Premiers deliver a deja vu of closed borders

IT feels as though we are living through a recurring nightmare. A sense of deja vu is pervading cross-border communities, who are fed up with blanket border restrictions.

New border restrictions by the Victorian Government will hurt border communities. They’ll hurt farmers that are in the middle of harvest; and they will hurt families that have been apart for months.

Cross-border communities will again be subject to another complicated permit system. The Victorian Government has indicated permits will available from 11.59pm Saturday.

Our experience with the South Australian Government system tells us that there will be numerous hiccups, some people will be excluded, and those with limited computer literacy and access to the internet will struggle needlessly. We can only hope the Victorian system will accommodate the needs of our communities.

The interim 48-hour hard border closure is not insignificant. After this announcement, I was immediately contacted by several farmers worried their work would be disrupted. Rob Berlin, of Murrayville, told me farmers stood to lose thousands of dollars a day if they can’t cart their grain to silos in SA.

I took this issue directly to the Minister for Agriculture, David Littleproud. I am pleased that the Victorian Minister for Agriculture, Jaclyn Symes, introduced a time-critical harvest permit to allow this work to continue.

As a nation, we can’t continue with this type of reactivity to outbreaks and premiers have conceded this.

On November 13, the Commonwealth and all state and territory governments, except Western Australia, agreed to a framework for national reopening that included an agreement on proportionate measures for controlling outbreaks, including targeted restrictions. There was also agreement that the removal of domestic border restrictions was a key pillar to support a COVID-normal Australia.

Merely days after the premiers agreed that border restrictions were not an appropriate means to control outbreaks, several reinstated such restrictions against South Australia.

Cross-border communities are being left behind by parochial premiers who are solely concerned with provincial interests rather than the national interest.

We send a clear message to state premiers: cross-border communities are not expendable.

Digital Editions


  • Kabaddi Cup chaos is back

    Kabaddi Cup chaos is back

    A PASSIONATE festival that combines culture and frenetic entertainment is set to take over the Mildura Sporting Precinct again today as the 2026 Kabaddi Cup…

More News

  • Powerhouse stable looms large in Mildura Cup heats

    Powerhouse stable looms large in Mildura Cup heats

    Victoria’s powerhouse harness racing team Emma Stewart and Clayton Tonkin look to hold the aces heading into this week’s CA Fitness Mildura Pacing Cup series. Two heats on Tuesday night…

  • Hawks clinch star recruit

    Hawks clinch star recruit

    IF you can’t beat ’em, recruit ’em. In perhaps the transfer swoop of the MFNL off-season, across all competitions, women’s league runners-up Bambill clinched the services of Gol Gol’s premiership…

  • Lions looking to roar in 2026

    Lions looking to roar in 2026

    CARDROSS looked for all intents and purposes premiers elect in 2025. They stormed through the regular season undefeated, and the flag looked a fait accompli, but then the table toppers…

  • Colour run fun to raise funds

    Colour run fun to raise funds

    STUDENTS at Mildura West Primary School will no longer need to put ice in their water bottles to combat the heat, thanks to Thursday’s colour fun run which raised more…

  • Crossing conundrum put to bed

    Crossing conundrum put to bed

    MILDURA has officially resolved to keep the nine raised platforms along Hugh King Drive and is now set to put the crossing confusion to bed with additional signage. The raised…

  • Easter brings out the city’s best

    Easter brings out the city’s best

    THERE was plenty of attractions over the Easter weekend, from motorsports to art exhibitions and Easter egg hunts. Mildura Rural City Council councillor for events and tourism Rebecca Crossling said…

  • MP puts spotlight on crime

    MP puts spotlight on crime

    COMMUNITIES throughout the Mildura electorate are feeling increasingly uneasy as crime continues to affect daily life, according to Member for Mildura Jade Benham. Ms Benham told State Parliament last week…

  • Lions focus on teamwork

    Lions focus on teamwork

    THE Cardross A Grade netball team had to settle for a third-place finish in 2025 after being involved in a ding-dong battle for finals seedings with eventual champions Nangiloc and…

  • Millewa competitions ‘wide open’

    Millewa competitions ‘wide open’

    AFTER a frenetic offseason, the Millewa Football Netball League gets under way this evening with Gol Gol and Meringur starting the three-ring show – which runs until August 29. The…

  • Local school joins Big Freeze

    Local school joins Big Freeze

    MILDURA’S third annual Big Freeze is promising to be bigger and better after enlisting a local school to join the national fundraising effort. The Mildura Big Freeze game has been…