Disability Minister Mark Butler used a speech at the National Press Club on Wednesday, August 20, to say the NDIS was not the right fit for the growing number of children on the autism spectrum or with developmental delays.
A separate program called Thriving Kids will be set up to focus on those children previously covered by the NDIS.
It will begin rolling out from July 2026 and be fully implemented by July 2027.
Children with autism on the NDIS would not be steered from the scheme until supports were fully rolled out, the minister said.
‘’’Diverting this group of kids over time from the NDIS is an important element of making the scheme sustainable and returning it to its original intent,’’ he said.
Medicare items for occupational therapy, speech pathology and psychosocial therapy would be considered for the program, including a bulk-billed check-up for three-year-olds, Mr Butler said.
The government would start by making a $2 billion contribution, matched by states and territories.
Early intervention strategies were key for ensuring children received the right support, Autism Awareness chief executive Nicole Rogerson said.
‘’(Thriving Kids) potentially has the opportunity to be a once-in-a-generation change in how we look at developmental paediatrics,’’ she said.
Ensuring the program was in place before children were moved from the scheme was reassuring, People with Disability acting chief executive Megan Spindler-Smith said.
The minister said while one-in-50 people had a significant disability that would be covered by the NDIS, one-in-five young children were on the autism spectrum or had a developmental delay.
Parents had little choice but to put their children with autism on a scheme designed for permanent disability, Mr Butler said.
‘’Families who were looking for additional supports in mainstream services can’t find them because they largely don’t exist anymore and in that, all governments have failed them,’’ he said.
Mr Butler said the changes would help to bring down the cost of the NDIS.
– AAP