An open letter to John Howard
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Dear John
I’m writing on behalf of all currently
disabled people, and for those who will suffer the onslaught of
time and ill fortune. I’m asking you to seriously consider
the following matters when your party frames legislation
affecting us.
I speak from a unique perspective, as an
Occupational Therapist with 15 years experience in assessing and
assisting people with disabilities. I have also suffered from
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome for 12 years, which seriously impairs my
ability to work. I am on DSP AND I do work, even though its only
10-15 hours per week.
My job is very interesting. I assess people who
are applying for DSP, and frankly while there are some people
genuinely trying to rort the system (my estimate is around 5%),
the majority are hard-working, civic minded Australians, seeking
DSP as a last resort. Many are only applying after being advised
to do so by Centrelink.
As you sit and decide our futures I ask you to
consider these problems in your plan. If you can resolve these
issues I fully support your intentions to help disabled people
find meaningful and productive work.
The definition of work
In assessing someone as able to work 15 hours, do
you consider productivity? Many people with disability
(PWD’s) are able work. However they are slower, less
efficient and less accurate. They cannot work as effectively as
they once did. This is not a character defect. It is simply part
of their medical condition. They can still produce quality work.
It just takes longer.
Even if they do gain employment, the laws of
profitability dictate they will earn less than a normal worker.
According to the Productivity Commission, when working,
PWD’s earn an average of 20% less. The productivity gains
your party has pushed for have raised the bar so high many of us
are unable to compete. If we do work, we often have to work 15
hours to earn 10 hours pay.
These productivity gains are actually a good
thing as they create an economic climate where it is more
feasible for us to work, but ONLY if we are given the right
support.
Rest and recovery
Many of us require intermittent work. We need
frequent rests or changes of posture. So even if we’re at
work for 6-8 hours, we may only be “working” for 4-6
hours, or less. How many work places provide accessible places to
rest and recover? How many workplaces will even tolerate someone
who needs frequent breaks?
PWD’s need employment where they can adjust
the work to suit their needs, not be pressured to conform to
another’s demands. This eliminates a huge proportion of
available jobs. The irony is that for many, self-employment is a
viable option. However the New Enterprise Initiative Scheme is
only available to people who can do an 8 week, full-time course.
I have approached the Government about this problem previously
with no response.
Piece Work
In some ways, home-based piecework is the ideal;
if the person’s physical, emotional and mental capacities
allow it. But again the “efficiency” factor means
they will be earning less than other workers.
Self-employment
Self-employment is a good option too, for it
offers a degree of control. Unfortunately self-employment means
you are responsible for everything such as reception and
marketing, particularly in the start up phase of a small
business. This requires up to 50% of time spent in unpaid work.
Will this be considered in assessing the 15 hours?
Leaving Home
Of course you could argue that the PWD should get
a “real job”, but this adds the physical and
financial burden of travel. So what they gain working for someone
else, they lose in their commute. Often the cost of this is pain
and further disability.
Why don’t they move closer?
Even if it was possible to live close to work,
moving home is a chore that makes the able bodied shudder. For
PWD’s, moving means finding a new network of health
professionals they can trust. For someone with my condition, this
is quite a challenge, as many doctors don’t even believe
CFS is a real illness. It means leaving supportive neighbours and
family. It means having to educate a whole new batch of carers or
services to your condition and needs.
Unemployment vs. Disability
It is about time that this Government put the
“disability bludger” myth into its social policy
wastebasket. PWD’s are not “Dole Bludgers”. For
the record, many “dole bludgers” aren’t dole
bludgers either, but that is another story. Consider the
differences.
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Able
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Unemployed
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Disability
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Wide range of choices
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Wide range of choices
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Choices limited by capacity
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Money problems – can work a second job or
overtime
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Money problems – largely resolved when they
get a job
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Earning capacity is severely limited by the
disability itself.
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Able to compete
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Able to compete with some disadvantage
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Competitiveness limited by condition/s
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Poverty is resolvable with training, guidance and
support
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Poverty is resolvable with training, guidance and
support
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Unable to work full-time – condemned to a
life of poverty unless extremely highly skilled and
resourced.
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Can pay for domestic help to allow more time for
work
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Domestic duties still allow time for work
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Domestic duties consume a major portion of time
and energy
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Lets be realistic John, for a disabled person to
escape poverty, they need to be able to earn an hourly rate of
twice the average person. The statistics show that for the vast
majority this is not achievable, and no training program will
resolve that.
A balanced life
Of course this is happening just as the
government is realizing that our society’s approach to work
is unbalanced. More able-bodied people are realising that life
needs to be balanced. The union ideal of reasonable time for
work, rest and play has been eroded by ridiculous commutes and
the escalation of unpaid overtime.
In this context, is it fair to demand that
PWD’s allocate a much higher percentage of their available
time and energy to work? While I respect every person’s
right to make that choice, it is close to a violation of human
rights to insist that a disabled person must place work above
everything else. I spent three years where my life was going to
work, and spending the rest of my life in bed, at the advice of a
Professor of Immunology. My employer (a public hospital) refused
to make the concessions needed for me to continue working. I
almost lost my marriage and family until I chose to ignore the
advice of this esteemed professional. Interestingly I started to
recover a little as well.
