Humanity needed in welfare fight (The Mercury)

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Humanity needed in welfare fight By Kym Goodes, CEO, TasCOSS (from The Mercury, 14/01/2017) Australians don’t expect their leaders to be super human. Just human will do. Because being human implies a certain amount of humanity and a willingness to embrace that common thread in us all, from the most privileged of political representatives to those who are just barely getting by. What we do expect is leadership. And we do expect a Minister with responsibility for human services – services for humans - would demonstrate the values and traits of humanity and leadership combined. And we don’t just expect it, we have entrusted those we voted for in the Federal Election with the means to do it. When a natural disaster hits one of our communities hard—when people are threatened and have no capacity to access food, may lose all their meagre savings or a loss of property and the stress and anxiety of that situation could overwhelm them—we always rally together to help, to support and to ease their pain. The current Centrelink debt fiasco is, sadly, measuring up as a human disaster. There are now too many frightening examples of letters and subsequent poor treatment of individuals trying to prove their innocence. Old frail people surviving on a pension with limited access or capacity to use an online system - our grandparents. Young people studying hard and living on an allowance and maybe some ad hoc casual work, trying to set themselves up for their future – our children. Mums and dads in Tasmania, trying to survive in a highly casualised labour-market that forces them in and out of casual or part time work, off and on support payments – our families, our neighbours. Those made redundant as businesses have closed down or the public service or university has reduced its workforce – our colleagues. People who are unwell and unable to work for short or long periods of time, people with mental illness, anxiety, and those doing it hard and who, for various reasons not of their own making, require some support – our friends. These people are receiving notices saying they owe thousands of dollars. Can you imagine getting a letter that says you owe $5,000 or $15,000 or $30,000? Can you imagine it taking weeks to try and resolve, going to bed every night not knowing what will happen? How many of us can find pay-slips from 6 years ago, from an employer who no longer exists? Living day to day and having an unproven,


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