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- The positive effect that education has on an individual’s
economic outcomes, particularly employment and income, has been
well established. Results from the 2006 Census show that Indigenous
peoples aged 15 years and over with higher levels of schooling were
more likely than those with lower levels of school attainment to be
in full-time employment. [1]
- This report has discussed in earlier chapters the extent to
which many areas of Indigenous disadvantage are interrelated.
Statistics indicate that Indigenous Australians have higher levels
of unemployment compared to non-Indigenous Australians.
- More specifically, a large gap is evident in labour force
participation rates for people aged 15-64 is evident when comparing
Indigenous and non-Indigenous rates. In 2006, 57 percent of the
Indigenous population in this age group was participating in the
labour force compared with 76 percent of the non-Indigenous
population. In addition, labour force participation rates for
Indigenous peoples declines with remoteness, with a 57percent
participation rate in major cities compared with 46 percent in very
remote areas.[2]
- The data collected from the Australian Bureau of Statistics
reveals that the high offending levels in Indigenous communities
correlate with high unemployment rates.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) National Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey 2002 data reveals that
Indigenous people who had been charged with an offence were around
twice as likely to be unemployed as the rest of the Indigenous
population.[3]
- The North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency (NAAJA) was
critical of the lack of support available to Indigenous youth
transitioning from education to work. In its submission NAAJA
commented:
Increased employment opportunities in Aboriginal communities
could assist in developing social norms and behaviours that lead to
positive social engagement. The lack of genuine employment
opportunities for Aboriginal people generally, and young people in
particular, is manifest. There are no clear pathways to post-school
employment in Northern Territory Aboriginal communities.[4]
- This chapter discusses the current Commonwealth and State and
Territory Government strategies that are in place to assist
Indigenous Australians to transition more effectively from
education and training to the workforce. It also examines some of
the community enterprises and non-government organisations (NGO)
which are working to provide employment opportunities for
Indigenous youth. However Indigenous youth face a number of
obstacles when transitioning from education to employment and the
chapter concludes with a discussion of education needs, work
readiness skills, driver licences and the availability of
employment in local areas.
Government initiatives
- Through Closing the Gap the Commonwealth Government funds a
number of initiatives to assist Indigenous youth to transition into
employment. Some transition programs are administered through the
Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR)
or the Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and
Indigenous Affairs (FaHCSIA), while others provide funding to local
community enterprises to deliver services.
Commonwealth Government and COAG
- The Council of Australian Governments (COAG) has identified
employment as one of its targets for Closing the Gap. The target is
to ‘Halve the gap in employment outcomes between Indigenous
and non-Indigenous Australians by 2018.’[5]
- The Prime Ministers Report on Closing the Gap 2011 stated that
there was some progress being made in relation to increasing the
percentage of Indigenous Australians employed in the 15-64 age
group:
In 2008, 53.8 per cent of Indigenous Australians aged 15-64 were
employed compared to 75 per cent of non-Indigenous Australians in
the same age group. While this gap is relatively wide there are
some positive developments in this field. For example, between 2002
and 2008 the proportion of Indigenous Australians aged 15-64 with a
job rose from 48.2 per cent to 53.8 per cent and the unemployment
rate for Indigenous Australians aged 15-64 decreased from 23 per
cent to 16.6 per cent.[6]
- DEEWR has direct responsibility for four of the six Closing the
Gap targets and informed the Committee of the need to increase the
number of Indigenous enrolments and commencements with higher
education in order to improve the transition of Indigenous people
from education to employment.
Indigenous students are significantly under-represented in
higher education and face distinct challenges. The statistics show
that despite comprising 2.5 per cent of the total resident
Australian population, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander higher
education students comprised less than one per cent of all
enrolments in 2008 and 1 per cent of commencements.[7]
- The National Partnership on Youth Attainment and Transitions is
an intergovernmental agreement that aims to increase participation
of young people in education and training, assist young people make
a successful transition from school to further education, training
or full-time employment, and increase attainment of Year 12 or
equivalent qualifications of young people aged 15-24, including
Indigenous young people.[8]
- DEEWR is supporting the Commonwealth Government’s
contribution to the National Partnership through two new programs,
Youth Connections and School Business Community Partnership Brokers
to be delivered across 113 designated service regions over a four
year period.[9]
- The Youth Connections program provides an improved safety net
for young people who have disengaged from education through the
provision of individually tailored case management and support to
help young people re-connect with education and training.[10]
- The School Business Community Partnerships Brokers objective is
to facilitate stakeholder engagement, build community capacity and
infrastructure and drive the Commonwealth Government’s
education reform and social inclusion agendas to improve education
and transition outcomes for all young people.[11]
- DEEWR commented it was aware that it had to work ‘closely
with state and territory governments to implement these programs,
including reducing overlap and duplication between programs and
assistance, and making it easier for young people to access the
assistance they need.’[12]
- In February 2010 the Commonwealth Government hosted a Business
Leaders Forum to share ideas on Indigenous employment strategies.
In a media release the Minister for Employment Participation
Senator Arbib commented:
This event provides an excellent forum for business leaders to
come together to network, share ideas and knowledge, and show their
commitment to increasing employment opportunities for Indigenous
Australians. Representatives from Indigenous businesses, major
banks, top law firms, major retailers, large mining and resource
companies, transport organisations and media and communications
companies will join government to share their ideas and
successes.[13]
- DEEWR administers a number of programs that assist Indigenous
young people exiting the criminal justice system with initiatives
to help maximise employment opportunities. In the Northern
Territory, a Job Services Australia provider works closely with the
local high school and also the Alice Springs Correctional Centre.
The provider has engaged with local high school principals to
identify and work with young people who are either at risk of
dropping out of school or leaving school without a further
education or employment option.
- In addition the provider has engaged with Northern Territory
Families and Community Services (FACS) to discuss how together they
can provide support to young people returning to Alice Springs
after they have served their custodial period in the Don Dale
Juvenile Centre in Darwin.[14]
- Another initiative administered by DEEWR is the National Green
Jobs Core program. DEEWR stated that:
The Government will invest up to $82.5 million in National Green
Jobs Corps. Commencing on 1 January 2010 and finishing on 31
December 2011, National Green Jobs Corps will offer 10,000 places
for unemployed Australians aged 17 to 24 years to gain a
combination of environmental work experience, skills development
and accredited training. National Green Jobs Corps will help equip
young Australians with the skills to fill employment opportunities
in emerging green and climate change related industries. The
program will provide additional participation opportunities for
young people who struggle to engage with and remain in education or
training.[15]
- DEEWR is responsible for the Innovation Fund Projects. The
Innovation Fund is a competitive grants program designed to address
the needs of the most disadvantaged job seekers through funding
projects that will foster innovative solutions to overcome barriers
to employment which these job seekers face.
- The objective of the Innovation Fund is to fund innovative
place-based solutions to address barriers to employment for groups
of the most disadvantaged job seekers. Round One of the Innovation
Fund has two projects which are directed specifically at
ex-offenders, while Round Two of the Innovation Fund has one
project directed at ex-offenders.[16]
- Remote Service Delivery National Partnership is supported by
FaHCSIA. One of the five aims of the Partnership is to
‘increase economic and social participation wherever
possible, and promote personal responsibility, engagement and
behaviours consistent with positive social norms.’[17]
- FaHCSIA supports the Infrastructure and Youth Programs in
Central Australia. This component aims to provide learning and
recreational activities and infrastructure to support young people,
while building community capacity through training and employment
opportunities. Approximately $6.5 million was spent on 15 projects
across communities in the Northern Territory over 2008-09.[18]
State and Territory governments
- The Committee received submissions from a majority of state and
territory governments that outlined policy and program initiatives
that aim to improve the effectiveness of arrangements for
transitioning from education to work.
Queensland
- In 2006 the Queensland Government introduced a 'compulsory
participation' requirement meaning that all young people must
participate in 'learning or earning':
- for two years after they complete compulsory schooling (i.e.
completed year 10 or turned 16 years of age) or
- until they turn 17 years of age or
- until they complete a Queensland Certificate of Education (or
Queensland Certificate of Individual Achievement), Senior Statement
or a Certificate III or IV vocational qualification.
- These changes are based on national and international evidence
that young people who complete 12 years of education have greater
opportunities for further education and sustainable employment.
Queensland Government agencies have also implemented several
initiatives to address barriers to access and improve outcomes for
young people, including Indigenous young people, transitioning from
education to work. Programs operate to address specific educational
need of Indigenous young people depending on the needs of the
region. Examples of programs are provided below:
- The Taking Big Steps program is a culturally specific and
inclusive transition program developed primarily for young
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples living in North
Queensland which seeks to increase young people's awareness and
understanding of issues associated with moving from a rural and
remote community to regional or urban areas for secondary
education.
