The Whitsundays Comes Alive For The Coral Sea Marina Resort Airlie Beach Triathlon Festival This Weekend! The day we’ve all been waiting for is finally here! Tomorrow, the Coral Sea Marina Resort Airlie Beach Triathlon Festival kicks off, and the energy is already electric. The iconic shoreline of Airlie Beach is buzzing with athletes, supporters, and organisers, all preparing for a weekend that promises to be a true highlight on the triathlon calendar. This festival is a celebration of our st
Read the full storyHi Everyone, It’s great to be back and feeling refreshed after a quick—but absolutely wonderful—two-week holiday in Italy. My family and I stayed in a small villa in a town three hours north of Rome called Radicondoli. With only 950 residents, it felt like by the end of the trip, we’d made friends with most of them! This was the first holiday in recent memory where I truly stopped and did nothing. Usually, our trips are active—skiing, bodyboarding, bushwalking—but this time (after 35 hours of
Read the full storyA major lighting upgrade at the Bowen Sporting Complex has been completed, paving the way for night games and future growth at one of the town’s key community hubs. The project delivered brand-new field lighting that meets the standards required for day/night cricket matches, as well as enabling night events for rugby and other sports, giving local players and visiting teams greater flexibility and opportunities to train and compete after dark. The upgrade was made possible through a $250,000
Read the full storyTec-NQ House grade 11 boarding student Max has his boots firmly planted in two very different worlds: the rugged, hands‑on life of a central Queensland cattle station, and the bustling day‑to‑day routine of boarding school in Townsville. “I live on a station north of Clermont called Mazeppa,” Max explained. “When I’m not here at school, I live there with my family.” Home for Max is anything but quiet. Mazeppa Station is a working property that runs both cattle and crops, keeping everyone on th
Read the full storyImage: Photo credit: Sam Gillespie
It’s become a Christmas tradition that the Walkerston community looks forward to every year.
On Saturday, Santa and his merry crew at Walkerston Fire Station criss-crossed the streets of Walkerston in their tinsel-covered fire trucks, lights and sirens alight, handing out lollies to eagerly awaiting families lining the streets. Lollies were donated to Walkerston Fire Station by the community and returned to the community in an annual display of community Christmas spirit.
Image: Jye Howes donated his day off to cut the hair of Westminster Lode residents earlier this week
Following recent revelations of alleged neglect at Westminster Lodge Retirement Village, a local barber donated his skills and his day off to visit the village and cut some of the residents’ hair.
“The story behind this place was something that really touched my heart,” said barber Jye Howes.
Mr Howes visited the village with his equipment, making his way to some of the units in the village to cut the hair of the residents.
“I will continue to visit this place and donate my time to the residents every fortnight to keep them looking fresh,” said Mr Howes,
“It's not much, I know, but a little can go a long way and I wanted to spread some Christmas cheer.”
The service is one of many gestures and donations being made by the Mackay community, with many local individuals, families and businesses donating money, services, food and Christmas presents.
“It’s actually amazing, especially just over a week until Christmas, everyone has pulled together as a community,” said one volunteer, Jessica Taylor.
“The whole community has done an amazing job.”
“It’s crazy to see what the community is capable of, there’s great people out there,” added fellow volunteer Travis Miller.
“I take my hat off to the Mackay community for everything they are doing for these people and the change we are making,” said Mr Howes.
Image 1: Charlotte Aish, Chad Delforce and their children live on a property 12km outside Eungella. Photo credit: Sam Gillespie
Negotiations have begun between the Queensland Government and affected landholders following the Government’s announcement of the Pioneer-Burdekin Pumped Hydro Scheme in September.
The project is estimated to affect over 54 houses across 79 properties throughout Netherdale, Eungella and Mount Dalrymple with Government officials and contractors approaching residents to discuss terms of property access to conduct studies as well as initiating negotiations for property resumption and compulsory acquisition.
An information session was held in Eungella last Monday, December 12 to provide residents with landholder law information while making these negotiations.
“I know how precious land is and what it means to families,” said Shine Lawyers Practice Leader for Landholder Law Diane Skene.
