• Want to help us with this year's BoS Trials?
    Let us know before 30 June. See this thread for details
  • Looking for HSC notes and resources?
    Check out our Notes & Resources page

Moving Out (1 Viewer)

jang

is not my real name
Joined
Feb 20, 2004
Messages
230
Location
Incheon Moonhak Stadium
Gender
Male
HSC
2004
JKDDragon said:
With all the fucking forms they kept sending me.. oh man, whether or not it was worth it was a big question for me.
but u still get youth allowance?? how did they annoy u
 

MasterP

Come to Daddy
Joined
Nov 8, 2004
Messages
227
Location
Central Coast, NSW
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
My parents are earning just above the threashold. And most of their money goes to my unemployed 19 year old brother. And it's a full house.

And I am pissed off.
 

_muse_

Come on join the joyride
Joined
May 19, 2004
Messages
2,019
Location
hunter valley
Gender
Female
HSC
2005
Anyone know wat the legal age is that u can leave home? i wanna get away from this shit they call a family home
 

braindrainedAsh

Journalist
Joined
Feb 20, 2003
Messages
4,268
Location
Sydney
Gender
Female
HSC
2003
One of our family friends couldn't afford to go straight to uni and couldn't get YA.... she got an early offer in to the course she wanted to do and you couldn't defer it. She had no choice but not to go.... then the next year she couldn't get in. Hence, she was crushed and all her hard work in yr 12 didn't pay off.

Plus it can be extremely hard to earn that $16000 when you are in a place where youth unemployment is high. In Alb it is very hard to find full time work or even a job as a casual where you get a decent number of hours a week at 18-20 yrs of age. A lot of people I know deferred and then still couldn't earn the money due to being stuffed around by employers and being unable to find a stable job. In Alb there is also a trend where the fast food restaurants and supermarkets start to cut back your hours drastically when you hit 18... they then give your hours to a 14 yr old.

I think that YA should be assessed on individual cases. I don't think that the clear cut earnings thresholds and assets/parents earnings stuff is a good enough assessment of a person's true need for the allowance, and they should be able to make exceptions if you are a bit under the earnings and have a good reason for needing it (like moving away to study) or in the case of the girl who couldn't defer her course etc.

But, I guess bureacracy works by slotting people in to holes, using numbers etc instead of examining people's actual situations.
 

RIZAL

Member
Joined
Sep 21, 2002
Messages
531
Location
Sydney
Gender
Male
HSC
2010
braindrainedAsh said:
One of our family friends couldn't afford to go straight to uni and couldn't get YA.... she got an early offer in to the course she wanted to do and you couldn't defer it. She had no choice but not to go.... then the next year she couldn't get in. Hence, she was crushed and all her hard work in yr 12 didn't pay off.

Plus it can be extremely hard to earn that $16000 when you are in a place where youth unemployment is high. In Alb it is very hard to find full time work or even a job as a casual where you get a decent number of hours a week at 18-20 yrs of age. A lot of people I know deferred and then still couldn't earn the money due to being stuffed around by employers and being unable to find a stable job. In Alb there is also a trend where the fast food restaurants and supermarkets start to cut back your hours drastically when you hit 18... they then give your hours to a 14 yr old.

I think that YA should be assessed on individual cases. I don't think that the clear cut earnings thresholds and assets/parents earnings stuff is a good enough assessment of a person's true need for the allowance, and they should be able to make exceptions if you are a bit under the earnings and have a good reason for needing it (like moving away to study) or in the case of the girl who couldn't defer her course etc.

But, I guess bureacracy works by slotting people in to holes, using numbers etc instead of examining people's actual situations.



also, I know someone that 'worked' 'full time' for his parents for 18 months. They 'paid' him 15000 so he qualified for Austudy. After he got Austudy he paid his parents back. If your parents run their own business, you should be able to do this....(without having to do any real work).
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top