SA-Best have responded to our pledge. They have committed fully to a safe and gender equal South Australia.
In relation to abortion access, this includes a party-wide commitment to remove barriers to accessing abortion care.
SA-Best have responded to our pledge. They have committed fully to a safe and gender equal South Australia. In relation to abortion access, this includes a party-wide commitment to remove barriers to accessing abortion care.
SA-Best (Connie Bonaros MLC) is fully committed
SA-Best have responded to our pledge. They have committed fully to a safe and gender equal South Australia.
In relation to abortion access, this includes a party-wide commitment to remove barriers to accessing abortion care.
Full Commitment
We all deserve to be and feel safe wherever we live, gather or play. Yet current funding settings mean specialist domestic, family and sexual violence services are under-resourced, limiting their ability to provide timely, specialist support to victim-survivors.
The next Parliament must ensure sustainable, adequate funding for specialist services and fully implement the key recommendations of the South Australian Royal Commission into Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence. This includes properly resourcing frontline supports and establishing clearer, fit-for-purpose funding pathways outside of homelessness funding streams.
South Australian voters deserve clarity on whether candidates will commit to strengthening the specialist services that keep victim-survivors safe.
Full Commitment
South Australians expect a justice and health system that responds swiftly, compassionately and effectively to the needs of sexual assault survivors. Yet victim-survivors continue to face unacceptable delays in accessing forensic medical examinations, gaps in specialist support, and processes that can retraumatise rather than assist recovery.
The next Parliament must act decisively to strengthen the state’s response to sexual violence. This includes investing in expanded specialist services, ensuring timely access to forensic medical care and health screening, and fully implementing the recommendations of the Royal Commission into Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence.
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Full Commitment
South Australians expect that victim-survivors will be able to access the services and support they need; when they need it. Yet too often the systems aren’t working for the people who need them.
The Royal Commission into Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence identified clear gaps in risk assessment, disability accessibility, and appropriate court infrastructure. Without dedicated resourcing and implementation, these gaps will continue to undermine safety and accountability.
The next Parliament must prioritise practical delivery of reform: improving accessibility across services and courts, and funding the case management work that is required to deliver on an improved Risk Assessment and Management Framework.
Full Commitment
South Australians should be able to access timely, affordable healthcare that respects their autonomy and reproductive choices. Yet across the state, too many women, particularly in regional and remote areas, face significant travel, cost, and service barriers when seeking abortion care.
The current South Australian legislative framework provides important protections, and was shaped by expert advice through the SALRI (South Australian Law Reform Institute) process. Yet this legislation has come under political attack from anti choice activists whose ultimate aim is to obstruct and reduce access to abortion care.
While South Australia leads the nation in provision of abortion care through the public system, inequality of access still remains with abortion care being much more difficult to access in regional and remote South Australia.
These questions have been endorsed by the South Australian Abortion Action Coalition (SAAAC)