“We’re not saying that it is (proceeding), but it’s definitely a bit scary.”
Charlotte Aish and Chad Delforce own a property 12km outside Eungella where they have raised their two young children for the last six years.
“Out of all the properties that we’d seen, there was just something about it and we just knew that was the one that we wanted to set up a life on,” said Ms Aish.
The family found out their property is proposed to be inundated by the project’s upper reservoir B and have received a letter to request access.
“We had no consultation on any of the contents of the proposal,” said Mr Delforce.
“Part of it was 48 hours’ notice to access and we informed them that that was completely unrealistic, so we’ve asked for changes to be made to that if we were going to look at agreeing to it which we’re not sure on at the moment.
“To think that we’re going to be in this situation for another two, three, four, five years, it’s going to have a really big impact.
“It’s still early days and we haven’t really obtained formal legal advice which is part of the reason we’ve attended tonight.”
Shine Lawyers have received enquiries from a number of residents in the area, prompting members of their Landholder Law team to travel to Eungella from Brisbane, Toowoomba and Dalby to facilitate the session.
“It was enough to bring us all up here, landholder to support landholder,” said Ms Skene.
“I think that having us on the ground up here, it won’t be our last trip up, it just depends on how fast the project moves and whether the community needs support in any objections, so I think we probably need to keep our fingers on the pulse just to make sure we’re there to help.”
● Seek legal advice for property access agreements and negotiations
● Inform Queensland Hydro officials of unique flora, fauna and other aspects of your property
● Keep a diary of interactions with government officials
● Talk to your accountant about tax implications
● Band together as a community
Twas two nights before Christmas and at the Mackay Life house,
Computers were switched off, including the mouse.
The newspapers were delivered that morning with great care,
In the hopes our readers were informed for the New Year.
As you nestle between the sheets all snug in your bed,
Dreams of a Christmas weekend dance in your head.
Those who featured in our good deed surely made the list of nice,
We know Santa reads our newspaper and has been checking it twice.
As Christmas Day approaches, St Nick readies his sleigh,
With reindeer fed and watered, it’s almost time for up-up-and-away.
"Now, DASHER! now, DANCER! now, PRANCER and VIXEN!
On, COMET! on CUPID! on, DONNER and BLITZEN!”
Keep an ear out for the jingle of bells on the roof,
As well as the prancing and pawing of each little hoof.
Santa doesn’t glide down chimney’s here in Mackay,
He manages to slide through the door with cunning and sly.
Our team wishes you and your family a Christmas filled with glee,
We hope you find something special to cherish under your tree.
Thanks for reading and for sharing your stories,
The pages would be empty if it weren’t for your glory.
As 2022 comes to a close and a new chapter starts,
We hope you have a wonderful New Year with joy in your hearts.
From Amanda and the team at Mackay Life xo
The Mackay Hospital and Health Service (HHS) is currently seeking expressions of interest from people who would like to join its Maternity Community Reference Group.
The group, which was established in 2020, enables consumers and community representatives to contribute towards enhancing maternity care for those in the Mackay, Whitsunday and Isaac regions.
Mackay HHS Interim Chief Executive Paula Foley said listening to the voices of mothers, fathers and support people helps shape the care being provided at our facilities.
“We welcome participation from people across all sectors of our community as we work on shaping the future of maternity care,” Ms Foley said.
“Having mothers, fathers and support people contributing their knowledge and experience Is essential to planning services that are safe for the women in our care.
“We particularly want to hear from consumers living in our catchment area who have accessed any of our services in the past three years, whether it’s though our hospitals in Mackay and Proserpine, our rural maternity care services, the Birth Centre or Kem Kem Yanga services.”
The Maternity Community Reference Group will have the opportunity to partner with us on a range of projects including the Mackay Base Hospital expansion, and service improvement activities.
The Maternity Community Reference Group meets regularly with MHHS leadership and maternity representatives, and appointment is for a two-year term.
To find out more please complete the expression of interest form on our website https://www.mackay.health.qld.gov.au/join-our-maternity-community-reference-group/
Applicants can also email mhhsengagement@health.qld.gov.au or phone 4885 6801.
