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Category: Politics

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Residential buildings and infrastructure within walking distance: what is being built within the framework of the KRT for the purposes of the renovation program

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    New neighborhoods will be created in the capital under the program of integrated development of territories (IDT). Investors and city operators plan to build 6.7 million square meters of housing for the purposes of the renovation program. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Urban Development Policy and Construction Vladimir Efimov.

    “The integrated territorial development program has been in effect in the capital since 2020. It currently includes 302 KRT projects at various stages of development and implementation. Various real estate objects will be built under them. In particular, the area of residential development will be 37 million square meters, of which 6.7 million are intended for the purposes of the renovation program. This will also speed up the renovation program in 78 districts of the capital,” said Vladimir Efimov.

    For the purposes of the renovation program, the necessary infrastructure will be created within walking distance.

    “The KRT projects, which provide for the construction of housing for the purposes of the renovation program and other city needs, also provide for the construction of social facilities. Thus, along with residential buildings in the new microdistricts, it is planned to build 48 kindergartens, 39 schools and 11 medical facilities. The adjacent territories will be landscaped and improved, children’s and sports playgrounds will be installed, and new roads will be laid,” noted the Minister of the Moscow Government, Head of the Department of City Property

    Maxim Gaman.

    Thanks to the comprehensive transformation of the capital’s neighborhoods, Muscovites will receive not only modern housing, but also a high-quality urban environment.

    According to the Minister of the Moscow Government, Head of the Department of Urban Development Policy Vladislav Ovchinsky, within the framework of the KRT, residential complexes with a total area of about 4.3 million square meters will be built for the purposes of the renovation program. This will provide new housing for about 150 thousand Muscovites. Elevators will be installed in the entrances of the new buildings, rooms for concierges, rooms for strollers and bicycles will be equipped. The first floors will be made non-residential – in the future, social and household facilities will open there.

    According to the program of integrated development of territories, multifunctional city blocks are created, where roads, comfortable housing and all necessary infrastructure are designed on the site of former industrial zones and inefficiently used areas. Currently, 302 KRT projects with a total area of about 4.2 thousand hectares are at various stages of development and implementation in Moscow. This work is carried out on behalf of Sergei Sobyanin.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/151787073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Technology that reduces risks during vascular surgeries has appeared in the capital’s X-ray operating rooms

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The capital’s doctors have begun to use a new method of ultrasound examination of blood vessels during operations on the coronary vessels of the heart and the vessels of the lower extremities, as well as in the context of other interventions. The technology allows obtaining detailed images in real time and is already available in all X-ray operating rooms in the capital, reported Anastasia Rakova, Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Social Development.

    “Cardiovascular diseases remain one of the most common pathologies that threaten health. To combat them, we continue to develop a network of vascular centers in the capital equipped with modern X-ray operating rooms. Now doctors can use intravascular ultrasound, which helps to accurately assess the condition of blood vessels, monitor the progress of surgery and reduce the risk of complications. This technology has already been implemented in all X-ray operating rooms in Moscow. Using this method makes treatment safer, allows you to avoid additional control X-ray examinations, which reduces the radiation load on patients and medical personnel,” said Anastasia Rakova.

    The new technique allows for the construction of detailed images of the operated vessel using a microcatheter up to two millimeters in diameter, which is delivered to the site of the pathology using a guidewire. The data is displayed on the screen in real time. This helps surgeons accurately determine the size and position of plaques, assess the extent and nature of vascular lesions, and control the installation of stents.

    In Moscow’s X-ray operating rooms, minimally invasive surgeries are performed using high-tech angiographic devices that allow vascular pathology to be detected under X-ray control. There are 60 such devices in total, with 13 of them arriving at hospitals in 2024. They allow doctors to perform high-tech X-ray surgical interventions and diagnostic studies. These include operations to install stents, remove blood clots, embolize large vessels, coronary angiography studies, and other types of medical care.

    Sobyanin: Reconstruction of three buildings of the Loginov Moscow Scientific Center will be completed in 2026Almost 2.5 thousand interventions were performed in hybrid operating rooms of the N.V. Sklifosovsky Research Institute of Emergency Care in two yearsReduce radiation exposure: the equipment in the X-ray operating room of the M.P. Konchalovsky City Clinical Hospital has been completely updated

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/151797073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Caring for the Elderly: Muscovites Do Good Deeds with Million Prizes

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Participants in the city loyalty program donated over 17.6 million rubles to help the elderly “A Million Prizes” since the moment this opportunity appeared on the program website.

    Muscovites willingly join charitable initiatives, because there are always those around us who sometimes need special attention and protection. By joint efforts, we can make their lives more comfortable, help solve everyday or medical issues. The funds go to the wards of the program partners – funds and non-profit organizations that provide support to the older generation. Among them is the Hospice Aid Fund “Faith”, funds “Old age is a joy” And “Memory of Generations”as well as other charitable organizations.

    Thanks to the help of caring citizens, food and care products (linen, disposable diapers, gels, protective creams) are delivered to needy grandparents, veterans, and people living in nursing homes and mental health care facilities. Glasses, glucometers, tonometers, hearing aids and much more are also purchased for the wards. The funds donated by Muscovites are used to open home care services, elderly people receive qualified medical care and nursing care in nursing homes and at home, and their loved ones receive the necessary support. The funds are also used to develop palliative care for the seriously ill.

    Targeted and reliable: how to help and give hope to those in need

    Even the busy schedule does not prevent people from showing compassion, supporting those who need special care, and showing an example of mercy. On the Million Prizes website, Muscovites can transfer from 500 to five thousand city (green) dollars in one click. points, received for participation in city electronic projects. The number of transfers is not limited. One point is equal to one ruble.

    To contribute to a good cause, you must log in to the site “A Million Prizes” using the login and password from your account on the mos.ru portal and go to the “Incentives” section. Here you should select the category “Charity”, the card of the required fund and click on the “Place an order” button. After this, the points will be debited from the user’s account, their cash equivalent will be sent to the fund.

    Transferring points is a simple and reliable way to provide targeted assistance to people who find themselves in a difficult life situation and need care and attention. Each participant in the city loyalty program can track their donation in the report on the website of the selected charity (you can go to a special page from the card on the Million Prizes website). It is enough to open the document for the required period and find the unique promo code that each user receives after transferring points. Reports are updated periodically.

    Users of the Million Prizes website regularly participate in charity initiatives. Thanks to the caring attitude of Muscovites, children with special needs and adults with serious illnesses receive the necessary support. Help is also provided to four-legged friends. About this mos.ru told earlier.

    “A Million Prizes” — a website where Muscovites can use city points to receive goods and services from more than 400 partner organizations. The loyalty program allows you to use accumulated points to receive discounts in stores, cafes and restaurants, purchase tickets to theaters and museums, as well as top up your Troika transport card and your parking account in the Parking of Russia app.

    The project is being developed by the State Institution “New Management Technologies” and Department of Information Technology of the City of Moscow.

    The creation, development and operation of the e-government infrastructure, including the provision of mass socially significant services, as well as other services in electronic form, corresponds to the objectives of the national project “Data Economy and Digital Transformation of the State”and the capital’s regional project “Digital Public Administration”.

    In addition, you can support children, adults, seniors, animals, environmental and scientific and educational projects with the help of charity service mos.ru.

    Sergei Sobyanin spoke about the largest volunteer projects involving Muscovites

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/151799073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Minister and cricketers face off in ‘Battle of the Buses’, as government pledges to get buses back on track through new bill

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Minister and cricketers face off in ‘Battle of the Buses’, as government pledges to get buses back on track through new bill

    We’re determined to ensure our bus services stay safe, inclusive and comfortable for all passengers.

    • Local Transport Minister took part in a precision time trial at First Bus’ ‘Battle of the Buses’, which saw participants learn more about the learner bus driver test
    • Simon Lightwood meets apprentice drivers and competes alongside Essex cricketers Matt Critchley and Paul Walters, to understand elements of the learner driver test
    • £1 billion investment and incoming Bus Services Bill set to boost local control and unlock transport links, getting the country moving to drive growth through our Plan for Change

    A ‘Battle of the Buses’ saw Local Transport Minister, Simon Lightwood, compete against pro cricketers to promote apprenticeships for the next generation of bus drivers, as the government accelerates journey to growth through our Plan for Change.

    Arranged by First Bus, one of the UK’s largest bus operators, the time trial event is designed to showcase the rigorous tests taken by learner bus drivers, emphasising the high skill level and rigorous standards expected of all staff.

    Minister Lightwood and pro-cricketers were put through their paces, tackling elements of the real-life driving test, including reversing, roundabouts and turning the bus without knocking over cones.

    Increasing opportunities for young people across the country is vital to drive up living standards and the government is supporting apprentices in the bus sector by including measures to enhance their training in the incoming Bus Services Bill.

    The event comes alongside £1 billion of investment to improve bus stop infrastructure, enhance bus service frequency and reliability and boost bus connectivity – and the incoming Bus Services Bill – which will deliver on the government’s Plan for Change by boosting local control of services, upskilling staff and better linking local people to job opportunities.

    The minister and Essex County cricketers, Paul Walter and Matt Critchley, were all scored on safety, speed, checking mirrors and using the correct turning signals. To understand the versatility required from learner drivers, they also took a 10-question theory test. Last week, the Rail Minister, Lord Peter Hendy, also took part in the challenge, alongside Essex Women’s cricketers, Eva Gray, Cordelia Griffith and Kelly Castle.

    Local Transport Minister, Simon Lightwood, said: 

    Today has been a fantastic opportunity to better understand the commitment and skill required of our incredible bus driver apprentices up and down the country.  

    As the future of the industry, we’re determined to provide apprentice drivers with the skills they need to deal with challenges facing the bus sector and to ensure our bus services stay safe, inclusive and comfortable for all passengers.

    Delivering better bus services will ensure people have proper access to jobs and opportunities, putting more money in their pockets and powering growth in every corner of the country.

    As part of the incoming Bus Services Bill, all bus staff will get mandatory training on improving women’s safety by responding to anti-social behaviour and incidents of violence against women and girls. The bill will be introduced in the House of Commons shortly and will support the government’s mission to keep our streets safe by also giving local authorities new powers to crack down on offenders.  

    The bill will also hand control to local leaders to operate bus services to deliver the reliability that local people deserve, whether they choose to emulate the achievements of Manchester’s Bee Network by taking operations fully in house or work closely with operators to improve bus services, which has had great success in Cornwall.  

    Piers Marlow, Managing Director of First Bus East of England, said:

    This is a fantastic and fun challenge for our partners at Essex County Cricket and the Department for Transport, but it also highlights the incredible skill required to be a bus driver.

    At First Bus, we place a huge emphasis on training to ensure our drivers are equipped with the expertise and confidence to navigate our roads safely and efficiently. Events like this help to showcase the professionalism of our drivers and the importance of ongoing development across the industry.

    Paul Walter, Essex County Cricket Club all-rounder, said:

    The Battle of the Buses challenge was a lot of fun. I didn’t realise how tough driving a bus would be, it felt like something out of Top Gear, with the leaderboard, obstacles and the First Bus Stig.

    We’re all naturally competitive and it’s always good to get one over a teammate. I also really enjoyed going head-to-head with Critch [Matt Critchley] and I understand that Kelly, Cordelia and Eva got on great.

    Thank you to First Bus for having us down for the day.

    A measure is also included to push ahead with a bright, new and clean future for the sector, by ending the use of new diesel and petrol buses on English bus services by 2030, heralding a green new era for buses across the country,

    The government is ensuring that industry bosses and local leaders have a voice by hosting panel sessions, the first of which took in Sheffield on 13 March 2025. This discussion considered how British manufacturing of new zero emission buses will grow our regional economies and drive up quality of life, as outlined in the Plan for Change.  

    Local authorities are also currently being supported with £1 billion in bus service improvement funding, including £17.8 million for Essex County Council to maintain and improve bus services and enhance infrastructure. They are expected to outline their full plans for the funding in due course.

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    Published 26 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Interview with Peter Fegan, 4BC, Brisbance

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    Peter Fegan:

    It’s Labor’s $17 billion pledge. But is it enough to save the election? The Labor Party or the government has delivered its fourth Budget last night. Plenty of savings, but given the cost‑of‑living crisis, we’re in no position to bite the hand that could potentially feed us for the next 3 years, at least. Joining me on the line is the Treasurer, Jim Chalmers. Treasurer, it is always great to have your time on the programme.

    Jim Chalmers:

    Thanks for having me back on your show, Pete. Good morning.

    Fegan:

    $268 in tax cuts in the first year, which is 2026. That’s $538 in the second. You’ve conceded, Treasurer, that that is modest cuts. It equates to about $5 a week. You add in the Stage 3 tax cuts, that will be around $56 bucks a week. So, when you consider how much groceries, fuel, beer, health, childcare, aged care is; most Australians would say that $50 bucks doesn’t go very far at all.

    Chalmers:

    I understand that, Pete. I understand that there’s always an appetite to do more. My job is to make sure that we’re providing this cost‑of‑living relief in the most responsible way that we can. The tax cuts are an important part of that, that $50 a week in income taxes is all about helping people but so is strengthening Medicare because more bulk billing means less pressure on families.

    So are the energy rebates, the cheaper medicines, cutting student debt. There are a number of ways that we’re providing cost‑of‑living help in the Budget, but we’ve got to do that in the most responsible way. We know that there will always be calls to do more. We’re doing the most that we can afford to do for the time being.

    Fegan:

    Treasurer, I would argue what is missing from this Budget are tough decisions, serious structural reforms and addressing the elephant in the room. We know what that is, Treasurer. It’s spending. Now, there’s $40 billion set aside for decisions not yet announced. That means that the Prime Minister has another $40 billion up his sleeve to throw around during the election campaign. So, let’s just call this Budget what it is. It’s a Budget to win the election. Surely.

    Chalmers:

    I don’t agree with you, Pete. It’s a Budget to build the future and to help people with the cost of living and strengthen Medicare. Those are the 3 primary objectives of the Budget. It’s all about making our economy more resilient in the face of all this global economic uncertainty. That’s what’s motivated us here when it comes to this Budget.

    Now, when it comes to spending, about half of the new spending in the Budget is the tax cuts. A big proportion of the rest of it was already provisioned for in the mid‑year Budget update. We’ve been responsible, we’ve gone for what’s affordable and we’ve done that in the context where we have taken difficult decisions. There are billions of dollars in savings.

    There is much less debt this year in the Budget than when we came to office 3 years ago in terms of the $177 billion less debt this year. We are making good progress in the budget. We’re making especially good progress in the economy more broadly. We know that that doesn’t always immediately translate into how people are feeling and faring in the economy. That’s why the cost‑of‑living help is so important.

    Fegan:

    Migration. 260,000 new migrants will flood into Australia by the end of July, the majority of which will come into Australia. Now Treasurer, historically yes, migration does help fuel economy, we know that. But unfortunately, here in Australia we have a living crisis, we have a housing crisis.

    We have a major supply issue here in Queensland. You know that, you live in Logan. You know how bad supply is at the moment. Are you putting them up? Because I don’t know where 260,000 new migrants will go. I know that they’ll work. But we’re in a housing crisis. It doesn’t make sense to me.

    Chalmers:

    Two important things about that, Pete. Firstly, we’re investing $33 billion in building more homes.

    Fegan:

    But you haven’t built any yet though, Treasurer. That’s the issue. You haven’t built any new homes yet. That’s the big issue here. You can invest all your money, all the money you want. You can’t put them in camps until they’re built.

    Chalmers:

    We are building new homes. We’re making a very substantial investment in making sure that’s the case. Secondly, you refer to those migration numbers. Those migration numbers have actually been very substantially managed down from their peak after COVID. When Australia more or less shut down during COVID in the year or 2 after that, couple of years after that, there was a big rebound in the net overseas migration number spanning 2 governments.

