Councillor Jane Agirtan ordered to make $2000 donation after being charged with breaching an intervention order


We spoke to Kingston Council on Thursday, and they said she was yet to be reinstated. They’ve put in a call with their legal team about how they should best proceed.

Going, going, gone

The mighty Hawthorn Football Club is really flying at the moment. They managed to convert their gold-coin Waverley Park purchase into a million-dollar payout earlier this week, after the ground was bought by the AFL.

The AFL has snapped up Waverley Park, buying it from the Hawthorn Football Club.

The AFL has snapped up Waverley Park, buying it from the Hawthorn Football Club.Credit: Pat Scala

While the final sum is all very hush-hush, it’s been estimated to be between $10 million and $15 million. Talk about ka-ching.

But word on the street is that an assortment of Melbourne’s private schools also expressed their interest in the sale. CBD has heard whispers that Caulfield Grammar School pricked up their ears when the oval went on the market.

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We were surprised to learn that the prestigious college (which sets parents back about $40,000 a year for a senior student) was considering picking up more acreage. With three existing campuses and another in the works, you’d think they’d be spoilt for choice.

But acquiring a footy ground which hosted the 1991 AFL Grand Final would be the type of status that money simply can’t buy (unless you’re got eight-figures to spend, that is).

This isn’t the first time that a private school has shown interest in acquiring one of Melbourne’s public landmarks. Regular readers will recall that St Michael’s Grammar School in St Kilda were short-lived proprietors of the famed Astor Theatre, before losing money when they offloaded it in 2012.

More recently, Mount Scopus Memorial College announced plans to build a super-campus at the Caulfield Racecourse, buying the land from the Melbourne Racing Club for $195 million. They’ll be neighbours with the Melbourne Football Club who have also sketched up the blueprints for a new home base at the racecourse. Quite the hub they have growing out there.

When CBD contacted Caulfield Grammar on Thursday, they declined to comment. But to any educational establishments who might be in the market for a footy ground – we’ll keep an eye out for any new listings.

Liberal Hack

Wednesday was meant to be an opportunity for the Liberals to reset.

Sussan Ley, the Party’s first female leader, delivered her address to the National Press Club, calling for, among other things, better recruitment and retention of women.

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The message was clearly lost on whoever manages the party’s socials. Around midnight, someone posted a series of lewd, pornographic images of scantily clad women to the stories on the @liberalaus Instagram account.

A social media Freudian slip? The act of a rogue intern?

Whatever the explanation, the offending material was, thankfully, swiftly removed.

“Overnight, the social media account of a contractor used by the party was hacked leading to the posting of unauthorised material on the Liberal Party’s Meta accounts at around midnight,” a party spokesman told CBD.

“All material was removed within 10 minutes of it being posted, and the matter was urgently raised with the Australian Cyber Security Centre and with Meta overnight. We apologise for any offence caused.”

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