Skip to content
Disability, Government Federal

Time to take profit out of NDIS, union urges

Australian Services Union 2 mins read

The Australian Services Union has warned that for-profit providers are jeopardising the viability and integrity of the NDIS, and is urging the federal government to consider banning profiteering companies from the scheme. 

 

The call comes after the ABC’s 7.30 program last night aired a story about hundreds of disability support workers being shortchanged their hard-earned pay, superannuation and other entitlements by a complex group of for-profit providers in the NDIS.

 

Over the last 18 months in NSW alone, the ASU has investigated 102 providers for underpaying workers and breaching the Fair Work Act, and all of these, bar two, have been for-profit providers. 

 

“The NDIS is increasingly becoming a vehicle for profiteering providers to make a quick buck at the expense of the integrity of the scheme,” ASU NSW & ACT Secretary, and the union’s NDIS spokesperson Angus McFarland, said.

 

“As the union for NDIS workers, we see the raw data and hear from exploited workers every day. Our union is constantly playing whack-a-mole on dodgy providers who rip off workers. Virtually all of these bad players are for-profits. 

 

“Many of these NDIS providers are ripping off workers then phoenixing or leaving the industry. But they don’t draw a line there - in our experience the same providers are also engaging in broader fraud of the system, ripping off NDIS participants and the taxpayer. 

 

“Our union can’t point to a single for-profit provider where workers are happy, where participants’ goals and aspirations are met, and where there are no complaints or grievances to the regulators.

 

“When there is so much commentary about the sustainability of the NDIS, it’s time for a conversation about why we have providers with profit motives in the scheme at all. It’s time to scrutinise the motive and mix of providers in federally funded essential services from the NDIS through to aged care and childcare too.

 

“The proliferation of for-profit NDIS providers all began under the Coalition government where we witnessed a rise in rip offs, fraud and undermining of the promise of the NDIS largely driven by a marketised and deregulated system. 

 

“To its credit, the federal government is cracking down on fraud in the NDIS but we need to have a bigger conversation about the clear patterns that are emerging.

 

“The NDIS was built on a promise to provide people with disability genuine choice, quality support, and the freedom to pursue their goals. That promise depends on properly paid workers who stay in the sector, and providers committed to quality supports not making a buck and gaming the system.”


Contact details:

Sofie: 0403 920 301

More from this category

  • Defence, Government Federal
  • 20/02/2026
  • 08:07
Weld Australia

Weld Australia Welcomes Landmark AUKUS Investment in South Australia

Weld Australia has welcomed the Albanese and Malinauskas Governments’ announcement of a $3.9 billion investment into the Submarine Construction Yard at Osborne, describing it as a once-in-a-generation opportunity for Australia’s advanced manufacturing industry. The investment forms part of a projected $30 billion infrastructure program over coming decades and will support the construction of Australia’s conventionally-armed, nuclear-powered submarines under AUKUS, creating nearly 10,000 jobs across South Australia alone. For Weld Australia, the peak body representing the nation’s welding industry, the announcement signals not just economic stimulus, but a defining moment for sovereign industrial capability. “This is nation-building at its most strategic,”…

  • Finance Investment, Government Federal
  • 20/02/2026
  • 06:00
ACOSS

Tax breaks help investors buy twice as many homes as first-time buyers

Property investors are buying almost twice as many homes as first home buyers, shutting renters out of the housing market, new analysis from ACOSS has revealed. And tax breaks are helping investors come armed with deeper pockets. The average property investor loan is around $100,000 larger than the average loan taken out by a first home buyer. “First home buyers are lining up at auctions only to be outbid by investors with bigger loans and generous tax breaks behind them,” said ACOSS CEO Cassandra Goldie. “It’s clear the housing market isn’t working for people who just want a place to…

  • General News, Government Federal
  • 19/02/2026
  • 06:00
e61 Institute

Australia’s Tax System Cannot Support Current Spending Levels

Australia is on course for 20 consecutive years of combined state and federal deficits by 2028 as spending consistently outstrips revenue, a new report by the e61 Institute and McKinnon has found. The report titled Rising Pressures, Fading Discipline: A Review of Australia's Fiscal Sustainability found the consolidated fiscal deficit - combining federal, state, and territory budgets - currently exceeds 3% of GDP and is larger than in the years before the COVID-19 pandemic. As a share of GDP, consolidated expenditure has increased from 34.7% in the early 2000s to 38.2% in 2024. “Over the past two decades, Australia’s financial…

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.