When Respect Feels Like Hope
There are moments, in the middle of prolonged distress, where even the smallest sign of responsiveness feels like relief.
My first contact with the office of Chris Minns — the Member for Kogarah — my elected representative - was one of those moments.
By that stage, I had already spent months navigating a system that felt impenetrable. Repeated attempts to seek help from regulators, agencies, and institutions had led nowhere. Each door closed. Each conversation deflected. Each escalation absorbed without outcome.
So when I reached out to the Kogarah electorate office, I did so not with expectation — but with urgency.
And something unexpected happened.
They responded.
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A Response That Felt “Different”
The reply from the electorate office was efficient. Respectful. Measured.
It acknowledged receipt of my concerns. It didn’t dismiss them. It didn’t minimise them. It didn’t redirect me elsewhere without engagement.
After everything I had experienced, that alone stood out.
Because by that stage, I had already detailed — in writing — the seriousness of what had occurred:
• systemic failures across multiple agencies
• the collapse of safeguards that were meant to protect injured workers
• and what I believed to be systemic failures in oversight and accountability within SIRA and SafeWork NSW
My initial email — sent on 15 October 2021 — was not casual correspondence. It was a plea for intervention, grounded in evidence and lived experience.
As reflected in that correspondence, I was seeking support at a point where the situation had become both urgent and overwhelming
And yet — for the first time — I felt heard… or so I was made to believe.
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The Power of First Impressions
First impressions matter:
Especially when you are vulnerable.
Especially when you have been ignored.
Especially when the system designed to protect you has instead contributed to your harm.
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When First Impressions Begin to Shift
But that sense of reassurance did not last.
The tone, the professionalism, the respect — they didn’t hold.
It became clear, quite quickly, that the initial responsiveness was not reflective of what followed.
What I had first experienced as engagement began to shift into something else entirely.
The alignment of the office became apparent.
And it did not feel grounded in serving the constituents of the Kogarah electorate.
Instead, the interaction left me with the distinct impression that priorities lay elsewhere — not in advocating for a constituent navigating serious issues with SafeWork NSW and SIRA, but in maintaining institutional positioning.
That realisation was confronting.
Because for a brief moment — once again — I had felt something I had not felt in a long time:
Hope.
Hope that my local elected representative might listen, might intervene, might advocate.
But that hope faded just as quickly as it appeared.
And in hindsight, I could not have been more mistaken in what I believed that first interaction represented.
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When Process Meets Reality
First impressions are not outcomes.
They are not accountability.
They are not enforcement.
They are not justice.
They are, at best, an entry point.
In complex matters — particularly those involving systemic failure — the gap between initial responsiveness and meaningful action can be vast.
What I would come to learn over time is this:
A respectful response does not necessarily translate into intervention.
Efficiency does not guarantee follow-through.
And acknowledgement, while important, is not the same as action.
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The Illusion of Progress
One of the most challenging aspects of navigating institutional systems is the illusion of progress.
You receive a reply.
Your concerns are “noted.”
Your correspondence is “forwarded.”
And for a moment, it feels like movement.
But without transparency, without accountability, and without outcomes — that movement can become circular.
A loop of communication without resolution.
In my case, despite that promising first interaction, the underlying issues remained:
• the failure to enforce statutory obligations
• the absence of meaningful regulatory intervention
• the ongoing impact on my health, finances, and professional life
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Why This Matters
This is a reflection on something broader.
In systems of governance, tone is not enough.
Professionalism matters.
Respect matters.
Timeliness matters.
But ultimately, what matters most is what happens next.
Do concerns lead to investigation?
Do investigations lead to findings?
Do findings lead to action?
Or do they disappear into “process”?
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Looking Back
When I think back to that first contact with the Kogarah electorate office, I see it as incomplete.
It showed me what the system is capable of — at its best:
• respectful engagement
• timely communication
• a willingness to listen
But it also revealed what happens when those qualities are not matched by structural follow-through.
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A Final Reflection
The closing words of my first email, sent on 15 October 2021, now read very differently to me:
“This psychological thriller has been so surreal, it’s felt worse than my dad’s suicide. I ask again. Does anyone care?
Do you care? Will the public care? What is the truth regarding the NSW government?”
I would soon find out whether Chris Minns cared — even before the next government in office was his own.
And I would come to understand, in ways I could not have anticipated at the time, what that “truth” looked like in practice.
The psychological thriller was not ending.
It was only just beginning.
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What Is Promised: Return to Work in NSW
In 2025, the NSW Government publicly outlined its position on return to work.
A system described as coordinated, resourced, and committed to ensuring “timely, safe and sustainable return to work”
A whole-of-government strategy.
Cross-agency job opportunities.
Improved planning and suitable duties.
Expanded regulatory and industrial oversight.
Significant investment in psychological injury prevention and support.
On paper, it is a system designed to protect workers.
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Where I Sit Within That System
I am not a public servant.
I am not a NSW Government employee.
But I am an employee of a publicly funded university.
And I was still entitled — under law — to a safe return to work.
An Injury Management Plan was issued.
A return to work program existed — one that was provided to a SafeWork NSW inspector.
But it was never provided to me.
The very framework that is now being promoted as essential — suitable duties, structured return to work, coordinated support — was not implemented in my case.
These were not optional processes.
They were statutory obligations.
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The Gap Between Promise and Reality
This is the system the Chris Minns government promotes.
This is what is promised to the public.
This is what is said to exist.
And as a constituent of the Kogarah electorate, this is the system I was supposed to be able to rely on.
What follows in my story is not that system.
What follows is the gap between what is promised… and what actually happens.
Source: contemporaneous record of events - Document 203
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Source
NSW Parliament Q&A – Return to Work Support:
https://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/la/papers/pages/qanda-tracking-details.aspx?pk=104328
