
聽has found that nearly 1000 JobSeeker recipients have had their payments unlawfully cancelled over a two-year period, in what welfare advocates have dubbed 鈥淩obodebt 2.0鈥.聽
Ombudsman Iain Anderson found that the 964 cancellations happened automatically, between April 2022 and July 2024, due to an IT 鈥渆rror鈥 with the Targeted Compliance Framework (TCF), a system set up under the Coalition government.聽
The TCF monitors jobseekers and ensures 鈥渕utual obligations鈥 鈥 attending job provider appointments and actively searching for work 鈥 are met. If they are not, it can penalise jobseekers via reduced, suspended or cancelled payments.
Following the聽Robodebt scandal in 2022,聽new laws were introduced to ensure that jobseekers would not be subjected to harsh, automated payment changes, or cancellations, without human oversight to understand a jobseeker鈥檚 circumstances.聽
Anderson found that this did not happen in the 964 cases and that the Department of Employment and Workplace Relations (DEWR) and Services Australia 鈥渇ailed to take adequate steps to ensure the TCF was implemented in accordance with the 2022 amendment鈥. It said this likely had a 鈥渃atastrophic impact鈥 on vulnerable jobseekers.
鈥淚magine that if you were already living under the poverty line, so you can鈥檛 necessarily afford to pay rent, to feed yourself, to clothe yourself, but imagine then that that income is cut off for four weeks or more,鈥 said Anderson. 鈥淲hat are you supposed to do? That鈥檚 the type of catastrophe that we are talking about.鈥
DEWR paused the cancellation of payments in September last year, informing the Australian Council of Social Services (ACOSS) of the IT errors and cancellations that November.聽
ACOSS demanded the payments be resumed immediately and referred the matter to the ombudsman to investigate why the amended laws were not implemented for three years after they were handed down.聽聽
Anderson鈥檚 report said that the cancellations happened 鈥渨ithout consideration of the jobseeker鈥檚 circumstances鈥 and noted a fifth IT error that caused a further 45 automatic payment cancellations since DEWR paused cancellations last September.聽
Anderson also questioned the 鈥渁pparent lack of urgency鈥 regarding the 2022 amendments.聽
鈥淲e do not consider a delay of over three years, coupled with an indefinite commitment to future action, as reasonable 鈥 in our view, if parliament imposes an obligation on an agency head without specifying a time frame (as was the case here), the agency head should aim for implementation as soon as reasonably practicable.鈥
The report included a warning to all government agencies to ensure that all 鈥渁utomated decision-making is aligned with law and policy and is subject to ongoing testing and assurance鈥 as a way to restore public confidence 鈥渢hat automated decisions are being made responsibly鈥.
聽likened these systemic automated errors to the Robodebt scandal and pointed to ACOSS鈥檚 repeated warnings about the TCF system, which had been ignored.聽
鈥淲e made that in writing repeatedly to the government, to the successive ministers who come into this portfolio,鈥澛犅犫淲e made very clear that on their watch, another example of a Robodebt-like catastrophe, was unfolding in front of them.
鈥淭his set of circumstances is off the back of the lessons we should have learned from Robodebt.鈥
Anderson聽made seven recommendations, including that DEWR not resume cancellations until the IT errors have been corrected and systems are in place to ensure the TCF complies with the law.聽
DEWR and Services Australia accepted all the recommendations, while acknowledging that the 2022 law was not adequately adopted.
聽it was 鈥渘ot enough 鈥 to implement the ombudsman鈥檚 recommendations and move on鈥.
鈥淲elfare recipients have been documenting the extreme harm caused by compulsory activities for years, and consistently pushed for the government to stop harm by abolishing the cruel and infantilising rules they call 鈥榤utual鈥 obligations,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t has never been more obvious that this must happen.鈥
Greens spokesperson for social services Penny Altman-Payne is also lobbying for the 鈥渘ot only cruel, but completely dysfunctional鈥 system to be scrapped. 鈥淭his must be a wake-up call for change: Stop cancelling payments right now, abolish the mess that is the Targeted Compliance Framework, and work toward an end to mutual obligations.鈥
A second ombudsman鈥檚 report,聽, will investigate whether the decision-making processes that lead to cancellations is fair. It will also look into the role of privately run employment agencies.