2025-26 state budget needs to be more than a ‘holding pattern’
Tomorrow’s state budget represents a perfect opportunity for the government to do more to address inequality and disadvantage, according to the state’s peak community services body, the South Australian Council of Social Service.
SACOSS’s budget submission was primarily focused on better funding and planning for the state’s community services sector, but SACOSS is also looking for new investment in public and community housing, and cost of living relief with real help for low income households to get energy efficient technologies.
Quotes attributable to Ross Womersley, SACOSS CEO
With an election nine months away, it will be tempting for the government to make this a ‘holding pattern’ budget – but in our view, this will be a missed opportunity.
We will be looking very closely at the budget on behalf of the community services sector. Our sector makes a massive contribution economically and socially to this state. It delivers many vital services on behalf of the government, yet the real value of sector funding has decreased in recent years and services are now over-stretched and under-resourced. We have asked for the government to act now to address inadequate indexation and fund the sector appropriately.
There is also an employment cliff looming directly in the path of our sector. We are faced with the ever-increasing prospect of not having enough workers and volunteers to care for our most vulnerable people. The sooner the government begins work with our sector to build a comprehensive strategy to address this, the better.
There are many other priorities where we would expect the budget to show that the government is acting now: we need assistance for renters and those on low incomes to get access to energy efficient appliances and technology before federal government energy bill relief runs out, and we need money in the forward estimates to see the critical growth of public and community housing maintained beyond 2027.
Tomorrow’s budget may well be delivered with a view to an election nine months from now; we are concerned that the people who need support the most – and the sector that helps them – do not have that amount of time to wait for action.