The Minns Labor government has today handed down a Budget that once again utterly fails victim-survivors of domestic and family violence-with no new investment in existing frontline domestic and family violence services, and mere crumbs for initiatives and programs that have gone underfunded for years.
The Greens have consistently backed calls from countless experts, victim-survivors and dedicated specialist frontline workers who have categorically called for a significant and permanent increase in baseline funding for existing frontline services.
As stated by Abigail Boyd, Greens NSW Spokesperson for Gendered Violence and Abuse:
"Over a year on from the Minns Labor government's so-called 'emergency funding package' and its promise to listen to calls from experts and the community, today's Budget has nothing for existing frontline domestic and family violence services.
"These services provide genuinely critical, irreplaceable and life-saving support to women and children fleeing violence-victim-survivors who are already waiting an average of two months to access support.
"The Minns Labor government has not only failed to meet repeated calls from domestic and family violence experts for a 50% increase in baseline funding for frontline services, but it has embarked on yet another attempt at spin-dressing up a cash splash for courts and the corrections system as somehow being funding for domestic and family violence victim-survivors.
"To claim this as an investment in ending domestic and family violence is not only blatantly dishonest-it's an arrogant betrayal of the over-stretched frontline workers who are working incredibly hard every day to deliver the services and programs that we know provide victim-survivors with sorely needed protection and refuge.
"Peel back the spin and what are we left with? A few piecemeal operational reforms and crumbs for strategies and plans we've been waiting on for years, which is nothing compared to the level of investment needed to tackle the gendered violence crisis.
"According to Domestic Violence NSW, it would only take $163 million to sufficiently resource frontline services to meet demand in 2025-26. Imagine what we could do to turn around the domestic and family violence crisis if Labor would finally fund the evidence-based services and programs the sector has been consistently crying out for.
"This Budget is all spin and no action, painting a clear picture of just how little the NSW Labor government cares about ending violence against women and children in our state."