Bit of a favour to ask. If you know a year 12 student trying to decide what to do next year, send them this. It might just help them make up their mind. We’re going to give anyone starting study to become a secondary teacher a scholarship to match the cost of their degree. It’ll be available for students starting study in 2024 and 2025 who go on to teach at a Victorian government secondary school.
Teachers change lives. Simple as that. And as we get closer to opening 100 new schools by 2026, we need more. That’s why anyone starting study to become a secondary teacher will be able to get a scholarship to match the cost of their degree. It’ll be available for students starting study in 2024 and 2025 who go on to teach at a Victorian government secondary school. It means one less barrier for Victorians thinking of a career in teaching. And more great teachers for the education state.
The first of two huge TBMs are on the move to the North East Link project. At 15.6 metres across, they’re some one of the biggest in the southern hemisphere. And soon it’ll be starting work to fix the missing link in our freeway network.
Glen Huntly’s palm trees are back home after a bit of a holiday. The palms are 80 to 100 years old, and spent 15 months in Keysborough to protect them during level crossing works. With the crossings gone, 65 trees are now back in place. And the locals are making themselves right at home. Treemendous.
Glen Huntly’s palm trees are back home after a bit of a holiday. The palms are 80 to 100 years old, and spent 15 months in Keysborough to protect them during level crossing works. With the crossings gone, 65 trees are now back in place. And the locals are making themselves right at home. Treemendous.
Glen Huntly’s palm trees are back home after a bit of a holiday. The palms are 80 to 100 years old, and spent 15 months in Keysborough to protect them during level crossing works. With the crossings gone, 65 trees are now back in place. And the locals are making themselves right at home. Treemendous.
Glen Huntly’s palm trees are back home after a bit of a holiday. The palms are 80 to 100 years old, and spent 15 months in Keysborough to protect them during level crossing works. With the crossings gone, 65 trees are now back in place. And the locals are making themselves right at home. Treemendous.
Just passing by. Whales are on their annual migration past Victoria and down to Antarctica as the weather starts to warm up. You can see them from the Great Ocean Road, Phillip Island, Gippsland, Portland and Warrnambool right through until October.
Just passing by. Whales are on their annual migration past Victoria and down to Antarctica as the weather starts to warm up. You can see them from the Great Ocean Road, Phillip Island, Gippsland, Portland and Warrnambool right through until October.
Just passing by. Whales are on their annual migration past Victoria and down to Antarctica as the weather starts to warm up. You can see them from the Great Ocean Road, Phillip Island, Gippsland, Portland and Warrnambool right through until October.
Just passing by. Whales are on their annual migration past Victoria and down to Antarctica as the weather starts to warm up. You can see them from the Great Ocean Road, Phillip Island, Gippsland, Portland and Warrnambool right through until October.
It might look like any other apartment development, but this one is special. Because this one includes 73 new social housing apartments – even though it’s being built by private developers. And today we’ve announced we’re going to make this happen far more often. We’re setting up new loans to encourage developments just like this one which will include homes for Victorians who need them most. It means when developers and investors are deciding what to build, it’ll make more sense to include social housing. It’ll add another 6,000 social and affordable to the thousands we’re building as part of the Big Housing Build. And most importantly, more Victorians will have a place to call home.
It might look like any other apartment development, but this one is special. Because this one includes 73 new social housing apartments – even though it’s being built by private developers. And today we’ve announced we’re going to make this happen far more often. We’re setting up new loans to encourage developments just like this one which will include homes for Victorians who need them most. It means when developers and investors are deciding what to build, it’ll make more sense to include social housing. It’ll add another 6,000 social and affordable to the thousands we’re building as part of the Big Housing Build. And most importantly, more Victorians will have a place to call home.
Running out of medication like the pill shouldn’t be such a chore. And soon, it won’t be. As part of Victoria’s Pharmacy Pilot you’ll be able to pick up more of the pill and get medicine for minor skin conditions and UTIs without a trip to the doctor. It’ll free up GPs for patients who need them most, and it just makes sense.
Big fan of this. We’re getting on with delivering Australia’s first offshore wind farm. And that means building the first offshore wind port. The Port of Hastings will be home to the Victorian Renewable Energy Terminal. It’ll have the infrastructure needed to assemble the huge towers and turbines, before they’re taken out to sea and installed. Offshore wind will mean cheaper, cleaner energy for Victorians – and thousands of jobs.
Keep an eye out for an oversized parcel. Because 100 Neighbourhood Batteries are on the way. We’re installing them right across the state, in places where there’s a high uptake in solar and other renewables. It means that excess renewable energy can be stored up during the day, and fed back to the neighbourhood when it’s needed. It’s like having a big charger at the end of your street. Except this is much cheaper and cleaner to run.
We’re building more schools than any other state, and that means we need more teachers. So, we’re making that first step in a career in teaching that little bit easier. We’re making teaching degrees free. Here’s the detail.
We’re building more schools than any other state, and that means we need more teachers. So, we’re making that first step in a career in teaching that little bit easier. We’re making teaching degrees free. Here’s the detail.
We’re building more schools than any other state, and that means we need more teachers. So, we’re making that first step in a career in teaching that little bit easier. We’re making teaching degrees free. Here’s the detail.
We’re building more schools than any other state, and that means we need more teachers. So, we’re making that first step in a career in teaching that little bit easier. We’re making teaching degrees free. Here’s the detail.
We’re building more schools than any other state, and that means we need more teachers. So, we’re making that first step in a career in teaching that little bit easier. We’re making teaching degrees free. Here’s the detail.
We’re building more schools than any other state, and that means we need more teachers. So, we’re making that first step in a career in teaching that little bit easier. We’re making teaching degrees free. Here’s the detail.
The Silo Art Trail is Australia’s biggest art gallery. It stretches 700 kilometres across 16 different towns. And some of the silos date all the way back to the 1930s. So when we say these silos tell stories, we mean it. The murals are inspired by local heroes – past and present. And put some of our smallest towns on the map. So take a drive and stay a while. And enjoy our beautiful state.
If you saw the Melbourne Now exhibition – you’re part of history. Because it was one of the most visited exhibitions ever at the Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia. Created by more than 200 of Victoria’s top creatives, for the most creative state in the country. Makes sense.