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  1. A Beginner’s Guide to Seed-Saving in the Garden

    When seed-saving for the first time, you may feel overwhelmed with information about hybrids, heirlooms, and proper seed-saving techniques. This easy guide takes you from start to finish so you can confidently collect your favorite plants’ seeds. Learn how magical these tiny living things are alongside native plant gardener Jerad Bryant.

    Written by Jerad Bryant
    September 9, 2024

    "Growing plants from start to finish exposes them to your climate’s conditions—as you collect seed year after year, you create new hybrid species that adapt well to your ecoregion."

    epicgardening.com/beginner-see

    #SolarPunkSunday #SeedSaving #HarvestTime #Harvesting #SeedSavers #FoodSecurity #GrowYourOwn #SeedExchange #SharingEconomy #ClimateChangeAdaptation

  2. #SeedSaving Basics

    Have you wondered whether you can replant seeds from your garden? Here is basic information to help you get started with saving seeds.

    by Lois Miklas, January 27, 2025

    "For longtime gardeners, saving seeds from their plants may be a family tradition. For new gardeners, it may only be a matter of time until they wonder if they can save the seeds forming in their vegetables and flowers to grow next year's garden. While the answer is yes, the successful seed saver will need to plan ahead. Here are a few things to consider in getting started with seed saving."

    Read more:
    extension.psu.edu/seed-saving-

    #SolarPunkSunday #PennStateExtension #HarvestTime #Harvesting #SeedSavers #FoodSecurity #GrowYourOwn #SeedExchange #SharingEconomy

  3. Thousands of deaths in the #deathtraps #USA created in #Gaza.

    At least three Palestinian aid seekers were killed by the Israeli occupation fire near the #GHF aid distribution center in Al-Shakoush, on the outskirts of #Rafah, southern #Gaza.
    t.me/QudsNen/189855

    #usacomplicity #gazagenocide #StarvationAsWeapon #warcrimes #IsraelWarCrimes #USAwarcrimes #imperialism

    @[email protected] @israel @[email protected]

  4. Thousands of deaths in the #deathtraps #USA created in #Gaza.

    At least three Palestinian aid seekers were killed by the Israeli occupation fire near the #GHF aid distribution center in Al-Shakoush, on the outskirts of #Rafah, southern #Gaza.
    t.me/QudsNen/189855

    #usacomplicity #gazagenocide #StarvationAsWeapon #warcrimes #IsraelWarCrimes #USAwarcrimes #imperialism

    @[email protected] @israel @[email protected]

  5. Thousands of deaths in the #deathtraps #USA created in #Gaza.

    At least three Palestinian aid seekers were killed by the Israeli occupation fire near the #GHF aid distribution center in Al-Shakoush, on the outskirts of #Rafah, southern #Gaza.
    t.me/QudsNen/189855

    #usacomplicity #gazagenocide #StarvationAsWeapon #warcrimes #IsraelWarCrimes #USAwarcrimes #imperialism

    @[email protected] @israel @[email protected]

  6. Thousands of deaths in the #deathtraps #USA created in #Gaza.

    At least three Palestinian aid seekers were killed by the Israeli occupation fire near the #GHF aid distribution center in Al-Shakoush, on the outskirts of #Rafah, southern #Gaza.
    t.me/QudsNen/189855

    #usacomplicity #gazagenocide #StarvationAsWeapon #warcrimes #IsraelWarCrimes #USAwarcrimes #imperialism

    @[email protected] @israel @[email protected]

  7. Thousands of deaths in the #deathtraps #USA created in #Gaza.

    At least 71 Palestinians, including 22 aid seekers, have been killed and 339 injured in Israeli attacks across Gaza in 24 hours, according to the enclave’s Health Ministry.

    Israel’s war on Gaza has killed 62,966 Palestinians and injured 159,266 since October 7, 2023, the ministry added.

    The total number of aid seekers killed since May 27, when Israel introduced a new aid distribution mechanism through the US-based #GHF, has reached 2,180, with more than 16,046 injured, the statement said.
    aje.io/sxdd8r?update=3912747

    #usacomplicity #gazagenocide #StarvationAsWeapon #warcrimes #IsraelWarCrimes #USAwarcrimes #imperialism
    @palestine @israel

  8. Thousands of deaths in the #deathtraps #USA created in #Gaza.

    At least 71 Palestinians, including 22 aid seekers, have been killed and 339 injured in Israeli attacks across Gaza in 24 hours, according to the enclave’s Health Ministry.

    Israel’s war on Gaza has killed 62,966 Palestinians and injured 159,266 since October 7, 2023, the ministry added.

