Prisoners
I am right behind and fully supportive of the CLP in their push to overcome the crime epidemic for which the NY. has unfortunately become renowned. Neither should prisoners’ rights be considered other than providing the essentials of life – food, ablutions, provision and a place to sleep. The rest is a low priority.
Tank Farm insecurities
P
This project, costing significant dollars, has gone from bad to worse and remains riddled with problems. Will a solution ever be found? But as a long-term Darwin resident, I have been worried from the beginning about the logistics of what, in a time of military conflict, could turn into a massive explosion decimating the area and costing many lives. Should it not have been located at a more respectable distance from the city?
Medical scholarships for Aborigines
Yet another boost for Aboriginal Australians in a context where so much is being provided ostensively to make up for real and imagined past wrongs. There is so much that is exclusively offered to Aboriginal people these days that the mind boggles.
Everyone is on a winner here, Kelsian, with guaranteed continuity of operations and healthy government subsidies for the next five years for those who will use the service, paying less for passage than would have been the case without government largesse. The places serviced need and deserve guaranteed connection.
Laksa Festival winds up
Congratulations to the winners and to all businesses that contributed to the best Laksa festival staged to this point in time. May the festival endure and become a ‘forever’ Darwin feature
Outstanding contribution by graduates.
P
It is wonderful to read about the successes in leadership, management, and innovation that are coming to pass for graduates of our educational system. With so much focus on the negative aspects of youth issues, this story offers a positive and encouraging perspective. Thank you, NT News, for one of the most uplifting stories of the year.
Dr Fejo resigns from the Waterfront Board
Dr Fejo is entitled to his viewpoint. I am so glad the government is taking the promised action. That is why the vast majority of people voted the CLP into office. Interestingly, the ALP’s retained seats are attached to remoter areas, where the problem of youth crime is less pronounced or understood but condoned.
Anzac Oval again
Indeed, there are enough places wherein Aboriginal art, culture and heritage can be celebrated without further construction. Whatever the outcome, preserving Anzac Oval must be a first and foremost priority.
4G network outage at Royal Darwin Hospital
The loss of communications capacity at the hospital is unfortunate – staff will have to resort to paper records and then upload them when the system is righted. However, the long-term gain will be worthwhile if the upgrade vastly improves the ‘G network’ in an area renowned for sporadic coverage.
Cyber attack possibilities in a vulnerable NT
This is another aspect of the vulnerabilities under which we live in the Northern Territory. Cyber attacks and the all too real possibility of military attack if ever Australia, with Darwin as a military hub, is caught up in the throes of war.
Dogs attacking posties delivering mail
P
Whether the attack is a major or minor consequence, dog attacks on mail deliverers should result in the attacking animal being put down. There ought also to be consideration of liability for dog owners if the dog has escaped security through neglect or restriction by the owner. Unless they were teasing the dog, this should go for anyone attacked while out and about.
“Crazy Chicks” opens in Bakewell Shopping Centre
P
Congratulations ladies. May your business thrive and do well, and may the fruits of your entrepreneurship reward you for your initiative.
Voting in the Barkley
There are 4503 electors entitled to vote for those standing for election in the wards of the Barkley Regional Council. Of these, 1219 persons voted. That is a voter turnout of 27%, with 73% disinclined or disinterested – and that is in the context of compulsory voting. That has to say something about the value placed on the Council and its operations by the community.
Northern Territorians of the Year
Congratulations to our four Northern Territorians who have earned top honours – and thank you to all who were considered in the various categories for your contributions to our NT community and, in some cases, to the world beyond our territory boundaries.
Deferred government expenditure
Sometimes, decisions of this nature, however unpalatable, must be taken in the interests of a responsible and accountable government. I do hope the delays in undergrounding powerlines will not be for too long. We are blessed with underground power, and it helps when it comes to supply reliability in adverse weather conditions.
Clamps on Palmerston Recreation Centre
When people cannot be trusted to be responsible in recreation centres and similar community benefit facilities, restrictions on access have to be imposed. It is so sad that in this modern era, appreciation of the rights of others is distanced from the thinking of so many; the concept of ‘community’ is slowly dying.
Woman slapped in the face with faeces
This is just the worst! I feel so very sorry for the lady who copped this vile response to her humanitarian act of intervening to save the puppy from further cruel treatment. I hope the police can apprehend the offender; when they do, judicial consequences should recognise the seriousness of this behaviour.