- Student learning pathways, which include vocational education
and training, school-based apprenticeships, traineeships and
work-readiness programs.
- The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education Toward
Employment Scholarship Scheme which encourages Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander students to complete Years 10, 11 and 12 or
alternate school-based training and provide scholarship recipients
with financial support for expenses related to education and
training.
- The Get Set for Work Project to address young people's learning
needs for those who leave or are at risk of leaving school
early.
- Western Cape College Work-Readiness Program to help Indigenous
students prepare for an employment pathway through hands-on
activities that utilise skills in the areas of building and
construction, landscaping and maintenance and hospitality.
- The Palm Island Senior Phase Program which provides a
vocationally oriented curriculum, focusing particularly on literacy
and numeracy, for the young people of Palm Island.
- The Aboriginal Centre for the Performing Arts provides training
to aspiring Indigenous performing artists and assists them in
establishing their careers.
- Indigenous Vocational Education and Training Initiatives which
have funded two Indigenous registered training organisations to
provide training in the areas of alcohol (and other addictions)
management, community services and community development.
- The Justice Entry Program which provides pathways for
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community members wishing to
pursue careers in the criminal justice system.[19]
- The recently released Queensland Government's Positive
Dreaming, Solid Futures - Indigenous Employment and Training
Strategy 2008-2011, provides a new framework for the delivery of
employment and training services to Indigenous people in the state.
The strategy is designed to address a number of priorities aimed at
improving outcomes for Indigenous Queenslanders in the area of
vocational education and training.
New South Wales
- The New South Wales Government submission outlined what the
state was doing to support economic development and employment for
Indigenous Australians. Its comments were prefaced with statistics
showing that New South Wales has the highest number of Indigenous
Australians out of all the states and territories.
- While approximately 32 percent of the New South Wales
Aboriginal population lives in Sydney, it is clear that many New
South Wales regional towns are experiencing significant immigration
of Aboriginal people (Taree, Armidale, Lithgow, Griffith, Dubbo,
Wagga Wagga and Broken Hill particularly) drawn mainly from western
and northern areas of New South Wales.
- Many of these regional towns are characterised by low levels of
Aboriginal employment, low education outcomes, poor health outcomes
and higher levels of engagement with the criminal justice
system.
- Addressing Aboriginal economic development is one of the seven
priority areas identified under the New South Wales Aboriginal
Affairs Plan, Two Ways Together and New South Wales agencies are
developing a New South Wales Aboriginal Economic Development
Policy.[20]
- The New South Wales Department of Education and Training's has
identified key strategies relating to the improvement of economic
opportunities for Aboriginal people. These include:
- offering a broader range of quality education and training
options for students in the senior years
- providing more school based apprenticeships and traineeships,
and
- targeting specific population groups for increased
participation and implement workforce re-entry initiatives.[21]
Victoria
- The Victorian Koori Early School leavers and Youth Employment
program aims to divert young Aboriginal people from the Youth
Justice System. It addresses the key risk factors for young
offenders, focussing on the lack of engagement in school or other
learning opportunities. This program aims to divert young Koories
aged 10-20 from the youth justice system once they have entered it,
by supporting and re engaging young Koori people into vocational
education or employment.[22]
- The Frontline Youth Initiatives Grant Program aims to engage
Koori children and youth at risk of contact with the criminal
justice system in socially and physically healthy alternatives to
offending. Projects considered for funding under Frontline are
primarily community based initiatives that promote healthy and
pro-social lifestyles for children and youth, thereby reducing
contact with the criminal justice system.
- Since inception approximately 670 young Koories have been
involved in the Frontline program, with more than 1,000 community
members involved in associated activities. A 2008 survey sample of
283 participants engaged in nine projects indicated that Frontline
delivered positive impacts for participants, including:
- one in four returned to education or training programs
- eight per cent secured new ongoing employment
- of 31 young people with prior negative contact with the
criminal justice system, only five had further contact, and
- none of the 'at-risk' youth participants had negative contact
with the criminal justice system during their engagement with
Frontline projects.[23]
Western Australia
- At the time of the Western Australian Aboriginal Child Health
(WAACH) Survey, school attendance in Western Australia was
compulsory through to the end of the school year in which children
turned 15 years of age. The school leaving age in Western Australia
has since changed and young people are now required to be engaged
in school, employment, apprenticeships or traineeships, or another
approved option until the end of the year they turn 17.[24]
- The Western Australia Aboriginal School Based Training (ASBT)
Program provides Aboriginal students in Years 10-12 with
opportunities to start training in school to access practical work
experience, gain a qualification, and go on to further education,
training or employment. Certificate I preparatory programs are
followed by an assessment of students' work readiness at the end of
Year 10.
- Students are then offered school-based traineeships or
apprenticeships, or full-time traineeships or apprenticeships.
Group training organisations are contracted to coordinate Year 10
Certificate 1 programs, employ students entering into
apprenticeships or traineeships, and arrange mentoring and other
support for the participants.[25]
South Australia
- Within South Australia’s Department of Education and
Children’s Services (DECS), the Aboriginal Education and
Employment Services has taken the lead role in developing an
integrated pathways program that links DECS secondary transition
programs to Aboriginal specific projects to support post secondary
training, higher education and pathways leading to employment. The
work plan identifies a special project trial during 2009 in Port
Augusta and the Northern Suburbs of Adelaide centred on a model
known as the 'WORKABOUT Centre’.
- The Centre aims to engage Aboriginal community in educational
and employment pathways, building relationships between education,
industry, organisations, and Aboriginal communities to create a
culture of sustainable employment and retention in the work force.
The Centre implements mentoring, counselling, tutoring and
work-readiness strategies that provides intensive culturally
inclusive support to Aboriginal young people from the commencement
of secondary schooling into post school pathways.
- 'Playing the Job Game' is an Aboriginal secondary education
work-readiness program, which develops individual skill sets and
career aspirations for Aboriginal secondary students focusing on
local economic development and industry skill shortage
areas.[26]
Tasmania
- The Tasmanian Government’s submission outlines a project
that is part of the Youth at Risk Strategy. Project U-Turn is a
diversionary program for young people aged 15-20 years with a
history of motor vehicle theft, or who are at risk of becoming
involved in motor vehicle theft. The core component of the program
is a structured ten-week automotive training course in car
maintenance and body work, delivered in a workshop environment.
Other components of the program include: case management and
personal development; links to employment and further education;
recreational activities; literacy and numeracy education; road
safety education and post-course support. Project U-turn is not
specifically for Indigenous young offenders, however a number of
participants report Aboriginality.[27]
- The Justice Mentoring Service is a pre and post release program
that aims to assist Aboriginal prisoners with their reintegration.
Mentors typically begin working with participants around their
housing, employment and general support needs three months before
their release and this continues for six months post
release.[28]
Northern Territory
- The Department of Education and Training (DET) offers VET
(Vocational Education and Training) in The Middle program to middle
year students, to provide entry into Certificate 1
Qualifications.
- DET offers the Get VET get a future program, to provide
training from Certificate 1 to Certificate 3 qualifications to
students in Urban, Remote and Regional areas. In 2010 DET expanded
the successful Work Ready program to three remote communities. DET
coordinate a cross-sectoral team of industry engagement and
participation officers and managers to facilitate work placement
for students in all Territory schools.[29]
- The Northern Territory Government also supports TRY (training
for remote youth) whereby funding applications are sought from
communities for specific programs for disengaged youth .The program
funds both accredited and non-accredited training.
- FRF (flexible response funding) applications are sought from
communities for specific programs. The program funds both
accredited and non-accredited training. Pre
Employment/Pre-apprenticeship program. This training is
specifically targeted at direct employment pathways .The program
funds both accredited and non-accredited training.[30]
Local and NGO employment initiatives
- The connection between unemployment and a heightened risk of
offending is well established and the real challenge is to work out
how to make employment opportunities accessible to Indigenous
Australians.
- The Committee received evidence from several witnesses who
either had innovative solutions in place or were in the process of
developing Indigenous run businesses that would provide positive
employment opportunities for Indigenous Australians.
- A Tasmanian example of successful local employment initiative
is the meenah mienne (which means 'my dream') mentoring program
which builds supportive local networks by fostering mentoring
relationships between disadvantaged young Aboriginal people, who
are already - or are at high risk of being - in juvenile detention,
and Aboriginal mentors and cultural practitioners in Northern
Tasmania. The project is part funded by FaHCSIA under an agreement
between two tiers of government and the Tasmanian Aboriginal
community.
