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Queensland Productivity Commission argues construction industry ‘reset’ needed to fix housing crisis and deliver Olympics

1 day ago
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Queensland’s Productivity Commission has flagged a broad construction industry “reset” that could threaten existing enterprise bargaining agreements, arguing it may be required if the state is to build its way out of a housing crisis – and host the Olympics.The commission released an interim report on Thursday into improving productivity in the construction sector that called on the Queensland government to permanently remove so-called “Best Practice Industry Conditions” (BPICs) from its procurement policy.Adopted under the previous Labor government in 2018, BPICs outlined construction union workers’ pay and conditions for all major state projects.Union proponents claim BPICs improved safety and lifted standards and created apprenticeship opportunities for women and Indigenous workers – industry opponents complained it led to cost blowouts and worksite shutdowns.Sign up: AU Breaking News emailThe Liberal National party deputy premier, Jarrod Bleijie, hit pause on BPICs in November until the re-established Productivity Commission completed its building industry review.

But the interim recommendations of that review go beyond a call to permanently scrap BPICs – arguing “a broader industry reset” was required if Queensland was to “meet the needs of its growing population, match infrastructure commitments and deliver the 2032 Olympic and Paralympic Games”.The report cited industry stakeholders as blaming BPICs for a “a significant slowdown in site productivity on public construction” workplaces that had enabled similar conditions to “creep into the private sector through the rollout of BPICs-like conditions in [EBAs)]”.“Removing BPICs alone is unlikely to be sufficient to shift construction productivity to a growth path or improve behaviours on government construction sites,” the commission wrote.“Given that BPIC-like conditions now seem to be embedded in industry practice, including in enterprise bargaining agreements that are not due to be re-negotiated until mid-2027, it is likely that a broader industry reset is required.”Asked at a press conference after the release of the interim report if the LNP would permanently scrap BPICs, the treasurer, David Janetzki, said he would wait for the final report before making any announcements.

However, the treasurer said that declining productivity “cannot be tolerated”.The Queensland Council of Unions denies that BPICs affected worksite productivity.In May it released a report it commissioned from University of Queensland emeritus professor of economics John Mangan that found post-Covid cost increases were primarily driven by global supply chain constraints and material shortages – not labour agreements or public procurement standards.The QCU general secretary, Jacqueline King, said at the time that BPICs “did not drive up costs or damage productivity” but improved safety, lifted standards and created real opportunities for apprentices, women and Indigenous workers.King said the commission’s interim report “missed the boat on the most important thing of all: people”.

Sign up to Breaking News AustraliaGet the most important news as it breaksafter newsletter promotionThe union secretary said “any serious conversation about lifting productivity” in the construction industry had to start with fixing what she said was a “crisis in building and retaining a Queensland workforce”.“There’s no shortage of Queenslanders willing to work in construction but this is an industry stuck in the 1970s, with 55-hour weeks, inflexible work arrangements and poor workplace cultures driving people away,” King said.“If we are serious about addressing the skills shortage and building the housing and infrastructure we need for our ever growing population in the lead-up to 2032 and beyond, we need to focus on how to attract a homegrown labour force instead of migrant workers.”The peak national body for construction and infrastructure contracting companies backed the interim report as supporting “many of the reforms the industry has long been calling for”, including scrapping BPICs.“Queensland has a once-in-a-generation infrastructure task ahead,” the Australian Constructors Association chief executive, Jon Davies, said.

“This report confirms the need for urgent reform and gives us a clear roadmap to get started”.The LNP is also pushing legislation to override more than a dozen planning laws – including heritage and environment protection laws – to build a swathe of venues for the 2032 Brisbane Olympic and Paralympic Games.
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Zuckerberg claims ‘superintelligence is now in sight’ as Meta lavishes billions on AI

Whether it’s poaching top talent away from competitors, acquiring AI startups or proclaiming that it will build data centers the size of Manhattan, Meta has been on a spending spree to boost its artificial intelligence capabilities for months now.The massive splurge is paying off, according to Meta’s chief executive. In a new memo posted on Wednesday ahead of the company’s quarterly earnings report, Mark Zuckerberg, describes his ambitions for developing what he calls “superintelligence”.“Over the last few months we have begun to see glimpses of our AI systems improving themselves,” Zuckerberg wrote. “The improvement is slow for now, but undeniable

