Key points:
- The disability royal commission is wrapping up after four-and-a-half years
- Emotions ran high at the commission’s ceremonial closing, attended by people with disability from across the country
- The inquiry’s chair says the media hasn’t given the inquiry the attention it deserves
Solidarity with all my fellow disabled folks today.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
“I can’t help but think of all the people … who talked about some of the worst things that have ever happened to them in the hope that we get the big changes that we need,” advocate El Gibbs said.
Uli Cartwright, a man with intellectual disability who gave evidence to the royal commission in November 2022, said he was nervously waiting to see what happened next.
The federal government will be looking at the royal commission’s recommendations “very, very closely”, Social Services Minister Amanda Rishworth said.
In an interview with the ABC, commission chair Ronald Sackville criticised a lack of interest from the media, and said many outlets appeared to give it a “pretty low priority” for coverage.
“A lot of the mainstream media have seemed to place the royal commission and its work as a pretty low priority for reporting — and I do regret this,” he said.
Mr Sackville also said all Australians needed to step up to make sure change happened after the inquiry wrapped up.
The original article contains 634 words, the summary contains 166 words. Saved 74%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
Sorry bot, you’ve stuffed this one right up. That’s a terrible summary.