Robodebt scheme

The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) has urged Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull to immediately halt Centrelink鈥檚 automated debt recovery system, protect government whistleblowers and end an ongoing 鈥渁buse of government power鈥 that is causing distress and financial hardship to some of Australia鈥檚 most vulnerable people.

ACOSS joined a wide range of charities, welfare groups, legal bodies, unions and advocacy services, which have all expressed serious reservations about the accuracy and fairness of the debt recovery system.

The government has not made a mistake with the Centrelink robo-debt notices. It knows it is sending out incorrect notices.

Centrelink staff warned management the notices would be wrong and the new debt recovery system would incorrectly claim overpayments.

The federal Coalition government has unleashed robots to illegally extort $4.5 billion from poor people. The money for politicians鈥 perks, tax dodging by the rich and corporate hand-outs 鈥 such as the $1 billion dollars given to coal giant Adani 鈥 has to come from somewhere.

I became aware that Centrelink were trying to pin a cooked-up 鈥渞obo-debt鈥 of $5558 on me through a text message from the aptly named debt collection agency.

There resources about how to dispute a Centrelink debt letter, including GetUp! that sends a bunch of letters to key places in one go.聽

It would surprise the federal Coalition government 鈥 that assumes we dislike welfare recipients as much as it does 鈥 that one of its biggest problems at the start of the year is the Centrelink debt fiasco.

Over the past six months, 170,000 people received debt notices from Centrelink, with the number gradually rising to 20,000 a week.

By comparison, .