15.9 C
Byron Shire
July 14, 2026

JobSeeker increase $6.25 per week deeply inadequate, says ACOSS

Latest News

Bumpers to Bruns

Last Sunday, antique chrome and stylish engineering was on display in Brunswick Heads as the Back to Bruns hot rods came to town. Jeff Dawson was there to capture it.

Other News

Energy savings

Two exciting developments will lower household electricity bills, strengthen the local grid, and help power-up our renewable energy. First,...

Inaugural DINGO Music & Arts Festival to light up Bangalow in October

It is a fusion of local and international art, music, performance, food, and thought that will be coming to you in Bangalow as part of the inaugural DINGO Music & Arts Festival across four days from 8 to 11 October.

$30,419 for Byron’s Fletcher Street Cottage

The Festival of Stone sold out in June with over 2,000 people enjoying good music, great food, and the festival’s namesake Stone Brew Beer.

Coorabell art show inspired by natural world

'Elemental: Conversations with Nature' is the title of a forthcoming exhibition featuring eight established and midcareer artists working across painting, drawing, weaving, ceramics, and textiles.  Inspired by the natural world, each artist explores the forms, patterns, materials, and forces found in nature.

Cartoons of the week – 8 July, 2026

The Echo loves your letters and is proud to provide a community forum on the issues that matter most to our readers and the people of the NSW north coast. So don’t be a passive reader, send us your epistles.

A spanner in the works for the Republic

I was changing the oil on Clancy, our barge moored on the Seine not far from the Place de la Concorde (think Marie Antoinette), when I made a big mistake.

Dr Cassandra Goldie, CEO of the Australian Council of Social Service.

With the routine indexation of JobSeeker lifting the payment by $6.25 per week to $401 for a single person, ACOSS has highlighted the support payments need to be substantially raised, as they are ‘deeply inadequate’.

ACOSS CEO Dr Cassandra Goldie said in a statement, ‘This routine indexation simply maintains the existing value of payments – it does not deliver the real increase that people so urgently need’.

Around 1 million people will remain unable to afford essentials like food and medicine because Australia has one of the lowest unemployment payments among wealthy countries.

‘Indexation is cold comfort for people skipping meals, going without essential medication and struggling to afford their energy bills.

‘We urge the Federal Government to build on previous real increases, and lift JobSeeker, Youth Allowance, Parenting Payment and related supports to at least $589 per week so people can cover the basics.

‘Indexation occurs every March and September, making it a routine cost-of-living adjustment rather than meaningful reform that fails to fix the underlying problem.

‘Young people on Youth Allowance receive only $335 per week, and the payment is only indexed once a year in January.

‘The Economic Inclusion Advisory Committee found JobSeeker and Youth Allowance fall far short of all measures of adequacy and must be lifted by more than $120 a week.

‘No one should be put in a position where they have to choose between paying rent and buying food,’ Dr Goldie said.

‘Routine indexation barely scratches the surface and realistically does nothing to address the inadequacy of our income support payments.’



For four decades The Echo has printed the stories some people loved, some people hated, and some pretended not to read. If you want us to keep telling the truth, the real truth, not the sugar-coated version. We’ll need your support to keep the presses rolling.

If you are a local business owner help us and in turn we help you. All The Echo asks for is advertising, not a free ride. It is every advert in The Echo and on www.echo.net.au, which creates the space for all the stories and coverage of community events, happenings and concerns.

If you are a reader you can become a sponsor of The Echo. Your support keeps the us independent.

Even a small one-off or regular donation from you will help keep the echo’s independent voice alive and strong.

Support Us

Become one of the supporters who helps keep independent, local journalism alive in the Byron Shire by contributing anything from as little as the cost of a coffee each month.

You're Wonderful, Thank you for supporting independent journalism in the Byron Shire

You’re supporting The Echo, thank you

Your contribution is keeping independent, local journalism alive in the Northern Rivers.

Because of supporters like you, we can keep every story free for everyone — no paywall, no exceptions. Your money goes directly to funding our newsroom of 40-odd local workers covering the stories that matter to this community.

Tell us what you think, give us your opinion

The Echo loves your letters and comments and is proud to provide a community forum on the issues that matter most to our readers and the people of the NSW north coast. So don’t be a passive reader, email us your epistles at editor@echo.net.au.

The letters deadline for The Echo is noon Friday. Letters longer than 200 words may be cut. The publication of letters is at the discretion of the letters editor. Please remember to include your full name, address and telephone number.

Online comments are no longer available.

Business Lennox Head meets Thursday

The first Business Lennox Head After Hours of the new 2026/27 financial year will be this Thursday at the Lennox Hotel  from 5.30pm, and organisers say, 'we'd love to see you there'.

Mullum residents rally over second ‘woeful’ massive DA

A community gathering last night heard of the concerns around the second attempt to plonk a large block of units at the entrance to Mullumbimby.

Myocum Road road patching starts soon

Byron Council say they are about to start a major program of heavy patching on Myocum Road later this month.

Great Koala National Park feedback report released

Feedback around the NSW government's Great Koala National Park (GKNP) proposal has been published – what are the main themes?