NDIS Bill Passes Parliament

NDIS Bill Passes Parliament
Published Summary

When the bill passes, lawmakers will design the rules and legislative instruments alongside the disability community.

On March 27, NDIS Minister Bill Shorten introduced a bill to Parliament to implement priority recommendations from the NDIS Review.

The NDIS Review recommended changes to the National Disability Insurance Scheme Act 2013 or NDIS Act. (Read our previous post: NDIS Review Panel releases Final Report)

The National Disability Insurance Scheme Amendment (Getting the NDIS Back on Track No 1) Bill 2024 is the first of several upcoming amendments to the NDIS Act to improve participant experience. 

Update 22 August: Bill passes Parliament

The National Disability Insurance Scheme Amendment (Getting the NDIS Back on Track No. 1) Bill 2024 was passed by the Parliament.

The new laws will come into effect 28 days after Royal Assent. Until then:

  • All access and planning processes, decisions and supports will continue in line with current operational guidance.
  • Participants should continue spending in accordance with their plans.
  • Providers should continue to claim for supports in line with current operational guidance.

Update 5 June: Bill passes House

On 5 June 2024, the Bill passed the House of Representatives, with parliamentary amendments being agreed to key elements of the Bill. It will now go on to be considered in the Senate.

Below is a summary of the amendments:

  • Instead of making reference to specific articles under the Convention on the Rights for People with Disability, section 10 now generally reference Australia’s obligations under the Convention.
  • New transitional NDIS rules will set out supports and classes of supports that are or are not NDIS supports based on existing intergovernmental agreements and the current NDIS (Support for Participant) Rules 2013.
  • These transitional rules will be developed in consultation with the disability community and will be replaced by new Category A rules requiring State and territory agreement.

Other amendments to the Bill that were supported in response to feedback will:

  • clarify that co-design is central to the Government’s reform agenda
  • clarify that no changes have been made to participant’s rights of review
  • ensure participants will have a copy of their needs assessment
  • ensure there are appropriate safeguards around new information gathering powers
  • embed an independent 5-year review of the operation of the Bill.

The text of our original article follows.

Implementation in stages

When the bill passes, lawmakers will design the rules and legislative instruments alongside the disability community.

The Government and NDIA will implement changes in stages.

Some rules require all states and territories to agree before they are made. Other rules will be implemented as soon as the Bill passes the Parliament and is signed off by the Governor-General.

The Bill’s Goals

In his second reading speech, Minister Shorten said:

“Every Australian deserves the peace of mind of knowing that if they or someone they love acquires a significant and permanent disability the NDIS will be there for them… While the NDIS has absolutely changed hundreds of thousands of lives for the better, it is not working well for everyone.

“Participants have spoken about how every interaction with the NDIS can become a battle. They’ve voiced their frustration at having to prove, year after year, that they still are blind or they still have Down syndrome or Prader-Willi or quadriplegia or motor neurone disease.”

He outlined the Bill’s goals:

1) that the NDIS provide a better experience for participants

2) that the NDIS return to its original intent of supporting people with significant and permanent disability

3) that the scheme be equitable

4) that the scheme be sustainable

Bill’s Bill: Proposed Changes

The Bill is made up of two parts. Here are some of the changes the Bill introduces:

Part 1:

  • Adding a new definition of ‘NDIS supports’. This will give a constitutional basis for the type of supports that are appropriately funded by the NDIS and those that are not.
  • Requiring the NDIA to make a specific decision and record about the criteria the person meets, whether a person meets the disability requirements, the early intervention requirements or both. This will also lead the way to the development of an early intervention pathway.
  • Revising NDIS rule-making powers about disability requirements and early intervention requirements. For early intervention, this rule-making power will allow new early intervention pathways for people with psychosocial disability and children (including access and planning for children younger than 9 years old). All states and territories need to agree with the rules before they are made.
  • Providing a clear process for reassessment of participant status. This change allows:
    • the NDIA to seek up-to-date information about participants
    • participants to undergo an assessment or examination by a medical or other health professional of their choice, and
    • for the resulting report or assessment to be considered by the NDIA in making a decision whether the participant remains in the Scheme.

Plans and Funding

  • Creating the concept of ‘New framework plans’. New framework plans will include a flexible budget and/or budget for stated supports, and will be developed following a needs assessment.
  • Enabling old framework plans to specify a total funding amount and also a specified amount for individual supports or classes of support. This change will provide a control mechanism to ensure participants do not overspend.
  • Updating circumstances in which the NDIA will change the plan management arrangements for a participant, particularly in circumstances where:
    • the participant might be likely to suffer physical, mental or financial harm, or
    • where the requirement to spend money in accordance with the participant’s plan has not been met.

Part 2:

This bill includes amendments to quality and safeguarding, providing greater flexibility for the NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commissioner in exercising compliance powers and building on fraud reforms.

You can subscribe to the Department of Social Services for updates on the NDIS reforms: Subscribe to updates on the NDIS reforms | engage.dss.gov.au

Sources:

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