distances.

    They have shown the ability to use sign language, mourn their dead, and demonstrate empathy, attesting to sophisticated cognitive skills.

    Trading muscles for minds

    A fight between 100 men and one gorilla might lead to a lot of dead men, but we all know that men will come with weapons, strategies, drones, fire and other clever tricks.

    Humans are not physically strong in comparison to many other mammals. Our strength as a species is our adaptability and our ability to collaborate in very large groups.

    Our brains are, on average, three times larger proportionally than those of gorillas. This fantastic evolutionary adaptation has allowed us to develop abstract thinking and symbolic language, but most of all, to pass and build on complex knowledge across generations.

    And this is our greatest superpower, our ability to cooperate across vast groups, far beyond the average gorilla social unit, which usually ranges from a few family members up to a group of 30 individuals.

    Humans’ evolutionary history has led to trading brute force for social, cultural and technological complexity, making us Earth’s most versatile and dangerous species.

    So, who’s the winner?

    In a one-on-one brawl, the gorilla can make “human-mash” with one hand. There is no contest when discussing brute force and bare hands.

    But humans fight dirty. Judging by our evolutionary success, humans would likely lose many battles but ultimately win the fight. Mountain gorillas were not on the brink of extinction in the 1980s without our help.

    Our species has spread across all continents, all terrains, and all climates. We have reshaped ecosystems, walked on the Moon, and developed advanced technologies. But gorillas are another kind of success rooted in harmony with their environment, physical grace, and quiet strength.

    Perhaps the real takeaway message isn’t who wins in a fight, but to realise that two very different and yet very close cousins have walked two separate evolutionary roads, each in their own distinct way. And both are nature’s triumph and accomplishment.

    Renaud Joannes-Boyau receives funding from the Australian Research Council, the Leakey Foundation, National Geographic, and the European Research Council.

    ref. Who would win in a fight between 100 men and 1 gorilla? An evolutionary expert weighs in – https://theconversation.com/who-would-win-in-a-fight-between-100-men-and-1-gorilla-an-evolutionary-expert-weighs-in-255621

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Research – Australia’s credit and charge card payments to near $300 billion in 2025 amid consumer and e-commerce growth, forecasts GlobalData

    Source: GlobalData

    Australia’s credit and charge card payments market continues to demonstrate resilience and growth, underpinned by rising consumer spending, robust payment infrastructure, and an expanding e-commerce landscape.

    Enhanced by value-added incentives such as cashback offers, flexible repayment options, and installment facilities, the market is set to maintain an upward trajectory, reaching AUD453.9 billion ($299.7 billion) in 2025 despite evolving global economic challenges, reveals GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

    GlobalData’s Payment Cards Analytics reveals that credit and charge card payment value in Australia registered a growth of 6.3% in 2024, driven by the rise in consumer spending.

    Kartik Challa, Senior Banking and Payments Analyst at GlobalData, comments: “Public awareness of the advantages associated with credit card usage is widespread in Australia. Consumers frequently utilize these cards to capitalize on benefits, including cashback offers and rewards programs. Bolstered by a robust payment infrastructure and a flourishing e-commerce market, credit and charge cards have gained marked preference among the Australian consumers.”

     

    Australians are increasingly using credit and charge cards for payments, with the frequency of payments per card standing at 225.5 times in 2024 and is anticipated to further rise to 239.5 in 2029. This is driven by banks offering flexible repayment options and value-added benefits such as cashback, reward points, discounts, and installment facilities.

    CommBank offers an installment plan “SurePay,” allowing its credit card holders to convert purchases into three, six, or 12 months. Likewise, National Australia Bank’s  NAB Now Pay Later option allows customers to split the cost of purchases into four interest-free repayments over six weeks.

    Well-developed payment infrastructure has been another key driver for the rise of credit and charge cards in Australia. The number of POS terminals per million inhabitants in Australia stood at 39,031 in 2024, which is higher compared to some of its peers such as China (33,631), Hong Kong (27,184), and India (6,964), though there is significant room for further expansion of POS infrastructure.

    Rising e-commerce payments is another factor contributing to the growth in credit and charge card usage. According to GlobalData’s E-Commerce Analytics, credit and charge cards are the preferred payment method for online payments, with 22.5% share in 2024.

    Meanwhile, to mitigate the risk of over-indebtedness, banks offer debt reconsolidation programs and credit card balance transfer programs to their customers to enable them to merge multiple loans (including credit card debt) into a single, monthly installment and transfer their credit card balance without interest. For example, ANZ offers balance transfer options that enable customers to consolidate debt by transferring outstanding balances from non-ANZ credit cards to a new or existing ANZ credit card.

    Challa concludes: “Australia’s credit and charge card market is poised for sustained growth over the next five years, driven by the economic recovery, growing consumer spending, and growth in e-commerce payments. However, challenges such as the ongoing global trade tariff dispute among major countries, and geopolitical uncertainties remain bottlenecks to the market. Overall, the value of credit and charge card payments is forecast to register a slower compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4.4% between 2025 and 2029 to reach AUD539.1 billion ($356 billion) in 2029.”

    About GlobalData

    4,000 of the world’s largest companies, including over 70% of FTSE 100 and 60% of Fortune 100 companies, make more timely and better business decisions thanks to GlobalData’s unique data, expert analysis and innovative solutions, all in one platform. GlobalData’s mission is to help our clients decode the future to be more successful and innovative across a range of industries, including the healthcare, consumer, retail, financial, technology and professional services sectors.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: UPDATE: Call for information – Suspicious machinery fire – Yuendumu

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    The Northern Territory Police Force is continuing to call for information in relation to a suspicious heavy machinery fire in Yuendumu on 14 December 2024.

    On Friday 13 December 2024 at 5:30pm, four employees operating the site completed their shift and stopped their heavy machinery for the day. The machinery being:

    • Isuzu Tip Truck bearing
    • Bobcat E50 Mini Excavator
    • Caterpillar 311D Excavator
    • Chase CX57C Excavator

    The machinery was parked along Nyrippi Road within approximately 50 meters of each other and upon the workers return to the site at 6:15am the following day, it was established that all but one of the machines were destroyed by fire.

    A crime scene was established where the extensive damage to the equipment was assessed, which suggests the fire was deliberately lit.

    Southern Crime members continue to investigate and urge anyone with information about the incident to make contact on 131 444. Please quote reference number P24347724.

    You can also report anonymously through Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or through https://crimestoppersnt.com.au/.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: NT Police Force seek community action to take advantage of Forensic Investigative Genetic Genealogy

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    The Northern Territory Police Force, in collaboration with the Australian Federal Police National Missing Persons Coordination Centre, are embracing innovative technology to help solve long-standing missing persons cases.

    Forensic Investigative Genetic Genealogy (FIGG) combines DNA testing with genealogy research to offer fresh hope for cases that have remained unsolved for years, particularly those of unidentified human remains.

    The Northern Territory currently have 64 cases of unidentified human remains under investigation with the Cold Case Taskforce. FIGG technology presents a new frontier in forensic science and allows investigators to use genetic data to trace family connections through DNA. The use of genealogy databases is a game-changer, providing families of missing persons a much-needed opportunity to find closure.

    What is Forensic Investigative Genetic Genealogy (FIGG)?

