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Phil says urgent cancer surgery is delayed because he's from a virus hot zone

A Tasmanian man in need of urgent cancer treatment says he has been refused surgery because his local hospital is in the midst of a coronavirus outbreak.




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'If you go to work, you have to move': Doctor evicted during COVID-19 crisis

A day after the Prime Minister announced a moratorium on evictions, this doctor was given an ultimatum by her landlord — either she stop working at a hospital or move out.




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'These birds flap all the way': Artists draw attention to seabirds' epic 25,000km migration

Printmakers across the country are raising awareness of our most endangered group of birds and their non-stop, eight-and-a-half day journey home from their Artic breeding grounds.




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Australia's largest ag field days postponed for first time in its history

AgQuip will not run in August, as it has done since 1973, due to the coronavirus pandemic, with organisers flagging November for the event which usually attracts about 100,000 people to north-west NSW.




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Coronavirus tally up by four, as more cases found in Tasmania's north-west

A day after authorities said the coronavirus outbreak in Tasmania may be "trailing off", the tally jumps to 205 with four new cases detected in the past 24 hours — all in the state's north-west.




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Is Anzac Day a public holiday? Here's who gets the day off

Anzac Day 2020 falls on a Saturday, which means for most Australians, there's no public holiday this year. Why? And when is your next public holiday?




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'Strange to be alone': Far-flung Aussies mull Anzac Day restrictions unseen since Spanish flu

Aussie expat Morgan Ray usually attends an Anzac Day ceremony on the banks of the Chicago River, but lockdowns have made that impossible this year. He's not alone in feeling alone this year.




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Coronavirus delivers islanders 'a quiet piece of paradise'

Hotel Bruny owner Dave Gunton is helping to feed the island's residents during the coronavirus crisis, as many welcome a return to quieter times of growing vegetables and producing salt from seawater.




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Coronavirus tally to 207, as Tasmania's north-west restrictions extended following ninth death

Retail restrictions are extended on Tasmania's north-west coast, as the state records its ninth coronavirus death and 207th case of the disease.




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Small army bands together in Tasmania to feed 'unicorns who fart glitter'

A high school teacher who wanted to thank Tasmania's frontline health workers with a simple gesture has found herself running, for all intents and purposes, a pop-up NGO.




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Australia's smallest state has the nation's worst coronavirus infection rate. How did it happen?

Tasmania had one of the strongest responses to COVID-19 in the country. But on the day the two-person gathering rule was adopted, the state's nightmare quietly began.




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'Something's happened up there': Why Aboriginal Tasmanians shun Hobart's mountain top

One Tasmanian Aboriginal elder says the mountain's summit is where her spirit will go when she dies. She wants people to only visit the sacred pinnacle "for good reason".




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School resumes in Tasmania this week. Here's what you need to know

Tasmanian mum Leesa Bouman plans to juggle classes at home with her three kids and a one-year-old by taking it "one day at a time" when virtual term two gets underway on Tuesday. What's it going to look like for parents, teachers and students as the COVID-19 crisis continues?




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Claims coronavirus spread due to 'illegal party' of health workers quashed by Tasmania Police

Tasmanian police dismiss allegations, first aired publicly by Australia's Chief Medical Officer, that an "illegal dinner party" of healthcare workers contributed to Tasmania's coronavirus outbreak.




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North-west health worker Tasmania's latest coronavirus case

A female healthcare worker "in her 20s" is the latest case of coronavirus confirmed in Tasmania, on the day Australia's Chief Medical Officer apologises for alleging an "illegal dinner party" contributed to the state's outbreak.





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North-west Tasmania's coronavirus outbreak timeline

Key dates in the outbreak which unfolded in two Tasmanian hospitals, according to a report released by Public Health.




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'We're used to chaos and disaster': Tasmanian family waits out COVID-19 in the slums of Mozambique

Jessica and James Brewer are volunteering in a Mozambican slum for the fourth year running, only this time they are expecting a child, parenting a toddler and dealing with the challenges of coronavirus.



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  • Relief and Aid Organisations

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'Get off your bums': Family demands release of war hero report

Tasmanian senator Jacqui Lambie says it won't "go down well" for the Coalition if she has to beg for the release of the year-old report into whether Tasmanian war hero Teddy Sheean deserves a Victoria Cross.




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We'll 'almost certainly' see another coronavirus spike. Will winter make it worse?

Experts say there's no evidence the weather has an impact on the spread of coronavirus — but with restrictions lifting, what you do when it's hot or cold outside might.




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'We couldn't have picked a better time': Couple isolates on remote island in Bass Strait

Rachel and Daniel Weeks are living on a national park in the middle of Bass Strait, embracing their isolation. But they feel like they are missing out on nothing during the COVID-19 crisis thanks to the crowds now on popular apps.




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Hobart principal says school only open for students whose parents have 'no other option'

A Catholic college principal tells parents children missing their friends and parents needing time are not valid reasons to send children to school, as Tasmania records its third consecutive day without new coronavirus cases.




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Paramedics' decision to leave woman who refused treatment questioned by coroner

Ambulance paramedics left a woman with a history of mental illness alone in her home without electricity, hot water or lighting before she was found dead months later, in a move a coroner said was "difficult to understand."




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For Tasmania's Mother Teresa, isolation has been a habit for quite some time

Having been a nun for 22 years, Mother Teresa Benedicta knows a thing or two about isolation. Here are her tips for living in solitude.




