Australian Greens Dissenting Report
Introduction
The Australian Greens do not support the recommendation
of the majority report that the Social Security Legislation Amendment
(Community Development Program) Bill 2015 be passed.
1.1
As highlighted below, there are major flaws in the bill. During the
hearing process the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet were unable to
provide satisfactory answers to many of the issues raised. It was the
understanding of committee members that because of this the inquiry reporting
date was to be extended. The reporting date was subsequently shortened, and
then extended again by a few days. This process made it difficult to adequately
explore the full implications of the measures in the bill. Areas of significant
concern include:
-
Significant gaps in the consultation process
-
That despite the name of the policy, it differs significantly
from the former Community Development Economic Program (CDEP), and is not a
wages based policy as the CDEP was
-
The discriminatory impact of the measure, which will
disproportionately impact Aboriginal people in remote communities.
-
The fundamental shift in the provision of social security in
Australia
-
Shifting decision making to private and non-government
organisations
-
Shifting responsibility for some areas of social security to the
Minister for Indigenous Affairs:
-
This provides significant discretion to the Minister to make
policy through legislative instrument, reducing the level of Parliamentary
scrutiny
-
It may remove people in remote communities from the protection
provided under social security legislation
-
Significant implementation challenges, including the shift of
responsibilities from the Department of Human Services to providers
Reporting date
1.2
Following an initial reporting date of the 29th of February, the
Committee agreed to an extended reporting date to later in March, before
subsequently reverting to the original date of the 29th, and then
extending to the current reporting date of 2 March 2016. This process made it
difficult to consider the large number of significant concerns raised in
evidence to the Committee. This dissenting report is just a short summary of
the many fundamental problems with a poorly devised policy measure. The
Australian Greens thank the wide range of organisations and witnesses who have
helped the Committee by providing insightful analysis and evidence.
Consultation
1.3
The main committee reports notes that:
One of the themes in submissions and in evidence at the
public hearing was frustration at the lack of consultation with communities and
CDP providers prior to the introduction of the bill.[1]
1.4
The Australian Greens share this fundamental concern about the lack of
consultation on such a significant proposed change.
1.5
Jobs Australia, in fact, said in its submission that:
... to date, there has been no formal consultation on any
aspect of the CDP arrangements. To the extent that consultation has occurred,
it has been limited to discussions with some individual communities and
individual CDP providers. Of the 31 provider staff who dialled in to Jobs
Australia's teleconference consultation on the Bill, none had been consulted on
any aspect of this Bill before it was introduced in December, nor were they
aware of any such consultation having taken place.[2]
1.6
Mr David Thompson, Chief Executive Officer of Jobs Australia,
re-iterated that concern in evidence to the Committee:
I would assert that everything hangs on the details. The way
things work and whether they are going to be a success or not hangs on the
details.
I put forward the view that tabling the bill before Christmas
with comments due over Christmas at the end of January with the initial
consultation with providers about this bill and its implications happening two
days ago does not amount to appropriate, effective or proper consultation ... the
Prime Minister said in the parliament last week:
'It's our role as government to provide an environment that
enables Indigenous leaders to develop local solutions'.
Not providers, leaders. It is time for governments to do
things with Aboriginal people, not do things to them. The way this process is
run does not fit that formula.[3]
1.7
Mr Morrison, Chief Executive Officer of the Northern Land Council, noted
that:
...each of these policies, along with the design of the CDP
bill, which we are here today discussing, has been developed without proper
open consultation with the Aboriginal people.[4]
1.8
At the hearing for this bill departmental officials said:
Consultation with the providers has been by any judgement
quite comprehensive, going back more than a year. There have been meetings and
discussions at quite some level of detail with individual providers but there
has also been collectively an opportunity for providers to gather on at least
four occasions as a group to work with us, to workshop some of the issues we
are discussing and work a way forward ... The first of the conferences with all
the providers took place in March last year, and there have been four all up.[5]
1.9
The department's evidence makes it clear that this process related to
policy measures, rather than to the detail of the bill itself, which was only
introduced in early December 2015. Draft regulations are not yet available.
1.10
The department did provide a draft of a consultation paper which was
proposed to be circulated to 'communities and providers', in relation to the
drafting of the legislative instruments proposed in the Bill. A significant
concern raised in multiple submissions and in relation to multiple aspects of
the proposed changes was that much of the detail is not in the primary Bill.
