It was going to be burned. Now it’ll be houses
Huge amounts of Kangaroo Island timber was to go up in smoke – now a funding breakthrough means about 2000 SA homes can be built.
Huge amounts of Kangaroo Island timber was to go up in smoke – now a funding breakthrough means about 2000 SA homes can be built.
A surf lifesaving club’s new look has been revealed, as part of a plan for a contentious $12m foreshore upgrade dividing the community.
In the city, people worry about dancing. But in the regions, Covid rules stop kids seeing their dads for months and people can’t access medical care.
Truckies say it’s outrageous they’re now being turned away from Covid-19 vaccination clinics and testing sites based on inaccurate advice.
Another 500 Pacific Islands workers are needed to help harvest fruit over the coming months or, growers warn, their produce will go to waste.
A tracking-app trial designed so travellers can skip mandatory hotel stays in favour of phone tracking using facial recognition is set to be expanded to international SA arrivals.
A water sports park planned for Murray Bridge will move from vision to reality after proponents took the local council to court to shore up the development’s approval.
Sneaky developers and homeowners are exploiting confusing rules meant for country areas to cut down trees in the city fringe and foothills.
The heartbreak of long-term separation from family – and huge delays in responses to travel requests – is taking a mental toll for the state’s fly in, fly out workers.
The company behind a huge Kangaroo Island timber plantation has begun burning it after its export deepwater port was rejected.
Original URL: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/journalists/michelle-etheridge/page/20