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Farmers hit the road to deliver to her door and stay afloat in lead-up to Mother's Day

Taking mum out for lunch this weekend is not an option, but thanks to innovative producers it has never been easier to get a gift delivered to her door.




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Youth mental health Budget focus, but what's the situation really like?

Money woes, climate change and personal crises mental health is the number one concern among young people. But are they more "emotionally fragile" than generations past?




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Teens who threatened Riverland school massacre have 'done their time', court told

Lawyers for two teenagers who threatened to carry out a school massacre tell South Australia's Supreme Court they should be immediately released.




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92yo truckie's Chevrolet restoration shows we never forget our first vehicle

You never forget your first car and it seems some of us wish we never let it go, including this 92-year-old who bought back his first Chevrolet and restored it.




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Wine grape industry in ACCC's sights as growers forced to wait up to nine months to be paid

An ACCC report highlights transparency and objectiveness as issues that need to be addressed in the wine grape industry.




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Households cut power bills with 'demand response', but big energy retailers want to keep grip on market

Some families are already taking advantage of "demand response", reducing their bills by cutting their electricity use at peak times. But a move to promote competition in the demand response market has come up against some serious opposition.




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Peacocks as pets? Demand increases though they're not that reliable as companions nor protectors

Peacocks are popular pets with people eager to host the showy ornamental bird, despite breeders admitting they are not particularly good companions nor protectors.





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Carp increasingly in demand, but herpes virus threatens industry's potential, fishers say

Fishing businesses report an increasing demand for carp as a "premium" food product, but fear the looming herpes virus release could kill the industry before it even takes off.




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Australia's enthusiasm for medicinal emu oil takes flight, as producers push to keep up with demand

Australia's emu farmers are trying to ramp up production as the demand for oil increases.




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Tarcutta: the truckies' sacred village

Every year, Australian truck drivers and their families converge on the small farming town of Tarcutta to remember their fallen.




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Royal Hotel: Why is it Australia's most common pub name?

The Royal is the most commonly used name for hotels in Australia, but the story behind the popularity of this pub name is a curious mix of colonial communications and aspirational marketing.




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What's with reverse angle parking in so many country towns?

The modern motoring experience is one of self-parking vehicles, multi-storey car parking complexes and stacking systems, but in many Australian country towns, reverse angle parking remains.




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Drought of 1891 to 1903 reconstructed shows today's conditions likely to have more devastating effects

A CSIRO reconstruction of the Federation drought of 1891 to 1903 finds that if it were to occur again today, its effects would likely be even more devastating.




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Laura was born into a 'church' called Outreach International. It took her 32 years to leave

Laura Sullivan spent 32 years in an Australian group she now believes is a cult, because of its controlling nature. But she didn't choose that path she was born into it.




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'Gundagai's mourning, Gundagai's in shock' after cherished Dog on Tuckerbox statue vandalised

The famous Dog on the Tuckerbox statue near Gundagai in the NSW Riverina has been knocked from its sandstone pedestal in an attack the local mayor has called a "senseless bit of vandalism".



  • ABC Riverina
  • riverina
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  • Crime and Justice:Crime:Vandalism
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  • Australia:NSW:Gundagai 2722

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Frank Rusconi, the gifted stonemason behind Gundagai's famed Dog on the Tuckerbox

The news the Dog on the Tuckerbox had been damaged made national headlines and prompted an outpouring of love for the much-loved pooch. But what is the history of the famous statue?




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GrainPro boss Mario Bonfante tells of his personal 'hell' as company struggles

Drought-stricken farmers are calling for failing grain trader GrainPro to be wound up in a bid to receive some of the $6 million they are owed.




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Gundagai's famous Dog on the Tuckerbox returns home to hero's welcome after vandalism attack

Sitting proudly on its pedestal, Gundagai's much-loved pooch is back where it belongs after it was recently vandalised in an attack that left the community outraged.





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Plastic dumped in Melbourne's Yarra River to be turned into outdoor furniture

Thousands of bottles, soy sauce containers, wrappers and microplastics that have been fished out of Melbourne's iconic river will be melted down to create seats along the water's edge.




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Frog numbers and wetlands surviving drought through 'precise' environmental water flows

Controversial environmental water flows are thought to be the driving force behind the revival of the native southern bell frog, despite the drought.




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Ivanhoe locals fear jail closure's 'devastating' effect on their outback town

Business owners at Ivanhoe in outback NSW are staring down closure if a plan to shut the jail goes ahead, and say the jail inmates make a huge contribution to the community.




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Snowy Hydro 2.0 a costly white elephant that won't deliver, says energy expert

After taxpayers were promised Snowy Hydro 2.0 for $2 billion in four years, the project is now likely to cost five times that amount and take twice as long to be completed.




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Struggle Street's Ashmont draws 'dangerous' moniker in latest series, but refuge operator says label unfair

Rampant vandalism, stress on social housing, and a dairy farming family at the end of their resources SBS's Struggle Street spotlights the Riverina in its latest look at poverty.



  • ABC Riverina
  • riverina
  • Community and Society:All:All
  • Community and Society:Poverty:All
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  • Crime and Justice:Crime Prevention:All
  • Australia:NSW:Deniliquin 2710
  • Australia:NSW:Wagga Wagga 2650

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Wagga Wagga's first public corroboree since 1870s honours past, present and country

The first corroboree at a New South Wales city in more than 150 years has united generations while acknowledging deep concerns about climate change and drought.