The tabling of this report to the
House of Representatives takes place against the background of the
government declared national emergency and the dramatic
military-supported federal intervention in the Northern Territory
following the "Little Children are Sacred" report1. Amongst the recommendations of that report,
most of which have so far been ignored in the government's
response, were several which highlighted the crucial role of
employment in promoting indigenous wellbeing and, conversely, the
destructive impact of unemployment on "self esteem, disposable
income, personal relationships" and in creating "a social
environment of boredom and hopelessness." The authors of the
report, Anderson and Wild, emphasised that the government needed to
work closely with Indigenous communities in policy development and
implementation rather than taking unilateral action which
implicitly denies Indigenous agency and reinforces the sense of
powerlessness which many already feel.
Anderson and Wild are by no means the first to underline how
important regular employment is in redressing indigenous
disadvantage more generally. In fact, they are the most recent in a
long line of commentators who've urged governments to take more
effective action in assisting indigenous Australians to gain a more
secure economic footing, and to do so in a way that respects and
engages Indigenous values and culture. While the specific
recommendations for action may vary, all start with the recognition
that unemployment is corrosive of the quality of both individual
and community life, producing poorer health outcomes, reduced life
expectancy, domestic violence, homelessness and substance abuse.
Poverty is the characteristic which best explains the prevalence of
poor health in any community and, according to the World Health
Organisation, the standard of health of Indigenous Australians lags
almost 100 years behind that of other Australians, with Australia
ranking last among rich countries who have indigenous
populations.
International research has documented
the connections between poverty and unemployment and poor health,
addictions, involvement in illegal drugs, violence, sexual
exploitation, prostitution at an early age and despair. It is also
well understood that health and destructive behaviour patterns
improve with improvement in a community's economy.
As we shouldn't need to be reminded, "European settlement and
subsequent capitalist economic development in Australia resulted in
widespread destruction of the traditional economic and cultural
activities of indigenous Australians". As Dockery and Milsom, the
authors of the previous quote, argue in their NCVER2 sponsored review of Indigenous employment
programs, to the extent that Indigenous Australians aspire to
integration with the mainstream economy, they face the considerable
disadvantages inherent in being in the early phase of "a profound
cultural and economic transition" as well as the barriers presented
by the ignorance and prejudice which still exist in the wider
community. They have also suffered from a lack of sustained
political action to address these complex problems, including short
term funding cycles, constantly changing bureaucratic arrangements
and inexperienced staff. For example, the South Hedland based
Western Desert Puntukumuparna Aboriginal Corporation (WDPAC) based
in Port Hedland, Western Australia which administers 18 CDEP's
across in remote locations, reported that:
Unfortunately it is very hard to
attract good people to these positions and consequently, some
shortcuts have been made in the recruitment process in an endeavour
to fill a position. Often a program coordinator is selected on
availability and not merit. Sometimes the right person is found but
more often than not, they aren't. This is due in part to the poor
working conditions found in communities, such as poor housing (if
available at all), poor water supplies (often undrinkable but still
all that is available to the community members) and poor pay rates
within a resource rich, high paying mining environment. Coupled
with these are the wider communities' misconceptions of Aboriginal
communities being populated by violent substance
abusers.3
One of the submissions to our
committee4 put it bluntly,
"Despite a mountain of research and
clear evidence of the degree of disadvantage faced by Indigenous
Australians in the labour market and with respect to almost all
other socio-economic indicators, the effort put into improving
Indigenous labour market outcomes in this country has been woefully
inadequate. This may not be as evident in terms of 'input' measures
such as budgetary commitment as it is in the lack of political will
to resolve critical questions on the broader objectives of
Indigenous policy and thus the ability for policy makers to remain
unaccountable for the lack of progress in addressing Indigenous
disadvantage".5
In what may be a precedent in Committee reporting, Labor members of
the ATSIA Committee were not prepared to endorse the majority
report of this inquiry into indigenous employment, not because of
any fundamental disagreement with the few recommendations it
proposed (although we do not agree with all of them), but because
of the report's failure to come to grips with the gravity of the
problem or to suggest policy settings and programs which had any
real prospect of increasing employment.
