Abigail Boyd: Ableism behind failure to meet housing accessibility standards

September 15, 2025
Issue 
The NSW Government is yet to adopt the national liveable design standards, meaning new housing will be inaccessible for most people with physical disabilities. Image: 91自拍论坛

搁别肠别苍迟听 shows just how many people with disability languish on waiting lists, including for priority housing.

According to the聽, 5.5 million, or 21.4% of the population, have a disability, 15% of whom are under 65 and 52.3% are 65 or more.聽

The waitlist is logjammed, while 聽are scarce 补苍诲听the wait time for grows longer. The ageing population also rose by 17% overall in the last census.

On top of聽,听 of liveable public housing and the creeping privatisation of social and community housing, people with a disability are left at a significant additional risk of .

The Physical Disability Council of NSW said of the 1.3 million people in New South Wales who live with a physical disability,听

Yet, NSW Labor聽 the most basic construction solutions, despite accessibility standards being introduced.

NSW Greens MP Abigail Boyd has been seeking to improve this. Her included a rally, in August last year, on the steps of NSW parliament to protest Labor鈥檚 repeated refusal to adopt the聽聽for minimum housing accessibility requirements in all new builds.

both recommended such standards be introduced.聽

罢丑别听, on June 21,听backed Boyd鈥檚 call for action. 鈥淭he disability community is disappointed that NSW Government is yet to adopt the National Construction Code Silver Level Livable Design Standards, meaning new housing will be inaccessible for people with physical disabilities.鈥

鈥淲e call on the government to adopt these principles or outline a plan to address the severe lack in accessible housing for people with physical disability.鈥

聽that the accessibility standards call for bare minimum changes, which, based on other states, add about 1% to the cost of new builds, while retrofitting new builds is聽鈥減rohibitively expensive鈥.

鈥淭he silver standard is actually really simple, requiring there be at least one level access to the home, one toilet on the ground floor, that corridor and hallway widths allow a wheelchair (or walker) and that bathrooms have reinforced walls that you could put railings on if you wanted to in the future.鈥

Boyd said the government was more concerned with protecting developers鈥 profits 鈥 a 20% margin, on average 鈥 than providing genuine housing affordability, including for people with disability.

鈥淸The government is] excluding all of the people with disability in the state, as well as anybody who wants to age in their place and anyone else with mobility needs, or who has a friend who wants to visit and has mobility needs,鈥 Boyd said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 extraordinary to think that those people are not considered when it comes to thinking about what affordable housing means.

鈥淚t absolutely has to be accessible, but the government won鈥檛 do it.鈥

Boyd recently asked housing minister聽Rose Jackson to provide data on the total community housing聽that is available and what percentage were disability friendly.聽Boyd said Jackson鈥檚 response was 鈥淭he [calculation] is too hard to do鈥. 鈥淚 said: 鈥榊ou know what鈥檚 hard, minister?聽Finding a house to live in when you are a person with mobility needs.鈥欌

Boyd said she is sick of seeing ministers in every portfolio area putting people with a disability at the bottom of the priority list.聽She noted that an 鈥渋ncredibly small amount鈥 鈥 $8 million of new funds 鈥 had been allocated in the latest budget for 鈥渁ccessibility and inclusion鈥 initiatives.

Boyd said that to be 鈥渄ismissive of almost 1.5 million people living with a disability鈥 reflects an 鈥渁bleist attitude鈥. She said that a 鈥渓ack of inclusion鈥 permeates parliament.

The disability community is furious at the government鈥檚 failure to implement even basic recommendations of the聽, the聽聽and countless聽补苍诲听.

In a sign of just how聽 the disability community is, some say privately that new MPs should be forced to spend a couple of days of their parliamentary orientation either blindfolded or in a wheelchair, while experiencing unsuitable housing.

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