Senate debates
Monday, 26 February 2007
Questions without Notice
Smartcard
2:25 pm
Ian Campbell (WA, Liberal Party, Minister for Human Services) Share this | Hansard source
Thank you, Senator Troeth, for what I regard as a very important question. This government is very keen to ensure that the people of Australia receive their health services and other benefits in an efficient and effective way—that those people who need help, for example from Medicare, get that help in an efficient way. Of course, Medicare e-claiming working together with the access card or the smartcard will ensure that families and people visiting their doctor will be able to see those transactions take place at the doctor’s surgery. We want to also ensure that those people who are ripping off the system—and Medicare and welfare fraud in Australia has been a substantial problem—are kicked out of the system. The people of Australia want to make sure that those people truly in need—whether it be because they need assistance with unemployment or assistance because they are veterans or assistance because they are taking their children to the doctor—get that assistance in a timely and effective manner but also that the fraudsters and the rorters that would rip off the taxpayers of Australia are kicked out of the system. That, indeed, is the core of Senator Troeth’s question about the smartcard and the access card. We want to roll out a modern, new, secure system to ensure that those people who deserve that support and deserve those services get them in a timely manner and the fraudsters do not get them.
While we are bringing out this access card, which will replace at least three or four cards and up to 17 cards—a very convenient way for Australians to interact with their government—there is also space on the card for the people of Australia to voluntarily include information. Professor Fels, who is heading up a task force around the implementation of the access card, has released a discussion paper which will allow all Australians to provide feedback to the government on what goes into that space. I think that provides a very sensible step forward in the consultation process. We want Australians to have a sense of ownership about this card.
Senator Troeth asked about alternative policies. We have seen the Labor Party mindlessly opposing this card. They seem to be on the side of the fraudsters, on the side of the rorters—they do not seem to mind that the existing system does create fraud. But worse—and I thought this senator would have been more sensible—Senator Stott Despoja came out last week and said that if you do not for example—
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