We argued that the Chairman's draft report, as initially presented
to us (and still largely unmodified in the final draft), needed
major revision. In fact, much of the report is little more than a
catalogue of case studies which could have formed the starting
point for sound deductions about future directions for effective
policy development but instead are simply presented without
coherent analysis.
The majority report appears to accept untested assertions about
various programs and public relations assertions from the privates
sector if they are as persuasive as carefully constructed
evaluations. Government department and agency claims about the
effectiveness of various policy settings are often accepted without
question rather than being subjected to reasonable critical
scrutiny. The purpose of the report, after all, was to try to find
out what really worked. Our constructive suggestions along these
lines and our request for a major revision of the report so that we
could achieve unanimity were initially accepted but later refused
on what we believe to be spuriously imposed deadlines that
prevented such revision.
After almost three years of hearings, including many witnesses, 137
submissions and travel to every corner of the continent, the
conclusions are disappointingly shallow. We argue that the findings
and recommendations presented to us in the draft report and
accepted by government members fall so far short of what is needed
as to constitute an insult to the many people who spoke to us.
Sadly, given the resources at our disposal and the now truncated
reporting timeline, the Labor members are not in a position to
write a comprehensive report which fully addresses these problems,
but we can point to areas where a future government should act. We
can also briefly review what is known about the effectiveness of
the programs which constitute the government's Indigenous
Employment Policy.
Evaluation: What works?
In setting the terms of reference, the Committee deliberately
set out to try to avoid simply restating the often reported deficit
in employment opportunities for Indigenous Australians but rather
to ascertain what programs and strategies actually succeeded in
increasing employment and what, if anything, could be learned from
these successes - what factors were predictive of success, what
program elements or interventions were most useful and where
resources could most effectively be allocated.
While we did not intend to ignore program failures and obstacles to
improvement, we did try to shift the focus to discerning the
possible reasons for the lower participation and higher
unemployment - the impediments - which successful programs should
seek to overcome. Labor members were disappointed that these
intentions are not clearly reflected in the majority report. We
recognise that this was always going to be a difficult task not
least because of the relative lack of rigorous evaluation, the lack
of continuity in government programs and the lack of clarity about
the objectives of economic development and labour market programs
targeting Indigenous people. Pointing out such deficiencies would
have assisted future policy makers - if they were inclined to take
any notice of committee reports.
As well as the broad question of what works to increase Indigenous
employment, the Labor members suggested that the committee should
seek to ascertain whether what works varies from place to place and
community to community. It seemed vital to us that in reporting our
findings we should test the validity of claims made about various
programs and approaches, including by the government and its
agencies, and to accord greater weight to hard data rather than
assertion or pious hopes.
We also suggested that in reporting the results of our inquiry we
should try to distil from the evidence we had been given an
understanding of what economic development settings seem to be
successful in generating new opportunities for indigenous people,
what maintains employment for those already in the workforce, what
improves labour market readiness and what helps overcome the
obvious obstacles that indigenous people face. In particular, we
suggested that these questions should be examined as a structural
or systemic level as well as for individually targeted
interventions. In the first case, it seemed sensible to ascertain
the effectiveness of:
- ensuring that Indigenous people are involved in the planning
and implementation of economic development and employment programs
which affect them;
- setting employment targets for Indigenous people in the public
and private sectors;
- providing financial incentives to employers;
- including Indigenous employment obligations in government
contracts and agreements with the private sector;
- Indigenous specific employment strategies (national, state and
local government) versus "mainstreaming";
- policies incorporating recognition
of the "customary"6 sector -
including art, wildlife harvesting and heritage and natural
resource management in economic development in remote
communities;
- programs to train and employ Indigenous people to replace
non-Indigenous workers in providing core services to Indigenous
communities;
- supplementing CDEP programs to provide services in education,
health, construction, maintenance, community order, conservation
and cultural activities;
- increasing access to land and capital, including through Native
Title land use agreements, the Indigenous Land Council and
Indigenous Small Business Fund;
- anti-discrimination and promotion programs to potential
employers on the benefits of employing Indigenous workers; and
- modifying working conditions to accommodate cultural
differences and distance constraints.
