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Q and A with Annual Public Forum panelist, Samar Bain

Hear from Samar Bain, NDIS participant and support worker trainer, who featured on the panel at the Summer Foundation Annual Public Forum.

Can you tell us  why you were asked to be a panelist and your connection to the topic ‘Transforming Home and Living Supports’?

The Summer Foundation approached me as I have done other work for them. Given my background as a disability support work trainer and NDIS consultant they thought I was a perfect person to be on the panel as an  NDIS participant and working in the field. 

I live in SDA housing. The topic transforming home and living support really grabbed me as I’m always having to fight to maintain my support worker hours and the way I would like to be supported in my home.

What do you think the most important part of the discussion was?

  • What makes a great support worker?
  • How far has the NDIS come in the last 10 years and how can we improve?
  • If you had freedom to spend your funding how would you spend it? 

These 3 questions were a highlight for me. They all relate to something that I am really passionate about. 

I think when it comes to being a great support worker you just have to keep in mind that we are humans supporting humans. I think people forget that. 

How did you feel speaking on the panel? 

I felt really nervous. All the prep work leading up to it was very exciting and when we got closer to the time I was starting to get nervous and I was worried I would get stage fright but when I got up the first question it just felt natural. I was happy when everyone added to the discussion. 

I think when I got the question from the audience it kind of threw me off guard but I surprised myself.

Why do you take the time to share your experience and insights?

I am very passionate about what I do.  As someone living with a disability I feel like I’ve got a valid point of view and I also work in the field. I love to share my insight. I am very passionate about the disability sector and training support workers. I like to share my insight and my experiences and I want people to learn from that, to take away from that and be the best version they could possibly be, just like I have done.

What would you say to someone else thinking about connecting with our work at the Summer Foundation and sharing their experience?

It’s a great organisation to work with and be connected with. The knowledge and the insight they have is just incredible. I highly recommend connecting as they are very supportive and value everything you share with them. I feel very honoured to be part of their team as they are just amazing to work alongside.

You can watch a recording of the 2023 Annual Public Forum here.

Welcome to the October edition of Summer Foundation Focus.

It’s a particularly busy time of year for us as we ramp up for our Annual Public Forum, which is being held on Thursday 2 November.

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The Housing Hub has launched an SDA Eligibility Checker.

It is an easy-to-use online tool where you can answer 10 questions or less to check if you are likely to be eligible for Specialist Disability Accommodation (SDA). Results are instant and you can ask for a Housing Expert to discuss your housing options in greater detail based on your results.

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The final countdown is on to the Summer Foundation’s 2023 Annual Public Forum.

Transforming supports at home: Making it work for NDIS participants is the topic for the event on Thursday 2 November.

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The Building Better Homes campaign we have been leading to make homes more accessible for all Australians took a major step forward at the beginning of October.

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We met Andrew last year and since then have been working with him on a number of projects. Sharing his voice, experience and insight he is helping to educate and improve outcomes for people with disability.

Andrew spoke with Louise recently to share a bit more about himself.

Andrew, tell us about yourself?

My name is Andrew, I’m a Nurungga man from Yorke Peninsula in South Australia, now living on Dja Dja Warung country in central Victoria. I’m an Aboriginal man living with a number of disabilities namely Parkinson’s disease and a number of major health issues as well.

Where are you living now and where are you planning to move?

I am living in a home unsuitable for my needs. It is a classic example of where things not only can go wrong, they can go wrong with major consequences. Aboriginal people have poorer health and disability outcomes and over the past 4 years my physical deterioration has been significant. 

I have now been approved for SDA 3 levels higher than what I had initially been approved (improved liveability) and will be moving to a home that is high physical support. I am planning a move to the coast to a new SDA.

How do you feel about that move?

It’s great, but unfortunately it has taken severe physical deterioration and a change in federal government for bureaucrats to join the dots to make things work the way the system is supposed to work. I am quite capable of advocating for myself but it concerns me that there are a lot of people with disabilities and others that don’t have capacity to do that. 

You recently spoke with (NDIS Review co-chair) Professor Bruce Bonyhady, what did you talk about? 

It was a chance for him to hear directly from me the concerns that I have been raising with the NDIS and the NDIA for a number of years. And the aged care system too, as that was the system I was originally placed in many years ago. It was a fight not to get into it in the first place, it was a much easier fight to get out.

Why were you placed into aged care when you were a 50-year-old man?