    The total number of aid seekers killed since May 27, when Israel introduced a new aid distribution mechanism through the US-based #GHF, has reached 2,180, with more than 16,046 injured, the statement said.
    aje.io/sxdd8r?update=3912747

    #usacomplicity #gazagenocide #StarvationAsWeapon #warcrimes #IsraelWarCrimes #USAwarcrimes #imperialism
    @palestine @israel

  9. Thousands of deaths in the #deathtraps #USA created in #Gaza.

    At least 71 Palestinians, including 22 aid seekers, have been killed and 339 injured in Israeli attacks across Gaza in 24 hours, according to the enclave’s Health Ministry.

    Israel’s war on Gaza has killed 62,966 Palestinians and injured 159,266 since October 7, 2023, the ministry added.

    The total number of aid seekers killed since May 27, when Israel introduced a new aid distribution mechanism through the US-based #GHF, has reached 2,180, with more than 16,046 injured, the statement said.
    aje.io/sxdd8r?update=3912747

    #usacomplicity #gazagenocide #StarvationAsWeapon #warcrimes #IsraelWarCrimes #USAwarcrimes #imperialism
    @palestine @israel

  10. Thousands of deaths in the #deathtraps #USA created in #Gaza.

    At least 71 Palestinians, including 22 aid seekers, have been killed and 339 injured in Israeli attacks across Gaza in 24 hours, according to the enclave’s Health Ministry.

    Israel’s war on Gaza has killed 62,966 Palestinians and injured 159,266 since October 7, 2023, the ministry added.

    The total number of aid seekers killed since May 27, when Israel introduced a new aid distribution mechanism through the US-based #GHF, has reached 2,180, with more than 16,046 injured, the statement said.
    aje.io/sxdd8r?update=3912747

    #usacomplicity #gazagenocide #StarvationAsWeapon #warcrimes #IsraelWarCrimes #USAwarcrimes #imperialism
    @palestine @israel

  11. Thousands of deaths in the #deathtraps #USA created in #Gaza.

    At least 71 Palestinians, including 22 aid seekers, have been killed and 339 injured in Israeli attacks across Gaza in 24 hours, according to the enclave’s Health Ministry.

    Israel’s war on Gaza has killed 62,966 Palestinians and injured 159,266 since October 7, 2023, the ministry added.

    The total number of aid seekers killed since May 27, when Israel introduced a new aid distribution mechanism through the US-based #GHF, has reached 2,180, with more than 16,046 injured, the statement said.
    aje.io/sxdd8r?update=3912747

    #usacomplicity #gazagenocide #StarvationAsWeapon #warcrimes #IsraelWarCrimes #USAwarcrimes #imperialism
    @palestine @israel

  12. #Berlin has reported a marked increase in attacks on asylum seekers and refugee shelters, amid a sharp rise in far-right crime and a hardening of German migration policy.

    Official figures provided at the request of two local Green party lawmakers showed there were 77 assaults on asylum seekers and #refugees in 2024 and eight instances of deliberate damage to residences housing them.

    This compares with 32 targeted attacks on people and none on residences in 2023, one of the deputies, Ario Ebrahimpour Mirzaie, told the news agency dpa.

    As a result of the assaults, 34 people needed treatment in hospital, according to the official data. These included 16 women, 14 men, two girls and two males whose age was not reported.

    “The number of insults, threats and attacks against refugees has been worryingly high for years and it is outrageous that these conditions are accepted with a shrug by many politicians and members of the public,”

    The Conservative leader, Friedrich Merz, who is due to be sworn in as chancellor on 6 May, campaigned on dramatically tightening border policy and bringing irregular immigration to a halt, after stricter measures already undertaken by the centre-left-led predecessor government.
    theguardian.com/world/2025/apr
    #racism #extremeright #Germany #fascists #institutionalracism

  13. #Berlin has reported a marked increase in attacks on asylum seekers and refugee shelters, amid a sharp rise in far-right crime and a hardening of German migration policy.

    Official figures provided at the request of two local Green party lawmakers showed there were 77 assaults on asylum seekers and #refugees in 2024 and eight instances of deliberate damage to residences housing them.

    This compares with 32 targeted attacks on people and none on residences in 2023, one of the deputies, Ario Ebrahimpour Mirzaie, told the news agency dpa.

    As a result of the assaults, 34 people needed treatment in hospital, according to the official data. These included 16 women, 14 men, two girls and two males whose age was not reported.