I have heard this story over and over, from DSP
applicants. They made the choice to give up full-time work
because they wanted to save their families. They were forced into
unemployment by employers who couldn’t or wouldn’t
make the concessions they needed.
The time that a disabled person can allocate to
work must be calculated AFTER reasonable allowance has been made
for sleep, self-care, family and leisure. What’s more,
PWD’s have an extra burden of time that their able bodied
counterparts don’t. Given our poverty, and reduced earning
capacity, we are not able to pay someone to do the domestic work
that we are unable to do, or that aggravates our conditions. The
availability of Home Care services, and the eligibility criteria
are a joke.
Treatment programs, whether they are home,
hospital or community centre based all require extra time and
energy. Even the task of “remaining fit” which the
Government is advocating for all people, extracts a higher toll
from the disabled.
Costs
Of course, the Government assures us that these
changes are not cost cutting measures, but are for the good of
disabled people. Yet your own media releases mention “the
cause for alarm is the escalating number of people on DSP, and
the cost of this to society”. The new guidelines will
simply transfer those least able to compete in a
productivity-oriented society from DSP onto Newstart.
They risk losing concessions on utilities, car
registration (vital if you can’t use public transport) and
medicines. Many conditions can only be treated with medicines and
supplements that are unavailable under the PBS. I note the recent
rise in the so-called “safety net”.
It is clear that disability is the biggest factor
in sucking capable people into poverty. PWD’s have an
average income that is 44 per cent of able-bodied people. The
lucky country is the 7th worst in the OECD!
Mutual obligation – for whom?
Mutual obligation has become a buzzword. Like
most buzzwords, government enthusiasm is no guarantee of
substance. I actually support the proposal to assist disabled
people to find work. Most people I’ve assessed for DSP tell
me they want to work. They also tell me they have given up after
the services available to them have failed.
In my case, despite having a degree, experience,
and being motivated, the Commonwealth Rehabilitation Service told
me “we cannot help you find work”, and
“there’s nothing we can do for you.” Job
Network did absolutely nothing. I even applied for a Job Network
position but was rejected as being “not suitable”
because I was seeking part-time work.
The problem is that EMPLOYERS, including
Government agencies need incentives to employ disabled people. HR
“experts” and “bosses” need to be a lot
more creative in their thinking about how work can be allocated
and controlled. Most are too lazy or unimaginative to think about
how they could employ a disabled applicant.
The vast majority of advertised jobs are
full-time, and employers use convenience as an excuse, refusing
to even consider applicants who could do the job but only in a
part-time or job-share situation.
The Government’s own record in this area is
appalling. According to the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity
Commission, employment of PWD’s in the Government Sector in
the last 10 years has dropped from 5.8 per cent to 3.8 per cent.
That’s a 30 per cent decline! I call on the Government to
lead by example in taking affirmative action for people on
DSP.
So John, yes, we do want to work. We want to be paid a fair
rate for the work we can do. We want services that really can
help. We want to live balanced lives. We don’t want to be
forced to jump through meaningless hoops, which aggravate our
pain, fatigue and depression. We don’t want to make you
happy while watching everything that is important in life like
our families and relationships disintegrate. We want recognition
for the extra costs that living with a disability imposes on us.
We are sick of poverty, yet your own enquiry tells us that 60,000
of the most disadvantaged people in Australia will be worse off
under your plans to “help” us.
A hidden tragedy
The tragedy of these changes is that they are completely
unnecessary. The financial benefits of DSP automatically decrease
rapidly as recipients earn income. For instance, even working as
little as 10 hours per week, my benefit drops to about $20. At 15
hours per week I would be receiving nothing. This of course
varies depending on what hourly rate you can attract.
The 15-hour threshold is a major disincentive. At present, I
personally am inspired to test my ability, knowing there is a
significant margin. With the new changes, the instant I cross the
15-hour threshold, I lose the substantial concessions that make
living in poverty barely manageable. You can feel the fear in
disabled communities as you discuss this issue with them.
A fairer system would be to maintain the eligibility criteria
at 30 hours. Compared to an able bodied person, this is still a
25-40% impairment of functional capacity. The sliding benefit
scale could be maintained. Ancillary benefits and concessions
should be income tested, not “hours” tested.
None of this prevents the Government investing it’s
healthy surplus in programs that really help. Things like:
- Employer incentives
- Training bonuses
- Affirmative action programs
- Better salary packages for skilled job network and other
employment consultants would help attract people with the skills
to assist disabled people in overcoming their significant
disadvantages in the open job market
- Small business start up assistance
- Establishing disability focused job co-operatives
- Domestic and home maintenance assistance
- Relationship counselling
- Coaching and mentoring programs
Interestingly, Kim Beasley’s view on disability changed
significantly when he experienced it, albeit temporarily. My
dearest wish is that you could spend 24 hours living the life
that we face every day, for the rest of our lives. Perhaps then
you might begin to understand.
Sincerely
Ken Davis
My fellow Australians. You may be disabled. It is 100% certain that you or someone you know will at some stage need Disability Support. Act now to ensure that you get a fair go.
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