Topic - aged care
Labor makes aged care an election issue in Budget Reply

The Opposition has brought aged care front and centre in the upcoming Federal election campaign, with leader Anthony Albanese (pictured) laying out a five-point plan for the sector if elected.

In his Budget Reply speech last week, Mr Albanese lashed the Morrison Government, accusing it of a decade of failure in the sector and promising Labor would “put the care back into aged care”.

“The global pandemic and a Royal Commission have confirmed what so many Australians already knew – our aged care system is in crisis.

“More of us are living long enough to need extra care in our later years. But currently that thought fills a generation of Australians and their families with dread,” he said.

The Opposition Leader set out five promises for the aged care sector:

  1. Mandating 24/7 registered nurses at every aged care facility;
  2. Mandating 215 minutes of care per resident, per day;
  3. Backing a pay rise for workers at the Fair Work Commission, and fully funding the outcome;
  4. Developing and implementing mandatory nutrition standards for aged care homes; and
  5. Increasing integrity and accountability for the sector, including new powers for the Aged Care Safety Commissioner.

The 24/7 nursing commitment brings forward a similar promise from the Government by a year to July 2023, though Mr Albanese has said providers who could not find enough staff would be afforded “flexibility”, with Shadow Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus also telling the ABC that the commitment could be “paused” if a Labor Government could not grow the workforce enough in time.

For more, look out for the next issue of SATURDAY – subscribe here.

Latest stories