General
Changes making it easier for sex assault victims to access their own files pass House of Representatives

Victims of sexual assault in Parliament House will now be able to access case files handed to an internal inquiry, after the government agreed to amend a new law.
Key points:
- People who take part in an inquiry into the workplace culture in Parliament House will no longer lose access to their own documents
- Independent MP Zali Steggall flagged issues with the current bill earlier this week
- The Sex Discrimination Commissioner says there are “systemic issues” in Parliament House
Last week in the Senate the government passed exemptions to the Archives and Other Legislation Amendment Bill.
Those exemptions would have stopped anything handed from ministers’ offices and departments to an inquiry on sexual assault and harassment from being made…
Continue Reading
-
Noosa News20 hours ago
Gippsland livestock agent Nathan Gibbon jailed for defrauding exporting companies
-
Noosa News20 hours ago
Tax office launches probe into case with devastating outcome
-
Noosa News23 hours ago
Commonwealth Bank executive Christopher James McCann gets bail after being charged with grooming girls for sex
-
Business23 hours ago
How I’m preparing my ASX earnings season watchlist