Budget 2021–22 breakdown

The focus of the 2021–22 Budget for veterans and their families is on wellbeing, suicide prevention and more funding for critical departmental services to ensure veterans and their families can continue to meaningfully contribute to our nation.

There are a range of measures in the Budget that will enable DVA to better respond to the current and future needs of the increasing number of veterans and their families engaging with the department.

As part of the success of changes made to DVA, there has been a doubling of compensation claims received between 2017–18 and 2019–20, with more than 121,000 claims received last financial year.

The Government is providing an additional $98.5 million to address claim waiting times over the next two years. DVA has also received funding for more than 440 additional Australian Public Service staff to bolster capability in the year ahead.

The Government will provide $62.1 million to improve long-term data capability, which will for the first time examine all aspects of an Australian Defence Force (ADF) member’s service — from enlistment to transition — and will allow both Defence and DVA to make better policies to support whole-of-life health, wellbeing and safety outcomes for current and former ADF members and their families.

The Government is also providing $138.3 million over four years to support the lifetime wellbeing of veterans and their families, by providing timely access to targeted services and support for their economic, physical and mental wellbeing. This includes:

  • $23.3 million to continue the successful Wellbeing and Support Program, which provides quality intensive case management for highly vulnerable veterans who are transitioning from the military to civilian life or who have complex care needs;
  • $16.9 million to extend the Provisional Access to Medical Treatment (PAMT) program for a further two years, enabling veterans to access treatment for 20 of the most common service-related conditions while their claim is being processed. PAMT is a critical program that has supported more than 20,000 veterans since the Government introduced it in 2017;
  • $61.9 million for a one-off fee increase for occupational therapists and podiatrists when treating veteran clients, supporting increased availability and quality of care provided;
  • $2.3 million for a pilot program of vocational and psychosocial rehabilitation, without the requirement for any liability claim to be lodged. Evidence gathered from the pilot will inform future initiatives on removing barriers to veterans accessing rehabilitation to encourage early engagement with rehabilitation and voluntary participation;
  • $10.7 million to establish Veteran Wellbeing Centres in Tasmania and South East Queensland, which will connect veterans and their families with a range of core services including transition, employment, health and social connection and builds on the Veteran Wellbeing Centres committed to in Townsville, Perth, Adelaide, Wodonga, Nowra and Darwin;
  • $6.0 million over four years for the provision of access to health care, rehabilitation and compensation for certain conditions for ADF firefighters who served at RAAF Base Point Cook between 1 January 1957 and 31 December 1986;
  • $5.1 million over four years to expand the Family Support Package to more veterans’ families and widowed partners and allowing them greater choice in how to use the services provided through the Package;
  • $7.4 million to bring forward access to rent assistance for eligible Totally and Permanently Incapacitated and other veterans who pay private rent, to begin on 1 January 2022 rather than 20 September 2022;
  • $4.7 million allocated to improve the Building Excellence in Support and Training Program (BEST) grants program by incorporating new service standards for claims advocacy.

The Government has also allocated $32.1 million in this Budget to enable the continued recognition of the service and sacrifice of those who have served or continue to serve in the defence of our nation, including their families. This includes:

  • $19.6 million for international Anzac Day services from 2022 onward, as well as support for domestic commemorative events, including Operation Ivanhoe (the Battle of Nui Le), on the 50th anniversary of the battle on 20 September 2021.
  • $12.5 million for the Office of Australian War Graves over the next four years to address the increasing costs associated with the care and maintenance of the resting places of Australian war dead in more than 75 war cemeteries and war plots in Australia, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, and more than 336,000 official commemorations in almost every community cemetery in Australia, including Christmas Island, Norfolk Island, the Torres Strait and in ten Gardens of Remembrance.

Suicide prevention continues to be a key focus of the Government and the Prime Minister recently announced the establishment of a Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide, with $28.9 million provided to provide DVA with an improved adverse events analysis capability and resources to respond to requests from the Royal Commission and from the National Commissioner for Defence and Veteran Suicide Prevention.

The Veterans’ Affairs 2021–22 Budget package also addresses several of the Productivity Commission’s recommendations contained in the report, A Better Way to Support Veterans, either in part or in full and builds upon the Government’s interim response. This includes some measures already mentioned to support the lifetime health and wellbeing of our veterans and their families, and their transition to civilian life. The Government will finalise any outstanding matters from the Productivity Commission report as part of its response to the Royal Commission once it is finalised.

More information on all DVA’s measures is available on the 2021–22 Budget page on the DVA website.