The Disability Royal Commission final report: a roadmap for disability service providers

Insights23 Feb 2024

About the Disability Royal Commission

The final report from the Royal Commission into Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation of People with Disability (the Royal Commission) was issued on 28 September 2023.

Established on 4 April 2019, this marked the culmination of many years of campaigning and advocacy by people with disability and their supporters and advocates.

Six commissioners with diverse backgrounds and experiences were appointed to conduct the inquiry.

The Royal Commission’s terms of reference require the Royal Commission to inquire into what governments, institutions and the community should do to prevent and better protect people with disability from experiencing all forms of violence, abuse, neglect and exploitation across all settings and contexts.

They also require the Royal Commission to inquire into what should be done to promote a more inclusive society that supports the independence of people with disability and their right to live free from violence, abuse, neglect and exploitation. The Royal Commission’s terms of reference expressly recognise people with disability have the ‘right to the full and equal enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms’.

During the inquiry, the Royal Commission held 32 public hearings and two ceremonial sittings, conducted more than 700 engagement activities, received 7,944 submissions, and held 1,785 private sessions.

In addition to referring to Australia’s obligations under the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), ratified by Australia in 2008, its terms of reference recognise that people with disability have the right to the full and equal enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms, including respect for their inherent dignity and individual autonomy.

An inclusive future, free from violence, abuse, neglect and exploitation was the central theme of the Royal Commission.

Throughout its work, people with disability clearly, persuasively and passionately described their vision for a more inclusive Australia.

This article focuses on some of the recommendations relevant to NDIS service providers, including in Volume 10, Disability Services.

Recommendations
A new Disability Rights Act
Enacting a National Disability Agreement
Remedies and enforcement
Enabling remedies through the courts
The statutory role of an independent oversight body
Protecting disability rights in state and territory laws
Strengthening the Disability Discrimination Act
Enabling autonomy and access
Choice and control over how services are delivered
Restrictive practices
Immediate action to provide that certain restrictive practices must not be used
Governance for inclusion
Embedding human rights
The role of support coordinators
A national disability support worker registration scheme
Internal procedures for monitoring reportable incidents
Requirement to consider redress
Strengthened monitoring, compliance and enforcement
Disability service provider governance
Inclusive employment

Government response

The Australian Government conducted an online questionnaire, inviting submissions from interested individuals and organisations to understand which Disability Royal Commission recommendations are important to them and why.

The questionnaire closed at 11.59 pm AEDT Friday, 19 January 2024.

The Australian Government announced on 19 October 2023 that it will establish a Commonwealth Disability Royal Commission Taskforce.[1] The taskforce will coordinate the Commonwealth’s response, particularly on the recommendations that are focused on the Commonwealth. The taskforce will be critical in assessing how individual recommendations link together, understanding the broader implications of the recommendations and sequencing of the government’s response. As many of the recommendations are directed to the Commonwealth, the taskforce will play an important role in assessing how the response to the recommendations could be implemented. The Government is committed to consulting with the disability community and key stakeholders to inform its response.[2]

The Australian Government and state and territory governments should each publish a written response to the final report by 31 March 2024.

We await the Australian Government’s formal response.

Commentary

From our experience in acting for clients before the Royal Commission, there were three key themes which were relevant to NDIS service providers:

  • the role and responsibility of the Boards and Senior Management to understand the business and compliance obligations;
  • there was a huge emphasis on co-design, with specific questions raised as to whether NDIS service providers had people with disabilities included in the Board and management and staff; and
  • broadly speaking, NDIS providers can expect increased regulation and a crackdown on non-compliance and enforcement, particularly in areas such as restrictive practices and abuse.

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Hall & Wilcox acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of the land, sea and waters on which we work, live and engage. We pay our respects to Elders past, present and emerging.

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