Similar assessment should also have been made of interventions
aimed at changing individual behaviour and capacity such as
education, training and work readiness programs, mentoring, small
business development assistance, leadership programs and, as the
terms of reference required, some evaluation of the contribution,
if any, of the changes introduced under the rubric of "practical
reconciliation" to improving Indigenous employment. Given the
government's major shifts in policy direction including the
abolition of ATSIC, the transfer of CDEP to DEWR, the introduction
of mutual obligation and shared responsibility agreements and the
"mainstreaming" of services to Indigenous people, it is reasonable
to ask whether they have yet produced any measurable benefits.
Indigenous Employment Policy
While we are not in a position to fully assess the questions
outlined above, the evidence presented to the committee and
available on the public record allows us to indicate some possible
mechanisms for expanding indigenous employment, especially in
remote and regional communities which have been the focus of recent
government attention.
Any such attempt should begin with the published research. Due to
data limitations, our knowledge of what does and does not work in
overcoming Indigenous disadvantage in the labour market is very
limited since there are few rigorous analyses of those data. In
2004-5, labour force participation of Indigenous people was about
three quarters of that of non-Indigenous people, while the
unemployment rate was about three times the rate of the rest of the
community. Many are long-term unemployed. Overall, the employment
rate for the Indigenous working age population is barely more than
50% including the approximately 36,000 CDEP participants.
The major government program in this
area is the Indigenous Employment Policy announced 1999. This is a
composite of several programs, encompassing a range of
Indigenous-specific programs such as CDEP as well as Indigenous
access to mainstream employment programs. It now has three main
elements: the Job Network, the Indigenous Small Business Fund and
the Indigenous Employment Program (IEP) whose key sub-programs are
listed in Attachment 1.7 We briefly
review the success of these interventions which are the primary
vehicles for the Commonwealth Government's "practical
reconciliation" agenda.
Since the point of the inquiry was to inform policy development, it
seemed important to us that we begin with the state of play. The
government has used both system wide data and post-program
employment rates to argue that there has been an improvement for
Indigenous Australians since the introduction of this policy
framework devised as part of the government's shift to so-called
"practical reconciliation". While the majority report repeats the
view of DEWR that there have been improvements in Indigenous
employment, there is no attempt to assess whether at a time of such
low national levels of unemployment and labour shortages, the
relative position of indigenous people has significantly
improved.
Census data show that the unemployment
rate for Indigenous Australians did fall between 1996 and 2001 from
22.7% to 20% (it has since fallen further, although the 2006 Census
data which would allow like with like comparisons are not yet
available). Without additional information it is difficult to
determine how much of this improvement would have occurred in any
event and whether the changes can be attributed to the policy
itself. While it does appear that the Indigenous labour force
participation rose between 1996 and 2005, the increase was small -
from 52.7% to 54% compared to the non-Indigenous population
increase from 61.9% to 73.3%.8 The
majority report does not untangle whether the increases were due to
increases in CDEP participation or in open employment and why
Indigenous people appear not to have increased their engagement in
the Labour market at the same rate as non-Indigenous
Australians.
The most recent major review of
Indigenous employment programs suggests that "the unemployment rate
for Indigenous Australians would appear to be more to related to
the general improvement in labour market conditions."9 The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) Labour
Force Survey shows that over the same period (1996- 2001) the total
unemployment rate for Australia fell from 8.2% to 6.1%, a greater
fall in relative terms, than that experienced by Indigenous
Australians.
In general, it seems that a number of indigenous specific programs
have been effective in boosting employment. Dockery and Milsom
concluded that,
"patchy as it is, the evidence suggests that a mix of
on-the-job work experience, achieved through wage subsidies or
brokered placements, combined with other appropriate support such
as mentoring and training, offers the most successful approach to
achieving market employment outcomes for Indigenous job
seekers"
They further concluded that wage
subsidies were one of the most effective means of assistance.
