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The Big Story

Yesterday Butler met with the Saudi Health Minister. He has an ambitious agenda, part of which he’ll reveal at the NPC today [photo supplied]

National Press Club Speech to Unveil Butler’s Blueprint

Health Minister Mark Butler will give a speech at the National Press Club outlining his vision for an integrated health system. This will likely form the basis for a dramatic reimagining of the NDIS.

When the PM initially announced that Butler would become both Health, Ageing and NDIS Minister after the election, it sounded like just another harmless MOG. That’s Canberra speak for ‘machinery of government’ change, like taking down one sign on a department and putting up another.

But Butler had much a bigger plan: creating a single health system for every Australian that made sense.

He envisaged a future where it didn’t matter if you were over or under 65, you were eligable for the care you needed. The same for disability. It wouldn’t matter if you happened to be under nine, or if you had received a particular assessment of not, you would be eligable for exactly the same assistance.

It’s a radical vision: but one that makes a great deal of intellectual and financial sense.

Now NDIS Minister Senator Jenny McAllister is putting flesh on these bones. She’s announced a Quality Supports Program which will include three pilots totaling $45 million, one each for Supported Independent Living, support coordination and therapy providers.

She says “the successful providers for the SIL pilot include: Aruma, Northcott, and in Victoria, Yooralla”. These will inform the next stage of the rollout.

“Quality support makes a real and lasting difference to the lives of participants and their families,” McAllister says. “We want to make sure that the quality providers delivering these supports are viable for the long term.”

“NDIA’s work to support the market to deliver services that supports the diverse needs of people with disability.”

McAllister is very involved in this process. She promises the disability community will continue to play a key role in shaping these major reforms to the scheme, with a new NDIS Reform Advisory Committee to be appointed.

“This is a critical step in the reform process,” McAllister says. “This committee will be a voice to government that will help us fine tune reform of the NDIS as we go.”

We won’t get the full detail in Butler’s Press Club speech today, but we will get the broad-brush picture of where he’s heading. And make no mistake: Butler will get there.

Just look at the ambitious reforms he’s already ushered into the health portfolio, particularly the changes to pharmacy. This was a monolith with entrenched interests that people said couldn’t be altered. Butler hasn’t achieved everything he wants to, yet, but he’s well on the way.

That’s why today’s speech will be vital. It will outline the extent of the Minister’s ambition.

Last week a small, closed-door session was held as a precursor to today’s speech. A selection of over 40 representatives from the sector attended, including Aruma CEO Martin Laverty, Professor Tanya Buchanan from Dementia Australia, and Brad Swan from Life Without Barriers. It included business representatives (Andrew Thorburn from HammondCare), but also ensured advocates had a voice (like Dr Elizabeth Deveny from the Consumers Health Forum of Australia and Katrina Armstrong from Mental Health Carers Australia).

It’s exactly the sort of group you’d want to fly reform ideas past before releasing them publicly.

Today’s speech can be seen on the ABC and Sky.

The Briefing

What the sector is saying

image courtesy Physical Disability Australia

How you can help make group homes and other closed settings safer

by Physical Disability Australia

The federal government is consulting on nationwide reforms to Community Visitor Schemes that oversee disability group homes and institutions. Existing protections vary between states, leaving some people with disability without regular external oversight in closed settings.

$45 million to boost quality supports for NDIS participants

by NDIS

As reported in the Daily Telegraph yesterday, the federal government is investing $45 million to improve the quality of care and oversight within the NDIS. The NDIA is now beleatedly releasing information about this program. This funding will support training, risk management and data analysis to better safeguard participants with complex needs.

Making NDIS support decisions clear, fair and inclusive

by National Disability Services

Community Mental Health Australia supports a call to simplify NDIS funding rules through a fairer, principles-based approach. The joint submission urges clearer guidance, inclusive policies and realistic transition timelines to better serve diverse disability communities.

Why We Need to Let All Kids Learn Together

by People with Disability Australia

Some disability advocates warn Queensland’s plan for more special schools contradicts expert advice and weakens inclusive education efforts. They urge a national roadmap to help mainstream schools support students with disability and end segregation.

Our (Autism Aspergers Advocacy) Rules

by Autism Aspergers Advocacy Australia

After its recent AGM, ASAN AUNZ has updated its constitution to better reflect autistic identity and respectful community language. Membership types were renamed to Autistic Members and Ally Members, aligning with inclusive values.

‘She Gets to Live Her Best Life’

by Cerebral Palsy Alliance

After years of battling complex health challenges with cerebral palsy, Claudia finally received the long-term care she needed. Her improved condition means she can now enjoy everyday moments that were once out of reach.

The Wrap

The latest stories

Seven in 10 new people joining NDIS for autism

by SMH

Seven in 10 people who joined the National Disability Insurance Scheme in the past year had a primary diagnosis of autism, and most were children, in a fresh sign of the challenges facing Health and Disability Minister Mark Butler as he seeks to secure the future of the $46 billion scheme.

Urgent NDIS warning issued that 10,000 vulnerable children will lose access to services

by Daily Mail Australia

More than 55,000 Australians have signed a petition urging a reversal to recent changes to the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS).

Disability funding reforms trigger 'so many questions'

by Canberra Times

Long-term concerns about an overhaul of the NDIS are still unanswered, disability advocates say, as they wait for a major update on the multibillion-dollar scheme from the man in charge.

Ex Youth Justice, NDIS manager steals thousands of dollars of tools from Bunnings

by Courier Mail

An ex Youth Justice worker and NDIS manager’s alleged “rapid escalation” into drug linked crime can be revealed.

NDIS providers paid $45m to reveal real disability care costs in major review

by Daily Telegraph

Disability providers will open their books in exchange for $45m in grants as part of an NDIS costs review, but those in the sector say the probe is just a distraction from ongoing cuts and freezes.

The Diary

What’s coming up

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