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Windy, wintery conditions have been forecast for the majority of NSW on Monday and Tuesday.

With already saturated ground, due of record-breaking rains, the NSW State Emergency Service (SES) are preparing for an increase of calls for assistance from the public.

NSW SES Assistant Commissioner Nicole Hogan would like to take this opportunity to warn the community of the dangers that these strong winds may bring.

“Strong Winds can result in trees falling, particularly within locations that have experienced a lot of rainfall recently,” she said.

“Our volunteers are trained and ready to assist the community, but we are urging the community to be prepared by taking some time this weekend to work in their garden.

Take the time to trim trees, clean out gutters and tie down loose items,” she said.

The NSW community have shown continued resilience throughout the weather we have experienced this year and are urged to take the usual precautions, like checking LiveTaffic, should next week’s winds impact their daily activities.  

“Communities have been impacted by extreme weather conditions this year and we thank the community for their ongoing efforts to be prepared for storms and floods.

For Monday and Tuesday, take your time travelling to work, school and study. Plan extra travel time, take your time and be mindful of the conditions,” Assistant Commissioner Hogan added.

Image: https://pixabay.com/photos/palm-trees-wind-windy-weather-4293013/ (free image)

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Police are appealing for public assistance to locate a man missing from the Illawarra-Shoalhaven area.

Tristan Dunning, aged 22, was last seen near Wollongong Train Station, about 10am on Thursday 26 May 2022.

When he failed to arrive at an address in Nowra, Tristan was reported missing to officers from South Coast Police District, who immediately commenced inquiries into his whereabouts.

Police and family have concerns for Tristan’s welfare.

He is described as being of Aboriginal/Torres Strait Islander appearance, about 175cm to 180cm tall, of medium build, with brown hair and brown eyes.

Tristan was last seen wearing a green t-shirt, jeans and no shoes.

He is known to frequent the Port Kembla, Wollongong and Nowra areas and has been known to previously frequent Parramatta.

Anyone with information regarding Tristan’s whereabouts is urged to contact police or Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000.

Image: NSW Police Facebook

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Brisbane fans booed wantaway star Payne Haas before Gold Coast blew another big lead in a mad 35-24 Broncos NRL win.

The Titans led 18-0 and 24-4, but conceded 31 straight points thanks to some brainless decisions in a rollicking Friday night derby at Suncorp Stadium.

It came a day after prop Haas's extraordinary request for an immediate release from the club was denied, the 22-year-old and his management testing the waters after negotiations on a bumper new deal stalled.

He showed up to play but his move drew sustained boos from the 32,864 crowd as combatant and Gold Coast captain Tino Fa'asuamaleaui (228 run metres and 18 first-half runs) powered the Titans' dominant start.

It all crumbled for the visitors though, the skipper taking the blame for a compulsive short kick off that backfired and led to Brisbane's sixth straight win - and second in a row without the injured Adam Reynolds.

Coach Kevin Walters was taken aback by Haas's move but laughed off the crowd's theatrics, saying he's confident it won't derail their progress and he can work out a solution quickly.

"He's the best prop in the game and we don't want to lose the best prop in the game," he said.

"That's what we'll have to get to in the next couple of weeks (why he is seeking a release), but he showed his commitment tonight and whilst he's got a Broncos jersey on he will continue to do that."

The Titans fell to 3-9 and are now a likely three wins outside the top eight.

It followed a similar tale to last year's Suncorp Stadium clash, the Titans giving up a 22-point lead to lose - something they also did against Canberra earlier this year.

"We're in complete control of a game. Up 18-0 and it should've kept going that way," coach Justin Holbrook said.

"We score a try with 11 men and defend that ... doing that really well. (Then) just dumb (mistakes).

"It's hard to sit here, he (Fa'asuamaleaui) was enormous. I could easily be rapping the boys and we just completely lose our way."

On-fire Gold Coast halfback Toby Sexton set up two of their three tries before Selwyn Cobbo's intercept stopped a fourth and his brave run that followed turned the tide.

In a mad two minutes, Sexton went off injured and Esan Marsters joined Sam McIntyre in the sin-bin for professional fouls.

Cobbo scored in the corner but Tom Flegler's knock-on from the restart let the 11-man Titans off the hook.

Back from injury, David Fifita stormed from dummy half to score a crucial try and stunt Brisbane's surge.

Tanah Boyd then did enough in a desperate tackle to dislodge the ball as Kurt Capewell looked for a pass to Corey Oates for a certain try to end an eventful first half.

Just when the Titans looked settled, more madness set in with three tries in six minutes.

Te Maire Martin sliced through to score before the Titans, despite being up 24-10, opted for a short restart that backfired badly.

Cory Paix beat the Titans to it, breaking straight through to gift Jordan Riki a runaway try.

The writing was on the wall then, Jamayne Isaako spilling a bomb that led to Herbie Farnworth's try, then Capewell and Ezra Mam also crossing before Tyson Gamble iced it with a field goal.

© AAP 2022

Image: Naparazzi, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

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NSW paramedics are stepping up industrial action in their fight for better resources as ambulance services face unprecedented demand.

Australian Paramedics Association NSW vice president Scott Beaton says workloads are unsustainable and ambulance services operate in perpetual crisis.

"We're fighting for the resourcing we need to protect the safety of our colleagues and communities," he said on Thursday.

"We're tired of apologising for arriving to patients hours late.

"We are tired of worrying our patient will be sicker because we can't get there in time," he said.

As a way of both saying sorry and advancing its industrial action, APA member paramedics will from Monday refuse to take patients' billing details.

Health Minister Brad Hazzard says the public values and appreciates paramedics and the state is doing what it can to support them.

"But there's a lot of pressure in every different area, and particularly the health area," he said on Thursday.

The minister said he doesn't believe many paramedics will take part in industrial action, and he intends to continue working with the larger Health Services Union to address concerns in the state budget in June.

The HSU, which represents staff ranging from doctors to hospital cleaners, wants at least 2000 more paramedics.

The union's NSW secretary Gerard Hayes told AAP it was just as critical for paramedics to receive a pay rise.

"We don't have enough paramedics to deal with surging demand. Our paramedics are underpaid, overworked and demoralised," he said.

NSW Ambulance Commissioner Dominic Morgan said paramedics were still turning up for the community despite the challenges.

"The amount of cases that NSW Ambulance has been going to is genuinely in the unprecedented category," Mr Morgan said earlier this week.

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, NSW ambulance crews would attend about one million calls a year.

In 2021 there were 1.43 million triple-zero calls with 116,000 in April alone, he said.

© AAP 2022

Image: NSW Ambulance Facebook