Research on vocational training programs has also shown superior
outcomes for Indigenous students in Indigenous specific courses
conducted by Indigenous teachers, and when study is undertaken with
Indigenous registered training organisations.10
These conclusions are consistent with
much of the material presented to the Committee in submissions and
hearings. For instance, the Umoona Aged Care Aboriginal Corporation
which is run for and by Aboriginal people pointed to individually
tailored training courses, effective mentoring and the use of CDEP
for work experience as key elements in achieving successful
employment outcomes.11
Community Development Employment Projects (CDEP)
Despite the fact that CDEP
participation forms a significant proportion (36,000 people or
25%)12 of those counted as employed,
the majority report largely avoids the questions of whether CDEP
has a continuing role in providing employment and of the likely
effects of the substantial changes to the CDEP program that
commenced on July as part of the government's 2005 revision of the
Indigenous Economic Development strategy. Nor does it
systematically explore the impact of earlier changes despite the
fact that CDEP is the nation's longest lasting program to assist
Indigenous people to gain work skills and employment and "widely
regarded as one of the most successful."
This is a serious omission since in
very remote Australia only 15% of Indigenous adults are in
mainstream employment, with 42% in CDEP employment. While the
figures are lower in urban and regional Australia, CDEP has been
the vehicle for many community programs and related employment. One
of the "key messages" from Misko's assessment for NCVER of the role
of CDEP in rural and remote communities was that while "the scheme
cannot be expected to solve the problems of employment and
under-employment of Indigenous Australians in the bush or
elsewhere", it "can assist by providing funds to support employers
to provide training and employment for participants" and it
"enables rural and remote communities access to substantial blocks
of funds and resources to customise activities and enterprises and
thus improve the physical and social environments of local
communities".13
The recently introduced changes mean that around 5000 CDEP
participants, principally in urban and regional Australia, will be
moved to STEP and Newstart and the CDEP programs of which they were
a part closed down. In addition, under the current intervention in
the Northern Territory, all CDEP funding has been moved from twelve
month to three month basis and placed under direct government,
rather than community, control. No rationale has been given for
these changes.
Already, many people in urban and regional Australia previously
employed under CDEP programs to provide community services such as
street patrols, support for the victims of domestic violence and
sobering up shelters are now treated as unemployed, with all that
implies. The services they formally provided are now either closed
or much reduced. State governments are being forced to fill some of
these service gaps, at short notice and without consultation or
funding transfers from the Commonwealth government. It seems to be
a classic case of cost shifting. For example in Broome, the closure
of CDEP programs would have resulted in the demise of the Goolari
Media Enterprises, which as the employer of 37 people is the
largest Indigenous employer in Broome and a significant force in
the Indigenous community. But for the $2.13 million funding package
provided by the State government over the next three years,
Goolari, which has been operating for 15 years and as a registered
training organisation which has won numerous State and Commonwealth
government awards for its employment based training in areas such
as radio, screen, broadcastings and events management, would have
closed. Other programs which have lost funds are the PCYC which
provides various programs for troubled Indigenous youth and the
town based women's shelter which helps train workers to assist
women in crisis, principally as a result of abuse. Similar programs
in other States and Territories have also been cut.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Social Justice Commissioner, Tom Calma, in his 2006 Social Justice
Report, attempted to assess the likely impact of these changes.
While allowing, as most commentators do, that there are problems
with CDEP, the Commissioner recognises that the "CDEP scheme plays
a central role in the economic and community life of many discrete
Indigenous communities and rural towns with a significant
Indigenous population."14 Although
the scheme is in some respects a prototype of later "work for the
dole" programs, since it was originally devised to redress the
perceived negative effects flowing from simply providing social
security benefits especially in areas where no formal labour market
existed, it is now seen by some as being part of the problem of
passive welfare.
In its original form, the program provided for unemployment
benefits payable to members of a community to be taken collectively
by the community's council and distributed in return for work
undertaken on projects devised by the community. Over time,
additional funds were provided for project management and
associated capital. The primary emphasis was on community
development which generated employment, not just on individual
employment readiness.
