House debates

Tuesday, 19 October 2021

Committees

National Disability Insurance Scheme Joint Committee; Report

12:06 pm

Photo of Bill ShortenBill Shorten (Maribyrnong, Australian Labor Party, Shadow Minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme) Share this | Hansard source

by leave—Labor welcomes the release of the report by the Joint Standing Committee on the National Disability Insurance Scheme into the Morrison government's failed independent assessments. The report has found what Labor, people with disabilities and, indeed, everybody who works with the NDIS, other than the senior management of the NDIA, knew as a fact: independent assessments were unwarranted and represented a severe breach of trust against the fundamental tenet of disability policy, 'Nothing about us without us'. Unfortunately, due to a revolving door of NDIS ministers with a one-track mind of cutting the NDIS and making the scheme harder for people with disability to access, independent assessments have taken up a lot of time and energy, with no appreciable outcome for people with disability.

The Morrison government wanted every one of 466,000 NDIS participants to effectively reaudition for packages of support. They wanted people who had chronic lifelong disabilities to prove again and again that they were really disabled—for the deaf to prove that they still couldn't hear, for the blind to prove that they still couldn't see and for people with other impairments to somehow demonstrate that they were still permanent. They wanted families with young children with permanent disabilities to be reassessed by a stranger who knew nothing about their child or their family or their experts and who was being paid by the government. The reality for NDIS participants was that independent assessments were a terrifying prospect and proof that the government didn't trust them. People with disabilities told them, experts told them and state governments told them that independent assessments needed to be binned, but, unfortunately, the government didn't listen until recently. The government underestimated people with disabilities, their families, their carers and the sector that supports them. They fought back. They did everything that the government asked of them. They took up places in the trial. They submitted themselves and their loved ones to the independent assessment trial process. They provided expert reports on their own experiences. None were positive. In fact, there was almost universal rejection of the independent assessments process, as the member for Menzies identified.

The report lays out a litany of charges from participants. The experiences of people who went through the trials were documented as follows:

… 'I am terrified of independent assessments. I'm scared that I would not be heard, that my needs would not be met and that my funding would be cut'.

Another quote:

'… my worst fears were realised'.

Another quote:

…'inaccurate, incomplete and irrelevant'.

Another quote:

'…I believe that the risks … to the participant and their families outweigh any … to the Commonwealth…'

It was unconscionable, really, that Australian people had to be subjected to the fear of either the loss or the degradation of their right of choice and control. leasingly, though, the joint standing committee has demonstrated its commitment to the parliament by unilaterally rejecting independent assessments. The government has been forced to stop its planned independent assessments. It has done it begrudgingly, but it has admitted that it has failed. This should be the end of this sorry chapter—the final nail in the coffin. I am concerned though that, following an election, if the Morrison government is re-elected, it will bring independent assessments back to life.

For the past eight years we've seen that successive Liberal governments have continually gone low when Australians were demanding the high road for people with disability. We cannot forget that this is the government that illegally forced thousands of Australians—many of whom were extremely disadvantaged—to repay money they never owed in the robodebt scandal. There has been colossal mismanagement of the NDIS at the very top, and it's people with disabilities who have been required to pay for the mistakes of others. We would now like to see the government not bin this report but respond to the recommendations that a bipartisan NDIS committee of the parliament has made, and the responses should be done in a timely fashion.

The committee noted that the NDIS has been transformational to the lives of people with disabilities and should never be denied to eligible participants. It pressed the point that Australians across all ideological divides support the scheme because it benefits everyone. It urged the government to introduce an NDIS reserve fund. The committee has also said that the government must fix the tier 2 supports available to people with disability who don't access the NDIS before it even considered cutting access to NDIS supports or reducing numbers. We welcome the innovative recommendation for bulk-billed free allied health assessments.

We keenly await the government's response to the report. Labor will continue to work with people with disabilities, with carers and with everyone in this country who wants to empower the lives of people with disability. Any changes need to be done with the co-design of people with disability and must be evidence based. Australians overwhelmingly support the NDIS. The NDIS is one of the bright spots in public policy in the last decade of Australian politics. We support the choice and control and the right to an ordinary life which the NDIS provides hundreds of thousands of our fellow Australians—and any one of us might need this scheme one day. But I would submit that, in reading the report, only a Labor government can actually be trusted to fix the damage to the NDIS and make sure that it works in the interests of all.

Comments

No comments