Chapter 2 - The agreements - intent and effect
2.1
This chapter provides an overview of the history and impact of the
previous two agreements and outlines the provisions of the current agreement.
Background
2.2
In 1983, the Commonwealth sought to reform services for people with
disability in response to the growing trend for people with disabilities to be
assisted to establish patterns of life that were close to, or the same as,
those of society generally. Accordingly, the Commonwealth instigated a review
of programs developed under the Handicapped Persons Assistance Act 1974.
The report of the review, New Directions, contained criticisms of
existing services based on institutional living arrangements, sheltered
workshops and activity therapy centres.[1]
It noted that people with disabilities wanted to live in a community setting,
have access to paid employment, opportunities for community participation and
community acceptance, and a choice in the services they used. The Review also
pointed to:
- a significant lack of coordination between Commonwealth and State
Governments;
- the lack of any clearly specified program objectives;
- a focus on large service providers running institutionally based
care at the expense of smaller, community based services; and
- the low priority accorded to consumers by governments and service
providers.
2.3
The Review concluded that substantial improvements were required in the
accountability of subsidised organisations for service content and quality, and
that major changes were needed in the programs themselves to reflect a consumer
outcomes focus. A restructuring of services, funding and other resources was
also required.
2.4
The Review formed the basis of an overhaul of Commonwealth programs for
people with disabilities and impacted on service providers. The implementation
of the Review's recommendations was achieved mainly through the Disability
Services Act 1986 which replaced the Handicapped Persons Assistance Act. Ms
Raelene West, a PhD student studying disability service delivery, noted that
the Disability Services Act 'sought to reduce models of service delivery that
promoted a reliance on charity and welfare models of service delivery and
instead sought to provide a full range of support services to assist people
with a disability to live independently in the community'.[2]
2.5
The Disability Services Act provided the legislative basis for the
funding of organisations and of States providing services for people with
disabilities. It covered a much broader range of services than the Handicapped
Persons Assistance Act and each service type was more broadly defined. The
inclusion of the States was a major change, with the then Minister for
Community Services stating that:
...it reflects the fact that most States are already involved to
varying degrees in service provision, and the many potential opportunities for
co-operative efforts in this field. The new legislation will permit the
Commonwealth to provide funds to the States for services provided by them
covered under the legislation. The intention is that such funding be provided
on similar conditions to those relating to eligible organisations. The
legislation will also permit the joint Commonwealth-State funding of services
and projects considered as being of joint interest. This will overcome a major
restriction of the Handicapped Persons Assistance Act 1974 and will enable a
more co-ordinated effort on behalf of people with disabilities who are part of
the target group - for example in relation to the provision of housing or
meeting the needs of people with more severe disabilities.[3]
2.6
The Act linked funding of services to their capacity to achieve
specific, agreed outcomes for participants in their services with transitional
provisions for those services which would not immediately meet the new funding
criteria. Organisations were allowed until 30 June 1992 to meet the new, more stringent conditions. Two new service types were also created: competitive
employment, training and placements services; and supported employment
services.
2.7
The Act was also accompanied by a Statement of Principles and Objectives
to be followed in the administration of the legislation and to be applied to
individual services. The Principles recognised that people with disabilities
have the same rights as do other members of society and advocated the
application of 'the least restrictive alternative' principle in assisting them
to realise their individual potential. The Objectives related to service delivery.
2.8
The Disability Services Program (DSP) was the name given to the range of
services funded by the Commonwealth under the Act. The DSP was supported by the
then recently established, and Commonwealth funded, Home and Community Care
(HACC) program and Commonwealth Rehabilitation Service (CRS).
Commonwealth State Disability Agreement (1991-1992 to 1996-1997)
2.9
Following the implementation of the Disability Services Act, there was
'considerable overlap and confusion in the funding arrangements for disability
services by the different levels of government'.[4]
Delays with processing requests and unwarranted interference across the dual
levels of government were reported as creating difficulty and confusion in
implementing the objectives of the Act. Ms West commented that 'it was surmised
that neither the State/Territory's or Commonwealth Governments alone would be
able to meet the outcomes of the Act and that a significant restructure in
funding arrangements would be required with the existing multilayered
government framework in implementing a service model based on independent
community living'.[5]
2.10
The first Commonwealth State Disability Agreement (CSDA) was aimed at
defining the roles and responsibilities of the Commonwealth, State and
Territory Governments in the delivery of specialist disability services. Before
the implementation of the CSDA, responsibility for disability services was
unclear. The Commonwealth funded a range of employment, accommodation and
community-based services for people with a disability under the DSP. At
the same time, the States and Territories provided similar services, and much
greater levels of overall funding, under separate legislation. The Commonwealth
noted in its submission that:
The first Commonwealth State Disability Agreement marked a
turning point in the provision of services for people with disability.