Applications close on Wednesday, January 11, 2023.
Image: Federal Member for Dawson Andrew Willcox
As energy continues to be a geopolitical battleground, an intervention on the energy industry passed through the House last week, with the Greens supporting a Federal Labor government’s decision to cap the price of coal and gas.
The temporary caps on the wholesale price of gas and coal of $12 per gigajoule and $125 per tonne respectively are meant to combat the skyrocketing cost of electricity, however Federal Member for Dawson Andrew Willcox warned of the detrimental effects of price caps in an address to the Parliament stating that they would drive business offshore and add pressure to the supply shortage.
Mr Willcox said Labor’s ineffective set of measures will only hurt Australians’ hip pocket.
“Price caps are receiving their rightful outcry across the community, from industry groups, to economists, to businesses and people trying to pay their bills,” Mr Willcox said.
“Some have labelled Labor’s response as a declaration of war on the gas and coal industry. They are more interested in demonising these groups who do so much to produce wealth for our nation. The caps do a lot to please activists, however they do not provide security to our energy supply.
“The root cause of the issue we face is supply. If there is an oversupply, the price goes down. If there is an undersupply, the price goes up. We have an undersupply, so bring on more coal and gas.
“We don’t want to end up in a situation where we are gas rationing because of the shortages that will occur when there is not enough gas being produced.”
Mr Willcox added that in our market-based economy, these price controls will drive away investment, reduce supply and send business overseas.
“That means our national profits will reduce dramatically, and the cost of living will increase for Australian households and businesses.
“Labor is about to get a major lesson in how markets work and unfortunately Australians will be collateral damage, paying the price for their ignorance.”
Image: Travis Miller and Jessica Taylor have rallied behind Westminster Lodge, a retirement village experiencing numerous instances of neglect. Photo credit: Sam Gillespie
A Facebook post requesting the loan of a barbecue for Christmas has uncovered a distressing case of alleged neglect in a Mackay aged care rental village.
Elvira Bates posted in Facebook group Mackay Noticeboard requesting the use of a barbecue for Christmas, saying “as our kitchen/dining room has been closed for months now, residents that have no family or are unable to travel Christmas day, will not have a Christmas meal.”
The post garnered hundreds of comments of shock and support and drove many locals to assist including Travis Miller and Jessica Taylor.
“We are just complete strangers, came here concerned about the barbecue, but coming here, it was just crazy, what they’re actually going through,” said Mr Miller.
“We saw it was a bigger picture than it actually was,” added Ms Taylor.
Westminster Lodge is an aged care rental village home to 37 residents aged between their mid-60s and mid-90s.
A meal service was provided as part of the residents’ rent, with three meals being served a day in a communal kitchen, dining and recreation space.
This meal service ceased in September and residents were given 24 hours’ notice that they would be left to fend for themselves.
Each room is equipped with a kitchenette that includes a microwave, mini fridge, toaster and kettle, which the Westminster Lodge Manager said is enough for residents to be self-sufficient.
“It’s an independent living village,” she said.
“They have one dining room, one lounge, a little kitchenette, a bar fridge, microwave – it’s a village, not a nursing home.”
Management of the village changed hands in April 2022 and the manager said at the time, all residents would eat the provided meals.
The number of residents eating the provided meals had dropped to around 20, which she said is why she ceased the service.
“As a business, if we don’t have enough people, we can’t run it, unless people want to pay more money,” she said.
“I want to look after them, but the payment would have to go up for the food.”
The manager went on to say the microwave meals some residents have been forced to eat since the kitchen closure would be “much better” than what was being served.
“Our food, it’s the same every week, repeat and repeat, it’s a bore,” she said.
“That’s why I say, okay, we’ll close and find a solution.
“It’s a business; I’m just a manager.
“The cooking is my commercial activity, not a charity.”
The management of Westminster Lodge has since been listed for sale on Gumtree, the manager saying she’s “sick of it”.
“Maybe someone who buys can do it, let them do it,” she said.