- The program offers young Indigenous people opportunities to
reconnect and engage with members of their community as well as
offering the chance to ‘discover alternative pathways into
education and employment.’[31]
- The meenah mienne submission stated that the preliminary
results of this approach have been encouraging. Since becoming
operational less than a year ago, three young Aboriginal 'buddies'
have pursued employment and further educational opportunities.
Further, more than 20 young Aboriginal people referred from local
schools (high-risk students) and the Ashley Youth Detention Centre
are voluntarily and actively participating in the program.[32]
- Demand for the meenah mienne mentoring program from high risk
juvenile Aboriginals has far outstripped mentor capacity at this
early stage in the program. The meenah mienne submission stated
that ‘Additional mentors are currently being
trained.’[33]
- The Youth Justice Aboriginal Advisory Committee, South
Australia, also supported the contribution that Aboriginal mentors
can play in addressing and supporting complex needs within
families. This can also provide business and employment
opportunities for Indigenous people.
We have an example, which is the MAYFS Taikurtinna Maltorendi
program, a holistic family case management service; prioritising
the employment of Aboriginal mentors for one-on-one support for
young people, and also family mentors.[34]
- The Inala Men’s Shed program being run by the Queensland
Police Service is a ‘mentoring program that aims to link
young people with a group of volunteer men who are retired
tradespeople who can act as role models around life and work
skills.[35]
- Banbai Business Enterprises (BBE) management of the
Wattleridge[36]
Indigenous Protected Area is an example of how local land
management can generate employment and provide economic
independence.
- The Wattleridge Indigenous Protected Area has at least 15 rare
or endangered plant species and 12 rare or threatened fauna. It is
managed by the traditional owners, who are undertaking major pest
management and fire management strategies, and managing the
cultural heritage sites on it. The community is also developing a
native plant propagation nursery, training people in horticulture,
and establishing seed banks and restoring degraded land through
revegetation.[37]
- The owners of Wattleridge are aiming to make the property
educationally and financially viable, and are developing small
businesses to help promote culturally significant employment and
generate additional funds for conservation. They are upgrading
cabins, building walking tracks, viewing platforms, and developing
interpretation signage to foster eco-tourism. They plan for this
tourism venture to grow and provide income, employment and further
infrastructure development. [38]
- The Guyra Central School allows two of its Aboriginal students,
one in Year 11 and the other in Year 9, to spend time each week
with BBE doing the Conservation and Land Management Certificate IV
course as an incentive to stay at school and complete Year 12 and
Year 10 respectively. This cooperative approach between school,
TAFE and community enterprise is having multiple benefits for the
area.
- As a result of Banbai Business Enterprises:
... crime rates have dropped, drug and alcohol use has reduced
and young people "at risk" are being given opportunities to
contribute, learn and gain longer-term opportunities for further
education or employment.[39]
- A review of the people who have worked with Banbai Business
Enterprises since its inception reveals that the organisation has
employed 43 people over the ten year period. Only one was
non-Indigenous.[40]
- Another example of a successful employment initiative is
Aboriginal Connections (AC) which was created as an independent
company in 2003, wholly owned by Guri Wa Ngundagar Aboriginal
Corporation (GWNAC). AC is a registered business in New South Wales
and is overseen by a Board of Directors. Two of the three board
members are Indigenous Australians and of the 47 employees, 76% are
Indigenous.
- AC has operated for the past six years specialising in the
construction of public housing, schools and other state and federal
government capital works projects. AC also builds for the private
sector market. The company is strongly focused on providing
training and employment for Indigenous Australians. AC's mission is
to unite effective quality training outcomes with the construction
of quality housing for both the Indigenous and mainstream building
markets. AC is currently looking at expanding its operations in
order to create new employment opportunities for Indigenous
Australians in New South Wales.[41]
- The Committee heard from three organisations who called
themselves the Partners and have significant experience in working
with young Indigenous offenders. The Partners have agreed to
collaborate and offer a potential solution to the growing issue of
Indigenous people remaining in the criminal justice system.
Ultimately, the aim of the program would be to demonstrate that
there are better ways forward in life that individuals are capable
of achieving, and that there are career opportunities available to
them.[42]
- Under the program, the Partners would recruit and train
eligible young Indigenous offenders to undertake contact centre
work on behalf of participating business-to-business (B2B) clients
while serving their prison or detention term, with a view to
offering them permanent employment and a structured career path
upon their release.[43]
- The Partners believe their ‘proposed initiatives will
significantly grow employment opportunities to reduce young
Indigenous people's involvement with the criminal justice system;
and support the diversion of these Indigenous people from
re-offending’.[44]
- Training and employment programs were discussed at a public
hearing in Fitzroy Crossing that focussed on jobs in the Kimberly
region. One example was provided in relation to a junior ranger
program:
... we work with young people and then we work with our sister
organisation, the Kimberley Land Council, and try to get those
young people employed in productive work such as Indigenous ranger
employment. So we have the two-week program that we run and then,
looking at that longer term relationship, our ongoing intervention
into that young person’s life. We have done that for eight or
nine years.[45]
- The Central Australian Youth Link-Up Service (CAYLUS) informed
the Committee about the Central Land Council Ranger program which
provides employment opportunities for local Indigenous people.
Ranger programs use traditional and modern land management
practices to restore and protect important ecosystems. CAYLUS
highlighted the fact that this type of work is often suited to
Indigenous people living in remote areas as the ‘work
undertaken by Rangers involves living and working in Indigenous
areas, and understanding local ecological and environmental
factors.’[46]
Recently, CAYLUS assisted the Central Land Council in community
negotiations to implement a ranger program in the Papunya community
in 2010.[47]
- The Central Land Council (CLC) received $5.1 million from the
Aboriginals Benefit Account[48] to improve and expand an Aboriginal ranger
program which has successfully developed and established ranger
groups in seven remote locations across Central Australia over the
past five years.
- The success of this ranger program has generated further
employment opportunities as the CLC ranger groups have also
undertaken contracts with the Northern Territory Parks and Wildlife
Service and the mining industry for work including track
maintenance, fencing and camp-ground development.[49]
Committee comment
- The Committee is encouraged by the recognition throughout
Australia of the value of mentoring programs for Indigenous people.
Mentoring programs are proving to be an effective way of
facilitating change. The Committee believes that Indigenous mentors
will provide part of the solution to improving both education and
employment outcomes for Indigenous people.
- The evidence regarding the Indigenous employment initiatives
that the Committee received was encouraging. The success of these
local enterprises demonstrates the commitment of individuals and
communities often working at the local level and able to achieve
positive change for Indigenous youth.
- The Committee was impressed with the successful education and
employment outcomes of the Banbai Enterprises as it encouraged
Indigenous students to stay in education for longer and it
developed Indigenous employment in a regional part of Australia.
The Committee recognises the hard work and leadership undertaken by
Banbai Enterprises to make this work by developing partnerships
with the local school and TAFE.
- The Committee encourages all new and developing Indigenous
initiatives that support employment opportunities for Indigenous
youth to develop strong partnerships with stakeholders in order to
provide the additional support that will be required to achieve
success.
- Indigenous Ranger programs are another successful employment
example of local employment initiatives that capitalise on
Indigenous cultural knowledge. Often these programs are carried out
in regional and remote areas, where employment opportunities are
limited. The Committee was encouraged to learn that the Central
Land Councils Ranger Program had lead to further employment
opportunities with the Northern Territory Government.
- The Committee notes that the Commonwealth Government have
funded $245.5 million until 2013 for the Working on Country program
with the Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water
Population and Communities. Working on Country supports the
Indigenous ranger programs.
Obstacles to employment
- While there is substantial investment from Commonwealth and
State and Territory governments in employment and transition to
employment programs, Indigenous workforce participation rates
remain low. There remain substantial obstacles to placing
Indigenous youth in employment, and to assisting them to retain
jobs in the long term.
- The following section examines some of these significant
obstacles, such as educational attainment, work readiness skills,
holding a driver licence, and the availability of types of
employment.
Education
- Statistically Indigenous Australians have lower education
attainment levels than non-Indigenous Australians. The correlation
between education and employment is well understood demonstrating
that the higher the level of education achieved by an individual
the more likely they are to obtain employment.
- The Committee received substantial evidence that low
educational attainment is an obstacle to gaining employment. The
need to improve educational outcomes for Indigenous Australians was
discussed in chapter 5 of this report.
- While the participation rates of Indigenous people in the
labour force have demonstrated a gradual increase over the past
twenty years, the rates remain well below the non-Indigenous
participation rates.