Instead, significant details of how this legislation will be implemented and
will work in practice have been delegated to legislative instrument. Given
this, it is deeply concerning that the consultation on the drafting of the
legislative instruments has not yet begun.
1.11
The Australian Council of Trade Unions said in evidence to the Committee:
In terms of consultation, as expressed by David Thompson, we
are dismayed that the consultation has not been done at the front end. It is
back-end consultation now that the legislation is already written and the
program has already been imposed with providers and community members.[6]
Differences from CDEP
1.12
In his second reading speech, the Minister said that 'Community leaders
and jobs providers often remind me of the positive elements of the previous
Community Development Employment Project (CDEP) in remote Australia.'[7]
1.13
Evidence provided to the Committee from multiple sources makes it very
clear that this program is not a revisiting of those earlier positive elements.
1.14
ACOSS said:
The CDP program is significantly different to the Community
Development Employment Program (CDEP) for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
people that previously operated in remote areas. The former CDEP paid wages
(and therefore complied with minimum wage requirements), was voluntary,
provided people with an income support safety net payment if they did not meet
community administered 'no show no pay' requirements to receive a wage payment,
and was designed in consultation with local communities, building in
flexibility to local needs.[8]
1.15
Similarly, Jobs Australia highlighted key differences between the CDEP
and the current CDP changes proposed in this bill:
Under CDEP, participants were paid wages – not welfare, with
the consequence that wages had to comply with minimum wage requirements. Under
CDP, most participants perform Work for the Dole for 25 hours to receive a
welfare payment, which equates to an hourly rate that is significantly less
than the minimum wage.
CDEP was an 'opt-in' arrangement that operated as an
alternative to welfare. People who opted in had the opportunity to work for
real wages, and if they worked additional hours then they received additional
pay. If, however, a person could not work or opted out of CDEP for some other
reason, they could still access a safety-net payment through the welfare
system. This meant that 'no-show, no-pay' rules (over which, local providers
had significant discretion, and in many cases did not enforce strictly) never
left vulnerable people completely without access to the safety-net. In
contrast, no-show no-pay in CDP results in removal of the safety-net payment
and can leave people without income support. This could put individuals (and
any dependent family members) at risk.
CDEP was explicitly designed to empower communities.
Communities, through local community councils, had to choose to implement a
CDEP scheme and had the flexibility to tailor the rules that would apply in
their community, as well as they types of projects that it would support. Under
CDP (and with the measures in this Bill), the program is imposed by Government,
the rules are determined by the Minister, and local projects are determined by
the Minister, the Department and/or a contracted CDP provider. At best,
communities may be consulted. These arrangements do not empower communities.[9]
1.16
Professor Jon Altman, an expert on CDEP, noted key differences in his
evidence to the Committee:
...what really surprises me about these proposals—I quite
transparently say I was in some discussions with Senator Scullion about the new
proposals—is that this notion that people will get wages is missing, that they
will be defined as employed and that they will have the opportunity to earn
top-up. These are the fundamental things, alongside community control, that
made CDEP so successful. When you actually look at what is being proposed, the
ability to earn top-up is after 25 hours of working for the dole, not the 15
hours for award wages that you had under CDEP, so there is a 10-hour gap there.
New poverty traps will be created, because some people will not do those 25
hours and then will earn extra money for the extra hours they will do, but
there will be a trade-off. So it will not improve things.[10]
1.17
An appeal to the success of the CDEP program is fundamentally flawed,
given the major differences which mean that the CDP, despite the similar name,
is a very different approach.
