Preliminary Pages
Foreword
There is a range of factors that impact on the successful
operation of a store in a remote Indigenous community. As each community
varies, so do its particular needs and the context within which the community
store operates. The Committee recognises that the development and support of a
diversity of store operations and delivery models is required to meet the
unique needs and situations in remote Indigenous communities.
It was evident to the Committee that the community stores
function as much more than a shop. As well as being the primary vehicle to
ensure access to affordable and nutritious food supply, it is the place where
people meet to socialise and to conduct business. As the title of this report
suggests, it is everybody’s business how well a store operates because
it plays such a critical role in the health and well‑being of the whole
community.
The Committee has made 33 recommendations in this report in
key areas such as health and nutrition, food access and supply, cost of living,
regulating governance, licensing of stores and the future of the Outback Stores
model.
The Committee received over 112 submissions and held 28
public hearings and visited stores in 17 remote Indigenous communities. I would
like to express my thanks to all those people who put so much time into their
submissions and for their excellent contributions during hearings and community
meetings.
I also take the opportunity to thank the previous Chair of
the Committee, Richard Marles MP, the Deputy Chair, Andrew Laming MP and
all the members of the Committee for their work during the inquiry.
The Hon Bob
Debus MP
Chair
Membership
of the Committee
Chair
|
The Hon Bob Debus MP (from 25 June 2009)
Mr Richard Marles MP (to 15 June 2009)
|
|
Deputy
Chair
|
Mr Andrew Laming MP
|
|
Members
|
The Hon Tony Abbott MP
Ms Jodie Campbell MP
|
|
|
The Hon Bob Katter MP
Ms Kerry Rea MP
Mr Chris Trevor MP
Mr Kelvin Thomson MP
Mr Jim Turnour MP
|
|
|
The Hon Mrs Danna Vale MP
|
|
Committee Secretariat
Secretary
|
Dr Anna Dacre
Ms Sharon Bryant (from 18 May 2009 to 23 September
2009)
|
Inquiry
Secretaries
|
Ms Susan Cardell
Ms Rebecca Gordon
|
Research
Officers
|
Ms Loes Slattery
|
Office
Manager
|
Ms Claire Young
|
|
|
Terms
of reference
The Committee shall inquire into and report on the operation
of local community stores in remote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
communities, with a particular focus on:
- Food supply, quality, cost and competition issues;
- The effectiveness of the Outback Stores model, and other
private, public and community store models; and
- The impact of these factors on the health and economic
outcomes of communities.
Abbreviations
ABA
|
Australian Bankers Association
|
ABS
|
Australian Bureau of Statistics
|
ACCC
|
Australian Competition &
Consumer Commission
|
ALPA
|
Arnhem Land Aboriginal Progress
Corporation
|
APY
|
Anangu Pitjantjatjara
Yankunytjatjara
|
ASIC
|
Australian Securities and
Investments Commission
|
ATO
|
Australian Taxation Office
|
BAC
|
Bawinanga Aboriginal Corporation
|
BSS
|
Building Strong Stores training
program
|
CAEPR
|
Centre for Aboriginal Economic
Policy Research
|
CAT
|
Centre for Appropriate Technology
|
CATSI Act
|
Corporations and Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander Act 2006
|
CDEP
|
Commonwealth Development
Employment Projects
|
CLC
|
Central Land Council
|
COAG
|
Council of Australian Governments
|
FAHCSIA
|
Department of Families, Housing,
Community Services and Indigenous Affairs
|
HES
|
Household Expenditure Survey
|
HFAB
|
Healthy Food Access Basket
|
IBA
|
Indigenous Business Australia
|
IBIS
|
Islanders Board of Industry and
Service
|
KCC
|
Kaltukatjara Community
Corporation
|
Mai Wiru
|
Mai Wiru Regional Stores Policy
|
MPA
|
Maningrida Progress Association
|
MOU
|
Memoranda of Understanding
|
MBS
|
Market Basket Survey
|
NATSINSAP
|
National Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Nutrition Strategy and Action Plan
|
NHC
|
Nganampa Health Council
|
NPARC
|
Northern Peninsula Area Regional
Council
|
NPY
|
Ngaanyatjarra Pitjantjatjara
Yankunytjatjara
|
NT Associations Act
|
Northern Territory
Associations Act 2003
|
NTER
|
Northern Territory Emergency
Response
|
NTER Act
|
Northern Territory Emergency
Response Act 2007
|
OBS
|
Outback Stores
|
ORIC
|
Office of the Registrar of
Indigenous Corporations
|
PIN
|
Personal identification number
|
PMSEIC
|
Prime Minister’s Science,
Engineering and Innovation Council
|
RIST
|
Remote Indigenous Stores and
Takeaways
|
SIHIP
|
Strategic Indigenous Housing and
Infrastructure Program
|
TFES
|
Tasmanian Freight Equalisation
Scheme
|
List
of recommendations
3 Healthy stores, healthy communities
Recommendation 1
The Committee recommends the Australian Government fund the
rollout of the Remote Indigenous Stores and Takeaways (RIST) resources to all
remote Indigenous communities across Australia, in conjunction with the support
required by a nutritionist.