Previously services for people with disability were not well coordinated across
the Commonwealth and state and territory governments. This had resulted in
overlap, duplication and gaps in service provision.[6]
2.11
The aim of the rationalisation was to:
- improve consumer information, assessment and referral systems;
- simplify access to services for consumers;
- provide greater clarity for service providers;
- ensure better planning and integration of services;
-
improve consistency and coverage of data on disability services;
- reduce costs of administration; and
- achieve, where possible, a shift away from direct service
provision by the Commonwealth and the States (because of a perceived conflict
of interest where governments were both service providers and funders).
Major features
2.12
The Agreement was signed by all Heads of Government at a Special
Premiers Conference in July 1991. Each State and Territory enacted legislation
complementary to the Commonwealth Disability Services Act 1986. This
ensured that disability services in each State and Territory would be required
to adhere to the Principles and Objectives enshrined in the Disability Services
Act (DSA) as well as moving, over time, to outcome based funding, service
agreements and regular service reviews and from an emphasis on specialist to
improving access to generic services, all of which were important features of
the DSA. The objective was to increase service accountability and consumer
focus in State-based services as the DSA had done in Commonwealth services.
2.13
Under the CSDA, the Commonwealth undertook responsibility for
administering employment services and labour market programs, consistent with
its general responsibilities for employment and its links with the Social
Security system. The State and Territory Governments undertook responsibility
for administering accommodation, community support, community access, respite
and other support services. As a consequence, some State and Territory services
that were predominantly employment-based were transferred to the Commonwealth and
some Commonwealth services that were predominantly day activity-based were
transferred to States and Territories. The CSDA provided for joint
Commonwealth-State responsibility for advocacy, research and development and
involved both jurisdictions in planning, priority setting and program
evaluation.
2.14
In recognition of the lack of adequate and consistent data on disability
services, the CSDA set out broad data requirements. Subsequently, the
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) developed a minimum data set
comprising core, non-financial data to be collected by the Commonwealth and
State Governments to build up a national picture of disability services.
Funding
2.15
Following implementation of the CSDA, the funding which the Commonwealth
previously contributed to the services transferred to the States in the Agreement
was paid to the State Governments as specific purpose (tied) payments, thus
ensuring that the money is spent only on disability services. Approximately
$200 million was allocated for this purpose in each of the first five
years. The Commonwealth provided, in addition, $145 million over five
years to improve the quality of services transferred to the States and an
additional $100 million over five years to provide for growth in these
services. Transferred services were to continue to be funded at existing levels
or above for the first 12 months following transfer. After that, funding for
individual services could be varied either up or down, but overall funding to
disability services by either level of government was not to fall below 1989-90
levels.
The views of consumers and service
providers
2.16
While recognising the potential benefits which might be realised from
implementation of the CSDA, peak bodies and others consulted in development of the
Agreement raised a number of concerns, including:
- inadequate consultation;
- inadequate attention to grievance procedures;
- fear that States would fail to honour the philosophy of service;
- provision enshrined in the Principles and Objectives of the DSA;
and
-
fear that States would reduce their financial commitment to
disability services.
