The People vs Robodebt

SBS reveals new landmark documentary-drama series ROBODEBT coming in 2025

Award-winning producers CJZ secure major funding through SBS first-of-its-kind initiative

The notorious Robodebt scheme has inspired an innovative and immersive landmark series that combines factual storytelling and high-end drama to take audiences beyond the headlines to experience the impact the scheme had on Australia’s most vulnerable citizens.

ROBODEBT (working title) is produced by CJZ, the production company behind International Emmy Award-winning Go Back to Where You Came From, after securing SBS’s new major development fund. Announced at the Australian International Documentary Conference (AIDC), SBS launched the first-of-its-kind initiative to discover an original and ambitious idea that explores inequality and social cohesion and tackles the fault lines of Australian society today.

SBS Director of Television Kathryn Fink said: “Through this initiative, SBS wanted to unearth a series unlike anything seen on Australian screens before. ROBODEBT will reveal the fight for justice by some of the most vulnerable people in our society. We’re excited to be working with CJZ on this series, which will shine a much-needed spotlight on this unprecedented chapter in recent Australian history.”

CJZ Creative Director Michael Cordell said: “Robodebt inflicted a tsunami of pain on hundreds of thousands of ordinary Australians accused of having fictitious debts. We’re excited to be telling this story with an innovative combination of hard-nosed factual and high-end drama to push the limits of contemporary storytelling.”

The Robodebt scandal ranks as one of the darkest chapters in Australian history. In a highly politicised campaign to claw back money from social welfare recipients allegedly ‘rorting’ the system, $1.8 billion was extracted from over half-a-million people between 2015 and 2019. The scandal resulted in Australia’s largest class action, with a Royal Commission finding that the scheme was “crude and cruel” and “neither fair nor legal”.

Attached as series director is award-winning documentary and drama director Ben Lawrence (Ithaka, Hearts and Bones). Esteemed screenwriter Jane Allen (Janet King, Cleverman, Last King of the Cross, Troppo, The Secret Life of Us) will serve as writer and script producer.

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Update from SBS Upfront

Robodebt is Working Title

Number of Episodes: 3 x 60 mins

The Robodebt scandal ranks as one of the darkest chapters in Australian history. In a highly politicised campaign to claw back money from social welfare recipients allegedly ‘rorting’ the system, $1.8 billion was extracted from over half-a-million people between 2015 - 2019, leading to thousands of Australians struggling to survive and multiple suicides. Robodebt is an ambitious hybrid series combining powerful factual storytelling with high-end drama to tell the story of this notorious scandal that struck at the heart of inequality and social cohesion in Australia. The series will gain access to the victims, the journalists, whistleblowers and those on the inside, testifying to give us the full emotional and dramatic picture of the story as it unfolded, for the very first time.

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Screen Australia today

Robodebt (working title) : A three-part series for SBS that combines documentary storytelling with drama to reveal how ordinary Australians fought back against the notorious Robodebt scandal that struck at the heart of inequality and social cohesion in Australia. It is from director Ben Lawrence (Hearts and Bones) and writer Jane Allen (Troppo, In Our Blood). Executive producing is Paula Bycroft (Con Girl), Michael Cordell (Go Back to Where You Came From) and Andrew Farrell (Murder in the Outback, Undercurrent). It has received major production investment from SBS with support from Screen NSW.

The People vs Robodebt - A powerful new TV series by SBS

Powerful and unflinching, The People vs Robodebt is an emotionally charged political thriller which unravels the devastating human story behind one of Australia’s greatest political scandals. The full three-part docu-drama series will be available to stream on SBS on Demand on 24 September, airing weekly on SBS.

What was the Robodebt scheme?

In the long hot summer of 2016, the federal government’s new Online Compliance Intervention scheme roared like a bushfire through Australian society. This automated welfare system soon became known as “Robodebt”.

Over the next three years, almost half a million Australians were hounded to pay back debts they did not owe. The system was later found to be inaccurate, unethical and illegal. Some people lost their savings, their homes, their marriages and a few lost their lives.

How did such a “crude and cruel” error-riddled scheme ever get off the ground, let alone run for years?

Jenny Miller is the determined mum who fought to clear her son Rhys Cauzzo's name and stop Robodebt.

Jenny Miller is the determined mum who fought to clear her son Rhys Cauzzo’s name and stop Robodebt. Credit: Simon Morris.

Robodebt victims and the fight for justice

A brave handful of Australians witnessed what was happening and took a stand. In The People vs Robodebt many of these people tell their full story for the first time.

Using a potent combination of gripping documentary story-telling with high end drama, the series follows the tireless and heroic efforts of these extraordinary people who fought against the system: the Robodebt victims and their angry families, the crusading social media activists, the whistleblowers and investigative journalists, the tenacious lawyers, as well as the forgotten victims of Robodebt: the Centrelink workers who bravely battled the system from within - their complaints falling on deaf ears.

