Skip to content
Disability

Statement on the NDIS Review

The Brotherhood of St. Laurence 2 mins read

The Brotherhood of St. Laurence (BSL) welcomes the final report from the NDIS Review. We commend the significant amount of work and collaboration undertaken by the Review Panel since it was established in October 2022.

In particular, we appreciate the deeply consultative approach adopted by co-chairs Professor Bruce Bonyhady AM and Ms Lisa Paul AO PSM, together with the efforts made by people with disability and their families, who shared their stories in order to achieve a better outcome for everyone.

As an NDIS Partner in the Community for Local Area Coordination and the early childhood approach in Victoria, we have seen first hand the importance of reforming the current Scheme to make it sustainable and to address existing challenges for people with disability, their family members and communities.

Our submission and input to the NDIS Review was informed by the knowledge and experience of people with disability, their families and carers, as well as our deep practice experience and research.  

We welcome the recommendations that will expand the range of foundational supports in and outside of the Scheme and improve outcomes for all children with developmental concerns, delay, or disability and their families. We have consistently argued for greater inclusion of people with disability in mainstream social and economic activity and services.

We applaud the call by Minister Bill Shorten for Federal and State governments and the disability community to find a way forward together. As noted by many organisations, it is imperative people with disability continue to drive the conversation and next steps in implementing change.

We know people with disability are more likely to experience poverty and disadvantage. As outlined in the NDIS Review report, achieving a unified system of support is essential for people with disability to live the life they aspire to. We will continue to work with all levels of government and the disability community to ensure the Scheme achieves its original outcomes.  

Media enquiries: Steph Jones, BSL Communications and Media Manager, [email protected] 

More from this category

  • Disability, General News
  • 03/12/2025
  • 10:08
UNSW Sydney

UNSW expert available to comment on NDIS plans being computer-generated.

Today's story in the Guardian "NDIS plans will be computer-generated, with human involvement dramatically cut under sweeping overhaul" outlines radical changes to the scheme. These changes will lead to the next Robo-debt, according to Dr Georgia van Toorn from UNSW Sydney's School of Social Sciences. Dr van Toorn is a political sociologist with particular expertise in welfare governance, with a particular focus on processes of marketisation, the commodification of social care, and the growing impact of data analytics and algorithmic decision-making in the public sector. "This is absolutely terrifying and even worse than I anticipated. The NDIA has always insisted…

  • Disability, Government VIC
  • 25/11/2025
  • 07:30
Professionals Australia

Unions warn Allan Government: do not abolish Victoria’s Disability Regulator

Professionals Australia is calling on the Allan Government to withdraw its plan to abolish Victoria’s dedicated Disability Regulator, a move that would dismantle specialist oversight and put disabled people at greater risk. The Government intends to merge the Victorian Disability Worker Commission, the Disability Worker Registration Board, and the Disability Services Commissioner into a single mega-regulator responsible for hundreds of services, including childcare, homelessness, domestic violence and broader social services. Professionals Australia CEO, Sam Roberts, said the reform abandons the core lessons of the Disability Royal Commission. “Specialist disability regulation exists for a reason. The Royal Commission made it clear…

  • Disability, Government VIC
  • 19/11/2025
  • 09:08
Health Services Union

Health Services Union condemns dangerous plan to scrap disability watchdogs

The Health Services Union has condemned the Victorian Government's plan to abolish specialist disability regulators and merge them into a single super-regulator, warning the move will leave vulnerable people with disability exposed to exploitation and abuse. Legislation before the Legislative Council would scrap the Disability Services Commissioner, the Victorian Disability Worker Commission, and the Disability Worker Registration Board, rolling them into the already overstretched Social Services Regulator (SSR). HSU National Secretary Lloyd Williams said the government was dismantling critical safeguards when it is clear stronger oversight is needed. "Recent reports have exposed shocking cases in the disability sector – yet…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.