Contents
-
A
- Aberfoyle Park High School
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Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Child Placement Principle
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2023-10-17
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Question Time (2)
-
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- Aboriginal Education Strategy
- Aboriginal Family Support Services
- Aboriginal Health
- Aboriginal Heritage (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Aboriginal Heritage Act
- Aboriginal Jobseeker Traineeships and Employment
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Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Aboriginal Heritage
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Inquiry into Aboriginal Governance
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Report 2021-22
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Report 2022-23
- Aboriginal Language Interpreting Service
- Aboriginal Rangers
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Aboriginal Remains, Riverlea Park
- 2023-10-17
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2023-10-18
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Aboriginal Representative Body Bill
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Access Taxi Industry
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2023-11-14
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- Acquire and Restore
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Active Service Honour Board
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2023-05-30
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Adjournment Debate (2)
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-
- Activity Indicators Table
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Address In Reply
- 2022-05-03
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2022-05-04
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Address in Reply (5)
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2022-05-05
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2022-05-17
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2022-05-18
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2022-05-19
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Address in Reply (3)
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2022-05-31
- 2022-06-01
- Adelaide 500
- Adelaide Airport International Flight Capacity
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Adelaide Aquatic Centre
- 2022-06-14
- 2022-09-06
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2023-06-13
- 2023-06-15
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2023-06-28
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2023-08-29
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Petitions (2)
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- 2023-08-31
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Adelaide Beach Management Review
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Adelaide Botanic High School
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Adelaide Central Market Redevelopment
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2023-11-14
- 2023-11-16
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- Adelaide City Football Club
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Adelaide Coastline Election Policy
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2022-06-16
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Question Time (2)
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- Adelaide Comets
- Adelaide Dolphin Sanctuary
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Adelaide Electorate
- Adelaide Festival Centre
- Adelaide Festival Centre Anniversary
- Adelaide Festival Funding
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Adelaide Festival Season
- Adelaide Festival, Staffing
- Adelaide Film Festival
- Adelaide Football Club
- Adelaide Football Club and Emergency Services Partnership
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Adelaide Fringe
- Adelaide Fringe and Adelaide Festival
- Adelaide Fringe Festival
- Adelaide Giants
- Adelaide Hills Ambulance Services
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Adelaide Hills Bus Services
- Adelaide Hills Gold Mine
- Adelaide Hills Hand Spinners And Weavers Guild
- Adelaide Hills Health Services
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Adelaide Hills Palliative Care Service
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2023-08-30
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Grievance Debate (1)
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Petitions (1)
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- Adelaide Hills Productivity and Road Safety Package
- Adelaide Hills Transport Services
- Adelaide Hills War Memorial Swimming Centre
- Adelaide Hills, Direct Express Service
- Adelaide International Tattoo
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Adelaide Parklands
- 2023-03-23
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2023-05-17
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Grievance Debate (1)
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Question Time (3)
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-
2023-05-18
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Petitions (2)
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- 2023-05-31
- Adelaide Thunderbirds
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Adelaide University Bill
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Adelaide Venue Management
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
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- 2023-10-18
- 2023-10-19
- 2024-02-20
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Administrative Units
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2022-09-06
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2023-02-21
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- Administrative Units Created, Abolished, Transferred
- Adult Safeguarding Unit
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Advance Care Directives (Review) Amendment Bill
- Advanced Manufacturing
- Advanced Strategic Capabilities Accelerator
- Advertising Value Equivalency Methodology
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Affordable Housing
-
2022-07-07
-
Grievance Debate (1)
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Question Time (3)
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- 2023-09-12
- 2023-09-26
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- Afghanistan
- Aged-Care Accreditation
- Aged-Care Facilities
- Aged-Care Sector Foreign Workers
- Agriculture Industry
- Agritourism Sector Plan
- Agtech Adoption Program
- AgTech Advisory Group
- Aldinga Recreational Facility
- Altavilla Irpina Sports and Social Club
-
Aluminium Composite Cladding
- 2022-11-15
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2022-11-17
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Question Time (2)
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-
2024-02-08
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Question Time (2)
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-
2024-02-08
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
Ambulance Ramping
-
2022-05-03
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2022-05-19
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (5)
-
- 2022-07-05
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2022-09-27
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (2)
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-
2022-10-18
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2023-02-07
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2023-02-21
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2023-02-22
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Motions (1)
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Question Time (1)
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2023-03-07
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2023-03-21
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2023-03-22
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (8)
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- Mrs HURN, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- Mrs HURN, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- Mrs HURN, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
-
- 2023-03-23
-
2023-05-02
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-06-13
- 2023-06-27
- 2023-08-31
-
2023-09-12
-
2023-10-17
-
2023-11-14
- 2023-11-16
- 2023-11-30
-
2024-02-06
-
2024-02-07
- 2024-02-22
- 2024-02-22
-
2024-03-05
- 2024-03-19
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-05-01
- 2024-05-01
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- Ambulance Ramping Taskforce
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Ambulance Response Times
-
2024-02-22
-
2024-03-19
-
- Ambulance Station Upgrades
- Ambulances, Mount Gambier
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Amy Gillett Bikeway
-
Anacta Strategies Pty Ltd
- Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Land Rights Act
- Andromeda, Great White Kaolin Project
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Animal Welfare (Jumps Racing) Amendment Bill
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Answers Tabled
- 2022-09-06
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-11-01
- 2022-11-15
- 2022-11-17
- 2022-11-29
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-08
- 2023-02-21
- 2023-03-07
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-05-02
- 2023-06-15
- 2023-06-27
- 2023-08-29
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-31
- 2023-09-12
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-10-17
- 2023-10-31
- 2023-11-01
- 2023-11-02
- 2023-11-14
- 2023-11-30
- 2024-02-06
- 2024-02-20
- 2024-03-06
- 2024-03-06
- 2024-03-19
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
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Answers to Questions
- Anti-Poverty Week
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Antisemitism
-
2022-09-08
-
Grievance Debate (1)
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Question Time (1)
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-
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ANZAC Day
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2023-05-03
- 2024-05-01
- 2024-05-01
-
2024-05-02
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Grievance Debate (2)
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-
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ANZAC Day Commemoration Fund
- 2023-02-09
- 2023-03-21
-
2023-08-30
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Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
ANZAC Day Commemoration Services
-
2024-04-30
-
Grievance Debate (4)
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-
- Anzac Highway, Glandore
- Appointment of Inspector Under the ICAC Act
- Apprenticeships
-
Apprenticeships and Traineeships
-
Appropriation Bill 2022
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2022-06-02
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2022-06-14
- 2022-06-15
-
2022-06-16
-
2022-07-05
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-11-01
-
-
Appropriation Bill 2023
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2023-06-15
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2023-06-27
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2023-06-28
- 2023-07-06
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2023-08-29
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-31
-
2023-09-12
-
Bills (2)
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- 2023-09-26
- 2023-10-19
- 2023-10-31
-
-
APY Art Centre Collective
- APY Lands
- APY Lands Main Access Road Upgrade Project
-
APY Lands Mental Health Services
-
2022-11-03
-
Question Time (2)
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-
- APY Lands Police Accommodation
- APY Lands, CAMHS Staff Vacancies
-
Ardrossan Community Hospital
- Arthritis
-
Artificial Intelligence
- Arts and Culture
-
Arts Funding
-
2022-11-15
- 2023-09-12
-
- Arts Organisations Program
- Arts SA
- Arts Sector
- Asia Minor Genocide Remembrance Day
- Assaults on Police
-
Assent
- 2022-05-31
- 2022-07-05
- 2022-07-05
- 2022-09-06
- 2022-09-06
- 2022-09-06
- 2022-09-06
- 2022-09-06
-
2022-09-06
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-11-01
- 2022-11-01
- 2022-11-01
- 2022-11-01
- 2022-11-15
- 2022-11-29
- 2022-11-29
- 2022-11-29
- 2022-11-29
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-03-07
- 2023-03-07
- 2023-03-07
- 2023-03-07
- 2023-03-07
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-05-02
- 2023-05-02
- 2023-05-02
- 2023-05-02
- 2023-05-02
- 2023-05-02
- 2023-05-02
-
2023-05-30
- 2023-05-30
- 2023-06-13
- 2023-06-13
- 2023-06-13
- 2023-06-27
- 2023-06-27
- 2023-06-27
-
2023-08-29
- 2023-08-29
- 2023-08-29
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-10-17
-
Assisted Reproductive Treatment (Posthumous Use of Material and Donor Conception Register) Amendment Bill
-
Attorney-General's Department
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (21)
- In reply to Mr COWDREY
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
-
-
- Auburn Frenchfest
- Auditor-General's Department
-
Auditor-General's Report
- 2022-10-20
- 2022-11-01
- 2022-11-02
- 2022-11-03
- 2022-11-15
-
2022-11-29
-
2023-02-07
-
Answers to Questions (13)
- In reply to Mr TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- In reply to Mr TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
-
-
2023-02-08
-
Answers to Questions (7)
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
-
2023-06-14
-
Answers to Questions (8)
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
-
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-10-18
- 2023-10-19
- 2023-10-31
- 2023-11-01
- 2023-11-02
- 2023-11-14
-
2023-11-28
-
2023-11-30
-
2024-02-06
-
Answers to Questions (14)
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. G.G. BROCK
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. G.G. BROCK
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. G.G. BROCK
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. G.G. BROCK
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
-
-
2024-02-20
-
Answers to Questions (7)
- In reply to Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
-
-
Augusta Highway
- AUKMIN Ministerial Meeting
-
AUKUS
- 2023-05-04
- 2023-06-01
- 2023-06-15
-
2023-09-28
-
AUKUS (Land Acquisition) Bill
-
2024-04-10
-
Bills (5)
- The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, Mr PATTERSON, Mr PEDERICK, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, Mr PATTERSON
- The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, Mr PATTERSON, Mr PEDERICK, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, Mr PATTERSON
- The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, Mr PATTERSON, Mr PEDERICK, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, Mr PATTERSON
- The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, Mr PATTERSON, Mr PEDERICK, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, Mr PATTERSON
- The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, Mr PATTERSON, Mr PEDERICK, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, Mr PATTERSON
-
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
-
-
AUKUS Submarines
-
2023-03-09
-
2023-03-21
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (3)
-
- 2023-03-22
- 2023-03-23
- 2023-11-29
-
- Australia Day Awards
- Australia Post, Oaklands Park Closure
- Australia-China Trade Relations
- Australia-United Kingdom Free Trade Agreement
-
Australian Cyber Collaboration Centre
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
- Australian Defence Force
- Australian Defence Force in South Australia
- Australian Employment Alliance
- Australian Hotels Association
- Australian Labor Party
- Australian of the Year Awards
- Australian Police Medal
- Australian Sikh Games
-
Australian Space Park
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
- Australian Swimming Championships
-
Autism
- 2023-10-31
-
2023-11-29
-
Question Time (2)
-
- Autism Inclusion Charter
-
Autism SA
- Autism Special Needs Program
-
Autism Strategy
-
2023-03-09
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Automated External Defibrillators (Public Access) Bill
- AVG Detection in the South-East
-
Ayers House Bill
- 2023-11-29
-
2024-02-08
-
2024-02-08
-
2024-02-22
-
2024-02-22
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
-
B
- B-Double Truck Traffic
-
Badcoe Electorate
-
Bail (Conditions) Amendment Bill
-
2024-03-07
-
2024-04-30
-
2024-04-30
-
- Balcony Room Refurbishment
-
Barossa Hospital
- Barossa Valley Transport Services
- Barossa Water Security Strategy
- Barunga Gap Road
- Basketball
-
Bats
- Battle Of The Coral Sea Anniversary
- Be Bushfire Ready Campaign
-
Beach Camping
- Beach Driving
- Bickford's Australia
- Bignell, Hon. L.W.K.
- Biosecurity Management
- Biosecurity Officers and Veterinarians
- Biosecurity Response To Varroa Destructor
- Birdwood Ambulance Station
- Births, Deaths and Marriages Registration (Tissue Donation Statements) Amendment Bill
- Bitumen Contractors
- Black Electorate
- Black Forest Trees
- Blackwood Christmas Pageant
- Bolder Future Project
- Bordertown Water Supply
- Botanic Gardens
-
Botanic Gardens and State Herbarium (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Bragg By-Election
- Bragg Electorate
-
Brain Tumour Support Coordinator
-
2023-05-31
-
-
Brand SA
-
2023-08-30
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Brand South Australia
- Brave for Dave
-
Brompton Gasworks
- 2022-05-04
-
2022-05-05
-
Question Time (12)
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
-
-
Brompton Gasworks Development
-
2022-05-18
-
- Brompton Gasworks Independent Review
-
Brompton Gasworks Site
-
Buckingham Arms Hotel Redevelopment
-
Buckland Park Intersection
- Buckney, Ms K.
-
Budget Papers
- Budget Savings Targets
-
Builders Indemnity Insurance Fund
- Building And Construction Industry
- Building Industry
-
Burial and Cremation (Interment Rights) Amendment Bill
- Burial And Cremation (Interment Rights) Amendment Bill
- Burnside Citizenship Awards
- Bus Contract Review
-
Bus Timetables
-
2023-05-03
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Bushfire Preparedness
- Bushfire Recovery Support
- Bushfire Regulations
-
Business Confidence
- Business Council of Australia
- Business Events
- Business Investment
- Buthera Agreement
-
C
- Cadets
-
Camden Park Sinkhole
-
2023-09-26
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Cameron, Hon. T.G.
-
2022-09-28
-
- CAMHS Recruitment of Additional Child Psychiatrists
- Campbelltown City Soccer Club
-
Canberra Press Gallery Midwinter Ball
- Capital Works Assistance Scheme
- Capital Works Projects
- Car Park Security Incident
- Carer Respite Support
- Casino (Penalties) Amendment Bill
- Catalysts for a Green Economy Program
-
CBD Crime and Antisocial Behaviour
-
2023-06-27
-
-
CBD Police Resources
-
2024-04-10
-
Question Time (15)
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
-
-
- Cease Harvest Threshold
- Ceduna Area School
-
Central Adelaide Local Health Network
-
2022-11-03
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Certificate III in Individual Support
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
- CFS Cadet Program
- CFS Volunteer Leadership Program
-
Chaffey Electorate
- Chaffey Electorate Award Recipients
- Chaffey Electorate March Long Weekend
- Chairman Of Committees, Election
- Chequered Copper Butterfly
- Chief Executive Appointments
-
Chief Scientist
-
2023-11-16
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2024-05-01
- 2024-05-01
-
- Child Care
-
Child Death and Serious Injury Review Committee
-
2022-09-07
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
-
-
Child Development Council
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
-
-
Child Protection
- 2022-05-03
- 2022-06-02
- 2022-07-07
-
2022-09-06
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2022-09-08
-
2022-09-27
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2022-11-15
- 2022-11-16
-
2022-12-01
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-03-07
-
2023-05-17
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2023-07-06
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2024-02-22
- 2024-02-22
-
Child Protection Case Management System
-
2023-03-09
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Child Protection Department
-
2022-05-05
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-03-07
-
2023-05-04
-
Personal Explanation (1)
-
Question Time (3)
-
-
-
Child Protection Department Chief Executive
-
2023-02-07
-
- Child Protection Expert Group
- Child Protection Reviews
-
Child Protection, Baby Removals
-
Child Sex Offenders Registration (Child-Related Work) Amendment Bill
- Children in Care
- Children In Care
-
Children in Care, Education Pathways
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
-
Children in Residential Care
-
2023-11-02
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Children in State Care
- Children in State Care Apology Anniversary
-
China Trade Mission
-
2023-09-13
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Citadel Secure
-
2024-02-22
-
Question Time (13)
- Mr TEAGUE
- Mr TEAGUE
- Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr TEAGUE
- Mr TEAGUE
- Mr TEAGUE
- Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
-
-
2024-03-19
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-03-20
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
-
- CITADEL SECURE
- City of Mitcham
- City West
-
City West Area
- Civil Fees
-
Civil Liability (Byo Containers) Amendment Bill
- Civil Liability (BYO Containers) Amendment Bill
- Clare Valley Wine Industry
- Cleland National Park
-
Climate Change
-
Climate Change and Greenhouse Emissions Reduction (Targets) Amendment Bill
-
Climate Change And Greenhouse Emissions Reduction (Targets) Amendment Bill
-
Closing the Gap Annual Report
- Coast Protection Board
-
Coastal Management
- Cobdogla Irrigation and Steam Museum
- Code Blue
- Code Blue Emergency Code
- Code White
-
Colton Electorate
-
Colton Electorate Beach Management
- COMCEN Upgrade
-
Commencement
- 2022-05-03
- 2022-05-04
- 2022-05-05
- 2022-05-17
- 2022-05-18
- 2022-05-19
- 2022-05-31
- 2022-06-01
- 2022-06-02
- 2022-06-14
- 2022-06-15
- 2022-06-16
- 2022-07-05
- 2022-07-06
- 2022-07-07
- 2022-09-06
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-08
- 2022-09-20
- 2022-09-27
- 2022-09-28
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-10-19
- 2022-10-20
- 2022-11-01
- 2022-11-02
- 2022-11-03
- 2022-11-15
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-17
- 2022-11-29
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-12-01
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-08
- 2023-02-09
- 2023-02-21
- 2023-02-22
- 2023-02-23
- 2023-03-07
- 2023-03-08
- 2023-03-09
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-03-22
- 2023-03-23
- 2023-03-26
- 2023-05-02
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-04
- 2023-05-16
- 2023-05-17
- 2023-05-18
- 2023-05-30
- 2023-05-31
- 2023-06-01
- 2023-06-13
- 2023-06-14
- 2023-06-15
- 2023-06-27
- 2023-06-28
- 2023-07-06
- 2023-08-29
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-31
- 2023-09-12
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-14
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-09-28
- 2023-10-17
- 2023-10-18
- 2023-10-19
- 2023-10-31
- 2023-11-01
- 2023-11-02
- 2023-11-14
- 2023-11-15
- 2023-11-16
- 2023-11-28
- 2023-11-29
- 2023-11-30
- 2024-02-06
- 2024-02-07
- 2024-02-08
- 2024-02-08
- 2024-02-20
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-22
- 2024-02-22
- 2024-03-05
- 2024-03-06
- 2024-03-06
- 2024-03-07
- 2024-03-07
- 2024-03-19
- 2024-03-20
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-05-01
- 2024-05-01
- 2024-05-02
- Commission of Oaths
-
Commission Of Oaths
-
Commissioner for Aboriginal Children and Young People
-
2022-09-07
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
-
-
Commissioner for Children and Young People
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
-
- Commissioner for Public Sector Employment
-
Committee Stage
-
2022-05-04
- 2022-06-14
-
2022-06-14
-
2022-06-15
- 2022-06-15
- 2022-07-06
-
2022-07-07
- 2022-09-06
-
2022-09-07
-
2022-09-27
- 2022-09-27
-
2022-09-28
-
2022-10-19
-
2022-10-20
-
2022-11-03
-
2022-11-15
-
2022-11-16
-
Bills (2)
-
-
2022-11-29
- 2022-11-30
-
2022-12-01
- 2023-02-21
-
2023-02-21
-
2023-02-23
- 2023-03-09
-
2023-03-21
- 2023-03-22
-
2023-05-02
-
2023-05-18
-
2023-06-01
- 2023-06-13
- 2023-06-15
- 2023-06-27
- 2023-08-29
- 2023-08-31
- 2023-09-14
-
2023-09-28
-
2023-10-17
- 2023-10-18
-
- Commonwealth Employer Incentives
-
Commonwealth Games
- Commonwealth Infrastructure Funding
- Community Connections Program
- Community Consultation
- Community Engagement
- Community Forum, Eastern Adelaide
-
Community Infrastructure Grant Program
-
2022-10-19
-
Question Time (3)
-
-
-
Community Language Schools
- Community Recreation and Sports Facilities Program
- Community Sport, Concussion Education
- Community Sporting Clubs
-
Community Visitor Scheme
-
Community Wastewater Management System
- Company Directors' Obligations
-
Compulsory Land Acquisition
-
Conservation Council
-
2023-08-29
-
2023-10-31
-
Answers to Questions (2)
-
-
- Conservation Council Contracts
-
Constitution (Countersigning) Amendment Bill
-
Construction Industry
-
Construction Industry Commissioner Bill
- Construction Industry Training Fund (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Construction Site Safety
- Construction Softwood Transport Assistance Program
-
Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union
-
2022-11-16
- 2022-11-17
-
-
Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union
-
2022-09-06
-
2022-09-07
-
2022-11-03
-
2023-06-01
-
-
Consultants and Contractors
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (8)
- In reply to Mr PEDERICK, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- In reply to Mr PEDERICK, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- In reply to Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- In reply to Mr PEDERICK, The Hon. G.G. BROCK
- In reply to Mr PEDERICK, The Hon. G.G. BROCK
-
-
2023-02-21
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (46)
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
-
-
2023-08-30
-
2023-08-31
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (14)
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
-
-
2023-10-17
-
Estimates Replies (7)
-
-
-
Consumer and Business Services
-
2023-09-14
-
-
Controlled Substances (Destruction of Seized Property) Amendment Bill
-
2024-02-22
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
-
-
Controlled Substances (Pure Amounts) Amendment Bill
- Coober Pedy Community
- Coober Pedy District Council
- Coober Pedy Taskforce
- Copper Theft
- Coronation of King Charles III
- Coronation of King Charles III and Queen Camilla
- Coronial Finalisations
-
Correctional Services Department
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
-
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
- Correctional Services Recidivism Target
-
Cost of Living
- 2022-09-07
- 2023-02-08
- 2023-02-22
-
2023-03-08
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-11-30
-
2024-03-05
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- Cost Of Living
-
Cost of Living Concession
-
Cost Of Living Concession
- Council Amalgamations
- Council Chief Executive Officer Salaries
-
Council Flag Protocols
-
2023-10-19
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Council Member Conduct Framework, Establishment Costs
- Council Member Vacancies
- Council Mergers
- Council Rates
- Country Arts SA Budget
- Country Cabinet
-
Country Education Strategy
-
Country Fire Service
- 2023-03-08
- 2023-09-12
-
2023-11-01
-
Grievance Debate (2)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2024-03-05
-
2024-05-02
- Country Fire Service Aerial Fleet
- Country Fire Service Chief Officer
-
Country Fire Service Staff
- Country Fire Service Volunteers
- Country Fire Service, Apy Lands
- Country Fire Service, Cold Burns
- Country Fire Service, Kangaroo Island
- Country Fire Service, Operational Fleet Manufacturers
- Country Fire Service, Staff Development Framework
- Country Fire Service, Telecommunications Equipment Replacement
- Country Health Services
- Country Shows
- Court of Appeal Office Accommodation
-
Courts Administration (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Courts Administration Authority
-
2022-09-06
- 2023-09-12
-
2023-09-13
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Covid-19
- Covid-19 Booster Campaign
-
Covid-19 Direction Accountability And Oversight Committee
-
COVID-19 Direction Accountability and Oversight Committee
- COVID-19 Full-Time Equivalent Reductions
- COVID-19 Mandatory Vaccination
-
COVID-19 Restrictions, Aged-Care Facilities
-
2023-11-15
-
- Covid-19 Schools
- Covid-19 Testing
- Covid-19 Vaccination Clinics
-
Crane Services
-
2022-11-17
-
- Credit Ratings
- Crime and Public Integrity Policy Committee
- Crime And Public Integrity Policy Committee
- Crime and Public Integrity Policy Committee: Operation of the Police Complaints and Discipline Act
- Crime in Regional Areas
- Crime Statistics
-
Criminal Law (High Risk Offenders) (Additional High Risk Offenders) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Child Sexual Abuse) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Criminal Organisations - Prescribed Places) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Human Remains) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Sexual Predation Offences) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Reform
-
Criminal Procedure (Monitoring Orders) Amendment Bill
-
Critical Client Incidents
-
2022-12-01
- 2023-02-08
-
- Croatian Club Grant
- Crop and Pasture Report
-
Cross Border Commissioner Bill
- Cross-Border Commissioner
- Crown Solicitor's Office
-
Cultural Institutions Storage Facility
- Cummins Police Office
-
Cybersecurity
-
D
- Dance Hub SA Funding
-
Davenport Electorate
- Davenport Electorate Council Elections
- Davenport Electorate Sporting Facilities
- Death of Queen Elizabeth II and Accession of King Charles III
- Declaration Of Electricity Market Suspension
- Deeper Maintenance and Modification Facility Project
-
Defence and Space Industries
-
Defence Industries
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-09-28
- 2024-02-20
-
2024-03-19
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
-
Defence Naval Shipbuilding
-
2023-10-31
-
2023-11-02
- 2023-11-29
-
2024-02-21
-
2024-02-21
-
2024-02-21
-
-
Defence SA
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
-
- 2023-09-28
-
- Defence SA Chief Executive
-
Defence Shipbuilding
-
2023-02-21
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-03-22
-
2023-05-03
- 2023-05-17
-
2023-06-14
- 2023-09-13
-
2023-09-28
-
2023-10-19
- 2023-11-14
-
-
Defence State
-
2023-09-28
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
-
-
Defence Strategic Review
- Defence Workforce Plan
- DefenCell Barriers
-
Dementia Awareness
-
2022-09-27
-
Grievance Debate (2)
-
- 2023-09-28
-
- Department for Industry, Innovation and Science
- Department of Human Services
- Deputy Premier
-
Deputy Premier, Overseas Trip
-
2023-03-08
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Dernancourt Kindergarten
- Desalination Plant
- Designated Area Migration Agreements
- Di Francesco, Rev. Canon M.