“I don’t want to stop it, it’s my income.”
Since the meal service stopped, the residents’ rent has been adjusted, but many issues remain.
Residents are not permitted to use the common kitchen, and, despite the manager’s claims, Ms Taylor said their rooms are insufficiently equipped.
“The rooms are not catered for cooking at all,” said Ms Taylor.
“When they shut it down, they were left to fend for themselves.”
Last week, volunteers saw to the repair and restoration of the “run down” facilities including fridge and freezer seals, air conditioning, gas supply, fire extinguishers and smoke alarms, security cameras and hot water.
There are two emergency phones on the premises, both of which have reportedly been disconnected.
Faulty chairlifts and poor lighting make it difficult for residents, visitors and emergency services to access the village.
Maintenance of the village and the apartments has largely been left the responsibility of residents and, more recently, volunteers with a reported lack of communication between the manager and body corporate.
Additionally, without their daily meals in the common room, residents lost their routine interactions with other residents with many opting to stay in their rooms.
“They don’t utilise this area anymore,” said Mr Miller.
“No one’s bonding … they’re not mingling, there’s no dinner here so there’s none of that time to come in, have a feed and mingle with other residents.”
To address this, Ms Taylor and Mr Miller hosted a dinner in the common room for the residents, a gesture that was met with tears of appreciation from some residents.
“That dining room was full,” said Ms Taylor.
“There was laughter … and it was nice, it was happy.”
The dinner was cut short, however, as Ms Liu reportedly “stormed into the dining room” and “ordered everyone out of the kitchen.”
“As soon as (the manager) turned up and walked in, 90% of (residents) got up and walked out, they were just too frightened,” said Ms Taylor.
The village’s locks have since been changed to prohibit residents and volunteers access to the common area.
The son of a Westminster Lodge resident, Mark Alterator, and his wife Suzie Penny were made aware of the issues at Westminster Lodge prior to the ceasing of the food service.
“Everyone keeps going on about the kitchen and the food, that’s only a very small part of what’s going on here,” said Ms Penny.
Mr Alterator and Ms Penny contacted Member for Mirani Stephen Andrew who spoke to the Lodge’s body corporate, managed by body corporate management company Whittles Group, who plan on taking legal action against the manager.
“Even though it’s out of my patch, the welfare of the people of Queensland is still my remit,” said Mr Andrews.
“These people need to have a manager that has actually got to stand by the contract that she actually signed, they need to go back to a normal subsistence of life so they can interact with each other, they can have their daily meals, three meals a day.
“They’re issuing a notice of breach.”
Image 1: Caneland Central has been purchased for $280 million
Image 2: Sentinel CEO Warren Ebert said Caneland completely dominates its market
Caneland Central has been acquired by Sentinel Property Group after almost a year on the market.
The shopping centre had been owned and managed by Lendlease’s APPF Retail fund since 2001, with Sentinel bolstering its $1 billion plus commercial real estate portfolio in Northern Australia with the $280 million purchase.
Sentinel CEO Warren Ebert said Caneland Central is the premier shopping and lifestyle destination in the Mackay region.
“Caneland Central completely dominates its market,” he said.
“Every man, woman and child in Mackay comes to Caneland four times a month.
“You could never duplicate this centre and you also cannot find another 14ha site like this in the city, let alone even close to the city.”
With 202 tenants and a gross floor area of 65,964 sqm, Caneland Central is the largest of its type in the region, servicing a catchment of more than 175,000 people.
The retail hub first opened in 1979 and has since undergone significant redevelopments including a $230 million expansion in 2011 which introduced a new food court and dining precinct, as well as the Myer department store.
Sentinel plans to carry out immediate improvements to the centre including a renewable energy upgrade through the installation of a roof mounted solar system, which the Group has also provided at its DFO retail complex in Cairns.
A new moving walkway is also being installed in the centre.
Mr Ebert said major national and international tenants had already inquired about leasing space at Caneland Central.
“Caneland Central dominates the Mackay CBD and is the central focal point for retail spending and leisure for the wider region which spans 386 km north to Townsville and 336 km south to Rockhampton,” Mr Ebert said.