    “The number of insults, threats and attacks against refugees has been worryingly high for years and it is outrageous that these conditions are accepted with a shrug by many politicians and members of the public,”

    The Conservative leader, Friedrich Merz, who is due to be sworn in as chancellor on 6 May, campaigned on dramatically tightening border policy and bringing irregular immigration to a halt, after stricter measures already undertaken by the centre-left-led predecessor government.
    theguardian.com/world/2025/apr
    #racism #extremeright #Germany #fascists #institutionalracism

  14. #Berlin has reported a marked increase in attacks on asylum seekers and refugee shelters, amid a sharp rise in far-right crime and a hardening of German migration policy.

    Official figures provided at the request of two local Green party lawmakers showed there were 77 assaults on asylum seekers and #refugees in 2024 and eight instances of deliberate damage to residences housing them.

    This compares with 32 targeted attacks on people and none on residences in 2023, one of the deputies, Ario Ebrahimpour Mirzaie, told the news agency dpa.

    As a result of the assaults, 34 people needed treatment in hospital, according to the official data. These included 16 women, 14 men, two girls and two males whose age was not reported.

    “The number of insults, threats and attacks against refugees has been worryingly high for years and it is outrageous that these conditions are accepted with a shrug by many politicians and members of the public,”

    The Conservative leader, Friedrich Merz, who is due to be sworn in as chancellor on 6 May, campaigned on dramatically tightening border policy and bringing irregular immigration to a halt, after stricter measures already undertaken by the centre-left-led predecessor government.
    theguardian.com/world/2025/apr
    #racism #extremeright #Germany #fascists #institutionalracism

  15. #Berlin has reported a marked increase in attacks on asylum seekers and refugee shelters, amid a sharp rise in far-right crime and a hardening of German migration policy.

    Official figures provided at the request of two local Green party lawmakers showed there were 77 assaults on asylum seekers and #refugees in 2024 and eight instances of deliberate damage to residences housing them.

    This compares with 32 targeted attacks on people and none on residences in 2023, one of the deputies, Ario Ebrahimpour Mirzaie, told the news agency dpa.

    As a result of the assaults, 34 people needed treatment in hospital, according to the official data. These included 16 women, 14 men, two girls and two males whose age was not reported.

    “The number of insults, threats and attacks against refugees has been worryingly high for years and it is outrageous that these conditions are accepted with a shrug by many politicians and members of the public,”

    The Conservative leader, Friedrich Merz, who is due to be sworn in as chancellor on 6 May, campaigned on dramatically tightening border policy and bringing irregular immigration to a halt, after stricter measures already undertaken by the centre-left-led predecessor government.
    theguardian.com/world/2025/apr
    #racism #extremeright #Germany #fascists #institutionalracism

  16. #Berlin has reported a marked increase in attacks on asylum seekers and refugee shelters, amid a sharp rise in far-right crime and a hardening of German migration policy.

    Official figures provided at the request of two local Green party lawmakers showed there were 77 assaults on asylum seekers and #refugees in 2024 and eight instances of deliberate damage to residences housing them.

    This compares with 32 targeted attacks on people and none on residences in 2023, one of the deputies, Ario Ebrahimpour Mirzaie, told the news agency dpa.

    As a result of the assaults, 34 people needed treatment in hospital, according to the official data. These included 16 women, 14 men, two girls and two males whose age was not reported.

    “The number of insults, threats and attacks against refugees has been worryingly high for years and it is outrageous that these conditions are accepted with a shrug by many politicians and members of the public,”

    The Conservative leader, Friedrich Merz, who is due to be sworn in as chancellor on 6 May, campaigned on dramatically tightening border policy and bringing irregular immigration to a halt, after stricter measures already undertaken by the centre-left-led predecessor government.
    theguardian.com/world/2025/apr
    #racism #extremeright #Germany #fascists #institutionalracism

  17. Almost 6 weeks til go-time, so speaker details are imminent... Keep an eye out to find out who's going to enlighten us at Writing the Occult: Seekers on 30 May.

    Join us as we get into the minds of those who seek proof. Whether they’re amateur ghost hunters on weekend urban explorations or official bodies seeking science behind the phenomena, they’re welcome in our school. Let’s go seek some proof.

    Tix now on sale: writingtheoccult.carrd.co

    #writing #writers #ufo #ghosthunter #paranormal

  18. #Joan and #Geras have an announcement to make...