Apprenticeships and Traineeships
- The Committee was advised that Apprenticeships and Traineeship
Programs specifically targeted to Indigenous youth are being
delivered by most states and territories around Australia. Some of
these apprenticeship programs are school based which has proven
successful in keeping young people engaged in school whilst at the
same time teaching young people a trade under the guidance of an
apprenticeship program.
- Project Murra is funded by the Commonwealth Government and is
being conducted in the Illawarra region of New South Wales. It
encourages Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander youth who are
entering the last two years of secondary school to enter a
traineeship which, when successfully completed, offers them the
chance of employment in either the New South Wales Police Service
or the New South Wales Ambulance Service.
- The Aboriginal Legal Service NSW/ACT highlighted Project Murra
as an example of a successful Indigenous apprenticeship and
training program, and also an important partnership between the
police and the Indigenous community.
The program is expressly about ‘school retention, keeping
Aboriginal students at school to complete their HSC, it’s
about careers, it’s about helping Aboriginal students move
from school into a career and it’s also about building
linkages between the police and the Aboriginal
community.’[50]
- The tangible benefits of such a program are many and the
intangible benefits, such as improved self-esteem, connections
established in the workforce and the work experience itself, are
equally important:
At the completion of the traineeship students will have gained a
Higher School Certificate, a University Academic Index needed to
gain entry to university, and a Certificate three in vocational and
study pathways from TAFE NSW. They will also have obtained one
hundred days paid employment with the NSW Police Service over the
two year period.[51]
- There are a number of other states and territories programs
aimed at increased school retention rates for Indigenous youth, and
providing practical employment skills. The New South Wales
Department of Education and Training have identified key strategies
relating to the improvement of economic opportunities for
Aboriginal people including providing more school based
apprenticeships and traineeships.[52] The New South Wales Board of Vocational
Education and Training (BVET) also indicated that further support
was required to improve retention outcomes for these Indigenous
Apprenticeship and Training Programs. The New South Wales BVET
supported The Way Ahead program involving 27 Aboriginal mentors who
support Aboriginal trainees and apprentices throughout New South
Wales.[53]
- The Western Australian DET have The Aboriginal School Based
Training (ASBT) Program that provides Aboriginal students in Years
10-12 with opportunities to start training in school to access
practical work experience, gain a qualification, and go on to
further education, training or employment.[54]
- The Commonwealth Government also has an Indigenous Youth
Mobility Program (IYMP) which supports Indigenous young people,
aged 16-24 primarily from remote areas, who wish to relocate to one
of seventeen IYMP host locations to undertake postsecondary
education and training options to gain the qualifications needed
for sustainable employment, in their home community or elsewhere.
IYMP provides safe and supported accommodation, mentoring and other
practical support to help young Indigenous people access and
complete university or vocational education and training, including
apprenticeships.[55]
- The Committee notes the value of apprenticeships as a mechanism
to assist transition youth from education to employment and to
provide entry to the workforce in an environment that incorporates
mentoring as well as work training. Many states and territories
provide school-based apprenticeships and training programs in order
to facilitate the transition from education into work for
Indigenous young people.
- The Commonwealth Government funds the Australian
Apprenticeships Access Program that provides vulnerable job seekers
who experience barriers to entering skilled employment with
nationally recognised pre-vocational training, support and
assistance. The Access Program is delivered locally by brokers and
providers who work closely with employers to deliver training that
meets industry needs. The program is provided at no cost to
participants and assists them to find and keep an Australian
apprenticeship, or to enter employment or further education or
training.[56]
- To be eligible to participate in the Access Program, a person
must be a registered job seeker who meets a number of conditions,
including being an early school leaver, a person with a disability
or a sole parent. While the program is not specifically aimed at
young Indigenous people, an additional eligibility requirement is
the referral of a person to the program by a Community Development
Employment Project (CDEP) officer.
- As part of the Australian Apprenticeships scheme, DEEWR also
provides a Making Indigenous Australian Apprenticeships your
business resource kit. The resource kit has:
been designed to provide a range of practical resources to
assist Indigenous employment and training service providers in
improving access of Indigenous people to Australian
Apprenticeships. It is also relevant to service providers who
support Indigenous Australians in other employment and training
situations.[57]
- The kit provides extensive information to potential employers
about a range of matters, including the importance of developing
cultural awareness, engaging with Indigenous communities through
networking and partnerships, and the value of mentoring Indigenous
trainees to enhance retention.
Committee comment
- The Committee is encouraged by the current focus that states
have on school-based apprenticeships and training and encourages
the continuation of funding for these programs into the future.
However the Committee urges more collaboration between schools,
TAFE and industry to engage Indigenous youth in apprenticeships and
training in order to assist with a smoother transition from
education into work.
- The Committee sees value in the Australian Apprenticeships
Access Program as it provides vulnerable job seekers with
additional training and support, but is disappointed that the
program lacks a focus on engaging with young Indigenous people. The
Committee recommends that the Australian Apprenticeship Access
Program should provide specialised assistance for Indigenous youth
seeking an apprenticeship, and specialised financial incentives for
potential employers. The Committee notes that additional financial
incentives are currently provided to employers who take an adult
apprentices or apprentices with a disability.
- Additionally, the Committee recommends DEEWR stipulate that
successful bidding for Access Program contracts is dependent on
businesses being able to demonstrate the ability to provide
culturally appropriate support for Indigenous job seekers.
- The Committee is encouraged by the Making Indigenous Australian
Apprenticeships your business resource kit as it provides
information to potential employers about how they can develop
culturally appropriate support for Indigenous apprentices. However
the Committee is concerned that the kit will have little impact,
unless accompanied by specific financial incentives for taking on
Indigenous apprentices.
- The Committee notes the commitment in the 2011-12 Australian
Government Budget to improve the effectiveness of apprenticeships,
through a National Trade Cadetship available to school students and
mentoring assistance for eligible apprentices.[58] This mentoring support
is important to ensure apprentices stay motivated to complete their
training, and can deal with the challenges of transitioning into
the workforce. Further funding has been allocated to maintain the
Apprenticeships Access Program.[59]
- The Committee considers these initiatives will be of particular
benefit to Indigenous apprentices, provided the mentors are
appropriately selected and trained. However, greater early
assistance is needed to increase the uptake of apprenticeships by
Indigenous students, and the uptake of Indigenous apprentices by
employers.
Recommendation 20 - Apprenticeships
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The Committee recommends that the Department of
Education, Employment and Workplace Relations provide greater
assistance and incentives to increase the uptake of Indigenous
apprentices through:
- providing specific financial incentives for employers to take
on Indigenous apprentices
- including Indigeneity as one of the eligibility criteria for
the Australian Apprenticeship Access Program, and
- ensuring that the Australian Apprenticeship Access Program
contract providers are able to demonstrate the ability to provide
culturally appropriate support and successful outcomes for
Indigenous job seekers.
|
- The Committee supports the suggestion of funding Aboriginal
specific positions within job service agencies throughout
Australia. The Committee believes there is value in qualified
Indigenous people working for job service providers to engage with
schools and promote apprenticeships and employment opportunities
for Indigenous students.
- The Committee agrees that extra support is required for some
Indigenous students to transition into work. Initiatives such as
the promotion of school based apprenticeships and traineeships are
important and can assist with the transition from education to work
by inspiring, engaging and connecting Indigenous students with the
workforce before they leave school.
Work readiness and practical training
- Work readiness programs assist people to prepare for
employment. This may include accessing birth certificates, tax file
numbers and setting up bank accounts. It may include mentoring in
workplace standards and expectations, and social skills. In
Indigenous communities, work readiness programs can be particularly
beneficial for youth who are not familiar with the workforce and
who have not had family members engaged with the workforce.
- The Youth Drug and Alcohol Court, New South Wales, highlighted
the importance of providing work readiness support for Indigenous
people trying to find work or re-engage with the education system.
In its submission it commented:
It is quite often the case that Aboriginal young people involved
in the criminal justice system come from an entrenched background
of reliance on welfare. Telling a young person to 'get a job' is
pointless when it's a foreign concept. By actually having an
individual caseworker who can help the young person look for work,
take them to the interview, explain to them the basics of having a
tax file number and back account details can make an enormous
amount of difference. The caseworker also gives them the support if
any problems should arise with the employer.[60]
- The Australian Children’s Commissioners and Guardians
referred to the need for practical supports, including employment
skills, to assist Indigenous youth in their transition from
detention to the community.