Discrimination
1.18
One of the many significant concerns in relation to this proposed bill
is the issue of discrimination. The Explanatory Memorandum says that:
...a determination will not be applied on the basis of racial,
cultural, gender, religious, or political status of people residing in remote
income support regions.[11]
1.19
However a much higher proportion of the population in remote regions are
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. The Parliamentary Joint
Committee on Human Rights said that:
By enabling the creation of a different system of obligations
and penalty arrangements for remote job seekers, the bill engages and may limit
the right to social security and the right to an adequate standard of living,
and the right to equality and non-discrimination.[12]
1.20
Social Justice and Native Title Commissioner Mick Gooda said:
I am concerned the Healthy Welfare Card trial and the
implementation of Work for the Dole in remote communities may give rise to
indirect discrimination and have a negative impact on the ability of Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander peoples to enjoy their rights, particularly the
right to social security.[13]
1.21
He re-iterated those concerns in a submission to the inquiry,
recommending that the Bill not be passed:
I reiterate my concerns about the mandatory application of Work
for the Dole arrangements and submit that the Bill and Explanatory Memorandum,
as currently drafted, do not provide sufficient protections of human rights. In
view of these issues, the Commission considers that the Bill should not be
passed in its present form.[14]
1.22
Jobs Australia also noted significant discrimination concerns in their
submission:
Fundamentally, the Bill establishes a separate system for
some welfare payments that are paid in remote Australia with arrangements that
most likely discriminate against Indigenous people.
...while the text of the Bill does not explicitly target
Indigenous people, there is a clear connection between a particular race and
the areas in which the measures in the Bill will apply. The overwhelming
majority of unemployed people in remote areas are Indigenous: of the 37,000
unemployed people in the regions that are currently considered remote, 31,000
(or 84%) are Indigenous ...
The real situation is that the new CDP contract imposes
greater mutual obligation requirements on remote job seekers than currently
apply to non-remote job seekers; more onerous obligations mean it is easier for
remote job seekers to fail the requirements; that, in turn, increases the
likelihood and frequency of financial penalties; and the measures in this Bill
remove safeguards and protections that non-remote job seekers enjoy. Given that
the vast majority of the target group are of one particular race, the
arrangements are likely to be discriminatory.[15]
1.23
They also succinctly said one of the most obvious reasons for concern
about the discriminatory impact for this proposed bill: '...if the legislation
was not targeted to Indigenous people, then the Minister for Indigenous Affairs
would not be the responsible Minister'.[16]
1.24
The Australian Council of Trade Unions also noted concerns about
discrimination as a basis for their opposition to the proposed bill:
This year—it is quite ironic—Australia celebrates the 50th
anniversary of when Aboriginal workers had to strike before their rights were
recognised during the event that is now known as the Wave Hill walk-off. This
event has been marked so poignantly across history by the finalisation of that
strike being the footage of Gough Whitlam pouring sacred red dirt through
Vincent Lingiari's hands. In 2016, 50 years since the Wave Hill walk-off, we
cannot understand how it is conceivable that an Australian government would
propose laws that once again allow Aboriginal people to be treated as an
inferior class of workers in this country. Based on that, we cannot support the
legislation.[17]
Fundamental change to social security
1.25
The bill makes fundamental changes to social security arrangements for
remote areas, and provides the Minister with significant discretion through
delegated legislation. This point was made in a number of submissions and in
evidence to the Committee. The Australian Council of Social Services (ACOSS)
said in their submission:
We consider that Bill would effectively allow the Minister to
remove areas of remote Australia from those parts of social security
legislation that govern the obligations and many of the rights of people
receiving activity tested income support payments. It would reduce transparency
and independent scrutiny of the effects of income supports arrangements on
vulnerable people.[18]
1.26
The National Welfare Rights Network (NWRN) similarly noted that the
bill:
...undermines basic protections in social security law such as
appeal rights.
The Minister is given a general power to determine the regime
of obligations and compliance applicable to recipients of activity tested
payments, such as Newstart Allowance, who reside in designated remote regions
by legislative instrument ...Simply put, the Minister has power to override or
modify the Act. The Minister has not provided a justification for the width of
this power.[19]
1.27
Jobs Australia made the point even more strongly in its submission:
The Bill delegates significant new regulation-making powers
to the Minister for Indigenous Affairs and the Secretary of the Department of
Prime Minister and Cabinet. Key aspects of the arrangements are simply not in
the Bill ...
Legislative instruments are, of course, disallowable, but
that is a lesser level of Parliamentary scrutiny than that which applies to
legislation. The process takes time and the legislative instruments take effect
from the time they are registered, which means they can be in place for months
before they are considered by the Parliament.
