Skip to content
Disability, Government Federal

Disability workforce crisis sparks call for federal government action on pay

Health Services Union 2 mins read

The Health Services Union has launched a push for disability workers to receive a desperately needed pay rise, with the sector facing a major workforce crisis.

 

A HSU discussion paper, which will be launched at Parliament House in Canberra on Monday, shows Australia is facing a 100,000 disability staff shortfall, while one in four workers are planning on leaving the sector.

 

With the NDIS growing at 8 per cent annually, this could have a catastrophic impact for the hundreds of thousands of Australians who rely on the scheme, as standards decline and people fall through the cracks.

 

The union is calling for a $5-an-hour pay increase through a new workforce compact that would also guarantee no additional cost to participants.

 

The compact would also mean better conditions including staffing levels, supervision, training, debrief time and classification structures.

 

The Federal Government is funding $11.3 billion in aged care wage increases over four years, and $3.6 billion in early childhood over two years.

 

The HSU's proposed workforce compact would be an investment of $900 million over three years and help shore up the future of the NDIS for hundreds of thousands of participants nationally.

 

“Disability workers are severely underpaid for the incredibly challenging work they do, which is motivated by a deep commitment to scheme participants,” HSU National Secretary Lloyd Williams said.

 

“Unfortunately, that commitment is being stretched to breaking point – and the federal government must urgently act to avoid a catastrophic erosion of standards across the NDIS.

 

“These workers are the forgotten allrounders of social support systems that give people living with disabilities the dignified and independent lives they deserve.

 

“Aged care and early childhood workers are getting the pay rise they thoroughly deserved because of government action. For just a small fraction of those investments, the government can ensure the NDIS isn’t hammered by the looming workforce crisis.

 

“Alongside that, disability workers must be given improved conditions around staffing levels, supervision, training, debrief time and classification structures that empower them to deliver the best quality support.” 


Contact details:

Matt Coughlan 0400 561 480 / [email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • General News, Government Federal
  • 09/07/2025
  • 08:53
Charles Darwin University (CDU)

Financial boost helps CDU student take vital regional placement without losing home

A new federal payment is enabling a Charles Darwin University (CDU) student to undertake a vital regional placement in Alice Springs, without sacrificing her…

  • Contains:
  • Finance Investment, Government Federal
  • 08/07/2025
  • 15:32
ACOSS

RBA misses opportunity to provide relief

ACOSS is deeply disappointed by today’s decision by the Reserve Bank of Australia to leave interest rates on hold, saying there is a missed crucial opportunity to deliver relief to millions of people doing it tough. “Today’s decision is a blow for millions of people in Australia on low and modest incomes who are struggling to cover the basics,” ACOSS Acting CEO Jacqueline Phillips said. “It means that it will take longer to restore growth in jobs and wages after a decade of stagnation. “With inflation now well within the target range, there is no justification for keeping rates at…

  • General News, Government Federal
  • 08/07/2025
  • 14:12
Senator Fatima Payman

Senator Payman offers assistance to Senator Hanson

Payman 'olive branch' to Hanson Staffing issue hanging over new Parliament Western Australia Senator Fatima Payman has reached out to offer support to Senator Pauline Hanson, as One Nation explores legal action against the Prime Minister. Senator Payman says the government is blocking her and other Senators from reviewing legislation by denying accessto Parliamentary staff. The WA Senator, who has no Parliamentary staff at all, is offering to support Senator Hanson in her efforts to take the matter to the independent corruption watchdog. The letter from Senator Payman is attached. Contact details: Jeff WatersMedia and Communications AdviserOffice of Senator Fatima…

  • Contains:

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.