Therapeutic supports such as interpersonal skills and
counselling programs and multi-systemic interventions are
considered the most effective ways of reducing the risk of
reoffending among chronic young offenders, yet findings from the
Queensland Commission's research show that Indigenous young people
are more likely to view practical supports (for example, employment
and training, sporting activities and mentoring) as helpful in
their transition to the community than therapeutic supports (for
example, counselling and drug and alcohol support).This finding
suggests that Indigenous young people may engage in therapeutic
post-release programs more readily if those programs also include a
significant practical component such as sporting, employment and
training programs and mentorship activities.[61]
- The Courts Administration Authority (CAA), South Australia
supported the need for practical training that leads to employment
opportunities.
... it is evident to the CAA through the experience of dealing
with young defendants in the Youth Court and in the juvenile
detention centres, that there is a real need for these young people
to receive practical training that leads directly to employment
and/or apprenticeships such as welding, brick-laying, forklift
driving. The benefits of acquiring trade skills leading to
employment, a stable income and lifestyle, greater self esteem and
social inclusion, are self evident.[62]
- The Committee notes that many of the local and NGO employment
initiatives discussed earlier in this chapter include a strong
focus on mentoring and providing practical experience in developing
work routines and appropriate workplace behaviours.
- While a number of organisations and businesses do conduct work
readiness or employment transition type programs, BoysTown and Rio
Tinto have been particularly successful in their community
initiatives to assist Indigenous youth secure employment.
BoysTown
- BoysTown discussed the success they are experiencing using the
social enterprises model that is assisting Indigenous young people
to develop the skills required to transition into long term
employment. The BoysTown submission urges the Government to
consider expanding social enterprise programs to assist Indigenous
youth to gain employment in a supported environment.
In our submission we have highlighted the success we are
experiencing with social enterprises, which is an intermediate
labour market strategy that we believe is effective in assisting
Indigenous young people to transition to employment. In terms of
Indigenous youth unemployment, figures that we access show that in
2008 about 22.5 per cent of Indigenous young people were unemployed
compared to 10.2 per cent for all youth and six per cent for
all-age unemployment.
Those figures indicate that there is a considerable need to
expand social enterprise-type programs and intermediate labour
market programs in general through partnerships of
government-corporate organisations to make these programs more
accessible to Indigenous young people.[63]
- BoysTown explained that this social enterprise model is based
on an emerging trend in the UK and Europe. The model aims to
provide long term unemployed and marginalised people with a
transitional period of paid employment in a genuine work
environment, combined with supervision, coaching and mentoring to
assist them in making a successful transition to the mainstream
labour market.[64]
- BoysTown described to the Committee the biggest obstacle that
arises for a number of employment programs is that the programs are
often not long enough to facilitate positive change.
So the issue in dealing with young people is that you have these
time-limited programs where we know that to get the change to
prepare a young person who has had a range of abusive experiences
for open employment takes much longer than what these programs are
funded to do.[65]
- By being a Job Services Australia provider, BoysTown is able to
get the Job Services placement officers to meet with young people
as soon as they come into the programs and work with them to get an
understanding of what the young person is like and then move them
into their own sustainable employment.[66]
- BoysTown commented that ‘that the government should
really be a collaborative partner with the sector and with the
community in terms of researching and evaluating initiatives that
may have an impact, because there is no one answer.’[67]
Rio Tinto
- Rio Tinto Iron Ore (Rio Tinto) outlined to the Committee the
work readiness programs it runs in the Pilbara in Western
Australia. Rio Tinto commented that :
Work readiness programs have been run or supported since 2008 in
several Pilbara communities including Paraburdoo, Tom Price,
Nullagine, Onslow, Roebourne, Karratha and South Hedland. Programs
are also run in Broome / Dampier Peninsula. Last year programs were
run or supported in Karratha, Roebourne, Tom Price, Broome /
Dampier Peninsula and Perth. This year the list includes
Carnarvon.[68]
- Rio Tinto explained that ‘[t]he work readiness programs
are usually run in collaboration with the Pilbara (or other) TAFE,
as well as other stakeholders such as potential employers, Job
Service Providers and CDEP or organisations acting on their
behalf.’[69]
They typically last for three to four months, and are conducted
once or twice per year at a particular location. They are designed
to equip unemployed Aboriginal people with a set of basic
vocational skills, life coping skills, and workplace coping
skills.
- Rio Tinto considers it important to mentor the people enrolled
in its Work Readiness Program and, in parallel with the coursework,
teach workplace and life coping skills.
... I am talking about issues like driving licences, overcoming
drug and alcohol problems, teamwork, giving people the opportunity
to develop their self-esteem, and basic financial management and
financial planning.[70]
- Where possible Rio Tinto feeds the work readiness program
graduates into so-called "Rotation" programs that run at some of
the operational sites. The programs at Dampier and Cape Lambert are
the most developed. Work readiness program graduates are taken into
these programs on a probationary 6 month contract. This provides
them with the opportunity to work in a number of entry level roles
in order to build up work experience and develop the related coping
skills. It gives them time to get an understanding of potential
longer term career opportunities in the mining industry and decide
whether they want to continue working for Rio Tinto in the long
term.[71]
- Rio Tinto commented on the success of its work readiness
programs:
Approximately 210 work readiness program trainees have graduated
(or exited work readiness programs early to take up employment) and
150 have entered employment.[72]
Driver licences
- Failure to meet minimum driver licence requirements of
potential employers was the most significant contributor to work
readiness program graduates not getting employed, particularly in
the early years.[73]
This suggests that the lack of a driver license, or an accumulation
of fines relating to driving without a licence, is a significant
obstacle for Indigenous youth when seeking employment.
- For many Indigenous people in remote or regional areas, a
number of factors make obtaining a driver’s licence a
difficult process. These factors include lower levels of literacy,
unpaid fines, limited access to driving mentors, and limited road
and transport infrastructure.
- In general, literacy levels for Indigenous people decrease as
remoteness increases. The percentage of Year 9 Indigenous students
in very remote locations who do not achieve the national minimum
reading standard ranges from 61.2 percent in Queensland to 88.3
percent in the Northern Territory.[74] Norman Clarke, of the Queensland Indigenous
Licensing Program, told the Committee that due to literacy and
numeracy issues, some of his Indigenous clients ‘cannot
understand the test paper when they do it’.[75]
- To obtain a learner driver’s licence, individuals need to
demonstrate a sufficient understanding of the road rules, which is
gained usually by reading the road user’s handbook relevant
to their jurisdiction. A number of jurisdictions make the handbook
available in languages other than English to assist people from
non-English speaking backgrounds. To date however, no jurisdiction
has developed a road user’s handbook in an Indigenous
language.
- In Western Australia, individuals seeking to obtain a learner
driver’s licence who may have difficulties reading English
are able to listen to audio recordings of the Handbook for Western
Australian Road Users.[76] However, the audio recording is only in English
and listeners require access to the internet and the capability to
download large files.
- A similar resource is available in South Australia where
individuals can download the Driver’s Handbook[77] in a LexiFlow[78] format, increasing
access to people with literacy support needs. Again, access is
limited by computer and internet use.
- In some areas of Queensland and Northern Territory, a bilingual
interactive computer game is available that has customised video
footage of local roads and local Indigenous-language audio
recording accompanying the English recording.[79]
- Another disadvantage for Indigenous people is the high level of
driving offence fines that Indigenous youth are more likely to have
accumulated, and not been able to pay. Outstanding traffic fines
impact on decisions to award licenses, which means that many
‘Aboriginal people have no chance of gaining a licence, and
so they do not even apply’.[80] This creates ‘a vicious
circle’[81]
whereby driver licences remain out of reach for many Indigenous
youth and is a clear obstacle to gaining employment.
- The Noetic Review noted that:
Fines and infringement notices are the most commonly used
response to regulatory offences committed by children and young
people. ...The accumulation of fines can follow a young person into
adulthood and prevent them being able to register vehicles and
obtain driving licenses.[82]
- Largely in response to broader community concern about the
number of road-related fatalities, most jurisdictions now require
learner drivers to complete a minimum number of log-booked hours
prior to obtaining their provisional licence.[83] However, Indigenous
community members are often unable to meet the requisite log hours
due to a lack of qualified driving companions or mentors, and the
limited road infrastructure that is available in some
communities.
- Magistrate Tonkin of Townsville advised the Committee that the
lack of driving mentors was limiting young Indigenous
people’s capacity to gain their driver’s
licence.[84]
- In New South Wales, the Road Transport Authority has developed
a resource for individuals or groups interested in establishing
driver mentor programs, Guidelines for Community-based Learner
Driver Mentor Programs.[85] While the Guidelines are comprehensive, they do
not identify appropriate funding sources, nor does the New South
Wales Government specifically provide any funding for driver mentor
programs.
