
It is shameful governments waited so long to roll out childcare safety measures
In response, we have heard ministers in the Australian and Victorian governments commit to implementing some long-delayed measures that had been recommended by various royal commissions and inquiries of the past.
While this is a positive outcome, there is much more to do to build safer childcare in this country.
Those royal commissions and inquiries have told us what is needed to keep children safe.
Many of us are now asking why it has taken so long for governments across the federation to act on serious child safeguarding gaps?
The risks to child safety have been known for decades, and the evidence-based recommendations have been sitting on a shelf.
Over the last few years, we have been collectively horrified by the notorious case of Ashley Griffith who abused children in childcare centres in Queensland and NSW. And now we have these terrible allegations coming out of Melbourne.
How did we end up in this place where governments knew what to do to help fix the problems and keep our children safe, but did not act?
To answer these questions, it is necessary to understand that the federation structure splits responsibilities across different levels of government, and that there is no one accountable for child safety and wellbeing in the Australian government.
In contrast, we have had ministers for women for decades, and "women and women's safety" is listed as a key priority for national cabinet, which is where the prime minister and state and territory leaders work together on "issues of national significance".
The complete absence of visibility and accountability for child safety and wellbeing at the national level has allowed the risks to remain unaddressed and the solutions not implemented.
This is despite endless media exposés and tragic stories of abuse of children.
We cannot allow the federation to be an excuse for not acting urgently on the safety and wellbeing of our children.
The latest scandal is taking place in childcare centres, but this is not just an issue for the early childhood education and care sector.
The failure to prioritise child safety and wellbeing and implement child safeguarding measures affects all children everywhere: in schools, after-school care, out-of-home care, youth detention, sporting clubs and holiday programs.
Anywhere you find children, there will be child safety risks that must be addressed.
Former royal commissioner Robert Fitzgerald said this week that it was "shameful" that we have failed to implement the detailed recommendations to strengthen child safety from a decade ago.
He is correct, and now we need to face up to why this has been allowed to happen. It is shameful that the advice of experts continues to be ignored and the risks to the safety and wellbeing of our children are neglected.
We don't need more royal commissions and inquiries. We know what to do.
Core recommendations in our Help Way Earlier! report tabled in Parliament last year were about governments across our federation working together on reform and making child wellbeing a national priority, at national cabinet.
READ MORE:
Right now, there is an absence of national leadership and co-ordination. Child wellbeing is not a priority for national cabinet, and there is no cabinet minister for children. These gaps have allowed a lack of accountability to persist, leading to critical reforms not being implemented.
For our youngest children, we need a childcare industry with stronger regulation, independent monitoring and oversight, and comprehensive enforceable child safeguarding measures. Everyone involved needs to make child safety their number one priority, from the boardroom to the sandpit.
This week has shown that the public wants more than just cheaper childcare. We demand safer childcare.
And importantly, our children, our youngest citizens, must not be sidelined and kept waiting for critical reforms that we know will help to keep them safe.
The new term of Parliament is the opportunity to demonstrate to the Australian public that child safety and wellbeing will be a national priority from now on.
Australians have rightly been outraged and dismayed this week following shocking revelations about babies and toddlers allegedly being sexually abused in childcare centres in Melbourne.
In response, we have heard ministers in the Australian and Victorian governments commit to implementing some long-delayed measures that had been recommended by various royal commissions and inquiries of the past.
While this is a positive outcome, there is much more to do to build safer childcare in this country.
Those royal commissions and inquiries have told us what is needed to keep children safe.
Many of us are now asking why it has taken so long for governments across the federation to act on serious child safeguarding gaps?
The risks to child safety have been known for decades, and the evidence-based recommendations have been sitting on a shelf.
Over the last few years, we have been collectively horrified by the notorious case of Ashley Griffith who abused children in childcare centres in Queensland and NSW. And now we have these terrible allegations coming out of Melbourne.
How did we end up in this place where governments knew what to do to help fix the problems and keep our children safe, but did not act?
To answer these questions, it is necessary to understand that the federation structure splits responsibilities across different levels of government, and that there is no one accountable for child safety and wellbeing in the Australian government.
