The Fluffy saga may never be over for many of the hundreds of families affected.
Greens candidate Tim Hollo will push for a Commonwealth-supported inquiry into the Mr Fluffy crisis.
The bulk of the loose-fill asbestos sales program has now been completed,a new report says.
A lawyer for the couple who successfully sued a law firm for negligence said it was possible,but not likely,there would be similar suits to follow.
The ACT government will stop paying for the disposal of rubble from privately arranged Mr Fluffy demolitions at the end of the financial year.
An ACT government register published on Thursday included 67 Mr Fluffy homes,66 of which were still standing.
A total of 260 former Mr Fluffy blocks have sold this year.
There were nine new cases of the disease recorded in the ACT in 2017,just down from the record of 10 the year before.
Plus the story of how Johnathan Thurston almost became a Canberra Raider.
For the first time,the government will publish a list distinguishing the Mr Fluffy homes still standing from those that have been demolished.
As the end of the buyback and demolition scheme draws closer,no one knows. Not the homeowners. Not even the ACT government.