New approach needed to tackle drug toll
We need programs such as needle exchanges as part of a sensible, proven strategy to minimise the harm caused and ultimately reduce drug use.
We need programs such as needle exchanges as part of a sensible, proven strategy to minimise the harm caused and ultimately reduce drug use.
Transport is a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions, which Australia is bound to reduce under its commitments to the Paris climate change agreement.
There is hope that a system allowing exploitation of young and foreign workers in Australia can be cleaned up.
It's the start of a new year but Victoria's bushfire season is already well advanced and far from over.
The hardest part of any resolution is the keeping of it. The hardest part of daring to dream is the risk it won't come true.
Times of uncertainty bring out the best and worst in us. We must do what we can to foster the former, and look to the future with hope and confidence.
It's about more than nostalgia and not about who's more deserving of our grief.
Good governance is essential. It is time for charities to be more open about how much of our money is going to our chosen causes.
Greater focus is needed on how to stop radicalised young Australians getting anywhere near the stage of planning to kill their fellow citizens and themselves.
If 2016 tells us anything, it's that the voters formerly known as the silent majority are looking for answers, and they are not finding them in politics as usual.
Sport can't balance the world's scales. It can't even begin. But it can and does offer hope.
There is no doubt the events of Friday will cast a pall over Christmas for many. But is important to remember that this is the time for peace on earth, and goodwill to all. We must work together.
The Andrews government has been blessed with a once-in-a-generation war chest with which to build the transport system Melbourne desperately needs
News this week that the federal government will allocate Victoria just 7.7 per cent of the national infrastructure budget is bitterly disappointing and a prime example of politicking triumphing over sound reason.
All parties in Victoria's Parliament must work together to determine how best to respond to fix buildings already built and how to stop the problem getting worse.
Until standards are raised, local governments will remain, in the minds of many, somewhat of farce.
On Tuesday, an extraordinary trial will resume that sees the Christian governor of Jakarta, capital the world's largest Muslim-majority nation, charged with blasphemy against Islam. The case carries monumental importance for Indonesia, and sends a worrisome signal about the political and social trajectory of Australia's most significant neighbour.
The abolition of the carbon price, married with the government’s failure to introduce anything in its place to tackle greenhouse gas emissions, is now actually increasing costs for consumers.
State politics verged on the bizarre this week when Premier Daniel Andrews ordered his ministers to hand over their mobile phones, in a bid to trace the source of cabinet leaks.
Aleppo might become another byword to denote international failure, but it should also be another reason to work harder to prevent another catastrophe.
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