Happy New Year and welcome to 2021's first Monday. We've got a plentiful day of rain ahead on our way to a top of 26 degrees. Here are today's headlines. |
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Farming hasn't always run in the veins of the Lilleymans but that all changed when they bought a property in Kambah. |
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The journalism you trust to keep you connected |
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While queues to enter the ACT stretched for long distances on the Federal Highway on Sunday, the Barton Highway was a different tale. |
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Subscriber: Canberra could run out of hospital beds as early as 2026 even with the planned Canberra Hospital revamp, documents show. |
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Subscriber: The public sector has largely fixed its gender-split issues at the graduate level but some work still needs to be done. |
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Subscriber: The chief minister's directorate topped the list of govt agencies most complained about in the last financial year. |
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Subscriber: Robbie Wallace worked 96 days out of 100 last summer on heavy-duty machinery to give fire-hit residents a chance. |
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Subscriber | Analysis: Compiling a case for another bush push based on the number of sickies not taken is inherently flawed. |
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| Updated by 7am weekdays. If you have a smart speaker, try saying: "OK Google, play The Canberra Times Today" or "Alexa, enable The Canberra Times today" |
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Subscriber: A late Nicki Flannery strike brought Melbourne City's 17-match unbeaten streak to an end as Canberra continued its dream start. |
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Opinion: If we take what we already know going in to 2021 and start working backwards, a clearer picture emerges, writes Nicholas Stuart. |
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You don't have to drive two hours east if you need to cool off on a sweltering hot Canberra day over the final two months of summer. |
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The world may have been living with a pandemic for a year now, but one ACT business has centred around a fast-spreading virus since 2018. |
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| Times Past About 28,000 young pine trees in the Uriarrra plantation had been destroyed in a bushfire which had already burned for four days, The Canberra Times reported on this day 89 years ago. The fire had burned since the middle of the previous week, starting on the western bank of the Murrumbidgee River near Hall. The blaze had been brought under control, and the Federal Capital Administration's chief lands officer expected no further damage. READ MORE |
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