NDIS Minister Bill Shorten.Credit:Alex Ellinghausen
Shorten on Wednesday issued a joint statement with South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas,on behalf of all states and territories,in which the leaders said they agreed to several amendments about their shared governance of the scheme.
He said the agreement guaranteed “that the states and the federal government are getting their act together,and people with disability and participants are not a political football”.
“It will allow us to resolve our consultation with people with disability about a list of what you can spend money on,and a list of what you can’t spend money on,” Shorten said.
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“This will always be a work in progress,but we’re committed to making sure the scheme’s here for the future.”
The laws respond tolast year’s NDIS review,which called for the scheme to return to its original purpose of providing for Australians with permanent disabilities,and demanded state and territories improve their offerings for people with less intense needs. The scheme is one of the government’s biggest budget pressures and,without reform,has been on track to cost $100 billion within a decade.
The premiers had agreed last December to a national cabinet deal that set up with a system of “foundational supports”,which would help people outside the scheme and limit its growth trajectory to 8 per cent a year. But they soon accused Shorten of making hasty changes thatwent far beyond what was agreed andpushed back against his bill.