- Digital Access Plan
-
Digital Education Strategy
- 2023-06-13
-
2024-03-07
-
2024-03-07
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
- Director of Public Prosecutions
-
Disability Inclusion (Review Recommendations) Amendment Bill
- 2023-06-28
- 2023-09-12
- 2023-09-13
-
2023-09-14
- 2024-03-20
-
2024-03-21
-
2024-03-21
-
2024-03-21
-
2024-04-09
-
2024-04-09
-
2024-04-11
-
Bills (2)
-
-
2024-04-11
-
Bills (2)
-
-
2024-04-11
-
Bills (2)
-
- Disability Ministerial Advisory Committee
- District Council of Mount Remarkable By-Laws
- District Court Associates
- Dividend to Government
- Diwali Festival
- Doig, Brevet Sergeant Jason Christopher
-
Domestic and Family Violence
-
Domestic and Family Violence Crisis Accommodation
-
2024-02-08
-
- Domestic and Family Violence Prevention
- Domestic And Family Violence Vigil
- Dozynki Harvest Festival
- DPP Workplace Experience Report
- Driver's Licence Replacement Fee
-
Drone Activity
-
Dukes Highway
- Dukes Highway Reconstruction
- Dunlop, Mr M.
-
Dunstan By-election
-
2024-02-08
-
Members (4)
-
-
-
E
- E-mobility Devices
- Eagles Lacrosse Club
-
Early Childhood Development
-
Early Intervention Funding
- Early Learning Strategy
- East Marden Primary School
- East Torrens Baseball Club
- Eastern States Deployment, Emergency Storm Response
- Echunga Dam
- Economic and Finance Committee
-
Economic And Finance Committee
- Economic and Finance Committee: Embedded Networks in South Australia
- Economic And Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2022-23
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2023-24
- Economic Equality for Women
-
Economic Recovery Fund
-
2022-06-14
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2022-09-06
- 2023-10-18
-
- Eden Valley Road
- Edithburgh Jetty
- Edithburgh Sports and Community Club Power Supply Upgrade
-
Education Advertising
-
2023-05-17
- 2023-08-29
-
-
Education Department
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
- 2023-08-29
- 2023-09-12
-
- Education Department Asbestos Register
-
Education Department Staff
-
2023-09-12
-
-
Education Family Conferences
-
Education Funding
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
-
Education Standards Board
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
-
2023-06-13
-
- Education Workforce
-
Efficiency Dividend
-
Efficiency Dividend Targets Savings
- Eid Celebrations
- Elder And Davenport Electorates
-
Elder Electorate
- Elderly Citizens
-
Election Commitments
-
2022-05-03
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2022-05-31
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-10-19
-
2022-11-30
-
2022-12-01
- 2023-03-22
- 2023-09-12
-
-
Elective Surgery
- 2022-06-02
- 2023-11-30
-
2024-04-09
-
2024-04-09
-
Electoral (Control of Corflutes) Amendment Bill
-
Electoral (Telephone Voting) Amendment Bill
-
Electoral Commission
-
Electoral Commission of South Australia
- Electric Personal Mobility Devices
- Electric Plane Trial
- Electricity Corporations (Restructuring Disposal) Act
- Electricity Generation
-
Electricity Interconnector
-
2022-06-16
-
- Electricity Network
-
Electricity Prices
- 2022-05-03
-
2022-05-17
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2024-03-19
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-03-21
-
Electricity Supply
- Emergency Accommodation
- Emergency Department Patient
- Emergency Housing
- Emergency Service Vehicles
-
Emergency Services
- 2022-06-14
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
-
- Employment Figures
- Employment Growth
- Employment Tribunal Review
- Encounter Bay Marina
-
Endometriosis
- 2022-07-05
- 2023-03-09
-
2024-03-21
-
2024-03-21
-
2024-03-21
- Energy and Mining Sector
-
Energy Bill Relief
-
2023-09-28
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-03-07
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-03-07
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Energy Concessions
-
2023-03-09
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2023-05-31
-
- Energy Drinks
- Energy Price Relief Plan
-
Energy Prices
-
2022-11-02
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
-
- Enforcement and Prosecution, Real-Time Data
- Enterprise Agreements
- Enterprise Chemotherapy Prescribing System
-
Entrepreneurial Learning Strategy
-
2023-06-13
-
Answers to Questions (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2023-08-29
-
- Entrepreneurial Specialist Schools
-
Environment Department
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
-
-
-
Environment Protection (Objects of Act and Board Attributes) Amendment Bill
-
Environment Protection Authority
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (11)
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
-
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
-
Environment, Resources and Development Committee
- Environment, Resources And Development Committee
- Environment, Resources and Development Committee: Inquiry into the Urban Forest
- Environment, Resources and Development Committee: PFAS Contaminated Waste Disposal
-
Environmental Warrior Award
-
ePlanning System
-
2022-10-20
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Equal Opportunity (Domestic Abuse) Amendment Bill
- Equal Opportunity Commissioner's Independent Review of Harassment in the Parliament Workplace
- Equestrian Sports
- ESCOSA Inquiry into Electricity and Gas
- Essential Services Commission
-
Essential Services Commission of South Australia
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
2023-08-30
-
-
Establishment of Adelaide University
-
2023-07-06
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
- 2023-10-18
-
-
Estimates Committees
-
2022-06-16
-
2022-07-05
-
Bills (2)
-
-
2023-06-28
- 2023-07-06
-
2023-08-29
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-31
-
2023-09-12
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2023-09-26
-
- Eurovision Song Contest 2024
- Evans, Dr A.L.
- Evanston Primary School
- Evidence (Aboriginal Traditional Laws and Customs) Amendment Bill
- Excess Employees
-
Executive Appointments
-
2022-09-06
-
2023-02-21
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (23)
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
-
-
2023-08-30
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
- 2023-08-31
-
2023-09-12
-
2023-10-17
-
- Executive Position Terminations
-
Executive Positions
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (6)
-
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (44)
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
-
-
2023-08-30
-
2023-08-31
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (14)
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
-
-
2023-10-17
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
-
- Executive Positions Abolished
-
Executive Terminations
-
2023-02-21
-
- Expenditure Targets
- Expert Panel
- Explosives Bill
-
Export Delays
-
2023-11-14
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Export Initiatives
- Export Programs
-
Extinction Rebellion
-
2023-05-17
-
- Extreme Weather Response
-
Eyre Peninsula Desalination Plant
-
2023-03-09
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (3)
-
- 2023-08-29
- 2024-03-05
- 2024-03-06
- 2024-03-06
-
2024-03-20
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-09
-
-
Eyre Peninsula Water Supply
-
F
-
Fair Work (Family and Domestic Violence Leave) Amendment Bill
- 2022-11-16
- 2023-02-09
-
2023-02-21
- 2023-03-22
- 2023-05-02
- False Requirements to Replace Gas Appliances
- Family Day Care And Respite Care
- Family-Based Carers
-
Federal Budget
-
2022-11-01
-
- Federal Election
- Federal Labor Government
-
Federal Voice to Parliament Referendum
-
Felmeri Group
- Felmeri Group O'Halloran Hill Development
- Female Community Work
- Female Owned Family Businesses
- Festa Della Repubblica
- Festa di Madonna di Montevergine
- Festival Plaza
- Field River Valley
-
FIFA Women's World Cup
-
Final Stages
- 2022-05-19
- 2022-06-14
- 2022-06-16
- 2022-07-06
- 2022-07-07
- 2022-07-07
-
2022-09-06
- 2022-09-27
- 2022-09-27
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-10-20
- 2022-11-03
- 2022-11-17
- 2022-11-17
- 2022-11-29
- 2022-11-30
-
2022-12-01
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-09
- 2023-03-07
- 2023-03-07
- 2023-03-09
- 2023-03-22
- 2023-03-23
- 2023-03-23
- 2023-05-18
-
2023-05-30
- 2023-05-31
- 2023-06-14
- 2023-06-15
- 2023-06-27
-
2023-08-29
- 2023-09-12
- 2023-09-28
- 2023-10-18
- Find Your Place Campaign
-
Findon Technical College
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
- 2023-09-26
-
- Finizio, Dr A.
- Finniss Electorate
-
Fire Danger Rating System
-
Firearms
-
2022-09-06
-
- First Home Owner Grants
-
First Nations Voice Bill
- 2023-02-23
-
2023-03-07
- 2023-03-08
-
2023-03-09
-
2023-03-21
- 2023-03-22
- 2023-03-23
- 2023-03-26
- 2023-05-02
-
First Nations Voice to Parliament
- 2022-11-16
-
2024-04-11
-
2024-04-11
-
2024-04-11
- 2024-05-02
- Fish Stock
-
Fisher, Ms E.M.
-
2022-12-01
-
Grievance Debate (2)
-
-
- Fishing Industry
- Flammable Building Cladding
-
Fleet Vehicles
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
- Flinders Electorate
-
Flinders Medical Centre
- 2022-05-03
- 2022-11-16
-
2022-11-17
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-02-23
-
2024-04-09
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-04-09
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
Flinders Ranges Sacred Sites
-
2023-09-27
-
2023-09-28
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-10-31
-
- Flinders Ranges Water Quality
- Flinders University
-
Flood Damaged Roads
-
2023-02-09
- 2023-05-02
- 2023-08-30
-
-
Flood Recovery Funding
-
2023-10-18
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Flows for the Future Program
-
Flu Vaccination
-
2022-06-02
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2022-06-16
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Food and Beverage Exports
- Food Security Budget Measures
- Food Waste for Healthy Soils Fund
- Football Australia
- Footy Express
- Forensic Science Building
- Forestry Industry
-
Forestville Hockey Club
- 2023-06-01
- 2023-06-13
-
2023-08-30
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Petitions (1)
-
- Forfeiture Bill
- Former Brompton Gasworks Site
-
Foster and Kinship Care
-
Foster and Kinship Carer Week
-
Frankfurt Trade Office
- Franklin Street Bus Station
- Frederick Road, West Lakes
- Free Cat Desexing Programs
-
Freedom of Information
-
2022-09-07
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2022-11-29
- 2023-02-07
-
2023-02-09
-
2023-05-17
- 2024-03-20
-
-
Freedom of Information (Ministerial Diaries) Amendment Bill
- Freeling Police Station
- Freeling Town Pump Upgrade
- Freight Costs
-
Friends of Parks Groups
-
2024-03-20
-
- Friendship Force
-
Frome Electorate
-
Frontier Software Cybersecurity Incident
-
Frontline Health Workers
- Frontline Workers
-
Fruit Fly
-
2023-02-08
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
- Fruit Fly Outbreak
- FTE Allocations to Industrial Relations Branch
- FTEs for Communications and Promotion
- Fuel Pricing
-
Full-Time Equivalents
-
2022-09-06
-
- Funds SA
-
-
G
-
Gas (Other Gases) Amendment Bill
- Gas Exploration
- Gather Round
-
Gawler Line Electrification
-
2022-05-05
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2022-06-16
-
- Gawler Railcars
- Gawler Show
- Gawler State Emergency Service
- Gawler Village Fair
-
Gender Equality
- 2022-11-29
-
2023-03-08
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
Gender-Based Violence
- Gender-Based Violence, National Cabinet
-
Gene Technology (Adoption of Commonwealth Amendments) Amendment Bill
-
General Practitioner Incentives
-
2024-02-06
-
-
General Practitioner Payroll Tax
- 2023-06-14
-
2023-09-26
-
2023-10-19
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2023-11-01
-
2023-11-30
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-03-06
-
2024-03-06
-
2024-03-19
- 2024-03-20
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
- Geranium Primary School Site
- Gibson Electorate
- Gibson Electorate Award Recipients
- Gibson Electorate Sporting Clubs
-
Giles Electorate
- Gillard, Hon. J.
- Giovine, Mr M.
- Glenelg Antisocial Behaviour and Violence
-
Glenelg Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation Centre
-
2023-06-28
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2023-08-30
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Petitions (1)
-
- 2023-11-02
- 2023-11-16
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
-
- Glenelg Surf Life Saving Club
- Glenside Urban Corridor (Living) Code Amendment
- Glenthorne National Park
- Glenunga Football Club
- Glitter Gang
- Glynde Rsl Sub Branch
- Glynde RSL Sub-Branch
- Gonis, Mr B.
-
Goods and Services
-
2022-09-06
-
2023-02-21
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (22)
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
-
-
2023-08-30
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
- 2023-08-31
-
2023-09-12
-
2023-10-17
-
-
Government Advertising
-
2022-09-06
-
2023-02-21
- 2023-03-07
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (44)
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
-
-
2023-08-30
-
2023-08-31
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (14)
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
-
-
2023-10-17
-
Estimates Replies (7)
-
-
- Government Contracts
- Government Country Housing
- Government Funding
- Government Marketing Campaigns
- Government Ministers
- Government Savings Targets
- Government-Paid Advertising
- Governor's Commission
- Governor's Speech
- GP Fee for Service Agreements
- Graham Report
- Grain Harvest
- Grange Road
- Granite Island Cafe
- Grant Breakdown
-
Grant Programs
- 2022-09-06
-
2023-02-21
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (22)
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
-
-
2023-08-30
- 2023-08-31
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (9)
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr TEAGUE
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr McBRIDE, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. A. MICHAELS
-
-
2023-10-17
-
Grant Programs or Funds
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
2022-10-18
-
- Grants and Subsidies
- Grantskalns, Ms C.
- Greater Adelaide 30-Year Plan
-
Greater Adelaide Freight Bypass
- 2022-09-08
-
2023-05-16
- 2023-06-01
- Greater Adelaide Regional Plan
-
Green Industries SA
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
-
- 2023-09-14
- 2023-10-31
-
-
Green Industry Fund
- Green Steel
- Greenhill Road, Cleland
- GreenInc
-
Greyhound Racing Industry
-
2023-08-30
-
-
Growth State Program
-
GST Distribution
- Gumeracha Emergency Department
-
-
H
-
Hahndorf Bypass
-
2023-02-23
- 2023-05-02
-
2023-08-31
- 2023-09-12
- 2023-09-26
-
2023-10-31
- 2023-11-28
-
2024-02-06
-
-
Hahndorf Traffic Improvement Project
- 2022-09-06
-
2022-10-18
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2022-10-20
- 2022-11-02
- 2022-11-29
- 2023-02-07
-
Hahndorf Truck Diversion
- 2023-08-29
-
2023-09-12
-
Grievance Debate (2)
-
Question Time (3)
-
- 2023-09-26
- Hall, Mr R.
-
Hammond Electorate
- Hargreaves, Mr M.
- Harmony Week
-
Harness Racing SA
-
2023-02-09
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Harnett, Mr G. and Pedler, Mr D.
-
Hartley Electorate
- Harvest Rock
-
Health Active Directory ID
-
Health Care (Acquisition of Property) Amendment Bill
- 2022-11-16
-
2022-11-16
-
Bills (1)
-
Parliamentary Procedure (1)
-
- 2022-11-29
- 2023-02-07
-
Health Care for Regional and Rural South Australia
- Health Infrastructure
- Health Services
-
Health System
- Health System, Winter Demand
-
Health Worker Incentives
-
2023-05-16
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-06-13
-
- Health Workers
-
Health Workforce
-
2023-02-23
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Healthy Workplaces Service
- Heartkids
- Hectorville Football Club
- Henley and Grange ANZAC Day Dawn Service
-
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
-
2022-09-20
-
Address to His Majesty the King (2)
- The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS, The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS, The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN, Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON, Mr TELFER, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD, Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. N.F. COOK, Mr TARZIA, The Hon. G.G. BROCK, Mr PEDERICK, The Hon. L.W.K. BIGNELL
- Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. B.I. BOYER, Mr BATTY, The Hon. A. MICHAELS, Mr BASHAM, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION, Mrs HURN, Mr ELLIS, The Hon. A. PICCOLO, Mr McBRIDE, Mr BELL, Mr ODENWALDER, Mr TEAGUE, Ms SAVVAS, Mr COWDREY, Ms HOOD, The Hon. D.G. PISONI, Mr FULBROOK, Ms THOMPSON, Mrs PEARCE, Ms HUTCHESSON, Ms WORTLEY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
-
- 2022-09-27
-
-
Heritage Places (Adelaide Park Lands) Amendment Bill
-
Heritage Places (Protection of State Heritage Places) Amendment Bill
- Heysen Boulevard, Mount Barker
- Heysen Electorate
- Heysen Tunnels
- HIA Housing Scorecard
- High Flows in the SA River Murray
- High Murray River Flows
- High Productivity Vehicle Network Project
- High-Risk Incident, Crystal Brook
- Higher Education Providers
-
Highgate Park
- Highway Traffic Management
- Hindmarsh Stadium Upgrade
-
History Month
-
History Trust
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
-
- Hogan, M.
- Hogan, Ms M.
- Holi Festival
- Home Battery Scheme
-
HomeBuilder Program
- 2023-02-08
-
2023-02-22
-
2023-03-08
-
2023-05-02
-
Homelessness
- Homelessness Rate
-
Homelessness Services
-
2022-05-18
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (3)
-
-
2022-06-15
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-11-01
- 2023-11-28
-
- Homelessness Week
-
HomeStart Finance
-
2022-09-06
-
- Hope Valley Reservoir
-
Hopgood Theatre
- Horne, Mr I.
- Hosking, Mr D.
