logo
Foster carers don't do it for cash, but NSW budget investment could make real difference

Foster carers don't do it for cash, but NSW budget investment could make real difference

There was little cause for delight among Treasurer Daniel Mookhey's budget revelations.
No exciting promises about shiny new metros.
No new handouts to ease the pressure on household budgets.
No credible path to achieving housing targets in New South Wales, although a $1 billion fund to improve supply will provide a welcome boost.
The government is stabilising debt and forecasting a surplus in 2027/28, the first in almost a decade. But that won't exactly thrill voters.
Ahead of every budget, treasurers are inundated with worthy funding requests and often those with the loudest voices win.
So, it's significant that this time around, the government is helping those who can't speak up for themselves — the state's most vulnerable children.
The NSW out-of-home care system is the biggest in the southern hemisphere, according to the government, with 14,000 children in the care of the state.
Last year, a landmark report revealed the depths of despair it had sunk to.
A chronic shortage of foster carers had pushed more and more children into temporary accommodation like motels and caravan parks, often under the supervision of unaccredited workers from labour hire firms.
The Advocate for Children and Young People detailed the squalid conditions some children endured, like cockroach infestations and having no access to shower facilities.
One child said they felt like a "doggy in the pound pretty much, moving cage to cage".
The record $1.2 billion investment announced on Tuesday aimed to turn the system around.
The government has already made solid progress by removing children from motels and will now use some of the new funding to attract more foster carers.
Cole and Gina Young, from Rooty Hill, have fostered many children over ten years.
They're currently caring for a 6-month-old boy who they welcomed into their home straight from hospital.
Mr Young said anyone considering becoming a foster carer shouldn't hesitate.
"It'll be the hardest thing you ever do in your life," he said.
"We all see on TV kids without a home, without a roof over their head in different countries and we say how horrible that is," he said.
"This is Australia and we've got kids like that here."
Families and Communities Minister Kate Washington said carers young and old, single or married, could become a carer.
"If you have got room in your home and your heart, please consider becoming a foster carer. We will support you," she said.
A tax-free allowance will rise by 20 per cent, meaning the carer of a typical 14-year old will receive more than $1,000 per fortnight.
As families face their own cost-of-living pressures, it will still be a major challenge to recruit enough carers.
People don't foster children for the money, but the new support will certainly help.
The funding package includes nearly $50 million for government-owned care homes.
There's also more than $190 million to recruit more than 200 new caseworkers and retain existing workers with higher pay.
Andrea Cartwright, a child protection worker from Ingleburn, said caseworkers experience chronic burnout and stress, with lack of staff meaning they can't perform the necessary welfare checks on children who might be at risk.
"Hopefully now with this new announcement that's all going to change," Ms Cartwright said.
"We're no longer the government's dirty little secret."
As with foster carers, there are no guarantees the government will succeed in its recruitment drive for caseworkers, but it's sending a clear signal that it values people doing difficult jobs.
The funding package is a significant win for Ms Washington who has fought hard within government to repair the crumbling child protection sector.
It'll be an even bigger win for the thousands of children who rely on it.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ATO data reveals the top 10 richest professions in Australia
ATO data reveals the top 10 richest professions in Australia