Recommendation 2
The Committee recommends the Australian Government consider
the development of an incentive scheme to influence store managers to sell
healthy produce.
Recommendation 3
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
require that membership of the Outback Stores board include a nutritionist.
Recommendation 4
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government work
collaboratively with state and territory governments, health services and
remote store operators to ensure that nutrition education programs are
available to all remote Indigenous communities.
Recommendation 5
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
require all Outback Stores to develop, in consultation with local communities,
a specific healthy store policy.
Recommendation 6
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government work
collaboratively with all remote Indigenous community store owners, operators
and communities to assist in the development and ongoing management of a
healthy store policy.
Recommendation 7
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government work
collaboratively with state and territory governments to fund and make available
to all remote Indigenous community stores:
n the Remote Indigenous Stores and
Takeaways (RIST) or similar point-of-sale monitoring tool,
n training for store employees on the
operation of the tool, and
n mechanisms to provide feedback to
communities and governments about the sale of products from the store.
Recommendation 8
The Committee recommends the Australian Government make
available in all Outback Stores a system similar to the FOODcard established by
the Arnhem Land Progress Aboriginal Corporation. The Committee also recommends
that the Australian Government consult with other remote community store
operators to facilitate more widespread introduction of this system for
communities who are interested.
Recommendation 9
The Committee recommends the Australian Government consider
the optional introduction of a healthy food card system to pregnant and
breast-feeding mothers in remote Indigenous communities.
Recommendation 10
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
establish a national Primary Health Care program to fund and coordinate supply
of healthy lunches and drinks to children at pre-schools and schools in remote
Indigenous communities where this need is identified.
Recommendation 11
The Committee recommends the Australian Government, in
collaboration with educational institutions, investigate and develop:
n the facilitation of training of
Indigenous staff living in remote communities to store management levels, and
n the certification of in-store training of
skills such as health promotion and food supply and storage.
Recommendation 12
The Committee recommends the Australian Government assess the
impact that Community Development Employment Projects reform will have on the
viability and employment opportunities in stores in remote Indigenous
communities.
4 Fresh food access and supply
Recommendation 13
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
establish a national remote Indigenous food supply chain coordination office
to:
n support individual communities or
regional groupings of communities to develop supply models by examining the
possibilities appropriate to them,
n facilitate the establishment of
cooperative arrangements including transparent cross-subsidisation models, if appropriate,
n assist to develop supply models that
deliver healthy perishables to remote communities weekly where possible, and
n disseminate information on options for
supply models to remote Indigenous communities.
Recommendation 14
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government,
through the proposed national remote Indigenous food supply chain coordination
office, investigate working with charitable delivery organisations, such as
FoodBank Western Australia, to aid in the delivery of fresh fruit and
vegetables to remote Indigenous communities.
Recommendation 15
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
establish a remote community store infrastructure fund to assist stores to
invest in delivery, refrigeration and storage facilities that will support the
supply of fresh and healthy produce to Indigenous communities. Access to the
fund may be contingent on stores having a healthy food policy and participating
in a nutrition education program.
Recommendation 16
The Committee recommends the Australian Government ensure
health clinics in remote Indigenous communities are aware of the nutritional
value of bush tucker and other traditional foods and actively encourage
communities to continue to engage in traditional practices.
Recommendation 17
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
support community garden, traditional food and farming projects in remote
Indigenous communities for the local production of food, particularly in
schools, where it is demonstrated that long term sustainability can be
attained.
Recommendation 18
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
continue to fund programs to eradicate feral animals in remote areas as
required.
Recommendation 19
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
examine ways to facilitate remote Indigenous communities undertaking
collaborative arrangements with stores to distribute and /or sell locally grown
or harvested produce.
