We offer a range of supports for young people worried about drug and alcohol use, mental, physical or sexual wellbeing. All headspace services are funded by the Australian Government Department of Health. Mental health workers — which may include psychologists, psychiatrists, counsellors and other workers — that can help if you're just not feeling yourself. Workers either on site or linked to the centre who can assist you with any alcohol or other drug issue. A group of young people who help with events and some decision making at a centre. Ask your centre about getting involved.
Queanbeyan & Jerrabomberra Office
Queanbeyan - Wikipedia
Finding a rental property in Canberra at this time of year is almost always a battle, as hordes of people flock to the national capital to start university and take up new jobs. But as the country remains in the grip of the coronavirus pandemic, there was hope among prospective tenants that this year would be less brutal. While COVID has halted the usual influx of international arrivals, more Australians are relocating to Canberra from interstate than agents expected. And the mass exodus from the territory that usually happens at this time of year is not occurring, with most Canberrans seemingly happy to stay put.
House prices have skyrocketed in Queanbeyan, pricing many locals out of the market
A new sleep bus is opening its doors to people without shelter in Queanbeyan this weekend, and founder Simon Rowe expects it will be a full house. The sleep bus will help provide overnight shelter to people without housing in the Queanbeyan area, as support services report the number of people without shelter jumping by more than 45 per cent. Mr Rowe, who established Sleepbus in , said sleep buses normally went to big cities with a larger number of homeless people.






Many Canberrans who find themselves priced out of the housing market have long looked across the border into New South Wales to get ahead, but as the COVID property boom continues around Australia, the surrounding region is not offering much relief. Other parts of the city have not been exempt from the hike — in Queanbeyan West, prices increased by more than 27 per cent, while the recently-developed suburb of Googong recorded a rise of more than 16 per cent. Eliza Owen from property analyst group CoreLogic said there were several reasons for the steep increase, including record-low interest rates and supply. Mirroring the low number of houses on the market in Canberra, she said that meant as soon as a property was available, it was snapped up, leaving many prospective buyers disappointed. But rising prices and fewer homes on the market means it is getting harder to find a bargain across the border.
while Lynnon seems completely legit, she is right..
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Girls, why this is not a standard?
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