The CEO of peak body Live Performance Australia (LPA), Evelyn Richardson, said this is exactly what the industry has been warning against. âThe reality is that this will happen again and again,â she told Guardian Australia. âWeâve been lobbying federal and state governments since early last year for exactly this scenario, so that a producer can get access to insurance underwriting and some kind of reimbursement.â
Without it, large-scale productions and live music tours become an unacceptable risk for producers, Richardson says â adding that despite New South Wales government assurances that the issue would be addressed in the wake of the cancellation of Byron Bayâs Bluesfest in 2020, no commitment has been forthcoming.
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NC House votes to end statewide school mask mandate. Here s what happens next. Avi Bajpai, The News & Observer (Raleigh, N.C.)
Jun. 23 RALEIGH The North Carolina House passed a bill Wednesday that would grant local school boards the authority to make face masks optional for the upcoming school year, allowing them not to comply with the state s ongoing mask mandate that remains in effect for schools.
Senate Bill 173, known as the Free the Smiles Act, would allow public school districts, charter schools and private schools to set their own mask policies. North Carolina schools, both public and private, are currently considered at-risk settings and fall under Gov. Roy Cooper s scaled-back mask mandate, which he recently extended through the end of July.