Recommendation 20
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government assist
stores across Australia in remote Indigenous communities to develop
partnerships with local food production and harvest industries and expand
operations to also function as market places for community grown produce. The
Committee recommends that the Australian Government trial a partnership that
requires Outback Stores to support local food production and harvesting
industries and buy an annual minimum of goods from these local sources.
5 Cost of living in remote Indigenous communities—the
price of health
Recommendation 21
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
commission a regional cost of living study for Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islanders living in remote communities in Australia and report by the end of
2010.
Recommendation 22
The Committee recommends the Australian Bureau of Statistics
consider expanding the Household Expenditure Survey to capture Indigenous
specific data and remote community data.
Recommendation 23
The Committee recommends that, following implementation of
supply chain coordination and efficiencies, the Australian Government give
consideration to a freight subsidy for fresh produce for the Torres Strait.
Recommendation 24
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
establish a working group with representatives from the Department of Families
Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs, the Australian Securities
and Investments Commission, state and territory governments, remote community
store operators and the Australian Bankers Association. The working group
should be tasked with:
n investigating the transaction fees being
charged in remote Indigenous communities,
n investigating the impact of the limited
banking choices available in remote communities, such as the consequent extent
of fees charged for using foreign Automated Teller Machines,
n ensuring Indigenous Australians in remote
communities have the financial literacy and access to facilities to make
informed decisions regarding money management options, including the use of
book up, and
n investigating mechanisms to lower or
waive financial fees and charges for Indigenous people in remote communities.
Recommendation 25
The Committee recommends that the Department of Families,
Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs support remote Indigenous
community service programs that develop lifestyle skills, such as home cooking
and shopping, to ensure Indigenous families have the skills to prepare healthy
and nutritious meals in the home at low cost.
Recommendation 26
The Committee recommends that the Department of Families,
Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs coordinate the dissemination
of a healthy takeaway food guide, such as the Remote Indigenous Stores and
Takeaways (RIST) Healthy Fast Food: a Resource for Remote Stores and
Takeaways, and provide appropriate start-up training for remote store
operators.
6 Regulating for governance
Recommendation 27
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
support proposals that Indigenous owned and controlled community stores
register as corporations under the Corporations and Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Act 2006.
In addition, the Committee recommends the Australian
Government actively promote and encourage registration under the Office of the
Registrar of Indigenous Corporations.
Recommendation 28
The Committee recommends that the Office of the Registrar of
Indigenous Corporations receive additional funding to provide governance and
financial management training to community stores that register under the Corporations
and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Act 2006.
7 Future of remote community stores
Recommendation 29
The Committee recommends that, if the Australian Government
proceeds with the proposal for a national licensing regime for remote community
stores, the following should be taken into account:
n administrative processes to apply for and
maintain a licence should be streamlined and easily complied with by Indigenous
corporations, store committees and managers,
n there should be a well-defined procedure
to appeal any decision to refuse a licence, such as through the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal, and a refusal should also consider the interim and longer
term impacts it may have on a remote community’s food supply security,
n the definition of a community store
should be sufficiently flexible to encompass bush delivery, hub and spoke
operations and other food supply models which offer economic and health
benefits to communities,
n licence assessment should be undertaken
in a timely manner,
n licences should be issued either to store
owners, or jointly to store owners and store managers,
n mandatory qualifications and
accreditation should apply to store managers,
n licences should include a requirement for
a healthy store policy and to display pricing, and
n licensing should be subject to a review
to ensure it is not providing unfair advantages to corporately managed stores
over individual and community stores.
Recommendation 30
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
require that membership of the Outback Stores board include Indigenous
representation.
Recommendation 31
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government revise
the purpose of the Outback Stores model to recognise the following two distinct
roles:
n the commercially viable operation of a
remote store where a community contracts it to manage their store, and
n under advice from the Department of
Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs, the delivery of
store services to communities where the current store is unviable or the
regular supply of healthy food is not secured. Supplementary interim funding
for these services be provided on a case by case basis.
Recommendation 32
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
require Outback Stores to disclose a financial statement of expenditure of the
appropriated funds received to date.
Recommendation 33
The Committee recommends that, rather than support particular
service providers, the Australian Government work proactively with individual communities
to develop and support a diversity of good store operations or delivery models
that recognise the unique needs and situations of those communities and ensure
food security to all remote communities.