Health Minister Mark Butler has unveiled sweeping cuts to the ballooning National Disability Insurance Scheme, aimed at cutting costs of the program down to $55 billion by the end of the decade.
The government wants to slash spending for NDIS participants as part of sweeping new changes.
Mark Butler said he will make ‘hard’ decisions to bring the program, which supports around 760,000 Australians with disabilities, under control ...
Labor will unveil sweeping changes to the NDIS aimed at reining in the cost of at-home care and other multibillion-dollar ...
NDIS changes: what we know so far and what it means for our communityTuesday 28 AprilWe know many of our members are feeling ...
Health Minister Mark Butler is also predicting that many allied health workers that have flocked to the NDIS will move to ...
In sweeping reforms to the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) announced today, the government will cut 160,000 ...
By Nicole RinehartThe national debate around NDIS policy and funding is not just about balancing the budget.Children's lives are at stake if we get ...
Health Minister Mark Butler has unveiled the government's plan to curb the ballooning growth of the NDIS and save the budget a projected $35 billion over four years.
The Albanese government this week launched the most significant intervention in the disability support scheme’s history ...
Disability advocates are worried the government's sweeping belt-tightening measures to the $50 billion insurance scheme will ...
To rein in spiralling costs, the government aims to cut the scheme’s growth rate from 10% to about 5% annually.
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