abc.net.au

Uluru tourism companies not worried about climb closure

As people flock to Uluru in their thousands to make the ascent while they still can, tour operators are finding new ways for people to enjoy the area after the climb is closed for good next weekend.




abc.net.au

Horticulture program at Alice Springs prison teaching practical skills, 'good for mind and soul'

Participants in this horticulture program say they are growing in confidence as they are growing fruit and vegetables.



  • 783 ABC Alice Springs
  • alicesprings
  • Law
  • Crime and Justice:Prisons and Punishment:All
  • Lifestyle and Leisure:Gardening:All
  • Rural:All:All
  • Australia:NT:Alice Springs 0870

abc.net.au

Alice Springs prison horticulture



  • 783 ABC Alice Springs
  • alicesprings
  • Law
  • Crime and Justice:Prisons and Punishment:All
  • Lifestyle and Leisure:Gardening:All
  • Rural:All:All
  • Australia:NT:Alice Springs 0870

abc.net.au

Alice Springs prisoner Grace at prison farm



  • 783 ABC Alice Springs
  • alicesprings
  • Law
  • Crime and Justice:Prisons and Punishment:All
  • Lifestyle and Leisure:Gardening:All
  • Rural:All:All
  • Australia:NT:Alice Springs 0870

abc.net.au

Uluru climb closure 2019: Arrival of final day gives voice to other claims by traditional owners

The climb closure at Uluru could motivate other traditional owner groups around the country to limit access to their cultural and sacred sites.



  • 783 ABC Alice Springs
  • alicesprings
  • westernvic
  • Business
  • Economics and Finance:Industry:Tourism
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander):Aboriginal
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander):All
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander):Indigenous Culture
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander):Sacred Sites
  • Environment:Conservation:All
  • Environment:Conservation:National Parks
  • Lifestyle and Leisure:Travel and Tourism:All
  • Australia:NT:Alice Springs 0870
  • Australia:NT:Yulara 0872
  • Australia:VIC:Halls Gap 3381

abc.net.au

Last day of climbing Uluru delayed by strong winds

Strong winds have delayed the final day of climbing Uluru, with hundreds of people waiting to climb the monolith.



  • 783 ABC Alice Springs
  • alicesprings
  • Community and Society:All:All
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander):Aboriginal
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander):Sacred Sites
  • Australia:NT:Alice Springs 0870

abc.net.au

Uluru climb opens for the last time

Visitors rush to ascend Uluru hours before the climb's permanent closure.



  • 783 ABC Alice Springs
  • alicesprings
  • Community and Society:All:All
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander):Sacred Sites
  • Australia:NT:Alice Springs 0870

abc.net.au

Climbers wait to ascend Uluru as traditional owners aim to educate

Tourists wait to ascend Uluru as high winds temporarily close the climb, while Anangu ranger Thiangu Thomas aims to educate those who don't understand the monolith's cultural significance.



  • 783 ABC Alice Springs
  • alicesprings
  • Community and Society:All:All
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander):Sacred Sites
  • Australia:NT:Alice Springs 0870

abc.net.au

Uluru climb is permanently closed



  • 783 ABC Alice Springs
  • alicesprings
  • Community and Society:All:All
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander):Sacred Sites
  • Australia:NT:Alice Springs 0870

abc.net.au

Shirleen Campbell among NT Australian of the Year winners for work with Indigenous women

An Alice Springs social worker who has given a voice to Aboriginal women and a Darwin doctor who oversaw the RAAF Cyclone Tracy evacuations have been honoured.




abc.net.au

Closing the climb was the easy part creating a brighter future for the people who live there is much harder

If tourists could see Mutitjulu, most would be shocked by the level of abject poverty at Australia's famous natural wonder.




abc.net.au

Old Beechworth Gaol home to new community-led clean-energy project

A people-powered revolution is taking place in north-east Victoria with the region's first community-led energy network going live.




abc.net.au

North East Victoria's first community owned solar system is switched on




abc.net.au

Deer kills man, injures woman near Wangaratta in north-east Victoria

A pet deer fatally attacks a man and injures his wife during feeding. The couple's son had to beat the animal with a lump of wood to save his mother, the ABC has been told.







abc.net.au

Josh Meredith's small business is helping change community attitudes about Down syndrome

Josh Meredith lives with Down syndrome and is helping change community attitudes towards disability in the workplace.




abc.net.au

Irish family faces deportation after son diagnosed with cystic fibrosis

An Irish family, who has been living in regional Victoria for almost a decade, faces deportation after their son is diagnosed with cystic fibrosis.




abc.net.au

Darragh Hyde's cystic fibrosis puts his family at risk of being deported back to Ireland




abc.net.au

The Hyde family will make a final appeal to the Administrative Review Tribunal on April 30




abc.net.au

Agriculture Department stands by water buybacks, amid claims of scandal and calls for an inquiry

The Agriculture Department is standing by a controversial water buyback deal worth $80 million, which Labor leader Bill Shorten says is a "scandal" worthy of inquiry.




abc.net.au

Did Barnaby Joyce miss an opportunity to get a better deal on water buybacks?