News.com.au

time13 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

ATO data reveals the top 10 richest professions in Australia

Surgeons are the highest paid professionals in Australia, according to new data from the Australian Taxation Office. On Friday, the Australian Taxation Office released data from 2022-23 financial year breaking down what the wealthiest Australians do for a living. 'Since reporting started in 2010–11, surgeons have remained the highest paid occupation with the 4,247 individuals reporting an average taxable income of $472,475 in 2022–23,' the report read. Anaesthetist and financial dealer were in second and third place with $447,193 and $355,233 respectively. This was followed by internal medicine specialist in fourth with $342,457 and psychiatrist with $288,146. Here are the top 10 highest paid jobs in Australia: 1. Surgeon – $472,475 2. Anaesthetist – $447,193 3. Financial dealer – $355,233 4. Internal medicine specialist – $342,457 5. Psychiatrist – $288,146. 6. Other medical practitioners – $259,802 7. Mining engineer – $206,408 8. Judicial or other legal professionals – $206,408 9. CEO or managing director – $194,987 10. Financial investment adviser – $191,986 The ATO has also revealed Australia's richest postcodes. NSW dominates the list, with seven from the top ten located in the state. The postcode '2027' takes out the number one spot with the areas of Point Piper, Darling Point, Edgecliff and HMAS Rushcutters in Sydney's east. The postcode boasted an average taxable income of $279,712 among 5,841 inhabitants. This was followed by Double Bay (postcode 2028) and Woollahra (postcode 2025) in second and third place with $255,901 and $242,267 respectively, both in Sydney's eastern suburbs. The only two Victorian postcodes to make the list were the Hawksburn/ Toorak area in fourth with $241,511 and Portsea in seventh with $222,254. Top 10 wealthiest postcodes in Australia: 1. '2027' NSW: Darling Point, Edgecliff, HMAS Rushcutters, Point Piper – $279,712 2. '2028' NSW: Double Bay – $255,901 3. '2025' NSW: Woollahra – $242,267 4. '3142' Vic: Hawksburn, Toorak – $241,511 5. '2030' NSW: Dover Heights, Rose Bay North, Vaucluse, Watsons Bay – $236,750 6. '2108' NSW: Coasters Retreat, Palm Beach, Currawong Beach – $233,344 7. '3844' Vic: Portsea – $222,254 8. '2023' NSW: Bellevue Hill – $216,383 9. '6011' WA: Cottesloe, Peppermint Grove – $213,621 10. '2110' NSW: Hunters Hills, Woolwich – $208,902

Melbourne's Metro Rail Tunnel may not be fully operational when it opens, with report two stations are behind schedule
Melbourne's Metro Rail Tunnel may not be fully operational when it opens, with report two stations are behind schedule

ABC News

time34 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Melbourne's Metro Rail Tunnel may not be fully operational when it opens, with report two stations are behind schedule

The Victorian Government has backed down from initial denials that Melbourne's $15 billion Metro Rail Tunnel project would not be fully operational when it opens at the end of the year. Nine newspapers have reported some train services will run through the nine-kilometre twin tunnels this year but peak hour services would divert to the City Loop until early 2026, despite the project being spruiked as opening this year. The report suggested the delay was due to construction of two of the project's five underground stations – Town Hall and State Library – failing to meet completion deadlines. Government frontbencher Steve Dimopoulos fronted the media on Saturday morning and initially said the report was wrong. But, when pushed by further questioning, changed his stance to suggest the article was 'pre-emptive'. 'We haven't landed the timetable,' Mr Dimopoulos said. Mr Dimopoulos said he did not expect any disappointment from commuters if services were not to run at full capacity. 'If you think of the complexity here … I don't think people are going to be anything but overjoyed when they walk through those five stations. 'This is a huge project, that's what I think people will be embracing.' He took a shot at the anonymous sources the newspaper article was based on. 'Anonymity comes with a lack of responsibility.' Metro Rail has notched up hundreds of millions of dollars in cost blow-outs and there were already known issues with station construction, including a shortage of construction workers, supply chain constraints and disruptions caused by COVID-19, that had pushed back the opening date from March 2025 to as far as the new year. Mr Dimopoulos said that deferred completion date should not be seen as a delay. 'When the government announced it in 2015 and you go back to those records, the premier then said it would be open in late 2026," he said. "It'll be open by the end of this year so it's a year early.' Opposition leader Brad Battin said the government had implied the project would be fully operational by this year.. "No one knows when it's going to open, no one knows which stations will open and no one knows how many trains will be able to go through during peak and off-peak times," he said. Mr Battin called on the government to guarantee it would not pay the builders any bonuses if they failed to complete the full project by the end of the year.