    We’ve been able to manage that down to more normal levels. That is what you’re seeing in the budget. That number that you refer to is right, but it is much lower, very, very substantially lower than it was a couple of years ago.

    Fegan:

    Okay, Treasurer, this is an interesting one and I think all eyes will be on this when it comes to the election.

    Let’s talk energy.

    Okay, Treasurer, the Prime Minister and yourself and all your Ministers all maintain that energy prices are lower under a Labor government. So, why has the government, if that’s the case – if we are paying less for energy, why has the government spent $6.8 billion on energy subsidies to date? Is that not an abject failure of the last 3 years? And your energy policy, why give Australians another $150 bucks if, according to Labor, energy is affordable? I don’t understand it. I mean, if it is affordable, I don’t need the $150 bucks.

    Chalmers:

    This is another important way that we’re helping people with the cost of living. We know that in the last year in the official inflation data, we were able to get electricity prices down. That’s a good thing. That’s been a combination of rebates, but also the efforts that we’re making to introduce more cleaner and cheaper energy into the system.

    If you think about the independent experts from a body called AEMO, what they talk about is what’s pushing electricity prices up is actually the old parts of the system, the traditional parts of the system, becoming less and less reliable.

    We’re providing these energy rebates in the near term to take some of the sting out of these electricity bills while people are under cost‑of‑living pressure. At the same time, we’re introducing more cleaner and cheaper, more reliable energy into the system because that’s the best way to put downward pressure on energy prices over the medium and long term.

    Fegan:

    Yeah, there’s no. But there’s no funding for green energy. There’s no funding for net zero.

    Chalmers:

    That’s not true, Pete.

    Fegan:

    Well, there’s no extra funding. Is there, in this Budget? Is there extra investment in –

    Chalmers:

    Yeah, there’s some extra investment out of an innovation.

    Fegan:

    How much?

    Chalmers:

    For about one and a half billion, I think from memory.

    Fegan:

    But it’s not in Budget. Is it in Budget papers released?

    Chalmers:

    Yeah, it’s in the Budget papers. We’ve also recapitalised the Clean Energy Finance Corporation because that’s playing an important role as well, financing cleaner and cheaper energy.

    I accept your broader point. Electricity prices are a pressure on family budgets we’re seeing around the world. We’re not immune from that. The energy bill rebates are an important, responsible way that we take some of the edge off that while we introduce more cleaner and cheaper, and more reliable energy into the system.

    Fegan:

    Treasurer, why should Australians trust Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers for another 3 years?

    Chalmers:

    I think after the Coalition’s brain explosion on tax last night, the choice at the election is becoming absolutely crystal clear now. We’re helping people as a Labor government with the cost of living by cutting their taxes. Peter Dutton has an agenda of secret cuts which will make people worse off. Now, Peter Dutton wants to cut everything except people’s taxes, and that’s really the contest which was set up last night when Angus Taylor, quite bizarrely, said that he would oppose our cost‑of‑living help.

    What we’ve seen over the course of the last 3 years is every time we’ve tried to help people with the cost of living, our opponents have opposed that. Peter Dutton and Angus Taylor have both said the best predictor of future performance is past performance. They have opposed cost‑of‑living help; they’re opposing these cost‑of‑living tax cuts in the Budget last night.

    I think that sets up a very clear choice. If people want a Labor government helping with the cost of living, managing the budget responsibly, investing in building Australia’s future, they can choose that over Peter Dutton, who has secret cuts which will make people worse off, and that’s because he wants to cut everything except taxes.

    Fegan:

    Do you accept that Australians don’t trust you?

    Chalmers:

    I don’t necessarily accept that, Pete. I mean, that’s a judgement for people to make. I understand that, and it’s something that journalists and commentators can speculate about. What we did last night was keep faith with the Australian people and do justice to the progress and the sacrifices that they have made. Together as Australians, we’ve made a lot of progress in our economy. We’ve got –

    Fegan:

    But a trillion dollars in debt. A trillion dollars, though, Treasurer?

    Chalmers:

    It’s $177 billion this year lower than what it was when we came to office for this year. That’s a really important thing. You will read a lot of stuff in the papers about debt and deficits. Don’t forget, we delivered 2 surpluses, we shrunk the deficit, we got the debt down, we’re saving on interest costs.

    Fegan:

    But it’s still a trillion dollars. You grilled the former government on this. It’s still a trillion dollars. And I know it’s not all your fault, but it’s a trillion dollars. We’ve got kids that need to buy homes in 20 years’ time.

    Chalmers:

    That’s why we’re investing substantially in housing, $33 billion program. On the debt, don’t forget, we would have already had a trillion dollars of debt under our opponents. It’s $177 billion lower this year. I think that’s too easily dismissed and diminished the progress we’ve made in the budget. Same goes for the progress we made in the economy together as Australians.

    As I was saying a moment ago, we’ve got growth rebounding solidly in our economy: inflation down, real wages up, unemployment is low, interest rates have started to be cut, we’ve got the debt down. This is good progress, and we would be crazy to interrupt that progress with Peter Dutton’s secret cuts which would make Australians worse off.

    Fegan:

    What’s happening with the Coalition at the moment, Treasurer? Seems to be some rumblings. I hear or see reports yesterday that Peter Dutton had to lay down the law, that David Littleproud got pretty fired up.

    Chalmers:

    Yeah, they got fired up because basically the Coalition members and senators are forming an orderly queue to say that Angus Taylor’s not up to the job. It’s quite bizarre that Angus Taylor’s asking Australians to take him seriously when his own colleagues don’t. He’s been found out and he’s been found wanting.

    I think genuinely, it was a proper brain explosion we saw last night when he said, at a time when people are under cost‑of‑living pressures, they won’t support our tax cuts to help people meet the cost of living. I think that was a bizarre decision. I think it will come back to haunt him, and I think his colleagues will have a view about it behind the scenes.

    Fegan:

    Treasurer, you’re on the front page of every paper today, but can I just say congratulations to you because you are drinking out of a Brisbane Broncos mug. How good is that?

    Chalmers:

    I get a bit of feedback about that. Mostly from Dolphins, mostly from people –

    Fegan:

    Well, do you know what? You’re still a staunch. You’re still a staunch Bronco supporter. Right?

    Chalmers:

    Pick and stick. Absolutely.

    Fegan:

    Thank you.

    Chalmers:

    Broncos until I die, Pete.

    Fegan:

    Because I see that Peter Dutton has changed his tune a little bit. He’s now, well, Dolphins is in his electorate. A little bit of his electorate. Well, I don’t know.

    Chalmers:

    Right. I’m not sure about that. In fairness to him, I’m not sure about that. I’m certainly, I will always be a very enthusiastic supporter of the Brisbane Broncos. I still remember their first game in the comp in 1988 as a little tacker. I’m looking forward to watching the Battle of Brisbane on Friday night. Always a good contest.

    Fegan:

    Go the Broncos. Yeah, exactly. Go the Broncos. Good on you, Treasurer. Great to have your company this morning.

    Chalmers:

    Nice to talk to you again, Pete. All the best.

    Fegan:

    There he is, the Treasurer, Jim Chalmers.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Regional Ministerial Budget Statement 2025-26

    Source: Workplace Gender Equality Agency

    On behalf of the Albanese Labor Government, I’m proud to deliver our fourth Regional Ministerial Budget Statement.

    I’d like to acknowledge the traditional custodians of where we are today, and pay my respects to their Elders past, present and emerging.

    Mr Speaker, across our first term in Government, our message to regional Australians has been loud and clear – your postcode shouldn’t be a barrier.

    Just because you grow up in Bega on the NSW Far South Coast, or in Gladstone in Central Queensland, and just because you live at Mount Gambier in regional South Australia, or in the Pilbara Region in outback WA – doesn’t mean that the services, and the opportunities available to you should be second best.

    I say this as a proud regional Member of this place, and on behalf of my fantastic regional colleagues here with me today. 

    I say this as someone that’s always lived in our regions – from Traralgon in regional Victoria, to Merimbula on the NSW Far South Coast – where I watched my parents work hard every day to build a small business, and to provide our family with a better life.

    A regional community where I myself now run a small business with my husband, and where we’re raising our kids.

    And I say this as someone that’s had the privilege of spending a lot of time talking to regional people across Australia – both as the Member for the Mighty Eden-Monaro, and as Minister for Regional Development, Local Government and Territories.

    From the Hunter region in NSW, Caboolture in regional Queensland, Devonport in Tasmania – to communities across the 42,000 square kilometres in my electorate.

    Regional Australia is a great place to live, work, study, visit and invest – and I wouldn’t live anywhere else.

    Our regions generate a third of the nation’s economic output, and there’s so many opportunities that our Government wants to take advantage of.

    But you’d be living under a rock if you said life outside of our big cities doesn’t come without its unique challenges – it absolutely does. 

    Unlike those opposite though, on this side of the House we’re not shying away from that.

    I’m proud to be part of a Government that across its first term, has delivered record investments to improve the reliability and the accessibility of critical services that regional people rely on.

    To support more regional people to work and train closer to home – because you shouldn’t have to pack your bags to build your career. 

    To build more things in our own backyard, investing in the hard-work and know-how of regional people.

    To give regional Australians more support to buy or rent a home.

    To support local businesses and local economies to grow – with small businesses in particular the backbone of our regions.

    To ensure the local roads we drive every day to drop the kids off at school and to get to work, are safe, and keep pace with growing communities.

    To improve our major highways linking our cities to our regions, so more visitors support our local businesses, and experience everything we have to offer.

    To keep our regions connected and better prepared for natural disasters – something many regional communities, including across Eden-Monaro, have needed to rebuild from.

    And most importantly, to relieve immediate pressures on regional families and businesses.

    Which let’s not forget, those opposite talk a big game on – despite opposing every single cost of living measure to date, and committing to tearing apart every measure that’ll support regional Australians into the future.

    Because while we’re delivering record investments to Build Regional Australia’s Future, the wreckers opposite are determined to leave regional communities which aren’t the right colour on their spreadsheets behind.

    The Albanese Government is delivering better outcomes for every regional community – because we’re addressing the challenges, harnessing the opportunities, and taking the needs of our regions seriously. 

    Through our Regional Investment Framework, we’re ensuring targeted investments support regional people, the places they live, the services they need, and the industries that stimulate local economies.

    With investments through the 2025-26 Budget building on everything we’ve delivered across our first term. 

    Our number one priority has been easing pressures faced by regional families and businesses today, while supporting more work, training and economic opportunities outside of our big cites. 

    We’ve delivered tax cuts for every regional taxpayer – a huge impact for taxpayers in my own electorate of Eden-Monaro, putting an average of $1,633 back into their pockets, with another two tax cuts on the way – something those opposite just voted against.

    We’ve delivered $300 in Energy Bill Relief to millions of households and $325 to small businesses, along with cheaper childcare and cheaper medicines.

    We’ve cut $3 billion in student debt, with a further 20 per cent to be cut if we’re re-elected.

    And we’ve supported over 127,000 free TAFE places in our regions – from construction courses to childcare.

    We’re getting more people into industries screaming out for workers, after those opposite gutted the vocational education system during their failed decade.

    We’ve introduced legislation to make free TAFE permanent – something those opposite have said they’ll repeal, because as the Deputy Leader of the Opposition said in this very chamber – “if you don’t pay for it, you don’t value it.”

    But I want my kids and every regional person to know – your postcode and your bank balance shouldn’t limit your potential.

    Through this Budget we’ll provide additional cost-of-living relief, along with increased investments to remove study barriers.

    $1.8 billion to provide all households, and around one million small businesses, with an additional $150 in Energy Bill Relief.

    $800 million to expand our Help to Buy scheme to support more people get into their own home – including in our regions.

    This builds on the 32,000 regional Australians we’ve already helped into home ownership, through the Regional Home Guarantee.

    $626.9 million to support $10,000 incentive payments for construction sector apprentices – with $7.0 million to increase the Living Away from Home Allowance for apprentices.

    As an operator of a small plumbing business that hires apprentices, and having recently spent time with bricklaying apprentices at Queanbeyan – I know that every cent counts when you’re starting out, especially when you’re living away from home.

    That’s why we’re boosting apprentice wages and easing cost-of-living pressures – because we value their hard work, and we know that building this workforce is essential to delivering more regional homes.

    My mum, dad, brother, sister and husband all went to TAFE, which is why I’m incredibly proud to be part of a Government that’s strengthening the sector – and ensuring more regional people can build a better future. 

    Through this Budget, we’re delivering $407.5 million to states and territories, as part of the Better and Fairer Schools Agreement.

    Record funding to give our teachers, including in our regional schools, more support – to lift education standards, and to better support students from kindergarten through to year 12. 

    And if you want to go onto further study, existing investments like the 56 Regional University Study Hubs we’re delivering – from Port Augusta in South Australia, to Goulburn in my own electorate – will mean you don’t have to leave the region you love.

    A further $33.6 million will also flow to the Clontarf Foundation to support up to 12,500 First Nations boys and young men access better education support.

    We’re delivering record investments to continue improving the affordability and accessibility of regional healthcare – because when you need to see the doctor, and when you need to buy your script, your street address and wallet shouldn’t stop you. 

    We’ve already delivered $3.5 billion to triple the bulk billing incentive, supporting over 2.4 million additional claims across regional Australia.

    Through this Budget, we’re investing an additional $7.9 billion to deliver more bulk billing to all Australians, including in our regions.

    Having delivered the largest cut to the cost of medicines in the history of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, we’re now making cheaper medicines even cheaper.

    $689 million to bring a PBS script down to $25, keeping more money in the hip pockets of regional Australians – with our pensioners and concession cardholders to continue paying $7.70 for PBS medicines until 2030.

    $792.9 million to deliver more choice, lower costs and better health care for women – including the first PBS listing for new oral contraceptive pills in more than 30 years.

    Along with more bulk billing for long-term contraceptives, more endometriosis and pelvic pain clinics to treat more conditions, and more Medicare support for women experiencing menopause. 

    Regional health and aged care were left in crisis under those opposite – a mess the Albanese Government has been cleaning up from day one.

    We’ve delivered $17.7 billion to fund increases to the minimum award wage for aged care workers – to not only support and retain these critical workers – but to ensure that our loved ones get the care they need, as they get older.

    We’re delivering an additional $1.8 billion to strengthen our public hospitals and to reduce waiting times across Australia, bringing our hospital funding to a record $33.9 billion in 2025-26.

    We’ve also increased the number of regional GP training places, along with waiving HECS for doctors and nurses that work in our regions – getting more skilled workers where we need them most.

    Through this Budget, we’re investing $662.6 million to grow our health workforce.

    There will be hundreds more GP and rural generalist training places to grow the pipeline of future GPs – with fairer salary incentives for junior doctors who choose general practice as their specialty.

    100 more Commonwealth Supported Places for medical students a year from 2026, increasing to 150 more a year by 2028 – with a focus on encouraging students to pursue general practice in our regions.

    And hundreds of scholarships for nurses and midwives, to help meet our current and future demands.

    A re-elected Albanese Government will deliver another 50 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics across Australia, from Burnie in Tasmania, to Bega in my own electorate – with our $644.3 million investment.

    This builds on the 87 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics we’ve already delivered, which are making a huge difference.

    With 48 of these 137 clinics to be in our regions– from Broome in Western Australia, Townsville in Queensland, to Tamworth in New South Wales.

    The Urgent Care Clinic we delivered in Queanbeyan has already supported over 7,000 fully bulk billed presentations.

    Rusty, a local constituent of mine told me about the huge difference it made for him, when he had an infection.