2.17
Many of these concerns were addressed in the Agreement, which required
States to espouse the Principles and Objectives of the Disability Services Act
and stipulated that neither Commonwealth nor State governments could reduce the
level of their financial commitment to disability services.[7]
Impact of the first CSDA
2.18
The Tasmanian Government stated that the first CSDA was a significant
event for people with disability and the disability sector:
For the first time the issue of provision of specialist
disability services was framed within a national context with particular
emphasis on common standards of service provision and comparable performance
data.[8]
2.19
The Review of the first CSDA, published in 1996, identified five
achievements:
- it restated the fundamental principles already adopted in the DSA
that people with disabilities are persons 'with the same basic human rights as
other members of Australian society';
- it represented a division of labour between the two levels of
government with regard to the provision of disability services – a demarcation
agreement regarding which level of government is responsible, and thus
accountable, for what;
-
it provided an opportunity for a joint and cooperative
governmental approach to policy, planning and funding for disability services
in Australia;
- it enabled the adoption of an 'outcomes' approach to services for
people with disabilities, that is, an emphasis on the results these services
achieve in enabling people with disabilities to realise their capacities and to
attain a reasonable quality of life; and
- it required each State/Territory government to pass legislation
in accordance with the principles and objectives of the Commonwealth Disability
Services Act 1986.[9]
2.20
The Commonwealth also pointed to the benefits arising out of the first
CSDA and cited the introduction of parallel Commonwealth-State disability
services legislation, which included shared Principles and Objectives. Other
major benefits identified included the clarification of government
responsibilities through the delineation of Commonwealth and State government
roles; a real increase in total disability funding; provision of opportunities
for cooperative planning and priority setting and ensuring a coordinated
approach across the range of services for people with disability; and the
establishment of National Disability Service Standards (National Standards) to
underpin consistent quality assurance processes.[10]
2.21
The Review of the CSDA also indicated that the Commonwealth and States
and Territories had maintained real funding at or about the 1989-90 base
levels. The Review estimated that total (Commonwealth and State and Territory)
CSDA funding of government and non-government organisations at over $1.2
billion annually. This represented an increase of 25 per cent from the amount
identified in the CSDA as the funding base for 1989-90. Expenditure on
accommodation services comprised 71 per cent of the total CSDA expenditure.[11]
2.22
However, some major shortcomings of the first CSDA were identified by the
Review, the most significant of which were:
- it made no practical provision for establishing and resourcing a
jointly owned, intergovernmental management capacity to plan and develop the
disability service system;
- in creating separate areas of responsibility for each level of
government, it did nothing to plan or provide for the issues of coordination
that then arose between these separate responsibilities;
- it instituted no system for setting performance targets for the
reduction of unmet demand in relation to an effective, intergovernmental
strategy to bring growth monies into the system;
- it arbitrarily excluded equipment and disability-related therapy
services, except as early intervention services for children below school age;
- it did not formally target the needs of the primary carers of
people with disabilities;
- it left the issues of how the CSDA was to interface with the
HACC, CRS and mental health programs, undealt with;
- users of the disability service system did not see the CSDA as
having led to improvements in service availability and adequacy;
- users did not see the CSDA as having made access to services
fairer and more equitable; and
- in the areas of joint responsibility (advocacy and information
services) there had been a neglect of how these services need to be developed
and resourced if they are to support access to disability services in
accordance with the principles and objectives stated in the text of the first
agreement.[12]
A lack of publicly available information on expenditure and
performance under the CSDA was seen as a major deficiency.
2.23
Despite these numerous and considerable difficulties, the Review overall
recommended a further renegotiation of the CSDA funding arrangement. However, the
Review made extensive recommendations to improve the next CSDA. The
recommendations included the need for greater accountability of service
delivery by all governments, improved monitoring and assessment criteria of
service delivery, work to identify more accurately the cost of unmet need, the
introduction of improved standards and definitions of disability and the development
of a reliable data set. The Review also recommended the inclusion of the disability
component of the HACC program and CRS into the funding parameters of the CSDA
and that formal services targeted to primary carers be flexible in design. The
Review further recommended the development of, and joint reporting against,
nationally agreed performance targets with a primary goal of the second
agreement to establish phased targets to address the critical levels of unmet
demand.[13]
2.24
Ms West commented that while the goal of the CSDA was administrative
convenience and streamlining of funding for disability services between the Commonwealth
and State Governments some commentators argued that the first CSDA instead
appeared to entrench the fragmentation of service provision for people with
disabilities across Commonwealth and State/Territory Government divisions. The
CSDA funding arrangement meant that an array of disability services and
programs were spread across both levels of governments and sourced through
multiple entrance points so that the development of integrated and
complementary services was hampered.[14]
2.25
The difficulties of this service model were highlighted in the 1995
review of the Commonwealth Disability Services Program. The review heard
recurrent complaints from those who made submissions that the CSDA had made it
more difficult for people to get services. Many submissions commented on the
dissonance between things that were done for logical administrative reasons but
which had unfortunate consequences for services for individuals.[15]
2.26
For example, a person with a disability living independently in the
community and in search of employment would access HACC services for daily
support care needs funded by the Commonwealth (but administered by the States),
access assistive aids and equipment from State services, access employment
related services that were administered by the Commonwealth and utilise
accommodation services provided by the States.[16]
The Tasmanian Government also noted that the identification of interface issues
with other programs was not a focus of the CSDA.[17]
2.27
In addition, the state-by-state funding of disability services through
the CSDA meant that a wide array of differing programs and differing models of
disability service delivery where constructed in each State and Territory. As a
consequence, the delivery of disability services in each jurisdiction was governed
by differing arrays of legislation and guidelines, administered through
differing forms of management and administrative processes and utilised various
forms of classifications.[18]
This also undermined attempts to make State comparisons of the delivery of
disability services and to develop a nationally consistent picture of
disability services.
