The Chronicle

Kids in trouble need more help: expert

- - Sherele Moody, NewsRegion­al

KIDS in strife accounted for 6.2 per cent of Toowoomba region residents fronting the region’s magistrate­s in 2016-17.

The Magistrate­s Courts of Queensland Annual Report shows 512 local children and young people faced 1207 charges in the 12 months – compared to 7789 adult defendants answering to 15,561 offences.

While the number of young people passing through our magistrate­s courts is low, youth advocate Janet Wright said it could be even lower if the region had a dedicated youth advocacy centre.

Ms Wright said she would like to see all major centres across Queensland have organisati­ons that provide juvenile justice educators, lawyers and youth support plus family support workers who would connect with disfranchi­sed young people and direct them away from criminal activities.

The service would be modelled on the Youth Advocacy Centre that operates in Brisbane.

“A lot of young people could be kept out of the justice system if we support them and their families early on,” Ms Wright said.

“It needs to be about early interventi­on and prevention services that support young people to deal with issues that might bring them into contact with the law,” she said.

Child Safety Minister Di Farmer would not commit to rolling out a youth advocacy centre.

Instead, she said our young people could access a “number of agencies including the Office of the Public Guardian and Youth Legal Aid”.

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