    He walked right into the clinic and received the help he needed, for free – a service that’s also supported his children and grandchildren.

    As Rusty said, this type of clinic is critical to taking pressure off our hospitals – as we continue to rebuild the health sector.

    But regional services like this will cease to exist under those opposite, because you only have to look at the billions cut from Medicare by the Leader of the Opposition when he was Health Minister, to know their only plan for Medicare is cuts.

    No government has done more for regional services than the Albanese Government – but healthcare wasn’t the only service completely abandoned during the wasted decade by those opposite.

    We’re already investing $2.2 billion to strengthen regional communications, particularly in disaster-prone areas – after programs like the Mobile Black Spot Program were pork-barrelled by those opposite.

    Through our record investments in the NBN, we’ve fixed half of some streets being stuck on the unreliable copper network they rolled out, including just 15 minutes down the road at Jerrabomberra.

    Because it actually takes a little bit more than a string and a can to run a small business, and to work and study from home.

    In this Budget, we’re providing an additional $3.0 billion in equity funding to NBN Co to complete upgrades for all remaining Fibre to the Node premises, including connecting an additional 334,000 regional premises to high speed internet.

    A service that we can’t forget, would be sold off to the highest bidder under those opposite.

    We’re also introducing a Universal Outdoor Mobile Obligation – requiring telcos to provide access to mobile voice and SMS almost everywhere across Australia – which will have huge benefits for regional and remote communities, particularly during emergencies and disasters. 

    Natural disasters are something my own electorate of Eden-Monaro has felt deeply, which is why I’m proud the National Emergency Management Agency that we launched continues to support regional communities – most recently in Queensland and NSW during Ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred.

    That’s on top of our $1 billion Disaster Ready Fund continuing to support regional communities to be better prepared.

    And our additional $35 million investment to boost our national aerial fleet – giving regional communities more emergency support when they need it most.

    But it’s not just during disasters when our regions need reliable aviation.

    Despite the Leader of the Nationals in the Senate telling Sky News just last week that the Opposition had been fighting for a more competitive aviation sector – the reality is they’ve sat idle at the departure gate. 

    Those opposite did nothing with the Sydney Airports Slot Review handed to them in 2021 – something we’ve responded to with our Aviation White Paper.

    And they’ve said that keeping Rex Airlines’ regional routes operating during the voluntary administration process is sabotaging the sale process.

    I’m proud the Albanese Government has kept Rex’s regional flights in the air, with an $80 million loan facility to Rex Administrators, and additional support to reduce the debt Rex owes.

    Because for regional communities like mine, these flights are critical to our local economy, accessing important health services, and for getting around.

    The reality of living in our regions is we need to travel longer for some services, which is why we’ll continue standing up for a strong regional aviation sector.

    But travelling by car is generally how we get around, which is why we’ve already increased local road funding for every council.

    Roads to Recovery funding is going up from $500 million to $1 billion per year, road Black Spot funding increasing to $150 million per year, we’ve launched our $200 million per year Safer Local Roads and Infrastructure Program – and we’ve continued investing in major transport projects.

    Because every local community should have confidence in the roads they’re driving on.

    In his Budget reply last year, the Leader of the Nationals said those opposite would deliver the strong infrastructure funding pipeline that our regional communities need. 

    But let’s not forget, they were responsible for an infrastructure pipeline that below out from 150 projects to 800 projects, without a single dollar extra being added to the Budget, and without the delivery. 

    Regional communities deserve better than promises in press release with no follow through, which is why we continue to deliver critical projects to Build Regional Australia’s Future.

    Funding through this Budget includes $7.2 billion for Bruce Highway safety upgrades in Queensland, $200 million towards duplicating the Stuart Highway from Darwin to Katherine.

    $40 million for the Main South Road Upgrade in South Australia, and $1.1 billion towards upgrades along the Western Freeway in Victoria.

    After colour-coded spreadsheets from those opposite, we’ve delivered on our commitment to establish transparent grant programs that every postcode can apply for.

    Our $600 million Growing Regions Program is already supporting 112 projects, with 29 projects supported under our $400 million Regional Precincts and Partnerships Program so far. 

    I had the pleasure of visiting Wagga’s Lake Albert – one of this region’s most popular recreational sites, which will be completely transformed thanks to $4.4 million in Growing Regions Funding.

    Projects like this are making our regions better places to live, to work and to invest – but having more housing to attract and retain workers is something every community tells me they need.

    We’ve already committed $32 billion in housing measures, including over 13,000 homes nationally under the first round of our Housing Australia Future Fund – many of these in our regions.

    That’s more than those opposite delivered in an entire decade – when they had no plan for building, and their only idea for turning more keys was letting people raid their super for a deposit. 

    To their credit, they’ve now said they’ll fund enabling infrastructure – labelling this a fantastic idea.

    So fantastic, we’re already doing it – through our $1.5 billion Housing Support Program.

    Including $27.2 million to support upgrading Marulan’s sewage treatment in the Mighty Eden-Monaro – laying the foundations for more housing.

    Through this Budget, we’re delivering $54 million to turbocharge advanced manufacturing of prefabricated and modular homes, getting more homes into our regions where we need them most – lifting our total housing commitments to $33 billion. 

    More housing is a key part of how we’re Building Regional Australia’s Future, as is supporting our regional businesses and regional economies to grow.

    Under those opposite, car manufacturers left our shores, leaving our regional people behind. 

    But Labor has always had the back of regional manufacturing, and we’ve shown that again with our new investment of $2.4 billion with the South Australian Government to save the Whyalla Steelworks.

    Supporting 1,100 direct workers, and encouraging more investment into Australian made steel. 

    This builds on our existing $22.7 billion Future Made in Australia agenda, ensuring we build more in our own backyard – which includes over $500 million to boost Australia’s battery manufacturing capabilities, and $1 billion to supercharge the production of solar panels in our regions.

    Our investments are putting regional communities at the centre of industries of the future – unlocking more secure and well-paid regional jobs, and ensuring that we train and retrain regional workforces.

    This includes $38.2 million to boost the diversity of our STEM workforce, with a focus on supporting more women secure jobs in these critical industries.

    Through this Budget, we’re delivering further investments to Build Regional Australia’s Future – by leveraging the competitive advantages that come with our vast energy resources, world-leading agricultural sector, and regional innovation.

    $250.0 million to accelerate the pace of Australia’s growing domestic Low Carbon Liquid Fuels industry – helping to drive economic growth and jobs in regional areas.

    $1.0 billion under our Green Iron Investment Fund to boost green iron manufacturing in our regions.

    This builds on our existing commitment of $2.0 billion to support aluminium smelters transition to renewables – in places like Portland in Victoria, Tomago in NSW, and in Queensland’s Gladstone region.

    From our factories to our fields, we’re backing our regions – with $11.0 million to tackle established pests and weeds in our agriculture and forestry sectors – keeping them productive

    An additional $20 million for a new round of the On Farm Connectivity Program so farmers can use the latest technology to make their work more efficient.  

    And $20.0 million to encourage more Australians to buy Australian-made products, which will have huge benefits for regional economies – because so much of what we love and rely on comes from our regions.

    In his Budget reply last year, the Leader of the Nationals said the Opposition will take decisive action to give regional Australians a fair go.

    But all we’ve seen since then is those opposite continue to vote against every single cost of living measure, while petrifying regional communities with their Nuclear thought bubble.

    An idea that was announced with zero consultation, and most importantly – one that will deliver zero savings for regional Australians and their power bills. 

    Since my last Regional Budget Statement, the Albanese Government has continued to relieve pressures on regional families and businesses, while improving access to the services and support regional people rely on – regardless of their postcode.

    Through our 2025-26 Budget we’re delivering more energy bill relief, making cheaper medicines even cheaper, and providing extra support to get more regional Australians into their own home.

    We’re strengthening Medicare and expanding regional health services, delivering further investments to boost regional connectivity, and investing in more support to help build workforces in our in-demand sectors.

    That’s because only the Albanese Government is serious about Building Regional Australia’s Future.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Press conference – Rockhampton, Queensland

    Source: Murray Darling Basin Authority

    JASON CLARE, MINISTER FOR EDUCATION: Thanks very much for coming along. It’s great to be back in Rocky, and it’s particularly fantastic to be here with my friend JP. We were together only a couple of days ago in Canberra.

    On Monday we made a really big announcement worth $2.8 billion of extra Commonwealth funding for public schools right across Queensland, an agreement that was struck by the Prime Minister and the Queensland Premier as well as the two of us, working together in the interests of kids right across Queensland. And that investment over the next decade is going to make sure that all public schools right across Queensland are fully funded. 

    It’s the last piece in the puzzle to make sure that all public schools right across the nation are fully funded. And it’s going to change lives. It’s a classic example of two Governments working together. And that’s what today is all about as well. We got a great opportunity just a minute ago to meet the doctors of the future – young people that are studying medicine right now that are going to be doctors in Rocky in the years ahead.

    And what we’re announcing today is that the Australian Government will provide $80 million to help build the health sciences school that Rockhampton needs. It’s a health sciences academy for Year 10 to 12. The Premier made this commitment in the election campaign. I’m glad that the Commonwealth Government can contribute to help make this a reality. It’s a great example of two Governments working together – Commonwealth Government chipping in, State Government chipping in – to help make sure that young people in regional Australia get the skills they need to produce the doctors and the nurses and the ambos and the health science professionals that we need now and that we’re going to need in the years ahead. 

    And as we all know, if you study local, you’re more likely to stay local. If you become a doctor in Rocky – if you study medicine in Rocky, you’re more likely to become a doctor who works in Rocky. And that’s why this is so important. Young people while they’re still at high school, getting the skills they need to go and study a university degree in health sciences, and help make sure that we’ve got more doctors and nurses and ambos here in Rocky and across regional Queensland.

    I’ll hand over to you, mate.

    JOHN-PAUL LANGBROEK, QUEENSLAND MINISTER FOR EDUCATION: Thanks, Jason. Well, thanks, everyone, for being here today. And I want to thank Jason Clare, our Federal Minister, as well for the partnership that we’ve had over the last couple of months working on that public school funding scheme that we were able to finalise on Monday. But importantly today is another piece of the puzzle about the election commitment that we made about the new health sciences academy that we want to bring to central Queensland and Rockhampton specifically. 

    So, we really want to thank the Federal Government for the $80 million commitment. It’s an $80 million commitment by the Federal Government that’s going to be a big help in us delivering our election commitment. So, it’s great to be here with the vice-chancellor and two of our local MPs as well.

    But as Jason Clare has just mentioned, seeing the students in action and hearing their stories – many of them here from the local community – and it’s a very, very important partnership between the Federal Government, the State Government, our local health services and schools and, of course, the university.

    So, we’re very appreciative, and we know it’s going to lead to better outcomes. I was here just a month ago, here at the university and also at local high schools. And we know there are over 30 different jobs in health that young people can aspire to. And as Jason Clare has mentioned, if they study here, they’re more likely to stay here.

    We don’t expect everyone to stay here forever necessarily. We want them to travel and go see other places but come back to where your roots are and build a growing state that’s got increasing needs into the future. So, we’ll be working with Health Minister Tim Nicholls as well about delivering that increased workforce that we know we’re going to need over the next few years.

    I’ll hand over to Nick Klomp now, the Vice-Chancellor. Thanks for having us here, Nick.

    NICK KLOMP: Thanks. Thank you, I’m Nick Klomp, Vice-Chancellor and President of CQ University. CQ University is delighted about this cross-government announcement today of locating the Queensland Academy of Health Sciences here in Rockhampton. And, you know, almost on behalf of the community I want to congratulate Jason and JP and our local members here, Donna and Glen, for recognising the importance of workforce in the regions. It’s one of the things that is top of mind for everyone that lives here. It’s top of mind for businesses and communities, and no discipline is more important perhaps than the health disciplines.

    CQ University, we provide graduates, we train graduates in a whole range of health disciplines, from the regional medical pathway, nurses, doctors, psychologists, oral health, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, speech therapists, paramedics, and I could keep on going. We can’t produce enough graduates. That’s how important it is in the region. And this announcement of the Queensland Academy of Health Sciences helps build aspiration for people that are thinking they would like to get a head start in their studies, they’d like a career in health sciences. And CQ University just stands ready to work in partnership with the schools, with the state on what can we do to use this academy to really prioritise the potential of health careers in the region.

    It’s really exciting. We need all the graduates in health science we can get, and, of course, CQ University recognises our obligation to help produce those graduates. So, a great day for health sciences. 

    DONNA KIRKLAND: Thank you. So, what we see today is the coming together of a number of stakeholders, different levels of Government, and that in itself speaks to the need for regional health services in our area. So very excited about this announcement today. And I want to continue to just reiterate that 70 per cent of the people who study in the regions stay in the regions. And that’s what we are wanting out of this. We’ve just been next door speaking to some of our doctors to be – four of those from Rockhampton, another from Gladstone – all with aspirations to continue to stay here in the regions to be of service to our community. 

    And so it will be that Grades 10, 11 and 12 right across Central Queensland will be able to access the Health Services Academy. This is a great outcome, and as the Member for Rockhampton and certainly Assistant Minister for Central Queensland I welcome this funding here today.

    GLEN KELLY: Glen Kelly, Member for Mirani. Well today what an announcement. I’m a great believer in education and keeping people in the bush from where they grow up. And just visiting in next door here and seeing the students of the future, our doctors of the future who have to study for seven years – seven years to become a doctor – that’s dedication for you. That really shows that these young people – teenagers coming into adults – are so focused on helping people with health issues and other things that might appear in their life.

    Today it’s a great honour to have Jason Clare, our Federal Education Minister. And obviously we’ve got Nick here, which we’ve seen so many times of late, and we have JP and obviously Donna Kirkland. It’s a great honour this for regional Queensland because if just keeps us focused on how important we are. And the doctors of the next generation, they’re just next door here, and with this announcement of $80 million to support these ones just next door and the coming on is so important to us. Thank you.

    JOURNALIST: So just on the funding, will that carry through regardless of the outcome of the federal election? 

    CLARE: Certainly, if the Albanese Government is returned that money will be delivered, and we’ll work with JP and the team to make sure that this school is built over the course of the first term, I think it is, of your Government. I can’t speak for if we’re not returned.

    JOURNALIST: And so, the $80 million, was that just Federal funding?

    CLARE: That’s a Federal contribution. The State Government will make an important contribution as well. We’re going to work really closely with Nick and the team at the University. There’s the potential for co-location here at the University. We’ve just got to go through the details of that to see what might be possible. If that’s possible, that’s great because young people going to school on university grounds get a chance to see what life is like once you go to university before you even get there.

    The other thing that makes this special is that there’s the potential to earn credits while you’re doing your studies at high school for the degree or for the diploma that you do once you leave high school and start a health science course, whether it’s a TAFE course or whether it’s a university degree.

    JOURNALIST: And why did the Government see this as a priority, and was there a lot of legwork bring this to fruition? 

    CLARE: Well, JP’s a former dentist – he’s good at pulling teeth! This is honestly a classic example of great teamwork. To get things done in this country it requires Australian Governments to work together – Commonwealth Governments and State Governments. Forget political parties; it’s about the people, it’s about what does a community need. This community needs more doctors, it needs more nurses, it needs more ambos, it needs more health professionals. And if we work together, we can get this done.

    JOURNALIST: And will this benefit students as well as the teachers and, if so, how so?

    CLARE: Will it benefit the students? 

    JOURNALIST: Will it benefit the community as well sorry?

    CLARE: I think it benefits the community. The ultimate goal here is that Rockhampton has more health professionals so that people who live in Rocky and call it home – my grandmother was born and raised in Rocky – have the health services they need and the health services that they deserve.

    Do you want to jump in?

