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‘Abhorrent’: Vinnies boss slams council law targeting homeless camps

A charity boss has condemned a Melbourne council's decision to introduce laws which will allow officials to seize belongings from rough sleepers as "baffling" and "abhorrent".

The City of Port Phillip Council, which captures suburbs including St Kilda, Elwood and Windsor, voted in favour of council officers confiscating and storing "encampment equipment" from people experiencing homelessness.

While the council claims the laws will be applied as a "last resort basis", the soon-to-be introduced powers have been met with swift backlash from homelessness advocates.

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Charlie Spendlove Group Chief Executive Officer of St Vincent de Paul Society Victoria

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St Vincent de Paul Society Victoria group chief executive Charlie Spendlove told Nine.com.au the council is "taking the shirt off peoples' backs who are already doing it tough".

She said it simply won't change anything and that efforts would be better spent consulting with the local community about how to provide better access to crisis accommodation.

"The mayor said this amendment isn't a solution to homelessness. So what is it about? Is it about tidy streets? Just literally bundling the problem up in a box and hoping it goes away?" Spendlove said.

"The face of homelessness has changed, particularly with the cost of living and housing prices. It is a social emergency.

"So this just beggars belief."

The local law change will allow council officers to take encampment belongings, which may include sleeping bags or tents, and store them in council service centres.

City of Port Phillip Council Mayor Alex Makin said the amendment was introduced in response to "anti-social behaviour" and will only target camps which create "safety or sustained amenity impacts".

"No fines will be issued and belongings will be available for collection free of charge," Makin said.

"Our local law provisions continue to allow camping on council land if someone doesn't have a home or has complex needs.

"Our officers will receive specific trauma-informed training before the amendment comes into effect on 1 June."

City of Port Phillip, Melbourne

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s understood that around two dozen rough sleepers are known to stay in the City of Port Phillip Council area.

A council survey of 708 residents found 76.1 per cent opposed the amendment.

However, it was passed after five councillors voted in favour of it last week, while three opposed the law.

"When so many people tell you it's a bad decision, it baffles me that [they] doubled down on a decision instead of talking to the experts," Spendlove said.

"It just deepens the trauma. It's just abhorrent."

Spendlove said the council has ignored the inconvenient truth behind homelessness: it can happen to anyone at any time.

Sleeping rough is not the result of "bad choices", she said. It is often due to a series of crises.

"It is completely ignorant for the reality, each one of us… no one is immune," she added.

"It doesn't matter who you are in the world, you're only two or three crises away from being homeless."

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Single women aged over 55 are the fastest-growing cohort of people experiencing homelessness in Australia, according to the Council to Homeless Persons.

Spendlove said she has seen heartbreaking examples of women escaping family violence in Victoria, only to end up in an encampment or sleeping rough.

In one case, a woman was found sleeping in a tent in a park with her children.

And another mother was helped after she slept in her car in a wooded area with her four children.

Spendlove warned the City of Port Phillip may have set a precedent that will harm rough sleepers all over the state.

"I'm really, really worried for Victoria, if Port Phillip [is] going to wear this badge of honour as the first council to do this… shame on them," she added.

Homelessness Australia chief executive Kate Colvin also denounced the council's decision.

She described the local law amendment as "draconian".

"When someone has nowhere safe to go, taking their bedding or moving them from one public place to another simply shifts the crisis around and makes people less safe and connected to support when they need it most," Colvin said.

"What is needed is more homes, more service capacity, and the kind of practical support that helps people move into safety and stay there."

Makin acknowledged the "diverse views" but added that "the common ground is that everyone wants improved safety in our public spaces, including for people sleeping rough".

"Support will always be offered first to address the underlying causes of behaviour," Makin added.

Other Australian councils have faced criticism over punitive attempts to curb homelessness.

The City of Perth in February engaged the Public Transport Authority (PTA) to place speakers which emitted shrill sounds 24/7 under the Lord Street overpass in East Perth in a bid to move along homeless camps.

This was disabled after outcry from advocates and politicians.

In 2023, the City of Bunbury played The Wiggles' song Hot Potato on repeat to drive rough sleepers from gathering at a shelter.

The King Street Arts Centre in Perth also faced backlash in 2015 after using a sprinkler system in a stairwell to stop people from sleeping there.

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Australian hantavirus evacuees start three-week quarantine

Passengers from a hantavirus-stricken cruise ship are now in quarantine after a prolonged journey home from a stopover in the Netherlands.

The group of six were among the last to be repatriated from the MV Hondius, and included four Australian citizens, one permanent resident, and one New Zealander.