As indicated in the majority report, several witnesses to the
committee indicated that they believed that CDEP funded activities
sometimes drew Indigenous people away from "real jobs" and were
essentially a "dead end" rather than a pathway to long term full
employment. Others have pointed to the fact that CDEP is used to
provide services that should be provided by governments or to
subsidise operations that would otherwise have to pay award wages.
The Waringarri Media Aboriginal Corporation pointed out, for
example, that there is an Indigenous Media Award that should be
paid to all the Indigenous employees in the media instead of CDEP
payments which do not provide any incentive to work because they
are no different from unemployment benefits which are also
available in the same community.
Despite these criticisms, it is clear that CDEP has enabled many
communities to develop valuable community services such at night
patrols, childcare centres and garbage collection which,
disgracefully, would not otherwise be provided and to start up
local businesses which would not otherwise receive capital. As Tom
Calma points out, it has also contributed to the development of
Indigenous businesses, entrepreneurship and leadership in some
communities. The Bawinanga Aboriginal Corporation based in
Maningrida, for example, has hosted a CDEP since 1989 and provides
for support, maintenance and development of 32 surrounding
communities with almost 600 participants. Their emphasis has
steadily shifted toward becoming a regional development
organisation with the goal of achieving economic independence for
the client groups. They make it clear that CDEP plays a critical
role in this process because it has had "the flexibility necessary
for the difficult tasks of growing the regional economy" in an area
where there is no mining, manufacturing or agricultural activity
and where the challenge of "accommodating a willing workforce in
relevant and productive employment requires creative and clever
solutions." The corporation, frustrated in finding other sources of
funding, have used profits from their successful trading
enterprises set up under CDEP to provide seed capital for business
development and to top up wages. This may well represent a
legitimate future direction for CDEP in communities with limited
opportunities for conventional employment. In their submission they
suggest several ways in which CDEP could be improved including
removing access to unemployment benefits (UB) in such communities
(since the simultaneous operation of CDEP and UB destabilises
CDEP), providing business funding linked by formula to CDEP and
providing funding for training and associated capital.
Professor Jon Altman, director of CAEPR, has made similar
suggestions, including the need to enhance links between CDEP
organisations and training providers and to provide realistic
capital and in-cost support. Research undertake by NATSISS and
analysed by CAEPR shows that CDEP organisation can assist
participants with their incomes, enhance working hours, participate
in non-market activities (with direct benefits to individuals and
families) and participate in cultural and ceremonial actives.
Critically, CDEP could be further enhanced to generate employment
in the arts sector, sustainable use of wildlife, natural and
cultural resource management, land and sea management, wildfire
management, carbon abatement, biodiversity conservation, security
and coastal surveillance.
At the moment, the lower CDEP pay rates effectively allow
governments to provide services on the cheap, to the detriment of
continuing, fully waged jobs. Governments, and some communities,
sometimes provide "top ups" to CDEP funded positions in school,
clinics and community services which in other places would be fully
funded positions. As a number of communities have suggested, one
method of securing better levels of Indigenous employment would be
to supplement funds currently directed toward CDEP programs in
Indigenous communities so that full time, appropriately paid jobs
could be offered within those communities. In fact, the government
has introduced a very modest program which does just this. In
2006-7 an annual allocation of $5 million was set aside to create
130 full-time equivalent positions for health worker duties. In its
2007-8 budget under the heading "Building an Indigenous Workforce
in Government Service Delivery, 97.2 million over four years (35.9
diverted from CDEP programs) is set aside to fund 825 jobs across
Australia in environmental and heritage protection, education,
child care, night patrol in indigenous communities and community
care. Labor members believe that a more generously funded program
encompassing a wider range of services, including state and local
government services such as water supply, housing, waste management
and so on, and funded in part by additional commitments from the
states and territories would obviously benefit Indigenous
employment and deliver a standard of services (and the additional
wages income) taken for granted by the rest of the community.
While there are weaknesses in the CDEP, the changes introduced by
the government do not appear to have built in any systematic way on
the documented strengths of the scheme. Nor do they appear to have
taken account of the benefits for Indigenous people's cultural
needs and self-determination aspirations of being in control of
such programs.
