Skip to content
Government NSW

LIQUOR & GAMING AUTHORITY TO VISIT ALBURY

Department of Enterprise, Investment and Trade < 1 mins read

**RE-ISSUE**

The NSW Independent Liquor & Gaming Authority (ILGA) will visit the Albury region between 18 and 20 July to gain better insights into regional issues as part of its Regional Engagement Strategy.

 

ILGA Chairperson Caroline Lamb said regional visits are important to ensure the Authority is responsive to the unique needs of each community it serves.

 

“This visit is in line with ILGA’s goal of engaging with different communities and stakeholders to ensure its regulatory decision making is well-informed and relevant,” Ms Lamb said.

 

Board members and representatives of the Authority will meet with various key regional organisations in the Albury region with scheduled meetings including:

 

  • Albury Council
  • Albury Liquor Accords
  • NSW Police
  • ClubsNSW
  • Australian Hotels Association NSW
  • Albury Wodonga Aboriginal Health Service 
  • Murrumbidgee and Southern NSW Local Health Districts
  • Uniting Victas - GambleAware Murrumbidgee

 

Ms Lamb said the Authority looks forward to working closely with the Albury community and building strong relationships that will help ILGA to make a positive impact in the region.

 

“By listening to locals’ concerns, we can be confident that our future decisions are fair, balanced and well-suited to the needs of the people in the area,” Ms Lamb said.

 

“We will be meeting with a range of groups over a two-day period to understand what matters to the Albury community when it comes to the impacts of liquor and gaming on crime, health and local industry, including the effect of the Albury – Wodonga border, which has differing liquor and gaming laws on either side.

“These visits will give us firsthand accounts to support the data and help us make decisions in the public interest.”

For more information, please visit: https://www.liquorandgaming.nsw.gov.au/independent-liquor-and-gaming-authority

 

MEDIA: [email protected]  

0435 155 490

More from this category

  • Government NSW, Mental Health
  • 12/12/2025
  • 11:40
Australians for Mental Health

Workers’ comp deal “punches down on people whose workplaces made them ill”: Australians for Mental Health

Workers’ comp deal “punches down on people whose workplaces made them ill”: Australians for Mental Health Grassroots mental health organisation Australians for Mental Health has warned a deal between the Minns Labor Government and the Coalition on workers’ compensation laws will kick vulnerable workers off support when they are still too sick to return to their jobs, while also further embedding stigma. The Coalition and Labor announced an agreement yesterday, which would see workers’ compensation become harder to access for people with psychological injuries. Under the deal, the whole person injury threshold for receiving income support will be raised to…

  • Government NSW, Women
  • 11/12/2025
  • 16:22
PSA

NSW Gov’s DV strategy has glaring omission

The Public Service Association of NSW (PSA) has welcomed the aims of the NSW Government's new strategy to address domestic and family violence perpetration, but has warned it will fail without tackling the privatised mess of frontline DV services. The strategy, launched yesterday by Minister Jodie Harrison, is focused on disrupting perpetrators and holding them accountable. But it says nothing about addressing the fragmented patchwork of underfunded community organisations responsible for keeping women and children safe. PSA General Secretary Stewart Little said the strategy was a missed opportunity. "You cannot be serious about keeping women safe while leaving their protection…

  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Government NSW
  • 11/12/2025
  • 08:56
Barnardos Australia

Small steps taken but more must be done to protect children from domestic and family violence

Small steps taken but more must be done to protect children from domestic and family violence Barnardos Australia strongly welcomes the NSW Government’s landmark strategy to acknowledge children as victim-survivors of domestic and family violence (DFV) in their own right, but more must be done to protect them. The NSW Government today released its Building Better Responses: NSW Strategy to Respond to the Use of Domestic and Family Violence 2026–2030, which recognises children are often exposed to DFV which can lead to worse health, social and educational outcomes and difficulties with emotional regulation, aggression and mental health. Major funding, including…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.