- The Committee heard that in some remote communities there is
simply insufficient road infrastructure to enable a learner driver
to fulfil the requisite log-book hours. A Queensland magistrate
noted the impossibility of achieving 100 log-book hours on an
island that contains merely 200 metres of road.[86] In some areas of the
country, such as Aurukun, roads are completely inaccessible for
parts of the year.[87]
- A number of witnesses offered their support for a
‘limited’ or ‘remote’ licence that would be
easier to obtain than a ‘full’ licence and permit
people to drive in regional and remote locations.[88]
- This view was echoed by Andrew Burrow, Rio Tinto, who stated
that he endorsed the concept of ‘a regional driver’s
licence ... applicable for people working in rural areas where you
do not have the complications of driving in a major
city’.[89]
- Serene Fernado raised concerns about lack of available
transport options in some parts of Australia inhibits the
accessibility to employment.
An issue such as travel to the nearest town where employment is
when they have no transport options restricts them from entering
the workforce.[90]
- There was concern, however, that a remote area licence was not
an acceptable solution:
I do not agree ... about getting a licence just to run around
your own area sort of thing. Once they get a licence they should
drive the same as you and I—into town to do shopping and
whatever. ... You will run into more strife because a licence to
just drive around the place is a licence to give them permission to
go into town, wherever.[91]
- Driver licenses may be required either to access work,
particularly in regional n remote locations, and it is also a
prerequisite of many of the types of employment in these
areas.
- Rio Tinto highlighted the importance of having a driver’s
licence in order to get work in the mining sector.
In addition to the lack of relevant skills, workplace experience
and adequate education (particularly beyond year ten), the lack of
driving licences is a serious obstacle to young Indigenous people
trying to get into the mining industry workplace. Although the
minimum driving licence requirements have started to be relaxed for
specific roles at certain of Rio Tinto’s operating sites, the
majority of the available jobs (particularly at its inland mine
sites) still require at least a C Class and preferably a HR
licence.
The obstacles facing youngsters from socio-economically
disadvantaged backgrounds to getting a full C Class licence are
significant and include:
- High cost
- Lack of access to licensed driving instructors and roadworthy
vehicles, and
- Long licensing process timeframe (typically 3 years in WA,
depending on individual circumstances).[92]
- Rio Tinto outlined how difficulties obtaining a driver license
impact on employment opportunities, and can contribute to offending
rates.
Many young people can't get a job because they haven't got a
drivers licence. Because they haven't got a job they can't afford
to get a licence particularly if their family is unable to pay the
practical tuition costs and / or provide the access to a suitable
vehicle and supervising driver. Boredom and peer pressure
inevitably lead many youngsters down a path of anti-social
behaviour (including driving and licensing related infringements)
that can lead to incarceration. We understand from our contacts at
the Roebourne Regional Prison that in the order of 60% of the
inmates have driving and/or licensing related convictions.[93]
- Consequently a significant component of the Rio Tinto work
readiness programs includes assistance with:
- driver theory training
- practical driving instruction, and
- resolving licence suspensions and unpaid fines issues.
- The Committee noted the awareness in some state jurisdictions
of the lack of driver licenses as a contributing to risk factors
for offending. Kylie O’Connor from the Department of
Attorney-Generals, South Australia stated:
... it is one of the key protective factors for a
community—the number of people who have drivers licences and
who therefore can facilitate and move people around within that
community. Drivers licences help facilitate employment and a whole
range of other outcomes, as we know. Also, driving offences can
lead to not being able to acquire your licence for some time. We
have some young people who cannot acquire their licence because of
traffic offences and driving offences but would possibly benefit if
they could acquire a licence and maintain it.[94]
- Ms O’Connor stated that driver licences was an area that
was being investigated into by state and Commonwealth
agencies:
It is a policy area that we are working on with the Commonwealth
government, with DEEWR, at the moment and with the employment
services. I am aware that a number of the employment services have
also cited this as a major problem—as a barrier along the
pathway to gaining employment.[95]
Committee comment
- The Committee recognises the importance of the driver’s
licence component of the Work Readiness program. Assisting
Indigenous people to obtain driver’s licences is critical in
relation to improving Indigenous disadvantage. Once one family
member has obtain their licence and are employed the flow on effect
can be very positive for other family members.
- Gaining a driver’s licence can open doors to new
prospects such as access to continuing education and employment
opportunities. This is important in regional and remote Australia
where education and employment opportunities are dispersed and
public transportation may not exist or may be very limited.
- The Committee is of the view that state and territory
governments have the capacity to increase the opportunity for
Indigenous people to obtain driver licences in the short term,
which will increase their employment options. An immediate effort
should be devoted to achieving this by developing
jurisdictionally-specific handbooks produced in multiple media
forms with due consideration to the literacy needs of Indigenous
communities.
- In addition, the Committee considers that the introduction of
regional and remote driver licenses would greatly assist Indigenous
youth in continuing their education and training, and in securing
employment in local areas. It would go some way to addressing the
contributory impact of traffic offences and unpaid fines on
Indigenous youth incarceration rates (this is discussed further in
chapter 7).
Recommendation 21 – Driver licences
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The Committee recommends that the Minister for
Infrastructure and Transport, in partnership with relevant state
and territory governments, establish:
- specific learner driver resources in multiple media
formats that appropriately meet language and literacy needs of
local Indigenous communities, and
- a remote and regional learner driver licensing scheme
to assist people in remote and regional areas to obtain learner and
provisional licences.
|
Availability of employment
- The Committee understands the complexities around improving
employment prospects for Indigenous Australians, particularly for
regional and remote communities. Indigenous people’s
participation in the labour force is often affected by the limited
employment opportunities available to Indigenous people in some
regional and remote areas.
- Over time, the Closing the Gap focus on education attainment
will have a positive flow on effect which will lead to increased
employment opportunities for Indigenous Australians. However the
availability of work in regional and remote areas where there is a
high Indigenous population remains a challenging issue.
- Serene Fernado, an academic from ANU commented that building
local capacity for mainstream employment for young Indigenous
people should be an important priority for the Commonwealth
Government. She commented that the Government should:
Provide the landscape for these high risk Indigenous youth to
obtain legitimate employment rather than transitional employment
programs such as the work for the dole schemes which often subjects
participants to menial tasks, such as mowing the lawn and picking
up rubbish around the community that rarely has proven to move
participants into real mainstream employment.[96]
- The Queensland Police Commissioner explained concerns about the
types of employment available in remote communities.
For the isolated communities, I think the elephant in the room
is the economic future. Most of the employment is government
funded. Do we keep doing that year after year after year? Clearly
there are links to other issues and that has been stated many
times—the links between the criminal justice system, health,
education and all of those other things.[97]
- In March 2011, Australia’s unemployment rate had
decreased to 4.9 percent[98] which presents a difficult environment for
Indigenous job seekers who face a range of obstacles when
transitioning to employment. However there are certain industry
sectors, such as mining and tourism, which are well placed to
invest in Indigenous transition and work readiness training in
order to recruit and meet their own workforce needs.
- The inquiry has revealed a number of workforce areas where
greater Indigenous representation and leadership is sought –
namely in police services, the Australian Defence Force (ADF),
education and other government service sectors.
- Under the 2011-12 Commonwealth Government Budget, the Language
Literacy and Numeracy Program, which is available to assist job
seekers attain basic skills, has been expanded.[99] In addition, six month
wage subsidies can be provided to employers who take on the long
term unemployed.[100] These initiatives are part of a $227.9 million
package over four years to provide incentives for employers and
support participation in training for the long-term unemployed, of
which around 17 percent are Indigenous people. A further $6.1
million over four years is being provided for Jobs Services
Australia to pilot the provision of culturally appropriate
mentoring support for Indigenous job seekers when they commence
work.[101]
- The Committee urges mining and tourism sectors in particular,
to take advantage of these services and, as a measure of their
social responsibility, to invest in Indigenous transition programs
and employment training.
Mining and tourism sectors
- The report has earlier mentioned both Rio Tinto and BHP
Billiton for their work readiness and employment transition
programs. The Committee is aware that there are a number of other
industries who are committed to addressing Indigenous disadvantage
and who make a substantial investment in local Indigenous
communities through transition and training assistance.
- The Committee considers that both the mining and the tourism
sectors are well placed to provide these greater employment
opportunities to Indigenous youth as the workplace is close to
regional or remote Indigenous communities. At times these are also
industry sectors which face challenges attracting a workforce due
to their location.
- The Committee urges mining and tourism sectors, in particular,
as a measure of their social responsibility, to invest in
Indigenous transition programs and employment training.
Education and Government service sectors
- Previously the report has discussed the important role of
Indigenous education workers and the need to increase the
Indigenous representation in teaching, early childhood and
teacher’s aide roles. There is a critical need for more
Indigenous health workers able to work with local communities. In
addition, government agencies suffer from a lack of Indigenous
representation in key policy and service delivery areas.
