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Friday, 15 May 2020

Bushfire grants not enough and take too long to approve, St Vincent de Paul Society says.

Extract from The Guardian

Bushfires
The charity says $1,000 cash payments to survivors are too small and should be raised to $3,000
Calla Wahlquist
@callapilla
Fri 15 May 2020 03.30 AEST Last modified on Fri 15 May 2020 03.31 AEST

Buildings destroyed by bushfires in Cobargo, New South Wales, Australia, 12 January 2020
Buildings destroyed by bushfires in Cobargo in January. The St Vincent de Paul Society says arrangements for delivering emergency aid are too restrictive. Photograph: Alkis Konstantinidis/Reuters

The St Vincent de Paul Society says the cash grants made available to bushfire survivors were too small, not flexible enough, and took too long to approve.
In a submission to the royal commission into national natural disaster arrangements, the charity said the structures in place for delivering emergency aid were too restrictive and led to delays in cash being made available, which caused “reputational damage” to both charities delivering the funds and the federal government itself.
“During the bushfires, the amount of time taken to process payments led to public criticism of charities, including by government officials,” the St Vincent de Paul chief executive, Toby O’Connor, wrote.
“This reputational damage not only impacted on the flow of donations, it made operational circumstances difficult for our volunteers, at a time when they needed support … At a time when the society needed to direct all of its resources to responding to need, its efforts were instead diverted to managing and responding to criticisms.”
The royal commission will begin public hearings on 25 May and is due to make recommendations in August. It has narrowed its focus to national coordination arrangements and mitigation methods. A group of ex-fire chiefs said it should recommend Australia develop “fast attack strategies” to prevent megafires from forming.
St Vincent de Paul raised $23.4m in donations to support bushfire affected communities this summer and has distributed $12.4m to 4,835 people in New South Wales, the ACT and Victoria.
It also received $11m in commonwealth emergency relief funding, to be delivered as $1,000 cash payments, about 40% of which has been expended.
Vinnies said the decision to limit grants of emergency relief funding to charities that already had commonwealth grant agreements in place meant that local charities and not-for-profits were excluded, and recommended the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 be amended to provide a more “flexible” approach.
It also said the $1,000 payments were too small and the criteria for granting them too restrictive, and recommended the grants be increased to $3,000 and the government adopt a “flexible, client-centred approach”. Vinnies provided $3,000 grants under its own emergency relief fund.
Under the criteria in place this summer, the $1,000 grants were only available to people who were at “imminent risk of not being able to pay their bills”, which O’Connor said “caused a lot of angst”.
“Many people were reluctant to agree to this for many reasons including personal pride, even if they had been heavily impacted by the fires,” he said.
Others did not qualify because they lived off-grid and needed to buy new water tanks and emergency generators, rather than help paying a utility bill. “Not only was the Commonwealth $1,000 cash payment inadequate, it could not be used for this purpose,” O’Conner said.
The submission recommended cash payments be delivered by the federal government through Services Australia, to ensure money is delivered immediately.
It also said mobile commonwealth services in bushfire areas needed to stay open after 4pm, so people who were using the daylight hours to repair their properties could still seek assistance.
O’Connor said some towns, such as Cobargo on the NSW south coast, had “limited service provision” and others, such as the Victorian towns of Mallacoota and Corryong, were cut off for weeks due to road closures, preventing support services from getting through.
He said a lack of access to local government area data made it difficult for charities to coordinate a local response, adding that it took the NSW government “a considerable amount of time” to release information such as how many houses had been destroyed.
The charity also criticised the federal government for not really developing a national response to the bushfires until early January, when Victoria and NSW were burning.


“It should not require a disaster to occur across multiple jurisdictions before a full service response and payments are developed and implemented,” O’Connor said.
The Worker at 7:13:00 am
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The Worker
I was inspired to start this when I discovered old editions of "The Worker". "The Worker" was first published in March 1890, it was the Journal of the Associated Workers of Queensland. It was a Political Newspaper for the Labour Movement. The first Editor was William "Billy" Lane who strongly supported the iconic Shearers' Strike in 1891. He planted the seed of New Unionism in Queensland with the motto “that men should organise for the good they can do and not the benefits they hope to obtain,” he also started a Socialist colony in Paraguay. Because of the right-wing bias in some sections of the Australian media, I feel compelled to counter their negative and one-sided version of events. The disgraceful conduct of the Murdoch owned Newspapers in the 2013 Federal Election towards the Labor Party shows how unrepresentative some of the Australian media has become.
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