    FIGG is an emerging technique that combines the power of DNA analysis with genealogy research. By comparing genetic material from unidentified remains with databases of individuals’ DNA, investigators can trace family relationships and potentially identify those who have been missing for years, or in some cases, decades.

    This process can be particularly effective for cases where traditional investigative methods have not yielded results. The ability to access and cross-reference large, publicly available DNA databases greatly enhances the likelihood of making connections that would otherwise be impossible.

    How Can You Help?

    Members of the public who have already submitted their DNA to consumer databases such as Ancestry.com can play a pivotal role in solving cold cases. By downloading your DNA results and uploading them to genealogy databases like GEDmatch or FamilyTreeDNA, you could help solve a case that has left families without answers for years.

    Instructions on how to upload DNA results to these databases can be found on their websites:

    The key to achieving success with the use of this cutting-edge technology lies in the support of the community.

    As FIGG continues to evolve, it holds promise for solving numerous unresolved missing persons cases across the Northern Territory and beyond. With 64 ongoing cases of unidentified human remains in the NT alone, this new method offers a renewed sense of optimism for those seeking answers.

    The Northern Territory Police Force is encouraging members of the public to consider participating, helping to bring answers to families and giving long-term missing persons a chance at being identified.

    For more information about how you can assist, please visit the websites linked above.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Exercise NZ – Pilates Rising: One of the Fastest-Growing Fitness Trends Globally – Celebrating International Pilates Day 2025

    Source: Exercise NZ

    The first Saturday of May — May 3rd — marks International Pilates Day. Pilates is officially one of the fastest-growing fitness trends in the world, with the global industry forecast to grow by over 10.8% in the next 10 years. Alongside global trends in core conditioning and functional training, Pilates is gaining momentum in New Zealand, with 64% of Gen Z gym members doing reformer Pilates classes and 55% taking part in mat-based Pilates.

    As momentum builds, ExerciseNZ, in association with Pilates Aotearoa, is encouraging Kiwis to celebrate International Pilates Day and experience first-hand why this dynamic, research-backed form of movement — developed by Joseph Pilates during World War I — is transforming lives everywhere.

    “In a world where wellbeing and vitality have never been more important, the Pilates method offers a holistic, sustainable approach to thriving — supporting not just physical wellness but emotional resilience and mindful movement. More than just a fitness fad, the practice of various forms of Pilates has earned its place as a powerful tool for building strength, enhancing mobility, and boosting mental wellbeing,”
    — Stephanie Hadley, Chair, Pilates Aotearoa

    As Pilates continues to grow in popularity, International Pilates Day offers a timely opportunity to explore the evidence behind this global trend. Studies show that regular Pilates practice can reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression by up to 30%, while improving balance, flexibility, and core strength — critical factors in preventing falls and supporting healthy ageing.

    Research from the University of Sydney found that Pilates delivers mental health benefits comparable to other major forms of exercise therapy. Clinical research published in Physiotherapy shows that participating in Pilates twice a week can reduce fall risk by up to 40% among older adults, significantly improving functional strength and stability. Findings published in The Open Public Health Journal also show that after just eight weeks, participants experience higher body confidence, improved mood, and reduced stress.

    Whether you’re a newbie, a regular participant, or a seasoned pro, there’s a place for everyone on the mat. ExerciseNZ, in partnership with Pilates Aotearoa, invites all New Zealanders to celebrate International Pilates Day — no matter your age, fitness level, or experience.

    Why Pilates Works: Evidence-Based Benefits

    Pilates can reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression by up to 30%.
    Practising Pilates twice a week can lower fall risk by up to 40% in older adults.
    After eight weeks, Pilates can significantly improve mood, reduce stress, and increase body confidence.
    Research shows Pilates offers mental health benefits on par with other major exercise therapies.

    This International Pilates Day, take a moment for yourself, connect with your community, and be part of a global movement towards better health and vitality through Pilates.

    Pilates Aotearoa will also be hosting events for their members to celebrate the classical method on Saturday, May 3rd.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-Evening Report: ER Report: A Roundup of Significant Articles on EveningReport.nz for May 1, 2025

    ER Report: Here is a summary of significant articles published on EveningReport.nz on May 1, 2025.

    What’s the difference between a tantrum and a meltdown?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Shawna Mastro Campbell, Assistant Professor Clinical Psychology, Bond University Volurol/Shutterstock If you live with young children, there’s a good chance you’ve been on the receiving end of a child yelling, screaming, crying, throwing or hitting things. But how do parents know what is typical and age-related boundary

    Is WA Health having final say over edits of Paramedics ‘censorship’? Yes. But it’s necessary
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jan Cattoni, Lecturer, Screen Production, CQUniversity Australia Australian reality TV debuted in 2006 with Bondi Rescue. The show featured a winning formula of sun, surf, heroes and danger. It sparked many similar programs featuring police, helicopter crews and paramedics. Paramedics (2018–), as the title suggests, follows Australian

    Savvy athletes and new technology are flipping traditional sports marketing on its head
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Cairney, Professor and Head of Human Movement and Nutrition Sciences; Director, The Queensland Centre for Olympic and Paralympic Studies, The University of Queensland Not so long ago, life was pretty simple for sports leagues and teams when it came to connecting with fans: the contests and

    3 years on from the ‘integrity’ election, how is Australia tracking on corruption reforms?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kate Griffiths, Democracy Deputy Program Director, Grattan Institute Taras Vyshnya/Shutterstock At the last federal election, the then opposition leader Anthony Albanese pledged to “change the way politics operates in this country”. Integrity was a key issue in 2022, and Australians voted for a change of government and

    Are side hustles really a way to escape the rat race, or just passion projects for a privileged few?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By David Farrugia, ARC Future Fellow, School of Education, Deakin University PeopleImages.com – Yuri A/Shutterstock Is a “side hustle” really the only thing separating you from the life you desire? Listening to some influencers on social media could certainly have you thinking so. Side hustles encompass a range

    Feuding mob families, mind control and a murder at the White House: what to watch in May
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Alexa Scarlata, Lecturer, Digital Communication, RMIT University Disney+/Prime/Netflix/Paramount+/The Conversation It’s May! Where did the year go? It must be all the amazing TV we’re watching that’s making the time whiz by. This month’s lineup of expert picks is packed with standout shows across all genres. Whether you’re

    How does consciousness work? Duelling scientists tested two big theories but found no winner
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Tim Bayne, Professor of Philosophy, Monash University cdd20 / Unsplash “Theories are like toothbrushes,” it’s sometimes said. “Everybody has their own and nobody wants to use anybody else’s.” It’s a joke, but when it comes to the study of consciousness – the question of how we have

    Australians are warming to minority governments – but they still prefer majority rule
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Nicholas Biddle, Professor of Economics and Public Policy, ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences, Australian National University Minority governments have been part of Australia’s political history since Federation. In the country’s early decades, Prime Ministers Edmund Barton, Alfred Deakin, Chris Watson, George Reid and Andrew Fisher

    Donald Trump has cast a long shadow over the Australian election. Will it prove decisive?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Emma Shortis, Adjunct Senior Fellow, School of Global, Urban and Social Studies, RMIT University Donald Trump is everywhere, inescapable. His return to power in the United States was always going to have some impact on the Australian federal election. The question was how disruptive he would be.

