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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Paul Gallagher

Morning Mail: scientists sound alarm over CSIRO job losses, fears grow over Ebola outbreak, Arsenal crowned Premier League champions

The latest CSIRO job cuts will go ahead despite the government announcing $387m in extra funding in last week’s federal budget.
The latest CSIRO job cuts will go ahead despite the government announcing $387m in extra funding in last week’s federal budget. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP

Good morning. Scientists claim looming CSIRO job cuts will put vital modelling relied upon by government, industry and farmers at risk – and would leave Australia unable to contribute data to global climate reports.

People walk past rough sleepers every day in Australia. But now an online platform in Adelaide is helping the public notify outreach workers who can then check on homeless people and connect them with support.

Experimental vaccines could be used to combat Ebola in parts of Africa as fears grow over the outbreak’s speed and scale. And government analysis has revealed which Australians would be hardest hit by NDIS funding cuts.

Australia

World

Full Story

Ebola, hantavirus: can the world avert another pandemic?

It’s been nearly three weeks since the first reports that a rare and deadly hantavirus had spread through a cruise ship. And now, the WHO has declared an Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic ‌of the Congo and Uganda a “public health emergency of international concern”. Melissa Davey speaks with Nour Haydar about the two viruses causing health authorities to reexamine pandemic response plans.

In-depth

Michelle Obama talked politics and going “a little low” as she delivered veiled but sharp remarks on the state of the US political system during the first event of an Australian speaking tour that began in Melbourne. The former first lady told the crowd that she hoped to teach children that accumulating wealth and assets was not a measure of happiness and self-worth: “I know plenty of billionaires, many of them are not happy people.”

Not the news

Tony Albert has spent decades collecting racist “Aboriginalia”: cups, tea towels, playing cards and figurines, all ostensibly depicting Aboriginal people, but created by non-Indigenous people, and often caricatured, exoticised or kitsch. Not A Souvenir, his new exhibition at Sydney’s MCA, highlights the commodification and misrepresentation of First Nations people – and invites the public to reckon with their own complicity.

Sport

Media roundup

Sydney’s Bankstown Airport could be redeveloped into a mini-city of 30,000 homes as radical plans gain momentum, the Sydney Morning Herald reports. Football Australia could slash 20% of its workforce as it braces for another massive financial loss, the Age reports. Vanuatu’s prime minister has suggested that both Australia and China are “undermining” his country, ABC News reports.

What’s happening today

  • NSW | A public hearing is scheduled in the parliamentary inquiry into fertility support and assisted reproductive treatment.

  • ACT | The shadow treasurer, Tim Wilson, is due to give a budget reply speech at the National Press Club in Canberra.

  • Sport | The Matildas squad is expected to be announced for their upcoming friendly against Mexico.

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Brain teaser

And finally, here are the Guardian’s crosswords to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow.

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