Terrible NT driving
P
We often go for a drive from home around Darwin and Palmerston and to the various parks and reserves dotting our two cities. The number of near misses caused by careless and selfish motorists during the past months is enormous. Included have been people running out in front of our car, drivers passing incorrectly on single land roads by veering around me to the left, and a significant number coming from side roads, pushing to be on the road ahead of me, requiring sharp braking and swerving. And then we wonder about road deaths in the NT!
Government to reduce motoring and licensing costs
P
Every little concession helps. Most Territorians will welcome fixing and reducing costs associated with motor vehicles. It will take a long time for the Finocchario Government to get ahead of the plethora of negative issues we confront, but we are heading in the right direction.
Real Estate awards
Congratulations to all who have earned accolades for contributing to our real estate industry in the NT over the past twelve months. Special congratulations to Derek Hart, the people’s choice this past year, for his efforts to reassure and assist people buying and selling property.
Dad’s advice about debt
My Father passed to his rest many years ago, but I continue to thank him for his sound money advice. From a young age, he said, “Henry, do not go into debt by buying goods on credit. The interest you pay is dead money and increases purchase costs. Save, and when you have sufficient, then buy the items.” This advice has been part of my life and passed on to our children. I am so glad that the idea of debt is something I keep at arm’s length.
Advice of Influencers
I like to think that young and old people can grow up and mature based on common sense and by self-adjustment to life. To surrender one’s mind to influencers, following their example and advice like sheep is a mistake and an abrogation of self-responsibility that should never happen.
Remembrance Day appreciation
I sincerely appreciate and thank those who have served Australia in the Australian Defence Force for over 120 years each Remembrance Day. The Australia we have, with relative peace and security, is thanks to their individual and collective efforts – and that of their families over decades. May we forever be grateful for their sacrifices, including giving up life that we might live.
Churchhill Fellowships Five for NT
I think it would have been lovely for an educator determined to return the educational system to one that values the basics and upholds explicit teaching to earn a fellowship to study and contribute to the re-development of this technology. Education these days is too much about tinsel, glitter and selective woke/leftist studies. Cognitive development and realistic educational needs have gone by the board.
Courts for criminals with scant regard for victims
This is just another example – especially for the multitude of many recidivists – of how far the justice system leans toward offenders. Because of this, the crisis and hardships faced by victims are neglected.
Footy club loses sponsorship over WOKE
HOW CAN WE COPE
Once life was straightforward, based on sense,
‘Till this approach got thin on defence,
These days, people say,
It has to be the WOKE way,
We’ve left the era of pounds, shillings and pence.
CDU’s Medical School for 2026, not 2025 start
P
I sometimes wonder if the CDU is not overstepping the mark at times, for ambition has to be couched in common sense. Why does the CDU need a medical school when Flinders University has been operating successfully in this field – in the NT – for years? Why not amalgamate the collective interest rather than reduplicate by starting a second medical school?
Spotlight on defence build-up in Darwin
The spotlight is evermore focussed on Darwin as the jump-off point for countering perceived aggression in our quadrant of the world. I have lived in Darwin since 1987 and confess to being increasingly insecure and jittery about our future. If Darwin is a defence focal point, God help us if military retaliation comes our way.
The hirdy-girdy of truancy officers
This on-again, off-again program, supported over the years by both the NT and Federal Governments – Remember Senator Nigel Scullion’s yellow army of truancy officers – has cost huge dollars for little or no success in changing parental and student attitudes toward school. Truancy officers, in my experience, go back to 1980. The and-off approach has cost huge dollars for negligible outcomes.
Darwin turning into a Dublin
I remember walking around the streets of Dublin (Ireland). CBD in the early hours of one morning in 1996 while we were on tour. The walk was against better advice. Streets were littered, graffiti was everywhere, and every shop and premises had heavy metal roll-down shutters to counter wanton damage. It sounds like Darwin will keep turning into another Dublin.
Break-in to communities by illegals
These are the sorts of experiences that must be borne and managed by everyone who is a resident of our cities and towns. For the most part, we have to grin and bear the results of property damage and physical assaults. As a Darwinian, I live with negative social potential every day. Maybe widening this experience will have an educational impact by showing what we have to endure.
NT Environment Centre thrives on negativity
P
Regardless of feasibility, The NT Environment Centre makes a habit of knocking every attempt by government, business and industry to further our economic progress and development. Just once, I would love to hear something bright and cheerful from the centre, ra rather than the 100% negative response to all developmental ideas.
