The Chronicle

Albo’s $500 bonus for health card holders

- Elena Couper

Nearly 500,000 Australian­s will be eligible for a rebate worth hundreds of dollars in a bid to offset a major price hike expected on July 1.

All Commonweal­th Seniors Health Card holders will receive up to $500 per household in energy bill relief from the federal government.

From July 1, electricit­y prices will increase between 20 and 25 per cent for those in NSW, southeast Queensland and South Australia.

The Australian Energy Regulator (AER) released its final determinat­ion on Thursday, with the revised hike higher than the March draft of 20 to 22 per cent rise.

AER chair Clare Savage said it had been a “difficult decision” but high wholesale energy costs continued to drive up retail prices.

“No one wants to see rising prices, and we recognise this is a difficult time, that’s why it’s important for consumers to shop around for a better deal,” she said.

Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth said the scheme would “help older Australian­s keep more money in their pockets”.

Following the AER’s announceme­nt on Thursday, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton said Prime Minister Anthony Albanese had “lied” to

Australian­s about energy prices.

“Let’s be very clear about it, he promised on 97 occasions your bill would go down by $275,” he told Today.

“I think the government’s completely underestim­ating how much families and small businesses are hurting at the moment.”

Mr Dutton also referred to suggestion­s that rising energy prices were caused in part by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as a “nonsense argument”.

Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles pushed back on the opposition’s comments, accusing Mr Dutton of “making stuff up” and saying the Liberal Party had voted against the $500 relief plan.

“When that war started, no one was imagining that it would still be going today in the way that it is,” Mr Marles said.

“That has disrupted energy prices and that’s what we’ve had to deal with.”

Income limits for the Seniors Health Card were increased to $90,000 for singles and $144,000 for couples on November 4, 2022 – the biggest increase in more than 20 years.

“It’s great that in six months of the new income threshold limits being in place so many older Australian­s have received access to the Commonweal­th Seniors Health Card,” Ms Rishworth said.

“Our hope is this take-up trajectory continues and more older Australian­s continue to take advantage of these increased income limits in the years to come.”

Initial projection­s of increased income limits projected an additional 52,000 Australian­s would benefit from the scheme by 2026-27.

Since November an additional 16,230 Australian­s who were not previously eligible have been granted access to the card.

The AER said that had the government not intervened in the energy market, energy prices would have climbed 35 to 50 per cent.

 ?? ?? PRICE RISE: All Commonweal­th Seniors Health Card holders will receive up to $500 per household in energy bill relief from the federal government.
PRICE RISE: All Commonweal­th Seniors Health Card holders will receive up to $500 per household in energy bill relief from the federal government.

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