A Murray-Darling Basin community leader says the former agriculture minister originally opposed water purchases as the Queensland Government suggests there was a better deal.




abc.net.au

The 'watergate scandal' is still as clear as mud in a drought

Labor is intent on pushing the so-called "watergate scandal". What exactly it is alleging is about as clear as the water flowing through the Menindee Lakes, writes Kath Sullivan.




abc.net.au

Federal election 2019 could see independents make history, with Indi as the test case

Rural independents are proving a difficult test for the Coalition in this election. But the pathway to parliament is harder than it might seem.




abc.net.au

Coalition makes on-farm pre-election pledge of cheap loans and water market review

Fair water trading and cheap on-farm loans are at the centre of a Coalition pre-election promise to boost Australia's agriculture sector.




abc.net.au

Rain in south-eastern Australia will help cropping but much more needed to break drought

Rain, and lots of it, has fallen across the south-east and is expected to continue for the next few days but what will it mean for the southern cropping season and the drought?




abc.net.au

Federal election 2019: Woman charged after Scott Morrison egged while campaigning in Albury

Police charge a woman with common assault after the Prime Minister is egged while meeting with delegates from the Country Women's Association in Albury, on the NSW-Victorian border.




abc.net.au

Federal election 2019: You Ask, We Answer your energy questions

Energy policy is confusing. There are no shortage of acronyms and the policies change almost as often as the leaders do. Here we've tried to answer your questions.







abc.net.au

CWA of NSW offers virtual branch meetings as a way for members to stay connected

The Country Women's Association of NSW has launched a virtual branch, aiming to cater to its grey nomads members while they are own the move.




abc.net.au

Volunteer detection dogs sniff out endangered alpine insects

Volunteer detection dogs have been trained to find the endangered alpine stonefly at Falls Creek, an insect measuring just 50 millimetres in length.






abc.net.au

Detection dogs have been trained to locate the endangered Alpine Stonefly





abc.net.au

Karen Chetcuti's family suing Victorian Government over her 'wrongful death'

The family of brutally murdered woman Karen Chetcuti, whose killer was a rapist on parole, is suing the Victorian Government for her wrongful death.




abc.net.au

South Gippsland hailstorm blankets beaches as wet weather sweeps across Victoria

A hailstorm blankets Gippsland beaches in white as a cold front sweeps across Victoria, downing trees and causing flash flooding as it dumps 50 millimetres of rain west of Melbourne.




abc.net.au

Artefacts salvaged from Ned Kelly's last stand at Glenrowan to be reunited after more than a century

Two items salvaged from the ruins of the Glenrowan Inn, which burnt to the ground in a siege between the Kelly Gang and police almost 140 years ago, will be brought together again for an exhibition in north-east Victoria.







abc.net.au

Murray irrigators lodge $750 million class action against MDBA claiming 'negligent' water management

A group of nine irrigators has lodged a class action in the NSW Supreme Court against the Murray-Darling Basin Authority, claiming its negligent water management has caused $750 million in losses.




abc.net.au

Drought support review recommends separating Farm Household Allowance from 'complex' social security

A fortnightly welfare payment for farmers, considered to be the cornerstone of drought assistance, should be removed from social security legislation, an independent review recommends.




abc.net.au

Federal election 2019: Are the major parties doing enough for our elderly when it comes to aged care?

Aged care advocates say policy, regulatory and funding systems have not kept pace with the changing needs and expectations of the growing number of older Australians.




abc.net.au

Federal election 2019: Regional NSW a Coalition danger zone as country eyes independents

Regional seats proved the toughest battleground for the Coalition at the NSW state election, and with just days to go until the federal poll the pressure remains.





abc.net.au

Tim Fischer says long, popular federal election pre-poll period 'poisoning' democracy

Former deputy prime minister Tim Fischer says the three-week early voting period is bad for democracy, particularly in regional Australia.