• All
  • Stories
  • Appeals
  • Petitions
  • Blog
  • Media Releases
  • Other pages

    Legal services cuts will have disastrous impact on Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander communities

    Campaigns and Advocacy • Indigenous Affairs • News

    Oxfam Australia is one of 26 organisations that have written to Prime Minister Tony Abbott, Treasurer Joe Hockey, Attorney-General George Brandis and Indigenous Affairs Minister Nigel Scullion, urging them to reverse the proposed funding cuts to legal assistance services under the Attorney General’s portfolio.


    These services include Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Services (ATSILS), its peak body National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Services (NATSILS), Community Legal Centres (CLCs) and the Legal Aid Commissions (LAC).


    The full text of the letter is below:


    25 March 2015


    The Hon. Tony Abbott MP


    Prime Minister


    Parliament House


    Canberra ACT 2600


    Cc: The Hon. Joe Hockey MP, Treasurer


    Senator the Hon. George Brandis QC, Attorney-General


    Senator the Hon. Nigel Scullion MP, Minister for Indigenous Affairs


    Dear Prime Minister,


    The undersigned organisations are writing to request that you urgently reverse the proposed funding cuts to legal assistance services under the Attorney General’s portfolio, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Services (ATSILS), its peak body National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Services (NATSILS), Community Legal Centres (CLCs) and the Legal Aid Commissions (LAC).


    This letter has arisen from our deeply held shared concern about the effects that these funding cuts will have on the delivery of frontline legal services to society’s most vulnerable members, particularly Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, women and children. We note that these organisations have already made difficult decisions to withdraw, or reduce, key services due to the proposed funding cuts and accompanying uncertainty. This has created an extremely difficult situation for these services, their staff and most importantly, for the clients and communities they represent.


    We are further concerned that these cuts come at a time when there are crisis levels of Aboriginal and Torres Islander peoples’ imprisonment, high rates of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children in the child protection system and growing rates of family violence. These cuts will make a bad situation worse as more Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people will be unrepresented in courts and unable to access legal assistance, including family and civil law services. This will lead to increased costs to all governments as unrepresented litigants will block the courts and create inefficiencies in the system.


    We ask that this matter be given urgent attention as the current uncertainty is hampering the ability of these organisations to deliver the expert frontline legal services that our communities so desperately need.


    We also call upon the Government to take heed of the Productivity Commission’s Access to Justice Arrangements report which called for a further $200m investment into the legal assistance sector, including the Family Violence Prevention Legal Services. We believe that additional funding is needed to address skyrocketing levels of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander imprisonment and family violence.


    We urge you to take critical leadership on this issue.


    Yours Sincerely,



    1. Amnesty International Australia
    2. Anglican Board of Mission
    3. ANTaR
    4. Australian Bar Association
    5. Australian Council of Social Service
    6. Australian Lawyers for Human Rights
    7. Commissioner for Aboriginal Children and Young People (Vic), Andrew Jackomos
    8. Commissioner for Children and Young People (Vic), Bernie Geary
    9. Congress of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Nurses and Midwives
    10. Federation of Community Legal Centres (Vic) Inc.
    11. First Peoples Disability Network (Australia)
    12. Human Rights Law Centre
    13. Indigenous Allied Health Australia
    14. Law Council of Australia
    15. National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Legal Services
    16. National Association for Community Legal Centres
    17. National Congress of Australia’s First Peoples
    18. National Family Violence Legal and Prevention Services Forum
    19. Muru Marri, School of Public Health and Community Medicine, UNSW Australia
    20. Oxfam Australia
    21. The Australian College of Midwives
    22. The Fred Hollows Foundation
    23. The Public Health Association of Australia
    24. Reconciliation Australia
    25. Secretariat for National Aboriginal and Islander Child Care
    26. The Lowitja Institute