    LANGBROEK: Well, look, I think there’s no doubt that it’s going to benefit teachers as well. It comes up with the university. When it comes to university and rankings, the more that you can have offerings at a university with local students it’s going to benefit lecturers, tutors and enhance the reputation of one of our finest universities. We’ve got nine in Queensland out of 40 nationally, and we want our universities to be seen as amongst the best in the country. And this is only going to help CQU as well as the students who are going to be here to benefit, as well as the local community. 

    ENDS

    MIL OSI News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Moscow simplifies procedure for placing summer verandas — Sergei Sobyanin

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    The capital will simplify the placement of certain types of summer verandas at stationary public catering facilities. This was announced by Sergei Sobyanin in his telegram channel.

    Now, by notification and without approval of the architectural and artistic design project, it will be possible to place summer verandas, for the operation of which no installation of various structures and equipment is required. That is, when arranging them, only umbrellas, tables, chairs and compact elements of flower arrangement can be used.

    The height of the umbrellas should not exceed the first floor of the enterprise (restaurant, cafe). Moreover, the material of their frame is metal, wood, composite materials, and the covering can be made of fabric treated from precipitation. It is prohibited to use country, garden and interior furniture – only industrially manufactured equipment elements are allowed.

    Summer verandas must be adjacent to a permanent public catering establishment or located no more than five meters away from it, and must not obstruct the free passage of pedestrians.

    “You can submit a notification about placing a summer veranda on the mos.ru portal. The new season will traditionally begin on April 1,” noted Sergei Sobyanin.

    Source: Sergei Sobyanin’s Telegram channel @Mos_Sobyanin

    After the applicant reports the placement of the veranda, he will receive a notification in his personal account. It can be cancelled if violations are found during the inspection.

    For verandas that use complex equipment (awnings, pergolas, decorative fences, lighting and heating devices, flower boxes, etc.), as well as in cases of implementing individual projects, the current procedure for inclusion in the placement scheme is maintained. In particular, approval of the architectural and artistic solution project is required.

    Summer verandas are a recognized calling card of Moscow. The city’s placement scheme includes over four thousand seasonal objects. In the winter of 2024/2025, verandas were able to continue working for the first time. This became an additional factor in the growth of popularity of Moscow cafes and restaurants, provided that comfortable conditions for visitors are created and an appropriate menu is offered.

    Sobyanin made a decision on the possibility of leaving seasonal verandas for the winterOver two million tourists from the regions visited Moscow’s cafes and restaurants in six months

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    HTTPS: //vv.mos.ru/mayor/tkhemes/12544050/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Automotive sector outlook: what’s driving recent trends

    Source: Allens Insights (legal sector)

    Regulation and scrutiny set to intensify 11 min read

    Whether it be consumer guarantees or vehicle emissions, the automotive sector continues to be highly regulated, and the target of scrutiny from regulators and private litigants alike. In this Insight, we reflect on some of the key issues facing the sector.

    Class action risk regaining momentum

    In recent years, the automotive sector has been a prominent target of class actions, with multiple claims filed each year. However, the rate of new claims noticeably stalled in mid-to-late 2023. Although there were eight claims in 2023, seven of these were filed by May. 

    In our 2024 Class Action Risk Report, we suggested that class action promoters may have been adopting a ‘wait and see’ approach, pending the High Court’s guidance in the Toyota and Ford proceedings on the availability of ‘reduction in value damages’ for breaches of the acceptable quality guarantee under section 272(1)(a) of the Australian Consumer Law (the ACL). This form of damages has been a mainstay in previous automotive class actions and a substantial driver of significant damages awards.

    The High Court provided that guidance late last year. As reported previously, it held that reduction in value (RIV) damages are a ‘performance based remedy’, reflecting the monetary difference between the value of what the consumer bargained for and what they ultimately received. The majority found that RIV damages are to be calculated as the amount by which the value of the goods was reduced by the failure to comply with the guarantee at the time of supply, with regard to ‘all that is known at the time of trial about the “state and condition of the goods”‘. Accordingly, the assessment includes consideration of both the nature of the defect, and the likely availability, timing, effectiveness, cost and inconvenience of any repairs.

    Automakers can find welcome relief in this decision because the High Court’s approach gives recognition to ‘field actions’ carried out by manufacturers in reducing their liability. However, depending on the seriousness of the defect and/or how long it takes to repair, manufacturers’ potential exposure to damages may still be considerable.

    It remains early days in assessing how class action promoters may respond to the High Court’s decision. Even so, there are initial signs that automotive class action filings may be regaining momentum, with two new claims filed in the past few months.

    Changes to dealership operating models

    Recent years have seen a number of Australian automakers consider, and implement, changes to their distribution models—away from a traditional dealer structure and towards an agency arrangement. Under this change, instead of dealers purchasing cars from automakers and onselling them to customers at a mark-up, they act as agents and sell cars on the automaker’s behalf (generally at an agreed price and in exchange for commission).

    While an agency approach gives automakers far more control over pricing and margins, the transition has been opposed by many franchisees, who fear a loss of profitability and goodwill in their business. Following Mercedes-Benz’s implementation of an agency model between 2016 to 2020, 38 of its 49 dealers commenced a class action alleging the loss of A$650 million in expropriated goodwill.

    We have now seen two distribution model changes litigated through the Australian courts—Mercedes-Benz (referred to above) and Honda Australia, which restructured its dealership network in 2020. While Mercedes-Benz emerged (relatively) unscathed, Honda had mixed success before different courts, and the two cases provide a helpful illustration of the current state of the law. Importantly, the decisions confirm that:

    • automakers are generally entitled to change their business models in the interest of improving profitability (even where it causes financial loss to their dealers); and
    • there is no current right under Australian franchising laws for a franchisee to be compensated for any loss of goodwill upon the non-renewal of a franchise agreement.

    With that said, in implementing any changes to distribution models, automakers should be very careful to honour existing contractual relationships and avoid misrepresentations or inaccurate statements. Compensation may be available where automakers eg :

    1. terminate dealership agreements early, and without a contractual right to do so;
    2. inform dealers they will be no worse off under a new model without a proper basis; or
    3. represent to customers that former authorised dealers can no longer service their vehicles, when this is inaccurate.

    The Mercedes-Benz and Honda cases concerned restructures that occurred before 2021, when the Franchising Code was amended to codify a compensation mechanism in circumstances where a motor vehicle franchisor terminates dealership agreements early. This regime will continue to apply under the new Franchising Code (see below). It will be interesting to see—in light of these decisions and the reforms to the Code—whether other automakers decide to follow in Mercedes-Benz and Honda’s footsteps.

    New Franchising Code on the way

    The Federal Government has now legislated a new Franchising Code of Conduct, which will take effect on 1 April 2025 and replace the current version of the Code, which is due to ‘sunset’.

    For motor vehicle franchisors, the changes in the Code will start applying on the following dates:

    • Almost all changes apply only to conduct that occurs on or after 1 April 2025, in relation to franchise agreements entered into, transferred, renewed or extended from this date.
    • Disclosure requirements in relation to significant capital expenditures will change, but the new requirements apply only to disclosure documents created on or after 1 November 2025. In all other respects, disclosure documents provided to franchisees in relation to franchise agreements to be entered into on or after 1 April 2025 (including disclosure documents provided before 1 April 2025 but relating to franchise agreements to be entered into after 1 April 2025) must comply with the form required by the new Code.

    Automakers will need to make some changes to the standard form of their dealership agreements, and a new form of disclosure document is required to be created.

    The new Code contains very few surprises for industry players who have been following its progress, as it largely aligns with the recommendations of the Independent Review released in February 2024 and the Exposure Draft released in October 2024.

    For automakers, it is important to note that the new Code has retained, without substantive changes, the provisions relating to compensation where a franchisor terminates dealership agreements early (with the changes proposed in the earlier Exposure Draft not implemented). The new Code also retains the obligation on motor vehicle franchisors to ensure that dealership agreements give franchisees a reasonable opportunity to make a return on their investment.

    The following reforms in the new Code are relevant to automakers who distribute through dealership or agency networks in Australia:

    1. Inclusion of service and parts agreements: The new Code includes a revised definition of ‘motor vehicle dealership’, which expressly captures ‘any servicing or repairing of motor vehicles’ conducted by dealers, or associated with a dealership agreement, where the dealer buys, sells, exchanges or leases motor vehicles.

      This change aligns the statutory definition with judicial interpretation of the Code in the AHG v Mercedes-Benz case.1 It is broadly designed to prevent franchisors from structuring contracts with dealers so as to exclude service and repair work from the Code’s application, while ensuring that pure service and repair franchise businesses are not subject to obligations specific to ‘motor vehicle dealerships’.

    1. Simplification of termination rights for franchisors: In relation to a limited set of serious termination events—eg the franchisee ceasing to hold a licence it needs to carry on the business, being deregistered as a company, or being convicted of a serious offence—the franchisor will be entitled to include in its franchise agreements a right to terminate on seven days’ notice, and the franchisee will not be permitted to raise a dispute under the alternative dispute resolution mechanism for such termination.
    2. Disclosure obligations: The new Code no longer requires franchisors to provide a key facts sheet to franchisees, separate from the disclosure document. Existing franchisees will be entitled to opt out of receiving disclosure documents, and also the 14-day cooling-off period, at the time of renewal or extension of the franchise agreement.
    3. Civil penalties apply to all substantive obligations: Whereas in the existing Code, only a limited number of substantive obligations will attract a civil penalty if breached, under the new Code, all substantive obligations will attract civil penalties if breached.

    Outside of the new Code, the Government has legislated to empower the ACCC to issue infringement notices with penalties at the upper end of what is currently available under the ACL (ie $19,800 for a body corporate).

    The New Vehicle Efficiency Standard begins to bite

    With the New Vehicle Efficiency Standard Act 2024 (Cth) (the NVES Act) taking effect at the start of this year, and the accumulation of the associated units and penalties commencing on 1 July 2025, the new standard is now kicking into gear.

    The NVES Act forms a central part of the Government’s National Electric Vehicle Strategy, which aims to promote Australia’s transition to a decarbonised transport system by providing a national framework to enhance the supply of, and access to, electric vehicles. Under the NVES Act, suppliers are incentivised to uptake more fuel-efficient, low or zero emission vehicles (including electric vehicles) through the following mechanisms:

    1. Suppliers of new light vehicles into the Australian market are required to keep CO2 emissions below annual emissions targets calculated based on the emissions and weight of vehicles sold. Stricter emissions targets are imposed for ‘Type 1’ vehicles (eg sedans and hatchbacks) than ‘Type 2’ vehicles (eg vans and utilities, and larger SUVs). The emissions targets of both vehicle types are expected to become more stringent over time.
    2. Central to the statutory regime is the concept of ‘Interim Emission Value’ (IEV), which measures the emissions performance of each supplier’s covered vehicles for a given year against the annual emissions targets set for the relevant vehicle type.
    3. Suppliers whose average fleetwide emissions fall below legislative targets (and therefore generate a negative IEV) will accrue tradeable ‘units’ or credits that can be sold to or purchased by other suppliers, and will be valid for up to three years.
    4. By contrast, suppliers that exceed their emissions targets (and therefore generate a positive IEV) may be liable for civil penalties, although liability will not crystallise immediately. Suppliers will have two years to bring their IEV down to zero, and can do so either by generating sufficient units themselves to meet any shortfall (ie by importing more fuel-efficient vehicles) and/or by purchasing units from other suppliers.

      If the supplier’s IEV has not been fully offset at the end of this period, the supplier will be liable for a civil penalty calculated at the scale of $100 for every gram of CO2 per kilometre of the supplier’s IEV that has not been offset. As the penalty regime applies to each covered vehicle, there is potential for significant fleetwide penalties, presenting a substantial new regulatory risk for automakers importing new vehicles into Australia.

    NGOs play a growing part in the enforcement of greenwashing claims

    We continue to see non-government organisations (NGOs) playing an increasingly prominent role in highlighting alleged instances of greenwashing by automakers, often with the dual aims of raising public awareness and agitating for regulatory enforcement action.

    Recent examples of this phenomenon are widespread. In 2023, the Environmental Defenders Office (EDO), an Australian environmental legal centre, published a report assessing climate-related claims made by the largest automotive companies in Australia. Most significantly, the report alleged that almost all automakers had made exaggerated climate-related claims, particularly by misleadingly comparing hybrid vehicles to ‘lower emitting electric vehicles’.

    To similar effect, United States-based advocacy group Ekō published a report in 2024 reviewing one automaker’s online marketing of its electrified vehicle line. The report surveyed 23 jurisdictions, including Australia, and alleged (among other things) that the automaker had misled consumers by using words such as ‘electrification’ on its website to describe hybrid, plug-in hybrid and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. The automaker was said to have capitalised on growing electric vehicle demand to sell more of its hybrid (and allegedly polluting) vehicles.

    Ekō urged regulators worldwide, including the ACCC, to investigate its findings and those contained in EDO’s 2023 report, highlighting the growing relationship between NGOs and regulators in the enforcement of greenwashing claims.

    Data, privacy and cyber risk

    In May 2024, it was reported the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner had commenced an inquiry aimed at ensuring that connected vehicles purchased in Australia protected sensitive personal data.

    While details of the inquiry have not been released, the Privacy Commissioner, Carly Kind, has stated that ‘cars are now [a] kind of computers on wheels’ that collect a lot of personal information and there is ‘not a lot of transparency or understanding about how that data is being used’.

    Whether this inquiry becomes public remains to be seen, but it contributes to growing public and media attention on the auto industry regarding privacy and data security issues, following several recent high-profile data breach incidents—as well as various studies released over the past several years that have been highly critical of the privacy compliance of connected vehicles. Privacy advocates have also raised concerns around intrusive surveillance made possible through connected services.

    These trends in the auto sector reflect the broader scrutiny being placed on privacy and large-scale data use, in the context of a number of pieces of law reform in late 2024, such as:

    • material changes to the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth), including expanding enforcement options— further tranches of reform to the Privacy Act are expected this year; and
    • whole-of-economy changes to cyber security laws, with the passage of the Cyber Security Act 2024 (Cth). While vehicles have been largely excluded from the new cyber standards for connected products under this Act, it will have broader ramifications, and cyber standards for manufacturers remain a key area of risk.

    We anticipate that car manufacturers and auto financiers will come under increasing privacy and cyber scrutiny, given the volume and potential sensitivity of data collected at scale through connected vehicles. We will be providing an in-depth look into these issues in a future Insight.

    Consumer law reforms

    There is momentum building for consumer law reforms that, if introduced, could significantly affect the automotive sector. Among other things, the Government signalled its commitment late last year to a suite of reforms including to the consumer guarantees in the ACL, and the introduction of a prohibition on unfair trading practices.

    The proposals to strengthen the consumer guarantees were set out in a Consultation Paper released in October 2024 for feedback. The paper cited evidence that for high-value goods, and vehicles in particular, consumers find it difficult to obtain a remedy for breaches of the consumer guarantees. The proposed reforms include:

    1. clarifications to the meaning of a ‘major failure’ under the ACL;
    2. introduction of a new prohibition on suppliers refusing to provide remedies to consumers for a major failure;
    3. introduction of a prohibition on manufacturers failing to indemnify suppliers; and
    4. civil penalties for contraventions of the above.

    Treasury is expected to publish a Decision Regulation Impact Statement that will set out the Government’s preferred options in relation to these proposals.

