South Australian Premier Steven Marshall will argue against a legal bid from the Barngarla Aboriginal Determination Corporation to stop drilling on sacred land in the state’s far-north.
Mr Marshall, who is also the Aboriginal Affairs Minister, will argue that the Barngarla people should not be allowed to proceed with their legal challenge, after he approved mineral exploration at Lake Torrens.
In January this year, the Barngarla people launched a Supreme Court judicial review in an attempt to stop exploration company Kelaray, a subsidiary of Argonaut Resources, from drilling on a sacred site.
The site is listed as an Aboriginal heritage place but is not protected under native title law.
However, three are old cases and are not longer Infectious.
There are now 32 people at the medi-hotel.
The special hotel has 90 rooms.
But because of the way coronavirus patients are spread out, after transmission occurred between rooms in other hotel s in other states, it s now close to capacity with that amount of patients
Before the figures were announced, South Australian Premier Steven Marshall said he didn t want to see it going above that 30 mark, adding that would trigger discussions with the federal government.
South Australia takes 530 people Australians returning from overseas a week, with more than 34,000 trying to get back.
Jab, one-two GIVE IT ANOTHER SHOT
National cabinet will hold its first biweekly meeting today to discuss Australia’s failed COVID-19 vaccine rollout, with the ABC noting that mass vaccination centres will be discussed and
Scott Morrison is facing resistance from states with regards to his push for a home quarantine system.
Yesterday, New South Wales recorded three locally acquired cases, after a family was found to have become infected while staying in hotel quarantine. Meanwhile, Victoria announced it will lift the pause on AstraZeneca for those both under and over 50 now that issues around training and liability have now been resolved and open three mass-vaccination hubs on Wednesday.
By Raquel Mustillo
PREMIER Steven Marshall has praised the efforts of Kimberly-Clark Australia Millicent Mill employees in producing almost half a billion toilet rolls in 2020 amid COVID-19 panic buying.
The state leader addressed employees at the facility’s 60th anniversary event on Tuesday, telling the crowd he was grateful for the continued production of toilet paper at the Millicent Mill.
“The country was relying on you guys to provide on extraordinary levels and of course, no stress there whatsoever for this workforce,” Mr Marshall said.
“We all got to know how important tissue was last year and I want to say thank you to every single person here who made sure the operation continued through what was a very difficult year for manufacturing right around the world.
Gupta calls Whyalla a spiritual home in race against time
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Steel magnate Sanjeev Gupta has stepped up a public charm offensive while he frantically tries to cement replacement funding for his teetering global empire, calling Whyalla his âspiritual homeâ and saying the steelworks and mining operations are benefiting from âstrong tailwindsâ in steel and iron ore markets.
In an open letter to people in South Australia, where he bought the Whyalla steelworks in mid-2017 after it was under administration for 16 months following the collapse of Arrium Ltd, he said he was âmoving in the right directionâ in the refinancing efforts. He is attempting to refinance between $400 million to $500 million for the steelworks and the Tahmoor coal operations in NSW which sit together in one of his Australian companies.