Well my understanding is that there was contact made from state-based DHS to state-based aged care services that they felt because my Parkinson’s disease was a deteriorating condition and because I am an Aboriginal man, I would be better suited to a system that I was ultimately going to be remaining in. Which of course defeats the entire purpose of the NDIS in principle.

Without listening to anyone, without listening to Aboriginal people who they know have poorer health outcomes, they used exactly that to put me into a system that I didn’t want to be in and that was the aged care system.

You are an Aboriginal man, why is the Voice to Parliament important to you?

It is important to bring about change so that people will have to listen.  The reality is that once this gets into the Constitution, and I am confident it will, any parliament on any day will have to listen. More people who have the authority to bring about change will listen and get on with it. Talk is cheap, talk has been there for years, talk is cheap until the referendum hopefully changes that.

We have always been told we have a voice and we are listened to, but in my 58, 59 years, it is clear to me that Aboriginal people don’t have a voice. 

I am confident a Yes vote  will help the Commonwealth make sound decisions to ensure Aboriginal people get the support and services they need to live better lives and hopefully in time longer lives.

Andrew explains why he thinks a Voice to parliament is important in this video below:

Andrew also shared his story in our Young people don’t belong in aged care – Our stories page here.

For many years, the Summer Foundation has focused on improving housing for people with disability in Australia. We have done this because housing for people with disability has long been grossly inadequate.  

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The Department of Health and Aged Care is consulting on the foundations for a new Aged Care Act. One of the proposals is to close the door to aged care for people under 65.

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The Summer Foundation recently commissioned Indigenous artist, Nakia Cadd, to design a piece of art that we will include on all our documents. 

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The Summer Foundation and our social enterprise, the Housing Hub, host a range of face-to-face and online workshops for a wide range of audiences Australia-wide.

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Source: The Conversation – Di Winkler | Photo: Lukas Coch

After more than four years and many traumatic stories, the disability royal commission’s final report was released this morning. Included in its 6,845 pages are 222 recommendations.

Hi my name is Frances.

I’m a mature woman with a disability who is trying to live my best possible life, which has included working and travelling around the world. This has enabled me to work and be involved in some amazing projects. I’m also a carer for someone with a psychosocial disability.  

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Meet Suzie – she has been living with a brain injury for 20 years. She writes about her experience and explains why it is important for people to understand brain injury.

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Welcome to our latest newsletter.

It has been a busy few months at the Summer Foundation as we celebrate the launch of a new co-design project. The purpose of the project is to co-design resources to build the capacity of NDIS participants, providers and supporters so they can exercise better choice and control over their supports. 

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The theme for this year’s Annual Public Forum on Thursday 2 November is Transforming supports at home: Making it work for NDIS participants.

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The Summer Foundation has secured funding for an NDIS Quality & Safeguards Commission led project to build the capacity of NDIS participants. 

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An independent review panel was set up last year to look at the design, operations and sustainability of the NDIS.

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Brendon waited for 918 days to get the correct level of funding to continue living in his 1-bedroom specialist disability accommodation in Queensland.

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Xavier was stranded in hospital for 12 months after flying over the handlebars of his bike and breaking his spine, leaving him a quadriplegic.

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Since 2006, the Summer Foundation has been working to get young people out of aged care. Much of our work over the past 15 years has been around changing the systems that lead to young people with disability having to live in aged care. In recent months though, we have kicked off a new program designed to directly support young people living in aged care to explore alternative housing options.

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Summer Foundation researcher, Dr. Megan Topping, recently received her doctoral thesis examiners’ reports for her PhD thesis, “Treat You Like a Person, Ask You What You Want”: A Grounded Theory Study of the Quality of Paid Disability Support for Adults with Acquired Neurological Disability.

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The Summer Foundation and our social enterprise, the Housing Hub, host a range of face-to-face and online workshops for a wide range of audiences Australia-wide.

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“It is super important that the participants needs and wants are always at the forefront of the NDIA decision making”

Summer Foundation contributor and NDIS participant, Elizabeth Ratcliffe has participated in the NDIS Review. She says, “It’s critically important that the experts actually get this review right for the participants currently on the scheme and for the next generation of participants.” 

You can read the NDIS review report ‘What we have heard’ and share your views on their further questions here.


If you would like to share your experience, please contact us at: peersupport@summerfoundation.org.au

Check out our other stories from people with lived experience of disability here

Source: The Courier Mail – Judith Kerr

A Logan man has had a groundbreaking victory against the National Disability Insurance Agency after it tried unsuccessfully to kick him out of his one-bedroom unit and force him into a share house to cut costs.