Good morning, Canberra. We're in for a sunny day with a top of 19 degrees after a foggy morning. Here's what's making news in the capital today. |
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With a little extra spare time around the house Canberrans are getting in touch with their creative side and harnessing their talent online. |
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The journalism you trust to keep you connected |
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House prices in the ACT are forecast to fall by 10 per cent this year, research by the Commonwealth Bank of Australia has revealed. |
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Approximately 1600 Canberra students had been signed up to physically attend a school site in term two as of Friday afternoon. |
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Canberra’s Dawn Waterhouse has lived through the Great Depression and World War II, but she says nothing compares to COVID-19. |
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Subscriber only: A woman who allegedly tried to burn her children to death has been refused bail after citing COVID-19 concerns. |
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Eight Vinnies stores in Canberra have kept their doors open, with social distancing measures in place in the lead-up to winter. |
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Obituary: Ted Evans spoke truth to power, and epitomised the values of integrity, trust, loyalty and humility, writes David Morgan. |
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And this little piggy went to ... Curtin. Here’s a story to make you smile during coronavirus restrictions. |
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Opinion: The rapid rise of women's sport threatens to be halted by the coronavirus pandemic, writes Lucie Bertoldo. |
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Subscriber only: Key players involved in the Ruby Princess saga may soon be in need of some political agility, writes Jack Waterford. |
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The ACT government will inject $3.3 million into Canberra's sports sector in a bid to keep leagues above water during the shutdown. |
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| Times Past Some Canberra children stumbled on an incredible discovery on this day in 1967. A bomb was found in the grass on a nature strip on Weston Street, in Yarralumla in the afternoon. Reports were that Helen Constance, 16, and her brother Raymond, 14, were chasing a stray dog when they came across the device near a storm water drain. READ MORE |
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