2.28
Inefficiencies soon became evident in the duplication of bureaucracies
and cost shifting resulting from the lack of agreement on appropriate roles
between the Commonwealth and State/Territory Governments. Overall, it appeared
difficult to see visible improvement in service delivery that the
implementation of the CSDA and Disability Act had sought to achieve.[19]
2.29
The Commonwealth concurred that there were shortcomings with the first
CSDA and pointed to:
- identification of gaps and interface issues with
other programs;
- lack of strategic planning to meet growth in
demand for services; and
- lack of accountability and lack of comparable
performance data.[20]
Commonwealth State Disability Agreement (1997-1998 to 2001-2002)
2.30
The Commonwealth stated that the second Agreement built on the
achievements of the first Agreement and attempted to address some of its
shortcomings.[21]
Bilateral Agreements between the Commonwealth and the States and Territories were
introduced to complement the single Multilateral Agreement and 'provided a
means for the Commonwealth to work in partnership with individual State and Territory
governments to address disability issues of local importance and joint interest'.[22]
The first interstate service portability protocols were developed.[23]
Ms West noted that the Bilateral Agreements were included in an effort to
improve reporting mechanisms on service delivery effectiveness and accountability
to the Commonwealth. Performance indicators were negotiated into the CSDA in an
attempt to monitor the effectiveness of services based around client service
delivery outcomes.[24]
The division of responsibilities between the Commonwealth and the States was
retained.[25]
Funding
2.31
The total funding for CSDA services in 1997-98 was $1.82 billion, a real
increase of 5.7 per cent from the level in 1996-97. Approximately 70 per cent
($1.27 billion) of all CSDA funding came from State and Territory Governments.
The Commonwealth provided the remaining funding which included $317 million in
transfer payments to the States and Territories.[26]
By 2001-02 funding for CSDA services had expanded to meet demand and need for
disability services with total government expenditure on CSDA services of $2.7
billion in 2001-02.[27]
2.32
In 2001, the Commonwealth offered the States and Territories $150
million over the last two years of the second Agreement to help State and
Territory Governments address unmet need for services. This funding was
provided on the proviso that States and Territories contribute at least a
similar amount. States and Territories contributed $366 million over the two
years and this funding has been continued in the third Agreement.[28]
Impact of the second CSDA
2.33
Achievements associated with the second CSDA included:
- providing a national framework for disability services and
bilateral capacity to target funding in strategically important directions;
- an injection of additional funding to assist the States and Territories
address unmet need for services;
- a shift towards public accountability through transparent funding
contributions and improvements in quality assurance;
- research and development on a range of key policy, interface and
transition issues;
- commencement of work on better data collection; and
- the development of the first interstate service portability
protocols.[29]
2.34
However, as with the first CSDA there were shortcomings in the second
Agreement which the Commonwealth identified as:
- the Agreement did not contain broad strategic policy directions
which interfaced with other programs;
- while there were high level performance outcome measures, these
were inconsistent with performance reporting for other Specific Purpose
Payments;
- there was a continued lack of clarity regarding funding
arrangements and areas of responsibility, which impeded service development and
provision; and
- there was a continued lack of long-term strategies to address and
manage growth in demand.[30]
2.35
The Tasmanian Government stated that one of the main failings of the
second CSDA 'was the narrow focus on management and operation of specialist
disability services with an absence of any broad strategic policy direction in
terms of engagement and interface with other comparable programs, particularly
in the health, aged care, home and community care and housing sectors'.[31]
2.36
Ms West also noted that the utilisation of performance indicators in the
second CSDA had not resolved the problem of accountability of service
utilisation or provided any accurate gauge as to the quality of service
delivery. Data problems appeared to be hampering any coherent utilisation of
performance indicators and the establishment of any effective benchmark with
which to compare State by State performances. Data problems included limited
