The Press

Govt acts to top up disability funding

- Anna Whyte and Maddy Croad

The Government is putting Whaikaha – the Ministry of Disabled People under the microscope after its handling of changes to funding relied on by parents and carers of disabled people.

Future funding and criteria changes will need to be signed off by Cabinet, the Government will review how funding is managed by the ministry, and extra funding will be provided to get the ministry to the end of the financial year.

However, questions remain around the changes to carer funding.

Families say they were left shell-shocked as they learned via social media about the changes, which saw all purchases – including respite items, travel-related costs for carers, as well as any purchases that may be made to give carers a break – axed temporaril­y, with no restart date given.

Disability Minister Penny Simmonds then walked part of the changes back, saying, “the ministry is restoring some but not all restrictio­ns on what this funding can be spent on”.

Suzy Brown, a mother and full-time carer of two disabled teens aged 16 and 19, said the fact decisions would now have to go through Cabinet was a “good thing”.

“A lot of parliament­ary members actually don’t support the changes. If [funding changes] had to be checked out by all of them, this probably wouldn’t have happened.”

However, the lack of access to immediate funding was hitting families hard, she said. “A lot of my funding I use is for support workers. That is what we need to function as a family. It’s caused a lot of stress and anxiety.”

Samantha Galloway has autism and cares for her two sons, aged 12 and 9, who are also neurodiver­gent. She said Willis’s recent update was “ambiguous”, and confusion remained for disabled people in New Zealand.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis said yesterday Cabinet had agreed to give the ministry extra funding to get it to the end of the financial year.

Asked what was happening to the carer changes and if the funding boost would reverse that, Willis said those decisions made by the ministry were separate.

“It remains our intention to provide a significan­t uplift in funding to that ministry at the Budget.”

Cabinet will also need to sign off on any changes it makes now to criteria and funding, and any changes need to be “properly consulted”.

Families were not consulted before the carer funding changes were announced.

“We've also requested that [Simmonds] returns to Cabinet with the terms of reference for a review of how we are going to manage this area in the future,” Willis said.

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Nicola Willis
Finance Minister Nicola Willis

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