
The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) has again called on the federal government to permanently raise the JobSeeker rate after its September 28 announcement to discontinue disaster payments to people聽without work due to lockdowns.
The government is scaling back the payment according to vaccination rates, with the amount to go down as states reach 70% vaccination coverage and to end fully once 80% coverage is reached.
said on September 29 it is 鈥渦nconscionable鈥 to use vaccination rate data as the mechanism to cut off income support to people without paid work.
She said as many as 1.7 million people currently receiving disaster payments in New South Wales, the ACT and Victoria will end up on the 鈥済rossly inadequate鈥 JobSeeker payment.
Some, like , point to the JobSeeker payment of $45 a day as a 鈥渟afety net鈥 for those without work 鈥 less than half the $750 a week disaster payment.
ACOSS also wants the lifted to a base rate of $67 a day.
Goldie said that the end of the payments 鈥渨ill leave others with no income at all, including people on temporary visas who are ineligible for JobSeeker and other income support鈥.
People on temporary visas, including international students have been left out of government support programs since the start of the pandemic.
鈥淪nap decisions like this hurt people on lowest incomes,鈥 Goldie said. 鈥淧eople won鈥檛 be able to pay their rent, afford food and cover the cost of other essentials. The mental health consequences are serious.鈥
There is no incentive from the government for businesses to keep workers on, or to hire more workers. As the disaster payments are removed, jobs will not be available for those who are unable to survive on little or no income.
on September 29 that the government鈥檚 vaccination targets do not apply to the whole population. 鈥淲hen the government talks about fully vaccinating 70 per cent of people aged over 16 years, it鈥檚 really only talking about having 56 per cent of Australia鈥檚 entire population vaccinated.鈥 This is because only 20 million are aged over 16.
Children under 16 and people with disabilities are not included in the vaccination numbers.
said the government鈥檚 move to force recipients to re-apply each week for the disaster payment at 70% vaccination levels and stop payments at 80%, risks plunging thousands of people into poverty.
鈥淎s we emerge out of lockdown, maintaining an adequate social safety net at liveable levels is crucial,鈥 she said on September 30.
Bolton said the federal government鈥檚 plan is聽forcing the most vulnerable into greater insecurity.
鈥淚t is not as though recipients of the Disaster Payment will simply have their jobs reinstated once lockdowns end,鈥 she said. 鈥淩estrictions will remain in place and capacity limits will mean many won鈥檛 be able to work, or will have hours reduced, through no fault of their own.
鈥淧eople will still not have work due to public health restrictions, yet will not have access to a specialised payment.鈥
Bolton, who is standing for the federal seat of Wills, said people needed to be able to access the disaster payment while they were out of work, or on reduced hours because of public health restrictions.
鈥淲e call for all welfare payments to be lifted above the poverty line, and indexed to maintain real value.鈥
Ultimately, the decision to remove the disaster payments is Canberra鈥檚 attempt to force the states to re-open, regardless of the health advice and economic practicalities of re-opening.