One councillor. Countless fights. How Big Rob's beefs are shaping Lismore, a city in recovery
One councillor. Countless fights. How Big Rob's beefs are shaping Lismore, a city in recovery

ABC News

timean hour ago

  • ABC News

One councillor. Countless fights. How Big Rob's beefs are shaping Lismore, a city in recovery

Big Rob's Kebab Shop was once the home of many of Lismore's big fights. Young revellers would often get into punch-ups inside his late night takeaway joint. The constant violence used to piss the kebab store owner Robert Bou-Hamden off, especially when he had to get involved to break it up. But lately, Lismore has had a different fight on its hands. The local businessman and lawyer is now a councillor and his little beefs have become big problems for a city still healing. When Bou-Hamden was told he couldn't put 'Big Rob' on his ballot paper in 2016, he legally changed his name. He's officially been Big Rob ever since. He's become known for the name both locally and online, running several community Facebook groups across the Lismore, Ballina and Casino that share local news, business ads, weather updates, topical polls, and the occasional photo of Rob's dog. During Lismore's multiple catastrophic flood events, the self-described 'citizen journalist' would go around and film what was happening in Lismore and share it on his pages. Like a community noticeboard, other people post on his pages too. Altogether, he has 90,000 followers across various platforms, which is just a little under the combined population of the areas he covers. If that's all he shared, perhaps his pathway to politics and his current grip on the city would be uncontroversial. But there's one more page that Big Rob runs. A local crime page, with 137,000 followers, that shares footage of people doing the wrong thing at all hours of the day and night. Since he's shifted from local social media celebrity to city councillor, his online antics have blurred the lines between private citizen and public official. In a city still bearing the scars of devastating floods, Big Rob's presence represents a risky kind of local politics — one where social media tirades and public shaming have become commonplace. Big Rob transitioned from kebab shop owner to citizen journalist after he started uploading videos of incidents on his North Coast Crime page. Sometimes he'd arrive on the scene before first responders got there. "I'm usually up really late. Most of the good stuff happens at night," he said. "I used to attend crimes and incidents, car crashes, fires, anything that I could hear on a police scanner. Like many regional places, the local media landscape was in decline. These videos kept the community informed. "I was outstripping the [mainstream media] by miles … They couldn't keep up. My traffic was more, my numbers were more," Big Rob says. He says he even started to turn a buck, charging news outlets for the footage he was capturing on his phone. But this citizen journalism came with complications. "[The police] used to threaten me with arrest. They've grabbed me many times. They've put hands on me, pushed me," he claims. Recently at a school fire, an officer "got right up in my face trying to make me move back … yelling at me like I'm doing something wrong". Police say they were clearing the area around a declared crime scene and that the public complied with their directions. Locals didn't love seeing their faces on North Coast Crime at their worst, before they'd had their day at court. In one instance, he was charged with two counts of publishing the names of minors involved in a fight, allegedly violating the Children Criminal Proceedings Act . The charges were later dismissed. Big Rob says his mission is civic-minded — he wants crime taken seriously in Lismore and he wants the police to step up. In 2016, Big Rob walked into the Lismore police station. He'd had an altercation with a woman at a local sushi shop and talked about it on his radio show and social media. The woman reported the incident to police and they asked him to come in. Big Rob live-streamed himself driving to the station and going inside. He was arrested and charged for common assault and four counts of stalking and intimidation. Big Rob uploaded the video to his North Coast Crime page. Only this time, he was the subject of the story. The footage is of a low resolution. His decision to record inside is clearly designed for maximum reach online. It shows the way he handles himself when under threat, the live streaming, the confidence, his appetite for conflict and his willingness to challenge authority. It's these qualities on display in the recording that Big Rob has used to grow his profile. A year after the incident, a judge dismissed all the charges. In court, the magistrate said that Big Rob was "rude, discourteous and insulting" but his behaviour wasn't worthy of a conviction. In the midst of these court hearings, Big Rob had time to ruminate on his next steps. In 2016, he decided he was going to run for mayor. He regularly turned up to council meetings to make the most of public access, where he could put questions to the council on matters ranging from public pools to parking fees. In his first attempt, he fell short. But Big Rob knew from curating his community