    Playing politics with AI: why NZ needs rules on the use of ‘fake’ images in election campaigns
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Bronwyn Isaacs, Lecturer, Anthropology, University of Waikato Laurence Dutton/Getty Images Seeing is no longer believing in the age of images and videos generated by artificial intelligence (AI), and this is having an impact on elections in New Zealand and elsewhere. Ahead of the 2025 local body elections,

    When it comes to health information, who should you trust? 4 ways to spot a dodgy ‘expert’
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Hassan Vally, Associate Professor, Epidemiology, Deakin University Surface/Unsplash When it comes to our health, we’re constantly being warned about being taken in by misinformation. Yet for most of us what we believe ultimately comes down to who we trust, including which “experts” we trust. The problem is

    What is a downburst? These winds can be as destructive as tornadoes − we recreate them to test building designs
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Amal Elawady, Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Florida International University A downburst blasts Bangkok, Thailand, in 2017. Natapat Ariyamongkol/iStock/Getty Images Plus From a distance, a downburst can look like a torrent of heavy rain. But at ground level, its behavior can be far more destructive.

    Confirmed: Australian weapons sold to Israel, reveals Declassified Australia
    Report by Dr David Robie – Café Pacific. – SPECIAL REPORT: By Michelle Fahy The Australian counter-drone weapons system seen at a weapons demonstration in Israel recently is actually just one of a few that were sold by the Canberra-based company Electro Optic Systems (EOS) and sent through its wholly-owned US subsidiary to Israel, Declassified

    Amid Dutton’s ‘hate media’ and Trump’s despotism, press freedom is more vital than ever
    COMMENTARY: By Alexandra Wake Despite all the political machinations and hate towards the media coming from the president of the United States, I always thought the majority of Australian politicians supported the role of the press in safeguarding democracy. And I certainly did not expect Peter Dutton — amid an election campaign, one with citizens

    Election Diary: post-election rate cut and phone call from Trump in the pipeline
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra It used to be de rigueur for the prime minister and opposition leader to turn up to the National Press Club in the final week of the election campaign. But now Liberal leaders are not so keen. Scott Morrison gave

    Inaccurate 1News reporting on football violence breached broadcasting standards, rules BSA
    Broadcasting Standards Authority New Zealand’s Broadcasting Standards Authority (BSA) has upheld complaints about two 1News reports relating to violence around a football match in Amsterdam between local team Ajax and Israel’s Maccabi Tel Aviv. The authority found an item on “antisemitic violence” surrounding the match, and another on heightened security in Paris the following week,

    People’s mental health goes downhill after repeated climate disasters – it’s an issue of social equity
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Ang Li, ARC DECRA and Senior Research Fellow, NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Healthy Housing, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne Across Australia, communities are grappling with climate disasters that are striking more frequently and with greater intensity. Bushfires, floods and

    Older Australians are also hurting from the housing crisis. Where are the election policies to help them?
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Victoria Cornell, Research Fellow, Flinders University shutterstock beeboys/Shutterstock It would be impossible at this stage in the election campaign to be unaware that housing is a critical, potentially vote-changing, issue. But the suite of policies being proposed by the major parties largely focus on young, first home

    Inflation is easing, boosting the case for another interest rate cut in May
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By John Hawkins, Senior Lecturer, Canberra School of Politics, Economics and Society, University of Canberra Daria Nipot/Shutterstock Australia’s headline inflation rate held steady at a four-year low of 2.4% in the March quarter, according to official data, adding to the case for a cut in interest rates at

    Is your child anxious about going on school camp? Here are 4 ways to prepare
    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Micah Boerma, Researcher, School of Psychology and Wellbeing, University of Southern Queensland Nitinai Thabthong/Shutterstock One of the highlights of the school year is an overnight excursion or school camp. These can happen as early as Year 3. While many students are very excited about the chance to

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: The global costs of the US-China tariff war are mounting. And the worst may be yet to come

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Kai He, Professor of International Relations, Griffith University

    The United States and China remain in a standoff in their tariff war. Neither side appears willing to budge.

    After US President Donald Trump imposed massive 145% tariffs on Chinese imports in early April, China retaliated with its own tariffs of 125% on US goods.

    US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said this week it’s up to China to de-escalate tensions. China’s Foreign Ministry, meanwhile, said the two sides are not talking.

    The prospect of economic decoupling between the world’s two largest economies is no longer speculative. It is becoming a hard reality. While many observers debate who might “win” the trade war, the more likely outcome is that everyone loses.

    A convenient target

    Trump’s protectionist agenda has spared few. Allies and adversaries alike have been targeted by sweeping US tariffs. However, China has served as the main target, absorbing the political backlash of broader frustrations over trade deficits and economic displacement in the US.

    The economic costs to China are undeniable. The loss of reliable access to the US market, coupled with mounting uncertainty in the global trading system, has dealt a blow to China’s export-driven sectors.

    China’s comparative advantage lies in its vast manufacturing base and tightly integrated supply chains. This is especially true in high-tech and green industries such as electric vehicles, batteries and solar energy. These sectors are deeply dependent on open markets and predictable demand.

    New trade restrictions in Europe, Canada and the US on Chinese electric vehicles, in particular, have already caused demand to drop significantly.

    China’s GDP growth was higher than expected in the first quarter of the year at 5.4%, but analysts expect the effect of the tariffs to soon bite. A key measure of factory activity this week showed a contraction in manufacturing.

    China’s economic growth has also been weighed down by structural headwinds, including industrial overcapacity (when a country’s production of goods exceeds demand), an ageing population, rising youth unemployment and persistent regional disparities. The property sector — once a pillar of the country’s economic rise — has become a source of financial stress. Local government debt is mounting and a pension crisis is looming.

    Negotiations with the US might be desirable to end the tariff war. However, unilateral concessions on Beijing’s part are neither viable nor politically palatable.

    Regional coordination

    Trump’s tariff wars have done more than strain bilateral relationships; they have shaken the foundations of the global trading system.

    By sidelining the World Trade Organization and embracing a transactional approach to bilateral trade, the US has weakened multilateral norms and emboldened protectionist tendencies worldwide.

    One unintended consequence of this instability has been the resurgence of regional arrangements. In Asia, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), backed by China and centred on the ASEAN bloc in Southeast Asia, has emerged as a credible alternative for economic cooperation.

    Meanwhile, the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) continues to expand, with the United Kingdom joining late last year.

    Across Latin America, too, regional blocs are exploring new avenues for integration, hoping to buffer themselves against the shocks of resurgent protectionism.

    But regionalism is no panacea. It cannot replicate the scale or efficiency of global trade, nor can it restore the predictability on which exporters depend.

    Looming dangers

    The greater danger is the world drifting into a Kindleberger Trap — a situation in which no power steps forward to provide the leadership necessary to sustain global public goods, or a stable trading system.

    Economist Charles Kindleberger’s account of the Great Depression remains instructive: it was not the presence of conflict but the absence of leadership that brought about the global economy’s systemic collapse.

    Without renewed global coordination, the economic fragmentation triggered by Trump’s tariff wars could give way to something far more dangerous than a recession – rising geopolitical and military tensions that no region can contain.

    The political landscape is already fraught. The Chinese Communist Party, for instance, has long tethered its legitimacy to the promise of eventual unification with Taiwan. Yet the costs of using force remain prohibitively high.