“The trade area population of the centre is around 154,110 persons which is projected to grow to around 183,410 persons by 2036.
“Bernard Salt, one of Australia's leading social commentators, recently forecast Mackay to be in the Top 20 sized cities in Australia by 2054.”
APPF Retail Fund Manager Anne MacSporran said “The centre has been a strong performer for APPF Retail due to its mix of retail, lifestyle and dining and core position at the heart of Mackay’s local community.
“Despite recent market volatility, the outlook for Australian retail remains positive, with sales remaining robust post the pandemic.”
The purchase of Caneland Central isn’t Sentinel’s first foray into the Mackay Market, with the Property Group’s portfolio also including Northpoint Homemaker Centre, Kings 4WD Supa Centre and Birch Carroll & Coyle cinema complex.
Image: Mayor’s Charity Ball committee members Dale Cramer (left) and Richard Wainwright (right) with Australia Street Aid Project director Kayleigh Brewster (centre)
Mayor’s Charity Ball committee members (left to right), Tracey Dean, Brendan Hughes, Dale Cramer and Mayor Greg Williamson with Ronald McDonald House Charities Community Engagement Executive Samantha Lee (centre)
After raising a record amount of more than $120,000 for local charities in 2022, the Mayor’s Charity Ball committee has announced the beneficiaries for the 2023 event.
Mayor Greg Williamson said the aim of the event was to fund two charities for two years, to enable significant funds to be raised for each charity and to make a real difference in the community.
“After careful consideration the committee has chosen two worthy beneficiaries for the 2023 Ball,” Mayor Williamson said.
“Proceeds will be split 50-50 between Ronald McDonald House Charities (RMHC) and new beneficiary, Australian Street Aid Project,” he said.
“HeartKids Mackay drops out this year after completing their two-year tenure, but it’s exciting to see the positive impact of the funds raised over the past two events.
“For example, they have been able to employ a local convenor and set up their previously unfunded organisation that looks after 300 local kids suffering from congenital heart disease.
“Our new beneficiary, Australian Street Aid Project, is a local Mackay charity in urgent need of funds to help support people experiencing homelessness.”
Australian Street Aid Project (ASAP) was established in 2018 by Mackay nurse, Kayleigh Brewster.
Miss Brewster said it was an honour to have ASAP nominated as one of the charities for the 2023 Mayor’s Charity Ball.
“I founded ASAP because I had some experiences with people who were suffering badly due to homelessness,” Miss Brewster said.
“After this I wanted to create an organisation that filled some of the many gaps that were visible, whilst also providing a community of support for people who were marginalised and vulnerable.
“The funds received from the 2023 event will help to create a much-needed homelessness healthcare and case management program for the Mackay region which will greatly reduce suffering and increase physical and mental health for people experiencing homelessness in our region.
“This program will help individuals suffering from complex comorbidities in particular, as it aims to help increase their quality of life and their chances of gaining sustainable accommodation.”
RMHC North Australia Chief Executive Officer Tamara South was also delighted with the announcement.
“Our sincerest thanks to Mayor Greg Williamson for selecting RMHC North Australia for a second year as a beneficiary of the Mayor’s Charity Ball,’’ she said.
“Now that construction of the facility has been completed, funds raised from the 2023 event will make a vital difference in the ongoing operations of our Ronald McDonald Family Room at Mackay Base Hospital.”
James Cook University scientists will lead seagrass restoration research spanning tropical Australia’s two oceans.
Researchers from JCU’s Centre for Tropical Water and Aquatic Ecosystem Research (TropWATER) will investigate restoration techniques for key tropical seagrass species, from Queensland’s Great Barrier Reef across to the north of Western Australia.
Their aim is to develop a blueprint for coastal managers to rapidly restore seagrass meadows in high-priority regions.
TropWATER’s Associate Professor Michael Rasheed said future-proofing highly diverse seagrass meadows is crucial to reversing the global downward trend in tropical seagrasses.
