House debates

Tuesday, 29 May 2018

Questions without Notice

National Disability Insurance Scheme

2:23 pm

Photo of Malcolm TurnbullMalcolm Turnbull (Wentworth, Liberal Party, Prime Minister) Share this | Hansard source

I thank the honourable member for his question. The government is absolutely committed to the NDIS. It is one of the most important social and economic reforms in our nation's history. It is changing lives and changing lives for the better. On Friday I was with the member for Robertson, where in that electorate around 2,900 people are expected to benefit from the NDIS. We were delighted to see together, firsthand, with the New South Wales Premier, the work of participants at Fairhaven and Point Clare. We met with Alexander Coppleman and the team at the Options Disability Theatre—really inspiring people—and they are benefitting from the NDIS. They represent some of the 162,000 Australians who are now accessing the NDIS, where a majority of people are receiving more support and obviously have greater choice and control. Eighty-four per cent of participants who entered the NDIS in the March quarter rated their experience as good or very good, and today the NDIS has released its quarterly report that shows that 44,945 people who had not been getting services from any government are now receiving support from the NDIS. These are people who have significant and permanent disability but were left without any assistance in the community. To demonstrate our commitment to the NDIS, we have sought to guarantee this essential service and give people certainty: the certainty that it will now be funded into the future, as the Treasurer outlined in the budget; and certainty through the landmark bilateral agreement with New South Wales, which I signed with the Premier last week, that will deliver long-term funding and support for the NDIS in that state.

The level of support provided in a participant's plan is based on what's determined 'reasonable and necessary' under the act. As of 31 December 2017, the total number of AAT appeals represented just 0.3 per cent of all access decisions. As a nation—

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