Skip to content Skip to footer

Aged care nurses and carers converge on Parliament House

JOINT MEDIA RELEASE

WHAT: Aged care nurses and carers media conference.

When: 10.30am, Tuesday 16 March, 2021.

Where: Senate Courtyard, Parliament House, Canberra.

 

A DELEGATION of aged care workers from across Australia will converge on Parliament House, Canberra, today (Tuesday 16 March) calling on the country’s political decision-makers to use the upcoming Federal Budget to urgently reform the understaffed and under-resourced aged care sector.

The 25-strong delegation from the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation (ANMF) and the United Workers Union (UWU) includes registered nurses, enrolled nurses and personal care workers concerned that elderly Australians living in nursing homes need action from Government now on critical reforms to get the safe, quality care they need and deserve.

The Final Report of the Aged Care Royal Commission recognised that far too many have suffered because of the long standing systemic failings of the aged care sector and identified unacceptably low levels of staffing as the key contributor to substandard care across the system, concluding that:

‘There are many ingredients that enable the provision of high quality and safe aged care, but it cannot be achieved without the sector having enough staff with the skills and time to care’.

With almost 60% of residents in nursing homes experiencing an unacceptably low level of staffing, the Report recommends that ‘staffing ratios should be introduced to ensure that there are sufficient nursing and other care staff present at all times in residential aged care’. This means guaranteeing enough nurses and care workers to provide high quality and safe, person centred care.

Aged care worker Sue from Queensland says: “The aged care system was in crisis well before Covid-19. The system is underfunded, understaffed and the workload is impossible.”

Aged care worker Zelda from South Australia says: “Older Australians are not being kept safe in aged care. They are left upset and confused by a revolving door of aged care workers because of insecure jobs and casualisation.”

The aged care nurses and carers will seek urgent meetings with Prime Minister Scott Morrison, advisors for Minister for Health Greg Hunt, Minister for Aged Care Richard Colbeck, Deputy Prime Minister Michael McCormack, the Labor caucus, Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese, and Shadows Mark Butler, Clare O’Neill and Ged Kearney, the Greens and key Crossbenchers, urging for mandated staffing ratios to be included in the May Budget.

ANMF Federal Secretary Annie Butler said: “Our politicians must come together and act now on the Royal Commission’s recommendation that providers meet a minimum staff time quality and safety standard which guarantees all health and care needs of older Australians are met.

“We’re calling on the Prime Minister to guarantee that residents receive the safe, dignified care they deserve, by introducing mandated staffing levels and skill mixes in nursing homes as a matter of urgency – reform can’t wait. More delays mean more suffering for older Australians.”

UWU aged care director Carolyn Smith said: “Aged care workers are saying they have had enough with delays, buck-passing and report after report.

“Politicians need to understand the cost of doing nothing, or doing too little, is paid by older Australians who do not get the care or safety they desperately need.

“The demands of aged care workers have been endorsed by hundreds of aged care workers in mass meetings last week, and we have been visiting politicians to make it very clear what they want.”

 

The ANMF, with over 300,000 members, is the industrial and professional voice for nurses, midwives and assistants in nursing in Australia.

The United Workers Union is 150,000 workers across the country from more than 45 industries and all walks of life, standing together to make a difference.

Our website is hosted on 100% carbon neutral servers in Naarm (Melbourne). The United Workers Union is committed to creating the secure & future-proof jobs workers and their communities need as our country continues to transition to a net zero economy.

UWU acknowledges that we meet and work on the unceded lands of First Nations peoples. We wish to pay respect to their Elders — past and present — and acknowledge the important role all First Nations peoples continue to play within Australia and in our union.

© United Workers Union 2026. All Rights Reserved.

Authorised by T. Kennedy, United Workers Union, 833 Bourke St, Docklands, VIC 3008

 

Campaign has finished

ACT
ACT Member Phone: 1800 805 027 (select option 2)
NSW
NSW Member Phone: 1800 805 027 (select option 2)
NT
NT Member Phone: (08) 8924 4700 (select option 2)
QLD
QLD Member Phone: 1800 065 885 (select option 2)
SA
SA Member Phone: 1800 622 900 (select option 2)
TAS
TAS Member Phone: 1800 625 119 (select option 2)
VIC
VIC Member (all VIC): (03) 8627 6200 (select option 2)
VIC Member (country VIC): 1800 819 087 (select option 2)
WA
WA Member Phone: 1800 199 890 (select option 2)

To become a United Workers Union member, and get help at work:

Join online now

call (02) 8204 3001

For media enquiries, please contact:

call 1300 898 633

email [email protected]

see our latest News

ACT
NSW
NT
Office: (08) 8924 4700 (select option 3)
Fax: (03) 8677 9876
QLD
Office: (07) 3291 4600 (select option 3)
Fax: (03) 8677 9876
SA
TAS
VIC
Office: (03) 8627 6200 (select option 3)
Fax: (03) 8677 9876
WA
Office: (08) 9388 5400 (select option 3)