    Separately, the Government has outlined proposals for a new prohibition on unfair trading practices. This prohibition would target conduct that might not meet the ACL thresholds for misleading or unconscionable conduct, but nonetheless causes consumer detriment through the distortion or manipulation of consumer choices (eg online pressure tactics). A Consultation Paper from November 2024 set out proposed general and specific prohibitions in this regard, and a Decision Regulation Impact Statement is now also anticipated, furthering these proposals.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Mix 104.9 with Katie Woolf

    Source: Workplace Gender Equality Agency

    KATIE WOOLF: And we are going to be catching up with the Minister for Northern Australia. I believe that I have got her on the line hopefully right now, the Minister for Northern Australia, Madeleine King. Good morning to you.

    MADELEINE KING: Oh, good morning, Katie. How are you going?

    KATIE WOOLF: Lovely to have you on the show. I’m really good. Thank you so much for joining us with a late call up this morning. It is very much appreciated. Now, Minister, talk us through what is in the budget from overnight for the Northern Territory.

    MADELEINE KING: Well, thanks, Katie. It’s a real pleasure to be calling back in to Darwin again. So, you know, overall the Federal Government will be providing over $7 billion in funding to the NT, which is a huge boost for the Northern Territory and that’s part of a great relationship we have with the Chief Minister, Lia Finocchiaro and of course their deputy, Gerard Maley. Now, I speak to the Member for Solomon, Luke Gosling all the time about how important the territory is to Australia because without a strong north, we don’t have a strong Australia. So, we’re going to keep on investing in the NT backing in one of our first commitments on coming into government, the $1.2 billion in Middle Arm investment precinct – industrial precincts with hundreds of millions of dollars on roads into the NT. But for every single NT taxpayer though, it is really, I want to be really clear about the magnitude of the tax cuts the Albanese Labor Government has delivered.

    KATIE WOOLF: I might get to those in just a moment and you know, I don’t want to sound ungrateful, but it does seem as though the only new money announced for the Northern Territory is a conditional $200 million out of a total budget of $786 billion. That is what the Northern Territory’s Treasurer Bill Yan is saying. I mean, is that correct when it comes to new money, it is just that, conditional $200 million?

    MADELEINE KING: Well, there are many things that will benefit the Territorians. Every single Territorian in this budget, one, of course, is the accumulated tax cuts. There are some already came in in July of last year. There is more now coming as the Treasurer spoke about last night. But there’s also savings on medicines that will save Northern Territory residents more than $1.3 million. Student debt will be slashed for Territorians and particularly important for young Territorians. We’ve made a commitment to a further Medicare Urgent Care Clinic in the Territory, bringing the total number in the NT up to nine. So, they’re really important commitments that will affect so many Territorians and of course the tax cuts will affect and be good for every single Territorian.

    KATIE WOOLF: So, just in relation to any sort of specific projects at this point in time, it is that $200 million for the Stuart Highway, that conditional $200 million. Is there any money going towards, you spoke before about Middle Arm and that development, but any new money or anything new in that space and certainly in the gas development space?

    MADELEINE KING: Well, no, excuse me. The focus is on Middle Arm and that $1.2 billion is, you know, one of the biggest commitments this Government has made to any single project in the country. So, it is of untold significance and it reflects the importance of Darwin’s position in relation to our neighbours in the north. And of course, the whole of the NT’s opportunity to be a renewable superpower. But there will be other industries involved in that like hydrogen and critical minerals processing and as you know, it’ll be Middle Arm is very close of course to the existing Inpex plant. So, there’s a lot of work going on on the planning for Middle Arm. It is a game changer for Darwin and our commitment to it remains solid.

    KATIE WOOLF: And Minister, in terms of, because there has been some discussion again as well about the Darwin Port, nothing in last night’s budget around the Darwin Port. Where does the Albanese Government stand on this? I mean, is there going to be some further announcements on the Darwin Port?

    MADELEINE KING: Well, as we know, the Darwin Port was permitted to be sold off under the former Coalition Government and that’s not something we agreed with at the time. But, you know, that’s a contract that was signed by that government and we have to work within those contractual laws. So, at the moment, you know, we will keep a watching brief, of course, on the solvency of the Port owner, Landbridge, I think it is. And make sure we’re well aware of what’s going on there, as we always are. I mean, Darwin remains and will always remain an integral part of Australia’s national defence. In the defence review we identified how important Darwin and other northern ports are. So, you know, obviously, we’ll keep a very close eye on everything that goes around with the Darwin Port. But the infrastructure spend on the Northern defence positions, including in Katherine as well, of course, are going to be vitally important to the country.

    KATIE WOOLF: Minister, look, there’s a lot of people messaging through to the show this morning. You know, they’re not like they are not hearing that there is, there’s a lot in it for the Northern Territory. I mean, is the Federal Government feeling as though at this point in time, you know, the Northern Territory seats are not winnable at the next election? Is that why there doesn’t seem to be a big focus on us.

    MADELEINE KING: Well, I mean, $7 billion to the Northern Territory –

    KATIE WOOLF: It’s not new money, though. Like, it’s not. They’re not new announcements, is the point that our listeners are making this morning.

    MADELEINE KING: Well, $7.2 billion is an extraordinary contribution to the NT economy and we as a government have a solid commitment and an ongoing commitment to the Territory. But I’ve taken you through a number of commitments already around urgent care clinics, obviously around the scripts being reduced under Medicare and strengthening Medicare as well. And also the tax cuts to every single Northern Territorian and we –

    KATIE WOOLF: Let’s talk about those. Let’s talk about those because we do know obviously the Federal Opposition, Angus Taylor, he’s come out and said what was offered was a bribe. He reckons the election bribe of 70 cents a day starting in a year’s time. He said, frankly, it’s not even going to touch the sides of the economic pain that Australian households have felt over the last two and a half years. Is it a bit insulting when you look at the cost of living and the rises that we are experiencing, particularly in regional parts of Australia? I know you’d understand that more than most, you know, as the Minister for Northern Australia.

    MADELEINE KING: Well, yeah, I do, and thanks for acknowledging that. But I would remind your listeners that Angus Taylor and Peter Dutton voted against tax cuts to Territorians worth over $2,700 per year. So, that’s what they have voted against and that they stood against it this morning in the Parliament, and I witnessed that myself. So, whilst we have had larger tax cuts in the last two budgets, and they were really important, and then this latest tax cut, of course, it’s smaller, but that’s why we are a responsible government. But the point of them is the accumulation of up to over $2,500 per Territorian taxpayer is undeniably a very good thing for everyone that lives there. And if it’s an extra $50 a week, as announced last night by the Treasurer, that’s nothing to be sneezed at. I mean, who wouldn’t want an extra 50 bucks in their pocket at the end of the week?

    KATIE WOOLF: So, how are we getting the, how’s the breakdown of the $50 happening? Is that in addition to the $5, what exactly is that breakdown for the $50?

    MADELEINE KING: Well, that’s the same thing, I think. I’m not sure what figures Angus Taylor has given you, but what it adds up to is, on average, for taxpayers, and of course, people pay different rates of tax. It’s an extra $50 a week in the pockets of Territorians on top of the over $2,000 worth of tax cuts we’ve introduced over the term of our Government.

    KATIE WOOLF: I just want to make it really clear for our listeners because I’m obviously reading off some other info that we have received, and it says that the Federal Treasurer obviously announcing the $17 billion tax cuts and that it will equate to most Australians to about $5 per week if you’re on a wage of around $79,000 a year.

    MADELEINE KING: Well, so what, doc – I don’t know what document that is, Katie. I’m sorry, I don’t know. But the figures I have is that for most Territorians it’s about $50 a week.

    KATIE WOOLF: All right. We’ll make sure we can do that.

    MADELEINE KING: Well, we can clear that up. I’m really happy to do that.

    KATIE WOOLF: Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. Hey, now, do we know what date this election’s going to be called? Madeleine King, when is it going to happen? We’re all waiting to find out.

    MADELEINE KING: Yeah. I mean, aren’t we all? But I can assure you it will be in May.

    KATIE WOOLF: We don’t know what date though.

    MADELEINE KING: Elections are an excellent opportunity for our democracy to demonstrate how great it is. And really important that there are so many more Territorians now on the electoral roll as well, which has been a great effort of the Special Minister of State, Don Farrell and his team to make sure more people across remote regions of the Territory are able to, you know, have their say in Australia’s future. And I really look forward to being part of that.

    KATIE WOOLF: Yeah, absolutely. Well, Minister for North Australia and Resources, Madeleine King, really appreciate your time this morning. Thanks very much for joining us on the show.

    MADELEINE KING: Thanks, Katie. I’ll see you up there soon. 

    MIL OSI News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Government Cuts – Tertiary Education Commission faces another round of damaging cuts

    Source: PSA

    EMBARGOED UNTIL 4.30PM WEDS 26 MARCH 2025
    More jobs are proposed to go from the Tertiary Education Commission as the Government forces it to take the axe to its budget again.
    TEC staff were told today of the latest restructure which proposes a net loss of 22 roles, following the Government demand for a 5% spending cut to its operating funding. This equates to its baseline being shaved by another $12 million over the next four years. This comes on top of cuts made last year where 28 roles axed after TEC was forced to slash spending by 6%, and absorbing cost  pressures, a $25 million cut over four years.
    “The Government talks a big game about economic growth, but at the heart of thriving economies around the world is a well-funded, well managed tertiary education system and this is just the opposite,” said Fleur Fitzsimons, National Secretary for the Public Service Association Te Pūkenga Here Tikanga Mahi.
    If these latest cuts are confirmed in May as proposed, TEC will have lost nearly 14% of its workforce in little over a year.
    “This is a critical organisation already cut to the bone having slashed other costs like research, travel, contractors, property and IT.
    “Ordering more cuts when the Government knows costs can only be saved by reducing the TEC workforce shows how little the Government cares about those who help our tertiary education sector function effectively.
    “This is an agency overseen by multiple Ministers who are demanding it do more with less. We worry this will lead to increased workloads and burnout for an already stretched workforce.
    “This is just more evidence of the Government ordering cuts without thinking of the long-term consequences. We have seen this repeated throughout the public service.
    “All this speaks to a government which is desperately trying to balance its books and find savings down the back of every sofa, not matter how small, to fund its irresponsible tax cuts.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Legislation – Transporting New Zealand welcomes roadside drug testing legislation passing third reading

    Source: Ia Ara Aotearoa Transporting New Zealand

    Road freight peak body Ia Ara Aotearoa Transporting New Zealand has welcomed roadside drug testing legislation passing its third reading today.
    Transporting New Zealand Policy and Advocacy Lead Billy Clemens says the final legislation has been a long time coming, after legislation from the previous government couldn’t be implemented by Police due to the lack of appropriate testing devices.
    “48 per cent of fatal crashes involved driver alcohol and/or drugs as a contributing factor between 2021-2023,” he says.
    “A lot of New Zealanders need to adjust their thinking about driving while impaired. The threat of 50,000 random roadside drug tests being done per year, potentially resulting in an immediate 12-hour driving stand-down and a fine, is a step in the right direction.”
    Clemens says the legislation will complement the random drug testing already commonplace in road freight businesses.
    “Our members take road safety seriously – the health, safety and wellbeing of drivers is currently one of the top three issues flagged in our 2025 Road Freight Industry Survey.
    “This legislation is a practical step towards improving road safety outcomes for all road users.”
    About Ia Ara Aotearoa Transporting New Zealand
    Ia Ara Aotearoa Transporting New Zealand is the peak national membership association representing the road freight transport industry. Our members operate urban, rural and inter- regional commercial freight transport services throughout the country.
    Road is the dominant freight mode in New Zealand, transporting 92.8% of the freight task on a tonnage basis, and 75.1% on a tonne-km basis.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: 81 Fundamentals of Metrology

    Source: US Government research organizations

    You will need a government-issued photo ID (e.g., passport or driver’s license) when you check into the Visitors Center at the entrance of NIST and if bringing a vehicle onto the NIST campus, a vehicle registration card.

    PLEASE NOTE: Effective July 21, 2014, under the REAL ID Act of 2005 (https://www.dhs.gov/real-id/real-id-frequently-asked-questions), agencies, including NIST, can only accept a state-issued driver’s license or identification card for access to federal facilities if issued by states that are REAL ID compliant or have an extension. NIST currently accepts other forms of federally issued identification in lieu of a state-issued driver’s license, such as a valid passport, passport card, DOD’s Common Access Card (CAC), Veterans ID, Federal Agency HSPD-12 IDs, Military Dependents ID, Transportation Workers Identification Credential (TWIC), and TSA Trusted Traveler ID. See Visitor Information for the latest information.
     

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: 82 Calibration Certificate Evaluation

    Source: US Government research organizations

    You will need a government-issued photo ID (e.g., passport or driver’s license) when you check into the Visitors Center at the entrance of NIST and if bringing a vehicle onto the NIST campus, a vehicle registration card.

    PLEASE NOTE: Effective July 21, 2014, under the REAL ID Act of 2005 (https://www.dhs.gov/real-id/real-id-frequently-asked-questions), agencies, including NIST, can only accept a state-issued driver’s license or identification card for access to federal facilities if issued by states that are REAL ID compliant or have an extension. NIST currently accepts other forms of federally issued identification in lieu of a state-issued driver’s license, such as a valid passport, passport card, DOD’s Common Access Card (CAC), Veterans ID, Federal Agency HSPD-12 IDs, Military Dependents ID, Transportation Workers Identification Credential (TWIC), and TSA Trusted Traveler ID. See Visitor Information for the latest information.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s message on the 50th Anniversary of the Biological Weapons Convention

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    Today marks the fiftieth anniversary of the entry into force of the Biological Weapons Convention, the first multilateral disarmament treaty to ban an entire category of weapons of mass destruction. 

    Over the past five decades, the Convention has contributed towards collective efforts to reject the use of disease as a weapon. 

    However, we must remain vigilant. Recent advances in biology hold great promise but also potential risks. The Biological Weapons Convention helps to ensure that such advances are only used for peaceful purposes.

    I urge all States parties to engage actively in the Working Group on the Strengthening of the Convention, and for the Group to accelerate its work so that it can fulfil its mandate in this anniversary year.  These efforts reinforce the commitment in the Pact for the Future, adopted at the United Nations last year, for all countries to pursue a world free of biological weapons.  

    Fifty years after its entry into force, the Biological Weapons Convention now has 188 States parties. I call on the nine governments that have not yet joined the Convention to do so without delay. Together, let us stand united against biological weapons. 

    ***
     

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Fivecast revolutionizes financial crime investigations with AI-driven online insights

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LONDON, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Fivecast today launched its cutting-edge, AI-driven digital intelligence platform into the financial crime compliance market, enabling financial institutions to radically streamline financial crime investigations, anti-money laundering (AML), know your customer (KYC), and enhanced due diligence (EDD) through online data analytics.

    Fivecast empowers financial investigation teams to swiftly and efficiently assess customer risk across masses of online information. The Fivecast platform delivers relevant and actionable information from a vast range of online data sources, enabling broad digital footprint discovery combined with in-depth, AI-driven multi-media data analysis. Current sources and methods used for financial intelligence investigations are missing critical, risk-based information about customers, leading financial institutions to grossly underestimate their risk exposure.

    The need for accurate, timely, and global data has never been greater. The global regulatory landscape is rapidly changing, demanding new data sources to meet evolving due diligence requirements for AML compliance. This is highlighted in guidance and consent orders from Government agencies and financial regulatory bodies across Europe, the US, and Australia. In 2024, global penalties related to financial crime imposed by U.S. regulators alone surpassed $4.3 billion.

    Duane Rivett, Fivecast Co-founder and VP of Strategic Growth, said: “The vastly superior speed and accuracy of our digital intelligence platform streamlines slow, labor-intensive processes in a highly sensitive area for financial institutions. Just as national security agencies use our solutions to analyze extremist or terrorist networks online, banks are doing the same with a slightly different focus on EDD, AML, and KYC.”