    Taiwanese President Lai Ching-te’s recent designation of China as a “foreign hostile force” have sharpened tensions. Beijing’s response has been calibrated – military exercises intended more as a warning than a prelude to conflict.

    However, the intensifying trade war with the US may become the final straw that exhausts Beijing’s patience, leaving Taiwan as collateral damage in a US-China final showdown.

    A role for collective leadership

    China alone is neither able nor inclined to assume the mantle of global leadership. Its current focus is more on domestic priorities – sustaining economic growth and managing social stability – than on foreign policy.

    Yet, Beijing can still play a constructive role in shaping the international environment through its cooperation with Europe, ASEAN and the Global South.

    The objective is not to replace American hegemony, but to support a more multi-polar and collaborative system — one capable of sustaining global public goods in an era of uncertainty.

    Paradoxically, a more coordinated effort by the rest of the world may ultimately help bring the US back into the fold. Washington may rediscover the strategic value of engagement — and return not as the sole leader, but as an indispensable partner.

    In the short term, other states may seek to gain an advantage from the great power standoff. But they should remember that what begins as a clash between giants can quickly engulf bystanders.

    In this volatile landscape, the path forward does not lie in exploiting disorder. Rather, nations must cautiously advance the shared interest in restoring a stable, rules-based global order.

    Kai He receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

    ref. The global costs of the US-China tariff war are mounting. And the worst may be yet to come – https://theconversation.com/the-global-costs-of-the-us-china-tariff-war-are-mounting-and-the-worst-may-be-yet-to-come-254583

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Tauranga’s lacklustre by-election turnout makes case for ditching Māori wards

    Source: ACT Party

    Responding to the results of Tauranga’s Te Awanui Māori Ward by-election, Tauranga-based ACT MP Cameron Luxton says:

    “Here’s another reason to ditch Māori council wards:

    “In Tauranga’s Māori ward by-election this week, less than 12% of eligible voters turned out. It means we have a new councillor elected with just 464 first-preference votes.

    “For comparison, in general ward by elections, 22% turned out in Hamilton East last year, and 42% in Ashburton in 2023.

    “When we have Māori ward councillors with full decision-making powers, elected by just a handful of voters, it makes a joke of local democracy. It means some people’s votes are more powerful than others.

    “In Tauranga the situation is especially absurd, because in addition to Māori ward councillors, we also have unelected mana whenua representatives on Council committees.

    “Thankfully ACT has brought back referendums on Māori wards. But councils shouldn’t be introducing them in the first place. Local issues of rates and roads can be addressed without dividing the community by race. In fact, the council could heed the message of this week’s by-election turnout, and simply take the option we’ve given them to remove the race-based ward without even having to go through a referendum process.

    “Outside of Tauranga, ACT is standing candidates in this year’s local elections, and ACT councillors will fight for equal rights, democracy, and the principle of ‘one person, one vote’. I just wish we had more of these values at the table in Tauranga.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Speech to Tauranga Business Chamber: The Case For a Smaller, Focused Executive

    Source: ACT Party

    Speech to Tauranga Business Chamber: The Case For a Smaller, Focused Executive

    Intro

    The term of Government is nearing half time, when we should be reviewing the first half and planning the second.

    I believe the Government can point to significant progress, and this is reflected in us maintaining a lead in the polls despite tough economic times.

    Inflation and interest rates have been beaten back. Government doesn’t control every factor influencing them, but we can control our own spending. The Government’s commitment to spend less, and maintaining that discipline over four years has helped win the war on inflation and interest rates. This week’s announcement that we will come in $1.1 billion under the allowance this year is a very positive development.

    The priority in crime has switched from criminals to victims. There is nothing wrong with rehabilitating criminals to reduce crime, and save money on imprisonment. There is a big problem, however, with seeing the gangs as partners, a lower prison muster as a goal in itself, and spending more on pre-sentencing reports for convicted criminals than victim support.

    Across the board we have made innocent people the priority and criminals the target. Gangs are no longer partners to the Government, Three Strikes is back, and the expansion of prisoner rights will be reversed, to name just a few. As a result, violent crime is falling and we’re not finished yet.

    In healthcare the prescription is very simple and very complex all at once. What we need to do is stabilise years of restructuring and chaos so that New Zealanders get value for money. The health budget is up 67 per cent, from $18 billion in 2019 to $30 billion six years later. The complex part is unblocking the myriad issues that make the system so frustratingly unproductive.

    Finally the Government has taken many steps to restore our country’s commitment to liberal democracy. The liberal part means all people are equal, regardless of their immutable characteristics. The democratic part means each person gets an equal say on the wielding of political power, or one person, one vote. These are uneasy conversations, but essential ones. We have problems to solve and they’re easier solved together as a people united by our common humanity than divided by identity politics.

    Half time talk

    Any good half time team talk, though, should be warts and all. Have we done well? I claim we have. Is it time to declare victory? Far too early? Could we do better? Absolutely, and here’s one way we might do better in the future.

    I often hear the change is too slow. People look at Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Javier Milei and ask, why don’t you just change things faster like them?

    Part of the reason that we are not a dictatorship, with all the power in one office. That’s a good thing. Power in New Zealand rests in many institutions. There are boards, like the board of Pharmac. There are councils, such as in universities. There are individuals’ statutory positions, such as the privacy commissioner. All of these are there thanks to parliamentary laws, which take time to change. Unless you’re Che Guevara, you probably want a stable, thoughtful political system that consults people affected by its changes and governs by consent.

    On the other hand, it’s time to start planning play even better in the future. Today I’d like to float an idea about how we could transform government management and get better results for the people who pay for it.

    The suggestion I’m making changes the way we think about government. At the moment it’s supposed to be something that can solve all your problems – although the track record is not good.

    Like any business, it needs to be an organisation focused on running itself well first. It is something that a determined manager would do as the first order of business, getting the right people in the right seats on the bus before setting off on the journey, so to speak.

    It’s also about tackling head on the lingering feeling in New Zealand of paralysis by analysis, that NOTHING GETS DONE, because there’s too much hui and not enough dui. Everyone is always consulting someone to make sure nobody’s feelings would be hurt if, hypothetically, anybody ever actually did anything.

    Our current set up of government, that has evolved over the past 25 years, seems to be an example of our national paralysis.

    The idea I’m about to share may seem a little like shuffling deckchairs, but it’s more like pass the parcel, because it involves seriously reducing the number of seats. It goes like this.

    Untangling Spaghetti

    Here’s a simple question. Each government minister has specific areas of responsibility assigned to them called portfolios. How many ministerial portfolios do you think New Zealand has today? 40? 60?

    Well, don’t feel too bad if you’re well off the mark. The truth is, most people wouldn’t know. And frankly, most wouldn’t believe it if I told them.

    We currently have 82 ministerial portfolios. Yes, you heard that right. Eighty-two.

    Those 82 portfolios are held by 28 ministers. And under them, we have 41 separate government departments. That’s a big, complicated bureaucratic beast. It’s hungry for taxpayer money and it’s paid for by you.

    Let’s put this in perspective.

    Ireland, with roughly five million people, has a constitutional maximum of 15 Ministers managing 18 portfolios.

    And yet, somehow, the Irish have managed to keep the lights on, run hospitals, fund schools, maintain roads, and defend their borders without 82 portfolios, 28 ministers, or 41 government departments.

    In fact, they’ve done much better than us on most measures this century. That’s not in spite of having simpler government, I suspect it’s because they have it.