Providing welfare payments to people in need of support is a
core responsibility of the Federal Government, and to delegate this much
authority over social security law to one Minister would be a fundamental
abrogation of the Parliament's responsibility to hold the Government to account
– a responsibility that is particularly important when individuals' human rights
are affected.[20]
1.28
The Australian Greens agree that this change is not appropriate. It
delegates decision making away from the Minister for Social Services and also
abrogates the role of the Parliament in scrutinising changes to social security
legislation.
Shift from the Department of Human Services to providers
1.29
A significant area of concern is the shift of responsibility and
administration from the Government's Department of Human Services, to private
service providers. Multiple submissions noted concerns on this front.
1.30
Professor Jon Altman said in his submission:
It is argued by the Minister that the CDP Bill will simplify
compliance arrangements for remote income support recipients, but it is
difficult to see how this will happen. For a start the new category 'remote
income support recipient' will be created and treated differently from other
recipients of welfare. And while monitoring will be devolved to community based
providers in remote income support regions, they will also be charged with the
burdensome task of panoptic micro-management of participation to the hour
rather than to the day. So in the name of a simplified regulatory regime,
providers will actually be entrusted with a more complicated regulatory
framework. Each provider will be monitoring an average 500 job seekers not just
for their participation for remote income support payments (25 hours by the
hour per week for Newstart equivalent payments) but also for their movements
between regions and for a complex set of acceptable reasons (like ceremony
leave) for non-attendance.[21]
1.31
The NWRN similarly noted in relation to this change that:
Increasing the functioning and capacity of DHS, which is the
government's specialist service delivery agency in remote areas is the answer,
not handing over administrative functions to CDP providers, especially if the
increased burden on those providers diverts them away from their core functions
of providing valuable activities and helping job seekers into employment.[22]
Decisions made by services providers, not the Department of Human Services
1.32
The shift from DHS to providers will require service providers to make
penalty and obligation decisions in relation to job seekers. Multiple
submissions had concerns about this shift. ACOSS said:
The Bill would delegate administration of social security
payments and penalties to local employment service providers (CDP providers),
in effect privatising decisions about how obligations and penalties for
individual people are applied by removing those decisions from the responsibility
of the Department of Human Services. There are substantial concerns with this,
including that independent local providers embedded in a small community, who
often source staff from that community, would be making decisions about
application of sanctions to people they are likely to know personally or be
related to, which can cause a conflict of interest in the absence of a process
to address this.[23]
1.33
Jobs Australia said:
Under the arrangements proposed in the Bill, such decisions
would be made by staff in CDP providers, who are not free to apply their
discretion and who have contractual incentives that push them to apply
financial penalties. Individual circumstances, vulnerabilities and barriers are
less likely to be appropriately taken into account.[24]
Appeals process
1.34
NWRN particularly highlighted concerns about the appeals process. NWRN
said in their submission:
...the CDP Bill's transfer of power to the Minister is so wide
as to undermine basic protections for income support recipients such as appeal
rights. The explanatory memorandum, and the Department's submission, maintains
that the CDP Bill preserves appeal rights. However, in the NWRN's reading of
the bill, this is not so clear.
It is true that proposed s 125 makes decisions of departmental
officers in relation to the new regime reviewable in the ordinary way, even if
made under a legislative instrument. However proposed s 144(da) precludes AAT
review of decisions by CDP providers. This is problematic, because the bill
also gives the Minister a wide power to make determinations regarding the
powers and functions of CDP providers, and review rights in relation to CDP
provider decisions. On its face, this would authorise the Minister to transfer
certain decisions (perhaps certain decisions about compliance) to CDP provider
staff and, unless he determined otherwise, s 144(da) would preclude merits
review of these decisions.
...Assurances in the Department's submission about the Minister's
current intentions are lacking in detail and are no substitute for legislated
appeal rights.[25]
1.35
In evidence to the Committee, Mr Gerard Thomas of the Sydney Welfare
Rights Centre said in relation to the appeals process changes:
This measure is unprecedented, as far as I am concerned, and
Welfare Rights does not know of any other precedent in this area.[26]
1.36
When asked about their responsibilities in handling appeals processes, a
provider noted in evidence to the Committee that several questions had not been
resolved:
It was raised in the conference this week, and we have also
raised it in discussions with the department previously. The answer we have
been given has not been clear, because it has not been drafted in a regulation
yet. The query that we had was: would our staff members in making these
decisions be protected in any way? What sort of safeguards are there? Again, it
has not been written into any legislation. It would be in the regulation. But
the department acknowledged that that was an issue and that one of the
options—and, again, it is a hypothetical option—is that there would be an
extension to provider staff to be treated similarly or the same as current DHS
staff in the making of those decisions. They would see the same protections.
