Life Matters

LIFE MATTERS

I discuss here the Matters of Life because Life Matters. From the very moments of conception until we meet face to face with Christ our creator. I share with my readers how my Christian Faith influences my biblical response to the events all around me.

Friday, December 13, 2013

The NDIS is not optional!

The federal government and Tony Abbot along with all Australians need to understand that the  National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) is not an optional extra for Australia. The NDIS is a revolution this nation needs to begin to address the Human Rights of people living with disabilities and their families.

The scheme in its current format only begins to address some of the Human Rights and years of neglect, people with disabilities and their families have experience. Assistance to have our daily needs meet such as toileting, showering, feeding, transport and equipment needs are not 'optional extras', when they can be afforded. 

Every  human being needs water, food, shelter and love to survive.  The introduction of the NDIS only begins to address these very basic human needs for people with disabilities.  Without support people with disabilities can not get out of bed, go to the toilet or eat.  Some in our community, speak about the scheme as if luxuries were being provided to people with disabilities. Needing someone to change your incontinent aid is not a luxury.

Excuse me for becoming blunt about the daily living needs of those of us have disabilities, but until the community and all members of government fully understands the urgent need to address the Human Rights violations occurring in one of the wealthiest nations in the world, then we have a problem. The UN knows it, the International Community knows it,  The government knows it, and its time the Australian population knows it too.

If I posted a picture of a women in a nursing home bed, who hadn't been changed in 24 hours and was lying in human waste there would be outraged. Outrage for all the wrong reasons. Outrage that I exposed this lady to the public eye, not out rage that it was occurring! 

When we politely discuss the introduction of the National Disability Insurance Scheme, we tend to hold up the champions and it ideals. While the ideals of the scheme are a huge leap forward in securing the some of the Human Rights of people with disabilities, it does nothing to address vicolance against women with disabilities living in nursing homes, fails to empower women with intellectual disabilities to access the justice system, fails to prevent the imprisonment of men with intellectual disabilities unfit to stand trail; fails to protect unborn children with disabilities from termination and continues to fail to address the needs of people with disabilities living in nursing homes under the age of thirty because the cost of the care is too high.

As we debate what the scheme should cost, what it was expected to cost, how to fund the scheme for who and to what degree, we miss the injustices occurring! Like it or not even if the NDIS is fully implemented as designed by the productivity commission only some of these human rights issues are address. 

When I hear we might not be able to be afford, so these are trails the can be stopped. . . I cringe because people have failed to understand, the human rights message that is the Everybody Counts Campaign.

We here much about the costs and the increasing pressure the blow out costs with place on the budgets around the country. We forget that the National Disability Insurance Scheme will only partially be funded  by the increase to our medicare levy and the viability of the NDIS is also dependent on our state leaders. So much about the scheme, its role in improving human rights and funding arrangements is misunderstood. 

For many in our community it s simple change in funding arrangements, but talk to those who are already benefiting from what we were told was a roll out . . . and we realise the scheme dose much more than fund the basic support needs of people living with disabilities. The NDIS hands them the keys to enjoy ever aspect of life as any other member of the Australian society.  It acknowledges  people with disabilities have the same rights and that includes sharing a house and a bed in that house as a couple, whether they a married, defatos or a same sex couple.  Same country then we have the same rights!

It sounds a bit different when we say, Hang on we're married, we want to share the same bed . . . we need a modified bed to do that. Why should the government on fund beds designed for single people living with a disability or only if the were married.  If we're going to call it equality make us equal. If its only tokenism wrapped up as equality, we have a problem  because with what is a luxury and what is not.  

The equality that the National Disability Insurance Scheme can bring and continue to build on.  The opportunities for early intervention, access to better therapies, communication devices, mobility aids, transport. education and employment opportunities are just a beginning on how the scheme will improve the quality of life for Australians living with disability, their families and the community as a whole.   Mr Abbot the NDIS is not optional, so stopping talking like it is!

Australia again we must united until Every Australian Counts!  


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