    Fivecast solutions empower financial investigation units to efficiently and accurately assess a customer’s risk profile to rapidly identify predicate crimes and customer risk exposure and adopt a genuine risk-based approach to compliance while minimizing compliance costs.

    About Fivecast:
    Fivecast is a world-leading provider of digital intelligence solutions that enable financial institutions to efficiently and accurately assess a customer’s risk profile, uncovering actionable insights critical to reducing business risk while driving down the cost of compliance. Fivecast was born out of a unique collaboration between government agencies and world-leading research institutions to tackle big data challenges like those facing financial institutions today.
    www.fivecast.com

    Media Contact:
    Monica Brink – Sr Director, Marketing
    Monica.brink@fivecast.com 

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/c3bca299-cead-4de1-9142-e768a865dc69

    The MIL Network –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Non-compete clauses make it too hard to change jobs. Banning them for millions of Australians is a good move

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By William van Caenegem, Professor of Law, Bond University

    Zivica Kerkez/Shutterstock

    The Labor government used this week’s budget to announce it plans to ban non-compete agreements for employees on less than A$175,000 per year, a move that will affect about 3 million Australian workers.

    Describing them as “unfair”, a media release by federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers said non‑compete clauses “are holding back Australian workers from switching to better, higher‑paying jobs”. Banning non-compete clauses could lift the wages of affected workers by up to 4%, the government has said.

    The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry quickly called the measure “heavy-handed”, arguing that very few employees, according to businesses, turn down employment due to non-compete clauses.

    However, research I did with colleagues from Melbourne and Monash universities showed very few employees signing a new job contract ever think about the end of the relationship and what might happen after.

    Workers often accept non-compete clauses with little understanding or regard for their practical implications.

    What the law currently says

    The current law says contractual clauses that stop departing workers from taking a new job in their preferred line of work, often for long periods of time, are – in principle – unenforceable.

    That is, however, unless a court says a particular non-compete clause is “reasonably required” to protect a “legitimate interest”.

    Therein lies the problem: it is hard to predict when, where or under what circumstances a court will find a particular clause is “reasonably required”.

    Our research concluded this uncertainty favoured employers with greater nous and resources.

    These employers have the advantage over employees, who are rarely willing or able to go to court arguing their non-compete clause is invalid.

    This has a chilling effect on the mobility of employees. In other words, these clauses make it harder for workers to change jobs.

    That’s detrimental to labour market competition and can hold back knowledge-sharing and economic growth.

    Global efforts to ban non-compete clauses

    In California, non-compete clauses have long been banned. Many economists have identified this as among the key reasons for the success of the Californian knowledge economy. This example also featured in a submission I made (with researcher Caitlyn Douglas) to a 2024 Treasury review into non-compete clauses in Australia.

    US research from 2021 also found non-compete clauses can hinder labour mobility. They can impede fundamental freedoms such as freedom of employment and freedom of general competition.

    In 2024, under President Biden, the US Federal Trade Commission banned non-competes clauses across the US.

    However, the ban has been blocked due to legal challenges in the US Federal Court. It’s also been reported the Trump administration may kill off these reforms altogether.

    The UK government proposed in 2023 limiting non-competes to a maximum of three months.

    Holding employees back

    Unlike in some countries, Australian law does not require employers to compensate their ex-employee for loss of income during their non-compete period.

    This means that if workers comply and do not work in the field they’re most skilled for, they will take a serious financial hit for months or more.

    This is another detrimental effect of non-compete clauses. They really hurt if the worker in question is lower paid and has very specific skills (such as hairdressers or dental assistants).

    In that respect, Labor’s mooted ban on such clauses for employees on less than $175,000 is well conceived.

    Courts will usually only enforce a non-compete clause if its terms are reasonable to protect a legitimate interest, such as trade secrets an employee has learned during their employment.

    However, it’s mostly higher-ranked employees that have access to really significant trade secrets, such as technical information, confidential business plans or pricing structures.

    Higher paid employees are also more often the “public face of the business”. A court might decide it’s fair to say such workers can’t leave and the next day turn up as the main face of a competing business.

    And the new government proposal won’t leave employers without any recourse against employees who take their genuine trade secrets and pass them on to their new employers. They will still be able to sue for breach of confidence.

    Non-competes really hurt if the worker in question is lower paid and has very specific skills (such as hairdressers or dental assistants).
    Dorde Krstic/Shutterstock

    Challenges for reform

    The proposed reforms are well supported by authoritative legal and economic research.

    The federal government will have to consider carefully how to make sure the prohibition cannot be easily circumvented.

    And they’ll have to ensure these reforms don’t make it more likely judges will find restraints valid for those on more than A$175,000. Labour and knowledge mobility remain crucially important for them too.

    Another key challenge will be ensuring a ban doesn’t encourage practices or clauses restricting competition to emerge or become too prevalent.

    That could include “garden leave” clauses. These give a departing employee a long notice period, during which they are paid but do not work and are isolated from their employment (and instead “doing the gardening” at home).

    The risk is that if employers can no longer include non-compete clauses in contracts, they might use long garden leave provisions more often.

    Although it is good that “garden leave” employees get paid during that period (unlike during a non-compete term), they are still isolated from their work, stagnating in their skills and unable to move to new employment.

    William van Caenegem received funding from the Australian Research Council a decade ago for some of the research referred to in this article.

    – ref. Non-compete clauses make it too hard to change jobs. Banning them for millions of Australians is a good move – https://theconversation.com/non-compete-clauses-make-it-too-hard-to-change-jobs-banning-them-for-millions-of-australians-is-a-good-move-253101

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: China sets record for European patent applications in 2024

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    Chinese companies and researchers filed a new record of 20,081 patent applications in 2024 at the European Patent Office (EPO), the office’s Patent Index 2024 revealed Tuesday.

    This figure accounts for 10.1 percent of all applications received by the office, securing China’s position as the fourth-largest filer globally.

    While the growth rate of Chinese patent applications registered 0.5 percent in 2024 compared to 2023, the overall number has more than doubled since 2018 and quadrupled since 2014, the EPO noted in its press release.

    In the company ranking, Huawei led the way with 4,322 applications, achieving second place overall at the EPO. In addition to Huawei, five other Chinese companies were among the top 50 filers, “showcasing China’s robust innovation capabilities and active participation in European patent applications,” it said.

    The top three technical fields for Chinese patent filings in 2024 were digital communication, electrical machinery and apparatus, and computer technology — mirroring global trends.

    The fastest-growing sector among Chinese applicants was electrical machinery, apparatus, and energy, which saw a 32.2 percent increase compared to 2023.

    “This was thanks to a surge from China in patent applications for battery-related technologies, up 79 percent from the previous year, with four Chinese companies now among the top 15 applicants in battery technologies,” EPO said.

    Overall, the EPO received 199,264 patent applications from around the world in 2024, with electrical machinery, apparatus, and energy recording the highest growth globally.

    “Despite political and economic uncertainties, companies and inventors from around the world filed a high number of patents last year, underlining their technological prowess and their continued investment in R&D,” said EPO President Antonio Campinos.

    MIL OSI China News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: The 2025 federal budget fails the millions of voters who want action on Australia’s struggling environment

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Timothy Neal, Senior lecturer in Economics / Institute for Climate Risk and Response, UNSW Sydney

    Commentators have branded last night’s federal budget as an attempt to win over typical Australian voters concerned about the cost of living, ahead of what is expected to be a tightly fought federal election.

    The budget’s big-ticket items included tax cuts and energy bill relief, plus measures to make childcare and healthcare cheaper.

    There was little in the budget dedicated to stemming Australia’s environmental crises. Given this, one might assume the average voter cares little for action on conservation and curbing climate change. But is this true?

    Polling suggests the clear answer is “no”. Voters consistently say they want more government action on both conservation and climate change. As the federal election looms, Labor is running out of time to show it cares about Australia’s precious natural environment.

    What environmental spending was in the budget?

    The main spending on the environment in last night’s budget had been announced in the weeks before. It includes:

    • A$250 million over five years to help protect 30% of Australia’s land and waters by 2030

    • $2 billion over 19 years to help Australia’s aluminium smelters transition to renewable electricity

    • $1 billion over seven years to support new facilities and supply chains for “green” iron.

    These measures are welcome. However, the overall environment spending is inadequate, given the scale of the challenges Australia faces.

    Australia’s protected areas, such as national parks, have suffered decades of poor funding, and the federal budget has not rectified this. It means these sensitive natural places will remain vulnerable to harms such as invasive species and bushfires.

    More broadly, Australia is failing to stem the drivers of biodiversity loss, such as land clearing and climate change. This means more native species become threatened with extinction each year.

    Experts say conserving Australia’s threatened species would cost an extra $2 billion a year. Clearly, the federal budget spending of an extra $50 million a year falls well short of this.

    And global greenhouse gas emissions continue to increase. This contributes to ever-worsening climate change, bringing heatwaves, more extreme fires, more variable rainfall and rising seas.

    Contrary to what the federal budget priorities might suggest, Australians are concerned about these issues.

    What does the average voter think about the environment?

    Results from reputable polling provide insight into what the average voters want when it comes to environmental policy and spending.

    When it comes to conservation, the evidence is clear. Polling by YouGov in October last year (commissioned by two environment groups) estimated that 70% of Australians think the Labor government should do more to “protect and restore nature”. The vast majority of voters (86%) supported stronger national nature laws.

    Essential Research polling in October 2023 found 53% of voters think the government is not doing enough to preserve endangered species. About the same proportion said more government action was needed to preserve native forests, and oceans and rivers.

    On climate change, the average voter appears to have views significantly out of step with both major parties. The Australia Institute’s Climate of the Nation report last year found 50% of voters believed the government was not doing enough to prepare for and adapt to climate impacts.

    The report also found 50% of voters supported a moratorium on new coal mines in Australia, 69% support charging companies a levy for each tonne of carbon pollution they emit, and 69% are concerned about climate change.

    Also in 2024, a Lowy Institute poll found 57% of Australians supported the statement that “global warming is a serious and pressing problem, and that we should take steps now to mitigate it even if it involves significant costs”.

    There’s a caveat here. As the cost-of-living crisis has worsened, the issue has edged out all others in terms of voter concerns at the upcoming election.

    For example, in January this year, Roy Morgan polling found 57% of voters considered cost of living one of their top-three issues of concern. Only 23% considered global warming a top-three issue.

    However, global warming was still more of a concern for voters than managing the economy (22%), keeping interest rates down (19%) and reducing taxes (15%). It was tied with reducing crime (23%).

    It’s also important to note that climate change and cost-of-living pressures are not separate issues. Research suggests that as climate change worsens, it will cause inflation to worsen.

    Labor’s unmet election promises

    The singular focus on the cost of living in last night’s federal budget means environmental spending has been neglected.

    Context matters here. Labor has utterly failed to deliver its 2022 election promise to rewrite federal environmental protection laws and create an environmental protection agency.

    The government could have used this budget to repair its environmental credentials going into the next election – but it didn’t. The many voters concerned about the environment might well wonder if Labor considers the environment a policy priority at all.

    The upcoming election result may show whether minor parties and independents better reflect the Australian electorate’s views on this important issue.

    Timothy Neal 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. The 2025 federal budget fails the millions of voters who want action on Australia’s struggling environment – https://theconversation.com/the-2025-federal-budget-fails-the-millions-of-voters-who-want-action-on-australias-struggling-environment-253099

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Padilla Blasts Trump Executive Order Attempting to Disenfranchise Millions of American Voters

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.)

    Padilla Blasts Trump Executive Order Attempting to Disenfranchise Millions of American Voters

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration and California’s former Secretary of State, issued the following statement condemning President Donald Trump’s harmful executive order that threatens to disenfranchise millions of American voters and undermines Congress’ authority over the administration of federal elections and the independence of the Election Assistance Commission:

    “As former California Secretary of State and Ranking Member of the Senate Rules Committee, I know full well that President Trump’s executive order does nothing to improve the safety of our federal elections — what it would do is disenfranchise millions of eligible American voters. 

    “President Trump is a notorious election denier. He lacks the authority to implement many of the changes laid out in this illegal executive order, which also ignores the requirements set forth in the bipartisan Help America Vote Act.

    “Free and fair elections are the foundation of our democracy and attempts by the President to make it harder for eligible voters to participate hurts all Americans, regardless of party. I stand ready to work with anyone on responsible solutions to improve election security and increase voter participation, but this sham order is not the answer. I will keep fighting against the Trump Administration’s brazen attempts to undermine our elections, and will work to protect American voters.”

    As Ranking Member of the Rules Committee, which has oversight over federal elections, Senator Padilla has fought against President Trump’s unprecedented attacks against election security. Last week, Padilla and Senator Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) led 29 Democratic Senators in urging Attorney General Pam Bondi to continue the essential work of the Department of Justice’s Election Threats Task Force, which directs the Department’s efforts to protect election officials from rising threats and acts of violence. Last month, he pressed senior officials at CISA for answers after they fired employees who have worked to combat election misinformation. During his first business meeting as Rules Committee Ranking Member, Padilla highlighted threats to election security and the importance of free and fair elections. Additionally, Padilla expressed serious concerns about the dangerous implications for elections following President Trump’s executive order purporting to bring independent regulatory agencies under total control of the White House. Padilla previously denounced the illegal firing of Federal Election Commission (FEC) Chair Ellen Weintraub and led 10 Democratic Senators to demand President Trump rescind his attempt.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Three NSU teachers became winners of the Potanin Foundation grant competition

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Novosibirsk State University – Novosibirsk State University –

    The names of the winners of the grant competition for teachers of Russian universities participating in the Vladimir Potanin Scholarship Program in 2024/2025 were recently announced. In total, 1,290 teachers showed interest in the competition this season, 574 applications were received from 68 universities, and 526 applications were admitted to expert evaluation. Based on the results of the selection, 150 teachers will receive a grant for the redesign and transformation of educational products. The total amount of support is 73.8 million rubles.

    The most popular areas for redesign and transformation of educational products: teacher education (11), management (10), computer science and engineering (7), economics (6), information systems and technologies (5), psychology (5), history (5).

    Novosibirsk State University was among the leading universities in terms of the number of applications admitted to the examination; there were 15 of them. Following the results of the competition, three NSU teachers became winners:

    Elina Arnoldovna Biberdorf, redesign of the course “Methods and Applications of Linear Algebra”. Alexander Vladimirovich Bobrovskikh, redesign of the course “Gene Networks: Advanced Approaches to Analysis and Reconstruction”. Ulyana Stanislavovna Zubairova, redesign of the course “Applications of Artificial Intelligence and Data Science in Biology Problems”.

    We spoke to the winners and found out why they decided to apply, what their projects are about, and what emotions they feel when they win.

    Alexander Bobrovskikh, Assistant Professor, Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology Faculty of Natural Sciences of NSU, teacher Advanced Engineering School of NSU:

    — I decided to participate in the competition quite spontaneously when I saw the announcement at NSU in December. I didn’t think long about the idea of the application, since I had recently completed the creation of the module “Reconstruction of Gene Networks” for the NSU Advanced Engineering School, which covers basic concepts in this area. I thought that it would be great to expand and deepen the content of this module, making it a full-fledged course with the support of the Vladimir Potanin Foundation. I wrote the application to the Foundation in a few days during the New Year holidays. I am grateful to the NSU Advanced Engineering School for supporting my idea and to the Foundation for the high assessment of my application. I am especially glad that I will be able to implement this within the walls of my native university and support the initiatives of our Advanced Engineering School.

