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Census: 49% of Americans Get Gov't Benefits; 82M in Households on Medicaid. (CNSNews.com) - In the fourth quarter of 2011, 49.2 percent of Americans received benefits from one or more government programs, according to data released Tuesday by the Census Bureau.
Kandinsky
reply to post by Thurisaz
On the money-making side...does some guy set up a store in a dirt-poor area and get authorised to accept the Basics Card? Captive market? Can he put his prices up on low-quality stock and chisel the value out of the poor? What can they do then? Would some chain-store use economies of scale to ramp its profit margins by exploiting the super-poor? I'd say they wouldn't miss the chance - hail the free-market economy!
In June 2007, the federal government staged a massive intervention in the Northern Territory to “protect Aboriginal children” from sexual abuse.
Without consultation Aboriginal peoples’ lives were heavily regulated, and many felt ashamed and angry.
94% Percentage of income-managed people in the NT who are Aboriginal [26]. More than 3/4 of those who managed to move off the scheme are non-Indigenous.
$282,048 Money the government spent to advertise the Basics Card to local businesses in Bankstown, NSW, before introducing income management there [35].
$76m Government spending in 2011-2012 to implement income management in the Northern Territory [35].
The Australian government and their new policy of” income management”, currently operating in the Northern Territory will be trialled in a number of metropolitan locations across Australia.
The concept is based on a form of increased social engineering, where government will tell you how and where you spend your money, the first five locations are: Bankstown, (NSW), Logan, (Qld), Rockhampton, (Qld), Playford, (SA) and Shepparton, Victoria. In addition, Kwinana in Western Australia, one of the other trial sites, has had Child Protection and Voluntary Income Management in place since April 2009.
This Big Government measure, which is supported by both the Labor and Liberal party, comes at a massive cost. Estimates provided by the Government indicate the new trials will cost the Government $117 million over 5 years. The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) has noted, for example, that the NT scheme (total expenditure of $402 million over 5 years) and covering about 20,000 individuals, amounts to a cost of $4,100 per person. Put in perspective, this is 1/3 of the allowance paid to unemployed people over a year ($11,600 per annum), or 8 times the amount provided to employment service providers to address barriers to work for long-term unemployed people ($500 per annum), money better spent on increasing services and employment, rather than Russian style social intervention.
Even out of the misery of unemployment the government is creating opportunities for big businesses to profiteer. Aboriginal people who previously worked for the Community Development Employment Program (CDEP) or Strategic Indigenous Housing and Infrastructure (SIHIP) programs for Award wages now work for less than half of that on quarantined incomes.
Endless private consultants and contractors are employed to do very little in these programs. Some consultants have been given free cars and hundreds of thousands of dollars to do, in their own words, “absolutely nothing”.
Under Labor’s rule, with the tacit support of the Greens, we have seen special deals with large supermarket chains, as not every shop accepts Basics Cards. Other businesses have sensed there is money to be made. Desperate for a piece of the income management pie, fast food companies like Red Rooster are begging the government to be part of the Basics Card scheme. You can bet that they will also be pushing for income management to be expanded into other areas.
This at an administration cost of a mere $4400 per person!
Issued with a Basics Card, people will be told where to shop and what they can buy, standing in separate queues at shops chosen by the Government to be fitted with Basics Card facilities.
The Northern Territory experience shows that most small businesses/takeaways and second hand shops are excluded.
Business groups have condemned a federal government plan to control the spending of up to 20,000 people across the country by effectively making them shop at a handful of the biggest retail chains. And the Law Council of Australia has warned that the change could be discriminatory.
Anyone who joined the CDEP from 1 July 2009 is still required to work 16 hours per week. However, they will only receive the Newstart allowance of $462 per fortnight through Centrelink, rather than being paid wages by their employer. In the NT half of these Centrelink payments are quarantined onto a BasicsCard, meaning that workers are paid half in wages and half in ration cards. For example, 16 hours work will earn a worker $231, with the rest going onto the BasicsCard. Top up money is still available for the hours.
However, the devastation of the CDEP changes will be felt beyond the hip pocket. The CDEP used to provide crucial blocks of funding to Aboriginal organisations and community councils, which both serviced the community and provided political representation.
Take for example the community of Kalkaringi, 500km west of Katherine. John Leemans, the Victoria Daly Shire CDEP Coordinator estimates that in 2007 before the Intervention there were between 200-250 people, out of a population of 800, working on the CDEP. They were participating in programs like plumbing, bakery, truck driving, brick making and welding, and kitchen work.
In short the CDEP paid for a lot of the day-to-day operations of the community. With the Intervention all these jobs were scrapped as residents were placed onto income management.
“There’s no way that you would have a white fella getting paid on a BasicsCard working on a $672 million construction program.”