-
Hospital Avoidance Hubs
-
Hospital Beds
-
Hospital Car Parking
-
Hospital Supplies
- 2023-03-07
-
2023-05-02
- Hospitals,
-
Hospitals, Car Parking
-
Housing Affordability
- Housing and Homelessness Funding
-
Housing Authority
-
2023-11-02
-
-
Housing Supply
- 2023-06-28
- 2023-09-27
-
2024-05-02
- Housing Trust
-
Human Services Department
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
-
-
2022-09-27
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2022-10-20
-
- Human Services Department Fleet
-
Human Services Department Newsletter
-
2022-09-07
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Human Services Department Staff
- Human Services Portfolio
- Humphries, Mr Barry
-
Hunter Class Frigate Program
-
2023-11-02
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2023-11-16
-
2024-02-06
-
2024-02-07
-
2024-02-20
-
Question Time (8)
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
-
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-22
- 2024-02-22
-
- Hutt St Centre
- Hyde and Alexander Child Protection Reports
- Hyde Review Safety Checks for Children
-
Hydrogen and Renewable Energy Bill
-
2023-09-14
-
2023-09-26
-
2023-09-27
- 2023-09-28
-
2023-10-17
- 2023-10-18
- 2023-10-19
- 2023-11-16
- 2023-11-28
-
- Hydrogen Industry
- Hydrogen Jobs Plan
- Hydrogen Power Funding
-
Hydrogen Power Plant
- 2022-07-07
- 2022-11-03
-
2023-02-21
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-03-22
-
2023-05-30
- 2023-09-27
-
2023-11-01
-
2023-11-29
-
Hydrogen Power Station
-
Hydrogen Production
-
2022-10-20
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (3)
-
-
2023-05-18
-
-
Hydrogen Sector
- 2022-05-03
-
2022-05-05
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (10)
- Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
-
- 2022-05-31
- 2022-06-15
- Hydrologist and Ecologist Appointments, Limestone Coast
-
-
I
- ICAC Evaluation of the Central Adelaide Local Health Network
- ICAC Report
-
Illuminate Adelaide
-
2022-07-06
- 2023-11-15
-
-
Immigrant Detention
-
2023-11-16
-
2023-11-28
-
-
Incolink
-
2023-07-06
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Independent Review Into Safework Sa's Investigation Into The Death Of Gayle Woodford
- India Trade Mission
- Indian Community
- Indian Mela
- Indigenous Apprenticeships and Traineeships
- Indigenous Tourism
- Indo Pacific International Maritime Exposition
- Industrial Land
- Industrial Relations
- Industry Climate Change Conference
- Industry Participation and Jobs
- Industry, Innovation and Skills Department
- Industry, Innovation and Skills Department
- Influenza Vaccinations
- Infrastructure Funding
-
Infrastructure Investment Program
-
2023-11-16
-
2024-03-06
-
2024-03-06
-
-
Infrastructure Projects
- 2022-06-01
- 2023-05-02
-
2023-11-15
-
2023-11-28
- 2024-02-06
- 2024-02-08
- 2024-02-08
- Innovation and Skills Development
-
Innovation, Industry and Skills Department
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (7)
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
-
-
- Inspirational Women
- International Day for Disaster Risk Reduction
-
International Day of People with Disability
-
2022-11-30
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Motions (1)
-
-
- International Day of Rural Women
-
International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People
-
International Firefighters' Day
- International Holocaust Remembrance Day
- International Nurses Day
-
International Paramedics Day
- International Student Levy
- International Students in Public Schools
- International Visitor Strategy
-
International Volunteer Day
-
International Women's Day
- International Workers' Memorial Day
-
Intervention Orders (Prevention of Abuse) (Section 31 Offences) Amendment Bill
- 2024-03-05
-
2024-03-07
-
2024-03-07
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-09
-
Introduction and First Reading
- 2022-09-06
- 2022-09-06
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-07
-
2022-09-07
- 2022-09-27
- 2022-09-27
- 2022-09-27
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-10-19
- 2022-10-20
- 2022-10-20
-
2022-11-02
- 2022-11-03
- 2022-11-03
- 2022-11-03
- 2022-11-15
- 2022-11-15
- 2022-11-15
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-16
-
2022-11-16
-
Bills (1)
-
Parliamentary Procedure (1)
-
- 2022-11-17
- 2022-11-17
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-12-01
- 2023-02-08
- 2023-02-09
- 2023-02-22
- 2023-02-23
- 2023-03-08
- 2023-03-08
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-03-23
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-04
- 2023-05-16
- 2023-05-16
- 2023-05-18
- 2023-05-18
- 2023-06-01
- 2023-06-14
-
2023-06-15
-
2023-06-15
- 2023-06-27
- 2023-06-28
- 2023-07-06
- 2023-08-29
- 2023-08-29
- 2023-08-29
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-31
- 2023-08-31
- 2023-09-12
- 2023-09-13
-
2023-09-14
- 2023-09-14
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-09-28
- 2023-09-28
- 2023-10-18
-
Introduction And First Reading
-
2022-05-03
-
2022-05-04
- 2022-05-05
- 2022-05-05
- 2022-05-18
- 2022-05-19
- 2022-05-19
- 2022-05-31
- 2022-06-01
- 2022-06-01
- 2022-06-01
- 2022-06-01
-
2022-06-02
- 2022-06-14
- 2022-06-15
-
2022-06-15
- 2022-06-15
- 2022-06-16
- 2022-07-05
- 2022-07-06
-
2022-09-08
-
-
Invest South Australia
- Investing Expenditure for the Forward Estimates
-
Investing Expenditure Projects
- Investment Attraction
- Investment Program
- iPAVe
- Islamic Community
-
Israel
-
J
- Japan Airlines
- Jet Skis
-
Jetties
-
Job Creation
-
2022-05-03
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Johns, Mr K.
-
Joint Committee on the Establishment of Adelaide University
-
2023-07-06
- 2023-08-29
-
2023-10-17
-
Parliamentary Committees (2)
-
-
2023-10-31
-
Parliamentary Committees (3)
-
- 2023-11-01
-
-
Joint Committee on the Legalisation of Medicinal Cannabis
-
Joint Parliamentary Service Committee
-
K
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Kangaroo Island
- Kangaroo Island CFS
-
Kangaroo Island Ferry
-
2022-05-05
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2022-11-15
-
-
Kangaroo Island Koalas
- Kangaroo Island Paediatric Services
- Kangaroo Island Tourism
- Kangaroo Island Wildlife Carers
- Keith and District Hospital
- Kelly, Mrs M.H.
-
Keolis Downer
- 2022-06-16
-
2022-07-07
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2023-02-09
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2023-09-27
- 2023-11-28
-
Kerley, Mr D.n.
-
2022-07-06
-
Grievance Debate (3)
-
Ministerial Statement (1)
-
-
- Kernewek Lowender Copper Coast Cornish Festival
- Kids in Space
-
King Electorate
- Koonibba Test Range
- KordaMentha Report
-
Kurlana Tapa Youth Justice Centre
-
-
L
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Labour Force Data
-
Lady George Kindergarten
-
2022-10-20
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Lamerton, Mr R.
- Land Supply
-
Land Tax
- Landscape Boards
- Landscape Priorities Fund
- Landscape South Australia Act
- Latouche Mazzei, Lucas
-
Lawrie, Ms J.L.
-
2023-06-15
-
Adjournment Debate (2)
-
-
- Le Cornu Site
- Learning Plus Tutoring Program
- Legacy Centenary Torch Relay
- Legal Services Commission
-
Legalisation of Cannabis
-
2023-02-23
-
Resolutions (2)
-
-
-
Legislative Review Committee
- 2022-05-03
- 2022-05-04
- 2022-05-18
- 2022-06-01
- 2022-06-15
- 2022-07-05
- 2022-07-06
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-28
- 2022-10-19
- 2022-11-02
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-30
- 2023-02-22
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-03-22
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-31
- 2023-06-28
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-10-17
-
2023-10-18
-
Parliamentary Committees (2)
-
- 2023-11-01
- 2023-11-15
- 2023-11-29
- 2024-02-07
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-03-06
- 2024-03-06
- 2024-03-20
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-05-01
- 2024-05-01
- Legislative Review Committee: Burial and Cremation (Surrender of Interment Rights) Variation Regulations 2021
- Legislative Review Committee: Controlled Substances (Youth Treatment Orders) Regulations 2021
- Legislative Review Committee: Local Government Land By-laws, Public Conveniences
- Legislative Review Committee: Planning Reform Petition
- Legislative Review Committee: Police (Police Security Officers) Amendment Regulations 2022
- Legislative Review Committee: School Funding Petition
- Legislative Review Committee: Termination of Pregnancy Regulations 2022
-
Letter to Renters
- Lewis, Brigadier L.J.
- Licence Issuance
- Licence Transfers
- Lifeblood Modbury
- Lifeline Broken Hill Country to Coast
-
Light Electorate
- Light Electorate Award Recipients
- Lightsview
- Limestone Coast
-
Limestone Coast Country Cabinet
-
2023-10-31
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
-
- Limestone Coast Local Health Network
- Limestone Coast Marine Rescue
- Limestone Coast Radiation Treatment
- Limestone Coast Tourism
- Lines, Mr Percy William
- Liquified Hydrogen Storage
- Literacy and Numeracy Programs
- Literacy Guarantee Unit
-
LIV Golf
- Live Music Sector
-
Livestock (Emergency Animal Disease) Amendment Bill
- Lobethal Freight Access Upgrade
- Local Car Clubs
-
Local Government
-
Local Government (Casual Vacancies) Amendment Bill
-
Local Government (Defaulting Council) Amendment Bill
- 2022-09-07
-
2022-09-08
-
Bills (1)
-
Personal Explanation (1)
-
- 2022-09-27
- 2022-10-18
-
Local Government (Waste Collection) Amendment Bill
-
Local Government Amalgamations
-
Local Government Boundaries
-
2023-05-03
-
2023-08-29
- 2023-09-26
-
- Local Government Boundaries Commission
-
Local Government Elections
- 2022-06-15
- 2022-06-16
- 2022-07-05
-
2022-10-18
-
Personal Explanation (1)
-
Question Time (4)
-
-
2022-11-03
- 2022-11-16
-
2022-11-29
-
2023-02-21
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2023-02-22
-
2023-02-23
-
2023-05-03
-
2024-03-06
-
2024-03-06
- Local Government Grants Commission
- Local Government Reform
- Local Nuisance and Litter Control (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Local School Infrastructure Projects
-
Lockleys Riding Club
-
2023-07-06
-
Personal Explanation (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
-
-
Lot Fourteen
- Lower Limestone Coast, Water Allocation Plan
-
Lower River Murray Levees
-
2023-09-12
-
Ministerial Statement (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-09-13
-
-
Lyell Mcewin Hospital
-
2022-05-31
-
-
Lyell McEwin Hospital
-
-
M
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MAB Corporation
- Machinery of Government Changes
-
Magistrates Court (Nunga Court) Amendment Bill
- Maintenance Software System
- Maitland CFS and SES Shed
- Maitland Hospital
- Maitland Netball Association
-
Major Events
-
2022-11-15
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2023-05-02
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
-
- Major Events Attraction Committee
- Major Projects Expenditure/Status
- Major Sporting Events
-
Majors Road Interchange
-
Majors Road Upgrade
-
2022-05-17
-
2022-06-16
-
- Make Your Move Campaign
-
Malinauskas Labor Government
- 2023-02-22
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-11-30
- 2024-02-22
- 2024-02-22
-
2024-03-19
-
Grievance Debate (2)
-
- Mannum Road
- Mansfield Review
- Marden Sports Complex
- Marginalised Community Assistance
-
Marine Discovery Centre
- Marine Rescue Fund
- Marine Scalefish Fishery
- Marion Road
- Marion Road-Cross Road Level Crossing
- Marion Road-Sir Donald Bradman Drive Intersection
- Marion Tennis Club
-
Mark Ray Haydon
- Marryatville High School Crossing
-
Marshall, The Hon. Steven
-
2024-02-06
-
Grievance Debate (2)
-
-
- Mates In Construction
-
Matter of Privilege
-
2022-11-30
-
Matter of Privilege (3)
-
- 2023-02-22
- 2023-11-29
-
- Matter Of Privilege
- Matter of Privilege, Speaker's Statement
- Matter Of Privilege, Speaker's Statement
- Mawson Lakes School Bridge
- Mayors
- McEwen, Mr M.
- McLaren Vale and Districts War Memorial Hospital
-
Meadows Intersection
-
2022-07-07
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2022-09-06
-
- Medical Malpractice Claims
-
Medicinal Cannabis
- MedSTAR
- Melaleuca Park Primary School
- Member for Bragg
- Member For Bragg
- Member for Bragg, New
- Member For Bragg, Speaker's Statement
- Member for Dunstan, New
- Member for Dunstan, Resignation
- Member for Kavel
- Member for MacKillop
-
Member for Mawson
-
2022-09-27
- 2023-10-19
-
-
Member for Stuart
-
2024-04-11
-
- Member's Leave
-
Member's Remarks
- Members of Parliament (Register of Interests) (Water Entitlements) Amendment Bill
-
Members, Swearing In
- Men's Health Week
- Mental Health
- Mental Health Ambulances
-
Mental Health and Emergency Services Steering Committee
-
2024-04-30
-
- Mental Health And Learning Support Specialists
- Mental Health Beds
- Mental Health Nursing Workforce Strategy
- Mental Health Review
- Mental Health Service Vacancies
-
Mental Health Services
- Mental Health Services for Volunteer Responders
- Mental Health Services Review
- Mental Health Support for Bushfire Victims
- Mentally Fit Eyre Peninsula
- Mercato
-
Message from Governor
- 2022-09-20
- 2023-05-17
-
2023-06-15
-
2023-06-15
- 2023-09-12
-
2023-09-14
-
Message From Governor
-
2022-05-03
- 2022-05-04
-
2022-06-02
-
- Michelle DeGaris Memorial Kindergarten
- Midwifery Services, Kapunda Region
-
Midwifery Services, Light Region
-
2023-11-01
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Migration Policy
- Mile End Athletic Stadium
- Millicent Hospital
- Millicent Hospital, Allied Health Services
- Mineral Exploration
- Mineral Resources
-
Mining (Land Access Inquiry Recommendations) Amendment Bill
- Mining Industry
-
Mining Ombudsman
-
2022-05-05
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Minister for Child Protection
- Minister for Health and Wellbeing
- Minister for Human Services
-
Minister For Human Services
- 2022-06-14
- 2022-06-15
-
2022-09-08
-
Question Time (2)
-
- Minister For Industrial Relations
- Minister for Infrastructure and Transport
-
Minister For Local Government, Regional Roads And Veterans Affairs
-
2022-05-05
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Minister for Recreation, Sport and Racing
- 2022-11-29
-
2022-11-30
-
Ministerial Appointment
- Ministerial Code of Conduct
-
Ministerial Code Of Conduct
- Ministerial Conduct
-
Ministerial Offices
-
2023-08-30
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
-
Ministerial Staff
-
Ministerial Staff Expenses
-
2022-12-01
-
-
Ministerial Travel
-
2023-02-22
- 2023-05-17
-
2023-08-30
-
- Minor Capital Works
- Mobile Black Spot Program
-
Mobile Phone Ban
-
Mobile Phone Towers
- Mobile Phone Towers, Limestone Coast
- Moonta Mines Uniting Church
-
Morialta Citizenship Awards
- Morialta Community Awards
-
Morialta Electorate
- Morocco Earthquake
- Morphett Electorate
- Morphett Road Level Crossing
- Morrison, Mr W.F.
- Motley, Mr G.
- Motor Accident Commission Funding
-
Motor Neurone Disease
-
Motor Vehicles (Electric Vehicle Levy) Amendment Repeal Bill
-
Motor Vehicles (Number Plates) Amendment Bill
- Mount Barker Country Cabinet
- Mount Barker Health Services
- Mount Barker Hospital
- Mount Barker State Emergency Service
-
Mount Gambier Bus Service
- Mount Gambier Dancers Ball
- Mount Gambier Drug and Alcohol Services
- Mount Gambier Educational Precinct
- Mount Gambier Electorate
- Mount Gambier Hospice Care
-
Mount Gambier Hospital
- Mount Gambier Hospital Wait Times
- Mount Gambier Paramedics
- Mount Gambier Public Transport
- Mount Gambier Technical College
-
Mount Lofty Summit Road
-
Mounted Operations Unit
-
2023-05-18
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-05-31
-
- Multicultural Charter
- Multicultural Communities Council of South Australia
- Multicultural Services Directory
- Multiculturalism
- Multiple Birth Awareness Week
- Murray Bridge Soldiers' Memorial Hospital Rehabilitation Pool
- Murray River
-
Murray-Darling Basin
- Murray-Darling Basin Agreement
-
Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission
-
Murray-Darling Basin Water
-
2023-05-18
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (3)
-
-
- Murray, Ms E.
- Murraylands Community Support
- Myponga Reservoir
-
-
N
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Naidoc Week
- Nairne Rail Crossings
- Nannapaneni, Ms L.
- Nantawarrina Indigenous Protected Area
- Naracoorte Fire
- Naracoorte Hospital
- Naracoorte Special Education Facility
-
Narungga Electorate
-
Narungga Electorate Businesses
-
2023-11-15
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
National Carers Week
-
2023-10-19
-
Grievance Debate (5)
-
-
- National Construction Code
- National Corrections Day
-
National Disability Insurance Scheme
-
National Electricity (South Australia) (Ministerial Reliability Instrument) Amendment Bill
-
National Electricity Law (South Australia) (Consumer Data Right) Amendment Bill
- National Electricity Market
- National Energy Crisis
-
National Energy Crisis Taskforce
- National Family Business Day
-
National Gas (South Australia) (East Coast Gas System) Amendment Bill
-
National Gas (South Australia) (Market Transparency) Amendment Bill
-
National Housing Accord
-
National Literacy and Numeracy Tests
- National Parks
-
National Parks and Wildlife (Wombat Burrows) Amendment Bill
- National Police Remembrance Day
- National Reconciliation Week
- National Road Safety Week
- National Schools Debating Championships
- National Science Week
-
National Skills Agreement
- National Sorry Day
- National Teachers' Day
- National Voice to Parliament
-
National Volunteer Week
- National Walk Safely to School Day
-
National Water Grid Scheme
-
Native Vegetation
- 2023-03-07
-
2023-03-09
- Native Vegetation Clearance
- Native Vegetation Fund
- Natural Gas Suppliers
-
Natural Resources Committee
- Natural Resources Committee: Adelaide Metropolitan Beaches
-
Natural Resources Committee: Belair National Park Fact-Finding Visit
- Natural Resources Committee: Innamincka and Moomba Fact-Finding Visit
- Natural Resources Committee: Inquiry into Biochar
- Natural Resources Committee: Riverland Fact-Finding Visit
- Neale, Mr R. and Tkachuk, Mr V.
- Netball SA
- New Houses, Cost
- New West Road, Port Lincoln
-
New Women's and Children's Hospital (Relocation of SA Police Facilities) Amendment Bill
-
New Women's and Children's Hospital Bill
-
2022-11-02
-
2022-11-03
-
2022-11-15
-
2022-11-16
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2022-11-29
-
-
Newland Electorate
- Newland Electorate Schools
- Newroz
- Nganampa Health Council
- Nilpena Ediacara National Park
-
Non-Government School Loans
- Non-Government Schools Funding
-
Non-Government Training Providers
- North East Road Speed Limit Reduction
- North Eastern MetroStars Soccer Club
-
North-South Corridor
-
2022-05-17
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2022-05-31
-
2022-06-01
-
Motions (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2022-09-08
- 2022-10-18
-
2022-11-01
- 2023-06-01
- 2023-11-28
-
- North-South Corridor Reprofile
-
North-South Corridor Tunnel
-
2023-09-26
- 2023-09-27
-
- Northern Adelaide Local Health Network
- Northern Adelaide Veteran Wellbeing Centre
- Northern Domestic Violence Prevention and Recovery Hub
- Northern Gawler Craton
- Northern Territory Deployment, Country Fire Service
- Northern Water Project
-
Notices of Motion
-
Nuclear Energy
-
2024-04-10
-
Question Time (20)
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
-
-
- Nuclear Powered Submarine Taskforce
-
Nuclear-Powered Submarines
-
Nurse Staffing Levels
-
Nurses and Midwives
-
2023-05-16
-
Grievance Debate (3)
-
-
-
Nuyts Archipelago
-
-
O
-
O'Donoghue, Dr Lowitja
-
2024-02-06
-
Ministerial Statement (2)
-
- 2024-02-20
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-09
-
-
O'Hanlon, Ms C.
-
2024-02-22
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2024-03-20
-
- Office for Ageing Well Community Grants
- Office for AUKUS
- Office for Regional Housing
- Office For Small And Family Business
- Office for the Cross-Border Commissioner
- Office of Hydrogen Power
- Office Of Hydrogen Power South Australia
- Office of Local Government
- Office of the Commissioner for Public Sector Employment
-
Office of the Guardian for Children and Young People
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (11)
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
-
- Office of the Industry Advocate
- Office of the Small Business Commissioner
- Official Visit to China
- Ombudsman
- Ombudsman Investigation, Local Council
-
Ombudsman Investigation, Member For Bragg
-
2022-05-04
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (8)
-
-
2022-05-05
-
- One Tree Hill
- OneFortyOne Plantations
-
Open Space Grant Program
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
- Operating Expenses
- Operation Paragon
-
Operational Efficiencies
-
Optus Data Breach
- Osborne Naval Shipyard
- Out-of-School-Hours Care
- Outback Communities Authority
- Outer Areas Registration Concession
- Ovarian Cancer Awareness
- Overseas Health Workers
- Overseas Migration Plan
- OzAsia Festival
-
-
P
- Paediatric and Neonatal Services, Kavel Electorate
-
Paediatric Cochlear Implant Program
-
2022-12-01
-
2023-05-03
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2023-08-30
-
2023-11-14
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-02-20
-
- Paediatric Eating Disorder Service
- Paediatric Intensive Care Unit
-
Palestine
-
Palliative Care Services
- Palmer, Mr G.
