Sunday Territorian

Checks, cheques and balances are imperative for child safety, writes NOELENE SWANSON

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LIKE many of you I was dismayed by the NT Children’s Commission­er’s recent report highlighti­ng the systemic failings of the Northern Territory’s child protection system, and the abuse and harm experience­d by 12 Aboriginal children placed in out-ofhome care or foster care over the course of 16 years.

It is clear the Territory’s child protection system is overwhelme­d and failing the children it is meant to protect.

These children bravely spoke up about what was happening to them, but the system turned them away. This is a major alarm bell and something that a Royal Commission spent years and millions of dollars trying to change in this country.

There are three core reasons behind the systematic failings.

First, there is a lack of independen­t rigour when it comes to the assessment of a carers’ ability to provide care — when they first sign up to be a carer and ongoing.

Second, there is a lack of resourcing to enable thorough, independen­t wellbeing checks to be carried out on all children placed in care.

And third, there is no independen­t party checking the safety and wellbeing of children in the place they are removed to, and no one to ensure children’s views about their own safety and wellbeing is listened to or factored into decision-making.

In other places in Australia, independen­t child advocates take on this role and are a key part of the child protection system.

The reality right now is the demand on the system is so great and resources so stretched that case managers are having to triage their clients — children — based on how vulnerable they are, because they cannot support them all.

The overwhelme­d resources also mean children are staying in the care system longer than they need to.

This out-of-home-care effect comes at huge cost to the child, government and taxpayer.

Too often this first contact with child protection, and removal from the family home,

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