forms of data collection; difficulties in obtaining comparable data from each
State and Territory in light of differing accounting practices and varying levels
of administrative efficiency; differing management systems between the States
and Territories resulted in difficulties in interpreting the results in relation
to service utilization; and a lack of clarity as to classifications of
disability. As a consequence, there was 'not only a lack of coherency and
understanding in how well services were being delivered, but a clear inability
of the CSDA funding arrangement to deliver equitable and uniform delivery of
disability services nationally'.[32]
2.37
The Steering Committee for the Review of Government Service Provision
(SCRGS), Report on Government Services 2002 noted that, while there had
been significant steps made in improving the comparability and scope of
reporting on disability services in 2002, concerns remained over the
comparability of some results because jurisdictions use different methods of
data collection. The Report commented that expenditure estimates for all jurisdictions
except South Australia and the Northern Territory were generally comparable
while the expenditure data from South Australia and the Northern Territory may
understate the full accrued cost.[33]
The Report also noted that data was not comparable across jurisdictions as
governments employed different methods to apportion administrative costs.[34]
2.38
The SCRGS Report commented that gaps in reporting service quality
and the availability of snapshot day data only, rather than whole of year data,
impacted on the reliability of performance indicators. The SCRGS stated that
the Review would address these limitations in subsequent reports.[35]
Commonwealth State Territory Disability Agreement (2002-2003 to 2006-2007)
2.39
The current Agreement features both a preamble and five key policy
priorities which are consistent with the Government's social and economic
policy directions. The five priorities are to:
- strengthen access to generic services for people with
disabilities;
- strengthen across government linkages;
- strengthen individuals, families and carers;
- improve long-term strategies to respond to and manage demand for
specialist disability services; and
- improve accountability, performance reporting and quality.
2.40
The introduction of the preamble to the Agreement 'moved the Agreement
away from solely describing a joint funding arrangement and articulated the
vision and values that drive the commitment of the Commonwealth, States and
Territories to people with disabilities and also set national strategic
priorities'.[36]
2.41
The third Agreement retained the two-tiered arrangement of multilateral
and bilateral agreements but with the bilateral agreements shifting their
emphasis from Commonwealth funding of particular local projects to both
jurisdictions working in partnership in key strategic areas of recognised need
to address policy priorities.[37]
2.42
The third CSTDA introduced a schedule that specifies the annual
production of performance indicators as part of the accountability measures for
all governments, indicators relating to service access and expenditure. These
were produced for the first time in 2002-03 and published in the National
Disability Administrators' first CSTDA Public Report. The second Public Report,
using 2003-04 data, was released in 2005.[38]
2.43
The Commonwealth noted that it has made substantial efforts to improve
the accountability, quality, efficiency and effectiveness of the specialist
disability services it funds under the Disability Services Act 1986
through two key initiatives:
- the progressive introduction of an individualised, case based
funding model for open and supported employment services from July 2004 has
enabled funding provided to more closely match the support need of service
users. It has also resulted in an increase in the effective utilisation of
employment services from around 80 per cent of all funded places in 2003 to around
95 per cent in June 2006; and
- the introduction of a legislated Quality Assurance system
involving independent third party quality audits of employment services. From
January 2005, all employment services funded under the Disability Services
Act 1986 were quality assured and a 2005 evaluation of the measure reported
a demonstrable lift in the quality of employment services provided to
jobseekers and workers with disability as a result of the measure.[39]
2.44
In the 2004-05 Budget, the Commonwealth committed $72.5 million over
four years, subject to matching commitments by State and Territory Governments,
to provide:
- up to four weeks respite care to parent carers over 70 years;
- up to two weeks respite care for parent carers aged between 65
and 69 years, who needed to spend time in hospital.