-
Papers
- 2022-05-03
- 2022-05-05
- 2022-05-17
- 2022-05-19
- 2022-05-31
- 2022-06-02
- 2022-06-14
- 2022-06-15
- 2022-06-16
- 2022-07-05
- 2022-07-07
- 2022-09-06
- 2022-09-08
- 2022-09-27
- 2022-09-28
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-10-19
- 2022-10-20
- 2022-11-01
- 2022-11-02
- 2022-11-03
- 2022-11-15
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-17
- 2022-11-29
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-12-01
-
2023-02-07
- 2023-02-09
- 2023-02-21
- 2023-02-22
- 2023-02-23
- 2023-03-07
- 2023-03-08
- 2023-03-09
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-03-23
- 2023-05-02
- 2023-05-04
- 2023-05-16
- 2023-05-17
- 2023-05-18
- 2023-05-30
- 2023-06-13
- 2023-06-14
- 2023-06-15
- 2023-06-27
- 2023-06-28
- 2023-07-06
- 2023-08-29
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-09-12
- 2023-09-14
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-09-28
- 2023-10-17
- 2023-10-18
- 2023-10-19
- 2023-10-31
- 2023-11-01
- 2023-11-02
- 2023-11-14
- 2023-11-15
- 2023-11-16
- 2023-11-28
- 2023-11-29
- 2023-11-30
- 2024-02-06
- 2024-02-07
- 2024-02-08
- 2024-02-08
- 2024-02-20
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-22
- 2024-02-22
- 2024-03-05
- 2024-03-06
- 2024-03-06
- 2024-03-19
- 2024-03-20
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-05-01
- 2024-05-01
- 2024-05-02
- Paradise Water Main
- Parafield Airport
- Parkrun
-
Parks 2025 Program
- Parks Renewal Investment
- Parliament House Artwork
- Parliament House Open Day
- Parliament House School Visits
- Parliament House Tours
-
Parliamentary Committee on Occupational Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation
- Parliamentary Committee On Occupational Safety, Rehabilitation And Compensation
-
Parliamentary Committees (Aboriginal Affairs Committee) Amendment Bill
-
2024-03-06
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-05-01
- 2024-05-01
-
- Parliamentary Committees (Referral of Petitions) Amendment Bill
- Parliamentary Friends of SA Carers
- Passenger Transport (Public Transport Infrastructure) Amendment Bill
- Passenger Transport Act
-
Pastoral Land Management and Conservation (Use of Pastoral Land) Amendment Bill
- Pastoral Lands
- Pastoral Unit Budget
- Pathway Community Centre
- Pathway of Honour
-
Patient Assistance Transport Scheme
- Patient Hospital Discharge
- Payroll Tax
- PBA-FM Community Radio
- Penneshaw Wharf
- Periods and Sport
-
Personify Care Cybersecurity Incident
-
2023-10-31
-
- Petrol Drive-Off Offences
-
Petroleum and Geothermal Energy (Energy Resources) Amendment Bill
- Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme
- Pharmacy Healthcare Services
- Phishing
- Piccaninnie Ponds
- Pine, Mr G.M.
- Planning and Design Code
- Planning and Design Review
-
Planning and Development Fund
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
- 2023-08-29
-
-
Planning and Land Use Services
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
-
Planning, Development and Infrastructure (Adelaide Park Lands) Amendment Bill
- Plant Protein Industry
- Plant Protein Manufacturing
-
Playford Electorate
-
Plebiscite (South East Council Amalgamation) Bill
-
Point to Point Transport
-
2023-05-17
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Point Turton Royal Volunteer Coastal Patrol
- Police Mounted Operations
-
Police Mounted Operations Unit
- 2023-09-26
-
2023-09-27
-
Police Numbers
-
2023-05-17
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
2024-04-10
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-04-10
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-04-10
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-04-10
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-04-10
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Police Recruitment
- Police Staffing
-
Police, Alice Springs Deployment
-
2024-04-09
-
- Political Donation Reform
- Pooraka Primary School
- Port Adelaide District Hockey Club
- Port Augusta
- Port Augusta Hospital
- Port District Football Club
- Port Lincoln Hospital
-
Port Lincoln Roadworks
-
2024-03-06
-
- Port MacDonnell Marine Wind Farm
- Port Pirie Greening Grants Program
- Port Pirie Greening Program
- Port Pirie Health Service
- Port Pirie Hospital
- Portrush Road-Magill Road Intersection, Vacant Lot
- Positive Masculinity
- Post-Coronial Reviewer Appointment
-
Power Prices
-
Power Supply
- Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month
- Premier's Ambulance Nightshift
- Premier's Comments
-
Premier's Delivery Unit
-
2023-08-29
-
2023-09-13
-
-
Premier's Expenditure
-
2023-02-07
-
- Premier's Food and Beverage Industry Awards
- Premier's Taskforce
- Premier's Trade Mission
-
Preschool Funding
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
-
Preschool Services
-
2022-05-31
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2022-10-20
-
- Preschool Staffing
- Presentation To Governor
-
Primary Industries and Regions Department
- Primary Industries and Regions Department Vacancies
-
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
-
2022-09-07
-
Grievance Debate (2)
-
-
- Princes Highway
-
Private Email Accounts
- 2022-09-07
-
2022-09-08
-
2022-09-27
-
Private Members' Statements
-
Private Parking Areas (Shopping Centre Parking Areas) Amendment Bill
- Privatisation
- Probity Principles
-
Programs and Grants
-
2022-09-06
-
- Project Carryovers
- Project EnergyConnect
- Prosecution Management System
- Prospect Primary School Centennial
- Prostate Cancer Awareness Month
- Protecting the Bird in Hand Gold Deposit
- Proton Therapy in South Australia
- Psychiatrists
- Psychosocial Services
- Public and Community Housing
-
Public Finance and Audit (Auditor-General Access to Cabinet Submissions) Amendment Bill
-
Public Holidays Bill
- Public Hospital Report Card
-
Public Housing
- Public Housing, Mount Gambier
-
Public Library Funding
-
2023-06-15
-
-
Public School Fees
-
2022-06-15
-
Question Time (8)
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
-
- Public Schools
- Public Sector
-
Public Sector (Ministerial Travel Reports) Amendment Bill
- Public Sector Enterprise Bargaining
- Public Sector Executive Positions
- Public Security Services
- Public Service Employees
- Public Transport
- Public Transport Disability Access
-
Public Transport Inquiry
-
2022-06-16
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2022-07-07
-
- Public Transport, Customer Attraction Campaign
-
Public Works Committee
- 2022-05-03
- 2022-07-05
- 2022-09-06
- 2022-09-27
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-11-01
- 2022-11-15
- 2022-11-29
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-22
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-05-02
- 2023-05-30
- 2023-06-27
- 2023-08-29
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-10-17
- 2023-10-31
- 2023-11-14
- 2023-11-28
- 2024-02-06
- 2024-02-20
- 2024-03-05
- 2024-03-19
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-09
-
2024-04-30
-
Parliamentary Committees (2)
-
-
2024-04-30
-
Parliamentary Committees (2)
-
- Public Works Committee: 2022-23 Annual Report
- Public Works Committee: Adelaide Aquatic Centre Development
- Public Works Committee: Adelaide Botanic High School Expansion
- Public Works Committee: Augusta Highway Junction Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Bolivar Wastewater Treatment Plant Essential Services Switchboard Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Bolivar Wastewater Water Treatment Plant Inlet Works Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Bookmark Creek
- Public Works Committee: BreastScreen SA Relocation Works
- Public Works Committee: Cadell Training Centre (New Dairy Complex)
- Public Works Committee: Crafers Park-and-Ride
- Public Works Committee: East Grand Trunkway
- Public Works Committee: Edwardstown Ambulance Station
- Public Works Committee: Ethelton Railway Station
- Public Works Committee: Findon Technical College
- Public Works Committee: Flinders Medical Centre Imaging Expansion and Repat Health Precinct Geriatric Evaluation and Management Service Development
- Public Works Committee: Flinders Medical Centre New 20-Bed Inpatient Ward
- Public Works Committee: Gawler And District Netball Association Court Redevelopment
- Public Works Committee: Healthy Coorong, Healthy Basin Program, Teringie Wetland On-Ground Works
- Public Works Committee: Intersection Works And Compulsory Acquisition
- Public Works Committee: Kapunda High School Redevelopment
- Public Works Committee: Lefevre Peninsula Upgrades
- Public Works Committee: Leigh Creek Health Clinic
- Public Works Committee: Lower Brownhill Creek Capacity Upgrades
- Public Works Committee: Lyell McEwin Hospital Expansion
- Public Works Committee: Majors Road Intersection Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Margaret Tobin Centre
- Public Works Committee: Marion Road and Sir Donald Bradman Drive Intersection Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Modbury Hospital Health Precinct
- Public Works Committee: Nailsworth Primary School Redevelopment
- Public Works Committee: New Norwood Ambulance Station
- Public Works Committee: New Women's and Children's Hospital Early Works Package
- Public Works Committee: New Woodville Ambulance Station
- Public Works Committee: Noarlunga Hospital Mental Health Rehabilitation Unit and Inpatient Unit Expansion
- Public Works Committee: Noarlunga State Emergency Service Unit
- Public Works Committee: North-South Corridor Darlington Upgrade Project
- Public Works Committee: North-South Corridor Torrens to Darlington Project
- Public Works Committee: Patawalonga South Gates Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Pimpala Primary School Redevelopment
- Public Works Committee: Port Augusta Ambulance Station
- Public Works Committee: Port Augusta Prison Accommodation Upgrades
- Public Works Committee: Port Augusta Technical College
- Public Works Committee: Princes Highway (Drain L) Culvert Replacement
- Public Works Committee: Rebuilt Mount Barker Ambulance Station
- Public Works Committee: Rebuilt Victor Harbor Ambulance Station
- Public Works Committee: Roma Mitchell House Asset Protection Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Roma Mitchell Secondary College Redevelopment
- Public Works Committee: RSPCA Animal Care Centre
- Public Works Committee: SAPOL APY Police Post Construction
- Public Works Committee: Seaview Downs Primary School Redevelopment
- Public Works Committee: Sir Samuel Way Building Facade Repairs
- Public Works Committee: South Australia Police Barracks Relocation Project—City Staging
- Public Works Committee: South Australia Police Barracks Relocation Project—Road Safety Centre
- Public Works Committee: South Australia Police Barracks Relocation—Gepps Cross
- Public Works Committee: South Australia Police Barracks Specialist Investigations Unit Relocation
- Public Works Committee: South Australia Police Barracks, 199 Grenfell Street, Adelaide
- Public Works Committee: South Australian Produce Markets Post-Harvest Biosecurity Precinct Project
-
Public Works Committee: South Australian Sports Institute New Work
- Public Works Committee: Southern Fleurieu Health Service (Victor Harbor) Emergency Department Redevelopment
- Public Works Committee: The Heights Technical College
- Public Works Committee: Thebarton Aquatic Centre Refurbishment
- Public Works Committee: Tilley Recreation Park Redevelopment
- Public Works Committee: Tonsley Technical College
- Public Works Committee: Tram Grade Separation Projects, Marion Road—Anzac Highway to Cross Road
-
Public Works Committee: Truro Bypass
- 2023-02-09
-
2023-05-04
-
Parliamentary Committees (2)
-
- 2023-05-18
- Public Works Committee: Warren Dam Outlet Works Reliability Project
- Public Works Committee: Women's And Children's Upgrade Sustainment Program
- Public Works Committee: Yankalilla Growth Stage 2
-
Publishing Committee
-
Puti on Kaurna Yerta Report
-
2023-07-06
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Pw2pa Alliance
-
Q
-
Qantas
-
Qantas Chairman's Lounge Membership
- Qatar
- Qatar Airways
- Question Time
- Question Time Extension
-
-
R
- R U Ok? Day
-
Rail Safety National Law (South Australia) (Fees) Amendment Bill
-
Rail Safety National Law (South Australia) (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- 2022-09-07
-
2022-10-18
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2022-10-20
- 2023-02-09
- 2023-03-07
- Railway Bob
- Ramadan
- Ramsay Electorate
- Rapid Response Pedestrian Crossing
- Rawlings, Mr A.
-
Reading Programs
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
- Reconciliation Week
- Recreation and Sport Funding
- Red-Light Cameras
- Referendum Corflutes
- Regional Birthing Services
- Regional Bus Services
-
Regional Capability Community Fund
- Regional Community Crime Levels
- Regional Community Nursing Services
- Regional Event Fund
- Regional Events
- Regional Growth Fund
- Regional Health Care
-
Regional Health Funding
-
2022-05-05
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Regional Health Services
- Regional Healthcare
- Regional Hospices
-
Regional Hospital Security
-
Regional Housing
- Regional Jetties
- Regional Mental Health Services
- Regional Nurses
-
Regional Nursing Students
- 2023-03-08
- 2023-06-15
-
2024-02-21
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-02-21
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-02-21
-
Question Time (2)
-
- Regional Palliative Care Workforce
- Regional Planning Boards
- Regional Policing Review
-
Regional Radiation Treatment Services
-
2023-05-04
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Petitions (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
-
- Regional Road Vegetation Clearance
-
Regional Roads
- 2022-05-19
- 2022-06-15
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-10-19
-
2022-11-02
- 2022-11-29
-
2023-08-29
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-09-12
- 2023-11-15
- 2024-02-06
- 2024-05-01
- 2024-05-01
- Regional School Maintenance
- Regional Schools
- Regional Services
- Regional Skills Shortages
-
Regional South Australia
- Regional Sport and Recreation
- Regional Students
-
Regional Tourism
- Regional Transport and Infrastructure Improvements
- Register of Members' Interests
- Registrar General
- Rehabilitation Services
-
Remembrance Day
-
Remote Outer Border Fire Control
-
2023-02-09
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Remote Work
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (25)
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- The Hon. V.A. TARZIA, The Hon. K.A. HILDYARD
- In reply to Mr BATTY, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr TELFER, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
-
-
2023-08-30
- 2023-08-31
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (9)
-
-
2023-10-17
-
- Removal of Magistrate
-
Renewable Energy
-
2022-06-01
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-09-13
-
-
Renewable Energy Projects
-
2024-03-19
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Renewable Energy Targets
-
Renewal SA
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
-
-
2022-10-20
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
Renmark High School Presentation
-
2024-04-09
-
Grievance Debate (2)
-
Question Time (18)
- Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
-
-
Renmark Police Station
-
Rental Affordability
- Rental Housing Reforms
- Repatriation of Aboriginal Remains
- RepaySA
- Rescue Helicopter Fleet
- Rescue Helicopter Services
-
Reservoirs
-
Residential Land Release
-
2022-10-20
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2022-11-15
-
Answers to Questions (2)
-
- 2023-02-23
- 2023-08-30
-
- Residential Tenancies
-
Residential Tenancies (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Residential Tenancies (Protection of Prospective Tenants) Amendment Bill
-
Resources Sector
- Response Function
- Retirement Village (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Retirement Villages (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Return to Work (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder) Amendment Bill
- Return to Work (Scheme Sustainability) Amendment Bill
-
Return To Work (Scheme Sustainability) Amendment Bill
-
2022-06-15
- 2022-06-15
- 2022-07-06
-
- Return to Work Corporation (Constitution of Board of Management) Amendment Bill
-
ReturnToWorkSA
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (15)
- In reply to Mr COWDREY
- In reply to Mr COWDREY
- In reply to Mr COWDREY
- In reply to Mr COWDREY
- In reply to Mr COWDREY
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
- In reply to Mr TARZIA
-
- 2023-02-08
-
- Richards, Ms G.
- Rideshare Services
- Ripples Community Arts Centre
- River Lights Mannum
- River Murray
-
River Murray Flood
-
2022-11-29
-
2022-11-30
- 2023-02-07
-
2023-02-08
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (4)
-
-
2023-02-09
- 2023-03-07
- 2023-03-08
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-06-01
- 2023-06-13
- 2023-06-15
- 2023-08-29
-
-
River Murray Flood Clean-Up
- River Murray Levees
-
River Murray Salinity Levels
-
2023-02-08
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- River Murray Updated Flow Advice
- River Revival Voucher Program
- River Road, Hahndorf Procurement
- RIverland and Murraylands Roads
-
Riverland Communities
-
Riverland Flood Response
- Riverland Mallee Coorong Local Health Network
-
Riverland Tourism
- Riverland, Hospital Evacuation Plans
- Road Fatalities
-
Road Safety
- Road Toll
- Road Transport Industry
- Road Upgrades
- Roads Of Strategic Importance
- Roads of Strategic Importance, Eyre Peninsula Road Upgrades
- Roads of Strategic Importance, Renmark to Gawler
- Roadworks Funding Cuts
- Robe Community Paramedics
- Roberts, Mr J.
- Rock Lobster Fishing Industry
- Rock Lobster Fishing Licence Cost
- Rollond, Dr A.K.
- Rotary
-
Rotary Clubs
- Rotary Youth Music Awards
- Rowe, Mr R.
-
Royal Adelaide Hospital
- 2022-05-19
-
2023-08-31
- Royal Commission into Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence
-
Royal Commission into Early Childhood Education and Care
-
2023-05-04
-
2023-08-30
-
- Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse
- Royal Commissioner's Salary
- RSPCA South Australia
- Ruby Awards
- Rundle Street Development
- Rural Mobile Bone Density Service
-
Rural Psychiatric Services
-
2023-09-27
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
-
S
-
SA Ambulance Service
-
SA Environment Awards
-
SA Health Focus Week
- 2023-05-02
-
2023-05-16
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-09-14
- SA Health Staff
- SA Housing
-
SA Housing Authority
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
-
-
2023-11-14
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-11-28
-
-
SA Housing Authority Property Maintenance
-
2024-04-10
-
Question Time (15)
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
- Mr TELFER, The Hon. N.F. COOK
-
-
- Sa Pathology
- SA Pathology
-
SA Tourism, Social Media
-
2023-05-16
-
- SA Venture Capital Fund
- Sa Water
-
SA Water
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (15)
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
- In reply to Mr PATTERSON, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
-
- 2022-12-01
-
2023-08-29
-
Answers to Questions (1)
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
- SA Water Infrastructure
- SA Water Outage
- SA Water Pipeline
-
SA Water Regulatory Business Plan
-
2024-03-05
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- SAAS Code of Conduct
-
SACE Board
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (11)
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
-
-
SACE Examinations
-
2022-11-15
-
- Safeguarding Taskforce
-
Safeguarding Taskforce Report
-
SafeWork SA
- Salvation Army Emergency Services
- Salvos Sleepout
-
Sam Smith Concert
-
2023-02-08
- 2023-05-16
-
2023-05-30
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (6)
-
-
-
Sandbags
-
2022-11-16
-
2022-11-17
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- Santos
- SAPOL Cadets
- SAPOL Recruitment
- SAPOL Vaccine Mandate
- SAPOL Welfare Checks
- Savings Strategies
- Savings Targets
- Scholarships
- School Community Libraries
- School Crossings
-
School Funding
- 2023-08-29
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
- School Funding Petition
- School Pedestrian Crossing Safety
- School Road Safety
- School Vaccination Hubs
- School Violence and Bullying
-
School-Based Apprentices and Trainees
- Schools Autism Funding
- Schools Chaplaincy Program
- Schools Specialist Teachers
- Schools Upgrade Fund
- Schools, Advertising Campaigns
- Schools, Allied Health Service Providers
-
Schools, Construction
-
2023-02-09
-
-
Schools, Specialist Support
-
2022-11-30
- 2024-05-01
- 2024-05-01
-
-
Schubert Electorate
- Schubert Electorate Roads
- Scott, Ms G.
