Call it not patience…it is
despair
Richard
II, Act 1, Scene 2
Last week the Productivity Commission released the Housing
chapter from the annual Review of Government Services (ROGS) (link here).
The provision of reliable and up-to –date data is particularly
an issue in relation to Indigenous services as one of the only drivers of
better government performance is transparency on how effectively and efficiently
services are being delivered. The Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet has
emphasised on a number of occasions that data is crucial to assessing and
driving performance (link here and here). While I am sceptical of the ‘data is
gold’ approach as a substitute for effective policy, there is no doubt that transparency
is a crucial element in allowing the community at large and the Indigenous
community in particular, to assess the effectiveness of government investments
and policy efforts, and thus a key element in our democratic framework.
The introductory chapter to the Review of Government
Services provides some template information on the purposes of the exercise,
and makes the point that one of the intentions is to allow greater
comparability across jurisdictions. This aim is thwarted when key data is not
provided by particular jurisdictions.
I wrote a post on the 2017 Review of Government Services Housing
Chapters in February 2017 (link here) which canvassed the data
presented and also foreshadowed various issues related to the delivery of
remote housing including the review which was then underway. Key paragraphs
from that post are reproduced in full here:
So how effective is the provision of social housing in remote regions?
The answer is that is seems there are substantial shortcomings in the
effectiveness of social housing provision, but there are also inexplicable data
absences which make comprehensive assessment more difficult.
So at page 18.5, in Box 18.3, the report indicates that some 5000 social
housing units in the Northern Territory were removed from the Indigenous
Housing data set following their transfer to mainstream social housing in
2008-10, but seven years later relevant
data is still not being provided and is expected to be included in the Report
in 2018. This is entirely unsatisfactory and difficult to understand in a
context where government rhetoric is focussed on the priority of closing the
gap. (emphasis
added)
Notwithstanding the change of Government in the Northern
Territory, the key tables on service delivery performance for the NT are still
not available. Figures 18.2, 18.3, 18.4, 18.5, 18.6, 18.7, 18.9 and 18.10 all
fail to provide comprehensive (or in most cases, any) data for State owned and
managed Indigenous housing (SOMIH) in the NT.
Footnote 3 to the Housing Chapter states:
‘The
NT commenced data reporting for its SOMIH program in 2016-17. Limited aggregate
data are available and include the number of dwellings (5032), but not the
number of households. These dwellings were not included in administrative data
collections used in this Report for 2015-16 and previous years following their
transfer from ICH management in the period 2008–2010.’
This strikes me as a pathetically inadequate explanation
for the non-availability of crucial information which has been an issue for
approaching seven years.
While there are indications that some data may now be being
collected, there is still no comprehensive reporting for remote Indigenous
housing in the NT, apart from figure 18.4 which shows overcrowding levels in
social housing hovering around 5% across all jurisdictions except in the NT
where SOMIH overcrowding is shown at 56%. This is an extraordinary figure, reported
in the ROGS for the first time.
To put this in plain English, 56 percent of all remote social
housing in the NT is overcrowded. There is no data on the average level of overcrowding.
Virtually all of this housing is allocated to Indigenous tenants in remote
communities.
Given the levels of disadvantage in the remote Indigenous
housing sector, it is disappointing that the NT has not seen fit to collect the
relevant data relating to remote housing since the changes made in 2010.
It is disappointing that the Federal Government has not
seen fit to encourage the NT to get its act together, particularly given the
renewed focus on data and evaluation in Commonwealth Indigenous policy.
And it is disappointing that the Productivity Commission
merely reports these issues without comment, apparently taking no responsibility
for the lackadaisical approaches of governments to providing data about basic services
to the most disadvantaged citizens.
It might be time for the Productivity Commission to adopt a
more robust and independent approach particularly to reports which deal with Indigenous
disadvantage.