PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
14/12/1998
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
10898
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP LAUNCH OF THE PRIME MINISTERIAL YOUTH HOMELESSNESS TASKFORCE REPORT

E&OE................................................................................................

Well thank you very much Captain Eldridge, to the Reverend Dr Bill

Lawton, to my ministerial colleagues, the leaders of many community

and welfare organisations here today, members of the taskforce, ladies

and gentleman.

I start by expressing my gratitude to David Eldridge and to the members

of the taskforce for delivering the report that I launched today.

This exercise grew out of a commitment I made in a speech I delivered

to ACOSS late in 1995 as Opposition Leader, to try and examine against

the background of concern being expressed by some in the community

that the processes relating to youth homelessness were not sufficiently

involving the families of young people who left home or were wanting

to leave home. I didn't approach it with too many preconceived

notions, I suppose all of us wherever we come from have preconceived

notions and it's a bit idle to pretend otherwise.

But I thought it would make a great deal of sense if in Government

we put together a group of men and women from both the community sector

and the Government to have another look at this issue. And indeed

within a couple of weeks of the Government being elected in 1996 I

called together a group of people and the taskforce was established.

And I'm delighted that Captain Eldridge assumed the chairmanship

of that taskforce and I want to personally thank him for the quite

remarkable job that he's done.

This taskforce and its recommendations give expression to part of

the Government's philosophical approach to welfare services and

support to the less advantaged in our community. In the address I

gave once again to ACOSS only a few weeks ago where I tried to set

out some of the pathways of the Government, in a philosophical sense,

towards welfare issues in our second term of Government, I did emphasise

that we saw the Government as having a very important and a very strategic

role, but we also saw a partnership between the Government and community

organisations and individuals as being very much at the core of the

delivery of more efficient and effective welfare services in the closing

years of this century and into the 21st century. One of

the crucial roles for Government I said on that occasion was to foster

a greater sense of individual moral obligation and duty amongst citizens

and to encourage individuals through there own actions and depth of

their conviction to give back to the community that looked after them.

Now this taskforce has completed its work and in launching the report

today I want to pay tribute to the input of both the Government's

dream and also the community's dream. Without in any way suggesting

that they are the only organisations that do magnificent work in the

community sector, I do of course acknowledge on the taskforce representatives

of the Salvation Army, the Society of St Vincent de Paul, the Wesley

Mission, and Anglicare. And those four organisations and many others

of course do absolutely superb work. And the personal side of welfare

in Australia would be quite different, would be much harsher, and

would be far less sensitive were it not for the ceaseless voluntary

work of magnificent organisations such as those four.

It is important, and I think it's appropriate that this report

be released shortly before Christmas because for most of us in the

community Christmas will be an opportunity of family renewal of family

gatherings of celebrating the happiness of family life and all it

means to us, and it means most to most of us. But there will be many

of our fellow Australians who won't have that same happy circumstance

and it's therefore appropriate on the eve of Christmas that we

release this report and hope that it does make some contribution towards

a better resolution of the challenges that face many in our community

who are trying very hard to grapple in very, very difficult situations.

The report is refreshingly nonjudgmental. The report is designed to

help people. It is realistic, it is not starry eyed, it is not ideologically

driven. But it does represent a number of central realities. And that

is there aren't too many people in Australian society who don't

want their family relationships to succeed. And there aren't

too many in our community who don't regard personal relationships

as the most important emotional support they have in their lives.

And if you start with those sorts of building blocks and you recognise

that putting families in the picture, which is the title of the report,

is a pretty sensible and logical starting point then I think you do

get some very sensible outcomes. There's an old saying of course

that prevention is better than cure and in a sense that old saying

has been the driving force to this report because what it's based

on is something that's quite new and that is early intervention.

It's not just a question of providing adequate support services

when families break up, or when young people find it intolerable to

remain at home, and in some cases that is plainly the truth.

Nobody who's had any contact at all with this field deny the

fact that in some cases there is no alternative other than for a young

person to leave home. But equally there are many cases where that

can be avoided. And what is, I think, very encouraging about this

report is that as a result of the pilots it was possible to identify

a number of very very significant things. And one the most important

things that it was possible to identify is that of those families

that were involved in the pilots carried out by the taskforce that

family reconciliation was achieved in around two-thirds of all cases

studied. And the positive outcomes include the return home of the

younger family member, acceptance by both parents that the young person

be afforded an appropriate degree of independence, and the creation

of viable support systems for young people that included a member

of their family. And of those young people who left home prior to

contacting a pilot project close to one third returned home to live

with one or both of their parents. And these were significant achievements

in very difficult personal circumstances and it was found that the

involvement of parents was important to the success of the early intervention

strategy.