In contrast, we have had ministers for women for decades, and "women and women's safety" is listed as a key priority for national cabinet, which is where the prime minister and state and territory leaders work together on "issues of national significance".
The complete absence of visibility and accountability for child safety and wellbeing at the national level has allowed the risks to remain unaddressed and the solutions not implemented.
This is despite endless media exposés and tragic stories of abuse of children.
We cannot allow the federation to be an excuse for not acting urgently on the safety and wellbeing of our children.
The latest scandal is taking place in childcare centres, but this is not just an issue for the early childhood education and care sector.
The failure to prioritise child safety and wellbeing and implement child safeguarding measures affects all children everywhere: in schools, after-school care, out-of-home care, youth detention, sporting clubs and holiday programs.
Anywhere you find children, there will be child safety risks that must be addressed.
Former royal commissioner Robert Fitzgerald said this week that it was "shameful" that we have failed to implement the detailed recommendations to strengthen child safety from a decade ago.
He is correct, and now we need to face up to why this has been allowed to happen. It is shameful that the advice of experts continues to be ignored and the risks to the safety and wellbeing of our children are neglected.
We don't need more royal commissions and inquiries. We know what to do.
Core recommendations in our Help Way Earlier! report tabled in Parliament last year were about governments across our federation working together on reform and making child wellbeing a national priority, at national cabinet.
READ MORE:
Right now, there is an absence of national leadership and co-ordination. Child wellbeing is not a priority for national cabinet, and there is no cabinet minister for children. These gaps have allowed a lack of accountability to persist, leading to critical reforms not being implemented.
For our youngest children, we need a childcare industry with stronger regulation, independent monitoring and oversight, and comprehensive enforceable child safeguarding measures. Everyone involved needs to make child safety their number one priority, from the boardroom to the sandpit.
This week has shown that the public wants more than just cheaper childcare. We demand safer childcare.
And importantly, our children, our youngest citizens, must not be sidelined and kept waiting for critical reforms that we know will help to keep them safe.
The new term of Parliament is the opportunity to demonstrate to the Australian public that child safety and wellbeing will be a national priority from now on.
Australians have rightly been outraged and dismayed this week following shocking revelations about babies and toddlers allegedly being sexually abused in childcare centres in Melbourne.
In response, we have heard ministers in the Australian and Victorian governments commit to implementing some long-delayed measures that had been recommended by various royal commissions and inquiries of the past.
While this is a positive outcome, there is much more to do to build safer childcare in this country.
Those royal commissions and inquiries have told us what is needed to keep children safe.
Many of us are now asking why it has taken so long for governments across the federation to act on serious child safeguarding gaps?
The risks to child safety have been known for decades, and the evidence-based recommendations have been sitting on a shelf.
Over the last few years, we have been collectively horrified by the notorious case of Ashley Griffith who abused children in childcare centres in Queensland and NSW. And now we have these terrible allegations coming out of Melbourne.
How did we end up in this place where governments knew what to do to help fix the problems and keep our children safe, but did not act?
To answer these questions, it is necessary to understand that the federation structure splits responsibilities across different levels of government, and that there is no one accountable for child safety and wellbeing in the Australian government.
In contrast, we have had ministers for women for decades, and "women and women's safety" is listed as a key priority for national cabinet, which is where the prime minister and state and territory leaders work together on "issues of national significance".
The complete absence of visibility and accountability for child safety and wellbeing at the national level has allowed the risks to remain unaddressed and the solutions not implemented.
This is despite endless media exposés and tragic stories of abuse of children.
We cannot allow the federation to be an excuse for not acting urgently on the safety and wellbeing of our children.
The latest scandal is taking place in childcare centres, but this is not just an issue for the early childhood education and care sector.
The failure to prioritise child safety and wellbeing and implement child safeguarding measures affects all children everywhere: in schools, after-school care, out-of-home care, youth detention, sporting clubs and holiday programs.
Anywhere you find children, there will be child safety risks that must be addressed.
Former royal commissioner Robert Fitzgerald said this week that it was "shameful" that we have failed to implement the detailed recommendations to strengthen child safety from a decade ago.
He is correct, and now we need to face up to why this has been allowed to happen. It is shameful that the advice of experts continues to be ignored and the risks to the safety and wellbeing of our children are neglected.
