Chapter 3 Appropriate support and accommodation in the community
3.1
This chapter draws on the Australian experience of alternatives to
secure immigration detention. While there appears no ‘best practice’ model in
operation the evidence received by the Committee highlighted the problems and
consequences of the current system, and so provides many lessons to assist in
developing a further framework for community release. This refers to the
practical characteristics of model design in terms of food, accommodation,
basic utilities and support services. It also refers to a broader assessment of
how a future framework might better support a person or family’s well being and
give them the best opportunity for a just outcome through Australia’s
immigration processes.
3.2
In particular, this chapter focuses on the first of the Committee’s
stated considerations for evaluating alternatives to immigration detention,
that is, the extent to which alternatives ensure a humane, appropriate and
supported environment for people with an unresolved immigration status.
3.3
The chapter summarises the volume of evidence received regarding the
support needed for appropriate placement in community-based options. In
examining this evidence, the Committee has sought to draw out the issues to be
taken into account in developing a future framework for greater use of
community-based detention alternatives, namely:
n ensuring financial
resources to meet the provision of basic needs, if required, such as through
income support or permission to work
n providing access to available,
affordable and appropriate accommodation
n giving due care to
personal and family wellbeing, such as mental health, social isolation and
meeting the particular needs of families and children, and
n providing support
services that include case management and referral services and orientation information
on living in the Australian community.
Provision for basic needs
3.4
For people with an unresolved immigration status living in the
community, mechanisms are required to ensure that their basic needs can be met.
As mentioned earlier, in some instances people on bridging visas will have no
requirement for assistance.
3.5
If bridging visas are utilised as a community-based alternative to
detention, however, then a responsibility rests with the Department of
Immigration and Citizenship (DIAC) to ensure that that person or family has the
financial capacity to meet their basic needs. This may take the form of an
allowance to provide income support, or permission to work as a condition of
the bridging visa so that a person is able to financially support themselves
and any dependent family members.
3.6
The next sections summarise evidence received regarding the importance
of income support and permission to work.
Income support
3.7
While in a detention facility, people have their basic needs for food
and accommodation met within the institutional environment and through the
service providers contracted by DIAC. People in immigration detention centres,
immigration residential housing and immigration transit accommodation do not
receive any income support, although people in residential housing may have a
nominal budget or vouchers with which to purchase groceries. Additionally, all
detainees are allocated weekly ‘points’ with which they may purchase small
items such as cigarettes, phone cards and snacks from detention stores.[1]
3.8
For people in community detention, the Australian Red Cross rents
apartments or houses and provides clients with a living allowance that is
transferred automatically into a bank account for them to access as needed. The
living allowance is used by detainees to pay for living expenses such as food
and electricity, although it may be insufficient to purchase more substantial
items such as household goods, furniture, and televisions, or to pay for a
telephone.[2] Income support is paid at
a rate equivalent to 89 per cent of Centrelink Special Benefit.[3]
At current rates, for example, this would be equivalent to a maximum of $403.44
per fortnight for a single person with no dependents.[4]
3.9
As outlined in chapter 2, there are some means of income support for
eligible people with an unresolved immigration status outside of immigration
detention on bridging visas, although these are limited. The relatively rare return
pending bridging visa is the only bridging visa that confers access to social
security benefits provided by Centrelink.[5] People on other bridging
visas, who may have been granted a bridging visa as an alternative to being
taken into detention, are not eligible for income support through Centrelink.
3.10
People accepted into the Community Care Pilot may receive assistance
with basic living expenses, although destitution on its own is not sufficient for
eligibility for the Pilot – other indicators of ‘exceptional circumstances’,
such as serious medical conditions, mental health issues, or torture or trauma
histories must also be present.[6] People in the community awaiting
the outcome of a protection visa application may receive support under the
Asylum Seekers Assistance Scheme (ASAS). To be eligible, asylum seekers must be
in financial hardship. The income support provided under both the Community
Care Pilot and the ASAS is at the same rate as that provided to people in
community detention.[7]
3.11
As noted in chapter 2, the Committee received evidence that whilst the Community
Care Pilot and the Asylum Seeker Assistance Scheme were welcome programs,
access and eligibility was patchy or periodic.[8] Despite recent
improvements:
…it remains the case that, under current government policy,
some asylum seekers at some or all stages of the determination process, despite
their lawful status within the community, are destitute by either design or the
system’s deficiencies; that is sometimes for a protracted period of time, but
it is always for an unknown period of time.[9]
3.12
Whilst many inquiry participants nominated bridging visas as their
preferred mechanism for release from detention into the community, in
preference to community detention or other arrangements, there was strong
criticism of restrictions attached to bridging visas, in particular,
restrictions on work, income assistance and health care.[10]
3.13
The Committee received a strong body of evidence that for bridging visa
holders who do not have independent financial means or friends or family in the
community willing to support them, the double bind of no income and no work may
result in poverty, destitution and other associated disadvantages. This may particularly
be the case for asylum seekers, who in comparison with other bridging visa
holder groups such as tourist, business or student visa over stayers may be
less likely to have financial resources or assets with which to survive pending
a decision on their visa application.
3.14
Bridging visa holders in the community without any means of supporting
themselves are currently relying on charities, non-government organisations and
the goodwill of strangers while their immigration status is being resolved. As
outlined in chapter 2, in the past this situation has extended for periods of
up to several years.
3.15
It is not known exactly how many people on bridging visas are in this
situation, although the Hotham Mission has estimated that there are about 500
in Melbourne.[11] The Committee heard from
a range of peak bodies that their clients are presenting in poverty or
destitution and that the current restrictions on bridging visas conditions
means they do not always represent a viable alternative to detention.[12]
Tamara Domicelj, of the Asylum Seekers Centre of New South Wales, told the
Committee:
What we see in the community at the moment is something that
is entirely unmanageable. We see people in desperate circumstances, utterly
debilitated by years and years of protracted destitution, often having been
released from a detention environment into that ongoing limbo. They also do not
know how long that is going to last. We often have people say to us: ‘Arrange
for us to go back inside. We can’t bear it outside. We can’t clothe our kids.
