Latest news with #ChelseaTobin

Sydney Morning Herald
29-05-2025
- Politics
- Sydney Morning Herald
New high-security shelters for women in crisis to sit empty during family violence epidemic
Nearly 30 high-security units for sheltering women at high risk of death by family violence will stand empty after the state government refused to fund their operating costs. Construction of the 28 crisis shelter units – expected to house more than 1000 women and children a year – is underway in Melbourne's north after the federal government provided $7.8 million in July 2024 to Victoria's 24/7 domestic violence response service, Safe Steps. The May state budget did not include the $3.9 million in operational funding for the new units for 2025-26 or the $9.6 million in ongoing funding requested by Safe Steps. As a result, the apartments will sit empty during a housing crisis, Safe Steps chief executive Chelsea Tobin said. Loading A Victorian government spokesperson said that since the federal government funded the construction of the apartments, 'they should fully fund it to become operational'. The construction money was granted after a string of brutal deaths in 2024 prompted Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's rapid review into addressing gendered violence. It allowed Safe Steps to expand its wraparound pilot service, Sanctuary, from seven apartments to 35, adding 120 places for women and their children to stay for three weeks while they are connected with safe accommodation, social services, education and employment. Independent analysis of Sanctuary's first year, 2023-24, found it saved Victorian taxpayers $100 per night per client compared to putting women and children in motels, which are currently used to cover the large gap in crisis refuge places in Victoria. It found 98 per cent of those who stayed there did not return to violent – and potentially deadly – homes.

The Age
29-05-2025
- Politics
- The Age
New high-security shelters for women in crisis to sit empty during family violence epidemic
Nearly 30 high-security units for sheltering women at high risk of death by family violence will stand empty after the state government refused to fund their operating costs. Construction of the 28 crisis shelter units – expected to house more than 1000 women and children a year – is underway in Melbourne's north after the federal government provided $7.8 million in July 2024 to Victoria's 24/7 domestic violence response service, Safe Steps. The May state budget did not include the $3.9 million in operational funding for the new units for 2025-26 or the $9.6 million in ongoing funding requested by Safe Steps. As a result, the apartments will sit empty during a housing crisis, Safe Steps chief executive Chelsea Tobin said. Loading A Victorian government spokesperson said that since the federal government funded the construction of the apartments, 'they should fully fund it to become operational'. The construction money was granted after a string of brutal deaths in 2024 prompted Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's rapid review into addressing gendered violence. It allowed Safe Steps to expand its wraparound pilot service, Sanctuary, from seven apartments to 35, adding 120 places for women and their children to stay for three weeks while they are connected with safe accommodation, social services, education and employment. Independent analysis of Sanctuary's first year, 2023-24, found it saved Victorian taxpayers $100 per night per client compared to putting women and children in motels, which are currently used to cover the large gap in crisis refuge places in Victoria. It found 98 per cent of those who stayed there did not return to violent – and potentially deadly – homes.

Sydney Morning Herald
03-05-2025
- Sydney Morning Herald
‘Invisible victims': Calls for reform as family violence system fails children
A decade of family violence reforms have failed to address the needs of tens of thousands of children impacted every year, prompting calls for a dedicated national support service. The nation's leading family violence prevention advocates and experts have warned that vulnerable children are falling through cracks in the response to the 2015 Royal Commission into Family Violence and desperately need their own tailored services. The move is being backed by the Family Court, which has begun reforming its own processes and introducing a Children's Charter to ensure the needs of young people impacted by family violence are put at the centre of its considerations. The charter will guide all people working in the Family Court system – from social scientists to lawyers and judges – to ensure children and young people are considered at every step of the process. Children were present during more than 37,000 family violence incidents Victoria Police responded to last year, but Safe Steps chief executive Dr Chelsea Tobin said young people were still not being treated as victims in their own right. 'We've come a long way since the royal commission. Billions of dollars are being poured in, and we see people seeking help that wouldn't have 10 years ago,' Tobin said. 'But there is a gap for young people. The sector has predominantly built a system for adult victim/survivors, and it's forgotten teenagers or young people, and they're quite the invisible victims. 'Forty per cent of young people under the age of 16 have been exposed to family and domestic violence, and that's really important because they're particularly vulnerable to the effects of trauma at that age.'

The Age
03-05-2025
- The Age
‘Invisible victims': Calls for reform as family violence system fails children
A decade of family violence reforms have failed to address the needs of tens of thousands of children impacted every year, prompting calls for a dedicated national support service. The nation's leading family violence prevention advocates and experts have warned that vulnerable children are falling through cracks in the response to the 2015 Royal Commission into Family Violence and desperately need their own tailored services. The move is being backed by the Family Court, which has begun reforming its own processes and introducing a Children's Charter to ensure the needs of young people impacted by family violence are put at the centre of its considerations. The charter will guide all people working in the Family Court system – from social scientists to lawyers and judges – to ensure children and young people are considered at every step of the process. Children were present during more than 37,000 family violence incidents Victoria Police responded to last year, but Safe Steps chief executive Dr Chelsea Tobin said young people were still not being treated as victims in their own right. 'We've come a long way since the royal commission. Billions of dollars are being poured in, and we see people seeking help that wouldn't have 10 years ago,' Tobin said. 'But there is a gap for young people. The sector has predominantly built a system for adult victim/survivors, and it's forgotten teenagers or young people, and they're quite the invisible victims. 'Forty per cent of young people under the age of 16 have been exposed to family and domestic violence, and that's really important because they're particularly vulnerable to the effects of trauma at that age.'