Job Network
Much of the recent government
policy emphasis has been on shifting Indigenous people into
mainstream job market programs. Indeed, from July 1 this year, the
urban and regional CDEPs have been closed and participants are
being moved either to STEP or Newstart, to be assisted through the
Job Network. However, the early results from the first round of Job
Network contracts suggested poor servicing of Indigenous job
seekers. While the government sought to address this problem in the
second round of contracts by requiring a greater focus on
specialist services for Indigenous jobseekers, the available
evidence shows that "participation rates for Indigenous people in
Job Network services have remained below target, in contrast to
program commencement rates for Indigenous people under the
Commonwealth Employment Service."15
What's more, despite DEWR's claims to
the Committee about the effectiveness of the job network (p 32 of
the majority report), their own data also show that while Intensive
Assistance providers have improved their effectiveness in getting
Indigenous people into work, the placements are not being
sustained. In 2005-6, only 21% of Indigenous job seekers placed
were still in work at 13 weeks, falling to 16% at 26 weeks. The
following year's figures were no better. This compares with figures
for 2005 from the population at large which show that 59, 46, 39,
and 47 percent of job seekers who commenced Job Search Training,
Customised Assistance, Work for the Dole and Mutual Obligation
respectively, were still in employment 12 months
later.16 The figures for 2006
indicate similar deficits, with total positive outcomes (employment
plus education) for intensive support programs reaching 59% for the
total population and only 39% for Indigenous job seekers.
It should come as no surprise, that
within the suite of Job Network programs, the most successful are
those which are linked with Indigenous people's interests and which
are flexible enough to encompass cultural and family
responsibilities. Research suggests that better results are often
achieved when Indigenous people are involved in service delivery,
perhaps because they are better able to deliver culturally
appropriate assistance. "The accumulated evidence from major
programs suggests that Indigenous-specific programs and wage
subsidy programs in particular are among the more effective forms
of assistance in promoting mainstream employment
outcomes."17 Is not clear whether,
in general, Indigenous people are faring better under the Job
Network than they did under previous labour market programs.
Practical Reconciliation
One of the tasks the committee set itself was to assess what
contribution, if any, "practical reconciliation" had made to any
positive outcomes we identified. This is one area in which the
majority report is clearly deficient; enough time has passed since
the government's shift of policy was announced to allow an
evaluation of the effectiveness of its new approach in tackling
unemployment and several attempts had been made to do so.
Preliminary results are not encouraging. In their evaluation of the
effectiveness of the "practical reconciliation" agenda, the Centre
for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research at the Australian National
University analysed Australian Bureau of Statistics data over a
10-year period from 1991 and concluded that there was no
statistical basis to the claim that "practical reconciliation" is
delivering better outcomes in employment, housing, education,
health or the income status of Indigenous Australians than previous
policies. For example, in four of the five indices of participation
in the labour force, the status of indigenous people relative to
the rest of the population appeared to have declined. Their median
income had also fallen, as had the ratio of Indigenous to
non-Indigenous participation in tertiary education. Census data to
be released later this year will allow further evaluation of any
trends. Since the abolition of ATSIC and the transfer of some its
responsibilities (including CDEP) to DEWR, the government has been
in complete control of its agenda. The results to date are not
encouraging.
In looking at the reasons why "practical reconciliation" does not
appear to have improved the wellbeing of Indigenous Australians,
the authors of the above review, Altman and Hunter, argue pointedly
that:
"One of the major problems with the practical reconciliation
agenda is that it fails to recognise that many of the practical
outcomes highlighted are driven, directly and indirectly, by
social, cultural and spiritual needs".
In a by now familiar response to criticism, the government invested
public funds in contracting a firm with close links to the
conservative think tank, CIS, to undertake a critique of the CAEPR
work. This attempt to discredit the authors continued despite the
fact that the Altman and Hunter paper was refereed by peers and
published in a reputable economics journal. Although it has enjoyed
significant public sector support for over 15 years and despite the
conclusion by independent reviewers that CAEPR is "the only major
grouping of researchers having expertise and producing sustained
quality research in the broad field of Indigenous economic and
social policy in Australia at a present", Government core funding
was cut at the end of 2005 and the government continues to ignore
their research findings.
