Author: Your Herald

  • Classy newbie a barrel of treats

    PERTH loves a new restaurant. Hunter & Barrel has been open for less than two months and the Raine Square newbie is already attracting big crowds. When we arrived at 5pm on a Friday we were told they were fully booked, but thanks to some table shuffling they squeezed us in upstairs. Hunter & Barrel…

  • Privatising nature?

    ARTIST Nicholas Mangan looks at how insects are becoming unwitting capitalist slaves in Termites Economies (Phase 1). The exhibition was inspired by scientific research into how termites could be used to help find gold deposits during mining exploration. Mangan says it was “such an interesting and perverse idea – putting nature to work for capitalism”.…

  • Life and everything else

    THE grace and charm of a bygone era can be found in the many rooms of this 1920s Menora home. It’s packed with beautiful period details including stained glass windows, jarrah floors, gorgeous fireplaces and art nouveau tiles. A lovely plaster arch sets off the long hall, and the formal lounge is so vast it…

  • Rorts ‘a fact of life’

    ABUSING expense privileges at the City of Perth was a “fact of life” for at least 20 years a long-time council insider says. The insider, who requested anonymity, had privileged access to the inner workings of the council, and says staff were aware it occurred but were reluctant to step in. “For 20 years it’s…

  • Staffer cleared without checking

    A CONTRACT which caught the eye of the state Corruption and Crime Commission was given the all-clear by the City of Perth’s governance unit without adequate investigation, an inquiry into the council has heard. On January 10 last year the CCC sent a letter to then-CEO Martin Mileham after receiving a complaint that a senior…

  • Flat out changing the face of Perth

    AT the height of his reign architect Harold Krantz was responsible for 1000 flats a year going up around Perth. From the 1930s to the ’60s, credible estimates place Krantz as being behind more than 90 per cent of the city’s apartments. A new exhibition at the Museum of Perth, The Krantz Legacy, is now…

  • On for young and old

    NUMBER 40 Mount Street, West Perth, is probably the kind of micro-community Harold Krantz had in mind when he wrote of “young people… and old folk” living together in an affordable spot close to the city. Built in 1939, today it houses a cross section of students, city workers, retirees, and cranky communal cat Faloush.…

  • Give us trams to get back on track

    MOUNT LAWLEY locals got the chance to bend premier Mark McGowan’s ear when he came by for a Community Cabinet this week. Mr McGowan’s been hauling his cabinet members around the state to hear about local issues. A town hall-style meeting at the Yokine Bowls Club on Sunday was followed by a whistle-stop tour of…

  • Plaza ‘not in stone’

    STIRLING council has tried to placate business owners in Mt Lawley by saying designs for a plaza on Beaufort Street aren’t set in stone. Last week the Voice heard from landowners and business people dissatisfied with the consultation process, loathe to lose any car bays to the council’s plaza plan in the public car park…

  • Letters: 24.8.19

    Flawed premise REGARDING the Speaker’s Corner “How I became an anti-Semite without trying” by Vincent Sammut in your August 17 edition of the Voice. Mr Sammut’s piece goes to great length explaining how his stance is a purely political one based on “truthful comments that…expose the injustices”. He rests his premise wholly on the false…