    WE'RE PREGNANT!!! 🚼​

    The due date for our little #Seeker-#Xaela mix is July 28! 💙​😻​🎇​

    #FFXIVMiqote #miqote #GPosers #FFXIVRP #RP #FFXIV #FFXIVScreenshots #screenshots #WOLPosting

  19. Source: CBC #news #pei

    Matching francophone job seekers with employers on P.E.I. aim of new program
    A new employment support service will soon be officially launching in francophone communities across P.E.I. The program will offer employment guidance and support to francophone job seekers. CBC News: Compass host Louise Martin talked with Emmanuelle Camara and Deb O'Hanley of the Francophone Economic Development Council of P.E.I.
    cbc.ca/player/play/9.7197258?c

  20. A Foxglove which has seeded itself next to our Lemon Verbena and is currently growing up the middle of it.

    The white-haloed black dots on each flower are thought to help guide bees inside to boost pollination.

    Lemon Verbena leaves smell amazing if you rub them between your fingers - like a mix of lemongrass and eucalyptus.

    #BloomScrolling #Flowers #Plants #Foxglove #NaturePhotography

  21. Anyone Can Be Your NDIS Support Worker. Who Is Keeping You Safe?

    Reflections from several years on the scheme.

    I have been on the NDIS for several years. A recent re-hiring process clarified something I had long suspected. The scheme has a workforce problem, and participants are the ones bearing the brunt.

    There Is No Mandatory Registration Requirement

    Under current Australian law, participants who self-manage or plan-manage their NDIS funding can hire any person as a support worker. Independent support Workers require no registration or minimum training standards.

    The worker who enters your home, learns your medical history, handles your medications, and has significant authority over your daily life may have no formal preparation for any of it.

    The NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission exists and handles serious complaints, including abuse, neglect, and criminal conduct. Boundary violations, confidentiality breaches, and chronic unpreparedness that fall below that threshold leave participants largely without recourse. Skilled and ethical workers bring those qualities from their own formation and prior training. When those qualities are absent, the participant discovers this after the fact, and any remedy is slow, uncertain, and theirs alone to pursue.

    That is the baseline. Everything that follows is built on it.

    The Dog

    My service dog performs specific medical functions. His effectiveness depends on remaining focused and oriented to me.

    Some workers reach for him the moment they walk through the door. They do not ask.

    Touching a service animal without permission is a safety violation and, in some contexts, carries legal weight under Australian disability discrimination law. A worker entering the home of a participant with a service animal has a professional obligation to understand what that animal does and what it requires. That preparation belongs to the provider. Its absence transfers the risk to the participant.

    This is a professional standard.

    What the Certificate III Does Not Cover

    The Certificate III in Individual Support is the standard qualification in this sector and takes between six and twelve months. For many workers, it is completed online with minimal supervised practice hours, and it does not prepare them for the clinical and ethical complexity of supporting people with invisible or fluctuating conditions.

    A worker with their cert may have no framework for how fatigue functions in ME/CFS or autistic burnout. Why pushing through is sometimes dangerous, why capacity varies day to day in ways that cannot be read from a plan approved six months ago, and why the participant’s account of their own condition is the primary source of accurate information.

    Workers who arrive without that preparation fill the gap with assumptions. Correcting those assumptions, educating the person sent to support them, translating their own experience into terms the worker finds legible — this falls to the participant. That work is skilled and exhausting, and no NDIS plan funds it.

    A Plan Is Not a Person

    An NDIS plan records approved supports, written at a point in time by a planner who may have spent an hour with the participant. What it cannot capture is what a Tuesday looks like after a bad night, or how that changes what Wednesday can hold.

    Workers who treat the plan as a complete picture end up supporting the document. When the participant’s actual day diverges from what the plan implies, some workers become confused, inflexible, or subtly sceptical. The participant then carries that response throughout the day.

    Confidentiality Is Not Discretionary

    Support workers enter your home and learn about your health, medications, finances, and relationships. The ethical obligations around that information are clear. Workers routinely underestimate them.

    Information moves in cars and waiting rooms, in casual exchanges during handover. Shared without consent in contexts the participant did not choose, each instance is a breach — and the pattern across a working relationship represents a significant, under-reported ethical problem in the sector.

    Providers who do not train explicitly for this are not taking their duty of care seriously. The Commission’s framework addresses the most serious breaches. Below that threshold, the everyday end goes largely unmonitored.

    A Diagnosis Is a Starting Point

    Workers who arrive having already decided how a participant communicates — based on a diagnostic label rather than a conversation — are making a category error with professional consequences.

    Autism produces significant variation across individuals, as do acquired brain injury, cerebral palsy, and many mental health conditions. Experience with one person transfers little to the next. The participant is the authority on their own communication and needs. Workers who approach that through the filter of what they already think they know require the participant to work harder to be accurately seen.