We can’t get medical attention. We’re not allowed to work. We can’t engage with
the community. We can’t study.’ We hear that as well. That is not to in any
sense diminish all of the issues in relation to the detention centre
environment, but releasing people on a bridging visa E without work rights and
without access to Medicare is no solution whatsoever.[13]
3.16
A few organisations are able to draw on philanthropic donations to
provide basic cash or in-kind support to people in this situation. The Hotham
Mission Asylum Seeker Project in Melbourne, for example, provides around 360
clients with $33 a week.[14] In Sydney, the Bridge
for Asylum Seekers Foundation provides $90 per week for a single person and $70
per person for a family member; as at March 2009, it was supporting 75 asylum
seekers.[15] The Asylum Seeker
Resource Centre of Melbourne provides 4800 food parcels each year through its
food bank for asylum seekers and 14 560 meals a year through their community
meals program.[16]
3.17
The Minister for Immigration and Citizenship has stated his interest in
increasing the use of community-based alternatives following health, identity
and security checks.[17] However, there was
concern from some submitters that the current bridging visa framework is
fundamentally flawed and needs reform. For example the Refugee Council of
Australia said that:
It is important, as the Australian Government moves to expand
community-based alternatives to detention, that steps are taken to ensure that
people are not left destitute while their visa status is determined.[18]
3.18
The Australian Human Rights Commission expressed the view that
conditions and restrictions attached to some bridging visas may significantly
impact on the ability of people to exercise their basic human rights, including
the right to social security and the right to an adequate standard of living.[19]
Several inquiry participants also made reference to a 2005 ruling by the House
of Lords in the United Kingdom which upheld a court's decision that failure to
provide basic support to destitute asylum seekers amounted to ‘inhuman’ or
‘degrading’ treatment in violation of international law.[20]
Permission to work
3.19
People in immigration detention in Australia are unlawful non-citizens
and are not permitted to work. This applies equally to those in less
restrictive forms of immigration detention, such as community detention, where
there may be no physical impediments to attending a place of work on a regular
basis. These restrictions may also apply to voluntary work and formal courses
of study.
3.20
As outlined in chapter 2, bridging visas may or may not be issued with a
‘no work’ condition. Work conditions attached to a bridging visa will vary
according to the substantive visa applied for, as well as the applicant's
immigration status and personal circumstances at time of application.[21]
3.21
Concerns about work rights, or lack thereof, for bridging visas were
raised by many inquiry participants. The primary concern was that without
access to income support, a restriction on work was equivalent to enforced
destitution for some people. For example, Ms LI, on a bridging visa, told
the Committee:
One of my children and I do not have any work rights so for
the past one and a half years I have been financially supported by the Red
Cross. Before that I was living on my own and I would collect rubbish and
furniture on the streets and resell that to support my children. It was not
easy at all.[22]
3.22
Another issue raised regarding restrictions on work rights was the
‘substantial alienation and psychological concerns’ caused by not being able to
work and being reliant on charities for basic needs.[23]
It was also argued that the mental health issues generated by having no income
and nothing to do rendered many people unable or ill-equipped to work when and
if they were granted a permanent visa, potentially perpetuating a future
dependence on welfare.[24] The Refugee Claimants
Support Centre in Brisbane argued that:
We see that not being able to work still affects people even
once they have received their permanent residency. Even though they have been
in Australia’s some time, sometimes years, they have no experience or work
references to show potential employers. On top of this, their reliance on charity
to survive and their constant need to ask and beg for money has often been a
big blow to their feelings of worth, adequacy and self-esteem.[25]
3.23
The consensus of social workers and others giving evidence to the
inquiry was that a large number of those people who currently did not have work
rights had the will and capacity to be largely self-sustaining.[26]
This view was also reiterated by individuals in evidence to the inquiry. One
man, a mechanical engineer from Korea, had been in a detention centre for eight
months and in community detention for three months. He expressed a desire to
work:
We are living on a very basic life; we are just surviving at
the moment... I can understand we are given very basic support financially from
government. It is really free money without me working. I should be
appreciative. I would rather go to work and make money instead of getting free
money from the government.[27]
Figure 3.1 International approaches to work rights for
asylum seekers
In Europe, where most asylum claims (about 75
per cent) have been lodged, few countries have provided asylum seekers with
work rights at the front end of the assessment process (Sweden is one
exception). Asylum seekers have had no work rights at all in some countries (France, Italy, and Ireland). In other countries they have been able to work after a period
of time if no decision has been made on their claim, or after a particular
stage in the determination process is reached (the Netherlands, Belgium). Following EU countries’ efforts to ‘harmonise’ their asylum systems, the European
Council issued a directive (2003/9/EC of 27 January 2003) under which asylum
seekers are to be allowed to apply for permission to work if they have not
received an initial decision on their asylum claim within 12 months.
In Sweden, if it appears that the application
process will exceed four months, the asylum seeker is entitled to gain
employment during the application period (to pay for food and accommodation in
the Refugee Reception Centre) through use of a general identity card.
In the UK, a ‘concession’ formerly allowed
asylum seekers to work after six months if ‘a decision’ had not been made. This
was withdrawn in July 2002 in an attempt to further discourage ‘bogus’ asylum
seekers, and to quarantine the UK’s new economic migration programs from asylum
inflows. Since February 2005, asylum seekers have been granted permission to
work after 12 months if the Home Office determines that they were not
responsible for the delay in making a decision.
In the USA, asylum seekers can apply for work rights after six months if
their case remains unresolved. Work rights may also be granted to asylum
seekers whose claims are refused, if they cannot be removed.
In New Zealand, asylum seekers may be granted a temporary work permit
(one per family) if they have arrived with ‘legal documentation’, but are
refused permission to work if they arrive with no or fraudulent papers and/or
are on ‘conditional release’ from detention.
Canada grants work rights to asylum seekers throughout the refugee
determination process, and for 12 months following the refusal of their claim
for refugee status. It would appear however that asylum seekers may be
authorised or directed to work only in specific sectors of the Canadian labour
market, associated with temporary or guest worker schemes.
Source Adapted
from Parliamentary Library, ‘Asylum seekers on bridging visa E’ (2007), research
brief no. 13 2006-07, p 15; information on Sweden from Law Institute of
Victoria, Liberty Victoria and The Justice Project, submission 127, p 42.
