Enabling Good Lives to be demonstrated in Christchurch

  • Tariana Turia
Disability Issues

The Minister for Disability Issues Tariana Turia announced today that Cabinet has approved a three-year demonstration of Enabling Good Lives in Christchurch, with work starting immediately.   

Christchurch school leavers with disabilities will be the first to benefit from Enabling Good Lives – a new way of supporting disabled people that offers people greater choice and control over the supports they receive and the lives they lead. 

Mrs Turia says that while Enabling Good Lives would eventually encompass a far wider group, young Christchurch people with high needs leaving school in November 2013 would be the first to benefit.

“I want these young people who, with their families, are making major decisions about their futures, to have a much higher level of choice and control so that they can really live the lives they want to lead in our communities and workplaces.”

“What is so exciting about this project is that it was an initiative by the disability sector to give disabled people greater choice and control,” says Mrs Turia.

“Christchurch is the perfect environment to trial this new way of working.  In fact reconfiguring disability supports and services is one of the priorities that was set to assist disabled people in the Canterbury recovery,” says Mrs Turia.

“Christchurch providers have also had to be more flexible and innovative in the way they have delivered services since the earthquakes. I am really excited at the prospect of building on this and making more choices and opportunities available to a wider group of disabled people in Christchurch.”

A director will be responsible for leading the demonstration and will be supported by a local advisory group.

Budget 2013 included $3m over three years for the additional costs associated with the demonstration.

Enabling Good Lives is a cross-agency approach involving the Ministries of Education, Health and Social Development, who will also be working with ACC.

“Disabled people have told us loud and clear that they want to work with one system not several, which means it is essential that agencies work together,” says Mrs Turia.

Disabled people and the wider disability sector will also have significant roles in decision making under Enabling Good Lives.  A Local Advisory Group will co-design the demonstration with staff from each of the government agencies.   A national Enabling Good Lives Leadership group will provide advice to the local advisory group, and to government agencies and Ministers.

“The involvement of the disability community in this way is an exciting development,” says Mrs Turia.

“It reflects disabled people’s strong desire for ‘nothing about us without us’. This approach is supported by the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

Enabling Good Lives arose from a 2011 Report from the disability sector to the Minister for Disability Issues that recommended transforming the disability support system. In September 2012, the Ministerial Committee for Disability Issues agreed to a vision, and a long term change of direction and set of principles to guide changes to the system. The vision and principles will guide the Christchurch demonstration.

The Enabling Good Lives demonstration will draw on the experience of the Ministry of Health’s New Model for Supporting Disabled People, which is seeking to transform the Ministry of Health’s parts of the disability support system.  Elements of the New Model are being demonstrated in the Bay of Plenty, Waikato and Auckland. The demonstration will bring in multiple government agencies and more closely involve disabled persons and their families and service providers in the transformation.

Further information about the New Model can be found on the Ministry of Health website www.health.govt.nz. Search for New Model.

Work is starting this week on setting up the Christchurch demonstration. Members of the Enabling Good Lives Leadership Group will be released on the Ministry of Social Development and Ministry of Health websites.

FAQs - Enabling Good Lives

Christchurch demonstration

What is ‘Enabling Good Lives’?

A new cross-government approach to supporting disabled people that offers people greater choice and control over the supports they receive and the lives they lead.  It is based on the vision and principles, proposed in an Enabling Good Lives Report, for government support of disabled people.

Why is this new approach needed?

In 2011, a group of people from the disability sector reviewed the options available to disabled people for their daily lives.  They concluded that changes to the entire disability support system were needed to address long standing concerns about how the government supported disabled people.  Their report was entitled ‘Enabling Good Lives’. 

How will Enabling Good Lives be introduced?

Enabling Good Lives will first be demonstrated in Christchurch to show how the new cross-government approach can be used to reconfigure supports and services for disabled people. The demonstration will run for three years and will gather information about the difference Enabling Good Lives makes to people’s lives, the costs involved in the new approach and how to put in place changes across the disability system.

The demonstration will be jointly designed with disabled people, families and service providers in the city.  These groups will have a say in changes at both the local and national level. The demonstration will include funds and services from the Ministries of Education, Health and Social Development. The services and supports ACC provides to clients with a serious injury will also be taken into account to ensure that systems are streamlined.

Why demonstrate in Christchurch?

The Government’s 2011 Disability Action Plan had a priority of including disabled people in the Canterbury earthquake recovery. As part of this, the Christchurch disability community and sector were invited to develop a proposal for demonstrating Enabling Good Lives in Canterbury.  The Christchurch disability community and sector embraced this opportunity. They submitted a draft report to the Minister for Disability Issues Tariana Turia in June 2012 entitled “Enabling Good Lives in Canterbury”.  In response, the Government has agreed to a three year demonstration, based on the report.

