Australia Free Web Directory

JMJ Conveyancing in Echuca, Victoria | Legal service



Click/Tap
to load big map

JMJ Conveyancing

Locality: Echuca, Victoria

Phone: +61 3 5482 1208



Address: 124 Hare Street 3564 Echuca, VIC, Australia

Website: http://www.jmjconveyancing.com.au

Likes: 344

Reviews

Add review



Tags

Click/Tap
to load big map

25.01.2022 Only a few days to go before we draw our Father’s Day vouchers!



21.01.2022 Premier Daniel Andrews announced the restrictions that will be easing in regional Victoria today.

19.01.2022 NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian announced today that the border between her state and Victoria will reopen on Monday November 23.

18.01.2022 BREAKING: The brand new border bubble as of midnight Friday. Let us know in the comments if you need to know about any towns outside this image we have cropped out or if you are finding a certain area hard to read, we will take a specific image of that area for you.



16.01.2022 If you live in these areas, boil your water before use. MORE HERE: https://bit.ly/3b4ZgUv

14.01.2022 Number of active cases in your postcode in victoria. List half way down the article.

10.01.2022 From today you may find a new coin in your pocket, or purse. It's called a Donation Dollar - legal tender, but especially inscribed to remind Australians to be... generous. The new coins are celebrating International Day of Charity on September 5. 25 million coins will be released over the next few years. www.7NEWS.com.au #7NEWS



08.01.2022 From midnight last night to midnight Wednesday. Stay strong everyone!

08.01.2022 To celebrate Fathers Day in the silliest year we’ve had, We have vouchers to give away for some fantastic local businesses. Winner gets $50 voucher to spend at Brash Offroad and the Bandicoot Brewery! To win Like the JMJ conveyancing page Share this post Tag the dads you know would love to win this awesome prize!... Winner will be drawn Thursday 3rd September at 8pm Goodluck! #fathersday #isofathers #bandicootbrewery #brashoutdoors

08.01.2022 This is not the news I wanted to be delivering today and I’m sure it’s not the news anyone wants to be hearing. We've managed to slow the case numbers over th...e past couple of weeks. But the epidemiological modelling is telling us that at current rates of transmission, and with our current restrictions, it would take months to drive the numbers back down not days or weeks. And that means months of uncertainty and living in limbo. It also means, sadly, more Victorians in hospital beds. More Victorians hooked up to machines just to breathe. More funerals. We can't allow this to drag on and I’m sure everyone would rather get on top of it as quickly and decisively as we possibly can. And the only way to do that is to rip the bandaid off, go harder and do it now. That’s why from 6pm tonight, Victoria will enter a State of Disaster. We used this same direction during the fires and as we fight this public health bushfire, we need to use it again. This will give Victoria Police additional powers to make sure people are complying with public health directions and we’ll have more to say on this in the coming days. From 6pm tonight, Melbourne will also move to Stage 4 restrictions with stronger rules to limit the movement of people and limit the spread of this virus across our city. That includes an 8pm-5am curfew beginning tonight. The only reasons to leave home during these hours will be work, medical care and caregiving. New time, distance and gathering limits will also apply for exercise and shopping. Exercise will be limited to a maximum of one hour per day and no more than five kilometres from your home. Group size will be limited to a maximum of two you and one other person whether you live with them or not. Shopping will be limited to one person per household per day. Again, you’ll need to stay within 5kms of your home. Supermarkets will remain open just as they have throughout this entire pandemic so there is absolutely no need to rush out now to stock up. There will be some common-sense exceptions. If your closest supermarket is further than 5kms away, you can still shop there. If you’re a parent with little ones, you can still take them with you when you go for a walk. And these distance, gathering and time limits won’t apply for work, medical care or compassionate reasons. But basically ‘staying at home’ needs to mean exactly that. No loopholes. No excuses. Case numbers have also been rising in regional Victoria and we can’t allow that to continue. The data suggests there's a risk the virus is moving faster and more widely than previously thought. That’s why from 11.59pm on Wednesday, Stage 3 restrictions will return across regional Victoria meaning there will once again only be four reasons to be out. Restaurants and cafes can only offer delivery and takeaway. Beauty and personal services will need to close. Entertainment and cultural venues will need to close. Community sport will need to stop. This timeframe is to help local businesses prepare not an excuse to go racing around seeing friends and maxing out your social calendar. Even though regional restrictions don’t formally start until Wednesday night, if you can stay at home in the meantime, you must. To the question I know most parents will be asking: Schools will return to remote and flexible learning across all year levels, in all parts of the state. Students who are currently attending onsite will go to school on Monday, have a pupil free day on Tuesday, and be learning at home from Wednesday. Onsite supervision will again be available but only for students who really need it. That means children whose parents have to go to work and vulnerable kids who can’t learn from home. From Thursday, those same rules will apply to Melbourne’s kinder and early childhood education services. We know this will be a significant ask of parents with little ones and big ones too. But I promise, as a parent of three, it’s an ask I don’t make lightly. These changes will be in place for at least the next six weeks until Sunday 13 September. As always, we’ll keep reviewing and realigning the restrictions in line with the advice of our health experts and if we can change things earlier, we will. Today, I’ve made some announcements that change how Victorians will live. Tomorrow and in the coming days, I’ll have more to say about changes to the way Victorians need to work recognising that workplaces continue to be a source of much of the spread. I appreciate this gap between announcements may create a level of anxiety and uncertainty and I'm sorry about that. But the truth is, this is complex and we’re going to take some extra time to make sure we get these calls right. I know this is a lot of information to take in and there will be details to figure out and questions to answer. I’ll explain things as clearly as I possibly can, and do my best to clarify any points of uncertainty over the next couple of days. The truth is that there are no easy solutions. If that were the case, the global community would be rid of this virus already. If there was a magic bullet, more than 683,000 people wouldn’t have already lost their lives around the world. This is the biggest and most complex challenge we’ve encountered in living memory and it requires big and complex solutions. People will no doubt be feeling scared and sad and worried. That’s only natural given what we’re facing. It’s why I’m asking something else of Victorians: Please be calm. Please be kind. Please be patient. Please treat people the way you would want to be treated. And please look out for each other. We can we will get through this.

