Australia Covid live news update: Scott Morrison announces increase to support payments as NSW records 11th death of outbreak



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NSW parliament won’t sit in August

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ACOSS welcomes $200-a-week boost to welfare payments

The Australian Council of Social Service has welcomed the $200-a-week boost to welfare payments for people who’ve lost more than eight hours of work, but criticised the government for failing to provide help to others who need it.

Scott Morrison announced today the government would reverse a decision to exclude people in locked-down Sydney who are already on existing payments from receiving additional Covid supports.

The Australian Council of Social Service, chief executive, Dr Cassandra Goldie, said:


Thank you to everyone locked down and locked out of paid work – and our member organisations on the frontline – who have spoken out about why the government’s lockdown support must include people with the least.

It’s because of you that today the government has announced this welcome $200 weekly payment for people in lockdown on social security who have lost eight or more hours of paid work a week.

We will continue to urge the government to extend support to everyone struggling, especially those with the very least, who had less paid work or none, despite trying to find it.

The lockdown prevents everyone on social security payments from being able to find paid work – they all need this support.

Goldie accused the government of “abandoning those who need the support the most”. She said:


For all its talk of us all being in this together, the government is dividing communities by providing financial support to some and leaving others who have the least behind them facing destitution on $44 a day.

Youth Allowance is even less, at $36 a day. Most people’s rent alone is far more than $36 a day.

The Greens senator Rachel Siewert said the payment was a “step in the right direction” but still not enough.


Continuing to punish people on income support payments in the midst of a pandemic is twisted and cruel.

If we want people to be able to eat, clothe and pay their bills, they need a payment of at least $80 a day.

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