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A door roped off with caution tape.

Uncle Carey wearing a blue shirt.

"The fact that it doesn't happen anymore … It hurts my heart. It hurts my spirit,"
Uncle Carey said.

Uncle Carey standing next to a manager of the health clinic, leaning against a nearly empty planter box.

An old brick building fenced off.

Woman with dark shoulder-length hair, wearing black tinted glasses and a black polo looks at the camera.

Two ladies share cups of tea at an Aboriginal health service. They each have grey hair, bob haircuts.

A white building striped in black, yellow and red is viewed from across the street.

"It's not just kind of rough floors and flaky paint, it's really quite significant structural issues,"
he said.

Positive messages written on a board at an Aboriginal health service, including notes on strength and safety.

An older woman with long black hair and statement silver earrings poses with a gentle smile in a office

Victorian health minister seated at a justice commission hearing in front of a microphone

"But if we haven't got the appropriate infrastructure to work from, then it makes it twice as difficult to do that."

"It's everyone's responsibility to meet those targets, but our community organisations have to have the proper tools to do that,"
she said.

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