Good morning, Canberra. We're in for a partly cloudy day and a top of 17 degrees. Here's what's making news to start the working week. |
|
Joash Taufa'ahau is a born leader. The 20-year-old Queanbeyan man is preparing for his next adventure hike for charity, having already trekked over 1200km along the NSW coast, then to Queensland and Victoria. |
|
The journalism you trust to keep you connected |
|
Subscriber: Public servants are working from home in the tens of thousands as agencies permanently embrace remote working. |
|
|
More people have taken up cycling in the wake of the pandemic, with bike counters registering 1891 cyclists in a day in 2021. |
|
|
Subscriber: A man has been sentenced to three years' jail for the "unsophisticated" but "brazen" robbery of an ACT convenience store. |
|
|
Drivers who buy zero-emissions vehicles will receive free registration for two years from today, as part of a $5.1 million ACT government plan. |
|
|
Subscriber | Opinion: Our Jindalee over-the-horizon radars could be key to watching the battlefield, writes Bradley Perrett. |
|
|
Subscriber: A new DA for the long-dormant Giralang Shops site would be needed to increase the size of the supermarket to proceed. |
|
|
| 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" |
|
Subscriber: Bob Fulton's talent haunted a young Parramatta-loving Glenn Lazarus. The duo became part of an iconic national league set-up. |
|
|
Opinion: Australian businesses can't work under Covid restrictions forever, writes John-Paul Romano. |
|
|
Subscriber: The ACT government would expect significant returns on any outlay to lure Rugby World Cup games to Canberra Stadium. |
|
|
Explainer: Mice in plague-like proportions are invading homes, sheds and anywhere they can get access to food. Here's what to do. |
|
|
| Times Past On this day 52 years ago, The Canberra Times reported on a raid carried out by police on a journalist's home. Nine Commonwealth policemen searched the home of journalist and newsletter publisher Maxwell Newton, of Deakin in 1969. READ MORE |
|
|
|