ustr

Australians are eating more cheese, butter and yoghurt, and Timboon is milking the trend

Australian dairy production is dropping, but a town in Victoria's Western District is taking advantage of changing consumer tastes to turn its fortunes around.




ustr

Australasian Global Dairies reaches settlement over allegations of foreign worker underpayment

A dairy company that accused foreign workers of owing rent after allegations of underpayment arose has agreed to an out-of-court settlement.




ustr

Pharmaceutical-grade medicinal cannabis 'global shortage' to be met with Australian product

An Australian medicinal cannabis company is working to address a global shortage of pharmaceutical-grade product, reducing cost and improving access at the same time.




ustr

Oozing enthusiasm for Australia's 'most intellectual' next Big Thing

At 662 square metres, a Perth university has created what it believes to be the world's largest periodic table of the elements.





ustr

Markis Turner's mother denied bail after allegedly buying yacht for him to flee Australia

A 64-year-old woman who allegedly purchased a yacht for her son to flee the country while he was on bail over a multi-million-dollar cocaine-smuggling operation is remanded in custody.




ustr

Mathias Cormann warns students around Australia to stick to school amid global climate strike

Finance Minister Mathias Cormann says "school time is a time to go to school" ahead of thousands planning to leave the classroom for a global climate strike.




ustr

WA announces direct flights to China as PM Scott Morrison aligns Australia to Donald Trump's America

As WA Premier Mark McGowan proudly announced direct flights from Perth to Shanghai this week, it flew in stark contrast to Scott Morrison's US visit that put several Chinese noses out of joint, writes Eliza Borrello.




ustr

Australia is turning a blind eye to violence against Indigenous women, but we will not stay silent our lives matter

While the release of Jody Gore has shone a spotlight on the ability of Aboriginal women to access justice, Australia is continuing to turn a blind eye to violence against Indigenous women, writes Hannah McGlade.



  • ABC Radio Perth
  • perth
  • Community and Society:All:All
  • Community and Society:Domestic Violence:All
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander):All
  • Community and Society:Indigenous (Other Peoples):All
  • Government and Politics:All:All
  • Government and Politics:Indigenous Policy:All
  • Australia:All:All
  • Australia:WA:All
  • Australia:WA:Perth 6000


ustr

Hilton Cartwright went from the 'top of the world' playing for Australia to the edge of the cricket abyss

Two years ago, he was playing for Australia and could have been forgiven for thinking he had the cricket world at his feet. Then Hilton Cartwright's form fell off a cliff and he's still trying to recover.





ustr

How the shack folk of Naval Base defied a huge industrial development to preserve their pocket of paradise

The heavy industrial area of Kwinana is home to Perth's only remaining beach shack community, but there are fears a new container port could destroy the simple lifestyle the locals have worked so hard to preserve.




ustr

Power disconnections double in three years as West Australians struggle to pay electricity bills

More than 60 West Australian homes and businesses are having their electricity cut off on an average day for failing to pay their bills, with the number more than doubling in just three years.




ustr

Meet the people who live at some of Western Australia's unique addresses in defiance of authorities

They are a select group of people who live in places that would never be possible today, and have refused every effort to get them to move on.




ustr

The State Tennis Centre is slowly sinking, and so is tennis in Western Australia

While Perth Stadium on the banks of the Swan River is soaring, its neighbour in the State Tennis Centre is literally sinking, contributing to major problems with facilities and there is currently no plan to fix it.





ustr

What happened to the NBN, Australia's 'information superhighway'?

The NBN was supposed to provide all Australian homes with reliable, super-fast internet connections. As many of us adjust to living and working from home, connected with our jobs, friends and family online, has it lived up to its promise?




ustr

Saving the renewable industry

Building a sustainable renewable industry.




ustr

Australia and India: it's complicated

Australia and India, as former British colonies, had much in common, and could have forged a strong relationship for their mutual benefit. But Australia's White Australia policy, and India's determination to leave the Empire and become a Republic, stymied the friendship.




ustr

Australia - China: how to proceed?

How should Australia proceed in its relationship with China and what are the risks involved?





ustr

Blue Tree Project tackles mental health and suicide in regional Australia

Jayden Whyte tried to get help twice on the day he died. Now he is being remembered through a striking grassroots project that could help others before it's too late.




ustr

Western Australian town fears 'life-threatening' decline in health services

Residents in a regional WA town are fighting against what they say is a life-threatening decline in healthcare services.




ustr

South Australian council elections see wave of women take control

Sandy Verschoor is elected Adelaide Lord Mayor, while the state's four largest councils and two largest cities outside Adelaide will have women in charge following elections yesterday.




ustr

New $60 million abattoir could be 'complete game changer' for central Australian pastoralists

Producers describe plans for a new abattoir near Port Pirie as a "complete game changer" for pastoralists, saving them thousands in freight costs.




ustr

Honey production down as much as 70 per cent in South Australia casts fear on crop pollination

Beekeepers have lost up to 70 per cent of honey production because of "horrendous" conditions, and the effects of another bad season could be felt by other food crops.




ustr

American jazz organist Joey DeFrancesco reunited with rare 'blonde' instrument in Australia after 15 years