Again, there is probably more devil in the detail, which would be in the regulations
relating to that.[27]
1.37
Jobs Australia also highlighted concerns around the challenge in
shifting responsibility for decisions to providers:
The people in the Department of Human Services who undertake
review processes are very highly trained, and very highly trained in the proper
documentation and evidencing of and reasons for the administrative decisions
they make in relation to income support. That is going to have to be provided
to the staff of CDP providers. If they have to front the AAT or the Federal
Court they will need legal representation, and that will have to be underwritten
by the government as well.[28]
1.38
In a paper provided to the Committee late on the 26th of February,
PM&C outlined a process under which:
-
Job seekers will be able to request a review by the provider
-
Job seekers will be able to appeal to PM&C, which can review
a decision under Part 4 of the Social Security (Administration) Act 1999.
-
Job seekers can appeal PM&C's decision to the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal, under Part 4A of the Social Security (Administration) Act
1999.
-
Job seekers can appeal the AAT decision to a second review and
subsequently to the courts, in line with current arrangements.
1.39
The paper says that provider employees would not be required to appear
during the AAT process.
1.40
While the provision of this outline provides further detail, it also
raises a number of concerns, such as PM&C's role as the appeal body,
without any expertise in this area, and the potential for pressure to be
applied on local providers over reviewing decisions. It is also concerning that
this process is not clear from the legislation, as reflected in a number of
submissions; it is unclear why this policy intent has not been reflected in the
Bill.
Employment conditions
1.41
The Australian Council of Trade Unions, among others, also highlighted
concerns over the workplace conditions of people undertaking Work for the Dole
under the CDP. Ms Karalyn Keys said:
Our concerns centre on workers' rights, occupational health
and safety, consultation and the possibility for discrimination under this
program. In terms of workers rights, this Community Development Program is open
to government agencies and now commercial businesses to take on or have access
to Work-for-the-Dole workers. There are obviously a number of concerns with
that. Regarding the increase to income thresholds, we think that there is an
opportunity for increased earning capacity for workers. However, we would say
that it establishes unequal and discriminatory workplace practices, especially
in relation to the minimum wage and standard conditions of employment.
As outlined in our submission, this opens up the possibility
that a worker could be engaged in a private for-profit company for 25 hours a
week, working for well below the minimum wage, and then for any additional
hours of extra work for that employer, at the same workplace, doing the same
job, would be entitled to the minimum wage and minimum standards of employment...
We are also concerned about occupational health and safety
implications. The CDP legislation specifically excludes these workers from
federal workplace health and safety and compensation legislation. It is very
vague at best as to how state and territory occupational health and safety, and
workers compensation, legislation would apply to these workers. In a situation
where someone has a very serious workplace injury or a death, there is no
certainty that that worker or their family would be able to access the safety
net that is provided for every other Australian worker.
Secondarily, there is no established clarity about who would
be responsible for compliance with the occupational health and safety, and
workers compensation, legislation. So is it the CDP provider or is it the host
employer? There is no clarity around that so, clearly, we hold some concerns
about how that would play out on the ground.[29]
Incentives for applying penalties
1.42
While many providers will face challenges in applying sanctions, there
is a direct incentive in the payment scheme to impose sanctions. Peter Davidson
from ACOSS said:
Basically, a provider has several options if a job seeker
does not meet the requirements in attending an interview or attending Work for
the Dole. One of them is to apply an immediate sanction, the other is to use
other strategies to try to re-engage the person, like allowing them to make up
time for missed activities at another time or rescheduling appointments.
The guidelines provide that the provider will be paid if they
are able to re-engage the person within two weeks, so the provider could be in
a scenario where they choose not to sanction the person for a range of reasons
because they think there is the possibility of re-engaging them because they
are concerned about the impact on the job seeker and they would prefer to re-engage
them rather than sanction them, but if they are not successful in doing so,
then they have invested a lot of time but they have received no payment for
that work at the end. That puts all of the risk upon the provider in terms of
the strategies that they use, whereas if they just used sanctions, then they
would receive the payment for the amount of work they have done. We see that
this bill is an incentive towards sanctioning rather than engaging in other
strategies.[30]
The Community Investment Fund
1.43
In response to questions on notice, the department said that the detail
of how the Community Investment Fund (CIF) was still being developed, but said:
The exact operational arrangements for the Community
Investment Fund are yet to be determined ... it is proposed that funds that have
been withheld as a result of penalties will be put back into communities, to
assist local economic and community development initiatives and programmes ...