3.24
During the course of the inquiry the Committee met with people on
bridging visas with work rights who were working as a chef, physical education
teacher, dairy farmer, fruit picker, and hotel worker, and others who were
self-employed as a market stall operator and an owner of a prefabrication
business. The Refugee Claimants Support Centre in Brisbane reported having
highly skilled people, such as nurses, dentists and doctors, in their client
group without work rights.[28]
3.25
Several witnesses made mention of a survey conducted in 2005 of bridging
visa holders without work rights, which found that 71 per cent of a sample of
113 people had skills or qualifications listed on the Skilled Occupation List
for the General Skilled Migration stream. Of these 45 per cent were listed on
the Migration Occupations in Demand List.[29]
3.26
Even where work rights are granted, though, it can be difficult for
individuals to find work due to mental or physical health reasons or because
they are caring for children. Additionally, people on bridging visas may face
barriers to employment common to other groups of migrants to Australia, such as
recognition of overseas qualifications, a lack of local work experience,
inadequate English language skills, or employment discrimination on the basis
of race or religion.[30]
3.27
In addition, bridging visas might be granted on one, two or three month
periods of extension, and even where work rights are granted, employers were
unwilling to employ anybody who only had a valid visa for a short time.[31]
3.28
A grant of a bridging visa on a monthly basis was considered favourable and
many were only granted on a fortnightly basis.[32] Ms WD, a protection
visa applicant from Ethiopia currently on a bridging visa E, told the Committee
that:
The visa that I am holding now just said that it was granted
for only one month and they want to make sure that I work for three months
minimum. So they are not sure whether I am living with them for one month. If
they are hiring someone they want to depend on them so they said that they are
not sure how they can give me the job because the visa that I am holding is
just for one month.[33]
3.29
The Committee also heard that the desire to work can lead to some
unacceptable work practices. The Asylum
Seeker Resource Centre in Melbourne has said that people on bridging visa E,
having no form of income:
…are extremely motivated to find work of any kind, for any
price. They often accept underpaid work, which may be cash-in-hand, in
dangerous conditions, for long hours and with minimum training.[34]
3.30
Evidence suggests that the limited access to income support or permission
to work is resulting in substantial hardship to bridging visa holders and
placing unacceptable demands on non government organisations. In chapter 5 the
Committee makes a series of recommendations to ensure basic material needs of
bridging visa holders can be met.
Access to medical care
3.31
People in immigration detention do not have access to Medicare benefits.
Health services for people in immigration detention are currently contracted to
International Health and Medical Services (IHMS).[35]
In relation to mainland immigration detention centres, the Department provides
access to a range of onsite primary health care services, including registered
nurses, general practitioners and mental health professionals, as well as
referrals to external services. For people in community detention, IHMS
facilitates access to health care through third party providers with the
Australian Red Cross continuing to provide support services to these people. People
with critical health needs may be admitted to hospitals or psychiatric
facilities, classified as a type of ‘temporary alternative detention’, and the
full cost of these services is borne by the Commonwealth.
3.32
There has been a greater investment in detention health services in
recent years, as evidenced by the establishment of the Detention Health
Advisory Group and development of detention health standards.[36]
3.33
In considering bridging visas as a community-based alternative to
immigration detention, the Committee has sought to consider the relative access
to health care between the detention population and bridging visa holders in
the community.
3.34
Access to health care is an important consideration given the typically
complex health needs of the detention population and others at risk of becoming
unlawful.[37] For example, Hotham
Mission reported that 66 per cent of asylum seekers required medical attention
while on a bridging visa E.[38] Amongst asylum seekers,
particularly, there is a high incidence of complex psychological and mental
health issues.[39] Additionally, people may
be released from immigration detention onto a bridging visa specifically
because DIAC has recognised that they have psychological or physical health
issues that cannot be adequately cared for or may be exacerbated in a detention
environment.[40]
3.35
Some bridging visas holders are entitled to Medicare and the
Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS). However, Medicare access is generally
tied to work rights. To be eligible for Medicare, a bridging visa holder must
have lodged an application for permanent residence (excluding a parent visa
application) and either have permission to work or have a parent, spouse
or child who is an Australian citizen or permanent resident.[41]
3.36
The Committee was not provided with statistical data that could describe
how many bridging visa holders in Australia would fail to meet these
intersecting eligibility requirements. However, based on the sample of bridging
E visa holders as at 30 January 2007, a population of around 7000, which showed
that approximately 37 per cent of visa holders had work rights, this would suggest
that around two thirds did not have access to Medicare.[42]
3.37
Health care services for people on bridging visas in capital cities are
largely being provided by networks of health professionals willing to provide
pro bono services.[43] For example, the major
such clinic in Victoria, that operated by the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre
since 2002, provides over 3000 medical consultations each year through the work
of volunteer medical professionals.[44] A number of asylum
seeker agencies and support groups draw on donations to underwrite
pharmaceuticals for serious or life-threatening illnesses, as these medications
are charged at the full (non-PBS) cost.[45]
3.38
A recent study published in the Medical Journal of Australia found
that in Melbourne, restrictions on Medicare access for people with an
unresolved immigration status were placing ‘a considerable burden on small
community-based organisations and volunteer health care professionals, who are
trying to fill the gap for a marginalised population with complex care needs’.[46]
This study found that most of the people seeking medical attention were on a
bridging visa E, and 46 per cent had been in Australia for five years or more.
