NewsBite

Advertisement

As it happened: Brisbane on Wednesday, April 30

Key posts

Pinned post from

As power bill subsidy ends, Brisbane’s inflation rate goes up

By Shane Wright

The end of the state’s $1000 electricity subsidy has pushed up Brisbane’s inflation rate to one of the highest in the country.

All-important inflation figures have come in a little higher than expected today, potentially throwing a spanner into Reserve Bank expectations of an interest rate cut next month.

In the March quarter, prices rose by a higher-than-expected 0.9 per cent, with the annual inflation rate steady at 2.4 per cent. Food prices were up 1.2 per cent in the quarter, housing lifted by 1.7 per cent, while there was a large 5.2 per cent jump in education.

Brisbane’s inflation rate is higher than that in Sydney and Melbourne.

Brisbane’s inflation rate is higher than that in Sydney and Melbourne.Credit: Courtney Kruk

The biggest factor in today’s figures has been the end of Queensland’s $1000 electricity subsidy, when the net cost to households rose again.

Nationally, power prices jumped by 16.3 per cent in the quarter. Without the end of Queensland’s subsidy, electricity prices would have lifted by just 0.4 per cent.

It means Brisbane’s inflation rate jumped 1.9 per cent to 2.7 per cent for the year, just below Perth’s rate of 2.8 per cent.

Inflation in Sydney and Melbourne is at 2.3 per cent, while it is now at 1.4 per cent in Hobart and 1.7 per cent in Darwin.

Latest posts

Today’s top stories

Thanks for joining us for our live coverage of news in Brisbane today. We’ll return tomorrow morning. In the meantime, here’s a look back at some of the stories that made headlines today.

Brisbane bakery entrepreneur Brooke Bellamy has faced further claims of recipe plagiarism, this time from US-based Sally McKenney of SallysBakeBlog.

Five weeks after Victoria Park was rubber-stamped as the site of Brisbane’s main Olympic stadium, the delivery authority has produced a new logo. But GIICA insists more substantive work is going on behind the scenes.

Australia’s inflation figures have come in a little higher than expected, partly due to the end of a Queensland electricity subsidy, but the Reserve Bank is still expected to cut the cash rate next month.

The coronial inquest into the Bondi Junction Westfield stabbings has heard a top paramedic was forced to wait outside amid fears Queensland-born mass killer Joel Cauchi had an accomplice.

Queensland Reds coach Les Kiss will take over as Wallabies coach in July 2026 and says he has enough time to prepare the Australian team for a home World Cup the following year.

Italian Cardinal Angelo Becciu will have no role in the election of the next pope after it emerged Pope Francis wanted his once-powerful aide to be excluded from the process.

Miles wants parliament to condemn LNP over health failures

By Sean Parnell

Opposition Leader Steven Miles has sought to turn the tables on Premier David Crisafulli over the delayed and over-budget hospital building program.

Loading

While the LNP government seeks access to Labor’s archived cabinet documents over the program, Miles has initiated a debate over LNP election promise to deliver it “on time and on budget”.

Miles today moved that parliament condemn the LNP for failing to honour its promise to deliver 2200 additional hospital beds by 2026, part of 3300 by 2032, and for releasing a damning review without an updated plan.

The LNP will inevitably use its majority in parliament to amend the motion to something more politically palatable before it is passed.

Question Time has so far focused on youth crime, the latest Callide power station explosion, and housing policies.

The LNP wants to open Labor’s cabinet bag for the first time since 2012

By Sean Parnell

The Crisafulli government is expected to formally request access to the archived cabinet documents of the former Labor government to explore its management of the hospital building program.

Loading

After using its numbers in parliament to pass a motion calling on Opposition Leader Steven Miles to consent to any such request by 5pm today, the parties are likely to exchange formal correspondence outlining the precedents, and merit or otherwise, of the move.

It is not yet clear how Miles will respond.

This is the first time a government has sought access to cabinet documents from the other side of politics since July 2012. On that occasion, then health minister Lawrence Springborg obtained documents relating to an IBM contract, with the support of then opposition leader Annastacia Palaszczuk, for a Commission of Inquiry into the health payroll debacle.

The Crisafulli government has vowed to continue with Labor’s hospital building program despite a review finding fault with the planning and budgeting. There is no suggestion it will hold an inquiry.

Advertisement

‘We’re still here to try the cookies’: Customers support Brooki Bakehouse despite copying allegations

By Marissa Calligeros and Neesha Sinnya

As we have reported today, the founder of Brisbane’s Brooki Bakehouse is embroiled in a stoush with Sydney-based RecipeTin Eats creator Nagi Maehashi over claims of copying.

But that did not deter customers from visiting the Fortitude Valley store today.

“We’re still here to try the cookies and take the books the home,” one customer told us.

Brooki Bakehouse owner Brooke Bellamy has denied allegations she copied two recipes from Maehashi’s RecipeTin website for her book Bake with Brooki.

Read more here.

Almost one in three people in Australia born overseas

By Sean Parnell

New data shows 31.5 per cent of people living in Australia last year were born overseas – up from 30.7 per cent the year before.

According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, the overseas-born population in Australia has grown for the third year in a row following the border closures associated with the COVID pandemic.

Most Queensland residents who hail from overseas were born in New Zealand or England.

Most Queensland residents who hail from overseas were born in New Zealand or England. Credit: iStock

For the first time since 1901, Italy has dropped out of Australia’s top 10 countries of birth, with the largest increases over the past decade coming from India, China, the Philippines and Nepal.

In Queensland, the top two countries for people born overseas are still New Zealand and England.