The additional respite for older carers measure is
implemented through bilateral agreements with each State and Territory Government
under the CSTDA. Negotiations were protracted with some jurisdictions; however
by May 2006, all State and Territory Governments had signed bilateral
agreements.
2.45
The Commonwealth's submission indicated that the main deliverables of
the current CSTDA have been:
- an additional $6.1 billion has been committed to specialist
disability services. Of this, the Commonwealth’s contribution is $1.641 billion
while the States will contribute $4.471 billion;
- an increase in the number of services provided and the proportion
of people with disability receiving services; and
- improvements in transparency and accountability for Commonwealth funding,
including the production of three CSTDA Annual Reports.[40]
2.46
During the course of the Agreement, whole of year data about the people
who use CSTDA-funded services and the services they use became available.
Previously, only part year and snapshot data were available. As a result, a
more detailed national picture of services delivered under the CSTDA was gained
and enabled a baseline to be established for future, cross year, comparisons.[41]
2.47
Despite these achievements, the Commonwealth saw the need for
improvements:
- there is an acknowledged level of unmet need, but data collected
and made available by the States and Territories does not allow an accurate
assessment of the level and nature of this need;
- a lack of consistency in quality assurance systems across
jurisdictions; and
- while transparency and accountability have improved, there has
been little improvement in all jurisdictions' understanding of the nature,
quality and durability of outcomes for people with disability accessing CSTDA
services.[42]
2.48
In its 2005-2006 Performance Audit Report on the administration of the
CSTDA, the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) commented on a number of
issues where improvements could be made. The ANAO stated that 'despite a number
of avenues for monitoring and reporting performance, there are currently no
adequate measures of whether, or to what extent, the CSTDA is meeting its
objectives'. The ANAO also noted that while there had been improvements in the
quality of data collected, it is 'not yet sufficient to allow robust
comparisons of equity and efficiency between jurisdictions, or of the same
jurisdiction over time'. The ANAO concluded that:
These shortcomings in performance information limit the capacity
for FaCS to influence the jurisdictions to improve the efficiency,
effectiveness or quality of services the States and Territories are primarily
responsible for administering under the CSTDA.[43]
2.49
State and Territory Governments also pointed to areas where the third
CSTDA did not meet expectations. The Tasmanian Government noted that in
contrast to the second CSDA, the third Agreement 'did not include any
commitment towards unmet need'.[44]
The Tasmanian Government also saw the CSTDA as primarily a funding agreement that
lacked long term agreed strategies to address and manage growth in demand and
unmet need. The need to improve the management of growth and the need for
growth funding was also highlighted by other governments.[45]
2.50
Other shortcomings of the CSTDA identified included the lack of a
framework for achieving whole-of-government coordination and collaboration around
access to generic services.[46]
Ongoing gaps and interface issues with other program areas, particularly aged
care, home and community care, housing and health was also raised, with the NSW
Government pointing to difficulties and obstacles which have occurred in
dealing with one Commonwealth Government department in relation to matters pertaining
to another department.[47]
2.51
The Victorian Government commented that the CSTDA has been successful as
a vehicle for promoting relationships and learning across jurisdictions but
that 'the overall success of the CSTDAs to date has been impeded by its focus
on inputs and bureaucratic processes and controls'. In addition, the government
saw the reporting requirements as onerous and that no real incentives or
framework existed for pursing improvement or for measuring the extent of
outcomes achieved for people with disability.[48]
2.52
The Western Australian Government commented that the CSTDA has provided
clarity for the respective administrative responsibilities of each jurisdiction
'but has not delivered clarity on funding responsibilities' and pointed to
funding inequities amongst the States and Territories.[49]
The Government also argued that the responsibility for funding of some areas
has been blurred by Commonwealth policy changes as part of the welfare reform
agenda 'that have resulted in cost shifting from the Commonwealth to the
States'.