The flight departed the Netherlands yesterday and is scheduled to land at an RAAF base in Perth about 1pm AEST (11am AWST).

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The group has been taken to the Centre for National Resilience in Bullsbrook in northern Perth, where they will be quarantined for three weeks.

The six are undergoing full medical checks, including blood work, which will be flown to Melbourne for processing.

It is expected their results will be returned in a day.

All passengers tested negative for Hantavirus when they left the Netherlands and are in good health.

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The group of six were among the last to be repatriated from the MV Hondius.

Of the five passengers who live in Australia, three are residents of NSW, and two of Queensland.

So far, there have been 11 confirmed cases of hantavirus among the passengers or crew members on the MV Hondius cruise ship.

Three people have died after contracting the deadly, rat-borne illness.

It was the first-ever case of a hantavirus outbreak on a cruise ship, according to Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO's director of epidemic and pandemic preparedness.

Health Minister Mark Butler previously said the government was taking a precautionary approach, emphasising that human-to-human transmission of the virus was extremely rare.

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Giving room instead of Tasing gran ‘least of all evils’

While there was a risk that a 95-year-old with dementia could hurt herself with a knife, an inquest has heard that leaving her to calm down would have been preferable to shooting her with a Taser.

Then-senior constable Kristian James Samuel White fired his weapon at the great-grandmother after being called to Yallambee Lodge nursing home at Cooma in southern NSW early on the morning of May 17, 2023.

Clare Nowland, who had symptoms of dementia, had taken two steak knives from a kitchen area and refused to give them up.

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Falling and hitting her head after being struck in the chest by the Taser's barbs, she did not regain consciousness and died in hospital a week later after a brain bleed.

Geriatrician Susan Kurrle told an inquest into Nowland's death that attending police and paramedics could have just left her alone to calm down.

"That in this case would have been the least of all evils," the professor said.

Nowland had not shown any prior thoughts of self-harm, and aged care staff could have kept the door ajar a little to supervise, she added.

Professor Joseph Ibrahim said he would have grabbed a chair and sat in the doorway, distracting her with topics about how early in the morning it was.

He shrugged off any concerns after counsel assisting Sophie Callan SC said the 95-year-old could have thrown the knife at him.

"The likelihood that she would have been able to aim it, hit a vital spot is extraordinarily remote," he said.

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Prof Kurrle told the inquest that dementia was "childhood development backwards".

This required anyone approaching a person with dementia to do so as they would a young child – gentle, smiling, without being threatening.

At the three-day inquest, which began on Wednesday, State Coroner Teresa O'Sullivan has examined systemic issues that existed before the Tasering incident.

The focus of the evidence has been dementia care and training for aged care staff, police and ambulance officers.

Judge O'Sullivan has heard of numerous alternatives available to White and other police and paramedics attending, including contacting Nowland's daughter, Lesley Lloyd, for help de-escalating the situation.

Prof Kurrle said the care offered by Yallambee Lodge staff to Nowland before her death was reasonable and appropriate.

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Clare Nowland, 95, was tasered at the Yallambee Lodge nursing home at Cooma in southern NSW on May 17, 2023.

The facility had been deemed compliant with aged care standards after a review by the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission in early 2023, she said.

Nowland's family are expected to give a statement about the 95-year-old's passing as the inquest concludes later on Friday.

The great-grandmother's relatives have previously expressed disappointment that White did not spend a day in jail after being convicted of manslaughter by a NSW Supreme Court jury in November 2024.

He was given a two-year good behaviour bond in March 2025, a decision which was later upheld by the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal.

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Man found dead in park kidnapped hours before death, police believe

Police say that an armed home invasion in Melbourne's north-east is linked to the discovery of a body in a Melbourne park early this morning.

Detective Inspector Dean Thomas said an aggravated home invasion occurred hours before the grisly discovery, which he believes is connected.

Thomas said they have spoken to the family of the 30-year-old man, who was found near Bruni Drive in Tarneit at 4.30am, and a postmortem is set to determine the cause of death.

Police are investigating the cause of death of the 30-year-old.

"It appears at this point in time that the [victim] was somewhat targeted."

At about 3am, multiple men, allegedly armed with machetes, broke into a home on Darius Terrace in South Morang in a dark-coloured SUV.

Police say they assaulted the man, who is known to police, while he was asleep, dragging him out of the house and into the vehicle before fleeing.

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Tarneit.

Another man and two children were inside the home at the time but were uninjured.

Shortly after, emergency crews were called to a parkland about an hour away from the home after it was reported that a man was found dead.

"We believe that male is the deceased we have found this morning in Tarneit," Thomas said.

Police are now appealing to the public for information and have yet to make any arrests, as investigations continue.

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