- The Committee is aware that many government agencies offer
Indigenous cadetships and, as part of the cadetship, transition
assistance and support is available. The Committee encourages the
expansion of these cadetship positions across states and
territories as well as Commonwealth agencies.
- The Committee considers that every jurisdiction should be
conducting intensive campaigns targeting Indigenous recruitment in
the areas of health and education. Indigenous workers in these
areas provide vital mentoring and leadership roles to other
Indigenous young people, and warrant a substantial commitment and
investment in transition assistance to facilitate entry to and
completion of training.
Police services
- Police services already conduct some targeted training and
recruitment programs for Indigenous people. For example the
Queensland Police Service (QPS) has Indigenous traineeships as part
of its Justice Entry Program. It is a six month timeframe full time
program during which trainees receive an allowance equal to that of
a police recruit.[102]
- Queensland Police Commissioner Atkinson commented that the
program focuses on developing a pathway for Indigenous people into
employment in the police service. From a policing perspective, he
commented that ‘it is really important that Indigenous people
gain employment in police departments.’[103]
- Similarly, New South Wales have an Indigenous Police
Recruitment Out West Delivery (IPROWD) Project. In April 2008, a
partnership was established between TAFE New South Wales and New
South Wales Police to develop a bridging course that would provide
Aboriginal students from western New South Wales with the academic
prerequisites to enrol as student police. The IPROWD project
enrolled 13 Aboriginal students in the course and all graduated in
December 2008.[104]
- This New South Wales Indigenous Police recruitment project has
relied on strong partnerships between the Police, TAFE and the
Indigenous community to help provide support as required.
Six students went on to study at the Police College, Goulburn,
three of whom remain. The remaining three have deferred their
studies. The majority of IPROWD students have found employment. A
second IPROWD course commenced at Dubbo in April 2009. IPROWD was
due to commence at Tamworth in July 2009. The mentoring of students
is an integral element of this program and involves community
members, teaching staff and Aboriginal staff in TAFE NSW
Institutes.[105]
- The Committee considers there is scope for police recruitment
campaigns to target Indigenous youth. The range of Indigenous entry
assistance programs provided are commendable; however a survey of
police recruitment websites across different jurisdictions suggests
that there often lacks an active focus on Indigenous
recruitment.
- The Committee considers that the diversity and cultural
awareness of the police service across jurisdictions could be
enhanced by recruitment campaigns targeted to Indigenous people.
Further, Indigenous recruitment campaigns should be culturally
appropriate and emphasise the positive leadership and community
benefits of joining the police service.
Australian Defence Force
- The Australian Defence Force (ADF) is well placed to provide
training and employment to young Indigenous people. First, the ADF
offers training in leadership and workplace-specific skills that
has benefits both for Indigenous recruits and their communities
beyond their career in the service. Second, the ADF is in need of
new recruits, while (as this report has shown) young Indigenous
people are in need of workplace training, support and
employment.
- In its recruitment material, the ADF emphasises that Indigenous
recruits make positive role models for other young community
members. It also has a range of programs intended to support
Indigenous recruits and to acknowledge significant Indigenous
cultural events. The recruitment material acknowledges the
significant contribution of Indigenous Australians to protecting
the nation’s interests for over a century.
- In addition, the Aboriginal Legal Service for ACT/NSW in its
submission called for the ADF to increase the provision of
school-based apprenticeships and target these to Indigenous youth
living in regional and remote areas:
Young people in Aboriginal communities in Queensland express
significant interest in joining the Australian Defence Force (ADF).
However, recruitment in rural and remote communities is not
occurring. The provision of school based ADF apprenticeships would
create real incentive to remain in the education system and provide
continuity with attractive employment.
Given that the separation rate of members of the ADF is
increasing, there is a match between its needs and those of
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander youth to find employment.
Significant advantages could be gained from the recruitment of
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander juveniles and young adults
into the Australian Defence Force.[106]
Committee comment
- The Committee acknowledges the significant contribution that
Indigenous Australians have made to the Australian Defence Force.
The Committee understands that this is a sensitive issue as the
commitment and sacrifice made by Indigenous people involved in
Australia’s Defence Force in the past went unrecognised for
some period of time.
- The Committee considers that the ADF has a social
responsibility to support Indigenous Australians, given the
historical neglect of Indigenous servicemen and women, and the
important contribution they have made in past wars.
- The Committee considers it important for the Australian Defence
Force to raise its profile with Indigenous Australians and form
innovative partnerships with Indigenous people, particularly in
regional and remote areas, who are interested in joining the
Australian Defence Force.
- The Committee is concerned that current Australian Defence
Force recruitment material is targeted at a narrow demographic. The
Committee recommends that the Australian Defence Force redesign its
recruitment material to provide more incentives for Australian
citizens from diverse backgrounds (including Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander people), and women to join.
- The Committee notes that the Australian Defence Force has an
Indigenous Recruitment Strategy that aims to recruit people from
remote, regional and urban settings. However the Committee
considers it opportune for the Australian Defence Force to look at
strategic ways to recruit from regional and remote areas throughout
Australia. The Committee suggests that the Australian Defence Force
consider new initiatives for its Indigenous recruitment strategy
such as a recruitment project modelled on the New South Wales
Indigenous Police Recruitment Out West project.
- The Committee notes the potential benefits of a school based
Australian Defence Force apprenticeship scheme in regional and
remote areas throughout Australia. A school based apprenticeship
scheme would provide a mentoring role which could support
Indigenous students both socially and academically. This would be
beneficial in supporting Indigenous students to complete year 12
and would provide a clear and supported pathway through to
employment.
Recommendation 22 – Defence Force recruitment
|
-
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Defence
Force:
- include in its training material an acknowledgement of
the important contribution Indigenous people have made to the
Australian Defence Force in past wars. All staff currently employed
by the Australian Defence Force should be made aware of this
contribution
- review its recruitment material to ensure it provides
strong encouragement for Indigenous people to join, which
particular reference to existing role models, for example
NorForce
- consider new and innovative strategies for raising its
profile with Indigenous people and for recruiting both reserves and
permanent members from remote, regional and metropolitan Indigenous
communities
- offer work experience for older students in the defence
force, and
- increase the provision of school based apprenticeships
throughout Australia and target apprenticeships to Indigenous youth
in regional and remote areas.
|
[1] Appendix 2, A
Statistical Overview of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Peoples in Australia, p. 299.
[2] Appendix 2, A
Statistical Overview of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Peoples in Australia, p. 297.
[3] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 1.
[4] NAAJA,
submission 15, p. 6.
[5] FaHCSIA,
submission 79, p. 7.
[6] Closing the Gap:
Prime Minister’s Report 2011, p. 17.
[7] DEEWR,
submission 63, pp. 4-5.
[8] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 5.
[9] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 5.
[10] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 5.
[11] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 5.
[12] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 6.
[13]
Ministers’ Media Centre, Senator the Hon. Mark Arbib, Media
Release, 23 February 2011 <www.deewr.gov.au/Ministers/Arbib/Media/Releases/Pages/Article_100223_110807.aspx>
accessed 14 April 2011.
[14] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 7.
[15] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 9.
[16] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 9.
[17] FaHCSIA,
submission 79, p. 11.
[18] FaHCSIA,
submission 79, p. 18.
[19] Queensland
Government, submission 91, p. 14.
[20] New South
Wales Department of Education and Training, submission 43, p.
24.
[21] New South
Wales Department of Education and Training, submission 43, p.
26.
[22] Department of
Attorney-General, Victoria, submission 75, p. 3.
[23] Department of
Attorney-General, Victoria, submission 75, p. 5.
[24] Department of
Education Western Australia, submission 81, p. 7.
[25] Department of
Education Western Australia, submission 81, p. 8.
[26] South
Australian Government, submission 82, pp. 9-10.
[27] Department of
Premier and Cabinet, Tasmania, submission 90, p. 8.
[28] Department of
Premier and Cabinet, Tasmania, submission 90, p. 10.
[29] Department of
Education, Northern Territory, submission 104, p. 1.
[30] Department of
Education, Northern Territory, submission 104, p. 2.
[31] FaHCSIA,
submission 79, p. 20.
[32] Meenah
Mienne, submission 16, p. 2.
[33] Meenah
Mienne, submission 16, p. 5.
[34] Sharen
Letton, Youth Justice Aboriginal Advisory Committee, South
Australia, Committee Hansard, Adelaide, 20 May 2010, p. 4.
[35] Queensland
Police Service, exhibit 24, p. 1.
