The desire to rollout the seemingly ideologically based Indigenous Advancement Strategy (IAS) within a short timeframe appears to have been more important than genuine consultation with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Organisations, a comprehensive regional needs analysis and transparency in the design and implementation.
The Senate Inquiry Report into the Advancement Strategy tendering processes by the Finance and Public Administration References Committee was released on 17th March 2016. Before this Report came out those of us who have been working in the Aboriginal Community Controlled sector knew that the IAS was chaos so the recommendations came as no surprise. I guess that’s one of the frustrations, had Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people been consulted all the way through the design and implementation the issues raised by the Report would have been less likely to occur.
“The committee believes the price paid by the Indigenous communities for implementing the unreasonable timetable was too high”
The desire to rollout the seemingly ideologically based Indigenous Advancement Strategy (IAS) within a short timeframe appears to have been more important than genuine consultation with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Organisations, a comprehensive regional needs analysis and transparency in the design and implementation.
The Senate Inquiry Report into the Advancement Strategy tendering processes by the Finance and Public Administration References Committee was released on 17th March 2016. Before this Report came out those of us who have been working in the Aboriginal Community Controlled sector knew that the IAS was chaos so the recommendations came as no surprise. I guess that’s one of the frustrations, had Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people been consulted all the way through the design and implementation the issues raised by the Report would have been less likely to occur.
I was working at the National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples during the development phase of the IAS and then at the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO) during the rollout. I gave evidence with Lisa Briggs NACCHO CEO at the June 2015 Public Hearing.
As with any Government Report I always wonder if this is going to be a sanitised version of the evidence given.
The Report appeared to give Prime Minister and Cabinet support for IAS concept which aimed to reduce red tape and create greater flexibility. Mr. Mick Gooda, the Social Justice Commissioner, supported this view while giving evidence in June 2015 at the Public Hearing:
“the [IAS has] potential to offer great benefit and flexibility for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. I believed that this approach could provide more scope to develop on-the-ground responses to the issues that confront our communities on a daily basis.”
The then National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples Co-Chair, Kirstie Parker, also supported reducing red tape and increasing flexibility.
“We are also firmly on the record as being supportive of simplified processes and a reduction in red tape around the administration particularly of Indigenous affairs.”
That, however, is where the support for the IAS seems to stop. The Committee noted more issues than strengths and despite its aims, it appears to have achieved the opposite. It issues are summarised as:
Major gaps in service delivery
A lack of consultation
Rushed processes with poor transparency
Cutting the number of funding areas created significant challenges, with many programs not captured by the reduced funding areas
Challenges for smaller organisations without the capacity to develop applications in the time frame, or resources to employ consultants to develop applications, and
Significant uncertainty for providers, with a very unclear and non-transparent process.
At the Public Hearing in June 2015, witnesses gave evidence that the IAS development timeframe was too short, did not engage Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and Organisations appropriately, and the regional assessments were substandard. Witnesses also gave evidence that the program was poorly communicated and the implementation lacked accountability and transparency. Many of the submissions also outlined these issues. In summary the PM&C did not have the expertise alone to deliver such an ambitious program.
PM&C disputed these claims, the Report however called “bullshit” on PM&C. It stated “The committee is very concerned that this loss of expertise and relationships has led to a disconnect between the people on the ground and their local needs and the decision making process undertaken in Canberra.”
Mr. Gooda, gave evidence that “[T]o have confidence in the outcomes we have got to have confidence in the process.”
The best way to ensure that the process has few negative and unintended consequences is to consult the people and organisations with expertise in the area; Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and organisations as outlined in the recommendations.
The Government has also recognised that it needs to improve its engagement with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. In September 2015 PM&C sought a request for tender for a new Panel Participatory Planning, Research and Evaluation Panel. According to the tender the “purpose of the Panel is to strengthen Indigenous community involvement, capacity and engagement in planning, collection, analysis and use of evidence to develop agreed approaches, solutions and outcomes between Indigenous communities, the Commonwealth government and key stakeholders”.
