The Coalition Government's Community Development Programme (CDP), introduced in July 2015 by Indigenous Affairs Minister Nigel Scullion, did result in welfare recipients being fined for non-attendance at activities including hygiene and "tie-dying" (formally listed as "Dirt Shirts" activities) [1].
**Key verified facts:**
The ABC obtained documents from the Prime Minister's Department listing CDP activities that included [1]:
- "Women's Hygiene and Nutrition" - described as teaching "women about personal grooming and hygiene to avoid becoming ill and spreading disease"
- "Dirt Shirts" - activities building "job seekers' understanding and experience in the preparation of shirts for dying"
Penalties were real and substantial.
Parliament-released documents revealed that [2]:
- More than 20,000 CDP participants were fined in the 2015-16 financial year
- People were fined on 146,654 separate occasions
- Penalties amounted to one-tenth of a person's fortnightly payment for each day of non-attendance
- For Newstart recipients (earning less than $290 per week), penalties ranged from approximately $48 to $57 per day
Minister Scullion's office confirmed the penalty structure was intentional, stating [2]: "It is important to recognise that the CDP is focused on providing jobseekers with an incentive to turn up to their activities — to give them a sense of purpose and to develop skills that can help them gain jobs."
Minister Scullion explicitly stated [1]: "This is not about jobs, this is about purposeful activities that the community benefit from and the community choose... we need positive activities so if a job does come up somewhere else or a job does come up there that we are in a space that we can move to that job."
The government framed these as community-designed activities intended to provide "purposeful activity" and build networks that could facilitate employment, not as employment training per se [2].
**2.
」 "
Scale of the Problem**
While 20,000+ fined sounds extensive, this should be contextualised: approximately 35,000 people participated in CDP [1][2], meaning roughly 57% of participants were fined.
However, the government maintained that more than 90% of eight-week non-payment penalties were waived, significantly reducing actual financial hardship for most participants [2].
**3.
Activities Were Community-Designed (According to Government)**
The government claimed activities were "co-designed with communities" [2], though independent researchers disputed this.
An Australian National University report contradicted this narrative, with Northern Land Council CEO Joe Morrison stating [3]: "There is no real engagement, serious engagement, with local Aboriginal organisations in the bush when it comes to these things.
Program Outcomes**
The government pointed to job placement numbers: the CDP placed participants into more than 11,000 jobs since July 2015 [2], though critics questioned whether this represented genuine employment outcomes or simply participation transfers.
The articles cited are from political correspondents (Dan Conifer) and were based on verifiable parliamentary documents and official government releases.
While the framing emphasizes problems and concerns (which reflects the Labor opposition's viewpoint), the core facts reported are sourced from official parliamentary documents and government department materials, making the factual accuracy sound.
**Critical Finding: Labor's Approach to Welfare Activity Testing**
Labor also implemented work-for-the-dole and activity requirement schemes, though with different structures:
- **Pre-2009**: Labor under Prime Minister Rudd and Gillard maintained activity requirements for welfare recipients through the Job Services Australia network and the Remote Jobs and Communities Program (RJCP).
- **CDEP Scheme History**: Labor actually **scrapped** the Community Development Employment Projects (CDEP) scheme in 2009 [3].
This preceded CDP's creation by six years.
- **Welfare Penalties**: Labor's employment services also applied penalties for non-compliance with activity requirements, making this not a Coalition-unique practice.
The key difference was that Labor's CDEP (which existed pre-2009) had different governance structures giving communities more direct control and provided minimum wage-equivalent payments.
**The Criticism (Supported by Evidence):**
An Australian National University report comprehensively documented serious problems [3]:
- Financial penalties created significant hardship and increased rental arrears (from $50,000 to $350,000 in Ngaanyatjarra Lands over a short period)
- ANU researchers documented cases of people going hungry and unable to feed families
- Language barriers and accessibility issues with Centrelink created compounding problems
- Activity design was criticized as "condescending" by participants who felt activities were "making it appear as if people are actually doing something rather than genuinely getting people into employment"
- The scheme was described by independent researchers as a "policy disaster"
**The Government's Justification:**
The government maintained [1][2]:
- Activities were designed to provide purpose and structure while participants waited for employment opportunities
- Penalties served as incentives to maintain engagement
- Most penalty waivers (90%+) were granted to prevent undue hardship
- The program placed 11,000+ people into jobs since July 2015
- Activities were claimed to be community-supported (disputed by researchers)
**Complexity That's Missing from the Simple Claim:**
1. **Remote Employment Reality**: Employment opportunities in remote Indigenous communities are genuinely limited.
The tension was whether mandatory activities created meaningful pathways to work or simply created compliance burdens.
2. **Bipartisan Precedent**: Both major parties have required welfare recipients to participate in activities as a condition of receiving benefits.
The difference was degree and design, not principle.
3. **Cultural Appropriateness**: The core debate was about whether activities were designed *with* communities or *for* them.
Government claimed community co-design; independent researchers found evidence of Canberra-designed bureaucratic requirements.
4. **Genuine Policy Tension**: There is a legitimate policy debate about whether welfare should require work-seeking activity, how punitive non-compliance should be, and who designs programs for Indigenous communities.
The claim is factually accurate in its core assertion: the Coalition Government's CDP did fine welfare recipients for not attending activities that included hygiene classes and tie-dying ("Dirt Shirts").
However, the claim presents the issue in deliberately unflattering terms without the context that [3]:
- These were community-specific (remote Indigenous) welfare programs
- The government had stated policy rationale (purposeful activity, maintaining engagement)
- Most penalties were waived
- Labor also implemented activity-based welfare requirements
- The debate involved genuine policy complexity, not straightforward malfeasance
The claim is technically TRUE but would be more accurately described as **TRUE BUT LACKS CONTEXT** regarding the policy rationale, comparative approaches across parties, and implementation of waiver provisions.
The claim is factually accurate in its core assertion: the Coalition Government's CDP did fine welfare recipients for not attending activities that included hygiene classes and tie-dying ("Dirt Shirts").
However, the claim presents the issue in deliberately unflattering terms without the context that [3]:
- These were community-specific (remote Indigenous) welfare programs
- The government had stated policy rationale (purposeful activity, maintaining engagement)
- Most penalties were waived
- Labor also implemented activity-based welfare requirements
- The debate involved genuine policy complexity, not straightforward malfeasance
The claim is technically TRUE but would be more accurately described as **TRUE BUT LACKS CONTEXT** regarding the policy rationale, comparative approaches across parties, and implementation of waiver provisions.