• image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
  • image
Private health insurance firms have dramatically increased their spending on management expenses while pulling the handbrake on paying benefits to their members over the past four years, sparking calls from Catholic Health Australia for greater oversight of the industry.
 
In the 2022 financial year, the funds collectively poured an extra $389 million into management expenses compared with 2019 ─ an increase of 17.43 per cent, according to an analysis of APRA data. 
Published in News
Australia’s not-for-profit Catholic aged-care providers saw many positives in a Budget that outlined the funding and priorities of the Albanese Government.
 
Peak advisory body Catholic Health Australia says the Budget’s $3.9bn in additional aged-care investment was a down payment on future aged-care reforms and the election commitments of the Albanese government.
Published in News

Caritas Australia welcomes the Australian Government’s commitment of $1.4 billion towards aid and development over the next four years.  The Labor Government has focused on supporting Australia’s region, with an increase of $900 million to the Pacific and Timor-Leste and $470 million to Southeast Asia.   
Published in News
VaticanCycle Rien Schuurhuis the cyclist who represented the Vatican at the UCI 2022 in Wollongong
As part of their visit to Australia to compete in the 2022 UCI Road World Championships, the first-ever Vatican World Cycling Team joined Caritas Australia to learn about truth-telling and reconciliation. 
 
The Vatican team, along with Archbishop Charles Balvo, the Apostolic Nuncio to Australia, visited Caritas Australia’s office in Sydney to spend a morning with Kinchela Boys Home Aboriginal Corporation, to learn about Australia’s history of kidnapping Aboriginal children from their families and communities.  
Published in News
The Albanese Government has today released a new, 10-year national strategy, designed to end family, domestic, and sexual violence against women and children within one generation.
 
The National Plan to End Violence against Women and Children 2022–2032, which has been agreed to by all states and territories, aims to guarantee all levels of government work towards the same goal − ensuring that women and children are safe in all our communities.
Published in News
CSSA LogoNearly 200,000 Australians will have their robodebt reviews wiped as the Federal Government scraps investigations into the controversial Coalition scheme introduced in 2015.
 
The Social Services Minister, Amanda Rishworth, has confirmed her department wouldn’t continue investigations.  “The robodebt fiasco is something that should be of deep concern to all Australians,” she said. “It was meant to save money; however, we know it had a significant human cost.”
Published in News
CSSA LogoThe proposal by the Federal Government to establish a new alternative dispute resolution process for people caught up in NDIS disputes would make the process of appealing a decision faster and easier.
 
Executive Director of Catholic Social Services Australia, Ms Monique Earsman, said any genuine attempt to assist those struggling with the NDIA bureaucracy is welcome.
Published in News
Catholic Health Australia says Peter Shergold’s findings into the way Australia handled the COVID pandemic reminds us of our duty to look after the most vulnerable in society. 
 
The independent review by a panel chaired by Mr Shergold concluded that policies were “designed and implemented without proper regard for the inequalities that already existed in our society and the vulnerabilities of particular communities”. 
Published in News
Tuesday, 11 October 2022 10:34

Grand Organ Master Series

Thomas Heywood Recital

Sunday 6 November at Sacred Heart Cathedral, Bendigo 

3.00 - 4.00 p.m. Thomas Heywood Recital 

4.30 p.m.  Sung Evening Prayer 

Published in News

108th Migrant and Refguee Sunday, 25 September 2022 

 

Across the Diocese on Migrant and Refugee Sunday, we remembered the difficult journeys which migrants and refugees have made to start a new life in Australia. We acknowledged the heartbreak in leaving home and the challenges of being new in a land with a different culture and even language. We also celebrated the gifts migrants and refugees bring to Australia, enriching our life with “beautiful diversity”, as Pope Francis has called it in his recent message for this day.
Published in News
Page 59 of 165