- Seacliff Surf Life Saving Club
-
Second Reading
-
2022-05-03
-
2022-05-04
- 2022-05-05
- 2022-05-05
- 2022-05-18
- 2022-05-31
- 2022-06-01
- 2022-06-01
- 2022-06-01
- 2022-06-01
- 2022-06-01
- 2022-06-02
-
2022-06-02
-
2022-06-14
- 2022-06-14
-
2022-06-14
- 2022-06-15
-
2022-06-15
- 2022-06-15
- 2022-06-15
-
2022-06-16
- 2022-06-16
- 2022-07-05
- 2022-07-05
- 2022-07-06
- 2022-07-06
- 2022-07-06
- 2022-07-06
- 2022-07-06
- 2022-07-06
- 2022-07-07
-
2022-07-07
- 2022-07-07
- 2022-09-06
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-09-07
-
2022-09-07
-
2022-09-08
-
Bills (1)
-
Personal Explanation (1)
-
- 2022-09-08
-
2022-09-27
-
2022-09-27
- 2022-09-27
- 2022-09-27
- 2022-09-28
- 2022-09-28
-
2022-09-28
- 2022-09-28
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-10-18
-
2022-10-18
-
Bills (2)
-
-
2022-10-18
- 2022-10-19
- 2022-10-19
- 2022-10-19
- 2022-10-19
- 2022-10-19
-
2022-10-19
-
2022-10-20
- 2022-10-20
-
2022-11-01
- 2022-11-02
- 2022-11-02
- 2022-11-02
- 2022-11-02
- 2022-11-02
-
2022-11-02
-
2022-11-03
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-16
-
2022-11-16
-
Bills (1)
-
Parliamentary Procedure (1)
-
-
2022-11-17
- 2022-11-17
-
2022-11-29
- 2022-11-29
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
-
2022-12-01
- 2022-12-01
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-07
-
2023-02-07
- 2023-02-08
- 2023-02-08
- 2023-02-08
- 2023-02-08
- 2023-02-08
-
2023-02-09
- 2023-02-09
- 2023-02-09
- 2023-02-21
-
2023-02-21
- 2023-02-21
- 2023-02-22
- 2023-02-22
- 2023-02-22
- 2023-02-22
- 2023-02-22
-
2023-02-23
- 2023-02-23
-
2023-03-07
- 2023-03-08
- 2023-03-08
- 2023-03-08
- 2023-03-08
- 2023-03-08
-
2023-03-09
- 2023-03-09
-
2023-03-21
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-03-22
- 2023-03-22
- 2023-03-22
- 2023-03-22
- 2023-03-23
-
2023-03-23
- 2023-03-23
- 2023-03-23
- 2023-03-23
-
2023-05-02
- 2023-05-02
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-03
-
2023-05-04
-
2023-05-16
- 2023-05-17
- 2023-05-17
- 2023-05-17
- 2023-05-17
- 2023-05-17
- 2023-05-17
- 2023-05-17
- 2023-05-17
-
2023-05-18
- 2023-05-18
- 2023-05-18
-
2023-05-30
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2023-05-31
- 2023-05-31
- 2023-05-31
- 2023-05-31
- 2023-05-31
- 2023-05-31
-
2023-06-01
-
2023-06-01
- 2023-06-01
- 2023-06-13
-
2023-06-13
- 2023-06-13
- 2023-06-14
- 2023-06-14
- 2023-06-14
- 2023-06-14
- 2023-06-14
- 2023-06-14
- 2023-06-15
- 2023-06-15
- 2023-06-15
-
2023-06-15
-
2023-06-15
-
2023-06-27
- 2023-06-27
- 2023-06-28
- 2023-06-28
- 2023-06-28
- 2023-06-28
- 2023-06-28
- 2023-06-28
-
2023-06-28
- 2023-06-28
-
2023-07-06
- 2023-07-06
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-08-30
-
2023-09-12
- 2023-09-12
- 2023-09-12
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-13
- 2023-09-14
-
2023-09-14
-
2023-09-14
- 2023-09-14
- 2023-09-14
- 2023-09-14
- 2023-09-26
-
2023-09-26
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-09-27
-
2023-09-27
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-09-27
- 2023-09-28
-
2023-09-28
- 2023-09-28
-
2023-10-17
-
2023-10-18
-
-
Second-hand Vehicle Dealers (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Second-Hand Vehicle Dealers (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Secure Jobs, Better Pay Bill
-
Select Committee on Access to Urinary Tract Infection Treatment
-
Select Committee on Artificial Intelligence
- Seniors Card Fuel Discount
- Sentencing (Serious Child Sex Offenders) Amendment Bill
- Service Clubs
- Service Recognition
-
Service SA
-
Service SA Centres
- Sessional Committees
- Sessional Orders
- Severe Weather Conditions
- Shared Services
- Shine On Kingston!
- Shop Trading Hours
-
Shop Trading Hours (Extension of Hours) Amendment Bill
-
Shopping Centre Parking
-
2024-02-08
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2024-02-20
-
- Single-Use Plastics
- Sir Samuel Way Building
-
Sittings and Business
- 2022-09-20
- 2022-09-28
- 2022-10-20
- 2022-11-03
- 2022-11-17
- 2022-12-01
- 2023-02-09
- 2023-02-23
- 2023-03-09
- 2023-03-23
- 2023-03-26
- 2023-05-04
- 2023-05-18
- 2023-06-01
- 2023-06-15
- 2023-06-28
- 2023-07-06
- 2023-08-31
- 2023-09-14
- 2023-09-28
- 2023-10-19
- 2023-11-02
-
2023-11-16
-
Parliamentary Procedure (2)
-
- 2023-11-30
- 2024-02-08
- 2024-02-08
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-22
- 2024-02-22
- 2024-03-07
- 2024-03-07
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-05-02
-
Sittings And Business
-
2022-05-03
-
Parliamentary Procedure (2)
-
- 2022-05-05
- 2022-05-19
- 2022-06-02
- 2022-06-15
- 2022-06-16
- 2022-07-07
- 2022-09-08
-
-
Skilled Migration Program
-
2024-03-21
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
-
- Skilling South Australia
-
Skills Shortages
-
Skills Training
-
2023-10-17
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2024-02-08
- 2024-02-08
- 2024-03-06
- 2024-03-06
-
- Small and Family Business
-
Small Business
- 2022-06-15
-
2024-03-21
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-03-21
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-03-21
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2024-05-02
- Small Business Energy Rebates
- Small Projects
- Smoking Rates
- Snapper Fingerlings
- Snapper Point Power Station
-
Snowtown to Bute Road
-
Socceroos
- Social and Affordable Housing
-
Social Development Committee
-
Social Development Committee: NDIS Inquiry
-
Social Housing
-
2022-05-18
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-09-12
- 2023-11-29
-
-
Social Workers Registration (Commencement) Amendment Bill
- Solar Feed-In Tariff
- South Adelaide Football Club
-
South Australia Police
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
- In reply to Mr WHETSTONE, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS
-
- 2023-09-12
- 2024-02-08
- 2024-02-08
-
2024-04-30
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-04-30
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-05-01
-
2024-05-01
- 2024-05-02
-
-
South Australian Film Industry
-
South Australian Government Financing Authority
-
2023-08-30
-
- South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute
- South Australian Hospitals
-
South Australian Housing Authority
-
2022-09-07
-
- South Australian Labour Market
- South Australian Local Government Grants Commission
-
South Australian Metropolitan Fire Service
-
South Australian Motor Sport (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
South Australian Museum
-
2023-03-07
-
2024-02-21
-
2024-02-21
-
2024-02-21
-
2024-03-21
-
2024-03-21
-
2024-03-21
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
-
2024-05-01
-
Question Time (6)
-
-
2024-05-01
-
Question Time (6)
-
-
- South Australian Parliamentary Internship Program
-
South Australian Public Health (Covid-19) Amendment Bill
- South Australian Research and Development Institute
-
South Australian Small Business
- South Australian Sports Institute
-
South Australian Tourism
-
South Australian Tourism Commission
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
- In reply to Ms PRATT, The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON
-
- 2023-03-08
-
- South East Coastal Lakes Review
- South East Field Days
- South Eastern Freeway
- South Eastern Freeway Repair Work
- South Road
-
South Road Upgrade
- South-East Coastal Lakes Project
- South-East Links Road Duplication Project
- South-East Region Roads
- Southern Adelaide Local Health Network
- Southern Coast Ocean Care Committee
-
Southern Expressway
- Southern Fleurieu Health Service
- Southern Intermediate Care Centre
- Sovereign Wealth Fund
-
Space Industry
-
2023-05-17
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2023-05-18
- 2023-06-15
-
- Space Sector
-
Speaker, Absence
-
Speaker, Election
- Speaker, Presentation to Governor
- Speaker, Resignation
-
Speaker's Statement
- Specialist Nurse Recruitment
- Spent Convictions (Part 8A Findings) Amendment Bill
- Spirit Of Kangaroo Island
- Sport And Recreation
-
Sporting and Infrastructure Grants
-
2022-10-19
-
2022-11-01
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (3)
-
-
2022-11-02
-
2022-11-29
- 2022-11-30
-
-
Sports and Community Infrastructure Grants
-
2023-02-07
-
Answers to Questions (2)
-
-
-
Sports Funding
-
2022-06-14
-
2022-07-05
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (4)
-
- 2022-07-06
-
- Spurr, Mr W.
- St Bernards/Penfold/Newton Roads
- St Kilda Mangroves
- St Kilda Tramway Museum
- Stamp Duty Abolition
- Standing and Sessional Orders Suspension
- Standing And Sessional Orders Suspension
- Standing Committees
- Standing Order 39
-
Standing Orders Committee
-
Standing Orders Committee: First Nations Voice
-
2024-03-21
-
Parliamentary Committees (3)
-
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
- 2024-04-11
-
-
Standing Orders Suspension
-
2022-05-04
- 2022-05-05
- 2022-05-17
- 2022-05-19
- 2022-05-31
-
2022-06-15
-
2022-06-15
- 2022-06-15
- 2022-07-07
-
2022-09-07
- 2022-09-20
- 2022-09-27
-
2022-11-02
- 2022-11-16
-
2022-11-16
-
Bills (1)
-
Parliamentary Procedure (1)
-
-
2022-11-16
-
Bills (1)
-
Parliamentary Procedure (1)
-
- 2022-12-01
- 2023-02-22
- 2023-03-23
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-17
- 2023-05-18
- 2023-06-14
-
2023-06-15
- 2023-07-06
- 2023-10-17
- 2023-11-29
-
2024-02-06
- 2024-02-20
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-09
-
-
State Assets (Privatisation Restrictions) Bill
- 2022-09-08
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
-
2024-03-05
-
State Budget
-
2022-05-17
- 2023-05-18
- 2023-05-30
- 2023-06-01
-
2023-06-13
-
Grievance Debate (2)
-
-
2023-06-14
-
Grievance Debate (2)
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2023-07-06
-
- State Budget 2021-22
- State Centre of Football
- State Debt
-
State Economy
- 2022-06-16
- 2022-09-07
- 2022-10-18
- 2023-02-08
- 2023-03-09
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-05-30
- 2023-06-15
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-11-02
- 2023-11-29
-
2024-02-06
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2024-03-07
- 2024-03-07
- 2024-03-20
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
-
State Electricity Network
-
State Emergency Service
- 2023-05-17
-
2024-02-06
-
Answers to Questions (3)
-
- State Emergency Service Fleet Renewal
- State Emergency Service, Project Review
-
State Government
-
State Government Procurement
-
State Labor Government
- State of the Sector Report 2022
-
State Planning Commission
-
2023-08-29
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
- 2023-10-18
-
- State Planning System
-
State Prosperity Project
-
2024-02-22
-
Ministerial Statement (2)
-
-
2024-03-07
-
2024-03-07
-
-
State Records
-
2024-03-20
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
- State Sporting Organisation Boards
- State's Grain Roads
-
Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio and Other Justice Measures) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio) (No 2) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio) (No 3) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio) (No 4) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Budget Measures) Bill
-
2023-06-15
-
2023-09-12
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-11-30
- 2024-02-06
-
-
Statutes Amendment (Child Sex Offences) Bill
- 2022-05-19
-
2022-07-07
-
2022-09-06
-
Statutes Amendment (Civil Enforcement) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Education, Training and Skills Portfolio) Bill
- 2022-11-30
- 2023-03-21
- 2023-03-23
-
2023-08-29
- Statutes Amendment (Identity Theft) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Industrial Relations Portfolio) Bill
-
2024-02-06
-
Bills (2)
- The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS, The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, Mr COWDREY, Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS, The Hon. D.G. PISONI
- The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS, The Hon. J.K. SZAKACS, The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, Mr COWDREY, Mr TEAGUE, The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS, The Hon. D.G. PISONI
-
Parliamentary Procedure (1)
-
- 2024-02-07
- 2024-02-20
- 2024-03-05
-
-
Statutes Amendment (Justice Measures) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Data Access) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Emissions Reduction Objectives) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Gas Pipelines) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Other Gases) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Regulatory Sandboxing) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Wholesale Market Monitoring) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws)(Regulatory Sandboxing) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Ombudsman and Auditor-General) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Personal Mobility Devices) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Public Trustee and Litigation Guardian) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Serious Vehicle and Vessel Offences) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Sexual Offences) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Stealthing and Consent) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Transport Portfolio) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Use of Devices in Vehicles) Bill
-
Statutory Officers Committee
- Steamranger Heritage Railway
- Stevens, Charlie
- Stirling Community
- Stirling Fire
-
Stirling Hospital
-
Strangers Gallery Renaming
-
2022-12-01
-
-
Strathalbyn Health Services
-
2023-05-02
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Petitions (1)
-
- 2023-05-30
-
- Strathalbyn Hospital
- Strathalbyn Road
- Structural Timber for Housing in South Australia
-
Strzelecki Track
-
Sturt Highway
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-09-26
-
2023-10-17
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Petitions (1)
-
-
Succession Bill
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-06-15
- 2023-09-14
-
2023-09-28
- 2023-10-18
- 2023-10-31
-
Suicide Prevention
- Suicide Prevention Advocate
- Suicide Prevention Council
-
Summary Offences (Dog Theft) Amendment Bill
- Summary Offences (Nazi Salute and Symbols Prohibition) Amendment Bill
-
Summary Offences (Obstruction of Public Places) Amendment Bill
- Summons To Council Chamber
-
Super SA
-
Super SA Cybersecurity Incident
-
2023-10-18
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (9)
- Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr COWDREY, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
-
-
2023-10-19
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2023-10-31
-
- Superannuation Funds
-
Superannuation Funds Management Corporation of South Australia (Investment in Russian Assets) Amendment Bill
-
Superannuation Funds Management Corporation Of South Australia (Investment In Russian Assets) Amendment Bill
- Supplementary Questions
-
Supply Bill 2022
-
2022-05-03
- 2022-05-31
- 2022-06-01
- 2022-06-02
- 2022-06-14
- 2022-07-05
-
-
Supply Bill 2023
- 2023-03-23
-
2023-05-04
-
2023-05-16
- 2023-05-17
-
2023-05-30
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2023-05-31
- 2023-06-15
- 2023-06-27
-
Supply Bill 2024
-
2024-04-09
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-10
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-04-30
- 2024-05-01
- 2024-05-01
-
2024-05-02
-
-
Supply Grievances
-
2023-05-30
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2023-05-31
-
-
Supreme Court (Distribution of Business) Amendment Bill
- Surf Lifesaving Clubs
- Surface Fleet Review
- Surplus Employees
- Survivors of Torture and Trauma Assistance and Rehabilitation Service
- Suspension Of Standing Orders
- Switch for Solar
- Switch the Headspace Match for Mental Health
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-
T
- Tafe Sa
-
TAFE SA
-
2022-09-06
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Estimates Replies (11)
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
- In reply to Mr BASHAM, The Hon. B.I. BOYER
-
- 2022-10-18
- 2023-06-13
- 2023-08-29
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (2)
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- 2023-09-28
- 2023-10-18
-
2023-11-16
-
Question Time (2)
-
-
2024-02-06
-
Answers to Questions (2)
-
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
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- TAFE SA Campus Closures
- TAFE SA Enrolments
- TAFE SA Investing Expenditure
- TAFE SA Ministerial Charter
- TAFE SA Reinstated Courses, Student Numbers
- TAFE SA Student Enrolments
- TAFE SA Victor Harbor Campus
-
TAFE SA Whyalla
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (2)
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-
- Targeted Road Safety Works
-
Tarrkarri
-
2023-05-02
-
-
Tarrkarri, Aboriginal Art and Cultures Centre
-
2022-10-20
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (2)
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- 2023-10-31
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-
Taste the Limestone Coast Festival
-
2024-02-08
-
Question Time (2)
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- 2024-03-06
- 2024-03-06
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- Tauondi Aboriginal College
- Tax Policy
- Taxi Industry
- Taxi Rank Concierge Services
- Tea Tree Gully Community Wastewater Management System
-
Tea Tree Plaza Car Parking
- Teacher Permanency
- Teacher Recruitment
-
Teachers Dispute
-
2023-08-29
-
2023-10-31
- 2023-11-14
- 2023-11-16
-
-
Technical Colleges
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
- 2022-09-08
- 2023-03-21
-
- Television Cameras
- Terramin's Bird in Hand Gold Project
- Tet Festival
- Thailand Burma Railway
- The Koala State Numberplate
- The Oaks Swim Centre
- The Push-up Challenge
- Thebarton Oval
- Thebarton Oval/Kings Reserve Trees
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Thebarton Police Barracks
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2022-09-28
-
Personal Explanation (1)
-
Question Time (3)
-
- 2023-05-18
- 2023-08-30
-
2023-09-13
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-11-01
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-
Third Reading
-
2022-05-04
- 2022-06-02
- 2022-06-14
-
2022-06-14
-
2022-06-15
- 2022-06-15
- 2022-07-05
-
2022-07-05
-
Bills (2)
-
- 2022-07-06
- 2022-07-07
-
2022-07-07
- 2022-09-06
-
2022-09-07
-
2022-09-08
-
Bills (1)
-
Personal Explanation (1)
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-
2022-09-27
-
2022-09-27
- 2022-09-27
-
2022-09-28
- 2022-10-18
- 2022-10-18
-
2022-10-20
- 2022-10-20
- 2022-10-20
-
2022-11-01
- 2022-11-16
-
2022-11-16
-
Bills (2)
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-
2022-11-16
-
Bills (1)
-
Parliamentary Procedure (1)
-
-
2022-11-17
- 2022-11-17
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-11-30
-
2022-12-01
- 2022-12-01
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-08
- 2023-02-08
-
2023-02-09
-
2023-02-21
- 2023-02-22
-
2023-02-23
- 2023-03-09
- 2023-03-23
- 2023-03-23
-
2023-03-23
- 2023-03-26
-
2023-05-02
- 2023-05-03
-
2023-05-18
- 2023-05-18
- 2023-05-31
-
2023-06-01
-
2023-06-01
- 2023-06-13
-
2023-06-13
- 2023-06-15
-
2023-07-06
- 2023-08-29
- 2023-08-31
- 2023-09-12
- 2023-09-14
- 2023-09-26
- 2023-09-26
-
2023-09-28
-
-
Thomas Foods International
-
Tobacco and E-Cigarette Products (Tobacco Product Prohibitions) Amendment Bill
- 2022-12-01
- 2023-05-03
- 2023-05-17
-
2023-05-18
-
2023-05-30
- Tom's Court
- Tonsley Innovation District
- Torrens Electorate School Awards
- Torrens Electorate Schools
- Torrens Parade Ground
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Torrens to Darlington Project
-
2022-10-18
-
2023-02-21
- 2023-02-23
-
2023-08-29
- 2023-08-30
- 2023-11-30
- 2024-02-08
- 2024-02-08
-
-
Torrens To Darlington Project
-
2022-05-05
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2022-05-17
-
2022-06-01
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (3)
-
- 2022-09-08
-
- Tourism and Multicultural Affairs
- Town of Gawler
-
Trade and Investment
-
Trade and Investment Department
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (10)
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
- In reply to Mr COWDREY, The Hon. N.D. CHAMPION
-
-
- Trade and Investment Department Staff
- Trade and Investment Strategy
- Trade Offices
- Trade Relations
- TradeStart
- Traffic Watch
- Train Drivers Dispute
-
Transfer of Care Data
-
2023-06-14
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
- 2023-07-06
-
-
Transfer Of Care Data
-
2022-06-02
-
Question Time (2)
-
- 2022-07-06
-
- Transition to Home Scheme
- Transport Funding
- Transport Infrastructure Projects
- Transport Service Transaction Levy
- Trinity College
-
Truro Bypass
-
Truro Freight Route Project
- Tsoulis, Ms E.
- Tuberculosis
-
Tumby Bay Jetty
- 2022-11-15
- 2022-11-30
- 2022-12-01
-
2023-02-23
- 2023-06-14
-
Turkiye-Syria Earthquake
-
2023-02-08
-
Ministerial Statement (1)
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Motions (1)
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-
-
U
-
Ukraine Invasion
- Ukraine, Medical Assistance
- Ukrainian Fundraising
-
Uluru Statement from the Heart
- UN World Environment Day
- Uncommitted Capital
- Uncommitted Capital Reserves
-
Unemployment Figures
- Uni Hub Spencer Gulf
-
Union Advertising
-
2022-11-30
-
- United Nations International Conventions
-
Universal Three-Year-Old Preschool
-
University Merger
-
2023-06-28
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (9)
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. S.E. CLOSE
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-
-
University of South Australia, Magill Campus
- University of South Australia, Magill Campus Land Transfer
- University Places
-
Unley High School
- Unley Tree Canopy Project
-
Unmet Needs Report
-
Upper Spencer Gulf
- Upper Spencer Gulf Public Meetings
- Urinary Tract Infection Treatment
-
Use of Names in Questions
-
2024-03-07
-
Parliamentary Procedure (2)
-
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-03-21
- 2024-03-21
-
-
-
V
- Vaginal Cancer
- VAILO Adelaide 500
-
Valedictories
- Valedictory
- VALO Adelaide 500
-
Valuer-General
-
2022-09-06
-
Estimates Replies (2)
-
-
- Vanderstock High Court Decision
-
Vaping
- Vehicle Registration Fees
- Vella, Mr P.