    Being Present Is the Job

    A worker on their phone during support hours has decided where their attention belongs. That decision reflects on the worker and the provider, and on a regulatory environment that permits it without consequence.

    Participant time is funded. Divided attention during that time is a failure of basic professional conduct.

    Punctuality Has Clinical Stakes

    For participants with fatigue conditions, medication schedules, or appointment windows that cannot flex, a late worker is sometimes no worker at all. The window closes, an appointment is missed, and the energy available at nine o’clock is gone by ten.

    Workers who treat punctuality as a matter of general courtesy have not been told what the costs of late arrival are in this context. Providers should tell them, in writing, before they begin.

    Handover Exists for a Reason

    When workers do not read handover notes, participants repeat themselves. Questions get asked that the notes had already answered. Avoidable errors get made. The first portion of support time becomes unpaid orientation, delivered by the person the support was supposed to serve.

    Reading the handover is the floor — it signals that a worker understands preparation begins before they arrive.

    The Re-Hiring Process

    When a support worker leaves, the participant does not simply wait for a replacement. A position description must be written, applications reviewed, interviews conducted, and a hiring decision made with incomplete information about a person who will have access to their home, their medical records, and significant portions of their daily life.

    After that comes orientation, and the contextual knowledge that made the previous support functional has to be rebuilt from the beginning.

    None of this is funded. The NDIS has no category for the labour of maintaining access to support, and for participants with high support needs or complex conditions, that labour is substantial.

    What Competent Support Looks Like

    Workers who are good at this job arrive having read the available documentation, ask before they act, and give more weight to what the participant tells them about their own needs than to any plan or file. When something changes during a shift, the response is immediate and adaptive.

    Their presence does not generate additional work for the participant — that is the measure. Support that requires the participant to manage, educate, or compensate for a worker’s preparation gaps has redistributed the load rather than reduced it.

    What Needs to Change

    Mandatory registration for all NDIS workers, regardless of how a participant’s plan is managed, would create a baseline of accountability. Genuine consequences for ethical breaches — including low-level, chronic ones — would change the conditions under which workers operate.

    Revised training requirements are long overdue: supervised hours in complex support settings, explicit coverage of invisible conditions, service animal protocols, confidentiality obligations, and fluctuating capacity. These are the preparations the role demands.

    Wages need to rise. Turnover in this sector is directly linked to pay, and the continuity of support is a safety condition for many participants — the relationship carries clinical knowledge that cannot be quickly or cheaply reconstructed.

    Participants also need a complaints mechanism they can use without fear of losing their support. Accountability cannot depend on participants absorbing the risk of speaking up.

    The Principle and the Practice

    Participant choice and control sit at the centre of the NDIS. On paper, participants are experts in their own lives and directors of their own support.

    That principle requires a workforce framework capable of supporting it. At present, workers enter participants’ lives with significant authority over their access, safety, and daily functioning, operating under training requirements and accountability mechanisms that do not match the weight of what they are being asked to do.

    Positioned at the centre of a scheme designed around their needs, the participant often ends up holding the system together when it fails to hold itself together.

    That is worth saying clearly, and worth changing.

    Share this with someone who trains support workers, manages a disability provider, or influences workforce policy. The problem is documented. The changes required are known. What is missing is the will to treat this workforce and the people it serves with the seriousness they both deserve. #NDIS #DisabilityRights #DisabilitySupport #SupportWorkers #DisabledPeople #DisabilityAdvocacy #Accessibility #AusPol #Australia

  22. Anyone Can Be Your NDIS Support Worker. Who Is Keeping You Safe?

    Reflections from several years on the scheme.

    I have been on the NDIS for several years. A recent re-hiring process clarified something I had long suspected. The scheme has a workforce problem, and participants are the ones bearing the brunt.

    There Is No Mandatory Registration Requirement

    Under current Australian law, participants who self-manage or plan-manage their NDIS funding can hire any person as a support worker. Independent support Workers require no registration or minimum training standards.

    The worker who enters your home, learns your medical history, handles your medications, and has significant authority over your daily life may have no formal preparation for any of it.

    The NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission exists and handles serious complaints, including abuse, neglect, and criminal conduct. Boundary violations, confidentiality breaches, and chronic unpreparedness that fall below that threshold leave participants largely without recourse. Skilled and ethical workers bring those qualities from their own formation and prior training. When those qualities are absent, the participant discovers this after the fact, and any remedy is slow, uncertain, and theirs alone to pursue.

    That is the baseline. Everything that follows is built on it.