pages that people in Lismore had genuine concerns about how the council was being run. So he set his sights on the next election and ramped up his criticisms of elected officials online. In 2017, Lismore's then-mayor Isaac Smith took out an interim Apprehended Personal Violence Order (APVO) against him to stop him posting about the mayor and his family . Big Rob responded to Smith's filing of the APVO application by posting a 24-minute long video of himself driving to the then-mayor's house, in which he narrated a long list of grievances against Smith. It's titled, 'Big Rob responds to Lismore mayor Isaac 'simple' Smith wanting an AVO" and in it, Big Rob refers to the then-mayor as a 'clown', a 'weasel' and taunts him, to 'get an AVO on this'. Addressing the social media posts that led Smith to apply for an AVO, he tells his followers that politicians are not exempt from public scrutiny and that he was simply uploading content provided to him by his audience. The clip captures Big Rob's confrontational stance toward elected officials: "I always say the best defence is attack". Later, he was found by a court to have breached his interim APVO because he continued to post about the then-mayor. Big Rob appealed, lost, and then was ordered to pay costs. After a year of multiple court appearances, Isaac Smith withdrew the APVO. Another local applied for an interim AVO against Big Rob. In the application with the court, the local accused Big Rob of labelling them a 'paedophile'. Big Rob denied the claims. The application was dismissed in court. When the community member who applied for the interim AVO confronted him outside the council chambers some years later, they had a big verbal stoush. The altercation led to the council attempting to restrict Big Rob from entering the council premises. Although the council later clarified that it was a 'misunderstanding' and council briefings are open to the public. Rob took it as an attempt to exclude him from the democratic process. In the years that followed, the council became embroiled in internal division and alleged governance issues. The region was also hit by major floods, triggering a surge in demand for local information. Big Rob's on-the-ground updates boosted his visibility in the community. In 2021, he had another crack at getting elected to council. This time, he scraped in . Big Rob chalks it up to his unorthodox approach to politics. "I guess they saw me as someone who wasn't like all the other politicians who didn't care what anyone thought, who didn't watch my Ps and Qs," Big Rob says. In 2024, Big Rob was returned to council, with an increased vote — proof that his approach was resonating with more people, not fewer. "He's the only true community representative we've got," Col Baker, a retiree says. As the former co-owner of the Lismore Pie Cart, Col said he admired Big Rob's persistence and that he cared about small businesses. "He doesn't shut up, he keeps pushing." "The council was completely dysfunctional. Development in Lismore was virtually nil and the council's attitude towards business was abysmal and Big Rob recognised that." But Col admits, the council is yet to change the issues he'd like to see dealt with in the community. "He's trying to get the council to stop spending money on frivolous stuff. I genuinely think he's there for the benefit of the community, but unfortunately he's got a lot of people offside." Janine Wilson, former editor of the Koori Mail, is one of those 'offsiders'. Janine now runs 'Lismore Council Watch' a Facebook page dedicated to reporting council matters. She says Big Rob's entry onto Lismore's council was built over years of stirring up conflict in the community to increase engagement on his pages. "It sews division, up-ends council processes, and fuels community tensions." For Janine, Big Rob's rise represents something that's gone amiss in the region. "Local media has collapsed. No one knows what's going on anymore. It's a dog's breakfast really." In that vacuum, Big Rob's beefs have thrived, his status has grown and it's propelled him into a career in local politics. On his official website Big Rob has a couple of lists. One about the policies he's passionate about, including water security, flood mitigation and economic development, and another one called "keeping them honest" where in eight dot points he sums up his ambition to make politics more engaging and more inclusive. Big Rob is vocal about his desire to rid the council of members he doesn't agree with. For that he has another list. He says it includes, among other things, people "doing the wrong thing to the community … and just being a dick." According to Rob, the people on that list are normally other public officials that are "bad for Lismore" and "need to go". "Once people get on my list, their careers are over in politics," he said. "They get what's called 'the Big Rob experience'." He claims to have already been instrumental in disposing of many elected officials, senior council staff and general managers in Lismore council. For police who've been involved in his AVO matters, Big Rob told the ABC this means high level attention to every piece of correspondence they've had around his case. This means subpoenas for "everything" … notes, phone records, personal