Kirstie Wellauer
Kirstie Wellauer is a multi-platform reporter/producer for the ABC's Indigenous Affairs Team. Previously she was a producer in the Specialist Reporting Team. Kirstie has worked in the Wollongong and Port Macquarie newsrooms as a reporter.
Latest by Kirstie Wellauer
This January 26, Indigenous Australians are feeling strong emotions of love, respect, sadness and hope
By the Indigenous affairs teams' Tahnee Jash, Kirstie Wellauer and Ali Russell
What does January 26 mean to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people? For many, there isn’t one emotion that fully captures it.
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Further climate change inaction 'cultural genocide' for Torres Strait, experts say
Legal and climate experts liken rising sea levels and climate harms to “colonisation” as proceedings for the Australian Climate Case resume.
'The Australian community couldn't comprehend what it was': Why the Voice failed
Many Yes campaigners have gone into "mourning", joining a collective week of silence, but others are speaking publicly for the first time on the failures of the multi-million-dollar campaign.
'Trying to hit the stars': ASIC takes legal action against collapsed company directors
By the Specialist Reporting Team's Loretta Florance and Kirstie Wellauer
Five former directors and officers of the failed funeral insurer Youpla are facing fines, after the corporate watchdog ASIC commenced civil proceedings over an arrangement to send the funds to a company in Vanuatu.
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Marty woke to find three intruders in his bedroom. His story is one of hundreds from his hometown
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By the Indigenous Affairs Team's Brooke Fryer and Kirstie Wellauer and Background Briefing's Brigid Andersen
There's a common cycle for many children in this town: Crime, watch house, detention. Background Briefing investigates why.
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These Australians fear becoming climate change refugees if the sea keeps rising
Torres Strait Islander elders continue the fight to protect their islands from disappearing in rising sea levels in week one of the Federal Court's on-country hearing.
'Leave their bones behind': Elders fear losing gravesites in Torres Strait as climate change court fight continues
By Indigenous affairs reporter Kirstie Wellauer
Aunty McRose Elu has been watching her ancestral lands slowly disappear beneath her feet for decades. The Saibai elder fears rising sea levels and increasingly severe weather events could mean her homeland is uninhabitable within 30 years.
'How much further can I be gutted?': Donald hopes the government will deliver on Youpla's broken promises
By the Indigenous Affairs Team's Kirstie Wellauer and the Specialist Reporting Team's Loretta Florance
For decades, funeral insurer ACBF Youpla sold policies to First Nations Australians despite attention from regulators. Now, two years after it collapsed, the government is still wrestling with how to compensate the company's customers.
This Arrernte teenager is helping to address youth issues in Alice Springs. But he needs more support
Communities have been calling for governments to support Aboriginal-led solutions to tackle youth issues in Alice Springs. With alcohol restrictions back in place, will the heart of this complex issue get solved?
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John and Sky's ancestors launched the first January 26 protest, 85 years ago. This is how their legacy continues
By Indigenous affairs reporters Jedda Costa and Kirstie Wellauer, and Indigenous affairs correspondent Carly Williams
The first January 26 protest was held in 1938, when a thousand-strong group of Aboriginal men and women marched through Sydney protesting more than a century of brutal treatment.
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Meena is an Aboriginal girl with an Indian name and January 26 is complicated
By Indigenous affairs correspondent Carly Williams and Indigenous affairs reporter Kirstie Wellauer
Meena walks in two worlds connected through a shared experience of British colonisation. And like a growing number of Australians, Australia Day brings up mixed emotions for her.
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Bodies still waiting in morgue despite funeral insurer rescue package over Youpla mess
By the specialist reporting team's Loretta Florance and Kirstie Wellauer
Advocates are in Canberra asking the government to compensate the thousands of people who put their money into funeral insurer Youpla. But finding out exactly who they are won't be easy.
