The Inadequate Age Pension

Pension-Adequacy_Report-Cover.jpgThis week has seen a new report bursting onto the television screen: “The Adequacy of the Age Pension“.

A National Press Club audience in Canberra heard some hard facts about the inadequacy of the age pension. (See the presentation here, or on the ABC’s iview till the 28th September.)

The Age Pension in Australia (base rate $794 per fortnight) fails to provide a decent standard of living for approximately 1.5 million people who rely on it as their main source of income. One third of aged pensioners live at, or below, the poverty line ($851 per fortnight).

Those at particular risk are renters and single women with low superannuation. People have thought up extreme ways of managing. Some people are disconnecting their hot water for six months of the year; others are avoiding medical care when it comes to specialist appointments or dentistry. There is simply no money for that kind of expense in the fortnightly pension, and the alternative might be not eating an evening meal. One woman had not had a holiday in thirty years.

The three Press Club speakers are co-authors of the report: Everald Compton, chairman of the Longevity Innovation Hub; David Hetherington, executive director of the Per Capita think tank; and Jo Toohey, CEO of the Benevolent Society, a 200-year-old Australian charity.

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September 2016 meeting

Our next meeting is at 11.00am on Tuesday 20 September at Dickson Tradies’ Club.

Please note that the meeting will be held in the ATRIUM on the Ground Floor.

Our guest speaker is Alan Foskett, eminent Local Historian. Alan came to Canberra in 1950 when the population was about 15,000. He is a prolific author, most recently of They Came to Build Canberra: The Story of the Turner Workmen’s Hostel – the People, the Buildings and the Land 1946 to 2014 (2014); and The Campbell community revisited (2016).

August 2016 Guest Speaker, John Falzon

john_falzon.jpegOur August guest speaker was John Falzon, the CEO of St Vincent de Paul, who spoke on Poverty. John Falzon has written and spoken widely on the structural causes of marginalisation and inequality in this country and is an advocate in campaigns for a fairer society.

John is a passionate supporter of the unemployed in a society where the market has failed but they are being blamed. The unemployed and the homeless are blamed for the collapse of the job market where whole industries have gone overseas, hours have fallen, and                      Photo: vinnies.org.au
casualisation continues to grow. They are blamed for being unable to get into the housing market, when this has become an arena for wealthy people to play in.

July 2016 Guest Speaker, Sandra Mahlberg

Vintage Reds were very lucky to hear Sandra Mahlberg, the Chair of Rotary for the ACT and South-eastern NSW, speaking on the work done by Rotary Oceania Medical Aid for Children (ROMAC).

ROMAC operates an entirely volunteer network of medical and non-medical volunteers who transport sick children from countries in our neighbourhood, to Australia or New Zealand, where they receive medical treatment they would be unable to get at home.

Hundreds of children have been given a new and rosier future thanks to the work of this wonderful organization, and you can donate to them knowing that every cent goes to the work of giving a better life to a child.

Canberra Hospital has been a supporter of this project, and children including Santa and Juanitahave gone home healthy after being looked after here.  Most recently Charlie and his mother, from the Solomon Islands, arrived for surgery on his bowel.

Our photo shows Sandra pinning on her Vintage Reds badge.20160719_Sandra_Mahlberg.jpg

Don’s mid-winter calendar

As usual there is plenty going on to get you out of the house!

This month Don’s list begins with a different kind of calendar item. Safe Shelter ACT provides homeless men with a bed for the night, in St Columba’s church hall in Braddon. Ainslie All Saints church is setting up its hall for the same purpose, and is calling for donations to pay for smoke detectors to be installed.

They are also offering training for volunteers. The next (and possibly final) training course for 2016 will be on Tuesday and Wednesday, 2nd and 3rd of August 2016.

To volunteer or to donate, contact safeshelteract@gmail.com, or see their Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/safeshelteract

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June 2016 Guest Speaker, Rachel Bahl

Our June speaker was Rachael Bahl, the NTEU secretary for the ACT.2016-6-21_Racheal.jpg

The National Tertiary Education Union represents academic and professional staff, full-time and casual.

Tertiary education continues to come under attack from threats of massive budget cuts and the casualisation of the workforce. The speed of change has removed any secure connection between coursework and degree, and the job market.

The Liberal government was unable to get its 2014 budget cut of 20% from higher education through the Senate; and it has also had to back down from plans to deregulate university fees. The 20% cut is still a possibility, though; and other plans include partial deregulation of “flagship” courses, Higher Education Loan Project (HELP, formerly HECS) repayments to begin at lower income levels, and increasing the student contribution as a percentage of the cost of their courses.