Justice McClellan was addressing the National Council of Churches and the transcript can be found on the ARC Child Abuse website.
They have proposed that the redress scheme involve a number of aspects. It's not just monetarily but requires an active role by the organization in apologizing -
http://www.childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au/media-centre/speeches/safe-as-churches.aspx
We said appropriate redress should include three elements:
A direct personal response by the institution, including an apology, an opportunity for the survivor to meet with a senior representative of the institution and an assurance as to the steps the institution has taken, or will take, to protect against further abuse.
Access to therapeutic counselling and psychological care as needed throughout a survivor’s life.
Modest monetary payments as a tangible means of recognising the wrong survivors have sufferedUnfortuantely it looks like the redress scheme will be voluntary.
On 4 November 2016 the Minister for Social Services, Christian Porter, announced the establishment of the Commonwealth Redress Scheme. In that announcement Minister Porter said that ‘any state, any territory, any church, any charity, who has responsibility in this area will be able to opt-in to the scheme’. Institutions would opt-in on the basis that they fund the cost of their own eligible redress claims.