As power bill subsidy ends, Brisbane’s inflation rate goes up

By Shane Wright

The end of the state’s $1000 electricity subsidy has pushed up Brisbane’s inflation rate to one of the highest in the country.

All-important inflation figures have come in a little higher than expected today, potentially throwing a spanner into Reserve Bank expectations of an interest rate cut next month.

In the March quarter, prices rose by a higher-than-expected 0.9 per cent, with the annual inflation rate steady at 2.4 per cent. Food prices were up 1.2 per cent in the quarter, housing lifted by 1.7 per cent, while there was a large 5.2 per cent jump in education.

Brisbane’s inflation rate is higher than that in Sydney and Melbourne.

Brisbane’s inflation rate is higher than that in Sydney and Melbourne.Credit: Courtney Kruk

The biggest factor in today’s figures has been the end of Queensland’s $1000 electricity subsidy, when the net cost to households rose again.

Nationally, power prices jumped by 16.3 per cent in the quarter. Without the end of Queensland’s subsidy, electricity prices would have lifted by just 0.4 per cent.

It means Brisbane’s inflation rate jumped 1.9 per cent to 2.7 per cent for the year, just below Perth’s rate of 2.8 per cent.

Inflation in Sydney and Melbourne is at 2.3 per cent, while it is now at 1.4 per cent in Hobart and 1.7 per cent in Darwin.

Advertisement

Dutton defends members of the Brethren church volunteering

By Olivia Ireland

Turning now to the federal election campaign trail, where Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has defended his party’s volunteers following reports members of the Exclusive Brethren are campaigning for the Liberal and National parties.

The Plymouth Brethren Christian Church, formerly known as the Exclusive Brethren, has dispatched hundreds of its members to pre-polling booths in marginal seats while instructing them to keep secret that they are members of the controversial religion.

Opposition leader Peter Dutton visited MSFIN - Mums Supporting Families In Need - in Seaford, in Victoria, today.

Opposition leader Peter Dutton visited MSFIN - Mums Supporting Families In Need - in Seaford, in Victoria, today.Credit: James Brickwood

The volunteers from the separatist Christian sect although the church objects to voting and tells its members to hate the world.

Earlier today a journalist asked Dutton: “This is a sect which treats women as second-class citizens and doesn’t tolerate homosexuality at all. Surely, you don’t think those are shared values.”

Dutton responded: “The point I make is people will support parties for different reasons and people of Islamic faith are involved in this election.”

“People of no faith, people of the Jewish faith obviously feel particularly aggrieved, as they should, by the antisemitism that we’ve seen in our society over the course of the last couple of years and they’ve seen antisemitic Jew-hating Greens party and the conduct of that party.

“But some people will be supporting the Greens.”

Follow our live coverage of the election campaign here.

Illegal pig hunters caught on Bribie Island

By William Davis

Two illegal pig hunters have been caught in Bribie Island’s national park.

Rangers and police received a tip-off last month about two vehicles entering the national park without number plates and travelling on restricted access roads with pig-hunting dogs and equipment.

Two men were subsequently caught by police and issued fines totalling $9032.

A spokesperson for the Department of the Environment said the duo did not have guns, but were hunting feral pigs with knives.

Feral pigs are a pest in Queensland, but hunting in national parks is illegal.

Bleijie set to take over assessment of Sunshine Coast campground proposal

By Sean Parnell

Deputy Premier Jarrod Bleijie has flagged his intention to call in a development application being considered by Sunshine Coast Regional Council.

While Bleijie has made much of the LNP government’s support for local government, having accused Labor of “riding roughshod” over councils, he has concerns with the proposed 150-site campground at Coochin Creek that may require a state takeover of the assessment process.

The site of the proposed campground at Coochin Creek on the Sunshine Coast.

The site of the proposed campground at Coochin Creek on the Sunshine Coast.

The company behind the project is the Comiskey Group, which owns nearby venues including the Sandstone Point Hotel, Imperial Hotel in Eumundi and the Doonan, as well as the planned Aura Hotel.

The council blocked the group’s previous application for a 100-site campground at Coochin Creek.

Loading

The group won an appeal in the Land and Environment Court, and applied to amend the proposal to 150-sites including 75 cabins.

If Bleijie calls it in, his decision will be final.

Bleijie is considering whether the tourism and employment benefits of the project offset the risks of departing from the area’s rural production designation, which is meant to provide a green break from south-east Queensland urban sprawl, in a site close to Moreton Bay Marine Park and Bribie Island National Park.

The council also blocked the group’s plan for a neighbouring music festival site called Coochin Fields. The group took it to court but backed out of the case earlier this month.

Advertisement

Heritage-listed Cape Moreton Lighthouse set for restoration work

By Sean Parnell

The federal government has called tenders for the restoration of the stone lighthouse on Mulgulpin (Moreton Island), the first of its kind in Queensland.

Built in 1857, the 23-metre tall tower with a cast iron lantern room is a tourist drawcard, having long served as a maritime safety guide in and around Moreton Bay.

The heritage-listed Cape Moreton Lighthouse on Mulgulpin (Moreton Island) in Queensland.

The heritage-listed Cape Moreton Lighthouse on Mulgulpin (Moreton Island) in Queensland.Credit: Queensland Government

A 2023 inspection identified erosion of the stone work, the poor state of cement pointing, deterioration of the external stone staircase and rising damp.

The Australian Maritime Safety Authority, which conducted its own more recent inspection, has told potential contractors it wants the restoration work completed in a matter of months.

Most Viewed in National

Loading

Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/national/queensland/brisbane-news-live-queensland-s-best-and-bravest-to-receive-medals-20250429-p5lv3l.html