Wednesday, 27 August 2025
Adjournment
Waste and recycling management
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Commencement
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Business of the house
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Notices of motion and orders of the day
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Documents
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Bills
- Bail Further Amendment Bill 2025
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Worker Screening Amendment (Strengthening the Working with Children Check) Bill 2025
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Council’s agreement
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Motions
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Motions by leave
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Members statements
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Community safety
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Ivanhoe Primary School
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Rosanna Fire Station Community House
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Digital jobs
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Victoria Police deaths
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Tarneit electorate bus services
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Victoria Police deaths
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Working from home
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Point Cook electorate Chinese community
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Warringa Park School
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Eildon electorate sporting clubs
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Kerala Muslim Cultural Centre
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Country Fire Authority Melton brigade
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Djerriwarrh District Scouts
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Brighton Philatelic Society
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Bayley Arts
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Mayflower aged care home
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Aintree sustainability festival
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Early childhood education and care
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Lara electorate schools
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Treaty
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Wendy Symons
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Lowanna College
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John Smethurst
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Port Melbourne Chargers
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Port Melbourne Netball Club
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Park Towers Community Pantry
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Cranbourne Football Netball Club
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Sikh Community Gurmat Centre
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Cranbourne electorate schools
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Preston electorate housing
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Newlands Primary School
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Middle East conflict
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Preston High School
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Upwey Community Market
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Country Fire Authority awards
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Living Libraries infrastructure program
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Pascoe Vale Scouts
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Coburg North Primary School
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Statements on parliamentary committee reports
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Standing Orders Committee
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Inquiry into Including Sessional Orders and Ongoing Resolutions in the Standing Orders
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Public Accounts and Estimates Committee
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Report on the 2024‒25 Budget Estimates
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Environment and Planning Committee
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Inquiry into Securing the Victorian Food Supply
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Public Accounts and Estimates Committee
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Report on the 2024‒25 Budget Estimates
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Environment and Planning Committee
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Inquiry into Securing the Victorian Food Supply
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Public Accounts and Estimates Committee
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Report on the 2024‒25 Budget Estimates
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Bills
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Casino and Gambling Legislation Amendment Bill 2025
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Statement of compatibility
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Second reading
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Statute Law Revision Bill 2025
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Members
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Minister for Environment
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Absence
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Questions without notice and ministers statements
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Early childhood education and care
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Ministers statements: emergency services
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Early childhood education and care
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Ministers statements: Victoria Police deaths
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Retail workplace safety
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Ministers statements: healthcare workers
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Medically supervised injecting facilities
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Ministers statements: Victoria Police deaths
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Agriculture sector
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Ministers statements: Victoria Police deaths
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Constituency questions
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Polwarth electorate
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Clarinda electorate
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Ovens Valley electorate
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Lara electorate
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Sandringham electorate
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Eureka electorate
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Narracan electorate
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Greenvale electorate
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Rowville electorate
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Wendouree electorate
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Bills
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Statute Law Revision Bill 2025
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Second reading
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Motions
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Budget papers 2025–26
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Matters of public importance
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Motions
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Budget papers 2025–26
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Bills
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Worker Screening Amendment (Strengthening the Working with Children Check) Bill 2025
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Royal assent
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Drugs, Poisons and Controlled Substances Amendment (Medication Administration in Residential Aged Care) Bill 2025
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Second reading
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Adjournment
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Benalla Health maternal and child health services
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Lara electorate community hubs
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Mornington electorate health services
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Country Fire Authority Kororoit electorate brigades
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Life Saving Victoria
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Get Active Kids voucher program
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Parentline
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Community safety
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Waste and recycling management
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Suburban Rail Loop
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Responses
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Waste and recycling management
Tim READ (Brunswick) (19:18): (1288) My adjournment matter is for the Minister for Environment, and the action I seek is for Victoria to ban unnecessary single-use plastic items, including bread tags, soy sauce fish, coffee cups, produce bags and fruit and veg stickers, which are still far too common in our state. Plastics are mostly made from fossil fuels, and because they do not readily biodegrade they instead break down into smaller micro and nanoplastic fragments that find their way into every corner of our environment and even ourselves. As I stand here today, it is likely that I have a plastic spoon’s worth of nanoplastics floating around in my brain, as does everyone else in this room, according to a recent study from the University of New Mexico. While this may go some way to explaining the behaviour of some of us, I think we can all agree it would be better if the contents of our brains were just brains. Another study found microplastics in human placenta tissue, so we are now saddling children with this problem before they are even born. We know plastics leach nasty chemical additives into their surrounding environment, and these chemicals have been linked to health problems in humans because some of them mimic hormones. The environmental impacts of our addiction to plastic can easily be seen by anyone who has visited their local litter-clogged creek lately, where dedicated clean-up volunteers struggle to keep up with the constant river of rubbish. And we know animals up and down the food chain are ingesting microplastics, which block their digestive tracts and even starve some species to death.
In recent years South Australia has banned a number of single-use plastic items that are still available in Victoria, including heavyweight plastic bags, plastic coffee cups and lids, produce bags, plastic confetti and expanded polystyrene fruit and meat trays, among others, and the South Australian government is still going – soy sauce fish and juice box straws will be banned as of next Monday. Meanwhile, in Victoria our government banned a few single-use plastic items in early 2023, but things have been pretty quiet since then. I understand the states are working together on a national road map to reduce plastics, but this is taking years, and that process is no excuse for us to sit on our hands and wait while more plastics accumulate in our bodies. If South Australia can be a leader in eliminating unnecessary single-use plastic items from their state, so can we. It is time for this government to show the same leadership and stop these waterway-clogging, brain-infesting fossil fuel products from polluting our state. Minister, when it comes to eliminating single-use plastics, why can’t Victoria be more like South Australia?