“Seagrasses are critical ecosystems,” he said. “They provide habitat for fish, they power coastal marine productivity, and they sequester carbon to help combat climate change – but they’re under increasing pressure from extreme weather events, coastal development and declining water quality.”
Associate Professor Rasheed said climate models predict that future conditions will see more frequent seagrass loss in tropical Australia, making it essential to have tools at hand for effective intervention and restoration.
“We’re investigating the most effective ways to restore different seagrass species, and developing the tools needed for rapid restoration on local and regional levels,” he said.
Professor Rasheed said the project would focus on tropical seagrasses, as most previous seagrass restoration projects have occurred in temperate regions.
“Tropical seagrasses can be very different to temperate seagrasses. They have different growth strategies, and they have the potential for much faster recovery once established.
“Some restoration methods applied in temperate systems may not be applicable or transferable to tropical seagrass meadows, which makes our work all the more valuable.
“We’ll investigate methods such as using seeds and cuttings, and new ways they can be used in the field, much the same as many land plants and nurseries operate.”
“We’re going to develop new techniques for tropical seagrass restoration, a blueprint for seagrass-friendly marine infrastructure, and restoration decision tools that can be applied at local and regional scales.”
The project builds on a long-term collaboration with industry partners Ports North and North Queensland Bulk Ports Corporation (NQBP).
“We are proud to support this ground-breaking research that aims to provide practical solutions to safeguard seagrasses and the Reef,” said Simona Trimarchi, NQBP’s Senior Manager of Sustainability and Environment.
The research is a significant next step in TropWATER’s long-term partnership with industry and will benefit from the decades of data already gathered.
“We take our environmental responsibilities seriously,” said Paul Doyle, Ports North’s General Manager of Corporate Affairs and Sustainability.
“Together with JCU’s TropWATER Centre we’ve supported seagrass monitoring and research for almost three decades across the ports of tropical Queensland.”
The project is funded by a more than $450,000 linkage grant from the Federal Government’s Australian Research Council.
The long-awaited projects for road safety improvements in the Bowen area will forge ahead in early 2023, but it is looking likely they will take over a year to complete – a timeline the Federal Member for Dawson said is “not good enough”.
The state government awarded contracts to two projects last week, announcing works between Bowen Connection Road and Champion Street intersections.
Construction ceased in February 2022 after principal contractor WBHO Infrastructure Pty Ltd went into voluntary administration.
New contractor FKG Civil will now deliver six kilometres of safety improvements in the area which include road widening, wide centre line treatments, guard rails, protected turn lanes, removal of roadside hazards and an upgrade to the Bowen Connection Road and Don Street intersection.
They are expected to be complete in early 2024 but Federal Member for Dawson, Andrew Wilcox, said this is too long for residents to endure.
“While I am relieved that new contractors have been appointed and works will recommence it is just not good enough to expect locals to put up with this,” he said.
“If this road was in the southeast corner, they would not be waiting years for six kilometres of safety improvements to be completed.
“The hard reality is locals are over it. We have been dealing with dangerous road conditions and lowered speed limits with no action for almost 12 months and to hear the completion date keeps getting dragged out is very frustrating.”
Willcox took his frustrations to social media where the community responded with their comments, many stating that the current situation is dangerous and the speed restriction pointless in some areas.
“I find the tall red bollards very difficult to see through at the intersection of Bowen. They have been there for so long it’s unbelievable. I breathe a sigh of relief every time I successfully make the right turn to continue the Bruce Highway south,” said one disappointed road user.
“If the roads can’t be fixed, can someone please revise the speed limits? Doing 60 in some and 80 in other sections with no workers and no work happening is ridiculous,” said another.