    If we look further abroad, the comparison is even more stark.

    South Korea, with a population of 52 million, has 18 Ministers. The United Kingdom, with 67 million people, has around 22. The United States, with over 330 million citizens, runs a Cabinet of about 25.

    By comparison, New Zealand’s executive looks bloated.

    Now I recognise these countries have different political systems. But that doesn’t mean we should accept inefficiency as inevitable. It certainly doesn’t mean we should celebrate it.

    Something has to change. That means fewer portfolios, fewer ministers, and fewer departments. Sure, that might put me and a few of my colleagues out of a job. But if that’s the price of having a government that delivers core services efficiently and gives taxpayers real value for money, then it’s worth it.

    It wasn’t always this way.

    New Zealand once had a lean cabinet. Sixteen ministers all sat at the same table. Each responsible for one or two departments. You were the Minister of Police. That was your job. Everyone knew who was accountable.

    Then came the 1990s and the dawn of MMP.

    Suddenly, governments needed to bring in coalition partners. The idea of ministers outside cabinet was invented. These were people with the title but not the seat at the table. Four of those ministers were created initially. That brought the total number to 20.

    A few years later, Helen Clark came along and took things further. Her government had 20 cabinet ministers and eight Ministers outside cabinet. 28 in total. And it’s stayed around that number ever since.

    With such a large executive, coordinating work programmes and communicating between ministers inside and outside cabinet is difficult, and as a result governments run the risk of drifting.

    Some departments now report to a dozen ministers or more.

    Officials at MBIE report to 19 different ministers. When you have 19 ministers responsible for one department, the department itself becomes the most powerful player in the room. Bureaucrats face ministers with competing priorities, unclear mandates, and often little subject matter expertise. The result? Nothing happens. Or worse, everything happens, badly. There’s a wonderful line in a report by the New Zealand Initiative: “Confusion empowers the bureaucracy.”

    The size of the executive might have stabilised, but the number of portfolios has exploded.

    It used to be roughly a one-to-one equation between a minister and a department. Now ministers hold three or four portfolios each.

    There are portfolios without a specific department, including Racing, Hospitality, Auckland, the South Island, Hunting and Fishing, the Voluntary Sector, and Space, just to name a few of the 82 portfolios that now exist. We have to ask ourselves, do we need a Government Minister overseeing each of these areas?

    I’m not saying those aren’t important communities. What I am saying is that creating a portfolio or a department named after the community is completely different from running a real department to deliver a service. It’s not a substitute for good policy. It’s not proof of delivery.

    It is an easy political gesture though. The cynics among us would say it’s symbolism. Governments want to show they care about an issue, so they create a portfolio to match. A Minister gets a title, and voters are told in the most obvious way possible that it is a priority.

    Take the Child Poverty Reduction portfolio under the Ardern Government. It came after Jacinda Ardern made child poverty her raison d’être. Creating the portfolio was a way to show she meant business. But five years later, has the creation of the portfolio improved the rate of child poverty? Were children better off because of a new Minister for Child Poverty Reduction?

    We all know the answer. Child poverty rates plateaued and New Zealand is still grappling with the same problems. At the time, only ACT had the courage to say this and to vote against the Child Poverty Reduction Act, because we knew it was window dressing.

    I’m proud to be part of a government that believes the path out of poverty isn’t paved by political slogans but better school attendance and achievement, making it easier to develop resources and build homes, getting more investment into New Zealand, and ending open-ended welfare in favour of mutual obligation.

    Deep down I think we all know that the only true path out of poverty is building the individual’s capacity to provide for themselves and their family. There are no examples of anyone escaping poverty though dependence on their fellow citizens.

    I know that if I start talking about specific ministries, people will start talking about the examples and the politics of who survives and who is cancelled and so on. Let me just say that I’ve been through the current list and I believe we could easily get to 30 departments.

    Now, some people might be thinking, hang on, didn’t you just create the Ministry for Regulation? Yes, I did. And here’s why it matters.

    Because government doesn’t just spend and tax. It also regulates. It restricts what people can do with their property. It dictates what can be built, where, how, and by whom. In fact, everything government does is either tax your money or put rules on the property it hasn’t taxed yet. That’s it. Try to think of something government does that isn’t either a) taxing and spending your money or b) making rules about what you can do with your remaining property.

    And yet, until now, there was no central department looking at the cumulative effect of regulation. No one asking whether the rules were achieving their goals or just stacking up and strangling productivity in red tape.

    The Ministry for Regulation is one of just five central agencies in government. It was created not to grow bureaucracy, but to hold the bureaucracy accountable.

    We don’t need more Ministers, we need fewer. But we also need smarter government. And that means focusing on what matters

    Portfolios shouldn’t be handed out like participation trophies. There’s no benefit to having ministers juggling three or four unrelated jobs and doing none of them well.

    Take Nanaia Mahuta. She was Minister for Foreign Affairs and Local Government. Two large, complex areas. It’s not uncommon for a Minister to fail at one of their major portfolios when performing this juggling act. She managed to be equally bad at both.

    Ministers should have a remit over a single, clearly defined, policy area. Stretching ministers across multiple, disparate areas of complex policy empowers the bureaucracy because there will always be a knowledge gap where ministers are overly dependent on the bureaucrats. This situation empowers the Wellington bureaucracy.

    That’s how they get away with spending your taxes with little accountability. Take Labour’s health restructure as an example. There’s no doubt our health system needed change, it clearly still does, and this government is working hard to address this. However, the change it needed was never to create more enormous, tax-absorbing bureaucracies with little explanation of how they would change things for you. That’s what Labour delivered.

    There was never any evidence that the creation of the Māori Health Authority and Health NZ was going to have any positive impact. Labour politicians simply knew that health was a big issue and Māori health in particular has appalling statistics.

    Progress would be figuring out the underlying causes and addressing them with evidence-based policy, like this Government has done with its changes to bowel screening ages. However, it was easier to publicise a glitzy administrative reform that cost billions. It’s decisions like this that mean our next budget is going to be so tight, and getting a doctor’s appointment is still just as difficult as it was before the change.

    They burnt billions of dollars shuffling deck chairs, restructuring, and creating the divisive and ineffective Māori Health Authority. We even got to the point where a call to Healthline, New Zealand’s primary telehealth service, began by asking patients’ ethnicity. A voice would say, “If you are Māori and would like to speak to a Māori clinician, please press 1. Alternatively, please stay on the line with Healthline who will triage your call.”

    I’m pleased our government is now prioritising workforce training, development, and retention. It doesn’t grab as many headlines, but it’s more likely to provide another GP down the road, train another mental health nurse, or deliver a midwife to rural New Zealand. We’re unwinding the divisive race-based categorising that was so prevalent. The goal must be to treat people first, as human beings, and to not make assumptions of people based on their background.

    You could say that the health reforms were just bad policy by Wellington’s prospective Mayor Andrew Little, who despite that disaster is somehow an improvement on the current Wellington Mayor.

    But I’d say that the size of the bureaucracy was as much the culprit for the health reforms. They write the memos. They draft the advice. When a minister isn’t providing leadership, they decide the pace and direction of reform, if reform happens at all. When no one is clearly responsible, the only people left standing are the officials. Because if you want to know why it’s so hard to shrink government, why red tape keeps piling up, and why reform feels impossible it’s because no one is really in charge and the bureaucracy is too big to pull itself into line.