    The Dog

    My service dog performs specific medical functions. His effectiveness depends on remaining focused and oriented to me.

    Some workers reach for him the moment they walk through the door. They do not ask.

    Touching a service animal without permission is a safety violation and, in some contexts, carries legal weight under Australian disability discrimination law. A worker entering the home of a participant with a service animal has a professional obligation to understand what that animal does and what it requires. That preparation belongs to the provider. Its absence transfers the risk to the participant.

    This is a professional standard.

    What the Certificate III Does Not Cover

    The Certificate III in Individual Support is the standard qualification in this sector and takes between six and twelve months. For many workers, it is completed online with minimal supervised practice hours, and it does not prepare them for the clinical and ethical complexity of supporting people with invisible or fluctuating conditions.

    A worker with their cert may have no framework for how fatigue functions in ME/CFS or autistic burnout. Why pushing through is sometimes dangerous, why capacity varies day to day in ways that cannot be read from a plan approved six months ago, and why the participant’s account of their own condition is the primary source of accurate information.

    Workers who arrive without that preparation fill the gap with assumptions. Correcting those assumptions, educating the person sent to support them, translating their own experience into terms the worker finds legible — this falls to the participant. That work is skilled and exhausting, and no NDIS plan funds it.

    A Plan Is Not a Person

    An NDIS plan records approved supports, written at a point in time by a planner who may have spent an hour with the participant. What it cannot capture is what a Tuesday looks like after a bad night, or how that changes what Wednesday can hold.

    Workers who treat the plan as a complete picture end up supporting the document. When the participant’s actual day diverges from what the plan implies, some workers become confused, inflexible, or subtly sceptical. The participant then carries that response throughout the day.

    Confidentiality Is Not Discretionary

    Support workers enter your home and learn about your health, medications, finances, and relationships. The ethical obligations around that information are clear. Workers routinely underestimate them.

    Information moves in cars and waiting rooms, in casual exchanges during handover. Shared without consent in contexts the participant did not choose, each instance is a breach — and the pattern across a working relationship represents a significant, under-reported ethical problem in the sector.

    Providers who do not train explicitly for this are not taking their duty of care seriously. The Commission’s framework addresses the most serious breaches. Below that threshold, the everyday end goes largely unmonitored.

    A Diagnosis Is a Starting Point

    Workers who arrive having already decided how a participant communicates — based on a diagnostic label rather than a conversation — are making a category error with professional consequences.

    Autism produces significant variation across individuals, as do acquired brain injury, cerebral palsy, and many mental health conditions. Experience with one person transfers little to the next. The participant is the authority on their own communication and needs. Workers who approach that through the filter of what they already think they know require the participant to work harder to be accurately seen.

    Being Present Is the Job

    A worker on their phone during support hours has decided where their attention belongs. That decision reflects on the worker and the provider, and on a regulatory environment that permits it without consequence.

    Participant time is funded. Divided attention during that time is a failure of basic professional conduct.

    Punctuality Has Clinical Stakes

    For participants with fatigue conditions, medication schedules, or appointment windows that cannot flex, a late worker is sometimes no worker at all. The window closes, an appointment is missed, and the energy available at nine o’clock is gone by ten.

    Workers who treat punctuality as a matter of general courtesy have not been told what the costs of late arrival are in this context. Providers should tell them, in writing, before they begin.

    Handover Exists for a Reason

    When workers do not read handover notes, participants repeat themselves. Questions get asked that the notes had already answered. Avoidable errors get made. The first portion of support time becomes unpaid orientation, delivered by the person the support was supposed to serve.

    Reading the handover is the floor — it signals that a worker understands preparation begins before they arrive.

    The Re-Hiring Process

    When a support worker leaves, the participant does not simply wait for a replacement. A position description must be written, applications reviewed, interviews conducted, and a hiring decision made with incomplete information about a person who will have access to their home, their medical records, and significant portions of their daily life.

    After that comes orientation, and the contextual knowledge that made the previous support functional has to be rebuilt from the beginning.

    None of this is funded. The NDIS has no category for the labour of maintaining access to support, and for participants with high support needs or complex conditions, that labour is substantial.

    What Competent Support Looks Like

    Workers who are good at this job arrive having read the available documentation, ask before they act, and give more weight to what the participant tells them about their own needs than to any plan or file. When something changes during a shift, the response is immediate and adaptive.

    Their presence does not generate additional work for the participant — that is the measure. Support that requires the participant to manage, educate, or compensate for a worker’s preparation gaps has redistributed the load rather than reduced it.

