28 August 2012.
Families Commission’s panel of experts are dead on target
Acting on the recommendations of the expert panel on child poverty will be critical if we are to raise more than a
quarter million of Kiwi children out of poverty, says The Salvation Army.
After years of talk, The Salvation Army is relieved that a common sense and practical route has been developed that
could finally address a shameful and costly social catastrophe, says head of Salvation Army Community Ministries Major
Pam Waugh
Reintroducing the universal child payment for the first five years and longer for poor families, as well raising family
tax credit to families with young or multiple children, would go a long way to solving the health, education and crime
and punishment problems associated with poverty, she says.
Ensuring homes are warm and dry and early childhood education is affordable and accessible are other essential
components, she says.
“To achieve the objective of alleviating childhood poverty, we believe a whole-of-government approach, that includes all
relevant ministries and government agencies, is necessary,” she says.
“It’s not enough to provide funding – it is critical to be doggedly focused to ensure that assistance arrives where it
is needed – in the homes of the poor.”
She says the government’s welfare reform policies currently being rolled out, particularly those relating to domestic
purpose beneficiaries, should be carefully aligned with the panel’s recommendations of helping single parents into
employment. These include providing pre-employment and in-work training, job subsidies, and high-quality child care
facilities