Eighty-eight per cent of the visits during the study period involved a person
with no Medicare access.[47] If counselling or specialist
services were required, ‘clinical staff at the clinics were forced to devote
considerable energy to time-consuming negotiation of referrals and fee waivers
for specialist services’.[48]
3.39
Regarding hospital admissions, in 2005 the Victorian government has directed
its public hospitals and community health centres to provide health care free
of charge to asylum seekers (although not necessarily to bridging visa holders
who have not applied for protection).[49] The Australian Capital
Territory has also made equivalent policy changes. This is not the case in
the other Australian states and territories, however, where people on bridging
visas are charged full rates for inpatient and outpatient care which can be in
the region of $80 for outpatient care to $695 per day for inpatient care.[50]
3.40
Agencies working with this client group reported on the impact that no
or limited access to health care had on their clients. Hotham Mission reported that
over 90 per cent of clients were not eligible for Medicare, seventeen per cent
claim to have been refused medical treatment since being on a bridging visa
which includes those turned away after presenting to medical centres or
hospitals and those unable to get appointments due to lack of funds or being
without a Medicare card.[51]
3.41
Robyn Sampson, from the Refugee Research Health Centre at La Trobe
University, provides the following account of a person’s experience in
detention and on a bridging visa:
One asylum seeker became destitute after living on a bridging
visa with no work rights or income support. He took a job illegally in order to
avoid starvation. As a result, he was taken into immigration detention for
breaching his visa conditions. While in detention, he experienced stomach pains
and was treated for ulcers. With the support of a charity, he was released from
detention on another bridging visa. In the community, a doctor took pity on him
and treated him as a patient for free. He was soon diagnosed with oesophageal
cancer, not ulcers. The cancer progressed quickly, and as the man was
ineligible for health care he struggled to obtain proper treatment. In the
terminal stages of the illness, he was threatened with removal as his
application for protection has been refused at all levels. Clearly unfit for
travel, he lived out his remaining months in Australia living off the charity
of others while his illness progressed without appropriate access to treatment
or palliative care.[52]
3.42
This account highlights, in particular, the inconsistency between care
available in the detention environment and in the community on a bridging visa,
which is all the more concerning where a person is specifically released from
detention because they are deemed to have health issues that cannot be managed
within a detention environment. A number of peak bodies reported similar cases
during the course of the inquiry.[53]
3.43
Associate Professor Harry Minas, Chair of the Detention Health Advisory
Group (DeHAG), told the Committee, ‘We already have very good health services
in the country. There is no reason why people who are going through a process
for status resolution should not have access to those services’.[54]
3.44
The Committee notes that the United Nations guidelines on the reception
of asylum seekers state that asylum-seekers should receive free basic medical
care, in case of need, both upon arrival and throughout the asylum procedure; a
principle recently affirmed by the European Parliament.[55]
3.45
Peak organisations in Australia, including the Australian Human Rights
Commission, the Royal Australasian College of Physicians and the Australian
Medical Association, have expressed the view that a person should have access
to basic medical care regardless of their immigration status and current
arrangements are discriminatory.[56]
3.46
Evidence suggests that there is currently limited access to health care
for people on bridging visas, where this is used as an alternative to
immigration detention, and this places some people at risk of poor or acute
health situations. In chapter 5, the Committee makes a series of recommendations
aimed at meeting these gaps.
Accommodation
3.47
This section examines some of the challenges involved in providing appropriate
accommodation for a person or family in the community, as opposed to a
designated detention centre environment. In particular, it reviews the evidence
submitted regarding availability, affordability and other issues associated
with use of the private rental market for people with an unresolved immigration
status.
Availability and affordability
3.48
In a secure detention environment, accommodation for people awaiting
resolution of immigration status is constructed or adapted, maintained and
equipped by the Commonwealth. In alternative temporary detention and community
detention, DIAC or the Australian Red Cross locate and provide for a hospital
room, foster family home, hotel room or private rental property.
3.49
People released from immigration detention on bridging visas, or granted
bridging visas as an alternative to detention, are required to make their own accommodation
arrangements. There is no designated accommodation available for these people.
This is because bridging visa holders are temporarily lawful non-citizens
considered independently responsible for their welfare and immigration choices.
It also reflects the fact that a significant proportion of bridging visa
holders are expected to be making arrangements to depart Australia.
3.50
While the absence of designated housing is entirely appropriate for the
majority of the bridging visa population, for the group of people of most
interest to the Committee —those released from detention on bridging visas, or
granted a bridging visa as an alternative to detention —this situation is
putting some people at risk of insecure, temporary or inappropriate housing, or
of homelessness. Issues of housing and homelessness were raised by a number of
inquiry participants.[57]
3.51
People on bridging visas cannot generally access public or community
housing. Even where they may be eligible, those without permission to work or
access to Centrelink benefits are typically unable to fulfil independent income
criteria that demonstrate they have the capacity to make regular rental
payments.[58] The Committee received
evidence that state and territory housing agencies are struggling to understand
the complexities of legal status, entitlements and needs of this group.[59]
Notwithstanding all this, access to public housing is extremely competitive,
with nearly 180 000 households in Australia already on waiting lists.[60]
3.52
There is some limited housing assistance available to vulnerable people
on bridging visas in the community through the Asylum Seeker Assistance Scheme and
the Community Care Pilot – although this assistance is substantially less than
that provided by DIAC and the Australian Red Cross under the community
detention program where a private rental property is secured and furnished on
behalf of the person.
3.53
People eligible for the Asylum Seeker Assistance Scheme may receive rent
assistance in addition to income support. Under the Community Care Pilot, housing
assistance was identified as a significant gap. There is no specific provision
for assistance in sourcing or securing housing in the model, however people in
need of affordable accommodation may be assisted. In exceptional circumstances,
the Pilot covers the cost of short term crisis accommodation.[61]
3.54
In Sydney and Melbourne there are a small number of loaned, donated or
church-owned properties available for housing people on bridging visas. Father Jim Carty, of the House of Welcome in Sydney, said that:
Sydney is dire in terms of available housing. Currently, the
House of Welcome is a very small operation. We have four houses and five units
in which we accommodate about 28 people during the transitional period, which
is when they are released from detention or they are on bridging visa Es
without access to work…. Every day we get a phone call from a little family or
a single person asking for accommodation, and we have to say no.[62]
3.55
Similar stories are reported across Australia. For example, in Melbourne,
Hotham Mission is currently housing 120 people across 46 properties. These
include families, single mothers, single males and single females. Many of
these houses are vacant church properties or houses donated by individuals,
with rent and bills paid by the donor or the Hotham Mission. Once an asylum
seeker has been placed in an appropriate housing situation, a volunteer
outreach worker is allocated to visit or contact the house at least once a week
and provide support and referral.[63]
3.56
In addition there is anecdotal evidence that members of the community
provide accommodation in private households. Despite the generosity of the
community in opening their homes, donated properties and places in emergency
accommodation shelters, private rental properties are often the only option for
many people.
3.57
Hotham Mission reported that in the current context of pressures on
housing markets, the challenges facing bridging visa holders have been brought
into sharper focus, particularly as the availability and affordability of
properties is diminishing.[64]
3.58
As a result, many agencies reported that people with an unresolved
immigration status were commonly homeless, in precarious housing situations or in
constant movement between temporary solutions. Hotham Mission reported that 62
per cent of their clients present as homeless, with approximately 73 per cent
having experienced homelessness while on a bridging visa E. Almost 17 per cent
become homeless due to unstable housing or lack of appropriate accommodation on
release from detention. In 70 per cent of cases, the loss of income (due to
loss of work rights or ineligibility for the Asylum Seeker Assistance Scheme)
is the primary cause of homelessness. The loss of housing further compromises
the health and security of asylum seekers.[65]
3.59
It was the view of a number of peak agencies that the availability and
accessibility of appropriate housing was one of the most critical issues facing
their clients in the community.[66]
Other issues with the private rental market
3.60
Aside from the issues of availability and affordability associated with
the private rental market, others raised by contributors to this inquiry and in
the research literature were difficulties in securing rental contracts without
proof of identity, visa status, or regular income; language, culture and
discrimination barriers; and a need for sources of information and support.[67]
This included information about tenancy rights and obligations and how to maintain
an average Australian house, which may be different to practices in the home
country of the person. These issues are common to many migrants to Australia, with the distinction that bridging visa holders do not know how long they will
require housing for, and do not have access to the settlement services that
support other migrants and people with refugee status.