For Victoria Legal Aid, Deanna Amato was the golden ticket to help prove Robodebt was illegal.

For Victoria Legal Aid, Deanna Amato was the golden ticket to help prove Robodebt was illegal. Credit: Simon Morris.

Key contributors to The People vs Robodebt

The series has unparallelled access to the heroic people who took a stand against Robodebt. Key contributors include Jenny Miller, mother of Rhys Cauzzo, whose story was the first Robodebt suicide reported in the media; Deanna Amato, whose court case proved Robodebt was illegal; Felicity Button, one of the lead applicants in the class action against Robodebt; Sandra Bevan, who desperately tried to prove her innocence; Colleen Taylor, a veteran public servant who warned her superiors from the start that Robodebt was wrong; Jeannie-Marie Blake, a whistleblowing frontline Centrelink worker; Chris Knaus, the journalist who broke the first media stories about the flaws in the Robodebt scheme; Rachelle Miller, the insider and media adviser who worked to ‘control the narrative’ for the government; Lyndsey Jackson, who, on maternity leave with a newborn baby, started the #NotMyDebt website - fighting against the Robodebt scheme from her kitchen table; Asher Wolf (pseudonym), renowned digital activist and fellow instigator of #NotMyDebt; Dr Darren O’Donovan, one of Australia’s leading legal experts on Robodebt; Miles Browne and Charley Brumby-Rendell, the Victoria Legal Aid lawyers who defeated Robodebt in a legal battle against the government.

At its heart, The People vs Robodebt tells an extraordinary ‘David and Goliath’ tale of the people who risked everything in their fight to unravel the truth and find justice for half a million fellow Australians, versus a government and a bureaucracy who had “broken the sacred trust that when citizens give some of their power to the government, that the government will make sure that it helps, not hurts citizens”. This is a story that the Royal Commissioner would later call “an extraordinary saga of venality, incompetence and cowardice” and Prime Minister Albanese called “a gross betrayal and a human tragedy.”

SBS Commissioning Editor for Factual, Bethan Arwel-Lewis said: “As Australia’s boldest network, SBS has a track record of delivering documentaries that tackle some of the biggest issues of our times. The People vs Robodebt is a truly gripping watch, that tells the hidden story of one of Australia’s biggest political scandals and will have you on the edge of your seat. Audiences will be inspired, provoked and outraged in equal measure.”

Frontline Centrelink worker Jeannie-Marie Baker dealt with multiple anxious customers, and raised concerns to her superiors about Robodebt.

Frontline Centrelink worker Jeannie-Marie Baker dealt with multiple anxious customers, and raised concerns to her superiors about Robodebt. Credit: Simon Morris.

The People vs Robodebt is produced by CJZ (Con Girl, Go Back to Where You Came From, Working Class Boy) , one of Australia’s leading independent production companies. The idea was conceived by CJZ creative director and executive producer Michael Cordell (Go Back to Where You Came From, Bondi Rescue, Revolution School) and the supervising executive producer of the series is Paula Bycroft (Con Girl, Homicide with Ron Iddles, The Good Cop) . Andrew Farrell (Working Class Boy, Murder in the Ouback) also executive produced. Ben Lawrence (Ithaca, Ghosthunter) directed both the drama and documentary scenes and Jane Allen (In Our Blood, Janet King, Troppo ) wrote the drama scenes.

The People vs Robodebt executive producer Michael Cordell said “We are proud to be partnering with SBS on this groundbreaking series. SBS has never been afraid of bold storytelling and The People vs Robodebt is a shocking tale that goes to the very heart of inequality and social cohesion in Australia.”

“Our challenge as storytellers was to bring the Robodebt scandal alive by distilling a complex story to convey the profound pain and suffering this scheme inflicted on so many innocent people. Thanks to Screen Australia, Screen NSW and SBS for working with us to expose this shameful chapter in Australian history.”

Felicity Button_The People vs Robodebt_Credit Simon Morris.jpg

Nurse Felicity Button was one of the lead applicants in the class action against Robodebt. Credit: Simon Morris.

The People vs Robodebt is a CJZ production for SBS. Major production investment from SBS and Screen Australia. Financed with support from Screen NSW.

All 3 episodes of The People vs Robodebt will premiere on Wednesday 24 September on SBS On Demand. Episodes air weekly on SBS.

Is it possible a note will be added to the end of the third episode, following this morning’s announcement?

(updated link)

Historic Settlement Underscores SBS’s Powerful New Series The People v Robodebt

PeopleVsRobodebt_artwork

The federal government has today agreed to pay an additional $475 million in compensation to Australians impacted by the unlawful Robodebt scheme. It is the largest class action settlement in Australian history, marking a pivotal moment in a controversy that has shaken Australia’s welfare system.

