Australia news live: Linda Burney hails Archie Roach’s songs as ‘a source of healing’; national Covid death toll nears 12,000

Linda Burney hails Archie Roach’s songs as ‘a source of healing’

The minister for Indigenous Australians, Linda Burney, has released a statement on the death of Archie Roach.

It was with great sadness I learned yesterday of the passing of Gunditjmara and Bundjalung man Archie Roach and I offer my deepest sympathies to his family.

For many Australians, Archie was their first exposure to the horrors of the Stolen Generations.

His voice, his music and his story came out of trauma and pain.

His powerful songs also brought people together. They provided strength and still serve as a source of healing – putting into words what was unspeakable.

We are all so sad about his passing.

Archie’s songs will live forever – etched into our 65,000+ history – and he will be remembered as one of the early Aboriginal artists to bring our music into the mainstream.

Archie was one of our nation’s greatest songmen and truth-tellers and we have lost a giant of the Australian music industry and of our mob.

Vale Archie.

Linda Burney
‘We have lost a giant’: Linda Burney on Archie Roach Photograph: Carly Earl/The Guardian

Updated at 22.34 EDT

Key events

South Australia records 9 new Covid deaths

Nine people with Covid-19 have died in South Australia overnight, with the state recording 2,364 new cases on Sunday morning, 346 people in hospital, and 11 in ICU.

Western Australian teachers, nurses, police officers, cleaners and public servants have been offered a six per cent wage rise over the next two years as a buffer to rising inflation, AAP reports.

The Western Australia government has increased its pay offer for 150,000 workers to three per cent annually for the next two years, along with an additional $2500 cost of living payment.

Premier Mark McGowan said in a social media post on Sunday the move was in response to peaking inflation and would cost the budget an extra $634 million over the next four years.

Given the current economic climate we’ve listened and reviewed our wages policy.

This is a reasonable and generous policy, but also responsible in these volatile economic times.

The changes will immediately flow through to industries that have already accepted the government’s previous 2.75 per cent pay increase offer, including teachers and public hospital doctors.

Some workers’ wages will be boosted more than the three per cent annual rate, with a patient care assistant who earns just over $55,000 a year set to effectively get a 7.5 per cent wage rise over the first year.

Perth’s consumer price index jumped 1.7 per cent in the June quarter, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics data, pushing its annual inflation rate well above the national average to 7.4 per cent.

Health workers and other WA public servants were lobbying for a pay rise above 2.75 per cent, with some holding stop-work meetings outside Perth hospitals in recent weeks.

Hundreds of school administration, leadership and support staff will be hired in NSW to help under-pressure teachers.

More than 200 new administrative positions will be trialled from term four to assist public school teachers with tasks including data entry, paperwork, and co-ordinating events and excursions.

Thousands of teachers walked off the job in late June over wages and conditions, with the NSW Teachers Federation describing the state government’s three per cent pay increase offer as an insult.

Education Minister Sarah Mitchell said the new roles will reduce the administrative burden on teachers and open doors to people wanting to re-enter the workforce or upskill.

Our teachers are skilled professionals and their time is precious. However, they are stretched across too many non-teaching and low-value activities.

Running a modern-day school is complex. We need to look at the work staff do in schools and think differently about how it gets done.

She said recruitment had started for 780 assistant principal positions.

The strike on June 30, just a day before two weeks of holidays, was the third in six months.

-From AAP.

Chalmers wants to see ‘strong and sustainable’ wage growth

Sky News has run an interview with the treasurer Jim Chalmers from late last week, where Chalmers was asked about Labor’s position on wage growth amid the high inflation the nation is experiencing.

Chalmers:

I think all of our team understands that we do want strong wages growth, but we want it to be sustainable. You know, I don’t hear anybody in our team calling for exorbitant wages growth. What people really want to see is something that’s strong and sustainable at the same time and enduring.

And there is a high level of understanding not just in our side of the parliament, but I think in the Australian community that one of the problems we’ve had with our economy for the best part of a decade now is those stagnant wages. We’ve got real wages going backwards quite considerably at the moment, unfortunately. And so our job is to see that inflation moderate, do our bit on the supply side in particular, but also to get those real wages growing again.

I think it’s in the interests of all Australians that as we rebuild this economy after this difficult period that sustainable wages growth is part of the story. And that means productivity is part of the story. It means investing in the future of our economy, strong and secure well-paid jobs is a big part of our agenda. Because what we want to see is these wage increases to continue to endure, and to be responsible and sustainable at the same time.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers says stagnant wages have been a problem for years.
Treasurer Jim Chalmers says stagnant wages have been a problem for years. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Updated at 22.52 EDT

The Reserve Bank of Australia is on track to lift interest rates again this week, adding to the cost of servicing mortgages and loans.

The central bank’s board will meet on Tuesday to discuss the state of the economy after new inflation data was released last week.

The consumer price index rose at an annual rate of 6.1 per cent in the June quarter, the fastest yearly growth since 2001.

