Apparently, it’s outrageous to expect ‘Australia’ to subsidise remote communities. Unless you happen to be a farmer living in one, of course.
Yesterday, WA premier Colin Barnett flagged the closures of between 100 and 150 of the state’s remote Indigenous communities as a result of the imminent transition from Federal to state responsibilities.
Which, in actual English, means the Federal Government cut its funding and the state doesn’t want to pay.
In passing the buck, or lack of, Abbott managed to put his foot in it. Just for a change.
He said that living in a remote community was a “lifestyle choice“, and that the Government shouldn’t be paying for it.
And his reasoning for not supporting the funding of these remote communities is “the cost of providing services in a particular remote location is out of all proportion to the benefits being delivered”.
Ah, “the benefits being delivered”.
Who decided what those benefits are? Tony Abbott did, apparently. Because he spends a week a year in remote communities he is the ‘suppository of all wisdom’. He used the example that it was hard in those regions for kids to get a good education. As if that is the only measure upon which benefits of living out there should be judged.
There are two important issues here and it’s essential not to conflate them because they are both important on their own.
Read more: Tony Abbott talks about living in indigenous areas as a ‘lifestyle choice.’
Firstly, every single day, the government funds what could certainly be deemed rural Australians’ “lifestyle choices”, through grants, tax breaks and all manner of things.