- Verdun Interchange
- VET Quality Audit Blitz
- Veterans Advisory Council
- Veterans Affairs
-
Veterans Services
- Veterans' Mental Health Services
-
Veterinary Services Bill
- Victor Harbor Mainstreet Precinct
-
Victor Harbor Road
- Vinehealth Australia
-
Violence Against Women
- Virtual Healthcare Services
-
Visitor Economy
-
Visitors
-
2022-05-04
-
2022-05-05
-
2022-05-18
-
2022-05-19
- 2022-05-31
-
2022-06-02
-
2022-07-05
- 2022-07-06
- 2022-07-07
-
2022-09-06
-
2022-09-08
- 2022-09-20
-
2022-09-27
-
2022-09-28
- 2022-10-18
-
2022-10-19
- 2022-10-20
- 2022-11-01
-
2022-11-02
- 2022-11-03
- 2022-11-16
- 2022-11-17
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2022-11-29
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2022-11-30
-
2022-12-01
- 2023-02-07
- 2023-02-08
- 2023-02-09
-
2023-02-21
-
2023-02-22
- 2023-02-23
- 2023-03-07
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2023-03-08
-
2023-03-09
-
2023-03-21
- 2023-03-22
- 2023-03-23
-
2023-05-02
-
2023-05-03
-
2023-05-04
-
2023-05-16
- 2023-05-17
-
2023-05-18
- 2023-05-30
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2023-05-31
-
2023-06-01
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2023-06-13
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2023-06-14
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2023-06-27
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2023-06-28
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2023-07-06
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2023-08-29
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2023-08-30
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2023-08-31
-
2023-09-12
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2023-09-13
- 2023-09-14
- 2023-09-26
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2023-09-27
- 2023-09-28
- 2023-10-17
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2023-10-18
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2023-10-19
- 2023-10-31
- 2023-11-01
- 2023-11-02
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2023-11-16
- 2023-11-28
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2023-11-29
- 2024-02-07
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2024-02-08
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2024-02-08
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2024-02-20
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
- 2024-02-21
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2024-02-22
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2024-02-22
- 2024-03-05
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2024-03-06
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2024-03-06
- 2024-03-07
- 2024-03-07
- 2024-03-19
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2024-03-20
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2024-03-21
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2024-03-21
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2024-03-21
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2024-04-09
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2024-04-09
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2024-04-10
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2024-04-10
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2024-04-10
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2024-04-10
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2024-04-10
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2024-04-11
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2024-04-11
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2024-04-11
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2024-04-30
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2024-04-30
-
2024-05-01
-
2024-05-01
-
2024-05-02
-
- Voluntary Assisted Dying
- Volunteering SA&NT
- Volunteers
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W
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Wade, The Hon. S.G.
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2023-02-22
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Grievance Debate (2)
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-
- Wage Price Index
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Wages Growth
- Wait Times for Rehab Services
-
Waite Electorate
- Walkerville Art Show
- Walkerville YMCA
- Walking in Two Worlds Podcast
- Wall, Dr I.B.
-
Wallaroo Hospital
- Walters, Ms E.M.
- War Widows Day
- Water Allocation Plan
- Water Rates
- Watkins, Mr K.
- We're Equal Campaign
- Weather Monitoring
- Webster, Mr F.R.
- Weekend Hospital Discharges
- Wellbeing Bushfire Grants and Community Groups
- Wellbeing Staff
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West Adelaide Hellas Soccer Club
-
2022-07-06
-
Question Time (2)
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-
- West Beach Primary School Air Quality Monitoring Station
- West Beach Trust
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West Beach Trust Board Appointments
- West End Brewery
- West Lakes Duck Pond
-
Western Hospital
- 2024-02-06
-
2024-03-07
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Petitions (1)
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-
2024-03-07
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Petitions (1)
-
- 2024-03-20
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-04-09
- 2024-05-02
- Whalers Way Orbital Launch Complex
- White, Mr P.
- Whyalla Asbestos Victims Support Group
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Whyalla Birthing Services
- Whyalla Hospital and Health Service
-
Whyalla Steelworks
-
2023-09-26
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
-
2024-05-01
-
2024-05-01
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- Wine Export Recovery and Expansion Program
- Wine Exports
- Wine Exports, United Kingdom
-
Wine Industry
-
Women in Business
- 2022-11-15
- 2023-02-23
-
2023-09-12
-
Estimates Replies (2)
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- Women in Local Government
- Women in Sport
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Women's and Children's Health Network Cochlear Implant Program
-
2023-03-21
-
Ministerial Statement (1)
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Question Time (8)
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-
2023-03-22
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Question Time (2)
-
-
2023-11-01
-
Answers to Questions (2)
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-
-
Women's and Children's Hospital
-
2022-09-27
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2022-09-28
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Question Time (13)
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- The Hon. D.J. SPEIRS, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- Ms THOMPSON, The Hon. P.B. MALINAUSKAS
- Ms SAVVAS, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- Mrs HURN, The Hon. C.J. PICTON
- Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
- Mr COWDREY, The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN
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2022-10-18
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Question Time (2)
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- 2022-10-20
- 2022-11-02
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2022-11-30
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2022-12-01
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Question Time (2)
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- 2023-06-13
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2023-06-14
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Estimates Replies (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
- 2023-08-31
- 2023-11-15
-
2024-04-30
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (1)
-
-
2024-04-30
-
Grievance Debate (1)
-
Question Time (1)
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Women's And Children's Hospital
- Women's and Children's Hospital Cochlear Implant Program
- Women's Asia Cup
- Women's Health Services
- Women's Representation in Politics
- Women's Representation in Public Spheres
- Women's World Cup
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Work Health and Safety (Industrial Manslaughter) Amendment Bill
- 2023-09-26
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2023-11-02
- 2023-11-16
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2023-11-28
- 2023-11-30
- 2024-02-06
- Workcover and Leave Without Pay
- Workforce Planning Timeline
- Workforce Summary
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Working with Children Checks
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2022-09-07
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Question Time (2)
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-
2022-09-27
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Question Time (2)
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- 2022-11-01
- 2023-11-16
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- Workplace Cultural Diversity
- Workplace Investigation Services Panel
- World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims
- World Down Syndrome Day
- World Expo 2025 Osaka
- World Lymphoedema Day
- World Mental Health Day
- World Parkinson's Day
- World Suicide Prevention Day
- World Teachers' Day
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World Tourism Day
- Wray, Mr D.
- Wright Electorate
- Wulanda Recreation and Convention Centre
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X
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Y
- Yahl Primary School
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Yellowtail Kingfish
- Yorke Peninsula Ferry
- Yorke Peninsula Health Advisory Council
- Yorke Peninsula Mining
- Yorke Peninsula Telecommunications
- Yorke Peninsula Turning Lanes
- Youth Aboriginal Community Court
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Youth Parliament
-
2022-09-06
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Grievance Debate (3)
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-
- Youth Week
-
Z
Bills
Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Wholesale Market Monitoring) Bill
Second Reading
Adjourned debate on second reading (resumed on motion).
Mr PATTERSON (Morphett) (15:43): To pick up where I left off just before we broke, I was talking about the effect of the quarterly average wholesale prices back in quarter 3, and how they flowed on from the announcement around the default market offer that came into place on 1 July 2023. I just remind people, as I said during that contribution, that the default market offer that came in on 1 July 2023 saw massive increases to household power bills on average on the default market offer with a jump of $512. Businesses also had massive increases to their bills under the default market offer of $1,310. These are big jumps equating to nearly 24 per cent for households and nearly 29 per cent for small businesses.
This came on the back of the increases to the default market offer previous to that, which came into effect on 1 July 2022, which saw households have increases of $198—nearly $200—in that one as well. Over the two years, those combined caused a big jump to bills for households: $710, in fact. For businesses the increases were even more, with big jumps in their electricity bills as well. That has a big impact on them.
As I said previously, we heard from both households and struggling small and medium businesses who had big increases to their electricity bills. They said these had increased by more than $5,000 per quarter for some of those medium businesses. They explained there is only so much they can cut back on to reduce their costs. On many occasions, the nature of their business means that they rely on power and they cannot cut back on their power. They are struggling.
At the same time, the families at home are having to deal with a broad range of increases to their cost of living. A big part of that is electricity, so it is impacting them as well. It is also having an effect in terms of them going out and spending money at some of these small businesses. Small businesses are getting hit not only from their own pressures, but unfortunately they are then seeing it from their customers as well, so it is really challenging for them.
Since that time, the quarter 4 wholesale prices have come out, and thankfully they did show a drop for that quarter. The wholesale prices did come down. When you look at the history of the average quarterly wholesale prices over the last four years, you do see that quarter 4 tends to be one of the lower ones when you compare it across the board—quarter 4 with spring and summer, and quarter 1 potentially as well, again because of summer.
So it was expected that they would come down. It would have been startling and a poor outcome if they had not. Of course, what we saw was the minister and also the Premier jump on board those and say, 'That's proof positive that wholesale prices are coming down,' and therefore we had the energy minister demanding and telling the energy regulator that the default market offer needs to have a significant drop, a big drop, because of these.
But when you look at the overall situation for the overall year—in 2023, you look at those average annual prices in the NEM—what you find is that because we had really high prices in quarter 3, because we had rising prices between quarter 4 of 2022 and quarter 1 of 2023 combined, the average annual price in the NEM in 2023 for South Australia was $103 per megawatt hour.
Compared with other jurisdictions, Queensland was $102 per megawatt hour for 2023, New South Wales was $105 per megawatt hour, Victoria was $64 per megawatt hour and Tasmania was $56 per megawatt hour. What you see there is that South Australia really is up in the upper echelons of the average annual prices in the NEM—just a bit more than Queensland and just a bit under New South Wales, but effectively those three are equal. So we see sustained high prices at a wholesale level for South Australia, and that then makes its way through into customers' bills.
After massive increases over the past two years of $710 for households, we see the Australian Energy Regulator announcing their draft default market offer today. It shows that electricity prices have come down but certainly not in comparable amounts to how much they went up over the previous two years. For households, prices were reduced between $14 to just a bit over $50, which is about between 0.5 per cent and 2.5 per cent.
What we are seeing are elevations, big jumps, over two years. This reduction really does not make a significant dent in those big prices that the energy minister was demanding because the underlying wholesale prices are elevated when you look at the average across the whole year. When you take away the $14 reduction, for example, what you see over the three default market offers that have been brought down under the Malinauskas Labor government is that electricity prices have still increased significantly.
Household power bills would still be up by $696. Small businesses saw an 8 per cent reduction in the draft default market offer here, but that was after a massive increase the previous year of 29 per cent. Combined across that, you can see that it was up 29 per cent and down 8 per cent. They are still overall big increases. In fact, over the three default market offers, we have seen elevated levels up around $1,288 for businesses.
This draft default market offer shows that electricity still remains in high-price territory in South Australia under the Malinauskas Labor government, and it is the families and small businesses that will have to continue to pay the price. They have to face up to another year of very high electricity prices going forward. Similarly, businesses are again having to face up to these high electricity prices. Some of them are really struggling.
We have seen stories of businesses shutting their doors because of significant cost pressures in South Australia. When they set about starting their businesses, they would have set up a business model that would have been based on a certain level of rent, a certain level of employee expenses, a certain level of electricity prices. They probably did not take into account the fact that there were going to be massive increases in the prices. The effect is they are unable to make a go of it because they cannot naturally increase costs for their products because their customers are also struggling.
Consequently, they are not able to have increases at the business level to then flow through to take account of these big increases in electricity costs that have occurred. Just on the weekend, we were with a business owner, Natalie from Pulp & Thread, talking with her about this. It is a cafe and also sells fashion, trying to provide various offerings for customers. Their power bills have gone up from $2,000 a quarter to over $5,000 a quarter. As I said before, their business relies on power. They cannot just turn the power off.
What Natalie was trying to do was make savings where she could, turning off some of the fridges, some of the freezers and the display fridges. Usually they have food that is pre-made put out in the display fridge. It gives ideas for customers so when they come in they can see immediately what is on the menu and what it looks like. So potentially that causes them to buy those products.
Additionally, you have tradies or people on the way through who are in a hurry and do not have time to wait for five or 10 minutes to have sandwiches made for them, so having pre-made food on display makes it quick and easy and very convenient. Potentially, by not having that product there it is not certain whether that is affecting customers' habits, if they are no longer attending.
What she has certainly noticed is that her customers do not seem to be spending as much, as they are dealing with their own cost pressures at home. So what we are seeing is real effects on people. She is talking about whether that affects employing staff and growing the business. Instead of having more products there to be able to sell, it is causing a reduction. That potentially means not employing staff for as long or not employing as many staff, and that is certainly not what we want to see. We want to see businesses thriving. We want to see them employing more people. That is why it is so important to make sure that this government has a plan to bring prices down.
We know that at the election the Malinauskas Labor government had no plan in place to ensure that electricity supply was affordable and reliable. Instead, what we have now is the minister basically trying to use the newspapers to bully the AER into dropping prices significantly. We see that on this occasion that has not come to fruition at all. It is really showing up why the government needs to come up with a plan to deal with sky-high electricity prices that people are having to deal with.
I have had another example of a couple in Camden Park who are pensioners. Their power bills have surged to nearly double over the last two years. Again, they are pensioners on fixed incomes, so they are really struggling to cope with this and it impacts on what they do in terms of how they use electricity. It is front of mind at all times for them because of this. They are not alone: there are many other working families that are struggling to make ends meet.
I spoke earlier about the information in the annual retail report that came out late last year. It went through and compared all the residential electricity median market and standard offer prices across Queensland, New South Wales, South Australia, Victoria and Tasmania. It confirmed that South Australia has the highest residential electricity median market and standard offer prices per kilowatt hour in the National Electricity Market. So high prices are continuing on, and that flows through into household electricity bills.
The report went on also to say what the effects of these high power bills are on customers. It makes the point that more household customers are accumulating energy bill debt and that the proportion of customers with energy debt (less than 12 months) has increased. It identifies the fact that the big price rises that happened last year are causing more and more people to get behind in their payments. As debts grow, there are more customers entering hardship payments as well.
Sadly, one of the things that the report reveals is that the proportion of South Australian customers on hardship payments is going up. It shows between 2018-19 it was over 2 per cent. It came down over those years between 2019-20, 2020-21. It came down to a number just over 1.5 per cent of the proportion of customers on hardship payments. Now it is going up again. In fact, South Australia had the highest proportion of electricity customers on hardship payments in the nation, I think at 1.99 per cent. So just under 2 per cent of electricity customers in South Australia are on hardship payments.
A bit further into the report it goes into some more information relating to the proportion of hardship-payment customers who are receiving energy concessions as well, and it shows that only 40 per cent of those on hardship programs are receiving a concession. That means that 60 per cent of people on hardship payments are not receiving any support from the Malinauskas Labor government. Working families are bearing the brunt because we know many of them were not eligible for the concessions in the state budget that was handed down last year. They are struggling and they are bearing the brunt of it.
Overall, we know that the typical South Australian family is $20,000 worse off under the Malinauskas Labor government during this cost-of-living crisis. Those people in the electorate of Dunstan, who saw their power bills going down when the former Liberal government was in power, who saw the average bill reduced by $420, see that they are now going up again.
As I said before, we know that there was no plan in place by the Malinauskas Labor government at the election, or since, to ensure that the electricity supply is affordable and reliable. The government are spending $600 million on their hydrogen power station, which they admit is not aimed at delivering cheaper power bills for households. I have asked the minister in parliament this year: will this power station reduce household electricity bills? His response was:
First and foremost, we have always said this is about trying to get an improvement for industrial users. It's commercial and industrial customers we are targeting.
For households, when they are struggling with these high prices, they are quite entitled to ask: what is the plan for households? That is certainly a fair question that they should be asking and that we certainly are asking.
That brings us back to the bill we have at hand. We have power bills surging for households and small businesses and so they are asking: is this bill going to help address our concerns? At the same time, they have been promised by the Prime Minister that he will reduce their power bills by $275. That was made before the default market offers came in place on 1 July 2022. As I said, we saw that prices over the three default market offers since are up $696. So South Australians are not seeing a reduction; they are in fact seeing a massive increase.
Again, looking at this reform, is there hope, potentially, that this amendment bill that we are discussing today will bring down power prices? If you look into what the stakeholders had to say, you would be doubtful. Looking at the stakeholders' feedback, they did acknowledge the need for the regulator to understand the wholesale contract market, but they did raise concerns about issues, including the scope of the new powers, the use of information gathered for wholesale market monitoring purposes, for other functions that the AER undertakes, and also the need for additional measures to accompany the broadening of the AER's powers.
If we talk specifically about what some of the stakeholders said and some of the concerns they raised in regard to the expansion of the AER's wholesale market monitoring and reporting function, ENGIE and Alinta say that the AER's new powers will have limited impact on its abilities to predict and respond to issues owing to the complex and unpredictable nature of the energy system.
We also had some commentary from the Australian Financial Markets Association and Australian Energy Council. The Australian Financial Markets Association is an industry association that promotes efficiency in Australia's financial markets. Some of their comments were that the AER's powers would extend beyond the areas where it holds regulatory functions, such as into financial markets. It goes on to say that it fails to fully appreciate the scale of the proposed reporting obligation and will have significant cost implications for both participants and the AER and is unlikely to deliver the anticipated insights.
They went on to expand on these points. In terms of the technological requirements, they made the point that their members' experience is that the AER has limited technology resources to assist in their information gathering and relies heavily on the provision of written responses and data in manually populated spreadsheets. With the significant amount of information that would be aimed to be collected, it is going to be very difficult to try to collate that mass of information by relying upon manually populated spreadsheets, according to the AFMA.
They also said the frequency at which the data is required to be reported is a significant driver of costs for both the AER and participants. When it comes to talking about information versus insight, they suggest that a targeted approach appears to give greater insight rather than collecting large volumes of data which then have to be processed. They go on to make the point that certain types of contracts should be excluded, including those concerning the transmission or distribution of electricity, the cost of fuel or underwriting the supply of gas or electricity.
After that, the Australian Financial Markets Association and the Australian Energy Council recommended that the reporting obligations, as a result, should be proportional to participants' impact on the market and this could mean either exempting small participants or reducing their reporting obligations proportional to their impact on the market. These small participants could have to go to a lot of effort to provide all this reporting, when ultimately they are not providing a big impact on the overall situation in the market. So the suggestion that was made there seems to have some merit.
In terms of other feedback around this bill, there was some stakeholder feedback regarding the compliance cost and also the risk of duplicate information requests, with some of the stakeholders raising concerns that the expansion of the wholesale market monitoring and reporting function would result in significant new compliant costs for affected market participants.
At the same time, several stakeholders also highlighted the potential duplication of information collection between the AER's proposed wholesale market monitoring function. Again, the Australian Financial Markets Association, in conjunction with the Australian Energy Council, said that a number of regulatory bodies currently collect data about energy markets and the associations are keen to avoid duplication and where possible the AER should rely on data collected by other bodies.
They made the point that the area where this is particularly relevant is in terms of ASIC. The collection of information on over-the-counter gas contracts and weather derivatives is done by ASIC. Additionally, the ACCC's east coast gas market inquiry has run from 2017 and is going to run until 2030. At the same time, the ACCC's electricity market monitoring inquiry has been running since 2018 and is scheduled to run until 2025. These have involved the provision to the ACCC of data on gas prices and offers under GSAs, and detailed electricity contract information.
Another area that was pointed out was in regard to AEMO's collection of information in respect of the Retailer Reliability Obligation, which requires market participants to report on hedging levels when a forecast reliability gap results in the AER making a reliability instrument. Those are some of the comments by AFMA. Some other comments in the same vein around potential duplication were made by the ACCC, who said:
It is important to recognise that the compliance burden on industry is increasing, including with the impending mandatory gas code.
They acknowledged the potential overlap with the ACCC's gas inquiry. The ACCC suggested that the AER:
…could potentially be required to systematically report on and review all bilateral trading agreements in the east coast gas market, including those that have no bearing on the wholesale gas market, which could impose an unnecessary burden on industry and a duplication of effort across the AER and the ACCC.
There was also some feedback from stakeholders raising concerns around the potential, because of the complexity of the contract market, of raising the risk that the Australian Energy Regulator may misinterpret contractual information provided to it by market participants. Some of the specific concerns included AGL saying:
Contract information may not be available in a format that is consistent across the industry or readily understood.
Alinta said:
Without understanding the reasons for the design and features of specific contracts, or the drivers for organisations pursuing particular commercial arrangements, the AER may reach incorrect conclusions.
Origin made the point:
Over-the-counter contracts are particularly unique and lengthy, increasing the difficulty of accurately interpreting them from a regulatory perspective.
Shell made the point:
There is a lot of information in electricity market contracts which may not be relevant to the AER and its aims, and the terms may be more indicative of the individual needs of the buyer and seller than representative of underlying market trends.
They are points made in relation to the potential for misinterpretation by the regulator when looking at the contracts.
Some other concerns also related to privacy and protection of confidential information. Some of the stakeholders raised concerns that the AER will gain access to large volumes of commercially sensitive information because of the expansion of its wholesale market monitoring function to both the gas and electricity markets. A specific concern from Origin's perspective is:
Along with holding more sensitive information, the removal of restrictions that currently exist in section 18D on the AER's use and disclosure of that information will increase the potential for confidential information to be disclosed.
While the stakeholders acknowledge that the amendments proposed in the bill would allow market participants to request the redaction of names and other identifying details of counterparties to contracts, there are still some concerns from the industry overall.
As I said at the outset of my remarks, South Australia is the lead legislator and the convention is for these changes to come into effect nationally, and they do that by passing through the South Australian parliament. As such, the opposition will provide our support for these amendments to the national energy laws and, as I informed the whip earlier, we will not seek to go into committee at the conclusion of the second reading debate.
I make the point that these changes, as I outlined for some of the other national energy bills that have come into this parliament recently, continue the trend of electricity and gas market reform, delivering market transparency and increased powers to market bodies, in this case the AER but also AEMO and the AEMC, in an attempt to address supply issues over the last few years. This legislation is not targeting the real need for South Australian families and businesses right now, which is to bring down energy bills, and that is certainly what the government should be focusing on right now.
Mr FULBROOK (Playford) (16:15): I am very happy to rise and speak in support of the Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Wholesale Market Monitoring) Bill 2023. Today, we received the welcome news that electricity prices for households and small businesses will start to fall. This follows a draft ruling by the Australian Energy Regulator that default market cuts of 2.5 per cent, or $57, for average households and 8.2 per cent, or $481, for small businesses should be in place by July.