The Community Investment Fund will be delivered through the Indigenous Advancement
Strategy (IAS). IAS funding is administered by the Indigenous Affairs portfolio
within the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.
There are likely to be significant complexities in the
process of returning funds to communities, but it is important to ensure this
occurs. The Indigenous Advancement Strategy continues to be plagued by
significant implementation problems, which have had devastating impacts on
Aboriginal communities. For those reasons, it is concerning that appropriate
consultation has not yet been undertaken, but is being postponed until the
finalisation of the legislative instrument.[31]
Patronage
1.44
This shift in decision making to local providers has significant
implications, and poses a real risk of wide-spread problems in the system.
Several submissions noted that this would create challenges for providers who
hire staff from their community, who will then be responsible for decision
making in relation to other members of their communities.
1.45
Mr Peter Davidson of ACOSS stated in evidence to the Committee:
All of the incentives for providers and recipients of CDP
services point to the entrenchment of a new system of patronage in remote
communities, where people's survival depends increasingly on their performance
of activities for a service provider. Even if they secure part-time employment,
their dependency on the provider continues. Incentives are weak for individuals
and providers to assist people to move towards financial independence and for
communities to take hold of their own futures. There is a risk that this will
entrench a system of patronage that is similar to the mission arrangements that
existed in many of those communities decades ago.[32]
1.46
Jobs Australia noted in their submission:
A further complication is the fact that providers often
source their staff from the local community. That means that the people charged
with responsibility for making decisions about benefit payments will also have
relationships with people in the community – they will be responsible for
deciding whether to apply sanctions to people who are their neighbours,
friends, and family members. In situations where the job seeker is known to the
staff member, it is almost impossible for decisions to be made with the same
kind of impartial assessment that would be undertaken by a stranger in DHS.[33]
Concerns about the safety of provider employees
1.47
An additional concern was raised in relation to the protection of the
employees of service providers. One service provider, the Tiwi Islands Training
and Employment Board, said in their submission:
Currently, our staff report non-participation to the
Department of Human Services (DHS), and it is DHS staff who make the decision
about any reduction in benefit payments. This means that when angry people
approach our staff and ask why their benefits have been reduced, we can refer
them to DHS. DHS has systems in place to address staff safety and, in most
cases, manages these conversations by phone. If our staff are to be entirely
responsible for decisions about people's benefits, then it's inevitable that
community members who are aggrieved at such a decision will confront our staff.
We might be able to increase security at our offices, but that has a
substantial cost and still leaves staff exposed outside of work hours or away from
secure premises. It will make it harder for us to attract and retain local
Indigenous people to work in delivering the program.[34]
Conclusion
1.48
Throughout the Committee process, clear evidence was provided through
submissions and in the hearing that the proposed framework will fail to support
Aboriginal people in remote communities. The Australian Greens oppose the
measures in this bill, which are fundamentally flawed, will involve major
implementation challenges, and will create further significant problems.
The Australian Greens recommend that the Social Security
Legislation Amendment (Community Development Program) Bill 2015 not be passed.
1.49
However there is an urgent need to provide appropriate support in remote
communities. We agree with the Government to the extent that the current
approach to employment support in remote communities is failing and needs
reform.
The Australian Greens recommend that the Government adopt
an approach of consulting communities directly to develop policy approaches
which are community initiated and have strong community involvement.
1.50
Some areas worth examining further include:
-
The Indigenous Ranger program, which provides significant
employment benefits, and strong environmental outcomes.
-
The Aboriginal Peak Organisations Northern Territory (APONT) has
proposed a model, which could be trialled in the Northern Territory, after
appropriate consultation.[35]
We urge the Government to review this proposal and work with community on a
program that will not disadvantage Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
peoples.
Senator Rachel Siewert
Navigation: Previous Page | Contents | Next Page