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Australia news LIVE: Government defends cash bonuses for aged care staff; nation’s total COVID-19 cases continue to grow

Broede Carmody and Michaela Whitbourn
Updated ,first published

The day in review

By Michaela Whitbourn

Good evening and thank you for reading our live coverage of the day’s events. If you are just joining us now, here’s what you need to know:

  • Prime Minister Scott Morrison has conceded his government was “too optimistic, perhaps” about the challenges the country would face over summer as the Omicron coronavirus variant led to a surge in infections. “We could have communicated more clearly about the risks and challenges that we still faced,” he told the National Press Club in Canberra. “I think in raising those expectations about the summer, that we heightened the great sense of disappointment that people felt,” he said. Mr Morrison and NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet were united in December in supporting a move away from mandatory mask-wearing and the relaxation of other restrictions, before the rules were reinstated before Christmas.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison at the National Press Club today.Alex Ellinghausen
  • Mr Morrison told the Press Club he had “always sought to balance our health objectives with our broader societal and economic wellbeing”. “I haven’t got everything right. And I’ll take my fair share of the criticism and the blame,” Mr Morrison said. “It goes with the job. But so does getting up each day, dealing with the challenges, staying positive, and believing in the strength and good nature and resilience of the Australian people.” He said strong economic management was “more important than ever”.
  • The federal government will deliver its next budget at the end of March.
  • Mr Morrison said his government would seek to “bring as much normality back to people’s lives as possible. And at the same time, we must ensure – as we battle this constantly shape-shifting pandemic – that we continue to make those big calls, necessary to keep our economy strong, keep Australians safe, and keep Australians growing together and not apart. It requires experience. It requires careful deliberation.”
Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese.Luis Enrique Ascui

About 150 Victorian staff, students COVID-positive on first day of term

By Cassandra Morgan

A total of about 150 Victorian school students and staff tested positive for COVID-19 on their first day back in term one on Monday, authorities say.

Speaking on ABC radio Melbourne on Tuesday afternoon, Victorian Department of Education and Training deputy secretary David Howes said the breakdown was about 101 students and 55 staff.

“Of course, we really feel for those students and staff and we wish them a really quick recovery,” Mr Howes said.

“But it does mean they have been able to stay home and isolate and that’s a major contribution protecting the rest of the students and staff in our community.”

Rio Tinto ‘shamed’ by systemic sexual harassment, bullying and racism

By Peter Milne and Nick Toscano

Staff across Rio Tinto’s global operations from corporate offices to remote mine sites are being subjected to alarming rates of sexual harassment, racism and bullying in the workplace, according to an independent report.

Australia’s second-largest miner has released a report by former sex discrimination commissioner Elizabeth Broderick, who surveyed more than 10,000 of Rio Tinto’s 45,000 employees and found systemic bullying, sexism and racism were common. These harmful behaviours were often tolerated or normalised, the report found.

An independent report has found widespread harassment at Rio Tinto, including office-based workers.Will Willitts

A “culture of silence” put workers off reporting unacceptable behaviour and some surveyed thought supervisors who bully and harass were rewarded with career progression, the report found.

Rio Tinto chief executive Jakob Stausholm said the findings should deeply disturb anyone who read them. “I feel shame and enormous regret to have learned the extent to which bullying, sexual harassment and racism are happening at Rio Tinto,” he said.

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Federal political donations should be capped at $1000: Greens Senator

By Michaela Whitbourn

As Angus Thompson reported earlier today, the Liberal and National parties have strengthened their financial positions in the lead-up to this year’s federal election after receiving almost $84 million in donations and other funding in the past financial year.

The 2020-21 financial year figures, released on Tuesday morning by the Australian Electoral Commission, represent a $15 million increase on the previous year’s total funding receipts, which also includes the party’s investment streams.

The figures put the Coalition on a stronger financial footing than the Labor Party, which collected $67 million in 2020/21, $12 million more than the previous year.

The Greens received almost $16,000 in donations and other funding.