This powerful new chapter provides timely context for SBS’s three-part docu-drama The People vs Robodebt, premiering Wednesday 24 September at 7.30pm on SBS, with all three episodes available to stream on SBS On Demand.

Through whistleblowers, frontline Centrelink staff, legal advocates and the ordinary Australians who fought back, the series exposes the human cost of Robodebt and the long road to justice.

Kathryn Fink, SBS Director of Television said, “This timely series reveals the human stories behind this heartbreaking injustice and underscores the importance of being courageous in telling the stories that matter.”

The People vs Robodebt is a CJZ production for SBS. Paula Bycroft, Supervising Executive Producer at CJZ said: “Today’s record-breaking settlement is a testament to the bravery of the victims and workers who spoke out against Robodebt. Nurse and mum Felicity Button, who told her compelling story in The People vs Robodebt, soon to be screened on SBS, is one of thousands who will finally be compensated for the trauma they experienced.”

The series has unparallelled access to the heroic people who took a stand against Robodebt, many speaking for the first time. Key contributors include Jenny Miller, mother of Rhys Cauzzo, whose story was the first Robodebt-related suicide reported in the media; Deanna Amato, whose court case proved Robodebt was illegal; Felicity Button, one of the lead applicants in the class action against Robodebt; Sandra Bevan, who desperately tried to prove her innocence; Colleen Taylor, a veteran public servant who warned her superiors from the start that Robodebt was wrong; Jeannie-Marie Blake, a whistleblowing frontline Centrelink worker; Chris Knaus, the Guardian journalist who broke the first media stories about the flaws in the Robodebt scheme; Rachelle Miller, the insider and media adviser who worked to ‘control the narrative’ for the government; Lyndsey Jackson, who, on maternity leave with a newborn baby, started the #NotMyDebt website – fighting against the Robodebt scheme from her kitchen table; Asher Wolf (pseudonym), renowned digital activist and fellow instigator of #NotMyDebt; Dr Darren O’Donovan, one of Australia’s leading legal experts on Robodebt; Miles Browne and Charley Brumby-Rendell, the Victoria Legal Aid lawyers who defeated Robodebt in a legal battle against the government.

All 3 episodes of The People vs Robodebt will premiere on Wednesday 24 September on SBS On Demand. Episodes air weekly on SBS.

The Age Green Guide review

Episode 2

Wednesday, 1 October at 7.30pm

The terrible cost of Robodebt becomes clear when one victim takes their own life, but a band of everyday Aussies takes up the fight to stop the scheme by proving it is illegal.

As 2017 dawns, Rhys Cauzzo is under immense pressure to pay a massive Robodebt. By the end of January, he can see only one way out of this mess – he takes his own life. Rhys’ heartbroken mother Jenny Miller rushes to Melbourne, determined to find answers, but she is thwarted at every turn by stonewalling government bureaucracy. As the number of Robodebt victims climbs, two Centrelink staff members – Jeannie-Marie Blake and Colleen Taylor – risk everything to speak out, fully aware that Robodebt is generating false debts. Negative stories start appearing in the press, so government media advisor Rachelle Miller releases Rhys Cauzzo’s personal information to the media, trying to “control the narrative”. Meanwhile, single mother-of-four Sandra Bevan is also battling a Robodebt. The part-time palliative care nurse has always kept meticulous records of her working hours, but Centrelink won’t accept them. Instead, debt collectors hound her constantly. Lawyer Miles Browne reveals how Victorian Legal Aid is being inundated with complaints about Robodebt. He is determined to prove the scheme is illegal but needs to mount a test case against the Government in the Federal Court, and that won’t be easy.

Update

Episode 3 - Final

Wednesday, 8 October at 7.30pm

Robodebt is finally found to be unlawful and a Royal Commission sets out to uncover the terrible truth behind a scheme that left hundreds of thousands of lives in tatters.

After three years defending Robodebt, the federal government is finally forced to concede that the scheme is unlawful. Deanna Amato’s test case is the Golden Ticket that proves it is illegal. A class action lawsuit then claws back money owed to more than 400,000 Australians, but it does not get compensation for the harm Robodebt caused. So, it’s left to a Royal Commission to uncover the terrible truth behind a scheme that took so much from so many. Nine weeks of the Royal Commission hearings see around a million documents tendered and hundreds of witnesses testify, including the politicians who introduced and defended the scheme for so long. In the end, Commissioner Catherine Holmes hands down a scathing report. She also singles out six people for possible criminal prosecution.

Who is on that list? Why are their names being kept in a special ‘sealed section’ of the report? And will the many victims of Robodebt finally get justice?