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Byron Shire
July 2, 2026

Biosecurity strategy up for comment

Latest News

Women to the front: the female voices shaping the 2026 Byron Writers Festival

The 2026 Byron Writers Festival program puts women front and centre. Journalists, novelists, and an award-winning columnist bring an extraordinary breadth of stories to Bundjalung Country this August.

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Wollumbin Art Award finalists announced

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Protecting the Daintree from Mullumbimby 

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Dr Louise Morin, plant pathologist from CSIRO’s Biosecurity Flagship, leads the Crofton weed rust fungus release program.

Public feedback is now sought on the draft NSW Biosecurity Strategy that the government says will provide the focus for improvements to the state’s biosecurity framework over the next 10 years.

They say in a media release, ‘The draft strategy helps address recommendations made by the Natural Resources Commission and former Independent Biosecurity Commissioner Dr Marion Healy to improve strategic planning and coordination for pest and weed management’.

‘It outlines a clear whole-of-government approach to strengthen how NSW manages the risk of disease, pests, weeds and other biosecurity risks to protect the state’s most important assets and values.

‘Biosecurity is a shared responsibility, and input from industry, businesses, organisations and the community will help ensure the system is effective into the future.

‘The Draft Strategy focuses on four priority areas:

  • ‘Strengthening adoption and compliance with the biosecurity duty, including the actions a person must take to protect what is important and meet their legislative obligation.
  • ‘Driving partnerships and collaboration to support cross-tenure and cross-sector outcomes nationally and across NSW, regionally and locally
  • ‘Delivering an agile and strategic approach to prepare, prevent, respond and recover from biosecurity risks; and
  • ‘Improving biosecurity systems and infrastructure that enables coordinated and dynamic approaches to planning, surveillance and compliance.

‘The NSW Government is seeking your feedback on what is working well and what needs to improve, as well as the biggest challenges facing biosecurity now and in the years ahead. Feedback will be used to inform the final Strategy, to be released later this year.

‘Delivery of this strategy will mean that the commitments and investment by government are targeted and effective at delivering outcomes for our economy, environment and community.

‘The final Strategy will be supported by an Implementation Roadmap to outline the key actions government will take to deliver on the Strategy’s outcomes from 2027.

‘The Strategy is a key deliverable of the NSW Biosecurity Action Plan 2025-26, providing a clear direction for government’s role in shaping improvements across the biosecurity framework. The Biosecurity Action Plan has delivered a number of improvements to the biosecurity system to date with more in progress, including:

  • ‘Improved support for local control authorities to tackle priority weeds through a 4-Year Weeds Action Program
  • ‘A dedicated biosecurity compliance and investigations unit to improve compliance with biosecurity obligations
  • ‘Establishing an Integrated Regulatory Framework for NSW with regular reporting on compliance activities
  • ‘Improved coordination and decision making with a new State Biosecurity Committee

‘The draft strategy is open for feedback until 29 July, 2026, via the Have Your Say website at https://www.haveyoursay.nsw.gov,au/nsw-biosecurity-strategy



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Osher’s next act: transforming recovery into a toolkit

Byron Writers Festival talks with best-selling author Osher Günsberg whose new book, So What? Now What? is a mental health toolkit and a compelling follow-up to his critically-acclaimed 2018 memoir, Back, After The Break.

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Biosecurity strategy up for comment

Feedback is now open on the draft NSW Biosecurity Strategy that the government says will provide the focus for improvements to the state’s biosecurity framework over the next 10 years.