Hawke's Bay Today

Delay over compo causes angst for abuse survivors

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Survivors of abuse in state care are frustrated they are yet to receive compensati­on a year after a royal commission recommende­d the immediate introducti­on of an interim redress scheme.

Former Lake Alice unit patient and Hawke’s Bay resident Malcolm Richards is frustrated with the wait, especially after winning a claim of torture at the United Nations.

The UN’s Committee Against Torture this year ruled Richards should receive appropriat­e redress, but this has not happened.

The 62-year-old, who was raped at the unit and given painful paralysing drugs and electric shock treatment, received some money from the government 20 years ago as part of an ex gratia payment to settle a class action.

Much of that was eaten up in legal fees, and he said a quick remedy would be to give those affected what they had to pay in fees.

“The longer they delay, the cheaper it is for them because more of us die,” he said.

“I’m in quite a lot of debt. Interest going up every day doesn’t make life any easier.

“It would mean a huge amount to get something now.”

Another former patient of the Lake Alice psychiatri­c hospital’s child and adolescent unit said she felt officials were ignoring and stonewalli­ng survivors.

However, a government official said an announceme­nt about a scheme was expected soon.

Robyn, who doesn’t want her surname used, lives in the central North Island where she tends to her animals — goats Forest Gump and Jenny, as well as three sheep, two dogs, three cats and chickens.

The 67-year-old survivor of abuse in state care has a dream to buy a bus and, with her pets, live a nomadic life around the South Island.

That would fulfil a promise she made to her grandson — that the pair would travel around together — but he died in a house fire 20 years ago.

“We need proper compensati­on so we can do what we want to do and have a bit of a life before we all pass on. That’s what I would like to see for all of us,” Robyn told RNZ.

That could happen if an interim redress scheme for older or sick survivors is introduced, as recommende­d by the Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in State Care a year ago.

The inquiry’s interim report, released in mid-December last year, talked about “advanced payments” to seriously ill and elderly survivors, ahead of a more permanent redress scheme.

The permanent scheme would have input from survivors, but is only now being set up.

Robyn said she was worried a long wait for full redress, which could include compensati­on, apologies from government agencies for their past actions, and other help, would come too late for some.

She still carried scars from her abuse in state care, including at Lake Alice’s child and adolescent unit.

Robyn has never spoken publicly about what happened to her and still cannot go into detail about her time at the unit.

Like many teens and children, she was there because she had a difficult upbringing, rather than a mental illness.

She supplied a statement to the royal commission, which ran an inquiry into the psychiatri­c hospital’s youth unit in mid-2021, and was hopeful meaningful redress would happen quickly.

“Fifty years on, I just feel like we’re all being re-traumatise­d, in a different way of course, and just completely ignored. We’re getting no informatio­n from anyone and we’re just . . . waiting, getting older.

In August, Public Services Minister Chris Hipkins said work was under way.

“I’ve asked for options on faster payments and for options for establishi­ng a listening service, to give survivors a safe place to tell their stories after the inquiry finishes in June 2023,” he said in a statement.

“I expect to see faster payment options within the next two months.”

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