In October, after almost a year of inquiry, the Joint Standing Committee on the NDIS released its final report on a proposal to introduce compulsory independent assessment for NDIS participants.
In its report, the Australian parliamentary committee identified a flawed policy development process at the NDIA, the agency which administers the NDIS, in which a proposal with weak evidence and insufficient community input was allowed to progress to the point of announcement.
The report went further, saying that at the NDIA, there were systemic insufficiencies of transparency and consultation.
Under the independent assessments proposal, all new participants would have their functional capacity assessed by government-contracted health professionals who would have no prior relationship with the participant. Independent assessment would also be compulsory for existing participants when their plans were reviewed.
A broad coalition of organisations and community groups campaigned against the proposal, and Minister for the NDIS Linda Reynolds announced in July that she had decided not to proceed with it.
The parliamentary inquiry into the proposal received 400 community submissions, among them one from AQA.
Our submission highlighted the lack of evidence cited in support of the independent assessments proposal, and the absence of effective consultation in its development. We recommended that the NDIA make independent assessment voluntary, not compulsory. We also urged the NDIA to engage more meaningfully with the disability community when considering changes likely to affect it.
The Joint Standing Committee’s report addressed all our points of concern, and there was a strong resonance between the report’s recommendations and our own.
The verdict
In describing the problems with the policy process that produced the independent assessment proposal, the report emphasizes deficiencies in transparency, in community and expert consultation, in supporting evidence, and in due diligence with respect to testing for the reliability or validity of the proposed tools.
Author Dan Nathan is Publications Officer with AQA