03.01.2022 Aaaaand its showtime! Congratulations to Zoe Nathan! We’ll be in contact via PM to organise for you to drop into the office and pick up your prize!

03.01.2022 Update: HomeBuilder grant ending A reminder that the extension to the HomeBuilder program ends on 31 March 2021. All applications, irrespective of when the eli...gible contract was signed, must be submitted within the HomeBuilder application portal by 14 April 2021. Read more below: https://www.aicnsw.com.au/weekly-news-update-19-3-2021/



02.01.2022 We have been receiving a lot of enquiries about the new requirements for swimming pools. 5 key points to address 1. You have until November to register your p...ool with council. You need to do this first, you will receive a letter with the date the pool was installed, the applicable standard it needs to be inspected against and when your first certificate of compliance is required to be lodged. 2. You then can choose to use council or a registered building inspector to certify your barrier. 3. If you choose to engage us, we can answer any questions you may have over the phone prior to us coming onsite. If the pool doesn’t comply we complete a non compliance form 24. You will have 60 days to fix up any items on the non compliance form. Once you have rectified any issues we will re inspect and provide a certificate of compliance for you to lodge with council. We recommend visiting the @victorianbuildingauthority website for self assessment tool. Please note that if we issue a non-compliance form and at the end of the 60 days you haven’t fixed up the items, we will lodge your noncompliance form to council and they will send out the $1100 fine. 4. To summarise the intent of the latest 2012 standard, which we will all have to comply with at some point, it is to make the swimming area as small as possible, have no where that kids can hide, the whole area concreted to maintain clearances under the fence, ideally no boundary barriers and nothing for kids to climb on. At the moment you are only required to comply with the standard that the pool was installed to so check the letter from council for your applicable requirements. 5. We service the Shepparton, Moira, Mansfield, Strathbogie, Campaspe and Ganawarra Regions. Our aim is to work with you to issue a form 23 certificate of compliance.

01.01.2022 From Oct 12 all Victorians must wear a fitted face mask that covers nose & mouth when you leave home. Face shields, bandanas, or scarves on their own are no lon...ger sufficient. As restrictions ease and movement increases, the effectiveness of a face mask is even more important. - For more information about mask wearing across whole of Victoria see: https://www.dhhs.vic.gov.au/face-masks-vic-covid-19 - For information about wearing masks at work, see: https://www.dhhs.vic.gov.au/face-masks-work-covid-19

Related searches