CHAPTER 2
Background and committee view
Background to Cape York Welfare Reform
2.1
In 2007 the Cape York Institute for Policy and Leadership (CYI)
published the report From hand out to hand up, Volumes 1 and 2, which set
out the policy design for Cape York Welfare Reform (CYWR). CYWR is a package of
policy measures which aims to address welfare dependence and reverse the decline
of social and economic conditions in Cape York Indigenous communities. The
underlying policy principles of the design were:
-
all welfare should be conditional;
-
further government investment in capability building was needed;
-
incentives needed to be fundamentally changed to encourage people
to engage in the real economy.[1]
2.2
Four communities – Mossman Gorge, Coen, Aurukun and Hope Vale – agreed
to participate in a four year trial of the reforms which began in 2008. It is
important to note that CYWR is a partnership between the CYI, the Australian
Government and the Queensland Government.[2]
Family Responsibilities Commission
2.3
A key component of CYWR was the establishment of the Family
Responsibilities Commission (FRC) by the Queensland Government as an
independent statutory body.[3]
The FRC comprises a Commissioner, a Deputy Commissioner and Local Commissioners
from each of the participating communities.
2.4
The FRC's website outlines its role and focus in the reform:
The purpose of the [FRC] is to support the restoration of
socially responsible standards of behaviour and to assist community members to
resume and maintain primary responsibility for the wellbeing of their community
and the individuals and families within their community...
The FRC focuses on early intervention and the outcomes sought
are clearly aligned with the goals of the wider criminal justice system – goals
aimed at reducing drug addiction, violence, assorted crime, and child neglect
in Indigenous communities. The FRC approach, however, is different to other
justice strategies in that its focus is socially orientated with conferencing,
case management, and support for the community in nurturing, protecting and
educating the future generation. The FRC methodology is aimed at being
proactive and collaborative.[4]
2.5
The FRC applies to all community members – both Aboriginal and
non-Aboriginal – who are welfare recipients or participating in Community
Development Employment Projects and who reside in or have lived in the
participating communities for three months since 1 July 2008.[5]
Triggers
2.6
There are four types of 'trigger events' which can result in a person
being brought before the FRC:
-
a person's child is absent from school for three full or part
days in a school term without a reasonable excuse, or the person's child of
school age is not enrolled in school without a lawful excuse;
-
a person is the subject of a child safety report;
-
a person is convicted on an offence in the Magistrates Court;
-
a person breaches his or her tenancy agreement.[6]
2.7
If one of the four trigger events occurs, the FRC receives a
notification about the breach. The FRC is then empowered to do a range of
things:
[The FRC] might take no action if none is warranted. It might
give the person a warning. It might recommend the person attend community
support services to help them get their life back on track. It might order the
person to attend those services.[7]
Support services
2.8
The FRC links individuals to relevant support services in their
community which include:
-
case managers to help children attend school;
-
money management advisors; and
-
counsellors for drug and alcohol addiction, family violence and
mental health issues.[8]
Income management
2.9
In the CYWR framework, income management over a person's welfare
payments is intended as a last resort where other support has not resulted in
an individual changing their behaviour.[9]
2.10
An income management order operates in the following way:
The FRC advises Centrelink how much of a person's welfare
payment will be income managed. This is usually 60 or 75 per cent of a person's
welfare payments, to be used for essentials such as food, clothing, medicine,
rent, electricity and basic household goods. The money cannot be spent on
alcohol, tobacco, pornography or gambling. Income management does not reduce
the total amount of a person's payments from Centrelink, and the rest of their
fortnightly entitlement is paid in the usual way.
The FRC orders income management by issuing an income
management notice to Centrelink, which Centrelink must implement if the
customer named in the notice receives a relevant income support payment. The
FRC may also amend an income management notice to revoke the notice, extend the
its duration or amend the percentage of fortnightly welfare payments that are
income managed. In CYWR communities, individuals also have the choice to go
onto income management voluntarily, if the FRC agrees.
The FRC can direct that the client be income managed for a
period of from 3 months to 12 months, which is typical. The FRC may extend
income management because:
-
it has received further notices
about the person
-
the client has refused to engage
with the FRC
-
the client has failed to follow
through on commitments agreed with the FRC
-
the client has asked for the
notice to be extended.[10]
2.11
Individuals on income management are issued a 'BasicsCard' in respect of
60 to 75 per cent of their welfare payment. The BasicsCard can only
be used for essential life expenses such as food, clothes and health items at a
variety of approved stores and businesses.[11]
2.12
In introducing the legislation for the FRC into the Queensland
Parliament, the then Queensland Premier highlighted the differences between CYWR
and the Northern Territory Emergency Response (the Northern Territory
Intervention):
[The CYWR] trial has a stronger emphasis on partnership,
capacity building, local authority and service enhancement. Community ownership
of the welfare reform trial is critical to its success.