3.61
The Committee noted that Hotham Mission in Melbourne provides housing
support and oversight through monthly housing meetings, ensuring tenants are
keeping the house clean and maintained, and ensuring crisis and safety
procedures are in place, suitable to the property and needs of tenants.[68]
This appears to be the exception, however.
3.62
Carolyn Doherty, of the Metropolitan Association Towards Community
Housing (MATCH) in Brisbane, drew on her agency’s experience with refugee
resettlement and housing. After a short period of transitional housing, newly
arrived refugees were ‘we would say—’dumped out’ onto the private rental
market’ – and they had had:
…no opportunity to learn how to manage a tenancy in
Australia. They have a lease—a contract that they do not understand and that
they may not have had an interpreter for. They have absolutely no idea of how
to care for a house in the Australian context. In our experience, many people
have not used sewerage systems or toilets. They have not had electric ovens,
and they certainly do not how to clean them or what cleaning products to use
for them. They throw buckets of water into ovens to clean them. They put rocks
and big pots on stove tops and end up damaging them. They put pots on laminate.
These are things that they need time to understand. They need support in
learning about things… A lot of the models that have existed have not allowed
that to occur.[69]
3.63
Ms Doherty reported high rates of tenancy breach and evictions amongst recently
arrived refugees, which often resulted in people being put on tenancy
black-lists by real estate agents, affecting their long-term ability to be
housed. [70]
3.64
Affordable private rental properties may also be geographically
dispersed around outer metropolitan areas, meaning that people have to spend
more on public transport to meet appointments, may find it difficult to access
support services, and may be more at risk of social isolation. This also creates
challenges for DIAC and non-government agencies maintaining contact with and
providing support to a number of people in a multitude of locations. This can
increase service delivery costs for DIAC. Anecdotally it was reported to the
Committee by one case worker that more time was spent travelling around the
city than talking with clients.
3.65
There are also challenges when clients are located in regional areas
which do not have the necessary infrastructure of non government agencies to
provide assistance and support. Hotham Mission said that, due to the fact that
all their properties where donated and they could not choose their location, ‘The
people we work with are housed all over Melbourne and that brings challenges to
us in working with them’.[71]
3.66
Finally, from the perspective of DIAC and of other housing service
providers in the community, assisting someone to find accommodation in the
private rental market can be very resource-intensive. For example, MATCH said
that their recent statistics showed that they were spending a minimum of 32
hours to get each client a housing option.[72]
3.67
The Minister for Immigration and Citizenship has acknowledged that, in
the context of the community detention program, the competitiveness of the
private rental market, especially in Sydney, makes finding appropriate accommodation
for a person on a bridging visa a challenge and is limiting the department’s ability
in making placement decisions in the best interests of the person.[73]
3.68
In some instances, people will be forced to remain in secure detention
forms until suitable accommodation is sourced. This has a negative impact on the
person and also results in higher costs for DIAC (relative costs are discussed
in chapter 4).
3.69
A more cost effective responsive solution to community based
accommodation is required. The Committee sets out its recommendations for new
accommodation alternatives in conjunction with enhanced social support services
in chapter 5.
Personal and family wellbeing
3.70
This section reviews evidence received on the impact of detention centres
and detention alternatives on mental health and wellbeing. In particular, it
acknowledges the continuing vulnerability of people with uncertain and
unresolved immigration status in relation to anxiety, depression and other
mental disorders. Finally, it makes special mention of the evidence received on
the wellbeing of children and families in detention alternatives.
Mental health issues and social isolation
3.71
Many clinical mental health studies, reports and inquiries have
documented the deleterious impact of indefinite immigration detention on mental
health, and associated impairment of cognition and memory. Depression, anxiety,
other psychiatric disorders and are prevalent in the detention population. This
is a product of the detention environment and in particular prolonged detention
with uncertain outcomes. It is also a product of its interaction with risk
factors already present in the detention centre population, such asylum seekers
with torture and trauma histories and section 501 detainees who have come from
the criminal justice system.[74]
3.72
In this regard, many inquiry participants regarded the development of
community release arrangements as a significant and positive improvement in
Australia’s detention framework.[75] The Australian Human
Rights Commission has said that the people the Commission met as part of their
2008 visits ‘were much happier to be in community detention than in an
immigration detention facility’. The Commission urged DIAC to make greater use
of community release arrangements: ‘In particular, any detainees with
significant health or mental health issues, or with a background of torture or
trauma, should be promptly considered for a residence determination’.[76]
3.73
This is consistent with the evidence given by the NSW Service for the
Treatment and Rehabilitation of Torture and Trauma Survivors (STARTTS), which
told the Committee, ‘We would support community detention—outside from the
detention centre—because there is a better recovery opportunity’ for people
with experience of torture and trauma.[77]
3.74
Similarly, the Commonwealth Ombudsman reported that individuals in
community detention had commented on an improvement in wellbeing since being
outside of a secure detention environment, and that people spoke positively of
the support provided by the Australian Red Cross and members of the community
generally.[78]
3.75
Notwithstanding these achievements, people on bridging visas released
into the community remain at risk of depression, anxiety and social isolation,
and a future framework for community release must be sensitive to this. While
no income, ‘no work’ conditions and lack of access to health care contributed
to poor mental health amongst people on bridging visas, mental health issues
also appeared to be present in those supported through the community detention
program.
