Jozef Imrich, name worthy of Kafka, has his finger on the pulse of any irony of interest and shares his findings to keep you in-the-know with the savviest trend setters and infomaniacs.
''I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center.''
-Kurt Vonnegut
‘Parasitic pen pushers’ are dodging paying taxes and ripping off people with disabilities — and getting paid a half-a-billion dollars to do it.
Parasitic pen pushers” are dodging paying taxes and ripping off people with disabilities and getting paid a half-a-billion dollars to do it.
The powerful Fraud Fusion Taskforce has set its sights on hundreds of suspect NDIS “plan managers” after investigators identified evidence of crooked behaviour ranging from theft from people with disabilities through to systemic tax fraud.
There is evidence of stealing from NDIS participants, intimidating and coercing them, stealing their identities and, in the worst cases, they are involved in organised crime.
At least 343 of the 1500 plan managers across the country have not been paying any tax – one arm of the government paying them half a billion dollars to manage NDIS plans and “the other hand not recording any income”.
NDIS Minister Bill Shorten says the unscrupulous managers – flagged by the ATO for failing to pay their taxes – are “public enemy number one” after the year-long investigation by his crack team.
“Understanding the sheer brazenness of the immoral conduct, I don’t even know whether to laugh or cry,” he said.
“Frankly I am shocked at what my taskforce is finding. When Labor was in opposition I said that fraud was plaguing the NDIS and the former Liberal Government ignored it,” Mr Shorten said.
“You can’t just drive by or put your head in the sand. That doesn’t serve the best interests of people with disability or the Australian taxpayer.
“While there are some excellent plan managers, there are just too many dodgy outfits defrauding the NDIS and my plan is to catch and convict.”
The NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission has already banned 11 plan managers from the Scheme since the inception of the Fraud Fusion Taskforce in November 2022.
In addition, hundreds of plan managers are under investigation for behaviours ranging from facilitating incorrect use of plans by participants, to money laundering and serious organised crime, the Minister said.