It was followed by a 5.6 per cent lift in the Producer Price Index, which measures wholesale costs for Australian businesses, on Friday.

Now, the RBA must factor the increases into its monetary policy efforts to push the rate of consumer price growth back to its preferred target band of two to three per cent.

The urgency for action increased after Treasurer Jim Chalmers gave an economic update to federal parliament, warning inflation was still rising and would likely peak in the December quarter at 7.75 per cent.

The consensus of financial market economists is for the RBA to raise the cash interest rate, for the fourth time in a row, by 50 basis points to 1.85 per cent.

A 50 basis point rate increase will see the average mortgage holder on a variable interest rate paying an extra $610 per month to service their loan compared to four months ago.

-From AAP.

NT records no new Covid deaths

No people with Covid-19 have died in the Northern Territory overnight, with the state reporting 236 new cases on Sunday morning, 56 people in hospital, and none in ICU.

Updated at 22.27 EDT

WA records six Covid deaths

Six people with Covid-19 have died in Western Australia overnight, with the state reporting 3,252 new cases on Sunday morning, 415 people in hospital, and 14 in ICU.

Updated at 22.29 EDT

Linda Burney hails Archie Roach’s songs as ‘a source of healing’

The minister for Indigenous Australians, Linda Burney, has released a statement on the death of Archie Roach.

It was with great sadness I learned yesterday of the passing of Gunditjmara and Bundjalung man Archie Roach and I offer my deepest sympathies to his family.

For many Australians, Archie was their first exposure to the horrors of the Stolen Generations.

His voice, his music and his story came out of trauma and pain.

His powerful songs also brought people together. They provided strength and still serve as a source of healing – putting into words what was unspeakable.

We are all so sad about his passing.

Archie’s songs will live forever – etched into our 65,000+ history – and he will be remembered as one of the early Aboriginal artists to bring our music into the mainstream.

Archie was one of our nation’s greatest songmen and truth-tellers and we have lost a giant of the Australian music industry and of our mob.

Vale Archie.

Linda Burney
‘We have lost a giant’: Linda Burney on Archie Roach Photograph: Carly Earl/The Guardian

Updated at 22.34 EDT

Eden Gillespie

Eden Gillespie

Police Facebook group belittled domestic violence victims

Queensland police are investigating social media posts on a private Facebook group for law enforcement personnel that belittled domestic violence victims and implied officers purposefully avoid responding to such incidents.

The posts were made at the same time as public hearings in a commission of inquiry into Queensland police responses to domestic violence have unearthed numerous allegations of a misogynistic culture within the service that has repeatedly failed women.

Guardian Australia has seen several offensive posts published on the Facebook group, which proclaims to be a space for current and former Australian law enforcement officers.

A Queensland member of the group uploaded a photo ranking domestic violence allegations from “dogshit” or “very poor quality” to “bullshit” or “not true” and “batshit – insane”.

The group member said the photo could be used when describing “the parties involved in the 10th DV [domestic violence incident] of the night”, with the post attracting dozens of “likes” or laughing emojis.

For the detail on this story read the full report by Guardian Australia Queensland state reporter Eden Gillespie.

Updated at 21.49 EDT

Covid deaths nearing 12,000

Australia’s daily Covid-19 death tallies are spiking, pushing the nation closer to chalking up 12,000 total virus-related fatalities.

The nation has recorded three straight days of 100-plus deaths related to the virus.

Another 27 have been reported so far on Sunday in Victoria, NSW and Tasmania – taking Australia’s total toll across the pandemic to 11,832 – along with 18,108 new cases.

– From AAP

Updated at 21.33 EDT

Queensland records no new Covid deaths

No one with Covid-19 has died in Queensland overnight, with the state recording 4,655 new cases on Sunday morning, 762 people in hospital and 28 in ICU.

*The PCR cases today are slightly higher due to a backlog of results being loaded in the system. These range from 10 June – 23 July 2022. Without the backlog, today’s PCR and RAT total is 3,858. This has not delayed the time in which people have received their results.

— Queensland Health (@qldhealth) July 31, 2022

Updated at 21.19 EDT

Tasmania records one Covid death

One person with Covid-19 has died in Tasmania overnight, with the state reporting 649 new cases on Sunday morning, 150 people in hospital and six in ICU.

Updated at 22.29 EDT

ACT records no new Covid deaths

No people with Covid-19 have died in Australian Capital Territory overnight, with the state reporting 556 new cases, 163 people in hospital and one in ICU.

ACT COVID-19 update – 31 July 2022
🦠 COVID-19 case numbers
◾ New cases today: 556 (295 PCR and 261 RAT)
◾ Active cases: 5,252
◾ Total cases since March 2020: 190,847
🏥 COVID-19 hospital numbers
◾ In hospital: 163
◾ In ICU: 1
◾ Ventilated: 0
◾ Lives lost: 0 pic.twitter.com/iZVk4c4Vqi

— ACT Health (@ACTHealth) July 31, 2022

Updated at 22.52 EDT