🔵 Mal Meninga and the 16 Bears
Plus: Cracking down on Airbnbs and the best feed in Chatswood
⏱️ The 100th edition of our newsletter is a four-minute read.
Morning all,
Today marks number 100 for our weekly newsletters! Thank you all for following along and supporting local news.
In this newsletter we’ve got an update on how things are travelling for the Perth Bears, the rugby league side that will join the NRL comp in 2027. The Perth franchise, of course, are linked to the much-loved North Sydney Bears. Will we get to see the best players in the world at North Sydney Oval, even once a year?
Read on for the latest.
🗞️ Anyway, let’s get into the news for today.
HEARD THIS WEEK👂
🏉 After 25 years in hibernation, the Bears are preparing to roar
Less than a year out from the 2027 season kick-off, how are the Perth Bears sizing up?
Key signings include Melbourne Storm’s Tyran Wishart, the son of successful league player Rod Wishart, who will likely play hooker or five-eighth, and goal kicker Nick Meaney, who has signed for three years.
In total, the Bears have announced the signing of 16 players, including Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks second rowers Siosifa Talakai, who played for NSW in the 2022 State of Origin and Scott Sorensen, who has won four grand finals with the Penrith Panthers.
The lineup also includes three Super League UK players: Hull F.C. centre Harry Newman and Leeds Rhinos’ Mikołaj Olędzki (prop) and James McDonnell (second row).
Former Canberra Raiders coach Mal Meninga was announced as the Bears’ inaugural coach in June last year. Last month he set a goal of taking home a premiership in the team's first year. “You’ve got to have ambition,” he said.
What next: The Perth Bears will need to lock down their roster of up to 30 players before pre-season training starts in November.
Meninga has said the Bears are in talks with “a few Rabbitohs players” but that the team was being patient about new signings.
“We want to have money still in our [salary] cap to make sure if a big fish, or a couple of big fish, come on the market, we’re ready to go,” he said.
Details about becoming a Perth Bears member will be released “in a matter of weeks”, according to CEO Anthony De Ceglie.
Any crumbs for North Sydney Bears fans?: While the Perth Bears have previously committed to playing one game a year at North Sydney Oval, some key figures have different ideas.
“North Sydney Oval is too small,” former Bears star Billy Moore said on the Perth Bears podcast. “We’ve got to take that [one Sydney home] game every year to the Sydney Football Stadium.”
A tough sell: Perth is competing for available talent with the Papua New Guinea Chiefs, a new franchise that will launch for the 2028 NRL season.
Wests Tigers captain Jarome Luai has been lured to the Chiefs, in part due to the fact the club can offer players tax-free salaries. Perth cannot match that, but may argue the lifestyle has more to offer.
Travel — flights of up to five hours — will be a key challenge for any players joining either club.
This is not the first time a rugby league franchise has set up on the West Coast.
In the mid-1990s, the Western Reds played two seasons in the ARL (now the NRL) and one in the breakaway Super League competition, before becoming a casualty of the truce between the warring sides.
Building a loyal and patient fanbase is a top priority for the club, which is setting up shop in an AFL state.
Meninga reckons it will be at least five years before local talent may be brought on to the team. He has announced plans to open an academy in Perth in hopes of laying the foundation for future players.
Read the full story below.
🌤️ Who can’t get solar panels?
While more than a third of NSW homes have rooftop solar, only 3.5 percent of apartments have a solar connection. Why is that?
Watch our full explainer below.
🍔 Where is Chatswood’s best feed?
We asked some locals. Watch the full video below.

LOOKING NATIONALLY 👀
🏠️ City of Sydney investigates banning Airbnb as suburbs turn into pseudo-hotels
As areas of the City of Sydney LGA, like Millers Point, turn into “hotel suburbs”, the council has begun an investigation into what a ban on short-term accommodation could look like.
Councillor Sylvia Ellsmore told the National Account that in Sydney there are short-term rental providers who door knock long-term rentals when tenants move out, offering to manage a lucrative switch to short-term.
"We've identified another provider in our area who targets ex-public housing properties and has 30 listings specifically for Airbnb”, said Ellsmore. “So it's that kind of predatory investor behaviour that is bad for communities, bad for our city, that in particular we want to tackle."
The National Account’s Archie Milligan has the rundown:

That’ll be all from me today.
As always, if you have a hot tip, an idea for a story or think there’s something I should be covering, hit reply to this email or reach out at [email protected].
Cheers,
Huw