Cash bonus for aged care workers ‘not a long-term solution’: Labor MP

By Michaela Whitbourn

Federal Labor MP Anne Aly has taken aim at the federal government over the cash bonus being offered to aged care workers before the next election.

As David Crowe has reported, the Morrison government plans to provide two cash payments of up to $400 each to aged care workers by May this year, when the election is due to be held.

WA Labor MP Anne Aly.Alex Ellinghausen

Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced the policy officially during his National Press Club address today.

The government is under growing pressure over coronavirus outbreaks across the aged care sector, for which the Commonwealth government has responsibility, and the rollout of the booster vaccine program to aged care residents.

Jane received her booster with the PM. Her fellow residents had to wait

By Mary Ward and Lucy Carroll

When aged care resident Jane Malysiak was called up to receive her COVID-19 booster vaccine in a photo opportunity with Prime Minister Scott Morrison in November, her 100 fellow residents were told they would have to wait until February for their shot.

The facility’s chief executive Alexandra Davis thought that was “not good enough” and organised boosters through a local GP instead, which she believes helped the facility avoid a coronavirus outbreak despite staff testing positive to the virus.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison greets Jane Malysiak before receiving their COVID-19 booster vaccinations at Kildare Road Medical Centre in Blacktown in Sydney.Kate Geraghty

The story is one of many instances of Sydney aged care residents being asked to wait prolonged periods for a booster clinic as infections rose in early December. Many facilities were forced into lockdown due to outbreaks before their clinic was scheduled - despite being eligible for weeks.

Many of the largest outbreaks in aged care facilities in Sydney – totalling more than 100 cases each across residents and staff – had not received a booster clinic before their first infections were recorded in December.

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More information about Victoria’s new COVID-19 cases

By Cassandra Morgan

As we reported earlier, another 34 people have died with COVID-19 in Victoria.

They were aged in their 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, and 100s. Thirteen of those people died in the past two days, according to the Chief Health Officer’s update.

Their deaths bring the total number in the state since the pandemic began to 2029.

Of Victorians aged between five and 11, 44.7 per cent have now had a dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

Education in the time of COVID: what does it mean for kids

By Bianca Hall

Millions of school students have returned to classrooms this week after two years of interrupted learning thanks to COVID-19.

Students in Melbourne, Sydney and Canberra will be provided with free rapid antigen tests, while in other states students will need to monitor for symptoms and test if symptoms appear.

There are new rules around masks, too. Teachers will have to monitor mask use, as well as behaviour and teaching the curriculum.

There are hopes schools will, in the main, stay open, with NSW and Victoria no longer treating school and workplaces as close contacts for the purposes of contact tracing.

But amidst all this, there’s widespread acceptance that case numbers will rise, which is leaving some parents, educators and students nervous.

Today on our podcast, Please Explain, education reporters Natassia Chrysanthos and Adam Carey join Bianca Hall to look at the return to school.

Retail sales slowed in December, but turnover still strong: ABS

By Shane Wright and Jennifer Duke

Shoppers slowed their retail spree in December following a bumper month of sales as the Omicron outbreak dampened the Christmas spending spirit.

Retail turnover dropped 4.4 per cent in the last month of 2021, data released today by the Australian Bureau of Statistics shows.

Retail spending slowed in December, ABS data shows. Chris Hopkins

This was the biggest fall since April 2020 but followed a 7.3 per cent national jump in turnover in November and a 4.9 per cent rise in October.

ABS director of quarterly economy wide statistics Ben James said retail sales remained above pre-pandemic levels, with December’s turnover the second highest level on record behind November.

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‘National emergency’ as hundreds of aged care residents die during COVID peak in January

By Michaela Whitbourn

More than 400 aged care residents have died since January 1 after contracting COVID-19.

Aged and Community Services Australia chief executive Paul Sadler said at a press conference just now that the situation was a “national emergency”.

He called on national cabinet to do everything it could to prevent COVID deaths in aged care facilities, including accelerating the rollout of COVID-19 vaccine booster shots.

The Commonwealth has responsibility for aged care facilities.

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