As of next year, NSW parents are going to be offered $100 per kid to get them playing sport.
Online commentators have already attacked the move, labelling it “vote-buying” and “middle-class welfare”. But a leading researcher into child obesity has praised it, saying it will help the kids who need it most.
The Active Kids Rebate was announced in the NSW budget yesterday. From January 1 2018, parents will be able to register online to receive a $100 voucher which can be used to help pay for kids’ sporting activities.
Every child enrolled in school, from kindergarten to Year 12, is eligible, and it’s not means-tested.
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The voucher can be used towards registration or membership fees for a wide range of sports, including netball, swimming, gymnastics and athletics.
Sydney paediatrician Professor Louise Baur says it makes sense.
“Obviously there are some families for whom the costs of for whom this doing extra sport for their kids isn’t a barrier,” she tells Mamamia.
“But there are families is a very real issue. The cost of uniforms, kitting out a child, cost of registration, etc, can be a real barrier.
“This is about physical activity, and it’s about inclusion – getting rid of those barriers that stop kids, who probably need it more than most, to have the opportunity to be involved.”