Federal Member for Dawson Andrew Willcox holds a sign up to vent his frustrations about long delays to roadworks along the Bruce Highway. Photo supplied
Anglican Church Whitsunday
8 Main Street, Proserpine
Christmas Eve at 7pm
Christmas Day at 8am
Liberty Church Whitsunday
19 Philip Street, Proserpine
Christmas Day at 9.30am
New Year’s Day at 9.30am
Proserpine Whitsunday Uniting Church
Christmas Eve at 7pm at St Paul’s Anglican Church
Christmas Day at 8am at St James Uniting Church
Christmas Day at 8am at St Paul’s Anglican Church
Whitsunday Baptist Church
4 Martin’s Lane, Cannonvale
Christmas Day at 9am
Whitsunday Impact Church
202 Bruce Highway, Proserpine
Christmas Carols on Friday, December 23 at 6pm
A trusted rural charity has distributed more than 700 bales of hay to Central West New South Wales farmers, helping to make Christmas a little brighter for flood-affected producers.
A hay drop was held at the Central West Livestock Exchange in Forbes on Friday, December 16.
Ten road trains delivered more than 480 tonnes of hay to the saleyards for Rural Aid’s registered primary producers.
Forbes cattle breeder Danielle Beard said her property is still covered in floodwaters and thick layers of mud, smothering any grass underneath.
“75 per cent of our property is under water and we’re going to have water on our place for another seven months.”
She said the bales of hay were exactly what her family needed to help them recover from the flooding event.
“We’re just so grateful for this hay,” Ms Beard said.
Rural Aid CEO John Warlters said flood affected farmers are facing a difficult recovery that will last well after Christmas.
“Rural Aid has brought back its Buy a Bale campaign, which was first created in the Millennium Drought, to help raise funds to support farmers impacted by these record-breaking floods,” Mr Warlters said.
“Christmas is going to be an enormously difficult time for thousands of our farming families.”
To support Rural Aid or make a donation go to: www.buyabale.com.au
Merry Christmas Everyone, from all of us to all of you!
We really appreciate you picking up the paper every week and we hope we delivered another year of exciting local news stories – we aim to support as many events and cover as many community issues as possible so please reach out to us if there is anything you would like us to cover for you.
I received a call last week saying that since the Bowen Independent stopped running, many of you in the north of the Whitsundays had been feeling abandoned and like you’d lost your local paper.
That was until we showed up!
We’ve received so many calls lately from Bowen and Collinsville – residents looking to us to relay their concerns to the broader community – whether that be a vandalised sign or the flying fox problem or a proud mother wanting us to cover her son’s sporting success.
Every time I receive one of these calls, I am thrilled to hear how our newspaper reaches every corner of the region and that many people consider us their local newspaper now.
While our office is based in Cannonvale, our team are all around the region and if not in person, we are always at the end of the phone so please call us anytime.
Once again, thank you for a fabulous year delivering your local newspaper and I would also like to say a huge thanks to our amazing team – everyone always gives 100 per cent and cares deeply about what they do.
See you in the new year!
Rach
Quote of the week: “May you never be too grown up to search the skies on Christmas Eve” anonymous
A national outpouring of grief followed the mid-December murders of two young Queensland Police officers in Wieambilla, including in the Whitsundays where a group of Bowen kids took the opportunity to thank their local officers.
Children from ‘Kidz at the Beach’ day care centre visited their local officers at the Bowen Police Station last Friday, offering them their gratitude as well as some delicious home baked cookies.
Chaperoned by Owner and Director of Kidz at the Beach, Anna Woodhouse, and Police Sergeant Michelle O’Regan, the kids were treated to a tour of the station as thanks for their gifts.
Those gifts included the aforementioned cookies – baked at Kidz at the Beach’s premises by the children themselves – as well as the children’s own drawings of police officers with ‘Thank You’ written on each.
Police Sergeant O’Regan said Kidz at the Beach had contacted her sending their well wishes to all Bowen officers which soon expanded to the pictures.
“They hopped on the bus, we took them to the police station, and they delivered their drawings which are just fantastic,” Sergeant O’Regan said.
“The guys were busy at the station, but they took the time out of their day to show the kids around because it really filled our buckets. It’s wonderful to see the genuine appreciation from the little people – it enlightens your soul in relation to what we do in community.
“Community is right behind police at the minute, and it’s just wonderful to have that.”
Bowen’s police officers were lucky enough to have a show of appreciation from some of the town’s ‘little people’ this week during what is a tough time for all law enforcement personnel