I know one is used to the bombardment of statistics and comparisons

but some studies have suggested that in terms of costs and the cost

of picking up the pieces in areas such as this rather than preventing

the breakage in the first instance can be as high as 1,000 times greater

than the successful early intervention. And it is important with something

like this to recognise the personal and the economic. The two are

not mutually exclusive. The idea that you can have an effective welfare

system without a strong economy is, of course, nonsense. But the idea

that a strong economy is an end in itself is also a nonsense. The

purpose of economic policy and the purpose of strong economic policies

is to make a contribution towards building a better society. And a

compassionate caring community is the ultimate goal, surely, for all

of us whatever our economic views may be. We can differ and argue

about what is the best way of getting there but I don't think

we really differ and argue too much about that being the ultimate

goal.

So I want to say how very pleased I am as Prime Minister and how pleased

the Government is that we have seen such a successful working through

of the nation of a greater partnership between the Government, the

welfare agencies and individuals within our community. And in responding

to the work of the taskforce I want to announce forthwith that the

principal recommendation of the taskforce, which is a continuation

of the early intervention strategies, will be immediately supported

by the Government. And that we'll commit $60 million over the

next four years to July 2003 and this will provide 100 services of

the type piloted across the country where the programme will be fully

operational. And I am told that this will enable assistance to be

provided to around 12,000 cases a year involving some 7,000 young

people and 5,000 parents.

Now, the purpose of that support is to demonstrate the immediately

positive and supportive response of the Government to what has been

the model established by the work of this taskforce. We think it is

breaking new ground, we think it is breaking new ground in an extremely

positive way and I want to say to David Eldridge and what he said

about my own personal interest in this is right. I am personally interested

in it because I think it is something that the Government in a sensible,

caring, positive way can contribute drawing on the expertise and the

care and the responsibility of great community organisations. And

we really do, all of us, have to pool our resources.

And the Government has an important role and I take the opportunity

in case anybody would want to use what I have said today to misconstrue

our motives. We are not in the business of shifting to the community

sector our financial responsibility to care for the disadvantaged

in our community. That is the responsibility of government. It is

the responsibility of any government of any political stripe to maintain

a decent social security safety net. That is the Australian way. We

don't believe in allowing the unemployed to starve in the streets.

We might ask the unemployed through the principle of mutual obligation

to engage in work-for-the-dole programmes. We regard that as a reasonable

request of the community that affords comfort, sanctuary and support.

And in engaging the community sector far more as is our philosophy

that is not a way of us withdrawing financial support rather it is

a way of recognising the obvious and that is that the capacity of

the sort of organisations that David Eldridge and others here today

come from to understand and relate to the problem is the superior

than that of any in the community. And that's been a belief that

I have held for a long time. I hold it very strongly and it will underpin

the approach of my Government to welfare issues.

But there is an ongoing role for the Government and that is not diminished

rather it is expanded in cooperation with the role of the organisations

which are examples of which are represented on the taskforce. It is

a very good report. The other recommendations will be studied, they

are in their character ones that require a slightly longer term response.

But our immediate response on the day of the launch of the report

to its principal recommendation I hope will be seen as an earnest

of our determination to continue the excellent work to establish perhaps

in the fullness of time a new paradigm for responding to this issue

not only in Australia but perhaps something of an example to other

countries around the world.

Family life does lie at the heart of the Australian way, it's

important to all of us. A large majority of Australians are fortunate

in their family relationships. A minority, a significant minority,

try very hard to be happy in those relationships and don't always

succeed and some don't try at all. To those who try and don't

succeed they need our support and our compassion and our understanding

and they need our help. To those who don't try at all well perhaps

we should try doubly hard to persuade them of the merits of beginning

to try. But whatever the situation may be the work of this taskforce

will, I believe, make a great contribution. I support it very strongly.

I again thank David and all of the members of the taskforce for their

magnificent work. Thank you.

[ends]

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