Conclusion
There is little disagreement that improving the wellbeing of
Indigenous people depends, at least in part, on reducing material
poverty. A key to such improvement lies in programs and initiatives
which increase sustainable employment. It is disappointing that the
evidence to date does not allow any firm conclusions about the
necessary components of effective interventions and how they might
need to be adapted for different communities. Equally disappointing
is the failure by government policy makers to confront the complex
- and contentious - questions. For instance, it appears to be taken
as read that all Indigenous people naturally desire the lifestyle
and values that come with economic integration and that if they
don't a carrot and stick approach will be effective in achieving
such integration. As Tom Calma argued in his recent report to
government:
"The compliance mentality that
currently permeates Indigenous policy making processes does not
address [the] full sweep of issues. It is an increasingly punitive
framework that cherry picks issues and neglects important essential
characteristics for good policy."18
The Hon Dr Carmen Lawrence MP
Ms Annette Ellis MP
Mr Peter Garrett MP
The Hon Warren Snowdon MP
Attachment 1
The Indigenous Employment Programme (As described
in NCVER Report)
Community Development Employment Projects Placement
Incentive
Promotes the Community Development Employment Projects scheme as a
staging post for Indigenous participants to move from developing
their work skills into the mainstream labour market. The Incentive
provides a $2200 bonus to Community Development Employment Project
sponsors for each placement of a participant in a job external to
the program and off program wages. That job must be for at least 15
hours per week.
Corporate Leaders for Indigenous Employment Project
A partnership between companies and the Commonwealth Government
whereby companies commit to employing Indigenous people and the
Commonwealth provides access to flexible funding for that purpose.
Companies can design an employment project or strategy to suit
their own business environment and access a mix of assistance under
the Indigenous Employment Policy. The underlying aim is to
encourage and assist Australian companies to generate more jobs for
Indigenous Australians and provide equal opportunities for them in
the private sector.
Wage Assistance
This is an aid to Indigenous job seekers to find long term
employment, either through Job Network or their own endeavours,
using an eligibility card. To be eligible, job seekers must be
registered as looking for work with Centrelink and in receipt of an
income support payment, including Community Development Employment
Project wages. Employers can receive up to $4400 over a 26 week
period to assist with costs.
Structured Training and Employment Projects
This project provides flexible financial assistance to businesses
which offer structured training such as apprenticeships that lead
to lasting employment opportunities for Indigenous job seekers.
While the Government's focus is to increase jobs in the private
sector people, funding is also provided to community and public
sector organisations.
Structured Training and Employment Program funding is negotiated
directly with the employers and projects can involve differing
levels of training including job training, apprenticeships and
traineeships, depending on the needs of the employer. Funding is
also available to organisations that train participants then place
them with employers, but such intermediaries are expected to
demonstrate they offer special skills not otherwise available from
local employers.
National Indigenous Cadetship Project
Provides support to companies prepared to sponsor Indigenous
tertiary students as cadets. Employers pay cadets a study allowance
while they attend full-time study in an approved course and then
provide paid work experience during long vacation breaks. The
Department of Employment and Workplace Relations reimburses
employers to a certain limit for study allowance. Participating
employers are expected to offer their cadets full-time employment
at the conclusion of their cadetship and study. Through this model,
the organisation gains a professionally qualified employee who has
worked in and understands their organisation.
Indigenous Small Business Fund
This can fund Indigenous organisations to assist Indigenous people
to learn about business, develop good business skills and expand
their business, as well as funding individuals for the development
of business ideas with potential.
Indigenous Employment Centres (abolished 2007)
The establishment of Indigenous Employment Centres was announced in
the 2001-02 budget to augment the Community Development Employment
Projects Placement Initiative in assisting Community Development
Employment Project participants find external employment. The
Centres are based on work preparation trials and operated by
program organisations 'in areas with job opportunities'. The first
Centres began operation in April 2002 and by 30 September 2003 had
assisted more than 1,700 participants and placed in excess of 400
people into employment.
The Voluntary Service to Indigenous Communities
This Service matches skilled volunteers with the needs of
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. |