2.53
While noting that the Agreements were 'somewhat effective' in setting a
national direction, the Western Australia Government stated that the progress
anticipated through the National Disability Administrators projects had been hampered
by an excessive and overambitious workload and the narrow focus by the Commonwealth
on accountability.[50]
In relation to the Bilateral Agreements, the Western Australian Government
contended that they had proven to be 'cumbersome' and that 'while at officer
level there is willingness to progress, little has been achieved to date in
areas of mutual interest'. The Commonwealth had 'provided little input to the
implementation work plan and the State typically ends up reporting its areas of
progress and deferring to the Commonwealth '.[51]
2.54
Many of the non-government witnesses argued that the current CSTDA had
failed to improve the delivery of services to people with disabilities and to
provide adequate resources for those services.[52]
The Australian Federation of Disability Organisations described the current
CSTDA in the following terms:
Unfortunately, the CSTDA is far from being a coordinated, high
level strategic policy document. Despite its broad aim and the priority placed
on access to generic services, the current CSTDA retains a narrow focus on
service delivery, particularly disability-specific services, to people with disability
aged under 65 years. The CSTDA is crisis driven, with the result that
short-term, individually focussed interventions are prioritised over systemic
reforms. For example, the provision of accommodation support services dominates
expenditure under the CSTDA.[53]
2.55
The reasons for these failures were varied but included the lack of an
all-of-government approach; inadequate growth funding, limitations to the data
available to establish the level of need; and a lack of a real commitment to
improve the resources available. ACROD pointed to the failure to:
- deliver the resources required to meet the substantial need for
disability services across Australia;
- require multi-year budgetary planning based on demand growth and
the increasing cost of service delivery;
- deliver a consistent robust approach to service quality;
- produce sufficient data to enable comprehensive and meaningful
performance comparisons across jurisdictions; and
- build strong linkages and easy-to-navigate pathways between
disability service systems administered by different governments or between disability
and other programs such as aged care, health, education and transport.[54]
2.56
AFDO also identified other major challenges which impact on the
effectiveness of the CSTDA:
- maintaining the viability of essential services targeted at small
population groups;
- reduced availability of individual advocacy services;
- poor capacity of providers of generic services to recognise
invisible impairments such as mental illness and brain injury and to respond to
the needs of people with multiple impairments; and
- continued reliance on indicators of medical rather than
functional impairment.[55]
2.57
Of major concern to many witnesses was the huge range of service
delivery models between and within jurisdictions which remain under the third
Agreement. Ms West pointed to the CSTDA Annual Report 2003-04 which showed
the array of different approaches and strategies being undertaken by each State
and Territory. Each of the States and Territories continue to fund disability
services at different rates and with differing levels of accountability. Each
State and Territory is governed by differing legislation with differing obligations
and priorities to users. Ms West commented that these differences exist for
services which assist a national population of only 20 million people and with
only a relatively small percentage of that population utilising some form of
funded disability service:
Under the current form of CSTDA funding, each state continues to
roll out their own gamut of programs, services, strategies and policies,
creating further inequities in the system on a national level. Service delivery
on the ground therefore continues to be disparate, with real mapping and
contrasting of service delivery remaining difficult.[56]
2.58
This situation also poses problems for recipients of service delivery who
move between jurisdictions. Service recipients are often forced to renegotiate
an entirely new system of programs and services. AFDO indicated that a survey
of its members indicated that people with a disability find navigating the
services system exhausting and frustrating. People are not offered flexible
service and support options, and are required to coordinate support from a
range of different services. Many other witnesses identified the lack of
coordination as one of the main shortcomings of the CSTDA with the result that
services are used to solve crisis situations rather than the delivery of
properly planned care.[57]
2.59
The array of service delivery systems also caused interface issues with
many witnesses pointing to problems accessing and coordinating services
delivered through State or Territory funded programs and HACC services funded
by the Commonwealth. ACROD also supported the need to build strong linkages and
easy-to-navigate pathways between disability service systems and other programs
such as aged care, health, education and transport.[58]
2.60
Ms West concluded that:
Instead, the current delivery of funded disability services
nationally therefore appears to remain within these state silos and held
together by these CSTDAs, despite significant reforms of the CSTDA structure.
Little political will or significant international influence promoting holistic
restructure, progressive development or nationalised reform of the disability
service delivery sector however appears visible. In terms of solutions, the
implementation of a nationalised disability services framework would best appear
to address the complexities associated with the CSTDA in its current form. Only
a nationalised disability services framework would provide the necessary
platform to ensure equity and uniformity of disability service delivery across Australia.[59]
2.61
The Disability Coalition WA commented that the vision contained in the
Preamble is expressed in terms of the focus on five policy priorities 'phrased
in limiting terms'. The priorities do not provide clear goals to aspire to, nor
a detailed plan on how to achieve them. There was also a management approach to
demand which 'falls short of what is required – that of meeting demand'.