    That’s not how a democratic system should function.

    Now, for the first time, ACT is at the centre of government.

    We didn’t set the table, but we’re sitting at it. If we could set it, there would be a lot fewer placemats.

    Here’s how we’d do it:

    • Only 20 Ministers, with no ministers outside cabinet
    • No associate ministers, except in finance
    • Abolish ‘portfolios’, there’s either a department or there’s not
    • Reduce the number of departments to 30 by merging them and removing low-value functions
    • Ensure each department is overseen by only one minister
    • Up to eight under-secretaries supporting the busiest ministers, effectively a training ground for future cabinet ministers

    Some simple rules to improve the way government works.

    This wouldn’t just act as a structural reform, but as a philosophical one.

    It’s a shift away from the idea that the government exists to solve every problem by creating a minister named after it. And towards a view that the government’s job is to manage your money responsibly and provide core public services that allow you to go about your life, respecting your property rights

    That’s it. That’s enough.

    I think we could easily cut the number of portfolios in half, while reducing the number of ministers by eight. Bringing cabinet back to a scale that is manageable, focused, and accountable.

    New Zealanders deserve better than bloated bureaucracy and meaningless titles. They deserve a government that respects them enough to be efficient.

    New Zealanders don’t need 82 portfolios to live better lives. They just need a government that does its job, and then gets out of their way.

    I’m looking forward to the second half, and floating more ideas like this as we plan for a better tomorrow.

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Twice the Impact, Half the Budget: Budget 25 Must Invest in Whakaata Māori

    Source: Te Pati Maori

    Te Pāti Māori spokesperson for Broadcasting, Tākuta Ferris, and MP for Tāmaki Makaurau, Takutai Tarsh Kemp, are demanding the Government significantly increase its investment in Whakaata Māori in Budget 2025.

    The call comes following the release of the network’s 2025 Social Value Report at an event today, attended by MP Kemp, highlighting more than $114 million in measured impact across Aotearoa.

    “Whakaata Māori is not just a broadcaster — it is a cornerstone of cultural survival, education, and national identity,” said Tākuta Ferris.

    “This latest report proves what our people have known all along: kaupapa Māori media changes lives, strengthens whānau, and brings te reo Māori into the hearts of homes across the motu.”

    The report, independently developed by Social Ventures Australia, affirms that Whakaata Māori’s work is delivering more than double its operating budget in social value — from improved reo Māori use to stronger cultural identity and cross-cultural understanding.

    “With 78% of Māori viewers feeling more connected to their identity and 69% of parents saying their tamariki are speaking more reo and practising tikanga at home, this Government must now future-proof these outcomes with targeted investment,” says Takutai Tarsh Kemp.

    Ferris and Kemp are calling on the Government to urgently prioritise a meaningful funding boost for Whakaata Māori in Budget 2025, following 17 years without an increase to the network’s baseline operational funding.

    “For too long, successive Governments – and especially this one – have paid lip service to te reo Māori and Māori development, while refusing to back it with resources,” said Kemp.

    “The network has not received a baseline funding increase since 2008. The numbers presented today speak for themselves – Whakaata Māori delivers where it matters most: to the people. Budget 2025 must reflect that,” concluded Ferris.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Better banking competition one step closer for Kiwis

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government is moving swiftly to ensure Kiwis will be able to benefit from open banking by Christmas this year, says Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Scott Simpson. 

    “Recently our Government passed the Customer and Product Data Act – one of the items in our Quarter 1 Action Plan to improve competition in banking, energy, and other key sectors that touch the daily lives of Kiwis. 

    “I’m pleased to announce that Cabinet has now agreed to designate banking as the first sector under the Act. This sets out the rules for how open banking will work in practice in New Zealand.”

    Open banking allows third parties such as fintech (financial technology) companies to access data held by banks on behalf of a customer, with the customer’s consent. Fintechs use that data to develop innovative products and services that traditional banks might not offer, such as faster payments, speedier mortgage comparisons, and money-saving apps.

    “The big four banks – ANZ, ASB, BNZ, and Westpac – will need to make sure their open banking systems meet the new requirements by 1 December. Kiwibank will need to be ready by June 2026.

    “Our Government is absolutely committed to boosting competition in the banking sector to provide greater choice and lower costs to Kiwis, and that’s why we’ve acted promptly to bring open banking another crucial step closer to reality. We are leaving no stone unturned to boost competition across our economy, and I expect the banks to be fully prepared so their customers can take advantage of open banking from day one.

    “Designating the banking sector is necessary to speed up the uptake of open banking in New Zealand. It will ensure the major banks are not creating unnecessary barriers for fintechs and smaller players.

    “There are many examples overseas of open banking in action, and I can’t wait to see similar success stories in New Zealand. For example in Australia, open banking has helped speed up home loan applications as customers can share their banking data with brokers much faster than before.

    “I’ve also seen innovative apps that help consumers find and cancel forgotten or unwanted subscription services, which would otherwise be quietly siphoning their hard-earned money.

    “I’m hoping this Christmas will be an extra joyous one for Kiwi consumers, with better competition among our banks and greater choice on the horizon.”

    Note to editors:

    A fact sheet with further information is attached.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Community volunteers celebrated with cheers

    Source: South Australia Police

    The City recently hosted a celebratory event to recognise the efforts of a dedicated group of volunteers.

    Mayor Linda Aitken said the 2025 Community Services and Conservation Volunteers Dinner at the Wanneroo Civic Centre was an opportunity to honour our incredible volunteers and thank them for their contributions to the City.

    “With the City of Wanneroo home to almost 240,000 residents and growing rapidly, we rely more than ever on dedicated and committed volunteers to help ensure it continues to be a great place to live, work and visit,” she said.

    “Our 92 conservation and community services volunteers help the City in a variety of ways, supporting staff to deliver a range of programs and services for some of the most vulnerable members of our community and caring for our natural environment.”

    Six volunteers were presented with peer-nominated excellence awards for outstanding dedication to their role and service to the City.

    Bukamu Dube

    Since 2021, Bukamu has been a member of the City’s Multicultural Advisory Group and currently serves as its Deputy Chairperson, helping shape conversations around diversion and inclusion in our City.

    Outside the group, Bakumu runs a small business focused on training and community support, helping others from multicultural backgrounds navigate new opportunities.

    Kadambii Barnao

    Kadambii started her volunteering journey with the City in 2011, as part of the City’s first Reconciliation Action Plan Working Group, which has since evolved into the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community reference group, Ni Kadadjiny Koort.

    She remains an active and dedicated member of the group and a strong advocate for cultural values, human rights and reconciliation between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal communities.

    Andrew Fairbairn

    Andrew has served as a dedicated member of the City’s Disability Access and Inclusion Reference Group since 2019, consistently offering thoughtful input and championing meaningful change.

    He has helped to raise awareness about mobility mapping in our town centre, highlighting how features like gradients, surfaces, ramps and elevators can make a real difference for people with mobility challenges, helping them navigate public spaces with greater confidence and safety.

    Jennie Villiers

    Jennie’s journey as a volunteer with the City started in 2016 when she attended a community planning event as part of the City’s GOLD program.

    After asking about walking and photography in Koondoola Bushland, she helped organise a guided wildflower walk and has been involved with the City ever since.