National Aboriginal Art Gallery being built on sacred site divides community as Indigenous leaders call for 'respect'
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By Indigenous affairs correspondent Carly Williams and Indigenous affairs reporter Kirstie Wellauer
It's being spruiked as a future tourist magnet that will celebrate 65,000 years of culture, that will stimulate central Australia's economy. But it is dividing the Alice Springs community
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'I love you my big cuz': Cassius Turvey's loving words to family before he died
By Indigenous affairs correspondent Carly Williams and Indigenous affairs reporters Jedda Costa and Kirstie Wellauer
Indigenous Australians are not just mourning a "loved and treasured" boy, they’re grieving the loss of hope. WARNING: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that the following article contains the names and images of deceased Aboriginal people.
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Referendum for Indigenous Voice to Parliament to be held next financial year, PM says
by Indigenous affairs correspondent Carly Williams and Indigenous affairs reporter Kirstie Wellauer
More than 60 of the country's prominent Indigenous voices gathered for crucial talks with the prime minister on Thursday to discuss the timing, question and education campaign around the Voice to Parliament.
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Is industry destroying ancient Aboriginal rock art in WA? An expert is set to investigate
By Indigenous affairs reporter Kirstie Wellauer and the Specialist Reporting Team's Loretta Florance
One of Australia's key industrial areas is set to go under the spotlight, after the government appointed a reporter to look into traditional owners' claims significant Aboriginal sites are being threatened by continued development.
'This is their history too': First Nations Australians on what comes next for the Monarchy
By Indigenous Affairs editor Bridget Brennan, political reporter Dana Morse and Indigenous Affairs reporters Kirstie Wellauer and Jedda Costa
The passing of the Queen leaves a complex legacy for First Nations people here in Australia and across the world.
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Traditional owners' group initially opposed moving significant rock carvings in Pilbara, documents show
By Indigenous affairs reporter Kirstie Wellauer and the Specialist Reporting Team's Loretta Florance
Documents submitted two months prior to a federal government decision reveal that Aboriginal custodians in Western Australia's Burrup Peninsula warned they were "extremely concerned" a state-heritage approval for a fertiliser plant would put sacred sites at risk.
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'Our constitution remains racist': Marcia Langton calls for decisive action from the government ahead of Garma Festival
By Indigenous Affairs editor Bridget Brennan, political reporter Dana Morse and Indigenous Affairs reporter Kirstie Wellauer
Indigenous leaders say they want the Prime Minister to spell out a path towards Australia's first referendum in 20 years, as he travels to make a significant address to Aboriginal communities.
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Some of Australia's most disadvantaged postcodes paid millions to company that collapsed
By the specialist reporting team's Loretta Florance and Kirstie Wellauer
New data shows that when funeral insurance company Youpla went into liquidation in March, some of Australia's most disadvantaged towns paid the heaviest price.
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Australia needs gas. For some Traditional Owners, the price is too high
As Australia faces a gas crisis, Indigenous communities fear their millennia-old sacred sites will be collateral damage in the rush for fresh supplies.
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As ASIC cracked down on insurance company, it accessed millions in welfare payments
By consumer affairs reporter Amy Bainbridge, the Specialist Reporting Team's Loretta Florance and Kirstie Wellauer
In 2013, the government was warned that allowing funeral insurers to access Centrelink payments could end badly for customers. Almost a decade later, it did.
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‘Normally, there are shades of grey’: Calls for consequences for failing company
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By consumer affairs reporter Amy Bainbridge, the Specialist Reporting Team's Loretta Florance and Kirstie Wellauer
Youpla director Greg Wheeldon says he did his all to save the funeral insurance company from liquidation. But advocates for the thousands of people who lost their cover still want answers.
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These men have 'unfinished business' with native title – and their case could change Australia
Indigenous affairs reporter Kirstie Wellauer
Three decades on from the landmark decision that paved the way for Indigenous people to reclaim their land, many First Nations say the next step is simple: to claim full rights to their waterways and seas.
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'I can't afford to die yet': They bought funeral insurance thinking it was run by Aboriginal people — they were wrong
By consumer affairs reporter Amy Bainbridge in Whangaparaoa New Zealand, with the Specialist Reporting Team's Loretta Florance and Kirstie Wellauer
For decades, First Nations people made contributions to the Aboriginal Funeral Benefit Fund. Now it's collapsed, thousands are asking: How was it allowed to trade for so long?
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