PARIAHPARIAH
PARIAHPARIAH

P A R I A H - People Against Racism In Aboriginal Homelands

Packed prison puts crims in containers (update April 08)

The Federal Intervention is manifestly oppressive to Aboriginal people

Berrimah prison is full - (I was in there earlier this year ('07) for an anti-racism protest in '02) - The NT State's preferred option is more black prisons

These prisons are used as POW camps in the ongoing war of invasion against Aboriginal people

Two PARIAH members were also imprisoned in Berrimah in 2001 for their part in a protest to support the people of East Timor in 1999

Mick Lambe- August 07

Nationalism + Militarism + Racism = Fascism*

- Image depicts Australian Federal Parliament flagpole atop Uluru

*(Source: history)

Australian militarism

"Australians were on hand even for the Boer war and the Boxer Rebellion. They were involved in more of the 20th century's major wars than either the British or the Americans"

 

The Federal intervention into Northern Territory Aboriginal homelands - is partly military

Mining (uranium) pastoral and military interests - all benefit from this increased control

 

The arms race in SE Asia and Australia's tacit approval of Indonesian 'terrorism' in West Papua - are indicative of our flawed militarist mindset

 

 

Militarism in the Northern Territory

Search PARIAH sites

Aboriginal homelands in the Northern Territory are now under Federal control
Main Menu
News Site Home
Contact Us


 

Login Form
Username

Password

Remember me
Password Reminder

 

 

Sites of interest
PARIAH newsletter
National Aboriginal Alliance
Bill Day
Nuclear Territory
Aboriginal Tent Embassy
Sacred Life walk
National Indigenous Times
Koori History
Koori Mail (News)
Pilbara rock art
Jaara Camp
Jim Green | no nuke news
fPcN - tribal freedom
NO WHITE AUSTRALIA
ENIAR - indigenous rights (Europe)
Akha Heritage Foundation
Disabled Indigenous - Forum
Just freedom - Pamela Curr
Swan Valley Nyungah Community

Articles of interest
Australian Militarism
The Queen vs Kyle Horace
Balgo Safe House (near Halls Creek) Goes Unfunded
Lake Cowal
West Papua Information Kit
UK papers oppose Federal intervention
Portraits from The Movement 1978 – 2003
Australian holocaust - Vincent Lingiari Lecture 07
Howard's New Tampa - Aboriginal Children Overboard
Voices of Resistance - Northern Territory Traditional Owners Speaking Out

NT Nuclear Territory
NTNews: Nuclear Territory articles
Nuclear Territory News - a newswire of mainstream and independant articles about the nuclear industry in Australia's Northern Territory.

Federal Martial Law imposed on the Northern Territory's Aboriginal people


PARIAH - About us



Interview with the PARIAH


New York Freethinkers

PARIAH origins
Green Left Weekly article


Social/Music
Top End Folk Club
Happy Yes Club

 


 
Indigenous communities' employment scheme to be axed PDF Print E-mail
Written by Peter Robson   
Jul 29, 2007 at 11:00 PM

Indigenous communities' employment scheme to be axed


Peter Robson
27 July 2007


At a time when it is pretending to improve conditions for people in the Northern Territory’s remote Aboriginal communities, the federal Coalition government is phasing out the Community Development Employment Projects (CDEPs). The announcement was made in the May federal budget papers, but has also been integrated into the new NT intervention plan, announced by PM John Howard on June 24.

CDEPs were introduced as an income support and training scheme in 1977 after below-award training allowances were replaced by award wages, and employers in the NT drastically reduced the number of Indigenous apprentices.

CDEPs have been criticised for not providing “real jobs” on award wage rates. However, Jon Altman, the director of the Centre for Aboriginal Economic Policy Research, argued in a July 24 Crikey.com opinion piece that the “beauty of the scheme is that it maximises individual choice; participants could work part-time for a minimum income or work full-time and overtime if they were income maximisers”.

Indigenous affairs minister Mal Brough has promoted the concept of removing CDEPs in a typically Orwellian manner, arguing that CDEPs just disguise the real levels of unemployment in remote Aboriginal communities. He claims scrapping CDEPs will “mainstream” these communities by helping create “real jobs” on “real wages”.

Altman points out: “ABS figures for the NT for 2006 show that the NT unemployment rate for Indigenous people was estimated at 15.7 per cent, more than three times the Australian rate of 4.9 per cent. But this rate includes an estimated 8000 CDEP participants as employed.

“If the total number of Indigenous people employed in the NT (15,300) is reduced by 8000 and between 1655 and 2000 ‘real jobs’ are created … by replacing all non-Indigenous employment with Indigenous workers, then the unemployment rate will still increase to at least 50 per cent.”

The result of Brough’s policy will be that most NT Aborigines currently employed on CDEPs will be forced into regular “work-for-the-dole” positions, which will mean they will do essentially the same jobs as before but for 20% less income.

Alice Springs CDEP manager Peter Cowan told the ABC on July 24 that “CDEP creates the only real jobs that have ever existed in [remote Aboriginal] communities… It’s the only way communities could get jobs out there.”