While we would like to see more as consumers, it is a far cry from the doom and gloom of the 25 per cent increases I understand were predicted by those opposite. While everything counts, it is still a small step and reinforces that there is still much more to do. This is where the bill before us has the potential to make further difference. While I have spoken about the default offer, this piece of legislation will hopefully empower consumers to drive a better deal for themselves on their energy bills.
You have to be hiding under a rock if you have not noticed privatisation has been a massive step backwards for consumers. What was supposed to have created a competitive market has instead developed a situation where consumers have suffered at the mercy of rising prices. Giving extra powers to the Australian Energy Regulator, as proposed in this bill, will allow it to investigate if retailers are making excessive profits at the detriment of consumers due to secret hedging strategies. Arguably, this sort of reform may not be necessary if the retailers were passing on savings. But who does not like letting a little bit of sunshine in?
I say this in the knowledge that I have become aware of a recently published report by the Australian Energy Regulator showing that wholesale electricity prices have fallen sharply. In the last quarter of 2024, the regulator's report showed that in South Australia average wholesale prices were $53 per megawatt hour. This was less than half the $114 per megawatt hour average in the previous quarter and down from $80 per megawatt hour in the same quarter of 2022. For the full year, prices fell by 44 per cent. As the minister stated—and this is reflected by the modest fall in the default offers—there can be no more excuses from retailers. They must pass savings like these to the consumers rather than what seems like the pocketing of extra profits.
What we are hopefully going to see is a benefit for all consumers, even those who have taken steps to insulate themselves from the worst of electricity price rises by investing in rooftop solar. It is reasonable to suggest that for those in a financial position to make the capital investment, solar has been an incredible success. The Australian Energy Market Operator's 2022-23 South Australian Electricity Report recorded that rooftop solar provided 17.7 per cent of the total annual generation for that financial year.
This was a significant part of the renewable energy mix, which dominates our power system, complementing the 46.9 per cent of generation which came from wind farms and the 8.8 per cent from grid-scale solar. It has put Australia in a position where renewables provided more than 75 per cent of the electricity generated in the 2023 calendar year, a world-leading achievement for a jurisdiction that does not have the benefit of hydroelectricity.
Arguably, the community I have the privilege to represent is at the epicentre of this movement, for they have been amongst the most enthusiastic in the nation in installing rooftop solar panels. The Clean Energy Regulator records rooftop solar installations by postcode and highlights that in Paralowie and Salisbury Downs, postcode 5108, residents have installed 8,300 solar systems as of December last year. This put the suburbs just outside the top 50 nationally in the number of systems per postcode area. In a separate investigation by the Clean Energy Council, postcode 5108 is down as the state's top suburb for solar energy production. I live in 5107, so I cannot ride personally on the coattails of this, but I am making my own personal contribution to bringing my neighbourhood's tally up.
Getting back to my neighbours in Paralowie and Salisbury Downs, it is worth celebrating that the aggregated capacity of 42 megawatts from just these two suburbs alone is like having a small-scale commercial generator. In Parafield Gardens and Greenfields, there are 4,130 solar systems, and in Mawson Lakes—a suburb of which I partly represent with the member for Florey—there are a further 4,131 solar systems registered with the Clean Energy Regulator.
The then Labor government, led by Premier Rann, paved the way for the uptake of solar power in our state. It was a visionary move that has been good for the planet and positive towards the household budgets of hundreds of thousands of South Australians. It is worth noting that the financial incentive to invest has changed markedly since the Rann government pump-primed the rooftop solar industry.
In those early days, the cost of a solar system was high and the capacity of the panels was comparatively low. Those early adopters who led the way enjoyed the benefits of the government-mandated 44¢ per kilowatt hour payment for what they fed back into the grid. It was the difference that made the investment worthwhile. Retailers added to their own feed-in solar as well, to further attract customers, taking the payment above 50¢ per kilowatt hour for many households in those early days.
Today, the cost of a solar system is far lower and the output capacity is far higher. While it served its purpose well, the early adopter 44¢ tariff scheme closed to new entrants in 2011, and in recent years the feed-in tariffs offered by retailers has reduced considerably. While as a government we are working hard to make rooftop solar an even more valued commodity, until this is achieved the best way for almost all households to use their solar power is to run as much of the household as possible during daylight hours rather than exporting as much solar energy as possible into the grid unless, of course, you are still on the 44¢ scheme. Running washing machines, air conditioners, dishwashers and so on during the middle of the day powered by the household's own solar is therefore the best way to save money and to recoup the cost of the investment.
It is encouraging that more than 350,000 solar systems and about 40,000 residential batteries are operating in South Australia according to SA Power Networks. I feel it is reasonable to say that this is the voice of consumers speaking. I make no secret that I want to see this number increase, and I take this moment to share a little personal story with the house on something I got up to over the summer period—riveting stuff.
As background, about this time last year my wife and I moved into our home in Parafield Gardens. We love it very much, and one notable feature of it was an existing solar system. With no battery and some ageing elements to the inverter, it is reasonable to say that its best days were behind it. On and off throughout 2023, I had been researching my options on what the best option would be to come as close as possible to taking the sting out of my energy bills. To cut a long story short, it was decided that I would hang onto the existing system and then go ahead with an additional 6.6 kilowatt PV system and a 9.6 kilowatt battery unit.
Before anyone accuses me of suggesting something that is out of reach of everyone, I want to make it very clear that, as I have my own home loan with one of the major banks, I was able to organise a green loan with a fixed interest rate of 3.99 per cent, repayable over 10 years. Given I understand green loans are available to most mortgage customers of the major banks, I want to share this, as it is my view this is accessible to many people. While I do not want to go into the exact specifics of what I have paid, it is reasonable to suggest the set-up payment was under $15,000, thanks to a little bit of shopping around.
Until I get a year's worth of bills I cannot say definitely but, according to the modelling done by several of the competing companies looking for my business, with a frugal family of three, and with winter being the possible exception, by and large the sting in my bills will be a thing of the past.
I am sharing this because taking out a loan like this means the repayments are now a fixed component to my energy costs for the next 10 years. Working on an amount of $15,000, it means that it will cost me about $71 per fortnight. This component becomes resilient to inflation, and after the system is paid off I understand there is a hopeful 15 years of operating life where it will cost me little to run. I know it is not for everyone, but hopefully it gives some food for thought on what products are out there and how they can be used in a way to smooth out bills and, looking ahead, take the sting out of things.
While consumers are choosing clean energy and taking back control of their energy consumption, we should not be oblivious to the 60 per cent of households that do not currently have solar. Subsequently, these consumers fully draw energy from the electricity grid to meet their total demand, and these people must be supported with good pieces of legislation like the bill before us. While solar can be a game-changer, it is not cheap and it is therefore imperative that we ensure 100 per cent of consumers have access to clean, reliable and, most of all, affordable energy. In calling for these extra powers, the Australian Energy Regulator says, and I quote:
The proposed changes will greatly enhance the AER's ability to assess performance, competition and efficiency in the wholesale energy markets and ensure consumers are not unduly impacted by energy prices due to an uncompetitive market.
It is worth noting that the AER wants contracts which relate to emissions to be expressly included in the ambit of what it can access. This request is relevant following the passage in our parliament of the Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Emissions Reduction Objectives) Bill 2023. Members may recall that this bill added emissions reductions to the objectives, which all energy market bodies must follow in their decision-making.
In a submission to the current reform proposal, but written before the emissions reduction objectives bill was enacted, the AER says, and I quote:
Emissions-related contracts can directly impact participant behaviour and performance of the wholesale electricity market, as they can influence which technology types in a portfolio a participant would choose to offer and at what cost. In addition, with the proposed integration of emissions reduction in the National Energy Objective, the AER will have a role in assessing whether there are features of the market that detrimentally impact the achievement of relevant emissions reduction targets.
The market bodies like the Australian Energy Regulator have been established to make the private markets perform efficiently and fairly. As lawmakers, we must give them the tools that they need to do their job. The powers to be granted in the bill are a new set of tools that will help the regulator accomplish their role. Given this, I am more than happy to commend this bill to the house.
Mr PEDERICK (Hammond) (16:27): I rise to make a contribution to the Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Wholesale Market Monitoring) Bill. It was back on 8 June 2022 that energy ministers agreed to consider additional legislative reform, and that this was having a look at options to enable new gas and electricity contract market-monitoring powers as an immediate priority for introduction into the South Australian parliament, to ensure that the Australian Energy Regulator has the full information and visibility it needs.
On 2 August 2022 a consultation paper was released on amending the Australian Energy Regulator Wholesale Market Monitoring and Reporting Framework as currently set out in the National Electricity Law. Submissions closed for this on 25 August 2022. On 24 February 2023 the Energy and Climate Change Ministerial Council agreed to expedite a package of measures expanding the Australian Energy Regulator's gas and electricity market-monitoring powers, which the Energy and Climate Change Ministerial Council regard as an essential function for a well-regulated and stable east coast electricity market. This group has a view to passing this legislation as soon as feasible.
On 13 April 2023, the draft National Energy Laws Amendment (Wholesale Market Monitoring) Bill and consultation paper were released for a three-week public consultation, with submissions closing on 4 May 2023. As with previous changes to the national energy laws, South Australia is the lead jurisdiction. As such, the convention is that, as the legislation has been approved by the Energy and Climate Change Ministerial Council prior to it being introduced in the Parliament of South Australia, it receives bipartisan support.
The Minister for Energy and Mining introduced the Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Wholesale Market Monitoring) Bill into this house on 15 November 2023. This bill seeks to amend both the National Electricity Law, set out in the schedule to the National Electricity (South Australia) Act 1996, and the National Gas Law, set out in the schedule to the National Gas (South Australia) Act 2008.
As mentioned previously, in February 2023, the Energy and Climate Change Ministerial Council resolved to fast-track a series of reforms designed to expand the Australian Energy Regulator's gas and electricity market monitoring powers. These powers were described as an essential function for a well-regulated and stable east coast electricity market. These reforms were considered by the ministerial council as imperative for the Australian Energy Regulator to be able to effectively monitor and proactively identify challenges to the energy market.
At present, the Australian Energy Regulator is limited in its ability to assess competition in the wholesale energy markets due to a range of reasons, including restrictions around obtaining and using information, a lack of visibility over electricity market contracts and the lack of a comprehensive gas market monitoring role. As such, the proposed reforms include changes to the National Electricity Law and National Gas Law, with the aim to:
1. remove provisions that currently limit the Australian Energy Regulator's ability to effectively fulfil its electricity wholesale market monitoring function;
2. empower the Australian Energy Regulator to monitor contract markets;
3. create an explicit wholesale market monitoring function for gas; and
4. create additional requirements for the Australian Energy Regulator in connection with its extended wholesale market monitoring powers.
The reforms to the Australian Energy Regulator's wholesale market monitoring and reporting function aim to provide the AER with the visibility it needs to identify and investigate issues in a timely and well-informed manner and make an ongoing assessment of whether these markets are operating competitively. They are also envisaged to enable the Australian Energy Regulator to better monitor electricity and gas markets to understand the drivers of volatility and the level of liquidity in the market to better anticipate and provide information in the event of future crises.
The proposed enhanced information-gathering powers are also intended to equip the Australian Energy Regulator to monitor the progress of the energy markets as they adapt and innovate as part of Australia's energy transition. These reforms are intended to enable the AER to provide information that can inform more targeted and effective long-term policy and regulatory reform.
This bill does affect us on the national scene, and we have to regulate it from our state first as the lead legislator in this process. It certainly affects what happens between this state, Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland and Tasmania because we are all interconnected. Down the track, when EnergyConnect gets finalised—it is taking a while; we have the towers on this side under our proposal to build that 800-megawatt line, connection through New South Wales from Robertstown, and this will complement the Hayward interconnector, which is 500 megawatts, and the Murraylink, which is a 200-megawatt underground line from the Riverland through to Victoria.
I believe that EnergyConnect will be vital into the future. I have talked about it here before. There is obviously a range of electricity generating still going on in this country. We notice—as coal was demonised—coal stations going and maintenance not even being carried out. The banks don't look nicely on coal-fired power, but the simple fact is that it is still part of the energy mix to keep the lights on in this state and in this country. Even though we do not have a coal-fired plant here, we certainly import some coal-fired power from the two connections we have through to Victoria, and obviously that connects into New South Wales, Queensland and Tasmania.
We certainly have a broad mix of generation. Obviously we have had lots of gas over the years. I have mentioned here many times that I used to work in the gas fields 40-odd years ago. It is a great industry and I really commend Santos for their project on carbon capture and storage, which will be a game changer in the Cooper Basin.
The work that goes on in the gas industry both here and interstate—some not so much interstate with bans on various programs in Bass Strait and that kind of thing—where the country has sourced a lot of energy and power in the past, is to be commended because gas will be a part of the mix for many years to come, probably at least 30 years most pundits say. We need to keep that in mind as the transition fuel because you do need base load power to keep everything running. Yes, we do have some great renewable resources as far as wind and solar goes, though I am a bit concerned that when these projects come to end of life they become waste products—the turbines and the panels. We do have many hundreds of megawatts of this type of generation across South Australia, and that has caused some controversy at times and still does.
It is fascinating if you have an electorate where one of these projects may or may not be going ahead, whether it is solar or wind. On the different levels of discussion that are had there are quite a few solar farms through the seat of Hammond. About 200 megawatts have gone in at Tailem Bend and there are various solar farms when you head out towards Palmer and Mannum. There have been other proposals that have not got off the ground or have not happened yet for whatever reason, but there are also some wind farming proposals around the place, and certainly Tilt. They have made some adjustments to the turbines they want to put in around Palmer, and that is going through its approval process. We will see whether or not that gets the go ahead.
Especially with wind turbines usually you get a couple of camps: the ones that don't mind looking at wind turbines and those that are staunchly against them. It is a bit like solar farms on some land. As much as it takes up land, it is a negotiated lease fee between the landholder and the company wanting to generate the electricity, but then there are other people who decide they do not want any part of it.
The simple fact is that we need to generate our electricity from somewhere. Since all the stations up in Port Augusta got bowled over, we lost about 500 megawatts in one or two fell swoops. We needed to enhance the energy we lost there, mainly with gas as far as base load power is concerned and, obviously, as we have heard from other members here today, a lot of rooftop solar, a lot of industrial solar.
I have my farmhouse at Coomandook and it is magnificent. You can only put a five-kilowatt amount of panels on the end of a single-wire return line but it is still pretty handy for keeping the power bills down. I know there has been conversation today about the early legislation where I think you were paid back about 44¢ a unit for your electricity and that has now decreased to 5¢ or 6¢.
At the end of the day, I look on that as a bonus because it is about what you can run during the day—the total opposite of what we used to do in the old days, I will say, where you wanted to run everything at night on J tariff. Now you certainly want to have everything cranked up during the day to utilise that solar power so that you are not paying—I will probably get this number wrong—the 38¢ or 42¢, or whatever it is, a unit with the price that you would have to pay for that power to come in.
I think I put my unit on in the second round, I will call it, not the first round of solar when the 44¢ per unit availability was on the line, and we legislated that here through the house. I think a unit then of a similar size to what I purchased was $20,000 with that early round and I think what we spent next time was about $12,000. They are remarkably cheaper now; they are probably down to $4,000 or something like that for a similar size. Then there is battery capability to go in if people want to go down the path of adding batteries.
It has been interesting—and I have mentioned this before—that the energy minister, Minister Koutsantonis, used to be a fan of EnergyConnect until we made it ours. It is odd because this will really enhance the use of our renewables, our 60 to 70 per cent of renewable generation in this state, so that when we have that oversupply of renewable energy we can export it straight into New South Wales, which then hooks up with the eastern market of Australia through Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and obviously Tasmania.
When we have to, we can import power for a range of needs, whether it is hydro in Tasmania, coal in Queensland, New South Wales or Victoria, or whether it is gas-fired. The beauty of it is that exchange of electricity and those options that will happen will assist us into the future to keep the lights on, which is something the Labor Party did not do in their previous term of government, in September 2016 when all the lights went out in this state. We were sitting in this place, and we were one of the only places to have power because we had emergency generation that kicked in.
It was a very odd day. I was stunned that the whole state could go out, but it did. It was a massive disruption. I think it was taking people up to an hour and a half to go across the square mile of the City of Adelaide. Quite frankly, for those of us who were in Adelaide for the week, it was best just to stay put here. That should not have happened and we must do all we can to make sure it never happens again.
As I have said, as we need to retain gas supplies into the future, we must work with companies like Santos to make sure that they can do the searching, the drilling and the work needed to extract that gas because we will need it for a long time into the future. As I indicated, I really commend their carbon capture and storage, which is coming online very soon, and that will utilise depleted gas wells, especially close to the Moomba plant.
We have heard a lot about how good hydrogen is going to be. I struggle with the amount of renewable energy that is going to have to be generated. I have heard that up to 16,000 wind turbines will have to be built in the pastoral area around Whyalla and there will be thousands of acres of solar panels to generate power that will probably have a 4:1 loss ratio. To go into hydrogen, I am assuming it will utilise hydrogen as a battery essentially, but to have such a huge power loss to make green steel and other products, I just worry that so much power will be lost—but we will see. When we had the briefing from university professors, I was concerned that they were not sure how it would work—that really did concern me. We need to make sure we do all we can to have energy security in this state.
Certainly, another plank we need to look forward to into the future is nuclear energy. I have spoken about that. Our federal team, with Peter Dutton, has announced that moving forward if nuclear came on board probably the most likely site for a small modular reactor would be at Port Augusta. That makes sense. Everything was there before, as far as the coal plant and all the transmission lines that radiate across this state, because we do have some long leads, obviously. We are a small population compared with the other states. I think it is something we really need to look at.
I witnessed a lot of this when I went to England, France and Finland about eight or 10 years ago and had a look at what is going on there. I saw the canola crops out in full flower right up to the fence of a nuclear power plant. I saw towns in Finland competing to see if they were the ones that got the contracts to build the nuclear power plants and I also saw the research that is being done on putting nuclear spent rods under the ground, which would be a lot safer than the many hundreds of tonnes, probably thousands of tonnes, right across the world that are sitting on the surface.
Here at home at the minute, we have to make sure we get things right to make sure that we can keep the lights on and that we can do it economically. There are people suffering under this Peter Malinauskas government when we have seen power prices go up for households by $696 and for small business by $1,288. We must do better to make sure that people can thrive and their businesses can thrive.
Ms THOMPSON (Davenport) (16:48): I, too, rise to speak to the Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Wholesale Market Monitoring) Bill 2023. Firstly, I think it is important that we establish how our power prices are set and why our bills look the way that they do, because it can be complicated.
Right now, we are operating in a market that sees retailers offer fixed prices to consumers across a 12-month period. To do this, providers are estimating the likely cost of buying energy to power people's homes and businesses in the months that follow. As a result, the forward price of the energy market is responsible for setting what we pay as consumers. As energy prices fall, households rightly expect a reduction in their power bills, but movement in the wholesale market is not passed along immediately because, as we know, those fixed price offers are already in place.
Next, we have to factor in costs associated with transmission, which accounts for approximately 40 per cent of an energy bill, along with maintenance and construction of South Australia's distribution infrastructure, including the highly distinct Stobie poles. Once upon a time, this would have fallen within the scope of the Electricity Trust, or ETSA as it is better known. Unfortunately, a typically short-sighted Liberal privatisation cast aside this reliable, efficient and valuable state asset some 25 years ago. Now we pay monopolies to manage regulated assets instead.
Members interjecting:
The DEPUTY SPEAKER: Members to my left, you were heard in silence.
Mr Whetstone: Yes, I know.
The DEPUTY SPEAKER: Yes, well, if you know that then I suggest you give this speaker the same courtesy. If you cannot, I suggest you leave the chamber. The member for Davenport.
Ms THOMPSON: Matters of ownership aside, international price shocks driven by Russia's invasion of Ukraine have subsided locally, fuelled largely by South Australia's plentiful generation of solar and wind. The Australian Energy Market Operator has confirmed that wholesale prices in South Australia almost halved from $64 per megawatt hour in the 2022 December quarter to $33 per megawatt hour during the same reporting period one year on.
Pleasingly, our investment in renewable energy generation is not just driving down wholesale prices, it is also helping South Australia break free of the Eastern States, where ageing coal-fired infrastructure is growing increasingly unreliable. Now it is up to private electricity retailers to recognise their costs are falling and pass resulting savings along to South Australian households, instead of treating government investment in renewable energy as a get-rich-quick scheme.
So where does that lead us? This bill increases the capabilities and responsibilities of the Australian Energy Regulator as it works to ensure our energy markets are performing competitively. For starters, we are bolstering the regulator's arsenal by providing it access to critical information on electricity contract markets. Today, the regulator relies on information available within the public domain. However, we know that deals between generators, finance intermediaries and retailers are often done behind closed doors. As it stands, we have a regulator fighting with one arm tied behind its back, and we believe that both the market and the consumer will benefit from a regulator that has full and thorough oversight of the industry it is entrusted with monitoring.
It is important to remember, too, that the Australian Energy Regulator is responsible for setting the default market offer (DMO). The DMO was enacted in July 2019 and is considered a safety net for customers who cannot or will not shop around for a new electricity deal. Households and small businesses on standard retail plans are protected by a maximum price as determined by the Australian Energy Regulator, but, understandably, it is difficult for the regulator to determine a fair and reasonable DMO when it lacks timely and regular access to each market participant's dealings. That is exactly what we are working to improve on for the residents and small businesses of South Australia, New South Wales and south-east Queensland with the introduction of this bill.