How will the disability community be involved in development of the demonstration?

A Local Advisory Group in Christchurch will co-design the demonstration with staff from each of the government agencies.  It will also support and advise the demonstration’s director. The group’s members will be nominated by the disability community and sector.  Wider networks in the Christchurch community will be drawn on to assist the group.

The national Enabling Good Lives Leadership Group will champion the vision and principles of Enabling Good Lives.  It will also advise Ministers and senior government officials.  Members of this group are about to be appointed from nominations from the disability community and sector.

Who will be part of the demonstration?

The demonstration will be in place for young people leaving school in November 2013. In the first year, it will focus on school leavers with high needs in Christchurch City. A small number of people will also be able to opt into this early phase of the demonstration at the discretion of the Enabling Good Lives Director.

As Enabling Good Lives expands over three years, increasing numbers of disabled people will be able to be part of it. By its third year it is expected that at least 300 people will be included in the demonstration.

Who will lead the demonstration?

A Christchurch-based director, reporting to a Joint Agency Group (comprised of the Ministries of Health, Education, Social Development and ACC). The Group will report to the Ministerial Committee on Disability Issues.

What is the demonstration seeking to achieve?

The demonstration’s primary goal is to improve the lives of disabled people by giving them more choice and control over the supports they receive and the lives they lead. It will create opportunities for family, whānau and friends to gain the skills, confidence and information they need to support disabled people to live an everyday life in everyday places.

The demonstration also aims to assist disabled people to feel welcome and included in their local communities; ensure government funding of disability support services is flexible and work wells; and develop a way for government agencies to work together in funding services that support disabled people to live ordinary lives.

How will it be funded?

The demonstration will focus on using existing resources in more effective ways. It will encompass funding from the Ministry of Health, Ministry of Social Development and Ministry of Education.
Additional government funding of $3 million over three years has been allocated for costs associated with the demonstration.

What are the ENABLING GOOD LIVES principles?

In September 2012, the Ministerial Committee on Disability Issues agreed to a vision, that in future, disabled people and their families will have greater choice and control over their supports and lives, and make more use of natural and universally available supports. They also agreed to a set of principles which spell out this change, based on the Enabling Good Lives report, to guide the transformation of the disability support system. Ministers recognised that such a fundamental shift would require change in a number of areas and would take some time.

There are eight principles based on what is needed to improve the quality of life of disabled people.  These are:

  • Self-determination: disabled people are in control of their lives.
  • Beginning early:invest early in families and whānau to support them to be aspirational   for their disabled child, to build community and natural supports and to support disabled children to become independent.
  • Person-centred: disabled people have supports that are tailored to their individual needs and goals, and that take a whole life approach.
  • Ordinary life outcomes: disabled people are supported to live an everyday life in everyday places; and are regarded as citizens with opportunities for learning, employment, having a home and family, and social participation - like others at similar stages of life.
  • Mainstream first: disabled people are supported to access mainstream services before specialist disability services.
  • Mana enhancing: the abilities and contributions of disabled people and their families are recognised and respected.
  • Easy to use: disabled people have supports that are simple to use and flexible.
  • Relationship building: relationships between disabled people, their whanau and community are built and strengthened.

How DOES THE DEMONSTRATION RELATE TO THE NEW MODEL?

The Ministry of Health has developed a New Model for Supporting Disabled People to increase disabled people’s choices and control over what they need to live the lives they want.  Unlike Enabling Good Lives, it only involves the parts of the disability support system that the Ministry of Health is responsible for.

While disabled people have actively engaged in the New Model work programme, Enabling Good Lives further enhances their role in decision-making. Enabling Good Lives also draws in a range of agencies. Over time, it is envisaged that the New Model will become part of the Enabling Good Lives initiative.

What the Ministry of Health is learning from the New Model is likely to be of considerable value to the demonstration.  This information will come from the demonstration of:

  • Enhanced Individualised Funding in the Eastern and Western Bay of Plenty – in which people manage their own support funding, 
  • Local Area Coordination in the Eastern and Western Bay of Plenty – where Local Area Coordinators help people to plan and build a life in their communities,
  • Choice in Community Living in Auckland and Waikato - which provides alternatives to residential care for people with significant support needs.

What is the long term plan?

If successful, experiences from the Enabling Good Lives demonstration and the New Model will feed into future changes to the disability support system.