logo
Ten-fold increase in NSW relief spending after horror run of natural disasters

Ten-fold increase in NSW relief spending after horror run of natural disasters

The Age23-06-2025
NSW faces unprecedented spending pressures as a result of worsening natural disasters, its budget hit with a 10-fold increase to relief and recovery payments since the deadly Black Summer bushfires ravaged the state six years ago.
In partnership with the Commonwealth, the NSW government has spent $9.5 billion on disaster relief and recovery across the state in the period following the devastating summer fires of 2019.
This represents a 10-fold increase compared with the previous six years. Before 2019, expenditure averaged $154 million a year. After Black Summer, that has risen to $1.6 billion annually.
The significant increase will be outlined in NSW Treasurer Daniel Mookhey's third budget on Tuesday, which despite spending pressures will report a stabilisation of the state's debt, delivering a gross debt improvement of $9.4 billion.
The $188.2 billion of gross debt projected in the 2023 pre-election budget update is set to be $178.8 billion by June 2026, cutting the government's interest payments by $400 million in 2025-26.
Mookhey will deliver his budget on the back of two years of the state's slowest economic growth in three decades, elevated interest rates and cost-of-living pressures.
Mookhey insists he is 'optimistic' about the state's finances and says NSW was able to spend more on improving educational outcomes, as well as investing in hospitals and preventive care to ease the burden on the under-pressure public health system.
Housing will be a key feature of the budget, but the government will also announce establishment of a new Investment Delivery Authority, modelled on the Housing Delivery Authority and designed to accelerate approvals for major projects across all industries, including advanced technologies and energy.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Federal government unleashes ‘Kindy Cops' and funding threats as childcare sector reels from Melbourne abuse allegations
Federal government unleashes ‘Kindy Cops' and funding threats as childcare sector reels from Melbourne abuse allegations

Sky News AU

time6 hours ago

  • Sky News AU

Federal government unleashes ‘Kindy Cops' and funding threats as childcare sector reels from Melbourne abuse allegations

The federal government is preparing to launch a sweeping crackdown on childcare providers, granting new powers to so-called "kindy cops" to carry out unannounced inspections, amid explosive revelations of abuse at a Melbourne childcare centre. The legislative overhaul comes after a 26-year-old childcare worker, Joshua Dale Brown, was charged with the alleged sexual abuse of eight babies and toddlers in his care - an incident that has sent shockwaves through the early education sector and prompted STD testing for more than 1,200 children. Federal Education Minister Jason Clare described the situation as "sickening and serious", acknowledging governments have taken "too bloody long" to act on childcare safety. 'The big weapon that the federal government has to wield here is the funding that we provide to childcare centres,' Mr Clare said. 'It equates to about 70 per cent of the funding that runs a centre, and if they're not keeping our kids safe then we need to cut off their funding.' Under the new laws to be introduced, Commonwealth fraud officers will be empowered to enter childcare centres without a warrant or federal police accompaniment. These powers will be used to target fraudulent claims involving so-called "ghost children" and monitor compliance with child safety standards. Operators that breach safety regulations repeatedly will face cuts to federal subsidies, bans on future licences, and potential shutdowns. The government also plans to push states and territories to expedite reforms, including a national childcare worker register and improved real-time criminal history checks. 'It's a complicated system but people aren't interested in bloody excuses, they're interested in action,' Mr Clare told the Seven Network. 'The implementation of those reforms has taken too bloody long, and they need to be accelerated.' In a move to enhance transparency and safety, Goodstart Early Learning, Australia's largest childcare provider, has announced the rollout of CCTV surveillance across all 653 of its centres. The not-for-profit organisation has already banned staff from using mobile phones on site and enforced strict protocols preventing staff from being alone with children unless there's a professional reason. 'CCTV has a role to play but it will never be a replacement for ­active supervision of every child by professional educators,' Goodstart said in a statement. 'Governments will have to consider how they fund a national program to support the rollout of CCTV in early learning centres as the costs are extremely high, in terms of installation costs, secure storage of data and ongoing monitoring or review.' The group has backed the government's move toward a national working-with-children check and stronger information sharing between agencies. Meanwhile, Nationals Senator for Victoria, Bridget McKenzie, told Sky News the situation revealed a deep failure in the system and demanded tougher enforcement of existing rules. 'What we've seen from these horrific reports this week is that the system is failing our children and failing our parents in a very, very significant and terrible way,' she said. 'It's one thing to have all the great frameworks, standards, principles, rules and procedures in place, it's another thing to actually enforce those. And we will be backing anything that's going to make our children safer.' McKenzie said the Coalition supports an urgent review of standards and called for "honest" assessments of bureaucratic failures across states. 'Any review needs to be very honest,' she said. 'We need to put our kids first and we need to tell the uncomfortable truths of bureaucracies that aren't working for kids. 'People hide behind piles of paperwork saying we've got all this beautiful framework.' Addressing concerns over the potential appointment of former South Australian Premier Jay Weatherill to lead the Victorian childcare sector review, McKenzie acknowledged it could shake public trust. 'We need to instill trust and confidence back into our childcare system for everybody,' she said. 'If this is going to be the appointment, then there will be some people who feel very let down by Mr Weatherill in the past and this will be a chance for redemption, but he has to be ruthless and uncompromising in his report.'

We can have a good childcare system, or a cheap one. When protecting children, that choice should be easy
We can have a good childcare system, or a cheap one. When protecting children, that choice should be easy

The Age

timea day ago

  • The Age

We can have a good childcare system, or a cheap one. When protecting children, that choice should be easy

Once it became clear that a string of child abuse offences may have taken place across Melbourne for years undetected, and parents of 1200 children were contacted, it was obvious that there would be wider public consternation. Parents across the nation would have experienced a pang of doubt. But childcare is not simply childcare. It is, as the federal government knows, a vital building block in the way modern Australian families live, and it underpins our economy. Put simply, parents cannot work productively unless they can outsource this care for part of the day. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese made widened access to childcare a key part of his re-election pitch, and has introduced legislation to guarantee three days of subsidised early education and care universally, with talk of a flat-fee system as part of his second-term vision. His government has also pushed higher wages for those working in childcare. But this week's revelations of police investigations bring us back to fundamental questions about a sector that the Commonwealth and states are anxious to build out rapidly. In March, reporting by the ABC's Four Corners showed that childcare centres were allowed to continue operating despite falling short of regulatory standards, and that regulation was infrequent and staff sometimes unqualified. At the time, Albanese insisted that a royal commission into these allegations was unnecessary because states would be able to investigate such clear wrongdoing. Loading At a hastily convened press conference on Wednesday, Premier Jacinta Allan and Minister for Children Lizzie Blandthorn implied that Victoria was moving quickly on reforming the sector, only to find itself frustrated by the pace of progress at the national level. They pledged to have a state register of workers in the sector by the end of August, which they hoped would then slot into a national register. The uproar surrounding the case of Joshua Dale Brown understandably has parents demanding immediate action, while politicians are left explaining the constraints they work under. But it is nearly three years since Deborah Glass, in her role as Victorian ombudsman, issued a report pointing to holes in the state's system of working with children checks. It was only this April that Allan launched a 'rapid review' of the system. Why such a delay? Robert Fitzgerald, a commissioner for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, told The Age federal and state governments have had the opportunity to act on the recommendation for a nationally coordinated working with children scheme since 2015. In the ten years since, they have failed to do so. He says it is time to 'get the job done.' Yesterday, the premier spoke about an 'urgent review' into the incident. For parents waiting to discover whether their children have been abused, talk of urgency and pledges of reform will wear thin if not followed by palpable action.

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