Tyson was 11 when he was first locked up. It took seven years to turn things around

Tyson was 11 when he was first locked up. It took seven years to turn things around

Nobody in youth detention asked Tyson about his dreams - they asked about his court dates. Now he wants the prime minister to fix the system.

  • byNatassia Chrysanthos

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Cook’s free Zoo tickets mean the die is well and truly cast for WA

Cook’s free Zoo tickets mean the die is well and truly cast for WA

After almost eight years in power,this government has got lazy,unimaginative,crass and ever-ready to use taxpayer dollars to grab happy headlines and votes.

  • byGary Adshead
Fix WA cost of living now:Social services launch election pitch

Fix WA cost of living now:Social services launch election pitch

The WA community services sector has come out swinging ahead of the state election saying the state has it in its power to act now on people’s suffering.

  • byEmma Young
Up to your eyeballs in debt? Join the club as WA mortgages break record

Up to your eyeballs in debt? Join the club as WA mortgages break record

The average figure West Australians are taking out for mortgages has broken the record,jumping more than $30,000 in just three months.

  • byMichael Genovese
Sixth government backflip in six months,this time on disability commissioner
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Disability

Sixth government backflip in six months,this time on disability commissioner

The Allan government has quietly shelved a plan to axe the state’s disability commissioner on July 1,its sixth major policy walk-back in six months.

  • byBroede Carmody
‘I feel loved’:St Mary’s House of Welcome brings Christmas to Melburnians sleeping rough

‘I feel loved’:St Mary’s House of Welcome brings Christmas to Melburnians sleeping rough

Every Christmas Day,this Fitzroy organisation provides people experiencing homelessness with everything from a three-course lunch to presents to hot showers.

  • byJewel Topsfield
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‘Middle incomes miss out’:Why fewer families are eligible for tax benefit

‘Middle incomes miss out’:Why fewer families are eligible for tax benefit

The government’s largest family assistance scheme which was originally designed to help low and middle-income families now only reaches fewer than half of Australian children.

  • byMary Ward
Private employment services have failed,watchdog is needed:Inquiry head

Private employment services have failed,watchdog is needed:Inquiry head

Julian Hill,who chaired a year-long inquiry into the $7 billion employment service sector,says privatisation has failed the unemployed and the country.

  • byShane Wright
Morrison lashes out at robo-debt ‘political lynching’,rejects royal commission findings

Morrison lashes out at robo-debt ‘political lynching’,rejects royal commission findings

The former prime minister has described the commission’s findings against him as “disproportionate,wrong,unsubstantiated and contradicted by clear evidence”.

  • byJames Massola
‘Wealthy families,private schools’:Have universities forgotten who their students really are?

‘Wealthy families,private schools’:Have universities forgotten who their students really are?

Experts warn funding cuts have led to the rise of universities operating like corporations instead of public institutions. What spiky ideas can fix the sector?

  • bySherryn Groch,Lucy Carroll andNicole Precel
‘She failed to act’:Damning findings for robo-debt public servant now in new $900k job

‘She failed to act’:Damning findings for robo-debt public servant now in new $900k job

The royal commission report found Kathryn Campbell kept the true nature of the robo-debt scheme secret when advising cabinet because she knew Scott Morrison wanted budget savings.

  • byMatthew Knott