City of Darwin Council to become lofty
P
This proposed new tower, apparently an artefact of architectural innovation and brilliance, convinces me that ‘structure’ is of far more importance to the City of Darwin Council than ‘function’.
Alice Springs a ‘no go’ place after dark
In no way should the residents and visitors to Alice Springs feel the constant threats permeating this town from sundown to sunrise every 24 hours. I hope the new CLP regime can put a stop to the ever-escalating violence and feelings of insecurity that embrace all law-abiding Alice Springs residents. Perpetrators MUST feel the consequences of their actions.
Australia’s north about as secure as a sieve
Senator Patterson is right in expressing concerns about the security of Australia’s north. Obviously, money allocated to surveillance is not cutting the mustard, for the percentage of arrivals onto our top coast is increasing. This is just one more challenge to our part of the world – which would be the first area impacted if overseas aggression toward Australia were to become a reality.
Thank you to our firefighters
Well done, and congratulations on your long and impeccable record of committed service. And thank you to all firies around the length and breadth of our territory for your outstanding work – including volunteer firegfighters who are part of our countering backbone in case of fire emergency.
Darwin has wonderful air – fact or myth?
It is blue skies and clear air in Darwin – sometimes! The dry season, with its everlasting smoke-filled skies because of incessant fires – some controlled and many not – the air in and around Darwin is anything but clear and pristine.
Council dumps HPA from Tip Shop management
I have followed the work done by HPA to build skills and confidence in employees who are supported in developing their confidence and skills; HPA has done and continues to do an enormous amount of good through the Tip Shop program and other facets of their enterprise. To dump an organisation from being able to continue its humanitarian and developmental focus, is an absolutely awful decision by this council.
Here come the anti-development brigade
This is a decision that makes sound economic and developmental sense. Now, watch for the gabfest of disapproval from environmentalists and every other splinter organisation that wants to gain leverage from negative comments and anti-development positioning.
Thanks to key Territory families for their contribution
P
These families have brought, and continue to bring, great blessings to the NT through the projects they have undertaken and for the hundreds of people they employ. Their contributions are both past and present, for they are part of the foundation and the ongoing endurance of NT enterprise. Thank you from a dyed-in-the-wool Territorian.
Golden snapper disappearing from Territory waters
P
It is no wonder this species of fish is disappearing. With the hundreds and hundreds of anglers regularly out there with lines and boats, all fish species must be monitored to avoid depletion—just one more role required of the AFANT.
Is Australia positioning on a war footing approach to the future?
Almost every day, we have breaking news about the way the Australian Defence Force is evolving toward a future where, in our region, there are two distinct sides. Both groups will be involved in shaping our future. I can only hope peace will prevail in our area, but I worry about the fact that more and more frequently, the thought of war footing preparations comes to mind.
New look for Northern Lands Council building
Facades may be necessary, but the quality and efficiency of the work done within any organisation are all important ingredients.
Gas shortages loom for the Northern Territory
P
How sensible and far-sighted was the WA Government in requiring 15% of produced gas to be tagged for domestic consumption within the state? No supply shortage and the avoidance of skyrocketing prices are guaranteed benefits for people in that state. Why can’t the NT Government enter a similar arrangement with companies, especially in areas where establishment and start-ups are still happening?
Supporting and restoring Darwin in the aftermath of Cyclone Tracy
There were so many individuals and organisations who contributed unstintingly to helping to restore and rebuild the city after Cyclone Tracey. They all – known and unknown – deserve our thanks.
Passing of Nick Dondas
Nick Dondas, one of the founding fathers of the modern-day NT under self-government, was a key figure in helping, within the Everingham Government, shape our Territory’s future. I remember him well and often think back to the fact that he was one who, with his peers, laid the solid foundation on which territory autonomy -being limited by federal constraints – was based. He will be missed.
Nicole Manison a Tamboran executive
Ms Manison’s depth and breadth of experience as a born-and-bred Territorian, augmented by her significant ministerial roles in the previous Labor Government, will provide her with the experiential tools and background awareness to fill her new role outstandingly. Tamboran is lucky to have her on their leadership team.
Hotel at Gateways to re-open
There will be great rejoicing in Palmerston when this hotel is re-opened. The Gateway Shopping Centre has many business establishments, and the hotel adds one more feature to this progressive commercial and retail hub.
NT Hockey grant from government
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This grant will significantly boost NT Hockey as it moves into this Asian competition. This is deserved because the association is very proactive and continues to develop and expand its outreach and appeal, particularly to upcoming players who are the future of NT Hockey. Let us also remember that Territorians have delivered in spades in both women’s and men’s competitions on the Australian and international stages.