    She first registered as a conservation volunteer, becoming one of our most active contributors – regularly weeding, collecting litter and supporting conservation events.

    Now, she leads annual wildflower walks for the community and local schools, and has even obtained a flora license for educational use and detailed surveys of Koondoola Bushland.

    In 2023, Jennie took the lead in running her own conservation activities, building a team and strengthening the Friends of Koondoola Bushland group along the way.

    Volunteering is a great way to get involved with your local community, contribute to a cause you care about and meet like-minded people.

    To find out more about volunteering with the City, visit wanneroo.wa.gov.au/volunteers.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Renewed call for information as investigation into former police officer progresses

    Source: New South Wales Community and Justice

    Renewed call for information as investigation into former police officer progresses

    Thursday, 1 May 2025 – 12:00 pm.

    Tasmania Police has renewed its call for information as the investigation into former police officer Dale Cook progresses.The investigation was announced in February to determine whether he used his position as a police officer to commit child sexual abuse crimes or any other criminal offending and identify any misconduct during his employment with Tasmania Police.Acting Deputy Commissioner Rob Blackwood said the investigation team had engaged with many people who either worked with Cook or knew him outside of his role as a police officer.“The investigation team sincerely thanks each person that has come forward to provide information, either in person or through the reporting options provided below. Every piece of information has been of value and will inform the outcomes of the investigation,” Acting Deputy Commissioner Blackwood said.“There are several avenues of enquiry outstanding, and the investigation team continues to work with oversight from the Integrity Commission to identify other criminal offending or misconduct during Cook’s employment with Tasmania Police.“The investigators would still like to hear from anyone with information.“The specialist investigation team recognises the need to offer choice and confidentiality to anyone wanting to provide information.”This includes:• Sending a direct email to the investigation team at cookinvestigation@police.tas.gov.au• Submitting an online form which allows you the option or remaining anonymous, or providing your details if you are willing to be contacted.• Submitting a report to the Tasmania Police Professional Standards online portal.• If you would like to meet in person, contact the investigation team at cookinvestigation@police.tas.gov.au and they will arrange this at a time and place that ensures confidentiality.Media outlets are reminded to be mindful of the following national guidelines when reporting on this matter.https://www.childsafety.gov.au/what-we-do/reporting-child-sexual-abuse-guidance-media-and-victims-and-survivors

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Is WA Health having final say over edits of Paramedics ‘censorship’? Yes. But it’s necessary

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jan Cattoni, Lecturer, Screen Production, CQUniversity Australia

    Australian reality TV debuted in 2006 with Bondi Rescue. The show featured a winning formula of sun, surf, heroes and danger. It sparked many similar programs featuring police, helicopter crews and paramedics.

    Paramedics (2018–), as the title suggests, follows Australian paramedics at work, and airs on Nine. Previous seasons focused on staff of Ambulance Victoria and SA Ambulance. The latest season, being filmed now in Perth, follows paramedics of St John Ambulance Western Australia.

    Last week, the ABC reported WA Health has issued a directive that filming must end “at the time of entering a hospital ramp” and no filming is to happen at hospitals.

    They also stipulate “vision that is used to negatively portray the WA Health system, including but not limited to perceived capacity constraints, is not permitted to be used”.

    This move drew criticism from WA Shadow Health Minister, Libby Mettam, and WA president of the Australian Medical Association, Michael Page, who claimed it amounts to censorship of healthcare delivery issues, in particular issues of “ramping” – ambulances waiting outside emergency departments until space becomes available.

    I created and directed the reality series Chopper Rescue (2009–11) for ABC, following real rescue helicopter crews saving lives in regional and remote north Queensland. Here’s what to consider when it comes to obtaining permissions to record factual television shows like these.

    Sharing stories

    These shows occupy a complex position between service provision and entertainment, creating inherent conflicts of interest.

    I developed the concept for Chopper Rescue from dual perspectives: as a filmmaker and as an experienced PICU (paediatric intensive care unit) nurse who had participated in many retrievals.

    I wanted to share stories of the incredible rescue crews: unassuming individuals undertaking extensive training, available 24/7. They might just happen to be the person sitting on the train opposite you travelling home after an all night saga.

    I wanted audiences to appreciate how lucky we are to have such services.

    From my first experience retrieving a child from a small regional clinic in the middle of the night, I was struck by the human drama and visual spectacle. Flying low at dawn over a sleeping city and safely delivering a sick child to expert care adhered to a perfect narrative structure.

    The success of shows like Chopper Rescue and Paramedics depends on the willingness of professionals to share their knowledge, and of those being rescued agreeing to have their stories aired. The most successful shows are a partnership, where those in front of the camera are able to exercise some agency in how they are represented on screen.

    By the time viewers see such content, multiple layers of permission have been negotiated.

    Seeking consent

    The most complex negotiation is the access agreements with organisations who have jurisdiction over the entities involved. For Paramedics, agreements would have been negotiated with St John’s Ambulance and WA Health.

    Such agreements always include conditions to protect individuals and professional reputations.

    Production companies must obtain signed consent from everyone identifiable onscreen. This is a complicated process when filming in emergency departments where multiple personnel might be attending to critically unwell patients.

    Production release forms typically assign worldwide rights to use recordings, while indemnifying the company against claims. Individuals can request variations, such as viewing content before release, but this requires understanding this option exists. Ethical documentary practice would explore individuals’ options at the time of signing the release.

    If someone doesn’t consent, their face is typically blurred. This highlights the tension between legal and ethical practice: blurring of identity meets legal requirements, but overlooks an individual’s choice not to participate.

    Then there is the case of organisational access agreements. Post production facilities are intense spaces where editors, directors and producers make decisions about episodes, creating perfect cuts and dramatic effects. What’s often missing in the edit suite is professional knowledge to determine whether a scene, while being dramatically successful, might contain actions by a professional that could be viewed critically by peers.

    There is little scope for the acknowledgement of human error once a show is aired, but human error occurs – particularly in high stakes situations.

    Access agreements and filming protocols ensure edited content is reviewed by those familiar with the setting. In the case of the new season of Paramedics, this responsibility will fall to WA Health.

    Is this censorship? Yes. Is it necessary? I would say yes, given these shows offer entertainment, not expository documentaries.

    Our human vulnerability

    There is another hidden risk for those being rescued: the presence of cameras capturing professionals at work.

    Awareness that millions might be watching on can potentially distract paramedics, doctors and pilots – with potentially disastrous consequences.

    And what about patients’ rights to receive assistance without the presence of microphones and cameras? Can we assume that patients are informed in advance that they may be filmed and have the option to decline? Clear protocols for filming are essential to ensure such patient rights are protected.

    As a filmmaker, I recognise the appeal of these shows. Viewers access normally restricted spaces, witnessing emergency calls and human drama. Such moments can be potent, allowing reflection on our human vulnerability. The educational potential is also significant, sharing important information about health conditions and interventions.

    It is unclear whether similar restrictions were requested in other states, but there is nothing unusual in WA Health seeking conditions to film in their facilities.

    However, to specifically exclude ambulance ramping has potentially left them vulnerable to criticism, rather than requesting general content approval.