phones, text messages, emails and police reports. For politicians and public figures, it means sustained social media campaigns. "Jenny Dowell was on the list, so she's gone," Big Rob says of a former Lismore mayor. "Every time she pops her head up, she gets back on the list." Councillors concerned by his methods have made complaints against Big Rob. But he remains undeterred. Jyllie Jackson is 77 and has devoted herself to Lismore's lantern parade for three decades. It's a landmark community event that attracts thousands each year. "The Lismore Lantern Parade is a piece of magic, it's a gathering of the community to tell a story. From tiny lanterns, to great, huge giant lanterns." She can't pinpoint exactly when the beef began with Big Rob, but it was around about the time he still had the takeaway joint. "He was complaining online about the fact that we didn't take the lantern parade down the street, that was ostensibly where his kebab shop was," she said. So she changed the route. Years later, Jyllie agreed to support a different local candidate to Big Rob at the council elections, by standing on Elly Bird's ticket. "I got a message from Big Rob on Facebook Messenger telling me that that was a very silly thing for me to do," Jackson said. When she moved the lantern parade temporarily to the North Lismore showgrounds to comply with COVID restrictions, Big Rob's public disapproval began. He thought it wasn't right to move the festival out of the CBD. But council documents show Jyllie received a $30,000 funding allocation to put the event on at the showgrounds and the council assisted Jyllie with the move through logistical and administrative support. When Big Rob couldn't succeed in blocking the funding of the festival in council, he took matters into his own hands. "We became aware that Big Rob had registered the Lismore Lantern Parade … as his business," Jackson says . The parade, which had been running since 1994, had never registered it as a business name — it was simply the name of their community event . "I got phone calls from contractors, subcontractors, and sponsors," she says. "They had been told that they weren't allowed to use the name Lismore Lantern Parade." "It's like throwing a little grenade into the community and waiting for people who like to be keyboard warriors to jump on it and make a fuss," she said. Jyllie asked Big Rob to quit claiming the business name as his own, to no avail. Big Rob maintains he was right to oppose the move and register the business name. When local councillor Elly Bird talks about her experience with Big Rob, she struggles to fight back tears. The councillor has spent eight years in local government and many more in paid and volunteer positions in community organisations. She's also the executive director of Resilient Lismore, an organisation dedicated to helping flood affected community members repair their homes. The organisation receives significant funding from government bodies, which Big Rob takes issue with. 'Resilient Lismore should be shut down. No more grant funding and no one should listen to them." Rob says. He's consistently criticised her organisation's operations, questioning the work it does, the wage Elly receives as an executive director and often uses the hashtag #DisasterCapitalism. Elly and her organisation have been mentioned by Big Rob's pages more than 100 times in the last five years. In 2022, as Lismore was in the grip of another devastating flooding event, Big Rob's influence became acutely apparent to her. "As I arrived at the evacuation center to help, some guy called out to me and said, 'Oh, it's Rate Rise Elly, what are you doing here?'" she recalls, her voice catching. "At the time of my community's highest need." The nickname was one of two Big Rob uses for her regularly on social media — Elly 'Angry' Bird and Rate Rise Elly. Elly is not the first councillor to be given a name by Big Rob. Former mayor was Isaac 'Simple' Smith, the former GM was 'the Dictator', a young political up-and-comer became 'Silly' Sally Flannery. Later in the year Big Rob posted other claims about Elly. "I went and bought myself a Toyota Hiace van because I needed to be able to move furniture around this community with my own money. After the disaster, there was a suggestion that 'she's gone off and bought herself a new car out of all the funds'. "What a load of rubbish." Elly has tried to respond to criticism in the past, but says she's one of thousands of people that is blocked from Rob's pages. Big Rob estimates that he's blocked over 30,000 people. Financial documents filed with the Australian Charities and Not-For-Profit Commission indicate that Resilient Lismore's 2024 revenue was $2,891,980. The organisation's 2022-24 impact report says it completed over 4,000 general repair jobs, and 657 significant repair jobs over that time. "We have successfully attracted grant funding to be able to deliver the work that we do. We have employed … 26 individuals over the last three years," the Executive Director said. Resilient Lismore's annual report shows that the organisation's 2024 expenditure on contractors — mostly skilled labourers — was $1,081,432, employee salaries were $1,014,513 and material purchases for home repairs was $369,675. Elly Bird finds the criticism