NT Cotton
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We need these enterprises, and for one, I applaud that we now seem to be heading toward growing our land-based industries. The early flourishing of our cotton industry is a good thing, and expansion will further cotton’s contribution to NT development.
Winners of ledership awards
Congratulations to all award winners and to those who were shortlisted for consideration. Out Territory is blessed by your positive leadership, commitment and contribution to enriching this place. Thank you for the example you set.
Caring for Darwin
The city has changed since we first came here in 1987. Close to 40 years later, it is no longer recognisable compared to what it was back then. People have come and gone. I imagine that only 10% to 15% of our current residents are here from those days. There have been some positive developments, but many other changes have been short-sighted, undertaken hastily and without careful forethought about consequences. Between the government and our council, we need to look after this place.
Copper exploration in NT
I am beginning to think that with our new CLP Government in place, things ARE improving in terms of economic, mining and industrial outlook.
NT Assembly 50 years old
P.
Thank you, NT News, for revisiting our past with meaningful historical recall. And thank you for the pictures illuminating the text. We tend to look at the past through rose-coloured glasses, but good things happened all those years ago. Thanks for the memories.
Upturn in boatpeople
P
We are likely to have an upturn in the numbers of people who go to desperate lengths to reach Australia. With reduced official surveillance, smugglers will be encouraged to return to what they see as a lucrative trade without fear of authorities’ interference.
Upgrade of Don Hotel
The history of this establishment will stay, and the upgrades will lift its decor and atmosphere to new heights of contemporary delights and atmosphere. What has been good about this place in the past will become even more appealing in the future.
Gender based violence
I have lived in the NT for many decades. There seem to be two critical shifts in gender-based domestic violence. On one hand, there is now a greater willingness for those abused or their nearest kin to report assaults. On the other hand, notwithstanding campaigns and far greater community awareness of the issue, the number of DV cases seems to be rising at an alarming rate.
Steeline are a top manufacturing business
Well done, Steeline, for showing how to develop manufacturing initiatives and make them front and centre in this vital industry. So often, brickbats are thrown at those who may be going out of their way to advance a cause or industry. In Steeline’s case, bouquets are in order.
Police checks on adults working with minors in the hospitality industry
I support Mr Dwyer’s call that adults who have responsibility and oversight for work done in the hospitality field, should be screened to ensure that young people are working in a safe place. Abuse of some by others, it seems, is growing almost exponentially, and I wonder if there will ever be a downturn in the proliferation of stories about bullying and abuse of some by others.
Cruise ships aplenty for Darwin
There is a possibility and a strong probability that Darwin will become the Cruise Capital of Australia in the not-too-distant future. This augurs well for our tourism and hospitality industry. Another upside is that those visiting share positives about their experiences and the places they visit, which will whet the appetite of others to visit this place.
Illegal arrivals on our northern shores
P
With our scant and financially deprived surveillance program in place, we are going to rely ever increasingly on Aboriginal people in communities and First People’s rangers to be Australia’s eyes and ears in countering what is becoming a significant issue. We can expect an increase in overseas arrivals to our northern shores.
Barunga Festival short listed for top gong
How fantastic is this accolade for a very deserving and proactive community? The festival has become better and more focused year after year, and this recognition is well and truly deserved. Congratulations to those in Barunga who have worked so hard to make this a top drawer and looked forward to celebration each year.
Aged care provision in Darwin
In discussing the pros and cons of the proposed development, we must remember that Darwin and our Top End have an ever-increasing number of aging people living in our midst. The housing may be needed, but supply needs are being met with the plethora of new suburbs and housing estates being established and constructed in Darwin and Palmerston. Providing accommodation for an aging population is essential – and where better to extend it than adjacent to an existing facility.
The EPA and SANTOS
I am thankful to Judge Charlesworth for adjudicating cost responsibility as she has. The EPA is an organisation that too often seems to enjoy obfuscation to obstruct economic progress, but manipulation of truth is beyond the pale. The organisation deserves to be called out and shamed. Neither should the government grant the EPA extra funds to restitute SANTOS.
$3.9 million extra for Legal Aid in the NT
This story and the accompanying statistics showing an exponential and mind-boggling increase in crime and the need for the accused to be offered legal aid in support of their defence convinces me that this – crime and its consequences – is the number one occupation in the NT.