The Cape York Institute and government officials have been
working with each community for some time in designing the key features of the
trial, particularly the [FRC] itself. Community participation in the trial will
be formalised through each community's local Indigenous partnership agreement.[12]
2.13
The committee notes that funding for the FRC from the Queensland
Government has only been extended until the end of 2014.[13]
Evaluation of Cape York Welfare Reform
2.14
An evaluation of CYWR was conducted by the Australian Government and
publically released in January 2013. The evaluation notes that '[i]n the first
three and a half years of the trial about half of the adult population in the
four trial communities had direct contact with the FRC for breaching at least
one of the behavioural obligations that act as triggers for referral to the FRC'.[14]
2.15
The evaluation found:
The FRC, operating in conjunction with a suite of support
services...and opportunities...is encouraging and enabling many individuals and
families to identify and start to address problems that affect their lives. The
evaluation has found evidence of greater self-awareness about problems
affecting individuals and families, and a greater preparedness to seek opportunities
for supported self-help.[15]
Overall findings
2.16
The trial is designed to rebuild social norms in Cape York, starting
with short to medium behaviour change which result in sustainable improvements
over the longer term.[16]
The evaluation looked at the areas of progress in social change, education,
social responsibility, housing, economic opportunity and restoring Indigenous
authority.
2.17
In the area of social change the evaluation noted that behavioural
change sought has been at the foundational level to create the basis for further
behavioural change:
There are signs that people are taking on greater personal
responsibility and raising expectations, particularly in areas such as sending
kids to school, caring for children and families and their needs, and accessing
supported self-help measures to deal with problems.[17]
2.18
The evaluation also advised:
Residents of the communities report that, compared to three
years ago, children are happier, more active and eating healthier food, and
life is on the way up generally.[18]
2.19
A successful feature of the trial has been the:
[R]ebuilding of Indigenous authority to tackle antisocial
behaviour through the local FRC Commissioners. Most community members and other
stakeholders believe that the FRC has strengthened leadership, particularly
through the Local Commissioner's listening, guiding and supporting role. The
FRC conferencing process resonates with traditional Aboriginal dispute
resolution practices and is consistent with restorative justice principles. An
analysis of the social change survey data by social psychologists indicates
that residents believe in the underlying logic of the trial – that the FRC can
strengthen leadership and encourage people to take responsibility for their
behaviour.[19]
2.20
The evaluation noted that more progress has been made changing
behaviours around education and social responsibility and suggested:
[T]here is a natural sequence in which stabilising the social
environment and improving educational attainment creates the preconditions for
greater employment and business enterprise and transition to private home
ownership.[20]
Income management findings
2.21
The evaluation provided the following information in relation to the
extent of income management in CYWR:
By December 2011, 424 people (25% of the population aged 17
and over) had been placed on income management in the four communities at some
point in the preceding 3½ years, for an average duration of 16.8 months. 93%
were compulsory and 7% were voluntary orders.[21]
2.22
In summary, the evaluation made the following findings in relation to
the operation of the income management scheme:
The evaluation has found that income management imposed by
the FRC has been a successful intervention in ensuring that the needs of
families and children are met...
The Cape York model of income management is far more targeted
than the original [Northern Territory Emergency Response] model. The FRC seeks
initially to counsel clients about their behaviour and refer them to support
services, while income management is used as a means to reform behaviour if
these initiatives do not work. Clients on income management are case managed and
the FRC monitors their progress and can adjust or revoke income management
orders as necessary. There is some evidence that income management assists in
reducing subsequent breaches of the behavioural obligations that lead to FRC
notices. In Hope Vale, Coen and Mossman Gorge, the average number of notices
per quarter for an individual fell by about 10 percentage points after the
individual was placed on income management.[22]
2.23
Specifically in relation to the BasicsCard, which is issued as part of
the income management program, the evaluation found:
In the social change surveys, 78 per cent of respondents in
the four communities reported that the BasicsCard made their life better, while
12 per cent thought that it made their life worse. Furthermore, across the
four communities, 69 per cent agreed that if people cannot pay for rent and
food because they spend their money on other things, then they should be put on
the BasicsCard. There is some dissent about the BasicsCard, with common
complaints being the inability to use it in some stores and the paternalistic
nature of the intervention. Generally, however, the qualitative feedback in the
social change surveys was very positive about the impact of the BasicsCard in
assisting people to manage their money to meet their families' needs, as well
as reducing the money spent on alcohol and drugs.[23]
Committee view
2.24
The committee notes this is not a new issue and this will be the third
time income management has been extended since it started in 2008.[24]
The committee is also mindful that income management is a divisive issue.[25]
2.25
The committee understands there is no quick fix to the long-term challenges
of Indigenous disadvantage in these communities. However, it notes advice in
the evaluation report that 'after only three years...the trial of welfare reform
points to a level of progress that has rarely been evident in previous reform
programs in Queensland's remote Indigenous communities.'[26]
2.26
The committee recognises that income management is a sanction of last
resort in CYWR. In considering the extension of income management in the CYWR,
the committee has referred to the findings of the evaluation that income management
was a 'successful intervention in ensuring that the needs of families and
children are met'.[27]
In particular, the committee is persuaded by support for the measure by
CYWR participants, where 78 per cent of respondents in the four communities
felt that the Basicscard (issued as part of income management) made their lives
better.
2.27
The committee also acknowledges the support of the Queensland
Government, one of the partners in CYWR, for the extension of income
management:
Income management is a critical and valued component of the Family
[Responsibilities] Commission and the broader welfare reform program. It is
considered vital to changing behaviour and increasing social function in the
communities.[28]
2.28
In the committee's view CYWR should be extended for a further two years in
order to allow for further consolidation of the successes of the reform to
date. Therefore, the committee supports Schedule 2 of the Bill.
Recommendation 1
2.29
The committee recommends that the Senate pass the measure contained in
Schedule 2 of the Bill.
Senator Cory Bernardi
Chair
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