This panel is likely to be one of the ways Recommendation 7 could be implemented.
Recommendation 7
“The committee recommends that the Government release the revised funding guidelines as a draft for consultation with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and their organisations.”
This recommendation will probably be welcomed by Aboriginal and Torres Strait islander people such as Mr. Gooda who has said that;
“As a bloke who has been around a fair bit in this game, I am now seeing a new leadership emerging within Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander affairs that is quite happy to sit down and talk through these things.”
Despite the planned Panel, it appears that this recommendation may be ignored in practice. According to the Report, PM&C have already started to revise the guidelines. In March 2016 “PM&C, indicated that there is no plan for consultation to occur on a draft version of the revised guidelines, however, there will be a phase-in period between the current guidelines and the revised guidelines.”
And it gets worse, the Report notes that as of March 2016:
“Many organisations are in the same position they were last year of having funding running out on 30 June 2016 and not knowing what the next steps are.”
On releasing the Report, the committee does not seem hopeful and states that “the committee has not been reassured that lessons are being learned.”
The Report raised as many question as it answered on the ability of PM&C to turn the IAS around.
Huge changes to funding like the IAS brings uncertainty. The implementation was very disruptive to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander organisations and it appears that it may have undermined the ability of the policy to achieve its aims. One of the aims of the IAS was “getting Indigenous Australians into work” yet through the uncertainty of the process numerous witnesses gave evidence that the funding uncertainty has meant that some organisations lost staff;
“the AHMRC reported losing experienced staff due to funding and job uncertainty, as well as noting negative effects on the morale and motivation of continuing staff.”
Another of the aims was “increasing Year 12 attainment and pathways to further training and education (including higher education)” yet the higher education was not included in the consultation process. Professor Mark Rose a member of Australian Universities said “I cannot understand why higher education, which is a strategic tool for closing the gap, was ignored. It confuses me.”
It seems good intentions are not enough; expertise is required. Again just demonstrating how important it is that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and organisations are consulted.
Let’s imagine for a minute that there is real intention by the Minister and PM&C to implement all recommendations in full. To implement all nine recommendations put forward by the Committee, undertaking Recommendation 1 is vital.
Recommendation 1
The committee recommends that future tender rounds are not blanket competitive processes and are underpinned by robust service planning and needs mapping.
As Mr Gooda said “If you fundamentally get wrong the needs of the community everything else is going to be flawed down the other end.”
Each region will have similarities and differences which need to be considered. To understand the needs for each region there needs to be data analysis considering all the social determinates of health, an understanding of the barriers and enablers to service delivery and current services need to be mapped with gaps identified before planning can commence. This regional analysis and mapping must be done with all relevant State and Commonwealth Departments and in collaboration with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and organisations.
This is a massive job one that needs to be done ASAP. I ask the Minister and PM&C have they undertaken such a task? If so as part of transparency and accountability this information should be made public. And if not how they can revise the guidelines in preparation for another round?
In summary, the IAS has to be redeveloped almost from scratch and there needs to be a major shift in the way PM&C engage with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and organisations. So where do I sit on the recommendations in the Report?
Summer is a Yorta Yorta Woman who grew up in Lake Macquarie near Newcastle. She has worked in Aboriginal affairs at the National level and has strong professional connections across the country in the Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Service sector. She specializes in health policy, qualitative research and communications.
Summer is a writer with Croakey and is the Co-convener of the Aboriginal Torres Strait Islander Special Interest Group an Associate Consultant with Cox Inall and Ridgeway and is an Honorary Associate at Sydney University. She has worked across the country in a variety of different capacities with a number of Universities, Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations, Tafe NSW, the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation and the Victorian and New South Wales state affiliates, National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples, the Heart Foundation, Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, NSW Departments of Health and the Commonwealth Department of Health.
She has a Bachelor of Social Science from Macquarie University, A Master of Public Health Advance from the University of Wollongong and is currently a PhD candidate at the University of South Australia.
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