3.76
In part this commonality may be attributed to the fact that people in community
detention and on bridging visas, like all people in immigration detention, live
in a state of uncertainty about their future, not knowing what that future may
hold and when they will learn the final outcome of their applications to remain
in Australia. The Australian Human Rights Commission, while noting the benefits
of community detention over secure detention facilities, reported that, ‘Virtually
all of the people the Commission met with [in community detention] expressed
anxiety about the ongoing uncertainty’.[79]
3.77
Alternatively, people on return pending bridging visas and others who
cannot be returned to their country of origin are living in a state of limbo in
the community with the possibility of removal occurring at any time.[80]
3.78
A number of agencies and individuals identified a general high level of
anxiety amongst their community-based clients, as well as a high incidence of mental
health conditions such as depression, psychosis, self-harm and suicidal
ideation, in part due to uncertainty about the future and their legal status in
Australia.[81]
3.79
Dr Tim Lightfoot, a member of the Detention Health Advisory Group,
expressed a concern that as the number of people in detention grew less and
less and people got released, then the system could simply transfer the problem
of mental health difficulties in detention to mental health difficulties in the
community.[82]
3.80
Similarly, the Australian Red Cross, which administers and operates the
community detention and community care pilot programs, said that:
Three years in community detention has taught us that really
people’s status is equally important. If people have unresolved immigration
status and do not know what their future is, it is really hard to address
mental health issues.[83]
3.81
Another issue common to people in community detention and on bridging
visas was the problem of filling their days with meaningful activities when
they are not permitted to work, volunteer or undertake a formal course of
study.[84]
3.82
This point was confirmed by a number of people in community detention in
Sydney who described to the Committee what they did on a typical day:
Mr U: [In a normal day I would do]… nothing.[85]
Mrs K: Every day seems aimlessly with nothing. It seems
hopeless all the time. There is no looking forward to the day. It is just
aimlessly everyday and just do not know what to do. Watch a bit of TV, go
shopping to buy some food for cooking. That is it, another day. Every day I
just do not know what I am going to do. I cannot visit people. I cannot catch
public transport a long distance. I am counting my money… Endless waiting for
that particular day. It is just waiting and waiting.[86]
Mrs L: I go to English class three times a week. We try to
attend seminars which the community organises. They are things like seminars in
a church or a library. My husband spends a lot of time reading Time magazine
in the library and searching on the internet. We put in an application for
voluntary work through the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital to care for elderly
people.[87]
3.83
These accounts are corroborated by the Australian Human Rights
Commission, who reported that one of the most common concerns raised by people
in community detention is that they would like to be able to spend their time
doing something meaningful and constructive, particularly some form of work or
study. Similar feedback has also been reported by the Commonwealth Ombudsman.[88]
3.84
Sister Lorraine Phelan, of the Mercy Refugee Service, said that:
The guys [in the detention centre] would love to be outside
but once they got outside there was nothing they could do. It was bad enough
for them mentally inside but outside was even worse. They thought they were
getting freedom but in fact they were not getting any freedom at all because
they could not work, they could not do voluntary work and they could not study.
There was nothing for them. Some of them actually said time and over again,
‘We’d be better back in Villawood detention centre.’[89]
3.85
The Committee also received anecdotal evidence that people living in the
community, either on bridging visas or in community detention, could be socially
isolated. Single people or couples living in private rental properties in outer
metropolitan suburbs, particularly, said that they knew nobody in their local
area. Others felt that their detention experience and current immigration
status was a stigma that prevented them from seeking interaction with others.[90]
3.86
Many community-based people with an unresolved immigration status reported
recurring mental health problems, being unable to sleep and being on sleeping
medication or antidepressants.[91]
3.87
Chris Nash, of the Refugee Council of Australia, said that, ‘There is
anecdotal evidence of some people being lonely, but equally there is anecdotal
evidence people finding support through the community [and] organisations in
the community’.[92]
3.88
The degree of support and assistance available to a person in developing
connections in the local community or through religious or ethnic communities
appeared to contribute to their wellbeing.
3.89
The evidence received on the mental health and social wellbeing issues
experienced by people in community detention and bridging visa holders
underscores for the Committee the importance of acknowledging that any
alternative to immigration detention, no matter how well designed or how
intensive the support provided, must be regarded as a temporary measure.
3.90
Ultimately, both the person and immigration system are best served by
expedient processing of claims and review and better provision of information
and legal advice – both subjects taken up further in the following chapter.
Children and families
3.91
The development of alternatives to immigration detention centres in
Australia, both within and outside of the legal definition of immigration
detention, has been spurred by evidence about the impact of high security
institutional detention on family life and on children’s development and mental
health.[93]
3.92
The Migration Amendment (Detention Arrangements) Act 2005 held
that children would no longer be held in detention unless as a ‘last resort’. Instead
families with children could reside at a specified place in accordance with a
residence determination (grant of community detention) by the Minister. This
arrangement has bipartisan political support and was reiterated by the Minister
for Immigration and Citizenship in the immigration detention values announced
on 29 July 2008.
3.93
Families with children are now placed in community detention, although
some may be detained in immigration residential housing, immigration transit
accommodation or alternative temporary detention immediately prior to removal; for
initial processing; or whilst appropriate rental accommodation in the community
is being sourced.[94]
3.94
While the Committee expresses its strong support for the commitment not
to place children in detention centres, there remain serious concerns about the
welfare of some children in families on bridging visas with no income support,
work rights or health care entitlement.[95] These go to the direct
effects of poverty on child health and nutrition as well as issues of child and
family wellbeing caused by stress on normal family roles and responsibilities,
family breakdown, lack of independent income and lack of daily activities such
as work and education.
3.95
It is difficult to know how many children might be living in the community
under these circumstances. The Committee requested this data from DIAC but the
department was not able to provide it before this report was finalised. It is revealing
that DIAC’s information systems are able to report promptly on the number of
children in forms of immigration detention but not the number living in the
community in families without work rights, income support, or health care.
3.96
The Committee received some anecdotal evidence from support agencies
about children and minors amongst their clientele:
n Hotham Mission in
Melbourne, which has worked with more than 1000 asylum seekers since 1997,
reports in its submission that around 40 per cent of their clients are family
groupings. This figure includes 14 per cent single mother families, with almost
30 per cent of clients being children under the age of 15.[96]
Hotham Mission told the Committee that they were currently supporting 114
children under the age of 17 whose parents had no access to an income.[97]
n The Refugee Claimants
Support Centre in Brisbane reported that they were currently supporting 11
families and 22 children, adding that only some of their target client group
were making it to the centre due to their limited capacity.[98]
n As at March 2009, the
Bridge for Asylum Seekers Foundation in Sydney were providing assistance to 10
children who were part of families without permission to work, income support,
or Medicare. Since June 2003 they have provided funding assistance to 364
people who have since had their immigration status resolved, including 90
youths and children.[99]
3.97
The difficulty of finding appropriate housing and the forced reliance on
temporary, insecure or inappropriate accommodation solutions is also impacting
on families and children. Refugee Claimants Support Centre said that families
without somewhere to live faced particular difficulties in finding crisis
accommodation. In Brisbane, there were some shelters for women and children but
there are very few full family crisis accommodation places.[100]
3.98
Tamara Domicelj, of the Asylum Seekers Centre of New South Wales,
described the impact of being in a family on a bridging visa without income
support or work rights as:
…utterly debilitating; there is no other way to describe it.