    Ulyana Zubairova, Senior Lecturer, Department of Informatics Systems Faculty of Information Technology NSU:

    — I learned about the competition from the department’s newsletter and immediately realized that this was a great opportunity to update our course “Applications of Artificial Intelligence and Data Science in Biology Problems”. It is located at the intersection of two very rapidly developing fields — biology and artificial intelligence. We have long wanted to make the course more practice-oriented and interdisciplinary, with an emphasis on real-world problems. Nowadays, biologists increasingly work with large data sets, and AI specialists — with problems where it is important to take into account the biological context. Our course is an attempt to combine these two worlds. We want students to not only know how algorithms work, but also to be able to apply them in real biological research: from gene analysis to spatial transcriptomics and medical imaging.

    AI in biology is developing at breakneck speed, and for the course to remain relevant and truly useful, it needs to be regularly revised. Thanks to the grant support, we will be able to seriously update the structure: add cases based on real biological data, develop interactive practical tasks, include blocks on visualizing results and integrate all this with laboratory practice. In addition, we plan to hold several intensive courses where students will be able to work on real scientific projects and apply the knowledge gained in the course in practice. This will help not only to better assimilate the material, but also to feel how modern bioinformatics works “live”.

    I am very happy with the victory! This is not just good news, but an opportunity to take an important step forward. We believe in the power of interdisciplinary education and want the course to be more than just a set of lectures, but a real space where scientific and engineering ideas are born. Special thanks to the Department of Informatics Systems of the Faculty of Information Technology of NSU. The support when submitting the application and in general during the course discussion was both very valuable and humanly warm. When there is a team nearby that believes in the project, it becomes much easier to move forward. And this victory is also a great reason to rethink the very approach to teaching: listen to students, be flexible, adapt the format. And most importantly, do not be afraid to try something new. Participation in the competition itself was a step towards change, and we will definitely not stop there.

    Elina Biberdorf, Associate Professor, Department of Differential Equations Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics, NSU:

    — I teach a course in the master’s program called “Methods and Applications of Linear Algebra”. I take the fate of this course to heart, because its content is close to the main direction of my scientific work. In addition, this course is the brainchild and legacy of my scientific supervisor, Academician Sergei Konstantinovich Godunov. In order for the material to be interesting and useful for master’s students, it must be regularly updated, improved, and include something new and modern.

    In recent years, most of the course participants have been graduates of other universities and foreign students. This creates a big problem due to the difference in the level of preparation. The teacher needs to make additional methodological efforts to make it interesting and understandable for everyone. That is why I jumped at the chance to participate in the competition and get support to transform my course.

    After this victory, first of all, I will revise the material of practical classes and synchronize the lecture presentations with it. These changes will affect the students of the next year. Later, a new teaching aid will be written, as well as a methodological manual for completing practical assignments.

    Of course, I am glad that the foundation supported my project. But this feeling is mixed with a bit of anxiety, because now there is serious work ahead, which will require quite a lot of effort from me. You could say that I expected to win. It seems to me that my application was quite high-quality and convincing.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Delivering a new Academy for Health Sciences in Central Queensland

    Source: Historic Cooma Gaol listed on the NSW State Heritage Register

    The Albanese Government and the Crisafulli Government will fund the establishment of a new Academy for Health Sciences in Rockhampton.

    The Academy will help to fast track high-achieving local students into careers as doctors, nurses, paramedics and allied health professionals.

    This is an investment to strengthen Medicare and boost the pipeline of health workers in regional Queensland.

    The Academy will cater for students from Years 10 to 12 and connect them to professionals in health sciences and research.

    The Albanese Government will support the establishment of the Academy through a $80 million investment, towards the Crisafulli Government’s existing commitment to deliver this key regional project.

    The Crisafulli Government will seek to establish a direct partnership with Central Queensland University. 

    This will also allow students to gain credit for university health science degrees while still at school, and follow their passion for health sciences without needing to move away from their families or communities.

    The recent record number of graduates to progress through Queensland’s Regional Medical Pathway program demonstrates the strong pipeline of home-grown future health professionals outside metropolitan areas.

    The Rockhampton campus will be the first regionally-based Queensland Academy, and demonstrates the Crisafulli and Albanese Government’s commitment to restoring and strengthening regional health services.

    The details of the Academy’s implementation are under consideration by the Crisafulli Government, with the final location to be determined through further planning and consultation.

    Comment attributable to Minister Clare: 

    “This is an important investment which will support young people in Central Queensland to become nurses, paramedics and doctors. 

    “This is all about building a better and fairer education system and strengthening the pipeline of key workers that regional Queensland needs.”

    Comment attributable to Minister King:

    “The Albanese Government is delivering the infrastructure and facilities our communities need. 

    “This health sciences academy is part of our landmark investment in Central Queensland, alongside the $7.2 billion being invested by the Australian Government in the Bruce Highway safety upgrade.”

    Comment attributable to Minister Langbroek: 

    “This funding contribution from the Albanese Government is incredibly significant, coupled with the planning and consultation work we’ve already done, this election commitment is well underway.

    “The Academy will help students across Central Queensland who are interested in a health career to connect with professionals in health sciences and research.

    “I look forward to continuing to work with State Health Minister Tim Nicholls and our local MPs to fulfill our commitment to deliver this vital project for Central Queensland.”

    MIL OSI News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Statement – Commonwealth Budget

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    As part of ACT Government’s ‘One Government, One Voice’ program, we are transitioning this website across to our . You can access everything you need through this website while it’s happening.

    Released 25/03/2025

    The ACT Government welcomes the wide range of initiatives in the 2025-26 Commonwealth Budget that will benefit Canberrans and our city.

    Continued cost of living relief for all Canberrans

    The ACT Government welcomes new relief for Canberrans who need it most, with tax cuts across the board including a further exemption for low-income earners with increases to the Medicare levy low-income thresholds.

    We also know that Canberra households have faced significantly rising costs over the past two years, which thankfully have started to moderate. The $150 Energy Bill Relief for every household in the ACT will provide much needed relief for nearly two hundred thousand Canberra households as well as small businesses.

    Across the five jurisdictions in the National Electricity Market, the ACT is expected to have the lowest standing offers in 2025-26 – the future is renewable.

    Additionally, the Commonwealth Government’s largest investment in Medicare since its inception will help take some of the pressure off our hospital system and continue to ensure Canberrans get the care they need when they need it.

    Canberrans deserve to be able to access bulk-billed GPs and appropriately funding primary care is critical to address the complexities of demand in our health system.

    Funding for an additional urgent care clinic in Woden is delivered through the budget, as is a boost to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme that will benefit all Canberrans.

    Canberrans are more likely than any other Australians to have a tertiary qualification and so will disproportionately benefit from further reductions in HECS-HELP debts; we want more Canberrans to attain tertiary qualifications for the jobs of the future and for more Australians to choose our great universities as their preferred place of study.

    Housing

    The ACT Government remains committed to delivering on the targets set out in the National Housing Accord and we are working to deliver above our per capita share of the national target of 1.2 million homes. We know that increasing housing supply will improve housing affordability, access and choice for Canberrans.

    The ACT Government welcomes the increased income and property price caps under the Government’s Help to Buy scheme which will support more Canberrans to enter the housing market with lower deposits and smaller mortgages. Purchase of homes of up to $1 million in Canberra will now be supported under the scheme, up from $750,000.

    The ACT’s apprentices in residential construction will benefit from $10,000 in cost of living completion payments, which will support the construction industry to build more homes.

    National Capital Investment Framework

    The ACT Government welcomes this additional investment into major transport infrastructure across our city.

    We will continue to work in partnership with the Commonwealth Government to deliver projects that create local jobs and strengthen our economy.

    This pipeline of investment supports our broader strategic objectives for transport planning including unlocking land for more housing, new public transport routes and improving connections with our surrounding region.

    The Budget commits another $53.5 million as part of the 2025-26 to support the next stage of growth and ensure projects across the territory can actually be delivered. This includes:

    • $30 million to complete the Monaro Highway Upgrade
    • $20 million to complete for the Monaro Highway Upgrade Stage 2 Upgrades
    • $3.5 million to complete the duplication of Gundaroo Drive

    The Budget also provides a $30 million boost over five years for the ACT under the Roads to Recovery program, which will go directly to maintaining the ACT’s existing road network. This includes $8.6 million for resurfacing the Kings Highway near Kowen.

    Under the previous Commonwealth Government, Commonwealth infrastructure investment for Canberra lagged behind the rest of the country.

    Public Service

    A strong Australian Public Service is crucial to Canberra’s economy and local businesses. The ACT Government welcomes the continued strong support for the Public Service by the Commonwealth Government which has supported continued low unemployment and strong wage growth across the broader economy.

    Over this term of government, the Commonwealth Government has supported this growth in the APS across every part of our city. The ACT Government welcomes the continued investment in the National Security Office Precinct which started construction earlier this year.

    An alternative approach of severe and prolonged cuts to the Australian Public Service would be an attack on Canberra’s economy and local businesses.

    National Broadband Network

    The ACT will be the largest proportionate beneficiary from a $3 billion investment the National Broadband Network. This investment will see 100,000 more Canberrans connected with faster and more reliable internet by upgrading remaining fibre-to-the node (FTTN) network.

    – Statement ends –

    Chris Steel, MLA | Media Releases

    «ACT Government Media Releases | «Minister Media Releases

    MIL OSI News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Schatz, Blackburn Introduce Bipartisan Legislation To Boost U.S. Cultural Trade Amid Competition From China

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Hawaii Brian Schatz

    WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Senators Brian Schatz (D-Hawai‘i) and Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) introduced the Cultural Trade Promotion Act of 2025, bipartisan legislation to strengthen America’s creative industries and expand cultural exports. By bolstering the creative economy, this legislation will help U.S. businesses—including Native-owned, small, and rural enterprises—reach new global markets, create jobs, and strengthen America’s influence abroad amidst increasing competition from China.

    “America’s creative industries are a powerful force, driving jobs at home and shaping perceptions of our country abroad. Recently, China has doubled down on promoting its cultural exports, and we’ve been falling behind,” said Senator Schatz, a member of the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee. “This bipartisan bill will help us level the playing field by expanding export opportunities for American businesses everywhere from Maui to Memphis so that our creative economy remains the global leader.”

    “We cannot allow China to continue to outpace the United States in overall cultural exports, and Tennessee is home to countless creative entrepreneurs who need support to export their products and grow their businesses,” said Senator Blackburn. “The Cultural Trade Promotion Act would improve access to international shipping services for these small businesses to strengthen our economy and promote high-quality American goods.” 

    Over the past decade, China has aggressively expanded its cultural trade through coordinated government investments and programs. In 2014, China surpassed the United States in overall cultural exports, and it continues to leverage cultural promotion as part of its Belt and Road Initiative. Meanwhile, America’s cultural trade surplus has declined, dropping from $31.5 billion in 2019 to $17.8 billion in 2021 before rebounding slightly to $21 billion in 2022, according to the National Endowment for the Arts.

    The Cultural Trade Promotion Act would direct the Foreign Commercial Service to promote U.S. creative economy goods abroad and require the Trade Promotion Coordinating Committee to include the creative economy in its annual governmentwide strategic plan. The bill would also improve access to international shipping services for small businesses by facilitating collaboration between the International Trade Administration and the U.S. Postal Service. Additionally, it would promote products from American Indian, Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian-owned businesses and include a representative of the creative industries on the Department of Commerce’s Travel and Tourism Advisory Board.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Protection, utilization bring modern touch to legacy of Neolithic culture

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    Zhang Zhijia, a 38-year-old volunteer at Chifeng Museum in north China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, leaves home at 8:30 a.m. to share stories about the Hongshan culture with museum visitors.

    Almost at the same time, Li Jiawei, a 24-year-old graduate student who studies cultural relics at Chifeng University in the city of Chifeng, walks from his dormitory to the library to research materials for future archaeological projects.

    And 45-year-old Guo Lei, who is in charge of Songshanzhai, a cultural and creative company under the Chifeng culture and tourism group, has already engaged in discussions with his colleagues on the designs of refrigerator magnets inspired by the Hongshan culture.

    Despite being from different age groups and living different lives, they all share a commitment to the preservation and utilization of the Hongshan culture, which was an important archaeological culture during the Neolithic Age.

    The culture spans three regions: the west of Liaoning Province, the north of Hebei Province and the east of Inner Mongolia. Chifeng in Inner Mongolia has over 700 known Hongshan culture relics sites.

    “My hometown, Chifeng, is both the birthplace of the Hongshan culture and the place where it was named,” Zhang said.

    The city’s northeastern suburbs are marked by a red mountain, Wulanhad, which means “red mountain” in Mongolian. It is from this mountain that the city and culture took their names.

    Since childhood, Zhang has been fascinated by jade artifacts from the Hongshan culture, such as jade dragons and jade silkworms.

    “Some of the jade artifacts show slight markings made by cowhide ropes during their polishing process, which makes me imagine scenes of the Hongshan ancestors crafting these objects. It feels like touching history,” he said.

    Motivated by this sentiment, he signed up to volunteer at Chifeng Museum, and he hopes that more young people can gain knowledge and joy through learning about history.

    “Volunteers are both narrators and learners,” he said. “Recently, many visitors have been asking about the newly excavated jade dragons from last year. The Hongshan artifacts are ‘updating,’ and our knowledge must also be continuously updated.”

    In 2024, three jade dragons from the Hongshan culture were unearthed — the largest number of such artifacts found in recent years. Among them was the largest jade dragon ever discovered.

    The object, measuring 15.8 centimeters in length, 9.5 centimeters in width and 3 centimeters in thickness, was excavated from a stone tomb in Yuanbaoshan in Chifeng’s Aohan Banner. It provides valuable new insights into the study of this ancient civilization.

    The piece has become a highlight of exhibitions and academic lectures, and it has also inspired designs in cultural and creative industries.

    Guo has been involved in the development of cultural and creative products inspired by the Hongshan culture for four years. Together with his colleagues, he has launched several products based on Hongshan artifacts, and is planning to release new refrigerator magnets inspired by the culture.

    “We design cultural and creative products that not only have high aesthetic value but also boast fine details and rich heritage, and we hope they can serve as a window through which visitors can understand the Hongshan culture,” Guo said.

    Li shares a similar hope, and looks forward to uncovering more secrets of the Hongshan culture through archaeological work.

    “Archaeology is a way to engage in dialogue with the ancestors, as each jade artifact and pottery shard may contain their stories,” Li said, adding that in the future, he wants to share more stories of the Hongshan culture with others.

    Today, the legacy of the Hongshan culture continues in modern life. In Chifeng, visitors can participate in themed research activities, watch performances, and even enjoy Hongshan culture-inspired feasts at local restaurants.

    “We dig into historical research and inherit fine traditional Chinese culture, enabling cultural empowerment for industrial development,” said Zhang Guohua, Chifeng’s vice mayor.

    MIL OSI China News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Turkish police arrest over 1,400 in protests over Istanbul mayor’s detention

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    Turkish riot police are seen during a demonstration in Ankara, Türkiye, on March 25, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]

    Turkish security forces have arrested 1,418 suspects since the start of protests last week against the detention of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said Tuesday.

    There are currently 979 suspects in custody, while 478 individuals will be referred to judicial authorities, Yerlikaya said on social media platform X.

    Meanwhile, Ozgur Ozel, chairman of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), said he will conclude his rallies in Istanbul’s Sarachane district as of Tuesday evening.

    Tens of thousands of Turks have taken to the streets since March 19 after Imamoglu was detained on charges of graft and terror ties. Imamoglu, from the CHP, is considered Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s main rival in the next presidential elections.

    Erdogan on Monday blamed the CHP for recent domestic protests that have escalated into what he called a “movement of violence,” saying CHP and its supporters should be responsible for “injured police officers, vandalized shops, and damaged public property.”