    What Needs to Change

    Mandatory registration for all NDIS workers, regardless of how a participant’s plan is managed, would create a baseline of accountability. Genuine consequences for ethical breaches — including low-level, chronic ones — would change the conditions under which workers operate.

    Revised training requirements are long overdue: supervised hours in complex support settings, explicit coverage of invisible conditions, service animal protocols, confidentiality obligations, and fluctuating capacity. These are the preparations the role demands.

    Wages need to rise. Turnover in this sector is directly linked to pay, and the continuity of support is a safety condition for many participants — the relationship carries clinical knowledge that cannot be quickly or cheaply reconstructed.

    Participants also need a complaints mechanism they can use without fear of losing their support. Accountability cannot depend on participants absorbing the risk of speaking up.

    The Principle and the Practice

    Participant choice and control sit at the centre of the NDIS. On paper, participants are experts in their own lives and directors of their own support.

    That principle requires a workforce framework capable of supporting it. At present, workers enter participants’ lives with significant authority over their access, safety, and daily functioning, operating under training requirements and accountability mechanisms that do not match the weight of what they are being asked to do.

    Positioned at the centre of a scheme designed around their needs, the participant often ends up holding the system together when it fails to hold itself together.

    That is worth saying clearly, and worth changing.

    Share this with someone who trains support workers, manages a disability provider, or influences workforce policy. The problem is documented. The changes required are known. What is missing is the will to treat this workforce and the people it serves with the seriousness they both deserve. #NDIS #DisabilityRights #DisabilitySupport #SupportWorkers #DisabledPeople #DisabilityAdvocacy #Accessibility #AusPol #Australia

  23. Anyone Can Be Your NDIS Support Worker. Who Is Keeping You Safe?

    Reflections from several years on the scheme.

    I have been on the NDIS for several years. A recent re-hiring process clarified something I had long suspected. The scheme has a workforce problem, and participants are the ones bearing the brunt.

    There Is No Mandatory Registration Requirement

    Under current Australian law, participants who self-manage or plan-manage their NDIS funding can hire any person as a support worker. Independent support Workers require no registration or minimum training standards.

    The worker who enters your home, learns your medical history, handles your medications, and has significant authority over your daily life may have no formal preparation for any of it.

    The NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission exists and handles serious complaints, including abuse, neglect, and criminal conduct. Boundary violations, confidentiality breaches, and chronic unpreparedness that fall below that threshold leave participants largely without recourse. Skilled and ethical workers bring those qualities from their own formation and prior training. When those qualities are absent, the participant discovers this after the fact, and any remedy is slow, uncertain, and theirs alone to pursue.

    That is the baseline. Everything that follows is built on it.

    The Dog

    My service dog performs specific medical functions. His effectiveness depends on remaining focused and oriented to me.

    Some workers reach for him the moment they walk through the door. They do not ask.

    Touching a service animal without permission is a safety violation and, in some contexts, carries legal weight under Australian disability discrimination law. A worker entering the home of a participant with a service animal has a professional obligation to understand what that animal does and what it requires. That preparation belongs to the provider. Its absence transfers the risk to the participant.

    This is a professional standard.

    What the Certificate III Does Not Cover

    The Certificate III in Individual Support is the standard qualification in this sector and takes between six and twelve months. For many workers, it is completed online with minimal supervised practice hours, and it does not prepare them for the clinical and ethical complexity of supporting people with invisible or fluctuating conditions.

    A worker with their cert may have no framework for how fatigue functions in ME/CFS or autistic burnout. Why pushing through is sometimes dangerous, why capacity varies day to day in ways that cannot be read from a plan approved six months ago, and why the participant’s account of their own condition is the primary source of accurate information.

    Workers who arrive without that preparation fill the gap with assumptions. Correcting those assumptions, educating the person sent to support them, translating their own experience into terms the worker finds legible — this falls to the participant. That work is skilled and exhausting, and no NDIS plan funds it.

    A Plan Is Not a Person

    An NDIS plan records approved supports, written at a point in time by a planner who may have spent an hour with the participant. What it cannot capture is what a Tuesday looks like after a bad night, or how that changes what Wednesday can hold.

    Workers who treat the plan as a complete picture end up supporting the document. When the participant’s actual day diverges from what the plan implies, some workers become confused, inflexible, or subtly sceptical. The participant then carries that response throughout the day.

    Confidentiality Is Not Discretionary

    Support workers enter your home and learn about your health, medications, finances, and relationships. The ethical obligations around that information are clear. Workers routinely underestimate them.