bewildering, saying her organisation is employing "local people to help local people". "You gotta pay people to do work. It's fundamental to our society." "I'm paid according to award rates for the work that I do, same as everybody else in this organisation, same as everybody else in the community … I work above and beyond what I'm being paid to do." An independent auditor's report found no fault in the organisation's financial statements and that they satisfy the requirements of the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission Act 2012. Elly says Big Rob's sustained attention was a factor in her deciding not to run for a third term in 2024. "It's very difficult to have your motivations challenged, particularly when I give so much of myself for this community, and no opportunity to defend myself," she said. "I just had to weigh up all the things in my life and the places and spaces where I can be effective. "I want it to stop." Elly says she's had conversations with people who would make good councillors but don't run because of the level of scrutiny and impact it might have on their businesses and their families. "I think it's a really sad state of affairs, our community deserves good leadership from good people who are committed to seeing the best possible outcomes for this community and people who have those qualities decide not to put themselves forward, to not take up that role," she said. Mayor Steve Krieg says the first time he ever spoke to Big Rob was very late at night, in 2021. Counsellor Krieg was about to run for council and for mayor. The staff of his cafe were having a party, when they saw Big Rob across the road. "I walked across the road and introduced myself … I'd had a few beers and he chewed my ear off for about two hours, about everything that I was gonna do wrong and how stupid I was for doing it," he said. "My wife ended up coming out and saying, 'what are you doing?'" The Mayor says he has since come to enjoy working with the provocateur, though he doesn't agree with many of his methods. "He's very switched-on as far as process and procedure goes and that's an important thing in council. "But he also has a very short fuse and cracks the sads when things don't go his way as well. So he needs to learn to control his emotions a little bit." Big Rob's approach to local politics has come with significant costs — both personal and financial. To date, he has breached the council code of conduct multiple times. In 2022, Big Rob was formally censured after an investigation found he breached the code of conduct over a social media post about transgender athletes. The following year, a complaint from Elly Bird was investigated which found that Big Rob in ten instances had been disparaging or belittling of the then-councillor online and on email. The council considered the code of conduct breach but on that occasion, voted against censuring Big Rob. That same year, Rob was censured twice: once for inflammatory comments about then-General Manager John Walker, and again for suggesting he might sue a pensioner for her house to satisfy a defamation claim. Most recently, Rob was censured for insensitive remarks about an Aboriginal elder, who he criticised for accepting payment to deliver Acknowledgements of Country. The matter was referred to the Office of Local Government, which declined to comment. Each investigation in council requires hiring an external investigator. Council sources estimate the total cost of dealing with complaints against Big Rob may be nearing $100,000 — money that could otherwise be spent on community services. Big Rob himself takes issue with the wasted cost involved, posting about one censure: "Another censure to add to the collection, and a considerable cost to ratepayers as attempts to control me using a very broken process continue." His response to each censure has been to challenge the process and publish the confidential council investigations on his website and Facebook page. "There is absolutely no procedural fairness in the code of conduct procedures and no appeal rights," he declared after one censure. Councillor Krieg finds himself trying to manage a council where one member publicly criticises private citizens within the community he represents. "Sadly, every day I get some form of correspondence or complaint," Councillor Krieg says about Big Rob's online behaviour. Big Rob's battles go beyond what happened to Jyllie Jackson , Elly Bird and Isaac Smith — his rants also take in an antique owner who displays his wares on the streets and people who park their cars in the wrong spot. "It's not my job to go and tell someone to get their shit off the footpath and it's not my job to tell someone that they're parking illegally," Mayor Krieg said. "That's what we employ rangers to do, and that's what the police are for. He tends to think that it is his role and he gets into trouble for it and he can't accept the fact that he gets into trouble for it because he thinks he's doing the right thing." Councillor Krieg identifies what he sees as Big Rob's fundamental flaw: "It's his way or no way … if he deems that someone's wronged him or is doing the wrong thing by the council, it's all or nothing in his head."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store