Senate debates

Tuesday, 26 November 2024

Bills

Better and Fairer Schools (Funding and Reform) Bill 2024; In Committee

8:14 pm

Photo of Penny Allman-PaynePenny Allman-Payne (Queensland, Australian Greens) Share this | Hansard source

by leave—I move amendments (1) and (2) on sheet 3040 together:

(1) Schedule 1, item 3, page 4 (line 11), omit "20 per cent", substitute "22.5 per cent".

(2) Schedule 1, item 7, page 5 (line 19), omit "20%", substitute "22.5%".

Given that the government won't support increasing the Commonwealth contribution to 25 per cent, this amendment seeks to increase the contribution of the federal government to our public schools to 22½ per cent.

Minister, this is your policy. This is the amount of contribution that you put in your offer to the states. Voting for this amendment is your opportunity to protect our public schools from backsliding under a coalition government. If you believe that 22½ per cent is a fair contribution that should be made by the federal government to our public schools, then you should lock it in for all of them. In your previous comments, you stated that you don't want to give blank cheques. I can tell you now that public schools, public school teachers and public school students have not been asking for blank cheques and we've been running on empty for over a decade.

Teachers dip into their pockets every year to the tune of $1,000. No-one is asking for a blank cheque. They're asking for a government that gives a damn about public education in this country. It is on its knees. There is a reason why parents feel like they have no choice but to fork out thousands of dollars to send their kids to the private school up the road because it is better resourced than the public one. It should be the job of governments to give every young person in this country the opportunity to have a well-funded, high-quality, world-class free public education. For over 13 years, we have not had that—not under the coalition and not under Labor. You went to an election and said that no-one would be left behind. You wanted and you believed in public education. If the minister believes in public education, show us.

I speak for thousands upon thousands of public school teachers in this country who believe that the federal government does not care about our public schools, because they see the amount of money that gets shovelled out of the door—$51 million every day—into our private school system. They drive past them in their cars with their cranes and their new buildings going up. They go into their classrooms that need paint, that have asbestos in them, that aren't cool in summer and that don't have the resources that they need. They look at the young person in front of them who is neurodiverse and who can't get a support teacher for more than two hours a week. They look at the young child with a disability who can't get up to the science block, because they don't have a lift.

Teachers deal with this and young people in public schools deal with this every single day, yet the teachers show up because we care about the kids in front of us—the majority of kids in this country who are educationally disadvantaged who attend our public schools. Teachers do this every single day, despite the fact that their governments don't care, despite the fact that they are underresourced, despite the fact that there is no end in sight to that underresourcing and despite the fact that they get abused in the media and by governments. By telling us there are no blank cheques, you might as well just say, 'You're not doing a good enough job.' Try doing the job when you are underresourced year after year.

Teachers have had enough. When you got elected to government, they thought that somebody cared and it was going to change. Well, it's changing a bit, but it's not 100 per cent, and you know it. So, if you really care, if you really believe that public schools in this country should get 22½ per cent, like you've put on the table, then lock it in for all of them. I commend this amendment to the House.

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