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Bid by Gina Rinehart’s company to build helipad set to be blocked by City of Perth

about 9 hours ago
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Gina Rinehart’s company has claimed helicopter pads are a necessity of modern business as it fights to install one at its new headquarters in West Perth.The City of Perth on Tuesday recommended councillors block the request from Hancock Iron Ore to install a helipad as it redevelops its offices.Designs provided to council show the helipad would sit 25 metres off the ground, directly above an in-house teppanyaki grill also proposed in the 53 Ord Street redevelopment plans.Hancock told the council a Bell 429 helicopter would use the pad up to 12 times a year and only during daylight hours but planning officers said it would be difficult to formally limit the helipad’s use.Dan Lees, an Element Advisory planner representing Hancock, told council on Tuesday night that private rooftop helipads – a rarity in Australia – were common in New York, London and Tokyo.

“Perth is a global city and with that come contemporary needs for globally connected businesses,” Lees said.Sign up: AU Breaking News email“The proposed helipad is a contemporary requirement for a business such as Hancock Iron Ore.”Appearing alongside Sanjiv Manchanda, a long-time Rinehart lieutenant, Lees told the meeting the helipad had “life-saving potential” as a landing point for emergency services.Questioned further, he acknowledged the deck was only a “backup of a backup” landing option, given another hospital helipad was 3km away, and patients carried in by air would still need to be transferred from the rooftop to a hospital for treatment.The application has attracted 29 opposing submissions, with one landlord telling council Hancock’s construction work had already prompted complaints from their tenants, including psychologist consulting rooms and recording studios.

Another neighbour feared the helicopter winds could damage their apartment block’s asbestos roofing and spread loose asbestos fibres, while others noted a private helipad offered no public benefit.“[It] would only save them some travel time, which is a very selfish attitude for the owners of the building to take,” a submission read.Hancock supplied analysis finding the aircraft noise would not surpass 92 decibels, similar to the levels already observed in the area but planning officers said the company had not shown noise and vibration issues would be avoided.The staff briefing ahead of council’s December meeting also warned the flight path could hinder Perth’s housing development by stopping nearby buildings from adding storeys, which Lees denied.Peter Newman, a professor of sustainability at Curtin University, said councillors could permit the helipad but were likely to follow the advice of the City of Perth’s planning team.

Sign up to Breaking News AustraliaGet the most important news as it breaksafter newsletter promotionBut Rinehart could nonetheless appeal to the state government to allow the helipad to be developed, Newman said,“The premier would have to do [that] against the wills of the planning system,” he said,Councillors declined to share how they would vote at next Tuesday’s meeting when asked,The deputy lord mayor, David Goncalves, said he would approach the decision with an open mind,One councillor, Chris Patton, said he would have supported the application but was ineligible to vote as Hancock was a client of his audiovisual services business.

“As a pilot myself, I wish I could vote,” Patton said.“As Perth continues to grow and modernise, it’s reasonable to expect air transport to become a more routine part of city life.”The council permitted Hancock to renovate its newly bought offices in 2023.The company also plans to install a staff restaurant and a cat-friendly meeting room next to an outdoor “meow terrace”.
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My cultural awakening: Thelma & Louise made me realise I was stuck in an unhappy marriage

It was 1991, I was in my early 40s, living in the south of England and trapped in a marriage that had long since curdled into something quietly suffocating. My husband had become controlling, first with money, then with almost everything else: what I wore, who I saw, what I said. It crept up so slowly that I didn’t quite realise what was happening.We had met as students in the early 1970s, both from working-class, northern families and feeling slightly out of place at a university full of public school accents. We shared politics, music and a sense of being outsiders together

4 days ago
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​The Guide #219: Don’t panic! Revisiting the millennium’s wildest cultural predictions

I love revisiting articles from around the turn of the millennium, a fascinatingly febrile period when everyone – but journalists especially – briefly lost the run of themselves. It seems strange now to think that the ticking over of a clock from 23:59 to 00:00 would prompt such big feelings, of excitement, terror, of end-of-days abandon, but it really did (I can remember feeling them myself as a teenager, especially the end-of-days-abandon bit.)Of course, some of that feeling came from the ticking over of the clock itself: the fears over the Y2K bug might seem quite silly today, but its potential ramifications – planes falling out of the sky, power grids failing, entire life savings being deleted in a stroke – would have sent anyone a bit loopy. There’s a very good podcast, Surviving Y2K, about some of the people who responded particularly drastically to the bug’s threat, including a bloke who planned to sit out the apocalypse by farming and eating hamsters.It does seem funny – and fitting – in the UK, column inches about this existential threat were equalled, perhaps even outmatched, by those about a big tarpaulin in Greenwich