The sheer experience of living in circumstances where the entire family is
placed under inordinate pressure as a result of destitution and uncertainty is
devastating to a child’s development.[101]
3.99
Stephanie Mendis of Hotham Mission also talked about the negative impact
of bridging visa conditions on family relationships and child development:
One of the major impacts on children is that they have to
watch their parents deteriorate mentally because they have no right to work,
nowhere to go and no ability. It is a basic sense of pride and responsibility
to provide for your children and they cannot even do that. They have to go from
service to service begging, often with their children in tow… We have also seen
a lot of depression in children from having to take over the parent role, given
that their parents have deteriorated.[102]
3.100
Agencies working with families on bridging visas report problems with family
violence and family breakdown.[103] The Asylum Seeker
Resource Centre in Melbourne has previously reported that, ‘It is evident from
our work with asylum seeker women that there is a high level of undocumented
and unreported incidence of domestic violence within families living on
bridging visas’.[104] Two of the bridging
visa holders the Committee met in Melbourne mentioned contact with Australian
child protection authorities in the context of them not being able to
adequately provide for their children, as well as of depression and anxiety.[105]
3.101
As noted previously, poverty has the potential to seriously impact on
health outcomes for pregnant women and growing children in community placements.[106]
For example, it was noted:
We are talking about getting $33 a week from us and then
traipsing around agencies [not-for-profit organisations and charities] looking
for food. The food that is given is basics like rice, lentils and dry goods.
So, children do not get fresh milk, they do not get fresh bread, they do not
get any meat or protein.[107]
3.102
Hotham Mission reported that they had worked with newborn and toddler
children with conditions normally only found in the third world, such as
scurvy, rickets and malnutrition.[108]
3.103
Other issues raised were around the education of children and young
adults. Children on bridging visas may attend school, but this appears to be
the result of individual schools’ and principals’ discretion on enrolment, fees
and other costs.[109] This is in contrast to
the arrangements for children in community detention, who have access to
primary and secondary schooling as well as access to English language classes,
in the words of the department, ‘in line with community standards’.[110]
3.104
Hotham Mission reported that their clients’ children often had to take
time off school to help them go and get food items from the Asylum Centre
Resource Centre because the parents had no car in which to carry items home. Hotham
Mission also reported having spent money on excursions, uniforms and school
books because parents cannot afford these attendant costs of children going to
school. [111]
3.105
Children and young adults on bridging visas also have difficulty in
applying for university, because without a substantive visa they are required
to enrol as an international student and pay full fees.[112]
Mrs LI, living in Melbourne on a bridging visa, told the Committee:
I have a daughter who is going to Monash next month and we do
not know whether she can apply for a scholarship. She was also very suicidal
and depressed when she was sitting for her exams last year, because she feels
she has got no future. She wakes up at two o’clock or three o’clock in the morning, banging her head on the door, because she feels she has no future.[113]
3.106
The daughter, S, spoke to the Committee about the stresses present in
her family:
There should be more help, not just in terms of financial help
also in terms of emotional support for other children like me going through the
final year of school and having a mum with severe depression. Having children
to look after in the house is not easy and there should be someone to help. I
did not study for my year 12 exam and I really regretted it. It was not just my
mum being sick but the stress and the constraints that I was under having to
live practically in handcuffs—not allowed to work, not allowed to do anything
except breathe.[114]
3.107
It is wholly appropriate that children are no longer being placed in
immigration detention centres, and the Committee has observed that DIAC is
making great efforts to secure alternative accommodation for families in the
community. The Committee is concerned, however, that these acknowledgements of
the particular vulnerability of children do not extend to all minors living in
the community, and makes some recommendations directed at this in chapter 5.
Support services
3.108
The final section of this chapter examines support services that are
needed as part of a future framework for community release of people with an
unresolved immigration status. Drawing on the experience to date with the
Community Care Pilot, this section considers case management and referral
services, and orientation assistance for people living in community-based
detention alternatives.
3.109
A number of other support service needs —such as legal advice, migration
information, and return counselling —are discussed in the following chapter in
the context of a maintaining a robust and enforceable immigration system.
Case management and referral services
3.110
Many inquiry participants, including the Australian Red Cross, the Immigration
Detention Advisory Group and the Refugee Council of Australia, supported the
continuation and expansion of the Community Care Pilot, or at least, a program
for intensive community support that drew on its key components.[115]
3.111
The Australian Red Cross, which currently manages the Community Care
Pilot under contract to DIAC, said that the program would form the basis of its
ideal model of community release:
Our idea would actually be release on a visa with support
such as the Community Care Pilot. If you are asking for the actual model, it
would not be community detention. To me, there is the graduated scale from an
immigration detention facility through to Community Care Pilot. Community Care
Pilot would be the ideal.[116]
3.112
Similarly, Tamara Domicelj, of the Asylum Seekers Centre of New South
Wales, suggested that the Community Care Pilot should be seen ‘a key mechanism for
providing fair and reasonable treatment to asylum seekers in a community
environment’, arguing that the program ‘provides a very real alternative to
detention, as we have seen it’.[117]
3.113
Since May 2006 to January 2009, the Community Care Pilot has assisted
918 people.[118] The elements identified
as making the pilot successful are:
n Case management: The
case manager’s role is to provide coordination, integration and management of
services to meet the needs of a person, drawn from a range of service providers
both internal and external to DIAC. This means that each person has a case
manager within DIAC to provide information on their case and individually
determine what care is needed. This individual assessment means that the Community
Care Pilot is particularly useful for individuals with complex needs.[119]
n A focus on early
intervention, through aiming to provide information and resources at the
beginning of a person’s case where that person has been identified as having
particular vulnerabilities. This includes access to free and independent migration
advice (discussed further in the next chapter). While this approach is more
resource-intensive at the front end of individual cases, it seeks to avoid some
of the public expenditure and staff time ultimately invested in long and
complex immigration cases, such as in legal costs, compliance detection, forcible
removals, and detention.[120]
n Health and welfare
support, alleviating some of the destitution experienced by some bridging visa
holders in the community, giving the person some dignity and stabilising his or
her circumstances.[121]
n Options for assisted
voluntary return. Until recently, if a person did not have the resources to
organise their own departure from the country, they faced the prospect of being
taken into detention to be forcibly removed from Australia. DIAC also advised
the Committee that the process of voluntary return was a cost effective
