Local Ipswich NewsLocal Ipswich NewsLocal Ipswich News
  • Home
  • News & Editorials
    • Community
    • Ipswich Arts
    • Local Seniors
    • Local Defence
    • Sport
    • Business
  • Ipswich Events
  • Read Online
  • Pickup Locations
  • Contact Us
Search
Reading: NDIS watchdog becoming more proactive
Share
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
Local Ipswich NewsLocal Ipswich News
  • News & Editorial
  • Community News
  • Local Seniors
  • Local Business
  • Ipswich Events & Arts
  • Sport
  • Local Defence
Search
  • Home
  • Read Online
  • Pickup Locations
  • Get Home Delivery
  • Home
  • News & Editorial
Copyright © 2023 Local News Group | Local Ipswich News | Ipswich Local Magazine | Logan Local Magazine
Website by Local News Group Digital
Local Ipswich News > Blog > Disability News > NDIS watchdog becoming more proactive
Disability News

NDIS watchdog becoming more proactive

Local Ipswich News
Local Ipswich News
Published: November 19, 2025
Share
Safety, dignity, and trust are non-negotiable.
Safety, dignity, and trust are non-negotiable.
SHARE

THE NDIS Quality and Safeguards Commission has unveiled its 2025-2027 Statement of Intent, signalling a stronger, smarter, and more assertive era for the national disability regulator.

The message is clear: safety, dignity, and trust are non-negotiable – and the Commission plans to use every tool at its disposal to protect them.

Commissioner Louise Glanville described the shift as the beginning of a “new phase of maturity and accountability”, with the agency moving beyond box-ticking compliance towards data-driven, risk-responsive regulation.

“We’re becoming a more proactive, strategic regulator – one that uses evidence to act early and act decisively,” she said.

- Advertisement -

Under the plan, the Commission will roll out a Strategic Roadmap 2025-27, setting measurable goals to lift quality and integrity as the NDIS continues to grow. Fraud, poor-quality supports, and unsafe practices are squarely in its sights.

Quality, the Commission insists, is not just paperwork – it’s a human right. Providers will be expected to show genuine commitment to continuous improvement, supported through clearer guidance, education, and engagement.

The Statement also reaffirms a crackdown on NDIS fraud, which the Commission bluntly calls both a financial and “trust” issue. Working with the Fraud Fusion Taskforce, it will continue to identify, disrupt, and penalise exploitative behaviour to ensure funding goes where it belongs – into participant outcomes, not back pockets.

Importantly, the Commission says it will keep listening.

Participants, families, and advocates — including those from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander, culturally diverse, LGBTIQA+, and remote communities – will continue to shape how regulation evolves.

If all goes to plan, the next two years will see a regulator that’s not only firmer but also fairer.

Blasting off on challenge to make future space travel more inclusive
Learning all about the Disability Support Pension
Report finds disabled students still bullied despite bid for reform
Advocacy group fears that autism plan may ignore children in need
Tragic death of Simon Cartwright just part of crisis
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print
Previous Article RISING STAR: Ipswich rapper YKL has made a bold artistic statement with his latest video. Ipswich teen rapper YKL turns up the heat with new track Cold
Next Article FULLY ACTIVE: Ipswich remains sports mad. Ipswich continues to score big as sport participation hits record high
Follow US
Copyright © 2025 Local News Group - Website by LNG Digital
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?