Gippsland › Latest news › Emma Kealy MP
Refusal to support immediate reforms on mental health and wellbeing boost for young Victorians by Andrews Labor government
A plan to boost youth mental health services by 2026 is years too late for children who are suffering right now and could benefit from other immediate reforms that the Andrews Labor government has refused to support.
The government has today trumpeted a plan to 'scale up' a mental health in primary schools program from 2023, but confirmed some schools will still have to wait another four years for a Mental Health and Wellbeing Leader. At the same time, Labor MPs have twice blocked a move by the Liberals and Nationals in Parliament to make reforms that will immediately unlock an extra 2000 counsellors for the school-based mental health workforce.
The damning assessment found there weren't enough workers across most professions leading to staff burnout, low morale and deskilling
Address worker shortages
Shadow Minister for Mental Health Emma Kealy said without enough workers to fill vacancies, the sector won't keep up. "It doesn't matter how much money Labor throws at a problem, it won't make a dent unless we address the shortage of mental health practitioners in our state."
"Growing evidence is showing that isolation and learning disruptions of Labor's six lockdowns are still weighing heavily on Victorian kids. Delaying change for a further four years does nothing to help Victorian kids who are suffering poor mental health right now."
"The sector has been crying out for reform to address worker shortages for years - long before the COVID pandemic put more demand on Victoria's fatigued and under-resourced mental health workforce." Ms Kealy said.
Ignored warnings
Ms Kealy also said, "State Labor has been in government for 20 of the past 24 years but still ignores dire warnings to rebuild our mental health workforce. Immediate reforms can be made right now which will unlock 2000 counsellors to work in Victorian schools, but while Labor MPs block these changes Victorian kids will continue to suffer."
Three years ago, the Royal Commission made damning findings on the failure to plan for future demands on Victoria's mental health workforce. More than half the recommendations called for urgent reform to boost the workforce.
Further, "workforce shortages have powerful negative effects on access and quality of care, ultimately compromising outcomes for people living with mental illness, their families and carers" (Interim Report, p453).
Pictures from Mental Health Australia Facebook page.
Source: http://gippsland.com/
Published by: news@gippsland.com
Latest News
Darren Chester pushes for funding to complete Snowy Rail Bridge restoration with community and government support
Darren Chester warns Gippslanders to stay alert against new Age Pension online scams targeting personal information

Grand Ridge Road landslip repairs underway and other updates on South Gippsland Council projects

Latrobe City Council initiatives halve litter and dumping peports, pushes for state action on arterial road cleanups

Martin Cameron highlights concerns grow over rooming house clusters in Churchill, prompting calls for urgent state government action

Martin Cameron highlights concerns grow over rooming house clusters in Churchill, prompting calls for urgent state government action

Latrobe City Council urges state to abandon emergency services levy due to community and economic impacts

Winnindoo CFA fire station funding reannounced in 2025-26 Budget, despite original 2020-21 promise unfulfilled

Danny O'Brien calls for urgent action to save Yanakie weather station critical to South Gippsland emergency response

Gippslanders face emergency services tax hike as Labor pushes ahead despite community and industry backlash
