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Divorce courts clogged with year-long backlog of cases

Divorce courts clogged with year-long backlog of cases With 100,000 cases clogging Australia’s divorce courts in the past year, some court hearings have already been pushed back to 2022. News by Natasha Bita Premium Content Subscriber only Divorce courts are clogged with a year-long backlog of cases, as highly-paid judges enjoy up to 10 weeks holidays while postponing court hearings until 2022. Divorce disputes are heard in two courts - the Family Court, which fielded a five-year high of 21,054 applications in 2019/2020, or the Federal Circuit Court (FCC), which received 85,563 family law cases, including 45,886 divorce applications the same year. The 33 Family Court judges, who hear the most complex disputes, are paid a base salary of $468,020 plus 15 per cent superannuation and a car allowance - with eight weeks holidays.

We Asked Surfers Like Kelly Slater, Jamie O'Brien, and Others What They Wanted For Christmas

Jingle bells, send us swells, make COVID go away … It’s safe to say that 2020 turned out to be a lump of metaphorical coal. Between contest cancellations, Pipe Masters dreams and Olympic false-starts, beach closures, surf mag shutterings, severed contracts, surfing bans, overcrowded breaks, travel prohibitions, and mid-contest shark attacks, 2021 promises to be nothing short of a diamond in comparison.  With the countdown to the New Year on, things are already starting to “slowly” look up. Red Bull has led the way with innovative swell-based contests. Our screens have been commandeered by creative YouTubers following in the footsteps of Jamie O’Brien’s incomparable antics and subsequent media blitz. Travel closures and contest cancellations means that, like us, the pros are able to spend more surf time with friends and family – and we might be wave sharing with our heroes at our home break. And, as we patiently await herd immunity, we can distract ourselves with the

Artsday/ Festival calls out for short stories

Margarita  Georgiadis and Max Cullen NEWS is in from artist Margarita Georgiadis that the Gunning Arts Festival’s ongoing FlashWrite Project for local stories is yielding results, readable here gunningartsfestival.com/activities/flashwrite-stories/ by Gavin Douglas, Uta Purcell, Dan Brigden and Georgiadis’ other half, actor Max Cullen. Now they’re seeking new short stories of no more than 1500 words from all ages and levels of experience that encapsulate something of their lives or the lives of those around them on the 2021 Gunning Arts Festival theme of “Rejuvenation.” Entries to gunningartsfestival.com close on February 8 at 5pm. PRINTS from local and international artists, Megalo artists-in-residence and finalists from the Megalo International Print Prize are available for purchase in the Megalo Print Emporium at 21 Wentworth Avenue, Kingston or online at megalo.org until 4pm, December 24.

Cabinet gets first virtual swearing-in

Cabinet gets first virtual swearing-in
couriermail.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from couriermail.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Joe Biden | The Australian

Joe Biden | The Australian
theaustralian.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theaustralian.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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