Bugle Newsroom
27 March 2025, 3:00 AM
Independent for Gilmore Kate Dezarnaulds has welcomed household relief in the 2025ā26 Federal Budget, but says lasting change for the South Coast depends on how promises are delivered.
Dezarnaulds praised new investments in health, infrastructure and education, and acknowledged the $7.9 billion bulk billing boost and aged care pay rise as āsteps in the right directionā.
However, she said the test will be whether these measures translate into better access, particularly in rural and coastal towns.
āThereās no doubt this Budget offers some relief,ā she said, ābut for communities like ours, what matters is how these commitments are felt day to day - in housing, health care, and our ability to access the services that city residents take for granted.
āIn places like Nowra, Milton and Ulladulla, the problem isnāt bulk billing,Ā itās finding a GP at all.Ā
āWe need investment in the rural health workforce, not just funding lines.ā
The Budgetās failure to increase Commonwealth Rent Assistance stood out for Dezarnaulds, especially in a region where over 90 per cent of renters are already in housing stress.Ā
āWhen housing affordability is this bad, tinkering around the edges wonāt cut it. We need serious strategies for regional housing - more affordable rentals, more diverse builds, and community-led models like modular homes and build-to-rent.ā
Kate Dezarnaulds.
While the governmentās Help to Buy scheme may help some first-home buyers, she noted it does little to help renters right now. āIn Gilmore, the crisis is immediate ā families are being priced out or pushed out.ā
And while the $13 billion for disaster recovery is significant, she urged the government not to neglect prevention. āIn high-risk regions like Shoalhaven, we need flood-proof roads, fire breaks, and climate-resilient infrastructure ā not just recovery cheques after the damage is done.ā
She also called for a national conversation about home and business insurance in disaster-prone areas. āPeople here are already struggling to get affordable cover. That needs urgent attention.ā
Despite commitments to clean energy, Dezarnaulds says more clarity is needed on how the transition will create jobs and opportunities in regional areas. āGrants for small business energy upgrades are great, but will local businesses even know how to access them?Ā
āAnd whereās the investment in community solar, EV charging and storage? These things should start in regions like ours.ā
Dezarnaulds also questioned the silence on mobile coverage, with no update on the $6.5 million previously pledged for the Princes Highway and Kangaroo Valley black spots. āItās hard to build a future if we canāt even get a phone signal.ā
Pay rises for early educators were another bright spot, but access remains the bigger issue for South Coast families. āItās good to value our educators, but if parents in Kiama or Ulladulla canāt find a place, what use is a pay rise? We need solutions for regional workforce shortages too.ā
While Dezarnaulds believes the Budget includes worthwhile commitments, she is urging a sharper focus on how these translate to communities like Gilmore.
āOne per cent of not much is still not much,ā she said. āItās not about spending more, itās about spending wisely, so it actually improves lives here on the ground.ā
NEWS