Piia Wirsu
Piia Wirsu is a reporter based in northern Tasmania. She started her career in local radio in Launceston, moved on to print journalism at the Examiner and now works across radio, TV and online. Follow her on twitter @piiawirsu.
Latest by Piia Wirsu
Bringing a 50-year-old shipwreck survival story back from the dead
By Piia Wirsu host of Expanse: From the Dead
Journalist Piia Wirsu grappled with retelling the traumatic story of the Blythe Star shipwreck. But deep within the disaster was an uplifting story of survival.
10 desperate men, shipwrecked off the harsh Tasmanian coast and left for dead. How did anyone live to tell the tale?
By Jessica Hinchliffe and Piia Wirsu for the Expanse podcast
It has been 50 years since the Blythe Star sank in Australia's unforgiving southern waters. Now, survivor Mick Doleman is telling the full story of how the crew lasted nearly two weeks in hostile seas, and helping give a voice to those who didn't return.
Atlas, 6, only occasionally hitched a ride on someone's shoulders to reach Everest base camp
While Atlas Southall "grumbled" a little, the sweeping views of mountains, yak trains and helicopters provided plenty of distraction from his sore legs.
Updated
Finding the news depressing? Lots of us are, so we're offering some light relief
By Piia Wirsu
With more than two-thirds of Australians actively avoiding the news because it brings them down, Piia Wirsu explains why the ABC has created a new podcast with the sole purpose of making you feel good.
Updated
Kamali and Gesanit migrated to Australia right when COVID hit. Finding jobs has been hard work
By Piia Wirsu
Kamali Rai and Gesanit Mahare moved to Tasmania two years ago as the pandemic first took off, and it has been tough to find work — but their chances have been given a big boost thanks to this program.
'There are questions about how prepared we are': Health workers anxious over Tasmania's border opening
By Piia Wirsu
Tasmania is preparing to manage inevitable COVID cases when borders open next week — but healthcare workers are concerned about the resilience of a system already under strain.
Updated
C-day is coming, so Tasmania is readying for battle
By Piia Wirsu
The pathology lab at Hobart's hospital is being upgraded to handle 5,000 COVID tests a day, PPE is being stockpiled, and thousands of home care kits are ready to go — it is all part of Tasmania's plan to be ready for the disease when it inevitably arrives.
Updated
Company running iconic Tasmanian walk bills taxpayers for marketing
By Piia Wirsu
The commercial company running Tasmania's Three Capes Track has been paid hundreds of thousands of dollars by the state government for marketing costs.
Updated
Tasmania is edging towards 200pc renewable energy, but some are concerned about how the state will get there
By Piia Wirsu
The Tasmanian government wants to generate 200 per cent renewable energy by 2040, but not everyone is sold on the pathway to a cleaner future, with wind turbine opposition groups popping up across the state.
Updated
'We are left off the map': Govt urged to do something about housing crisis in Tasmania's north-west
By Piia Wirsu
Rochelle Gordon has had to postpone knee replacement surgery three times due to her public housing unit being in no state for her recovery — her story is just one of many, amid pleas for something to be done about Tasmania's public housing crisis.
After leaving her abusive relationship, Laura lived in fear she would be deported
By Piia Wirsu
In Tasmania, women on temporary visas experiencing domestic abuse now have access to a legal support service.
Isaiah Dixon's uncle speaks after boating tragedy that saw 'beautiful day' come to tragic end
By Jessica Moran, April McLennan and Piia Wirsu
Isaiah Dixon and Bree-Anna Thomas, whose bodies washed ashore yesterday after they and a third friend went missing at sea on Monday, are being remembered as "beautiful" people whose deaths will have a lasting effect on the community.
Updated
Tasmanian families feel locked out of new model for educational support funding
By Piia Wirsu
Emily Harvey battles with hearing loss and an auditory processing disorder and needs small adjustments in the classroom to help her, but confusion around disability funding means she is not receiving the support she needs.
Updated
'It's like family': How teams of mentors are helping refugees feel at home
By Piia Wirsu
Landing in a foreign country, Tibetan refugee Chungla wasn't sure of the cultural rules that define Australian life, but a new community support program hopes to change that.
Updated
26yo Sean spent years unemployed after leaving school. Now he has a second chance
By Piia Wirsu
George Town in Tasmania's north has long battled with youth unemployment and a reputation for disenfranchised youth but a new, community focused group is changing that.
Updated
When Anwarul had a heart attack at 33, he made a deal with God
By Piia Wirsu
Anwarul Islam Khan was at work one day when he suddenly felt like he was "breaking down from the middle".
Updated
End-of-life wishes: What happens when the doctors won't let them die?
By Piia Wirsu
Michelle had to fight to have her mother's end-of-life wishes respected, she wants to make sure no-one else has to battle the way she had to.
Updated
As a historic town grapples with a tourist exodus, business owners look to a cable car
By Piia Wirsu
The vertical rock columns of Mount Roland loom large over the historic north-west Tasmanian town of Sheffield. A proposal for a cableway at the site is gathering support from local businesses, but the Aboriginal community says it should not proceed.
'It was all ripped away so quickly': Family of 22yo who died of 'sepsis' still want answers
By investigative reporter Piia Wirsu
Zane Jamison was told he would be in hospital for seven to 10 days to treat wounds on his legs caused by complications from a bone marrow transplant. He died months later, with his family saying he "rotted from the outside in".
Updated
Lance jumped at the chance to get his COVID vaccine, but others don't find it easy to understand public health messages
By Piia Wirsu
A medical team is travelling around Tasmania to help vaccinate the state's homeless and vulnerable populations, but there are calls for public health and vaccine information to be made easier to understand for those with low literacy.
Kylie has spent five years waiting to get on a surgery list, now she has to wait another eight
By Piia Wirsu
Kylie MacLeod has painful bursitis which stops her from working, or even doing basic tasks. But she's only one case in many thousands grappling with long waiting lists in Tasmania.
Updated
Musician due to receive Order of Australia found collapsed in hospital hours after seeking care
By investigative reporter Piia Wirsu
Thomas Langston died just weeks before he was due to receive an Order of Australia award for his service to music and the community. Now, his family and friends want to know why his death at a hospital was not investigated.
Dogs to be banned from some Tassie beaches under council proposal
By Piia Wirsu
Dog owners on Hobart's eastern shore say they're concerned about a council proposal that will see dogs banned or on-lead in popular exercise areas.
'Dangerous' changes to paramedic pay will leave remote ambulance stations empty, union says
The Tasmanian health union says changes to paramedics' travel allowance payments are leaving some remote ambulance stations unable to respond to call-outs for hours at a time, prompting warnings people may die waiting for help.
Updated
'It's a wild idea': How Maria Island could help save the brush-tailed rock wallaby from extinction
By Sean Wales and Piia Wirsu
A tiny island off the coast of Tasmania could provide a refuge to the brush-tailed rock wallaby whose habitat was devastated in the 2020 bushfires, but they're not native to the island state.