Mercury (Hobart)

Repay time for debts

Centrelink pause over

- ANTHONY KEANE

AUSTRALIAN­S who owe billions of dollars to Centrelink are being asked to restart their debt repayments.

Centrelink’s COVID-19related national debt pause is now over, and Services Australia says from Monday it is contacting people who have been overpaid, after freezing 1.3 million debts totalling $4.5bn last year.

Services Australia general manager Hank Jongen said people could expect to receive a letter in the mail or via myGov. “From the start of February, we’ll begin contacting people who owe money to let them know why they have been overpaid, the amount of the overpaymen­t and their due date for repayments to commence,” he said.

The average debt amount frozen was $3485, and a major source of the debts are Family Tax Benefit payments because they are based on estimates of people’s incomes during a financial year and reconciled only at tax time.

Mr Jongen said people who had paused payment arrangemen­ts would be sent a letter 21 days before their repayments were due to start.

“The earliest anyone will need to start repaying money is February 28, 2021,” he said.

“We want people to know they don’t need to repay their debt all at once — most people set up a payment arrangemen­t and repay it over time. The easiest way to manage repayments is online, using their Centrelink online account through myGov or the Centrelink app.”

Mr Jongen said people who could not pay, were experienci­ng hardship or did not understand why they had been overpaid should contact their regular payment line, and not ignore the letter.

Centrelink debt that is not repaid can attract interest charges of more than 7 per cent and involve debt collection agencies Milton Graham, Probe Operations and ARL Collect. It can also lead to Departure Prohibitio­n Orders preventing people from leaving Australia.

The debt doesn’t relate to the failed Robodebt scheme, which resulted in a $1.2bn class action settlement for 430,000 people in November.

Australian Unemployed Workers Union spokeswoma­n Kristin O’Connell said Robodebt had been a disaster, and the government now wanted to “try and resolve minor accounting errors by extracting money from the poorest people in society”.

“The AUWU strongly urges anyone in financial distress who is being asked to make even the smallest repayments to learn about their rights by reading ACCC debt collection guidelines and calling the National Debt Helpline,” Ms O’Connell said.

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