inner_saboteur


























  1. The panel is able to accept applications after closure. However I’ve never heard of this happening after shortlisting and interviews. The panel might elect to interview other candidates if the shortlisted candidates aren’t meeting selection criteria though.

  2. Too early to celebrate because it really depends on the department and the area. Usually reference checks are done on just the highest-scoring candidate, but some hiring managers or even whole business areas like to reference check all of the top scoring candidates.

  3. Why should only the bereaved get bereavement leave? Or those summoned for jury service to get jury service leave?

  4. They’re always hiring. Turnover there must be nuts. I’m in another department and I always get a few applications for my roles from current SRLA employees, people never seem to want to stay very long. Make of that what you will

  5. Thats the point I made in my post. Those other areas have multiplexes already which are well patronised by locals, Queensgate, Monterey, North City etc so Reading will only really service the Wellington city population and visitors e.g. a population the size of Hobart.

  6. But people don’t only go to the screens immediately near their home, and Wellington City’s cinemas aren’t patronised by just its residents. There’s no convention or rule on cinema screens per capita, generally it’s gonna be driven by market forces and what they can practically build. Besides, Hobart isn’t a national capital or city of national significance like Wellington is. There’s more visitors and tourists in it and it’s a totally different market they’re operating in.

  7. You seem to be a bit insulted by me comparing Wellington to Hobart. I'll happily compare it to Canberra instead but i don't think that's an upgrade! Have been to both and Hobart is definitely a nicer city than Canberra!

  8. I mean, your comparisons are just a bit one-dimensional and honestly it’s a bit bizarre to be second guessing building a new cinema complex where a well-used cinema complex used to be before an earthquake took it out of action.

  9. It's absolutely the universities fault. All of them. They've dumbed down every single course to make them essentially worthless.

  10. Government should be held responsible for pulling the levers on demand and supply for particular courses/qualifications through funding arrangements to universities, numbers of CSPs and funding clusters for student contributions - among other things.

  11. IN the story, the tenants who commented had little problem with the rent increase. They complain instead that they weren't given a chance to pay the higher rents. So greed is not the issue, it is the inconvenience.Why would the landlord do this, if they were going to get the rent increase anyway?

  12. The reason is simply under current Victorian laws it’s possible to give a notice to vacate for no reason if it’s the end of the first fixed term lease, giving landlords maximum flexibility. They can just churn and burn tenants on an annual basis.

  13. Raid Pokémon, especially in events, do have egg moves and hidden abilities. It’s kinda the point of these events.

  14. Sponsorship for permanent residency is invaluable, if that is important to you. Not all employers are willing or able to do this. If I were wanting a pathway to permanent residency/citizenship, and in your position, that’s a no brainer. I know people who willingly worked for a lot less than they’re worth simply for sponsorship and the opportunities it can provide down the track.

  15. I think it depends. I'm 29 and work as a senior associate in PE and the people I know my age who studied med don't even earn half my salary. Med students also tend to take a gap year due to burnout (nights shifts, being on call etc). Additionally, becoming a specialist is highly competitive and you may have to wait a long time for a slot, even after meeting the prerequisites for your specific pathway.

  16. How many accountants become managing directors? Compare that to how many medical grads become doctors.

  17. This reads like either party tried to have sex with each other and one rebuffed. Now one party is salty about the arrangement

  18. Sure, if you like reading between lines that aren’t there and just making up your own narrative.

  19. If it helps you jump to conclusions, a quick look at OP’s post history suggests they are female and in a relationship.

  20. I agree and I think there would be more call for it than people think here. It's the reason people in Europe are happier to live in medium density, which we have to do as a nation, we can't keep expanding without it.

  21. I’m very curious where in Europe people have been where they have seen these big apartments in the larger cities, cos in my experience they’re typically on the smaller side - 3 bedrooms yes, but a small living/kitchen area that overall is a lot less liveable than the typical 3 bed/2 bath apartment you see being built in Australia.

  22. Internal reviews and criminal prosecutions are different things. Centrelink does not have 13,000 active prosecutions on the go.

  23. Foreign buyers including on-shore PR holders or just off-shore investors?

  24. All Australian citizens, all PR holders, and on-shore NZ citizens are not foreign buyers for tax purposes.

  25. What should we expect with a baggage handler strike? I am arriving in Italy on the 8th for a wedding as part of a bridal party, so we have multiple bags. What is the best way to work thru this? Should we continue as planned or plan to just bring a carry on?

  26. If flying into a wedding, definitely pack any essentials and enough for 2-3 days in your carry-on, if you can manage it. Last thing you want to deal with is missing luggage that you need for a particular event!

  27. Important for all tourist to know this. Doesn't need to be a passport, any state issued ID will do, e.g., state DL.

  28. Italy does not consider US drivers licences as “official” documents. They’re not issued by them. Some businesses may decide to accept them for proof of age, but they’re not meant to.

  29. It’s not an exception, and it doesn’t defy reason. It’s defined in the law I linked to. The law defines what is acceptable with an exhaustive list so it can be clear what is and what is not recognised as formal ID.

  30. I don’t know the accuracy of this, but apparently using Apple Pay it can’t even be skimmed like normal cards can be

  31. For each transaction Apple Pay, Android Pay, etc. essentially creates a one-off number that is used instead of the card number. So when you wave your phone at the machine, the machine doesn’t ever handle your credit card number - just a one-off token that’s of no value once it’s used.

  32. This really depends on what your medical needs are, whether you’re looking for public or private, metro or regional. Also, Victoria’s major medical institutions are based in the comparatively expensive inner suburbs of Melbourne.

  33. 1 and 2 in your list are “older”, but they aren’t really the “old” apartments often touted as smart buys (those are typically blocks dating approx. 1930s to 1980s).

  34. yeah 1 and 2 were meant to be the "newer" original post was along the lines of why aren't mid 2000s builds more popular.

  35. Depreciation will happen when you move into somewhere that hasn’t been touched in decades, and done up by you to bring it up to a spec you’re happy with.

  36. It sounds to me like the business is within their rights to only offer a replacement, not a refund. They are providing you a remedy to your problem which is replacing the defective product - a “

  37. It’s tempting to blame it all on Qantas, but their opposing view is always a given.

  38. You might know more than the general public on that, as I haven’t seen any updates since Turkish Airlines have

  39. Natural justice (or procedural fairness) is drawn from common law. It’s a concept that has developed over centuries by Courts as precedents and principles that are interpreted and applied by judges, which Australia has inherited when our systems were established under the British legal system. It isn’t codified formally in the constitution, but is often reiterated in places like written reasons for judgements.

  40. 3.5%. From April, all 300,000 VPS employees that enter into a new EBA get 3.5% every year. So the pollies argued for and funded a 3.5% increase for the rank and file and then got the same increase themselves. Seems fair?

  41. Not true. Under the current collective agreement, increases are maxed out to an average of 2% per year (has been since 2020). For the next one Govt is so generously considering upwards of 3% per year.

  42. That is the wages policy, it’s a statement. It doesn’t apply to VPS salary increases (these are under the collective agreement). The wages policy is just the position the government will take into negotiations, such as for the next VPS collective agreement which will replace the current one with 2% increases that expires in 2024. Trust me, I know what’s in my own pay packet

  43. Girl, look at the date. We’ve already been through this 😂

  44. This account is just posting click bait links that lead to porn ads

  45. Asking prices are already increasing due to red-hot demand for rentals. I don’t see how landlords would, in general, not ask for as much as the market is willing to give.

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