Comprehensive welfare reforms implemented
Hon Paula Bennett
Minister
for Social Development
Associate
Minister of Housing
14 July
2013
Media Statement
Comprehensive welfare reforms implemented
Social Development Minister Paula
Bennett says from tomorrow New Zealand’s welfare system
will be fundamentally different.
“The welfare
system will look and feel very different, with new
expectations and obligations and a much stronger work
focus,” says Mrs Bennett.
“The investment
approach will allow us to provide more individualised
support to people, with a particular focus on those at risk
of long-term dependence.”
From tomorrow the DPB,
Unemployment and Sickness Benefits won’t exist.
Replacing a complex system of seven categories are
three main benefits:
Jobseeker Support for those actively seeking and available for work
Sole Parent Support for sole parents with children under 14 years
Supported Living
Payment for people significantly restricted by sickness,
injury or disability.
“New Zealanders should know
the changes mean we’ll go from having less than 50,000
people on the old Unemployment Benefit to nearly 130,000 on
Jobseeker Support, as it now includes former Sickness
Beneficiaries.”
Jobseekers will have work
expectations set depending on their capacity – full time,
part time or temporarily exempt through short-term illness
for example.
From October 2012, changes for sole
parent beneficiaries introduced expectations to be available
for part-time work when their youngest is school-age and
full-time work when their youngest turns 14.
“Like most New Zealanders, I think that’s
absolutely reasonable and more importantly, it’s making a
difference to sole parents and their children as already
9,000 sole parents have gone off welfare into
work.”
From tomorrow new social obligations also
come into effect which require all beneficiary parents to
ensure their children:
attend 15 hours a week in ECE from 3-5yrs
attend school from age five or six
enrol with a PHO, Integrated Family Health Centre or GP
complete
WellChild/Tamariki Ora checks
The changes also
require anyone with work expectations to be drug-free, and
benefits can now be stopped if people fail to clear
outstanding arrest warrants.
“Over 40 per cent of
jobs advertised with Work and Income require a drug test.
We’ll expect people to be able to pass a test for those
available jobs.”
Specialised Youth Services for
teens and teen parents, with the Youth Payment and Young
Parent Payment, have been in place since last August.
“Community providers have been working
intensively with these young people, helping them navigate
what can feel like a pretty daunting world, helping them
with paying bills, budgeting and parenting and
education.”
“Benefit rates will remain
unchanged and there will be extra support for those who want
to work but need more help to get them ready,” says Mrs
Bennett.
A work bonus is also available from July
15 as an incentive for those who decide to work even though
they do not have work expectations.”
National
campaigned on all of these welfare reforms and is delivering
on those promises to New Zealanders.
ENDS