When Grammy-nominated American jazz performer Joey DeFrancesco sold his blonde-coloured Hammond B3 organ over eBay to an Australian bidder, he had one condition. That it be made available when he played in Australia.




ustr

Meteor suspected as 'fireball' filmed in Australian night sky, with sightings in two states

A "fireball" believed to have been a meteor lights up the skies overnight, with reports of sightings coming in from South Australia and Victoria. One expert says the earth has been bombarded by twice as many small asteroids than usual over the last couple of years.




ustr

Township rallies around local man recycling thousands of Australia's used bread tags into everyday items

Recycler Brad Scott is using his Robe studio to convert used plastics into everyday items like bowls, doorknobs and cheeseboards.




ustr

Street artist Kitt Bennett creates massive murals under Australia's feet

A small town has become home to a major new mural but you might not notice it if you were walking past.




ustr

Cave divers flock to South Australian farms to explore what lies beneath

Trevor Ashby's property south of Mount Gambier looks like a typical dairy farm from the roadside, but hidden among the cows is a tiny portal into a world-class dive site.




ustr

South Australian forest growers looking to expand in Victoria because of water restrictions

South Australia's forestry industry says it's struggling to secure enough water licences to expand, warning that if growers plant forests interstate instead, jobs and investment will follow.




ustr

Paedophile and former magistrate Peter Liddy applies for release from South Australian jail

One of Australia's most notorious paedophiles has applied for parole, but South Australia is considering whether the former magistrate should be indefinitely detained behind bars.




ustr

The real School of Rock: Australia's little country school transformed by music

A little country school in South Australia's south-east provided an instrument for every student and the results have been "joyful".





ustr

South Australian border collie wins working dog competition, trainer first female winner

When Peta Bauer first moved to a remote station for work more than 20 years ago she was the only female on the farm's staff. Now she's a record-winning sheepdog trainer and things are different.




ustr

Drugs found in Australia Post parcels leads to investigation by Limestone Coast police

A routine car search by Limestone Coast police has led to an investigation into whether south-east drug users are using Australia Post as a courier service to send and receive illegal drugs.




ustr

Mount Gambier to have first RFDS patient transfer facility in regional South Australia

The centre at Mount Gambier will improve response times for critical patients as well as provide a greater level of comfort for crew and people awaiting transfer.



  • ABC South East SA
  • southeastsa
  • Community and Society:All:All
  • Community and Society:Regional:All
  • Health:All:All
  • Health:Doctors and Medical Professionals:All
  • Human Interest:All:All
  • Australia:SA:Mount Gambier 5290
  • Australia:SA:Mount Gambier East 5291
  • Australia:SA:Mount Gambier West 5291

ustr

Five of Australia's best spots to take a dip

Australia is blessed with a vast number of stunning swimming holes, lakes, creeks, rivers and beaches. We thought we'd take one for the team and find a few excellent spots for you to cool down.




ustr

How Australia's largest swimming pool was built on a natural mineral spring at Helidon

For a time in the 1960s, a natural spring at the foot of the Great Dividing Range was home to Australia's largest swimming pool and legendary "mini-Woodstock" rock concerts.




ustr

Credit cards, drought, bad loans create crippling debt for rural Australians

In a small town in country Australia an elderly man is praying he won't live to 91, like his father. He doesn't have the money, and it feels like debt is closing in on him.




ustr

Dairy farmer makes one final plea for milk price to increase to $1.50 a litre or industry will not survive

A Queensland dairy farmer says the only way the industry will survive is if people pay $1.50 a litre, with production costs skyrocketing in the drought.




ustr

Australian painter Wayne Malkin claims unofficial world record with matchstick portrait

Queensland painter Wayne Malkin claims a record for creating the world's smallest painting on the end of a matchstick, but he won't make it into the record books.




ustr

Transgender woman had to tick Australian Tax Office's mental illness box to get early access to super

Why does the Australian Tax Office require people to tick a mental illness box for early access to their superannuation to fund gender transition surgery?




ustr

Eumundi's last church closes its doors, as more Australians identify as having no religion

At Eumundi, in Queensland's Sunshine Coast hinterland, 43 per cent of people identify as having no religion, and now the town's last church has called it a day.




ustr

Queensland Government allows timber industry to keep harvesting native forest, says it will save up to 500 Wide Bay-Burnett jobs

Thousands of hectares of native forest north of Noosa, which was due to become national park, will now remain open to the timber industry in order to save hundreds of jobs.




ustr

Australia's only floor price on alcohol has been in place for a year. Is it working?

Researchers say they've found early signs of a positive impact in the NT and health groups want the measure rolled out around the country, but an alcohol lobby group says the research is inconclusive.




ustr

Fish kill farmer files complaint with police alleging he felt 'intimidated' by cotton industry rep

A farmer at the centre of the Menindee fish kill story has lodged a complaint with police, alleging he felt "intimidated" by a staff member of lobby group Cotton Australia.




ustr

NSW election exposes 'Great Dividing Range' between city and rural voters in Australian politics

The re-election of the Berejiklian Government for a third term has provided a morale boost for the federal Liberals, but any relief being felt will be tempered by a much bigger problem: what to do about voter discontent in the bush.