Sunday Territorian

GOVT MUST FIGHT RACISM

Public service told to scrap ‘symbolic gestures’ in new report

- JASON WALLS

THE Territory’s public service has been put on notice to get on board with tackling systemic racism within all government department­s or “get off the train”.

THE Territory’s public service has been put on notice to get on board with tackling systemic racism within all government department­s or “get off the train”.

The final draft of the NT’s Aboriginal Justice Agreement is due to be delivered to cabinet by the end of this month, and could make for uncomforta­ble reading for some government bureaucrat­s, according to the document’s architect.

Aboriginal Justice Unit director Leanne Liddle said the agreement would eschew “symbolic gestures” like reconcilia­tion action plans and cultural awareness programs in favour of concrete action.

“The symbolic gestures, the low-lying fruit, none of that is in this document,” she said.

“There’ll actually be some requiremen­ts for government to move out and to shift into overdrive with Aboriginal people in the front seat, compared with where we are at the moment.”

Ms Liddle said the agreement would be unlike “any other agreement you’ve seen elsewhere” and could be “quite confrontin­g for some people to actually acknowledg­e that we’ve dealt with racism”.

“It’d be fair to say the number one issue that has been in every consult, front and centre, that we’re actually going to take head on, is systemic racism,” she said.

“Whether it be just — I don’t like the word ‘casual’ racism — but quite in your face racism, to systems in government and contracted parties’ inability to recognise when they’re delivering to Aboriginal people that it’s not a fair or equitable service delivery.”

As an example of the way the current approach was failing, Ms Liddle said police had previously been provided with 1500 iPads containing formal cautions in 18 Aboriginal languages.

But despite the rollout, Ms Liddle said since its inception the system had been used in just a fraction of the more than 7000 arrests of Indigenous people with limited English.

“Even when we provide tools to people to improve the levels of cultural competency, the auditing of that arrangemen­t goes unchecked and unbalanced and unmonitore­d,” she said.

The agreement wasn’t just about policing and criminal justice, but would require a whole of government commitment: “If they’re not ready for this ride, well, maybe you have to get off the train”, she said.

“It’s going to make agencies recognise that they’re going to have to change the way they work. They’re going to have to meet outcomes not just outputs, they’re going to have to do a huge shift in their agency on how money is put on the table.

“If you don’t get improvemen­ts in school attendance, if you don’t get improvemen­ts in people’s health, if you don’t get improvemen­ts in Aboriginal employment, and you don’t meet all those areas of social determinan­ts and at least make some progress towards that, we’re going to have to build a bigger prison.”

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