[36] Wattleridge
is a botanically diverse bushland with high biodiversity values on
outcropping granite country on the New South Wales Northern
Tablelands near the small town of Guyra (between Armidale and Glen
Innes).
[37] Janet Hunt,
submission 22, p. 2.
[38] Janet Hunt,
submission 22, p. 3.
[39] Janet Hunt,
submission 22, p. 2.
[40] Janet Hunt,
submission 22, p. 3.
[41] Aboriginal
Connections, submission 49, p. 3.
[42] Execlior,
Message Stick, Nallawilli, submission 70, p. 3.
[43] Execlior,
Message Stick, Nallawilli, submission 70, p. 3.
[44] Execlior,
Message Stick, Nallawilli, submission 70, p. 3.
[45] Wes Morris,
Kimberley Aboriginal Law and Culture Centre, Committee Hansard,
Perth, 30 March 2010, p. 61.
[46] Central
Australian Youth Link-Up Services, submission 27, p. 8.
[47] Central
Australian Youth Link-Up Services, submission 27, p. 9.
[48] ABA grants
are awarded to projects to open up new opportunities for Aboriginal
people in the Northern Territory by providing the funding essential
to getting new initiatives off the ground and backing established
ventures to expand and develop. The ABA receives financial
compensation from the Australian Government equal to the value of
the royalties generated from mining on Aboriginal land in the
Northern Territory. It was established under the Aboriginal Land
Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976.
[49] The Hon.
Jenny Macklin and the Hon. Warren Snowdon, joint media release, 2
July 2010,
<www.jennymacklin.fahcsia.gov.au/mediareleases/2010/pages/central_oz_5mboost_2july2010.aspx>
accessed 31 May 2011.
[50] Aboriginal
Legal Service NSW/ACT, submission 66, pp. 14-15.
[51] Aboriginal
Legal Service NSW/ACT, submission 66, p. 14.
[52] New South
Wales Department of Education and Training, submission 43, p.
26.
[53] New South
Wales Department of Education and Training, submission 43, pp.
23-24.
[54] Western
Australia Department of Education and Training, submission 89, p.
9.
[55] DEEWR,
submission 63, p. 8.
[56] DEEWR,
Apprenticeships Access Program
<www.deewr.gov.au/Skills/Programs/PreVoc/AAAP/Pages/default.aspx>
accessed 5 May 2011.
[57] Employment
and Training Outcomes Pty Ltd, Making Indigenous Australian
Apprenticeships your business
<www.australianapprenticeships.gov.au/documents/IndigenousAABusinessKit.pdf>
accessed 6 May 2011.
[58] Building
Australia’s Future Workforce: trained up and ready for work
Australian Government Budget 2011-2011, pp. 14-15.
[59] Building
Australia’s Future Workforce: trained up and ready for work
Australian Government Budget 2011-2011, p. 17.
[60] Youth Drug
and Alcohol Court, New South Wales, submission 2, p. 2.
[61] Australian
Children’s Commissioners and Guardians, submission 59, p.
23.
[62] Courts
Administration Authority, submission 69, p. 3.
[63] John
Dalgleish, Boystown, Committee Hansard, Brisbane, 4 May 2010, pp.
65-66.
[64] Boystown,
submission 6, p. 10.
[65] John
Dalgleish, Boystown, Committee Hansard, Brisbane, 4 May 2010, p.
68.
[66] John
Dalgleish, Boystown, Committee Hansard, Brisbane, 4 May 2010, p.
70.
[67] John
Dalgleish, Boystown, Committee Hansard, Brisbane, 4 May 2010, p.
76.
[68] Rio Tinto
Iron Ore, submission 110, p. 1.
[69] Rio Tinto
Iron Ore, submission 110, pp. 1-2.
[70] Andrew
Burrow, Rio Tinto, Committee Hansard, Perth, 30 March 2010, p.
63.
[71] Rio Tinto
Iron Ore, submission 110, pp. 1-2.
[72] Rio Tinto
Iron Ore, submission 110, p. 2.
[73] Rio Tinto
Iron Ore, submission 110, p. 2.
[74] Ministerial
Council for Education, Early Childhood Development and Youth
Affairs National Assessment Program Literacy and Numeracy (NAPLAN)
2009, Table 9.R6,
<www.mceecdya.edu.au/verve/_resources/NAPLAN2009-GeoIndig-Reading.pdf>
accessed 2 September 2010.
[75] Norman
Clarke, Committee Hansard, Brisbane, 4 May 2010, p. 27.
[76] Western
Australia Department of Transport, Drive Safe Guide
<www.transport.wa.gov.au/licensing/20425.asp> accessed 29
July 2010.
[77] South
Australian Department of Education and Children’s Services,
Special Education Resource Unit, Driver’s Handbook,
<web.seru.sa.edu.au/Visual%20Tools.htm> accessed 28 May
2010.
[78] LexiFlow
software converts materials saved in PDF format into an electronic
‘talking Flash’ presentation.
[79] Driving our
Future, <www.drivingourfuture.com.au/> accessed 3 November
2010; ‘The Centre for Indigenous Literacy’, The
Australian Literacy and Numeracy Foundation,
<www.alnf.org/programs/indigenous-literacy.php> accessed 3
November 2010.
[80] New South
Wales Sentencing Council, The Effectiveness of Fines as a
Sentencing Option: Court-imposed Fines and Penalty Notices: Interim
Report 2006, p. 25.
[81] Catholic
Bishops of Broome and Darwin, submission 8, p. 13.
[82] Noetic
Solutions Pty Ltd, A Strategic Review of the New South Wales
Juvenile Justice System, 2010, pp. 111-112.
[83] This number
is different in each jurisdiction where such a requirement exists:
in New South Wales, 125 supervised hours must be log-booked; in
Victoria, learner drivers under the age of 21 must gain 120
log-booked hours; in Queensland, 120 supervised hours must be
log-booked; in South Australia, 50 hours must be log-booked;
while in Western Australia, 25 log-booked hours are needed.
[84] Stephanie
Tonkin, Committee Hansard, Brisbane, 4 May 2010.
[85] Road
Transport Authority, Guidelines for community based learner driver
mentor programs,
<www.rta.nsw.gov.au/roadsafety/downloads/mentorprogram.pdf>
accessed 24 May 2010.
[86] Stephanie
Tonkin, Committee Hansard, Brisbane, 4 May 2010, p. 23.
[87] David
Glasgow, Family Responsibilities Commission, Committee Hansard,
Cairns, 7 May 2010, p. 16.
[88] Denis
Reynolds, Committee Hansard, Perth, 30 March 2010, pp. 7-8; Andrew
Burrow, Rio Tinto, Committee Hansard, Perth, 30 March 2010, p. 64;
Stephanie Tonkin, Committee Hansard, Brisbane, 4 May 2010, p.
23.
[89] Andrew
Burrow, Rio Tinto, Committee Hansard, Perth, 30 March 2010, p.
64
[90] Serene
Fernado, exhibit 12, p. 3.
[91] Barry Abbott,
Ilpurla Aboriginal Corporation, Committee Hansard, Darwin, 6 May
2010, p. 86.
[92] Rio Tinto
Iron Ore, submission 110, p. 2.
[93] Rio Tinto
Iron Ore, submission 110, p. 3.
[94] Kylie
O’Connell, Attorney-General’s Department, South
Australia, Committee Hansard, Adelaide, 20 May 2010, p. 25.
[95] Kylie
O’Connell, Attorney-General’s Department, South
Australia, Committee Hansard, Adelaide, 20 May 2010, p. 25.
[96] Serene
Fernado, exhibit 12, p. 3.
[97] Robert
Atkinson, Queensland Government, Committee Hansard, Brisbane, 4 May
2010, p. 9.
[98] ABS 6202.0 -
Labour Force, Australia, March 2011
<www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/mf/6202.0> accessed 6 May
2011.
[99] Building
Australia’s Future Workforce: trained up and ready for work
Australian Government Budget 2011-2011, p.17.
[100] Building
Australia’s Future Workforce: trained up and ready for work
Australian Government Budget 2011-2011, p.26
[101] Budget:
Investing to Close the Gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous
Australians, Statement by the Hon. Jenny Macklin MP, Minister for
Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs, 10
May 2011.
[102] Queensland
Police Service, exhibit 23, p. 2.
[103] Robert
Atkinson, Queensland Government, Committee Hansard, Brisbane, 4 May
2010, p. 10.
[104] New South
Wales Department of Education and Training, submission 43, p.
23.
[105] New South
Wales Department of Education and Training, submission 43, p.
23.
[106] Aboriginal
Legal Service NSW/ACT, submission 66, p. 15.
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