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Wall Street delighted with Microsoft as it spends $100bn on AI

Microsoft, the world’s second-most valuable company, is dumping enormous sums of money into its artificial intelligence efforts. At the same time, the company is earning money hand over fist. Investors are thrilled.The enterprise software giant reported fiscal fourth-quarter results that exceeded expectations on Wednesday as the company races to acquire datacenters and talent, which continues to be investigated by investors. The company predicted its capital expenditure for the next fiscal year would top $100bn, a 14% increase from the year prior

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YouTube to gauge US users’ ages with AI after UK and Australia add age checks

YouTube announced on Tuesday that it will begin to use artificial intelligence to estimate the ages of users in the US, in order to show them age-appropriate content.The rollout of the new feature comes one day after Australia’s government announced it would ban children under 16 from using YouTube and less than a week after the UK implemented sweeping age checks on content on social networks.YouTube’s AI age verification on its home turf indicates it is putting into place a form of compliance with the Australian and UK requirements, despite its persistent opposition to age-check requirements.“Over the next few weeks, we’ll begin to roll out machine learning to a small set of users in the US to estimate their age, so that teens are treated as teens and adults as adults,” wrote James Beser, director of product management for YouTube Youth, in a blogpost titled Extending our built-in protections to more teens on YouTube.YouTube was promised an exemption from Australia’s social media ban last year by the then communications minister, but the Australian government said on Monday that the platform would, in fact, be included in the country’s ban on children under 16 using social networks

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UK online safety law leads to 5m extra age checks a day for pornography sites

Five million extra online age checks a day are being carried out in the UK since the introduction of age-gating for pornography sites, according to new data.The Age Verification Providers Association (AVPA) said there had been a sharp increase in additional age checks in the UK since Friday, when age verification became mandatory for accessing pornography under the Online Safety Act.“As a result of new codes under the Online Safety Act coming into force on Friday, we have seen an additional 5m age checks on a daily basis, as UK-based internet users seek to access sites that are age-restricted,” said Iain Corby, the executive director of the AVPA.The UK has also seen a surge in popularity of virtual private networks, which obscure a user’s real location and thus allow them to access sites blocked in their own country. Four of the top five free apps on the Apple download store in the UK are VPN apps, with Proton, the most popular, reporting a 1,800% increase in downloads

2 days ago
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People in the UK: have you been the victim of phone theft recently?

According to data compiled by an insurance firm, nearly two in every five mobile phones stolen in Europe are taken in the UK. Claims made to the American insurance company SquareTrade showed 39% of all phone thefts across the company’s 12 European markets were in Britain.The data revealed that phone theft claims in the UK had increased by 425% since June 2021 and 42% of phone thefts in the UK occurred in London.We’d like to hear from people who have been the victim of phone theft in the UK in the last six months? Has your phone been snatched out of your hands? What happened next and how easy was it to secure your data and accounts? Did you report it to the police? Has it changed your behaviour using your phone or sense of safety on the streets? Why do you think that the UK is the phone theft capital of Europe.You can tell us if you have been the victim of phone theft in the UK by filling in the form below

2 days ago
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UK viewers: are you watching YouTube on your TV more than other channels?

YouTube has become popular to watch on TV with children and older people choosing the video platform when they first switch on their televisions.Viewers aged 55 and over watched almost twice as much YouTube than they did in 2023, with 42% of them watching on a TV. The platform is also the most popular first TV destination for generation Alpha viewers, aged four to 15.We’d like to hear from people who watch YouTube on their TV more than other channels. When and why did your watching habits change and how does it differ to what you grew up with? What are your favourite YouTube shows and why?You can tell us why you watch YouTube more than other broadcast channels on your TV by filling in the form below

2 days ago
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Lottie Woad off the pace at Women’s Open but second round too early for TV

about 15 hours ago
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Surrey boost title hopes by besting Durham: county cricket day three – as it happened

about 15 hours ago
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‘A big shame’: Chris Woakes could miss rest of fifth Test with shoulder injury

about 16 hours ago
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Gambhir’s India can’t escape the Fortis-verse on rain-hit day

about 16 hours ago
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Gus Atkinson throws down gauntlet to India before England’s Woakes blow

about 16 hours ago
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England v India: fifth men’s cricket Test, day one – as it happened

about 17 hours ago