Category: news

  • Adamos charged

    CHARGES have been laid against former Perth city councillor Jim Adamos. Police from the WA Financial Crimes Division laid the charges just three days after City of Perth inquiry commissioner Tony Power gave his summation before heading off to prepare his final report. Two charges against Mr Adamos allege that in August 2017, “through a…

  •  Consultation rerouted

    CONSULTATION’S open for the future of Vincent’s bike lanes and the WA government says it’ll accept late answers. Originally the Department of Transport wanted all councils to endorse its “Long Term Cycle Network” plan by June 30, saying only those routes outlined in the plan would be eligible for state funding for a year. Vincent…

  • Bearing up under Covid

    ARTIST and researcher DeeDee Noon has spent years examining peoples’ connection to toys. When she recently returned from a trip down south to find bears in many Perth windows to comfort children during lockdown, she was compelled to photograph them and delve deeper into the origins and meanings. “No one’s been able to pin down…

  • Punters pouring back for a pint

    LOCALS pining for a pint have flooded back to pubs as restrictions are lifted.  The Rosemount Hotel’s manager Calvin Hook says it’s been heartening to see people pour back in post-lockdown. When the hotel had a very partial reopening mid-May with a 20 person limit, he says “we were overwhelmed with the response from the local community.  “Every session…

  • Inquiry fallout: Busy times ahead

    “POORLY led, badly governed, dysfunctional”; inquirer Tony Power says the City of Perth deserved to be dismissed and there are dozens of potential crimes to be investigated by other authorities. Presenting his closing address on June 30, Mr Power said “the inquiry has referred over 135 matters, many concerning suspected criminal behaviour, in respect of…

  • Budget sneaks in

    “NOT fair” and “a sneak attack” is how some Bayswater councillors have described the city’s proposed budget. Councillors Catherine Ehrhardt, Elli Petersen-Pik, Steven Ostaszewskyj and  Michelle Sutherland, voted against the budget at the council’s June 30 meeting, over concerns a Covid assistance measure will see owners of less valuable properties subsidising their fancier neighbours. Like…

  • Seat to disappear

    WESTERN AUSTRALIA will lose a seat in federal parliament under an Australian Electoral Commission rejig on July 3. Federal Labor MP Patrick Gorman, whose division Perth is safe from the chop, says it’s a huge shakeup.  “For the first time since Federation, WA is going to lose a federal seat,” Mr Gorman says. The numbers…

  • Carmageddon without buses

    A TRAFFIC apocalypse is predicted after the July school holidays if Perth people don’t return to public transport pronto. During the height of restrictions at the end of March, freeway use dropped from 1.5 million cars per week to about 1 million. They’ve now sprung back up to 95 per cent of pre-Covid levels and…

  • Skyworks planning goes ahead

    CITY of Perth commissioners have confirmed planning will go ahead for the 2021 Australia Day Skyworks. Planning on the $2.8 million event has to start soon if it’s to get sorted in time, and chair commissioner Andrew Hammond said staff should get the ball rolling so as to not tie the hands of the new council…

  • Nod for sign

    THE big Northbridge (à la Hollywood and Venice) sign has got its $35,000 grant. The sign by organisation Happy Heart (Adrian Fini and Marcus Canning’s venture to re-launch the Rechabite) will go up on William Street near the horseshoe bridge as part of an overall $1 million improvement program, also redeveloping Hook Lane and Lock…