►Nambucca: An elderly man in Nambucca has been conned into buying $6000 worth of iTunes gift cards on his credit card. Read more here
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►Wauchope/Camden Haven: Residents and businesses in parts of Wauchope, King Creek, Laurieton, North Haven, Lakewood, Telegraph Point, Brombin, Pappinbarra and Rollands Plains have been unable to use their mobile phones or go online. Read more here
►Kempsey: The fate of the Kempsey cinema project hangs in the balance ahead of an extraordinary meeting of Kempsey Shire Council on Tuesday. Read more here
►Taree: Former Greater Taree City mayor Eddie Loftus is unhappy the new council will not be led by a mayor elected by the people. Read more here
►Forster: Rob Henry has spent the last nine years living among the Mentawai people, an ancient forest dwelling tribe whose way of life depends solely on the forest and natures provisions. Rob is coming to Forster to screen his film As Worlds Divide. Read more here
State of the nation
Need a national news snapshot first thing - well, we have you covered.
Regional news
►Illawarra: A young girl has died after being pulled from a bathtub at her home in Sydney's south-west on Tuesday evening in what is being described as a "tragic accident."
NSW Police say the four-year-old was found unresponsive in the bath at her home in West Hoxton just after 6pm. Read on.
► Bendigo: Cat killer or wildlife warrior? That is the debate raging online after a Bendigo woman posed for a photograph alongside three cats she shot dead with a bow and arrow. Read on.
► Newcastle: FORMER Marist Brothers Hamilton headmaster Brother Christopher Wade has been found guilty of child sex offences against a Marist Hamilton student in the mid 1970s, and a second student at a Kogarah Marist school from 1977. Brother Christopher – real name William Henry Wade, 78 – pleaded not guilty to indecently assaulting the boys while headmaster at both schools, but was found guilty of the offences on Wednesday after a judge-alone trial before Sydney District Court Judge David Arnott. More here.
► Bendigo: Federal Education Minister Simon Birmingham is seeking to reclaim funds allocated to schools under Labor’s Building the Education Revolution scheme that have since closed down. In response, Federal opposition education spokeswoman Tanya Plibersek accused the government of distraction prior to Gonski 2.0 funding passing through the Senate. More here.
► The Turnbull government has locked in the numbers for a stunning victory on its Gonski 2.0 school funding package by agreeing to fast-track its spending plan and pump an extra $5 billion into the nation's schools.
The government can pass its changes into law without the support of the Greens after it secured the necessary 10 votes from the Senate crossbench on Tuesday. Read on.
► The 18-year-old mother of a baby who died suddenly in May has been charged in relation to her death.
The four-month old girl, Anastasia Hand, died in Princess Margaret Hospital on May 26 after being found unresponsive by her father in their Capel home two days earlier and rushed to Bunbury Hospital. Full report here.
National weather radar:
World news:
► Indonesia: Bali police were forced to hold off an investigation to ensure four prison escapees, including Australian Shaun Davidson, were not still trapped inside the escape tunnel after rain made conditions unstable.
The four prisoners have not been sighted since it emerged they had escaped during prison roll call at Kerobokan jail at 8am Monday. Read on.
► Portugal: Fire experts are hoping adopting Australian-style warning systems may prevent future catastrophes after the most devastating blaze in decades left 62 people dead in Portugal. Locals in the town of Pedrogao Grande are struggling to understand how so many people died as they tried to flee the blaze in scenes reminiscent of Black Saturday with people incinerated in their cars. Read on.