    Information moves in cars and waiting rooms, in casual exchanges during handover. Shared without consent in contexts the participant did not choose, each instance is a breach — and the pattern across a working relationship represents a significant, under-reported ethical problem in the sector.

    Providers who do not train explicitly for this are not taking their duty of care seriously. The Commission’s framework addresses the most serious breaches. Below that threshold, the everyday end goes largely unmonitored.

    A Diagnosis Is a Starting Point

    Workers who arrive having already decided how a participant communicates — based on a diagnostic label rather than a conversation — are making a category error with professional consequences.

    Autism produces significant variation across individuals, as do acquired brain injury, cerebral palsy, and many mental health conditions. Experience with one person transfers little to the next. The participant is the authority on their own communication and needs. Workers who approach that through the filter of what they already think they know require the participant to work harder to be accurately seen.

    Being Present Is the Job

    A worker on their phone during support hours has decided where their attention belongs. That decision reflects on the worker and the provider, and on a regulatory environment that permits it without consequence.

    Participant time is funded. Divided attention during that time is a failure of basic professional conduct.

    Punctuality Has Clinical Stakes

    For participants with fatigue conditions, medication schedules, or appointment windows that cannot flex, a late worker is sometimes no worker at all. The window closes, an appointment is missed, and the energy available at nine o’clock is gone by ten.

    Workers who treat punctuality as a matter of general courtesy have not been told what the costs of late arrival are in this context. Providers should tell them, in writing, before they begin.

    Handover Exists for a Reason

    When workers do not read handover notes, participants repeat themselves. Questions get asked that the notes had already answered. Avoidable errors get made. The first portion of support time becomes unpaid orientation, delivered by the person the support was supposed to serve.

    Reading the handover is the floor — it signals that a worker understands preparation begins before they arrive.

    The Re-Hiring Process

    When a support worker leaves, the participant does not simply wait for a replacement. A position description must be written, applications reviewed, interviews conducted, and a hiring decision made with incomplete information about a person who will have access to their home, their medical records, and significant portions of their daily life.

    After that comes orientation, and the contextual knowledge that made the previous support functional has to be rebuilt from the beginning.

    None of this is funded. The NDIS has no category for the labour of maintaining access to support, and for participants with high support needs or complex conditions, that labour is substantial.

    What Competent Support Looks Like

    Workers who are good at this job arrive having read the available documentation, ask before they act, and give more weight to what the participant tells them about their own needs than to any plan or file. When something changes during a shift, the response is immediate and adaptive.

    Their presence does not generate additional work for the participant — that is the measure. Support that requires the participant to manage, educate, or compensate for a worker’s preparation gaps has redistributed the load rather than reduced it.

    What Needs to Change

    Mandatory registration for all NDIS workers, regardless of how a participant’s plan is managed, would create a baseline of accountability. Genuine consequences for ethical breaches — including low-level, chronic ones — would change the conditions under which workers operate.

    Revised training requirements are long overdue: supervised hours in complex support settings, explicit coverage of invisible conditions, service animal protocols, confidentiality obligations, and fluctuating capacity. These are the preparations the role demands.

    Wages need to rise. Turnover in this sector is directly linked to pay, and the continuity of support is a safety condition for many participants — the relationship carries clinical knowledge that cannot be quickly or cheaply reconstructed.

    Participants also need a complaints mechanism they can use without fear of losing their support. Accountability cannot depend on participants absorbing the risk of speaking up.

    The Principle and the Practice

    Participant choice and control sit at the centre of the NDIS. On paper, participants are experts in their own lives and directors of their own support.

    That principle requires a workforce framework capable of supporting it. At present, workers enter participants’ lives with significant authority over their access, safety, and daily functioning, operating under training requirements and accountability mechanisms that do not match the weight of what they are being asked to do.

    Positioned at the centre of a scheme designed around their needs, the participant often ends up holding the system together when it fails to hold itself together.

    That is worth saying clearly, and worth changing.

    Share this with someone who trains support workers, manages a disability provider, or influences workforce policy. The problem is documented. The changes required are known. What is missing is the will to treat this workforce and the people it serves with the seriousness they both deserve. #NDIS #DisabilityRights #DisabilitySupport #SupportWorkers #DisabledPeople #DisabilityAdvocacy #Accessibility #AusPol #Australia

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    Far right politicians are already celebrating that “the era of deportations has begun"

    theguardian.com/world/2026/mar

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    ParaPsyCon 7 brings psychics, ghost hunters and cryptid seekers to Mansfield’s haunted prison

    ashlandsource.com/2026/05/13/p

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