As Sheldon explained, “When we first got paid, there was $300 on top of our Centrelink every fortnight. Then the top-up just started going down and down and then went out completely. It was just working for the dole. I was on the BasicsCard too. It was a complete rip off.” In other words Sheldon was working the equivalent of a full time job to be paid $115 a week in cash and $115 on Basic Cards. Or in more precise terms as outlined on Crikey: “For the weeks Sheldon was receiving $300 top-up… his pay works out to $8.15 cash an hour. For the weeks he received no top-up, the hourly cash rate was $3.50.”
Thurisaz
WORK AND THE BASIC CARDS IN THE NORTHERN TERRITORY
... the devastation of the CDEP changes will be felt beyond the hip pocket. The CDEP used to provide crucial blocks of funding to Aboriginal organisations and community councils, which both serviced the community and provided political representation.
Take for example the community of Kalkaringi, 500km west of Katherine. John Leemans, the Victoria Daly Shire CDEP Coordinator estimates that in 2007 before the Intervention there were between 200-250 people, out of a population of 800, working on the CDEP. They were participating in programs like plumbing, bakery, truck driving, brick making and welding, and kitchen work.
In short the CDEP paid for a lot of the day-to-day operations of the community. With the Intervention all these jobs were scrapped as residents were placed onto income management.
As Sheldon explained, “When we first got paid, there was $300 on top of our Centrelink every fortnight. Then the top-up just started going down and down and then went out completely. It was just working for the dole. I was on the BasicsCard too. It was a complete rip off.” In other words Sheldon was working the equivalent of a full time job to be paid $115 a week in cash and $115 on Basic Cards. Or in more precise terms as outlined on Crikey: “For the weeks Sheldon was receiving $300 top-up… his pay works out to $8.15 cash an hour. For the weeks he received no top-up, the hourly cash rate was $3.50.”
Thurisaz
reply to post by darkbake
yes the truth is the various phases of the Australian Government kept the Indigenous People dependent on welfare. It was and still is a cycle of dependency... the Govt is now expanding that cycle onto other groups in other areas.
edit on CDT01uSat, 15 Mar 2014 01:54:46 -05005446am73 by Thurisaz because: add
Thurisaz
Since the release of the 'Little Children are Sacred' Report, media representation of Aboriginal Communities has been extremely negative.
The media coverage is sensational, controversial and it has generated a huge public outcry.
The Government must do something to stop this!
It has become nothing more than a seven day wonder.
The Government of the day is now justified in taking whatever action is necessary. The general public is not overly interested now in what the Indigenous Communities have to say.
In the public’s mind, they have been led to believe from the select media footage, all Indigenous Communities are incompetent and cannot manage their own affairs:
They are all drunks, petrol sniffers and child abusers[sic]
What is really going on?
Despite pleas made by the Indigenous Groups, the NT Intervention Bills were passed through the Senate:
The Combined Aboriginal Organisations of the Northern Territory and the NSW Aboriginal Land Council are urging the Senate to put off the vote until the NT Government releases its legislative response this weeksource
It had been suggested that legislation would be passed regardless of the Committee’s findings:
whatever the committee's opinion, the report is unlikely to halt the progress of the legislation source
A member of the Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs suggested the Senate hearing into the Intervention Bills were inadequate:
If we look at the way in which this legislation has been rammed through the House, we can see that the potential for open and clear discussions about the faults or merits of the legislation has been denied… we can see that this is a recipe not for the empowerment of Aboriginal people but for the disempowerment of their interests
Aboriginal Land Rights (NT) Amendment (Township Leasing) Bill Second Reading, 13 June 2007
The Intervention Bills will give the Australian Government the power to abolish the permit system and lease Native Title Land.
The Commonwealth Government has indicated that, during this five-year period, it will continue to negotiate for 99-year township leases with traditional owners, pursuant to section 19A of the ALRA. This gives rise to an extraordinary proposition, having stripped traditional owners of the use of, rights to, and responsibility for their land, the Commonwealth is proposing ongoing negotiation of 99-year leasing arrangement under extremely asymmetric power relationsAboriginal Land Rights (NT) Amendment (Township Leasing) Bill Second Reading, 13 June 2007
The matter that we have to consider regarding these amendments concerns the Commonwealth establishing for itself an entity that would issue subleases Aboriginal Land Rights (NT) Amendment (Township Leasing) Bill Second Reading, 13 June 2007
Why is it that the Government needs to lease the Native Title Land in order to protect Aboriginal Children?
Why is it that the Australian Government is excluding Aboriginal people from involvement in this process?
Why is it that the Australian Government is black-mailing Indigenous Communities into signing the lease agreements?
Thurisaz
ATS Thurisaz thread Aug 14 2007
Battling food shortages, the government is rolling out a new ID system that is either a grocery loyalty card with extra muscle or the most dramatic step yet toward rationing in Venezuela, depending on who is describing it.
President Nicolas Maduro's administration says the cards to track families' purchases will foil people who stock up on groceries at subsidized prices and then illegally resell them for several times the amount. Critics say it's another sign the oil-rich Venezuelan economy is headed toward Cuba-style dysfunction.