We don't need more royal commissions and inquiries. We know what to do.
Core recommendations in our Help Way Earlier! report tabled in Parliament last year were about governments across our federation working together on reform and making child wellbeing a national priority, at national cabinet.
READ MORE:
Right now, there is an absence of national leadership and co-ordination. Child wellbeing is not a priority for national cabinet, and there is no cabinet minister for children. These gaps have allowed a lack of accountability to persist, leading to critical reforms not being implemented.
For our youngest children, we need a childcare industry with stronger regulation, independent monitoring and oversight, and comprehensive enforceable child safeguarding measures. Everyone involved needs to make child safety their number one priority, from the boardroom to the sandpit.
This week has shown that the public wants more than just cheaper childcare. We demand safer childcare.
And importantly, our children, our youngest citizens, must not be sidelined and kept waiting for critical reforms that we know will help to keep them safe.
The new term of Parliament is the opportunity to demonstrate to the Australian public that child safety and wellbeing will be a national priority from now on.
Australians have rightly been outraged and dismayed this week following shocking revelations about babies and toddlers allegedly being sexually abused in childcare centres in Melbourne.
In response, we have heard ministers in the Australian and Victorian governments commit to implementing some long-delayed measures that had been recommended by various royal commissions and inquiries of the past.
While this is a positive outcome, there is much more to do to build safer childcare in this country.
Those royal commissions and inquiries have told us what is needed to keep children safe.
Many of us are now asking why it has taken so long for governments across the federation to act on serious child safeguarding gaps?
The risks to child safety have been known for decades, and the evidence-based recommendations have been sitting on a shelf.
Over the last few years, we have been collectively horrified by the notorious case of Ashley Griffith who abused children in childcare centres in Queensland and NSW. And now we have these terrible allegations coming out of Melbourne.
How did we end up in this place where governments knew what to do to help fix the problems and keep our children safe, but did not act?
To answer these questions, it is necessary to understand that the federation structure splits responsibilities across different levels of government, and that there is no one accountable for child safety and wellbeing in the Australian government.
In contrast, we have had ministers for women for decades, and "women and women's safety" is listed as a key priority for national cabinet, which is where the prime minister and state and territory leaders work together on "issues of national significance".
The complete absence of visibility and accountability for child safety and wellbeing at the national level has allowed the risks to remain unaddressed and the solutions not implemented.
This is despite endless media exposés and tragic stories of abuse of children.
We cannot allow the federation to be an excuse for not acting urgently on the safety and wellbeing of our children.
The latest scandal is taking place in childcare centres, but this is not just an issue for the early childhood education and care sector.
The failure to prioritise child safety and wellbeing and implement child safeguarding measures affects all children everywhere: in schools, after-school care, out-of-home care, youth detention, sporting clubs and holiday programs.
Anywhere you find children, there will be child safety risks that must be addressed.
Former royal commissioner Robert Fitzgerald said this week that it was "shameful" that we have failed to implement the detailed recommendations to strengthen child safety from a decade ago.
He is correct, and now we need to face up to why this has been allowed to happen. It is shameful that the advice of experts continues to be ignored and the risks to the safety and wellbeing of our children are neglected.
We don't need more royal commissions and inquiries. We know what to do.
Core recommendations in our Help Way Earlier! report tabled in Parliament last year were about governments across our federation working together on reform and making child wellbeing a national priority, at national cabinet.
READ MORE:
Right now, there is an absence of national leadership and co-ordination. Child wellbeing is not a priority for national cabinet, and there is no cabinet minister for children. These gaps have allowed a lack of accountability to persist, leading to critical reforms not being implemented.
For our youngest children, we need a childcare industry with stronger regulation, independent monitoring and oversight, and comprehensive enforceable child safeguarding measures. Everyone involved needs to make child safety their number one priority, from the boardroom to the sandpit.
This week has shown that the public wants more than just cheaper childcare. We demand safer childcare.
And importantly, our children, our youngest citizens, must not be sidelined and kept waiting for critical reforms that we know will help to keep them safe.
The new term of Parliament is the opportunity to demonstrate to the Australian public that child safety and wellbeing will be a national priority from now on.

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