    Jan Cattoni does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Is WA Health having final say over edits of Paramedics ‘censorship’? Yes. But it’s necessary – https://theconversation.com/is-wa-health-having-final-say-over-edits-of-paramedics-censorship-yes-but-its-necessary-255417

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Universities – Drinking water plumbing a hotspot for antimicrobial resistant pathogens – Flinders

    Source: Flinders University

    A growing threat of antimicrobial resistant (AMR) pathogens poses a critical public health threat – and drinking water plumbing systems serve as significant but overlooked reservoirs of these problematic microbes.

    Despite international efforts to combat AMR, surveillance has primarily focused on clinical cases, while environmental reservoirs – such as drinking water plumbing systems – remain poorly understood.

    A recent study by researchers from Flinders University and other leading institutions revealed alarming findings about bacterial persistence in Australian drinking water plumbing, and identified significant transmission risks in both hospital and residential environments.

    “The presence of these antimicrobial resistant bacteria in residential and hospital plumbing systems highlights a pressing public health concern that requires immediate attention,” says Flinders University’s Professor Harriet Whiley.

    Published in the Journal of Hospital Infection, the study assessed the prevalence of key AMR threats – being methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), plus carbapenem-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa andAcinetobacter baumannii – in hospital and residential drinking water and biofilm samples across Australia.

    Key findings showed:

    73% of residential water and biofilm samples tested positive for at least one AMR pathogen, compared to 38% of hospital samples.
    45% of residential drinking water plumbing fixtures had at least two of the targeted AMR pathogens, highlighting the risks in home environments.
    Drain biofilms were identified as a major reservoir for AMR bacteria, contributing to their persistence even after disinfection efforts.
    Carbapenem resistance genes were found in biofilm samples that tested negative for P. aeruginosa, suggesting biofilms may act as long-term reservoirs for AMR genes, which will allow resistance to spread even after the original bacteria have died.
    MRSA, typically associated with dry, high-touch surfaces such as bed rails and doorknobs, was detected in both water and biofilm samples. This indicates that AMR pathogens that are not traditionally considered waterborne may thrive in plumbing systems.

    Antimicrobial resistance is among the most pressing 21st century global health challenges. The World Health Organization (WHO) warns that by 2050, AMR infections could cause 10 million deaths a year, and would therefore surpass cancer as the leading cause of death worldwide.

    Resistant infections already lead to prolonged hospital stays, higher medical costs and an increasing reliance on last-resort antibiotics, which are becoming less effective.

    “Our research underscores the urgent need for enhanced surveillance and targeted interventions to mitigate the risks posed by AMR pathogens in drinking water systems, especially in home healthcare settings,” said lead researcher Dr Claire Hayward.

    This study calls for improved strategies to manage AMR risks in water infrastructure, particularly in environments housing vulnerable populations, such as hospitals and aged care facilities.

    Strengthening water system hygiene, routine monitoring, and innovative biofilm control methods could play a crucial role in addressing this growing threat.

    The research – “Drinking water plumbing systems are a hot spot for antimicrobial resistant pathogens”, by Claire Hayward, Kirstin Ross, Melissa Brown, Richard Bentham, Jason Hinds and Harriet Whiley – has been published in the Journal of Hospital Infection. For access to the full study, visit: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0195670125000593

    Funding statement: This work was supported by the Impact Seed Funding for Early Career Researcher and Flinders Foundation grant 2021.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: 135-2025: Scheduled Service Disruption: Saturday 03 May 2025 – Multiple Systems

    Source: New South Wales Government 2

    01 May 2025

    Who does this notice affect?

    All clients submitting the below declarations:

    • Full Import Declaration (FID)
    • Long Form Self Assessed Clearance (LFSAC)
    • Short Form Self Assessed Clearance (SFSAC)
    • Cargo Report Self Assessed Clearance (CRSAC)
    • Cargo Report Personal Effects (PE)

    Approved arrangements operators, customs brokers, importers, manned depots, and freight forwarders who are required to book and manage requests…

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Kaine Statement on Awarding of Virginia-Class Submarines Contract to Newport News Shipbuilding

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Virginia Tim Kaine
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Tim Kaine (D-VA), Ranking Member of the Senate Armed Services Subcommittee on Seapower, released the following statement after the Department of the Navy awarded a contract to Huntington Ingalls Industries’ Newport News Shipbuilding to start construction on two Virginia-class submarines, which Kaine successfully pushed to get additional funding for last year:
    “I’m thrilled the Navy has awarded two additional Virginia-class submarines to Newport News Shipbuilding. This is a testament to the hard work and leadership of Virginia’s shipbuilders and defense industry. I was proud to secure funding for these submarines in legislation we passed last year. This funding is critical to ensuring the Navy has the resources it needs to provide competitive wages for shipbuilders and advance the AUKUS agreement that will help ensure a free and open Indo-Pacific. I look forward to continuing to work with my colleagues in Congress to get our shipbuilding programs back on track.”
    Kaine has played a key role in securing more resources for the submarine industrial base, including additional funding for the Virginia-class submarine program that is currently facing significant delays because of workforce challenges and supply chain disruptions. The on-time completion of Virginia-class submarines, which are built in Virginia and Connecticut, is critical to fulfill the Australia-U.K.-U.S. (AUKUS) partnership, through which the U.S. will sell at least two Virginia-class submarines to Australia to boost security and freedom of navigation in the Indo-Pacific, and counter Chinese military aggression in the region. Kaine has been a strong champion of AUKUS in Congress and has helped get signed into law provisions to implement and strengthen AUKUS.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Residents encouraged to contribute to development of new Domestic Animal Management Plan and review of Local Law 2

    Source: New South Wales Ministerial News

    The City of Greater Bendigo is developing a new Domestic Animal Management Plan and undertaking a review of its Keeping of Animals Local Law 2 and is calling on residents both with pets and without pets to have input, to ensure the views of the wider community are reflected.  

    Local Law 2 has several clauses relating to the keeping of domestic animals and under the Local Government Act must be reviewed every 10 years to ensure it meets community expectations and relevancy.  

    City of Greater Bendigo Safe Environments Manager Jock Schofield said the City has a legislative requirement under the Domestic Animals Act 1994 to prepare a Domestic Animal Management Plan (DAMP) and this will be the fifth plan that the City has prepared.  

    “The new plan will build on the achievements and work from the first four plans and establish a framework to guide future service programs and actions through to 2029,” Mr Schofield said.

    “Companion animals have been part of our lives since recorded history with dogs and cats playing an important role in the daily lives of many Greater Bendigo residents.

    “Therefore, it’s vital for the City to undertake the necessary planning to ensure that pets, pet owners and non-pet owners can coexist in a harmonious way.

    “That is why we want to hear from both pet owners and non-pet owners so we can undertake initiatives to complement pet ownership and also actions that help minimise the nuisance and potential danger created by some dogs and cats.

    “Some of the initiatives that have come from previous plans include the creation of new dog parks and off leash areas and new cat containment rules.

    “The first step in developing the new plan is to gather feedback through a survey.  This information will be used in the development of a draft plan which will also be available for further community comment.”

    The survey includes questions in relation to demographics, responsible pet ownership and education, registration and identification of cats and dogs, desexing of cats and dogs and dog faeces management, keeping of animals local law, off/on lead areas (access to public spaces), cat control, dog attacks and nuisance animals and enforcement.

    Residents can make comments on the local law review and have input into the development of the by completing a survey by Friday May 30, 2025.

    To complete the survey, visit:

    MIL OSI News