Robodebt Class Action Settles for $1.2 Billion

Robodebt Class Action Settles for $1.2 Billion
A Medicare and Centrelink office sign is seen at Bondi Junction on March 21, 2016 in Sydney, Australia. (Matt King/Getty Images)
AAP
By AAP
11/16/2020
Updated:
11/16/2020

About 400,000 Australians who had money taken from them unlawfully in the federal government’s robodebt scandal will share in a $1.2 billion court settlement.

While not admitting legal liability, the commonwealth has settled a class action the day a Federal Court trial over the saga had been due to start.

The government agreed on Nov. 16 to pay $112 million in compensation to about 400,000 individuals as well as legal costs.

It also dropped $398 million in debts it had been pursing against class action members.

This comes on top of $720 million in refunds announced in May over faulty income assessments.

This involved matching Australian Taxation Office and Centrelink data to claw back welfare benefits the government said were overpaid.

But the scheme was last year ruled unlawful, with the Federal Court saying Centrelink could not have been satisfied the debt was correct.

Income averaging is no longer used as the sole proof for a possible debt.

Following Monday’s settlement, Prime Minister Scott Morrison pointed to the money it had previously agreed to refund.

“What we had been doing most importantly is we have been settling those payments,” he said.

Gordon Legal partner Andrew Grech labelled the settlement a fair and reasonable outcome.

“No money amount will ever compensate people for the hardship they’ve been through. Many people have been in really difficult circumstances,” he said.

“We’ve listened intently over a long period of time now to the more than 70,000 people that have contacted us and there are some really dreadful stories you hear through that process.”

Federal Labor frontbencher Bill Shorten is continuing to push for a royal commission into the saga.

“We said it was illegal and the government ignored us. We said it was unfair, the government ignored us. We asked for documents in parliament from the government and they ignored us,” he said.

“Why should people have to go to lawyers, put together a class action just to get the government to obey the law?”

The final detail of the overall settlement requires approval by a judge and the case will return to court at a later date.

Gordon Legal said it hoped to finish distributing the repayments by the end of next year.

By Georgie Moore