Another of this legislation's core functions is to appropriately equip the regulator to monitor and report on happenings within the wholesale gas market. It is well documented that Russia's invasion of Ukraine put upward pressure on gas prices globally, and while we cannot control the movements of foreign governments from South Australia, we can put reasonable consumer protections in place closer to home. That is why I am pleased that we are removing the regulator's shackles, and tasking it with identifying parties that exercise market power and seeking out factors that may be detrimental to competition in gas markets.
It is fair to suggest that these changes are welcomed by the consumer watchdog, which said that the AER receiving the power to monitor the electricity hedging contracts market will improve transparency and policy development. They said:
This will protect competition and facilitate the effective functioning of the electricity market by supporting the provision of risk management options to smaller, non-vertically integrated retailers.
The Public Interest Advocacy Centre was similarly effusive in its praise, saying they:
…consider these changes to be in the long-term interest of consumers, bringing greater transparency to the market and encouraging more efficient and competitive market outcomes.
Feedback received to date has been loud and clear. This is sensible policy to be delivered by the South Australian parliament for households and small businesses spanning several jurisdictions.
Sensible energy policy, as we know, is a hallmark of the Malinauskas Labor government. With our Hydrogen Jobs Plan and a commitment to establishing a world-leading hydrogen power plant in Whyalla, it is no secret that all eyes in the energy sector are firmly on South Australia, which is why it is so important we deliver legislation specifically in relation to energy regulation that tackles the big issues head-on.
Our ambition extends beyond the hydrogen space and beyond regulatory frameworks, too. South Australian Labor's track record is unparalleled in the renewable energy space, with more than 75 per cent of all electricity generated in South Australia last year having derived from clean sources, being wind and solar. It comes as no surprise, at the very least, to members on this side of the chamber, that such significant generation of renewable energy has resulted in South Australia recording wholesale electricity prices far lower than the black-coal states of New South Wales and Queensland. Make no mistake: this long-term vision is paying dividends for people living and working in South Australia right now, and rest assured we are not done yet.
Finally, while we are talking renewable energy, it would be remiss of me not to mention that for the first time in the National Electricity Market, South Australia entered a period of negative operational demand. When we speak of negative operational demand, we are referencing a period of time in which electricity generated by rooftop solar systems exceeded the demands of an entire state.
We know people are doing it tough, and we know energy prices in particular have proven a burden. Right now, everything points to retailers having an opportunity to deliver families and small businesses the relief that they have been crying out for without impacting on their bottom lines. To assist in that process, we are giving the Australian Energy Regulator the teeth and the visibility it needs to see that our energy markets are working for all. I look forward to delivering this change for those living in South Australia and beyond, and I commend this bill to the house.
Mr WHETSTONE (Chaffey) (16:56): I would like to make a contribution to the Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Wholesale Market Monitoring) Bill. I think it is very important. I think most members of this place understand that we do need national energy laws that work and that are transparent, and we would like to think that South Australia will be the lead jurisdiction. The Australian Energy Regulator is limited. There are restrictions for obtaining and using information, a lack of visibility over electricity contract markets and a lack of comprehensive gas market monitoring.
I have a very good friend who is a retail provider, and he has given me a much clearer understanding of the current state of play. Of course, the proposed reforms are aiming to remove provisions limiting AER's ability to effectively monitor the electricity wholesale market, to empower the AER to monitor contract markets and to create an explicit wholesale market monitoring function, particularly for gas. The reforms give AER the visibility it needs to investigate issues promptly. At the end of the day, it is about making better ongoing assessments of competition within the marketplace and also helping understand the drivers of volatility and level of liquidity.
To anticipate and provide information in future crises, reforms should allow for effective long-term energy policy that protects South Australians. Whether it is an everyday house, a small business or a large business, it does affect the flow-down. The costs, particularly by the large businesses and the large conglomerates, are felt by all. What we cannot pass down is the cost of a household power bill. That is what is hurting everyday households. That is what is hurting everyday cost-of-living pressures that South Australians are dealing with.
Back at home, where I live in Chaffey, we do need efficient and affordable energy, because that is the critical element for attracting investment. For many years, the main component within a small business has been the cost of labour, but in today's environment we are seeing that the cost of electricity is the number one cost in a day-to-day business operation. Obviously, extensive solar opportunities are helping some individuals.
I will get to clean energy, renewable energy, in just a moment. There is some truth in how we do need to have clean, renewable energy, yes, but currently, with the transition from coal, from gas and from traditional forms of power generation, we are now paying the price for that conversion into renewables.
Obviously, regional communities are facing unique challenges; they are more heavily restricted, but remember that they cannot grow without reliability and they cannot invest with that detailed information. They cannot invest with a transparent understanding of what the cost of power will mean to their business. We must understand that infrastructure investment needs to be addressed more proactively and supply needs to be more reliable.
I will just touch on some of the larger power users in my electorate. Obviously, being a food-producing electorate we have to pump a lot of water and we also have to pack a lot of fruit. To do that takes a lot of power. I am seeing a number of those businesses, whether they be larger or smaller, reacting to looking at ways that they can be more efficient in how to drive the cost of their power bill down.
Speaking to a number of the owners and proprietors today, we have Venus Citrus, which is a citrus packhouse at Loxton. Their power bill is about $167,000 a year but they have installed a significant amount of solar and batteries. They are also now getting to the point where they are having to install all sorts of new technology with LED lighting, making sure that they sensor light all of their infrastructure so that the light follows the movement in their shed. That is helping to bring prices down at every opportunity.
The Central Irrigation Trust is the largest irrigation trust in South Australia and probably one of the largest in Australia. They pump about 110 gigalitres of water to I think just over 10 districts at a cost of about $5 million. To help with their business model they are now in joint power contracts in a cooperative power negotiating capacity with other businesses, so they are all buying wholesale power to reduce their power costs as well as installing panels and batteries. They are now actively involved in all of those power-generation committees and advisory boards doing everything they can to advise and to give people an understanding of what it means to their business with these spiralling power costs.
Mitolo Family Farms is a broadacre horticulture family farm, and they grow and pack mostly potatoes and onions. It is a significant business. Their power price is $8 million a year. They have looked at ways that they would like to reduce the cost of power, but they are growing with the market trends and putting more and more land under potatoes and onions for the growing consumer demand.
With the cost of living, people are now consuming more carbohydrates; they are eating more potatoes and more onions because it is a cheaper form of food. People are restricting themselves from eating red meat, they are restricting themselves from eating seafood, they are restricting themselves from eating food sources that are more expensive. So, as a family farm, Mitolo have many sites—not just in the Riverland. The majority of their irrigation is in the Riverland, Mallee and Lower Murray, and they are now looking at ways to implement power cost-saving ways, particularly with the takeover by the Canadian Pension fund.
Accolade Wines is quite interesting as they use about 7,000 kVA a year. We are not putting a price on that because they pay for their power whether they use it or not, and that is a distinct disadvantage to that business model. They have wholesale contracts. They are a business—they are a big winery, one of the biggest wineries in the country. That just shows you the vulnerability of a food or beverage provider. They have a season, and during that season they are flat out and have the meter spinning as fast as it will go. When things slow down through the cooler months and the winemaking slows right down, they are still paying the same power price because it is an agreed market price.
The Renmark Irrigation Trust pumps about 34 gigalitres of water. They have renewed their contract, and they did it at an opportune time—they came out of contract and went shopping. They were able to reduce their power price from nearly $1 million down to $650,000 just with a five-year contract. If we look at other packhouses, Costa pumps around 25 gigalitres of water, but they also run significant packhouse operations. Their cost for running that business now is a major component of the cost of putting a box of fruit into the market. That cost is, of course, passed on to the consumer and that is adding pressure to day-to-day household prices.
I was speaking to Bill Moularadellis at Kingston Estate. His power price is about $2½ million a year. He is looking at ways of reducing the cost to his business model. His words were, 'If I reduce the demand, it has to reduce the cost in a broader sense.' But the only way he sees fit to reduce the cost of his power is to go off grid by installing solar panels and batteries, and also with a mixture of diesel because that is a cheaper form of energy generation than going into the marketplace and dealing with large amounts of cost.
I have been speaking with a number of businesses. Another family business, Red Mud Foods, has a large farm enterprise and winery. They pay about $100,000 per month for their farm and they pay about $80,000 per month for their winery. That is getting to the point where it is a very fine line as to whether they make money after paying wages and getting product to market. It is all dependent on the commodity price—as it is with many—but it is now becoming very evident. They pump about 9½ gigalitres of water. It shows a very distinct trend of people wanting to buy affordable food but the issues of the producers providing that food to the marketplace are ever-challenging. It is now more evident than ever that it is becoming very expensive to grow food, just as it is very expensive to buy food.
I think some of the vulnerability with the power situation—where it is hurting many businesses—is the contracts. When are those contracts signed? Are they signed at an opportune time? Is the contract signed when they come out of a contract? We have seen in some instances their power prices have doubled from a previous contract that they had signed over a period of time to a new contract. Sometimes, they need that certainty.
They cannot go into the spot market. Many might know that the spot market is highly volatile. The spot market can go from almost zero cost of power to a price that is restrictive to the point where they have to turn their pumps off, they have to shut their sheds down and they have to lay off employees because it is just simply not viable to keep that operation running when we see high spikes in power prices. That is usually when the wind is not blowing, and potentially when the sun is not shining.
I want to touch on a number of contributions by members in this place. We talk about having 75 per cent renewables in South Australia. That is great, but by the same token, the cost of power is a very small part of your bill. If we were to break that down, a number of members on the government benches have said how wonderful it is to have solar panels on your roof and maybe batteries if you are lucky enough, but what they do not tell you is what the network charges are, they do not tell you what the metering charges are and they do not tell you what the market charges are.
That is what is hurting people's bills. That is what is hurting every South Australian family at the moment. That is what is hurting every South Australian business. The wholesalers, the generators, the poles and wires all have fixed costs. We have gone from a couple of major power generators in yesteryear to now thousands of power generators, which is ideology: generating a little bit of power off your roof, sometimes storing a bit of power in your battery.
But every South Australian is picking up the tab. Mark my words: it might feel good, it might sound good, to have 75 per cent renewables, but it is costing every South Australian a significant amount of money for the fixed charges. We cannot just be spellbound by the cost of electricity. That is a small element of your bill, remembering that it is the other charges that are costing so much money.
I will just give everyone a bit of an understanding. At the old Holden site, they used to use 35 megavolts, MVA. When the current desal plant was built, they thought it was going to use a significant amount of power, somewhere in the vicinity of 100 MVA. They now know that running that plant uses about 40 MVA. BHP at Olympic Dam are the main power consumer in South Australia. They use 100-plus MVA at any one time. OneSteel, which is now GFG, the Gupta enterprise, use 50 MVA.
It will be interesting to see how the traditional power will convert over to what I think is a little bit of a pipedream, this government's hydrogen model. It is an experiment. It is going to come at a significant cost to taxpayers, and it has to be proven. I am a little sceptical because there is nothing there that is giving me hope. It will be an untested form of power generation in South Australia, how it is going to work.
By the way, EnergyConnect, the interconnector, is all very good. It is basically putting an extension cord between all of the southern and eastern states so that we can generate power, we can push power into other states when they need it and we can draw power into South Australia when we need it. It is a great idea, but we still continue to talk about solar and batteries. We continue to talk about a lot of the renewables. I think that is a great thing to talk about because I am a supporter, but where is the base load going to come from? We cannot continue to say that we are going to get lots of solar panels, lots of fans and lots of batteries to generate the base load that this state needs because that is a simple furphy.
The state would need to be covered with fans, it would need to be covered in solar panels, to have the base load needed for some of these big users of power, and not just the big miners, the big steelmakers and the manufacturers: do not forget about the food. You cannot eat steel, you cannot eat hydrogen, but you can eat the produce that comes out of the fields, which need reliable power to keep the water pumped, to make sure that the pack houses can keep the lights on and to make sure that we can load the trucks and get it to market so people can put food on their table at an affordable price.
I must say, for what it is worth, speaking with a number of large power users, providers and generators, the best way to put transparency into the marketplace is by decoupling your bill. To do that is not playing politics: it is just plain math. At the moment every bill, whether you are house or a business, has four major components: we have a network charge, which is large; we have an energy charge, which is small; we have a metering charge, which is almost invisible to understand how it works; and we also have market charges. If we were able to decouple those four components of our power bill—so when you get your power bill next time, just turn the page over and better understand what the component of energy is in the overall cost of your power bill. It will probably make your jaw hit the floor because the energy component on the bill is very, very small.
The network charges, the metering charges and the market charges are what need to be exposed so that we can better understand where those charges are coming from, and then we can tackle those charges individually. We can decouple and we can have a level of transparency, because at the moment it is very hard to understand what your power bill represents. For the day-to-day mums and dads who do not understand, they look at the overall bill charge and they are gobsmacked because they do not understand the layers that make up the charge of that bill.
As I understand it, the national energy law, the Australian Energy Regulator, we have to support it—yes we do—but we need more transparency in the marketplace. We need to better understand what our bill represents and what makes up that charge so we can actually tackle those individual charges and then better understand how to actually reduce our power bill on a day-to-day basis.
Ms CLANCY (Elder) (17:16): I rise today in support of the Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Wholesale Market Monitoring) Bill 2023, which seeks to add to the capabilities and responsibilities of the Australian Energy Regulator. Like many of us in this place, I am regularly contacted by members of my community concerned with the price of electricity. This is an issue that was raised with me as a candidate and something that I and many other South Australians have been concerned about for some time.
When constituents bring inquiries to me, no matter what the issue is about, I always try to—and it is often impossible not to—avoid providing the context of mistakes that previous governments have made. However, when it comes to energy prices, South Australians are well aware of the mistakes of the past in privatising the Electricity Trust of South Australia and the effect that mistake still has on energy prices today.
South Australians were also bitterly disappointed by the former Liberal government's decision to sell off the operation of state-owned generators, which would have shielded us by reserving energy for emergency use. This bitterly disappointing decision has left our state more vulnerable to international forces and subjected to increasing unreliability and higher costs of coal-fired power stations interstate.
During the winter of 2022, South Australians saw the worst of this vulnerability. The ongoing invasion and conflict in Ukraine—
Mr Whetstone interjecting:
The DEPUTY SPEAKER: Member for Chaffey, you were heard uninterrupted. It doesn't mean people agreed with what you said. Member for Elder, continue uninterrupted please.
Ms CLANCY: Thank you very much for your protection, Mr Deputy Speaker.
Mr Whetstone interjecting:
Ms CLANCY: Sorry, did that just happen again?
The DEPUTY SPEAKER: Member for Chaffey, can you just zip it please.
Ms CLANCY: I was silent during your contribution, member for Chaffey. Maybe give it a crack.
Mr Whetstone interjecting:
The DEPUTY SPEAKER: Member for Chaffey, you are warned for the third time. Next time you will be leaving the chamber.
Ms CLANCY: During the winter of 2022—
Mr Whetstone interjecting:
Ms CLANCY: —farewell, member for Chaffey—South Australians saw the worst of this vulnerability. The ongoing invasion and conflict in Ukraine, high international fuel prices, fuel supply shortages and generator outages contributed to unprecedented high prices and price volatility in the wholesale electricity market. Events such as those experienced in recent years have demonstrated the risks that energy consumers are exposed to when there is a lack of effective competition in and visibility of wholesale electricity and electricity contract markets.
It is vital to South Australian energy consumers and consumers in other jurisdictions that those responsible for monitoring these markets have the capacity and tools to look out for their best interest. The Australian Energy Regulator plays this important role, ensuring consumers have access to reliable, clean and secure energy.
The regulator is also responsible for ensuring consumers pay no more than necessary for the energy delivered to their homes and businesses. As part of this role, the Australian Energy Regulator sets the annual default market offer for electricity, which is the price cap for consumers on standing offers and which also acts as the reference point for all other contracts for households and small businesses on market offers.
Like many of you, I am sure, I was incredibly pleased to see this morning that the regulator announced their draft default market offer of cuts—not increases, as scaremongered by some of those opposite, but cuts—of 2.5 per cent, or $57, for average households and 8.2 per cent, or $481, for small businesses. The regulator is also responsible for determining the maximum revenue which monopoly businesses, such as SA Power Networks, ElectraNet and Australian Gas Networks, can earn and for monitoring markets and performance to enforce compliance with energy legislation.
At present, the Australian Energy Regulator relies on publicly accessible information to monitor the wholesale electricity market, such as auction processes run by the Australian Energy Market Operator and the futures market run by the Australian Securities Exchange. This restriction was placed on Australian Energy Regulator under the national energy laws to protect commercially sensitive information. In practice, however, these restrictions only serve to hamper the regulator's capacity to gain sufficient visibility of the market to perform its role.
As we saw during the winter of 2022, energy retailers struggled to access electricity contracts to hedge their retail load against high spot prices. Without access to the entire board, the Australian Energy Regulator and the commonwealth could not see the information required throughout this time period. This bill seeks to assist the Australian Energy Regulator to fulfil its role by allowing the regulator the visibility it needs to identify and investigate issues in a timely and well-informed manner and make an ongoing assessment of whether the market is operating competitively.
Outside of the publicly accessible information the Australian Energy Regulator has access to, much of the trading conducted in the electricity market is done through private bespoke contracts between generators, finance intermediaries and retailers. Without access to this information, the Australian Energy Regulator cannot easily estimate what retailers are actually paying to purchase the energy they then sell on to households and small businesses. This particularly impacts the regulator's capacity to set the default market offer fairly for consumers.
Since the South Australian Liberals privatised ETSA, it has been up to good governments at all levels to empower consumers to take back control of their energy use and costs. A really successful example of this is in my electorate, where the City of Mitcham's Community Renewables Program is running. This program, managed by solar energy supplier ShineHub, was introduced to help households and businesses across the council area to install solar and battery systems for no up-front costs. So far, over 760 households have signed up for solar panels and/or batteries, which has offset a total of three power plants and is helping to build a virtual power plant to support the local electricity network.
The City of Mitcham's ultimate goal is to develop a community energy plan that sources the majority of its power from this local virtual power plant. This includes all residents in the council area, not just those who go solar, and a number of other local governments in South Australia and in other states have seen this project by the City of Mitcham and are looking to implement it themselves.
While this initiative is fantastic, it is still limited to those households with the financial capacity to participate in the program. While renters will benefit from the strengthening of a local virtual power plant in the long run, they will only receive the benefits in the short term should their landlord be willing to participate. That is where reforms such as those included in this bill are so important, empowering consumers and ensuring that profit-seeking retailers are not leaving ordinary South Australians behind.
I would also like to take this opportunity to talk about a new community battery program. Through a $1 million grant from the commonwealth Community Batteries for Household Solar initiative, two community batteries will lower annual electricity bills for around 600 eligible participants by as much as $562 per year. These batteries are in Magill and Edwardstown. The one in Edwardstown is not in my part of Edwardstown but is just over the border in my friend's seat of Badcoe, on Towers Terrace. (Hello to Jayne and Quinn, who I am sure are undoubtedly watching my excellent contribution.)
These batteries will help us to continue to decarbonise and will store excess energy during the day when renewable energy is abundant and then make it available at night during periods of high demand or when the grid needs support. Housing SA tenants living near these community batteries will be invited to join the SA Virtual Power Plant scheme, with tenants closest to the two batteries in Magill and Edwardstown receiving the offers first.
I would also like to put on record my strong support for our government bringing forward our renewable energy target by three years. We knew that we were definitely going to be able to reach our target of 100 per cent renewables by 2030, so we thought, 'Let's actually make it a bit tougher. Let's give ourselves a bit more of a push.' Now we have a target to reach 100 per cent renewables by 2027. Our previous Labor government and this Labor government's commitment to renewable energy in our state is something we can be very, very proud of, and I am so pleased that we continue to be leaders, not only in our country but around the world, in increasing renewable energy use.
In closing, I would like to thank all those who have helped bring the bill to this place, including those who participated in the two rounds of public consultation, the Energy and Climate Change Ministerial Council, and our Minister for Energy's staff, particularly Chris. I also really want to thank our Minister for Energy. He is incredibly knowledgeable about this space. He works incredibly hard. I am proud that we have a Minister for Energy who proudly voted against the sale of ETSA back in 1999—what a legend. Thank you to the rest of his team. I proudly commend this bill to the house.
Ms HOOD (Adelaide) (17:28): I, too, rise to speak on the Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Wholesale Market Monitoring) Bill 2023, and I would like to begin by taking a little trip down memory lane, recalling what was said in this place by the most senior members of a former Liberal government in South Australia. These members, a Liberal Premier and a Liberal Treasurer, were speaking about the expected benefits of privatisation of the state's electricity assets.
Of course, at that time these assets were owned and operated by the government in the interests of the South Australian people—it was good times. The then Liberal Premier, John Olsen, said on 18 March 1998:
The outcomes for reform of the State's electricity assets, to be achieved over the next few years, are as follows:
an efficient, competitive electricity industry in South Australia, within the context of the national electricity market and competition policy;
sustainable lower electricity prices and choice of supply for consumers;
an appropriate regulatory environment to encourage competitive outcomes and protection for consumers;
long term security of supply;
repayment of budget supported debt;
reduced risks to taxpayers;
Yes, that was the Liberals' 1998 promise of electricity privatisation: I quote, 'sustainable, lower electricity prices'.
The view was echoed by the then Treasurer, the Hon. Rob Lucas, who only recently served in the former Marshall Liberal government again as Treasurer. Privatisation would, Mr Lucas hoped, and I quote, 'lead eventually to lower prices for industry and business'. That was said on 25 March 1999. Yet, here we are, some 2½ decades later, when privatisation has almost definitely not delivered lower prices for households, industry or business. I seek leave to continue my remarks.
Leave granted; debate adjourned.