4 days ago
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From Christy to Neil Young: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

ChristyOut now Based on the life of the American boxer Christy Martin (nickname: the Coal Miner’s Daughter), this sports drama sees Sydney Sweeney Set aside her conventionally feminine America’s sweetheart aesthetic and don the mouth guard and gloves of a professional fighter.Blue MoonOut now Richard Linklater (Before Sunrise) reteams with one of his favourite actors, Ethan Hawke, for a film about Lorenz Hart, the songwriter who – in addition to My Funny Valentine and The Lady Is a Tramp – also penned the lyrics to the eponymous lunar classic. Also starring Andrew Scott and Margaret Qualley.PillionOut now Harry Melling plays the naive sub to Alexander Skarsgård’s biker dom in this kinky romance based on the 1970s-set novel Box Hill by Adam Mars-Jones, here updated to a modern-day setting, and with some success: it bagged the screenplay prize in the Un Certain Regard section at Cannes.Laura Mulvey’s Big Screen ClassicsThroughout DecemberRecent recipient of a BFI Fellowship, the film theorist Laura Mulvey coined the term “the male gaze” in a seminal 1975 essay, and thus transformed film criticism

4 days ago
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Susan Loppert obituary

My partner Susan Loppert, who has died aged 81, was the moving force behind the development of Chelsea and Westminster Hospital Arts in the 1990s. This pioneering programme, which Susan directed for 10 years (1993-2003), was a hugely innovative and imaginative project to bring the visual and performing arts into the heart of London’s newest teaching hospital.As Susan wrote in an article for the Guardian in 2006, this was not about “the odd Monet reproduction or carols at Christmas … but 2,000 original works of art hung in the vast spaces of the stunning atrial building” as well as in clinics, wards and treatment areas – many of them specially commissioned. And on top of this, full-length operas, an annual music festival, Indian dancers in residence, and workshops by artists from poets to puppeteers.Susan was born in Grahamstown, South Africa, to Phyllis (nee Orkin, and known as “Inkey” because of her dark hair), a lawyer and anti-apartheid activist, and her husband Eric Loppert, a manager

4 days ago
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Oh yes he is! Kiefer Sutherland dives into the world of panto

Hollywood megastars hit Leeds this year to make Tinsel Town, a feelgood festive comedy about panto. The 24 star, Rebel Wilson and more talk about their addiction to Greggs sausage rolls – and epic brawls with Danny DyerTwenty-odd years ago, I binged a TV series on DVD for the first time. At my mate’s house in a village outside Harrogate, I was glued to Jack Bauer shooting his way through 24. We probably only made it to episode six before surrendering to sleep for school the next day.Fast forward to the start of this year, and photos are all over the local news of Kiefer Sutherland out and about in nearby market towns Knaresborough and Wetherby

4 days ago
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O come out ye faithful: a joyful roundup of UK culture this Christmas

The 12 Beans of ChristmasTouring to 19 December Last year, character comedians Adam Riches and John Kearns joined forces for an archly silly tribute to crooners Michael Ball and Alfie Boe. Now Riches is back with another leftfield celebrity riff as he gives his Game of Thrones-era Sean Bean impression (as seen on 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown and his Edinburgh show Dungeons’n’Bastards) a yuletide twist. Rachel AroestiThe BFGRoyal Shakespeare theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, to 7 February Are you ready for snozzcumbers and dream-catchers, for norphans and whizzpoppers? A stellar team have come together for this world premiere of Roald Dahl’s children’s classic, with a script courtesy of Tom Wells (Jumpers for Goalposts) and puppetry by the masterful Toby Olié (Spirited Away). John Leader heads up the cast for this beloved story of an orphan befriending a giant; Daniel Evans directs. Kate WyverCount Arthur Strong Is Charles Dickens in A Christmas CarolTouring to 14 December The reliably bewildered and chronically digressive one-time variety star takes his tangent-riddled festive show on tour again

4 days ago
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Production of French-German fighter jet threatened by rivalries, chief executive says

about 3 hours ago
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Tunbridge Wells water cut likely to last after treatment problem reoccurs

about 4 hours ago
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Sam Altman issues ‘code red’ at OpenAI as ChatGPT contends with rivals

about 4 hours ago
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The fight to see clearly through big tech’s echo chambers

about 7 hours ago
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Serena Williams quietly re-enters drug-testing pool in step toward possible 2026 return

about 4 hours ago
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Men’s Rugby World Cup 2027: how the draw will work and the new format explained

about 4 hours ago