Advocates push for Brisbane Olympics social impact gold
Danielle Kutchel
Momentum and expectations are building around how the Brisbane Games could leave a social policy legacy that benefits the whole community.
With 10 years to go until the Olympics land on Queensland?s golden shores, advocates are gearing up for an event that could reshape social policy in the state.
According to several not for profit and advocacy groups, the Olympic Games, to be held in Brisbane in 2032, could provide the perfect opportunity to reshape policy in the state in key areas like housing, employment and disability.
But there is much work to be done and a decade in which to do it, and although that sounds like a long time, it?s not for the sort of long-lasting change being considered.
Two groups at the forefront of this push are Queenslanders with Disability Network and Q Shelter.˜
An inclusive Games and legacy for people with disability
Queenslanders with Disability Network (QDN) has a vision for the Brisbane Games, and deputy chair of QDN, Dr Sharon Boyce, is ready to implement it. She was recently appointed to the 2032 Games Legacy Committee to represent the voice of people with disability. ?I would like to think that it signifies the importance of the voice of people with disability,? she told Pro Bono News. As well as her own lived experience as a person with disability, Boyce will bring the experiences and ideas of her colleagues and networks to the table for consideration, she said. She said in the past, disability had perhaps not been considered on the same level as other indicators when planning major events. As one of 12 people on the committee, she?s looking forward to changing that, working with business, government, transport and education to ensure the Games - and their legacy - are inclusive and accessible. In June, QDN held a forum attended by over 80 people with disability and key supporters, at which it outlined its vision for the Games and their legacy. The summary of the forum was provided exclusively to Pro Bono News, and reveals participants called for:- A successful, inclusive and accessible games for people with disability as athletes, spectators, workers, and volunteers
- Co-designed planning, designing and delivery of infrastructure, facilities and services with people with disability from the beginning
- A Queensland community that values people with disability as equal citizens
- A legacy of world class accessibility and inclusion across sport, housing, transport, infrastructure, employment, tourism, volunteering, public services and health and well-being for Queenslanders with disability and our community.
Time to go for gold
Like QDN, housing and homelessness peak body Q Shelter identified the 2032 Olympic Games as an opportunity for Queensland to reform areas of its social policy. Last month Q Shelter released its ?Go for Gold: A social inclusion legacy for the 2032 Olympic & Paralympic Games? report, proposing a number of initiatives to improve the state of housing in Queensland in the lead up to the Games. The release of the report was timed to closely follow the announcement of the Legacy Committee guiding the preparation for the Games, and to take advantage of the gathering hype around them to amplify social causes. The report notes that Queensland is currently experiencing a housing crisis, with the state?s housing supply not keeping pace with demand. The report warns that large scale events like the Games will cause displacement of existing populations without early interventions to prevent rising rental costs and ensure adequate housing supply. Drawing on case studies from previous Olympic and Paralympic Games, the report proposes a number of outcomes across homelessness, housing, employment and economic participation, governance, and monitoring and evaluation, including:- Ensuring Brisbane 2032 contributes to a reduction in homelessness
- Ensuring Brisbane 2032 achieves an increase in housing supply inclusive of social and affordable housing.˜
- Ensuring Brisbane 2032 achieves increased employment outcomes for people who are unemployed or underemployed.˜
- Ensuring housing and homelessness expertise at all levels of governance.˜
- Implementing a transparent monitoring and evaluation framework that includes targets, indicators, and measures.˜
- Clear social and affordable housing targets in key locations, including targets for the conversion of athletes? village accommodation to social and affordable housing
- Developing measures to assist people to exit homelessness before Brisbane 2032 and prevent more people from becoming homeless
- Creating a lead agency for whole-of-housing system responses in Queensland with responsibility for coordinating all contributions across the levels of Government
- Monitoring and responding to housing market changes leading up to, during and after Brisbane 2032, in impacted regions
- Reporting on progress against housing targets to achieve real-time improvements
- Establishment of a housing trust to capture community-wide contributions to social and affordable housing in perpetuity