The Local Government Association told the ABC that Indigenous communities in the NT are living under a “dark cloud” of uncertainty as the Howard government continues to roll out its intervention plan. LGA president Kerry Moir said many in the communities feared they will not be able to find a permanent real job in such remote areas when the CDEPs are scrapped.

“I can see infrastructure [and] businesses collapsing. CDEP is not just about paying wages”, he said. The LGA is calling on the federal government to reverse its CDEP decision.

On July 18, the Combined Aboriginal Organisation produced a response to the Howard government’s NT intervention plan, which also included a critique of Canberra’s handling of CDEPs. According to CAO, some 5000 artists and 400 rangers are currently funded by CDEPs in addition to childcare workers and nights patrols.

The CAO proposed that “the development of a stable paid work force within the communities should be supported through adequate and sustained funding of services including management of traditional lands, employment of local Aboriginal people to improve housing in the communities, support for local business and employment development initiatives, obligations and support for mainstream employers such as mining companies to employ local Aboriginal people rather than ‘fly in-fly out’ arrangements, and by assisting community members to live in areas where jobs exist but return regularly to their communities”.

Part of the Howard government’s NT intervention plan includes threats to “quarantine” welfare payments as a punishment for parents whose children have poor school attendance. Because CDEPs are administered locally, rather than federally, the government lacks the power to control payments in this manner. Scrapping the CDEPs will put Aboriginal parents in remote communities onto Canberra-controlled welfare payments.

In addition, Brough’s talk of “mainstreaming” Indigenous communities actually means forcing their residents to leave them — to find employment elsewhere. Combined with the government’s plan to seize control of these communities’ land under “temporary” five-year leases, this will make it easier for the government to open up traditional Indigenous land to mining companies, thus rolling back the gains made by the land rights struggles of the last few decades.

Quote this article on your site | Views: 433 | Print | E-mail

Make a comment on this article
RSS comments

Write Comment
  • Please keep the topic of messages relevant to the subject of the article.
  • Personal attacks will be deleted.
  • COMMENTS WORK ONLY WITH FIREFOX BROWSER - alternatively email comments to us for publication
Name:
E-mail
Homepage
Title:
Comment:

I wish to be contacted by email regarding additional comments

Powered by AkoComment Tweaked Special Edition v.1.4.6
AkoComment © Copyright 2004 by Arthur Konze - www.mamboportal.com
All right reserved

<Previous
PARIAHNews
Syndicate
PARIAH rss feeds


Popular




Latest comments
Army, US forces build NT airfi...
Australia's hidden empire
A good overview of Australian militarism and its consequence...
01/04/08 22:46 More...
By admin

Apology was a mistake, says fe...
Howard, lies and hypocrisy
Howard states - "I think we persevered for too long with the...
13/03/08 01:03 More...
By admin

Rudd's apology revealed
I agree with you
But Dial "Triple-0-HUMBUG" (an insult from the CLP) - and th...
23/02/08 20:36 More...
By admin

Rudd's apology revealed
i think that kevin rudd did the right thing
17/02/08 18:19 More...
By kelly

Christmas spirit in the Northe...
sad story
26/01/08 05:06 More...
By cads

ASIO ordered to protect Jewish...
Intolerance on display in headscarf row
August 30, 2005 Ignorant MPs calling for a ban on heads...
10/01/08 23:32 More...
By admin

ASIO ordered to protect Jewish...
PARIAH campaign Headscarf day
PARIAH have always supported the peace initiatives by Jewish...
10/01/08 23:35 More...
By admin

Army, US forces build NT airfi...
Southeast Asia's growing arms race
The money, natural resources and intellectual energy spent o...
09/12/07 21:31 More...
By admin

Govt won't pursue Jongmin case
Whittington walks
The law is changed - but not retrospectively - so Whittingto...
05/12/07 02:28 More...
By admin

Govt won't pursue Jongmin case
Hypocrisy will allow more Police letoffs
Kill a blackfella - and it's not worth changing the law B...
05/12/07 01:02 More...
By Police Auxilary




Tribal Australia

Tribal - Australia
tribal-Australia at Yahoo! Groups
Focus on the true Australians



McArthur River Mine Campaign

Mine court ruling side-stepped

The Northern Territory Government is ramming
through legislation to override a court decision preventing a
controversial mine expansion from going ahead

McMine-sm

Latest - ACF plea
to NT government

Read more...
McArthur River


National Indigenous Times - NIT
NIT
RSS Web Feed for NIT (Generated by Feedity.com)

 

PARIAH Newsgroup
pariahnt at Yahoo! Groups
PARIAH - anti-racism - NT Australia

Friends from the Belyuen Aboriginal Community at my Bush home (1999) on what is now Aboriginal land after a very long struggle

Our refusal to accept the land's status as belonging to the "Crown" and use of the courts in exposing local racism was never appreciated by the invasive interests protected and supported by the former Country Liberal Party.
The family that won the right to the Kenbi claim adopted me as family, due to the State's attempts to remove me from my (then) home of seven years

Many of the Belyuen people are related to the people at One Mile Dam Aboriginal Community where I spent 10 months living with the people and publicising their concerns in 2005 (Mick Lambe)


Search PARIAH sites





PARIAH
Established 1998


|
Web hosting services by SiteGround| Mambo cms (Open Source) |