Overall, the Disability Coalition described the third CSTDA as short of the
forward thinking and goal setting embodied in the first CSDA. The Disability
Coalition concluded:
The effect of the CSTDAs has not been as intended...the potential
contained in the first CSTDA has been lost over the life of the subsequent
agreements with the watering down and exclusion of key principles and
objectives required for best outcomes for people with disability and their
families...
The entailing system has become too crisis driven and fails in
meeting the stated objective of strengthening people with disability, their
families and carers. The shortcomings of the current CSTDA result in a very
heavy cost to people with disabilities and their families, to government and to
the taxpayer.[60]
2.62
The Office of the Public Advocate Victoria considered that the vision
contained in the preamble was 'appropriately aspirational', the five strategic
policy priorities 'appear modest in comparison' and that in practice the
priorities 'seem to be mainly preoccupied with just one aspect of the fourth
priority: demand management'. The Office pointed to the use of definitions of
disability which act to restrict access to services by people with dual
disabilities and conditions such as Huntington's disease and autism spectrum
disorder. The Office concluded that:
While progress can be seen on some of the
incremental policy priorities, the Office is concerned that the vision
encapsulated within the CSTDA preamble remains elusive. The other parts of the
CSTDA that establish the national framework are not directly related to the
vision of the preamble. For example, while the term 'rights' is used seven
times within the preamble as an important remedy for the situation of people
with disabilities, the rest of the agreement fails to use the term.
In summary, the view of the Office is that the vision contained
within the preamble to the agreement needs to be more than just symbolic. It
must also be a continuing reference point to measure progress made through the
‘practical’ measures that are undertaken. The next CSTDA needs to incorporate
greater connection between the vision and the terms of the agreement through
revised recitals.[61]
2.63
Limitations of data continued to be identified by witnesses as a
significant problem. Data limitations were seen as weakening the CSTDA Bilateral
Arrangements and 'although the arrangements provide opportunities for coordinated
planning and service delivery across governments, joint service mapping and
accurate trend trajectories remain virtually impossible under the current
framework'. Ms West concluded that 'consultation processes and service building
partnerships will continue to remain siloed by State/Territory jurisdiction,
with the objective of creating streamlined and equitable delivery of services
at a national level, locked within these individualised bilateral funding
arrangements'.[62]
Conclusion
2.64
It is clear to the Committee that the delivery of disability services in
Australia is highly complex and the delivery of services to meet individual
needs in an appropriate and timely way is extraordinarily difficult. The reform
processes commenced in the 1980s have gone some way to overcome these
complexities and difficulties. The three Agreements have been central to the
reform process and significant improvements can be identified which are
directly attributable to the rationalisation of the delivery of services and
the clearer funding arrangements.
2.65
However, there still remain many concerns about the delivery of
disability services in Australia. First and foremost, the level of unmet need is
largely unknown and pressures within the system, including an ageing
population, will result in an ever increasing demand for services. The
appropriateness of joint funding arrangements including the level of
contributions by the Commonwealth and State and Territory Governments, the
level of indexation, equity of funding arrangements and cost shifting between
governments need to be addressed to ensure that scarce funding resources are efficiently
and effectively utilised.
2.66
As has been the case with many of the Committee's previous inquiries
into the health and welfare system, the multiplicity of services, programs,
models and funding arrangements has led to inefficiencies, gaps in service
delivery, and service interface problems. This has led to difficulties for
users to access services to address their needs in an appropriate way and to
the degree required.
2.67
While the CSTDA should remain the basis for the delivery of disability
services, the Committee does not consider that it is an adequate national
strategic policy document. In order to ensure a coordinated national approach
to improving the delivery of disability services, to ensure that people with
disability services access the services they require throughout their lives, to
address interface issues within the disability sector and to ensure that future
need for services is adequately addressed, a renewed national strategic
approach is required. The Committee considers that a national disability
strategy would reaffirm our commitment to equity and inclusiveness in
Australian society for people with disability.
2.68
The following chapters address these issues and identify possible ways
in which the next Commonwealth State Territory Disability Agreement may be
improved.
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