strategy for people that were willing to depart the country, but did not have
the means to.[122] The assisted voluntary
return component of the pilot is managed by the International Organisation for
Migration (IOM).[123]
n Collaboration between
DIAC and non-government agencies, including with service providers to asylum
seekers and other immigration clients, the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the IOM. This collaboration draws on the
expertise of all of these organisations and provides a potential model for
future service provision by a range of agencies.[124]
3.114
A number of issues were identified with the Community Care Pilot, in
particular inadequate capacity and overly narrow eligibility criteria and
lacked transparency about who was accepted. [125] Hotham Mission Asylum
Seeker Project said that while they acknowledged that the Pilot was intended to
be small and exploratory in nature:
There is currently a lack of acknowledgment or formal
research into the numbers of asylum seekers who are eligible for CCP but cannot
access it due to the small size of the program.[126]
3.115
At a public hearing the Hotham Mission said that only eight of their 123
cases had been accepted into the CCP in that year.[127]
The Refugee Claimants Support Centre in Brisbane estimated that a little under
half of their clients had support through the CCP.[128]
3.116
In response to these claims, DIAC advised the Committee that the CCP
continues to accept referrals for the 2008-09 year in the three states in which
it operates (New South Wales, Queensland and Victoria). As at 9 February
2009, 172 referrals had been accepted for the financial year. ‘From time to
time community organisations seek to refer clients who are not eligible for
assistance (for example because they do not meet the criteria relating to
vulnerability) or who fall outside our current priorities or capacity to
provide case management support’. DIAC advised that there is no set limit to
the number of places available under the CPP. Although the program had a
limited budget, on current projections DIAC expected to be able to maintain
support at current client levels.[129]
3.117
The Committee notes that there is expected to be an increase in the use
of community-based detention alternatives which will increase the number of people
seeking assistance through the program. If support levels are to be maintained
then either access must be further limited or funding increased – unless a
wider, more comprehensive system of support delivery is provided. The Committee
addresses these needs in chapter 5.
Staying in the Australian community
3.118
Those who are taken into immigration detention for overstaying their
visa, breaching the conditions of their visa or as section 501 visa
cancellations have by definition spent some time in the Australian community
already, and likely have that experience and personal contacts to assist them
should they meet the criteria for release back into the community. However, an
important consideration for a framework of community release is that unauthorised
arrivals, or those who have spent only brief periods of time in the community,
may need extra support in order to be able to stay safe, look after themselves
and their family, and function in an Australian community setting.
3.119
Morteza Poorvadi, an ex-immigration detainee, told the Committee his
story of being released from detention into the community:
When I got out I was 20 years old. I did not know how to walk
in the street, to be honest with you. I nearly got run over by a car twice
because I did not know to look to the right or left… I had to take care of my
own Medicare. I had to take care of my own bank accounts. It was a struggle,
when you did not know things…
Detainees think they are all right but they are not. They
cannot cope with the hardship that the outside world brings them. When you are
in detention, you focus only on getting released. That is all you focus on.
When you are released, you are in bigger trouble. You need a house, you need
food, you need money from work and all these sorts of things.[130]
3.120
Sister Claudette Cusack of the Sisters of Mercy, formerly a chaplain in
immigration detention centres, recommended that people released from detention
needed skills and basic knowledge about living in Australia:
As well as English tuition practical information needs to be
given about Australia. I do not mean its history, sporting or otherwise. What
they need is practical help for their possible future life in Australia. Information needs to be given about:
n Australian currency:
and the cost of living
n Road rules including
how to get a vehicle license and its importance.
n Use of public
transport e.g. How to purchase tickets, read timetables and maps.
n Information around
the rental of premises, bonds and obligations in renting.
n Centrelink
information
n The role of police
These are just some of the facts that they need to know
before release. We have witnessed avoidable mistakes through ignorance of these
basic rules.[131]
3.121
Within a reformed detention framework the Committee anticipates that the
issue of support on release from detention may not be so critical, given the
expectation that people will spend much briefer periods of time in immigration
detention before being eligible for community release.
3.122
However, any community release program must include some orientation and
support for the basic skills necessary for functioning in the Australian
community. Even if the stay in the community is temporary awaiting departure
from the country, if community-based options are to be used by DIAC in
preference to detention centres, then basic orientation and transition
assistance to understand Australian life needs to be provided.
3.123
The Committee also acknowledges the steps taken by DIAC to provide
better support on release through the Community Care Pilot. As a component of
the pilot, the Australian Red Cross now provides community transition and
orientation by way of transition support. Pamela Curr, of the Asylum Seeker
Resource Centre in Melbourne, said that:
Before the Community Care Pilot people came out of detention
and arrived in Melbourne from Baxter at five to six o’clock at night with
nowhere to stay and $120 to survive on. After the Community Care Pilot was
introduced people were met and a lot more things were put in place so that they
did not land on our doorstep at nine o’clock in the morning. In the case of one
person who had $120, $80 was paid to a motel in Elizabeth Street and that left
$40 to survive on until immigration and all the other things had been set in
place. These things came in after the Palmer inquiry and they certainly are a
great improvement.[132]
3.124
Some inquiry participants called for settlement assistance and English
language classes to be made available to people released from immigration
detention on bridging visas, or for people based in the community who are
currently bridging visa holders.[133]
3.125
This raises some difficult questions regarding the status of asylum
seekers, or other people with unresolved immigration status, who are living in
the community while they await resolution of their immigration status. A
bridging visa is not provided with settlement assistance because by definition,
it is not yet known whether that person will be able to remain in Australia. Nonetheless, the Committee considers that community-based detention alternatives
carry with them an obligation on the Commonwealth to ensure that people have
the basic skills to survive in Australian society whilst awaiting the outcome
of their immigration status.
Summary
3.126
The evidence received by the Committee, particularly in relation to the
Community Care Pilot, has confirmed that integrated support services for people
that need them are an essential component of a framework for community release.
Support services contribute towards a humane and dignified living environment
for people with an unresolved immigration status and make sure they are
equipped with the information necessary to make the best choices about their
immigration case. A holistic model of support services, as illustrated by the
Community Care Pilot, also benefits the immigration system by encouraging
greater transparency, fair process and case resolution. It is to these issues
of impact on the immigration system that the Committee turns to in the next
chapter.