7.05pm EDT19:05
The Victorian government is considering a plea from builders to include home renovations in financial support packages the next time the state locks down as the national construction industry reels from Covid-19 restrictions in Melbourne and Sydney.
While large Melbourne sites, which typically have dedicated workforces, have kept operating throughout the city’s five lockdowns, smaller builders were banned from working on renovations inside people’s homes during the latest lockdown, which lifted at midnight on Tuesday.
Master Builders Victoria says builders were also excluded from the state’s business support schemes during the last two lockdowns, despite being eligible previously due to loss of revenue.
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at 7.06pm EDT
6.57pm EDT18:57
Victoria records eight local Covid-19 cases overnight, all in isolation
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6.42pm EDT18:42
Australia’s health department was urged by the government’s vaccine advisory group to order as many Covid-19 vaccines as possible from different sources after a meeting in August last year.
The health department secretary, Prof Brendan Murphy, said on Friday that the government’s procurement strategy was based on advice from the Science and Industry Technical Advisory Group – a group he chairs – as he sought to deflect criticism of the troubled vaccine rollout.
The comments disgruntled some members of Sitag. Multiple sources have told Guardian Australia that the group was asked to provide feedback on a procurement strategy that had already been prepared by the department after its negotiations with pharmaceutical companies.
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6.23pm EDT18:23
European, British and US diplomats have met up to three times in Canberra to discuss how to encourage Australia to consider stronger cuts to its greenhouse gas emissions.
Guardian Australia can reveal that diplomats from like-minded countries have been talking about how they could engage in dialogue with Australia, aimed at lifting its level of climate ambition before a crucial international conference in November.
In addition to pursuing engagement with the Australian government, possible options include outreach to business associations and farming groups.
The latest meeting, held last Thursday, brought together the ambassadors, high commissioners or deputy heads of mission of the UK, the US, the EU, Denmark, France, Italy, Germany, Canada, Sweden and Switzerland.
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6.03pm EDT18:03
Simon Birmingham labels NSW pleas for jobkeeper to be reinstated ‘political bickering’
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5.55pm EDT17:55
Major aged care providers have warned that vaccination rates for their home care staff remain extraordinarily low, just days after the government conceded it still has no specific plan for vaccinating the workforce.
About 150,000 aged care workers provide care to about 1 million older Australians in their own homes across the country, but the government revealed on Friday it still has no dedicated plan for vaccinating home care staff and has given the issue little focus.
It has not extended the vaccine mandate for residential workers to home care workers, despite warnings weeks ago that it was an “obvious blind spot” in the rollout.
Now, at least two major providers are urging the government to treat the issue with greater urgency.
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at 6.07pm EDT