    MIL OSI China News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Lukashenko officially takes office as Belarusian president

    Source: China State Council Information Office 3

    Alexander Lukashenko takes the oath of office during an inauguration ceremony in Minsk, Belarus, March 25, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]

    Alexander Lukashenko has officially taken office as President of Belarus on Tuesday.

    Lukashenko assumed office for his seventh term following his victory in the January 26 elections.

    The inauguration ceremony took place at the Independence Palace in Minsk, attended by top officials and invited guests.

    During the event, Lukashenko took the presidential oath. He pledged to faithfully serve the people of Belarus, uphold and protect the rights and freedoms of its citizens, and observe and defend the nation’s constitution.

    The Chairman of the Central Election Commission, Igor Karpenko, presented the newly inaugurated president with a presidential certificate.

    According to the Central Election Commission of Belarus, Lukashenko won the presidential election with 86.82 per cent of the vote. 

    MIL OSI China News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Interview with Raf Epstein, Melbourne Mornings, ABC Radio

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    Raf Epstein:

    Jim Chalmers has delivered his fourth Budget. He’s the federal Treasurer. Good morning.

    Jim Chalmers:

    Good morning, Raf. How are you?

    Epstein:

    I’m good. Look, people on $45 grand might really need it, but people earning $200 grand don’t need an extra $500 a year in a tax cut. High earners are getting tax cuts. Why?

    Chalmers:

    Well, every Australian taxpayer’s getting another 2 tax cuts in addition to the one that started rolling out in July. And that’s what we’re doing in the Budget. We’re topping up the tax cuts.

    And when you cut the bottom rate from 19 cents all the way down to 14 cents, that flows to every taxpayer. That’s just how the tax system works. But the benefits will be disproportionately felt for people on lower incomes, younger people, people entering the workforce, and that’s deliberate.

    Epstein:

    Why are high income earners getting it? I just want to understand the rationale. You and I don’t need that money. It could be better spent by the government, it could be targeted at people who need it. Why are we getting it?

    Chalmers:

    Because the way the tax system works is it’s a marginal tax system and when you cut the bottom rate, it means that every taxpayer benefits and the –

    Epstein:

    – that’s an explanation. That’s not a reason.

    Chalmers:

    The only easy way to limit the tax cuts is to provide it in people’s tax returns. We’ve done that in the past, but we wanted to make this a weekly, enduring, ongoing benefit to people. The benefit, when you combine our 3 tax cuts together is an average tax cut of about $50 a week.

    You ask me about cost‑of‑living relief more broadly. It’s not the only thing we’re doing. You know, strengthening Medicare is about out of pocket health costs, cheaper medicines, energy bill rebates, cutting student debt. These are all of the ways that we are responsibly helping people with the cost of living.

    Epstein:

    Without an election, would there have been tax cuts?

    Chalmers:

    Yes, we’re very keen to top up the tax cuts which started flowing in July. And that’s because we recognise that even though we’re making a heap of very encouraging progress in the fight against inflation, we’ve got inflation down lower and earlier in the budget than was expected, even at the end of last year.

    But we know that people are still under pressure and so we’re providing cost‑of‑living relief, really one of the main focuses in the Budget. And, and we’re doing that in a whole bunch of ways and giving people 2 more tax cuts to top up the tax cuts, which are already flowing, is a very effective way of doing that.

    Epstein:

    Jim Chalmers, as Treasurer, your shared equity scheme, it is extra help for some people to buy a house, but there’s not much for most people trying to buy a house. Why do you keep kicking that can down the road?

    Chalmers:

    I don’t think we are. You know, the Help to Buy scheme, the expansion means about 40 – helping about 40,000 Australians into the housing market. That’s a significant amount of people. But it’s not the only thing we’re doing in housing.

    There’s about $33 billion being invested in housing in all kinds of responsible ways, from social and affordable housing to the Help to Buy scheme, to working with the states to open up new estates and make sure that it’s got the infrastructure that it needs.

    We’re investing in housing in a whole bunch of ways. We know that there’s a shortage. It’s one of the big challenges in our economy, as you and I have spoken about, I think, on a number of occasions, Raf and that’s why we’re doing something about it.

    Epstein:

    But aren’t those changes on the edges? The big changes are how we incentivise people to build wealth. Negative gearing, capital gains, like that’s the big lever that you haven’t pulled?

    Chalmers:

    We haven’t. That’s correct. But whether it’s cost of living or housing, it’s best not to look at any one measure in isolation. You look across what we’re doing in housing, we’ve got the most ambitious housing programme of any government in my lifetime.

    Epstein:

    Are you scared of negative gearing changes?

    Chalmers:

    We’re not going down that route because we’re not convinced that it would build more homes to change that. We’ve made that clear. And our emphasis is on housing supply. We want to build more homes, 1.2 million homes in the next 5 years. That’s going to be difficult. It’s ambitious, but it’s achievable if everybody does their bit.

    We’ve shown a willingness and enthusiasm to invest in housing because we know it’s the source of a lot of this cost‑of‑living pressure, which is still hanging around. We know we don’t have enough homes. That’s why we’re acting decisively with $33 billion of investment.

    Epstein:

    Jim Chalmers is the Treasurer on 774. We’ll have a word to the Shadow Treasurer, Angus Taylor, soon as well.

    Treasurer, if you had 60 seconds in a lift with Donald Trump, what would you say to him?

    Chalmers:

    I think I’d tell President Trump, exactly what I told his Treasury Secretary in Washington D.C. a few weeks ago. Ours is an economic relationship of mutual benefit. They run a big trade surplus with us, they enjoy tariff‑free access to our markets. We believe that should be taken into consideration and we will always speak up for and stand up for our interests.

    Epstein:

    Do you think he cares about Australia?

    Chalmers:

    I don’t think that’s a question really for me. You’d have to ask him. But I do believe whoever is in the White House and whoever is in the Lodge, this is such an important economic relationship and security relationship, it benefits both countries. And we will continue to make our case to stand up and speak for our interests.

    We don’t want to trade away the things that we’re proud of in Australia, things like the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme that I invested in in the Budget. We want to make sure that we’re strengthening that because Australians need us to, not weakening it because American multinationals want us to. So that’s been in the mix. That’s been some of the things that have been discussed. I would make the same points to President Trump that I made to his Treasury Secretary.

    Epstein:

    You did pull a bit of a rabbit out of your hat with the tax cuts last night. One thing you did not mention is Melbourne’s suburban rail loop. Why not?

    Chalmers:

    Because we’d already funded that. As you know, I think the funding got released a few weeks ago. But that’s been in our, that $2 billion or so has been in our budget for a while. Usually in the Budget speech, you mentioned the new things.

    Epstein:

    You don’t think it’s a sketchy project, you’ve got faith in it?

    Chalmers:

    Well, it’s cleared the hurdles. And So we’re providing that $2 billion. We believe in it. We think it’s a project worthy of Commonwealth investment. That’s why Catherine King, my colleague, has been working closely with the Victorians to provide and release that funding for Suburban Rail Loop. But in the Budget speech last night, we focused on Sunshine Station because that’s part of a big new investment we’re making in the Airport Rail line.

    Epstein:

    Tobacco excise. I think it’s about $1.40 of tax per cigarette at the moment. That is failing in your Budget. You’re taking in even less money than you thought you would. It’s failing on the streets. Why are you sticking with that while shops are burning?

    Chalmers:

    There are 2 reasons why tobacco excise is down. There’s a good reason and there’s a bad reason. Good reason is more people giving it away. But I do acknowledge the essence of your question, which is we’ve got a challenge here and too many people are avoiding the excise, and that’s why we’ve actually invested a substantial amount of money and resources in the Budget last night to try and crack down on people avoiding the excise. There’s a lot of money in the Budget for compliance and enforcement because we do have a problem there. I acknowledge that. We’re doing something about it.

    Epstein:

    Will we ever get a surplus?

    Chalmers:

    We’ve delivered 2 surpluses, Raf.

    Epstein:

    I’m talking looking forward.

    Chalmers:

    I know, but this is too easily lost. When we came to office, there were deficits in every year, we turned 2 of them into surpluses. And we’ve shrunk the deficit this year and that’s helping us get debt down this year by $177 billion. I think that is too easily lost.

    We do acknowledge there are structural issues in the budget in the medium term and in the longer term. That’s what’s motivated us in terms of making spending on the NDIS and in aged care more sustainable. We have made a structural difference, a structural improvement to the budget over time with those measures. But the work of budget repair is ongoing.

    In every single one of our 4 Budgets, we’ve had savings. We’ve tried to. When we’re investing money in helping with the cost of living or strengthening Medicare, we’ve done it in the most responsible way that we can, which recognises these pressures on the budget.

    Epstein:

    Thanks so much for your time this morning.

    Chalmers:

    Appreciate it, Raf. All the best.

    Epstein:

    Jim Chalmers there, the federal Treasurer.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Interview with Sarah Abo and James Bracey, Today Show, Channel 9

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    James Bracey:

    Now more on the Albanese government’s fourth federal Budget. Jim Chalmers catching the country off guard with a surprise tax cut for every Australian, a move the Coalition is calling an election bribe.

    Sarah Abo:

    And the Treasurer joins us live now from Parliament House in Canberra. Good morning to you, Treasurer, or should I call you the re‑election salesman with a Budget like that? $5 a week barely buys a cup of coffee. Can it buy an election?

    Jim Chalmers:

    It’s more than that, Sarah, that’s the first point. If you combine the 3 tax cuts that Labor is providing, it’s around $50 a week on average. It’s not the only cost‑of‑living help that we’re providing. We know that cost of living is front of mind for most Australians and it’s absolutely front and centre in the Budget. The tax cuts, strengthening Medicare, cheaper medicines, cutting student debt, providing energy bill rebates. This is all about providing the most cost‑of‑living help that we can in the most responsible way that we can.

    Bracey:

    Treasurer, why across the whole board, for everyone with this tax cut? We spoke to Kirsty earlier, cafe owner, mother of 7, who says the $5 bucks a week just won’t touch the sides.

    Chalmers:

    That’s only one of the 2 tax cuts that we’re providing, and 3 in total in our time in office, the average –

    Abo:

    But why is it for everyone Treasurer?

    Chalmers:

    The average is $50 a week. That’s the first point.

    Abo:

    Shouldn’t you prioritise the first 2?

    Chalmers:

    When you cut the bottom rate of tax, it flows right up and down the income scale, so it’s a tax cut for every taxpayer. These are modest tax cuts, they’re responsible tax cuts, but they’re meaningful when you take them in combination with the tax cuts which are flowing already, we’re topping up those tax cuts and we’re also providing cost‑of‑living relief in other ways.

    Abo:

    It’s barely going to help those top part of the brackets, as you know but it will, if it was doubled, be more of an impact for those underneath. I mean, there is still a big household onus now to find savings. The cost‑of‑living pressures are unlikely to change in the short term.

    Chalmers:

    That’s why we’re helping people with the cost of living. We’ve made a lot of progress together as Australians on inflation and in our economy more broadly. The Australian economy is turning a corner and that’s a very good thing. But we know that there’s more work to do. That’s why we’re providing more cost‑of‑living help and that’s why it beggars belief that the Coalition is opposing this cost‑of‑living relief.

    What it means for the election is that it’s a simple choice between Labor cutting taxes to help with the cost of living versus Peter Dutton’s secret cuts which will make people worse off. Peter Dutton wants to cut everything except income taxes and that will be part of the choice that we’ll be asking people to make at the election.

    Bracey:

    There really is no Treasurer budget for an election and you set aside a further billion dollars for that election. What is up your sleeve?

    Chalmers:

    I don’t agree with that characterisation. It’s a budget about building Australia’s future and strengthening Medicare and helping with the cost of living. When it comes to that line in the Budget about decisions taken but not announced, that’s actually very small by historical standards. There are good reasons to have a small amount of money provisioned for in that way. If you compare that with earlier budgets, that line item is actually incredibly small.

    Abo:

    The surpluses are firmly in the review mirror, aren’t they, Treasurer? I mean, what a legacy; 10 years of deficit. Now you’re staring down extraordinary debt as far as the eye can see and without a real concrete plan to pay for it.

    Chalmers:

    I think it’s unusual, Sarah, that your question doesn’t acknowledge that when we came to office there were only deficits, and we turned 2 of them into surpluses and we shrunk the deficit for this year. We’ve made a lot of progress in the Budget. We’ve helped engineer the biggest ever nominal improvement in the Budget position in a single parliamentary term. More than $200 billion improvement, much less debt than what we inherited from our predecessors and that’s making a structural improvement to the budget as well. We have got the budget in better nick. We’re providing responsible cost‑of‑living help, we’re strengthening Medicare and we’re investing in the future of this country. And we’re doing that in the most responsible way that we can.

    Bracey:

    There’s a legitimate crisis in amongst all this though, Treasurer. The tobacco taxes collapsed to a 14‑year low. It’s blown a $17.6 billion hole in the tax base. Meanwhile, we see fire bombings almost daily, fuelling the black‑market wars that are going on as we speak. So, what will the government be doing about it all?

    Chalmers:

    There are 2 reasons why tobacco excise goes down. One of them is a good reason, one of them is a bad reason. The good reason is more and more people giving up the darts, which is what we want to see. But the bad reason is the case that people are finding more ways around tobacco excise. That’s why we’ve invested a substantial amount of money in new resources for compliance and enforcement. We do know there’s an issue. We acknowledge that. That’s why we’re trying to resource some more compliance and some more enforcement, because there has been some leakage in the Budget in that regard.

    Abo:

    Long night for you, Treasurer, and an early start. Thank you for joining us this morning and speaking to our audience. Appreciate it.

    Chalmers:

    Nice to talk to you both. Thank you.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 26, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Headline and underlying inflation fall in February

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    New figures show that headline and underlying inflation fell last month.

    This is more positive and promising news that shows we’re making progress together in the fight against inflation.

    Monthly inflation fell to 2.4 per cent in the year to February 2025.

    Annual trimmed mean inflation fell to 2.7 per cent.

    Today’s headline result was below the median market expectation.

    Inflation was high and rising when we came to government and now it’s much lower and falling.

    Headline inflation has been at or below the midpoint of the Reserve Bank’s target band for six consecutive months.

    Underlying inflation has been below three per cent for three consecutive months.

    This is even more proof that inflation continues to moderate in our economy.

    The Budget we handed down this week continues the fight against inflation and shows that Treasury now expects inflation to return sustainably to the target band six months sooner – in the middle of this year, rather than at the end.

    Today’s result is a reminder of our substantial and sustained progress in the fight against inflation.

    Under Labor, inflation is down, wages are up, unemployment is low, interest rates have started to come down and we’ve topped up our tax relief to give every taxpayer two new tax cuts from next year.

    We know that these monthly numbers are volatile and can bounce around but the direction of travel on inflation is clear.

    On the official quarterly measure, inflation under Labor is almost a third of the 6.1 per cent we inherited. Australia’s inflation is now lower than most major advanced economies.

    While most other advanced economies have paid for progress on inflation with much higher unemployment, growth going backwards, or a recession, we’ve managed to preserve the progress we’ve made in our labour market while inflation has come down.

    Electricity prices fell 13.2 cent in the year to February but would have fallen only 1.2 per cent without the energy rebates for every household we are rolling out with the states.

    Rents rose 5.5 per cent in the year but would have increased 6.8 per cent without the recent increase to Commonwealth Rent Assistance.

    Even with this substantial progress, we know people are still under pressure and that’s why our cost‑of‑living help is so important.

    We’re delivering two new tax cuts that will put an average of about $50 a week back in taxpayers’ pockets when combined with our tax cuts from 2024.

    Our Budget is all about helping with the cost of living and finishing the fight against inflation, strengthening Medicare and building Australia’s future.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 26, 2025
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