Chapter 5
Support for families
5.1
This chapter examines the following terms of reference:
- consultation with individuals, families and communities
affected by removal of children from the home;
- extent of children in out of home care remaining connected
to their family of origin; and
- best practice solutions for supporting children in
vulnerable family situations including early intervention.
5.2
As noted in Chapter 3, some of the most significant drivers for children
entering and remaining in out-of-home are social factors linked to poverty and
disadvantage, including family violence, alcohol and substance abuse and mental
health issues.
5.3
The National Children's Commissioner, Ms Megan Mitchell, highlighted
that one of the keys to reducing the number of children in out-of-home care is
providing support to families to address these underlying social issues. Ms
Mitchell told the committee at its Sydney hearing:
...building and supporting safe, resilient families where
children can grow and thrive is fundamental to ensuring children's rights are
upheld and giving them the opportunities they deserve, stemming the further
growth of the out-of-home care system and breaking the cycle of
intergenerational disadvantage.[1]
5.4
During the inquiry the committee heard from a range of families and
individuals affected by the removal of children by child protection
authorities, and a number of organisations representing parents with children
in care.[2]
Mrs Denise Smith, secretary and treasurer of Family Inclusion Network Victoria
(FINV), a support group for parents with children in care, told the committee
that parents with children in out-of-home care 'are often an invisible
population, about whom unspoken and unchallenged assumptions are made'.[3]
5.5
Submitters and witnesses emphasised the pain and trauma caused by child
removal, and expressed concerns about the lack of support available to maintain
contact with their children and, where appropriate, regain parental
responsibility. This evidence highlighted the need for a range of ongoing supports
for parents and families beyond 'early intervention' and extending across a
continuum of needs.
5.6
This chapter examines available support for parents with children who
are in out-of-home care, or at risk of entering out-of-home care, and suggests
areas for additional support for families and their children prior to entering
care, entry into care and during care.
5.7
Specific supports for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander families and
communities are examined in Chapter 8. Supports for families with disability
are examined in Chapter 9.
Building safe and resilient families
Responsibilities of parents
5.8
The committee acknowledges that parents and families have a
responsibility to provide safe and nurturing environments for their children, free
from abuse and neglect. Recent consultations by the NSW Government highlighted
the need to increase community awareness about the responsibilities of parents
to their children:
We need to make sure parents understand the great value our
community places on their role in raising children – but also that there may be
consequences when they place their children at risk of significant harm.
Parents also need to understand that they will be held accountable when they
fail to meet their responsibilities as parents.[4]
5.9
Evidence to the committee highlighted that for some families may not be
meeting these responsibilities, and placement in out-of-home care may be the
safest and most stable option for their children. Barnardos Australia
(Barnardos) submitted that 'children rarely enter care unnecessarily' due to
issues of abuse and neglect.[5]
5.10
However, a large number of witnesses and submitters suggested there is
not enough available support for families, particularly those from
disadvantaged backgrounds, to meet their parental responsibilities and build
safe and resilient families for their children.[6]
Early intervention and prevention
5.11
Overwhelmingly, evidence to the committee from service providers and
families called for increased 'early intervention and prevention' to prevent
child abuse and neglect.[7]
The National Children's Commissioner, Ms Mitchell, expressed particular concern
'that Australia's current approach to child protection is narrow in scope and
designed to respond to harm rather than prevent it in the first place'.[8]
5.12
A number of witnesses highlighted the importance of early intervention
strategies and programs in ultimately reducing the numbers of children in
out-of-home care. Ms Wendy Norton from the Northern Territory Council of Social
Services (NTCOSS) told the committee that:
...if we do not invest more in the early intervention and
prevention space, then we will not stop the large number of children entering
the system. As a long-time worker in the child and family area once said to me,
'We will never fix the child protection system. All we can do is stop children
from entering it.'[9]
5.13
The committee heard that early intervention is widely recognised as
having the potential to reduce the likelihood of poor long-term outcomes for
children. Research commissioned by the Benevolent Society found that the
benefits of early intervention range from reduced contact with juvenile and
adult justice systems, reduced notifications of child abuse and neglect,
through to improved school performance and better employment outcomes.[10]
5.14
In addition, early intervention is considered to be more cost effective
than the current models of care. The Benevolent Society submitted that:
it is far better to intervene early to prevent problems from
occurring, or escalating, than to try to address them once they have become
entrenched. It also showed that it is far more cost effective.[11]
5.15
However, Barnardos argued it is 'a myth to put in tons of early
intervention'. Citing a 2010 evaluation by the Social Policy Research Centre
(SPRC) into the NSW Government's Brighter Futures early intervention program,
Barnardos suggested early intervention does not prevent children entering care.[12]
5.16
While the SPRC evaluation found a substantial proportion of families,
particularly those who were more disadvantaged (including Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander families, families with drug and alcohol problems, experience
of domestic violence or intellectual disability), 'did not benefit from the
program',[13]
it concluded that overall, the Brighter Futures program had a 'positive impact'
on the out-of-home care system by reducing the upward trend in out-of-home care
placements.[14]
Definition of early intervention
(family support and building good families)
5.17
The committee heard that 'early intervention' is a problematic
definition that may refer to a range of services and programs. Ms Mitchell told
the committee that 'early intervention' is a 'fuzzy term' and suggested it
should broadly encapsulate 'family support and building good families'.[15]
One of the key challenges in defining 'early intervention' is determining how
'early' interventions should be targeted at vulnerable families. Ms Emma White,
Director General of the Western Australian Department of Child Protection and
Family Support, told the committee early intervention and prevention can be a
'catch-all term':
...we often think of that [early intervention] as preventing
the next step of intervention along what is already a tertiary system. We have
lots of discussions with partners on this; it is a whole orientation of a
service system and community around vulnerable children and families. So I
think that we would support the notion that if you can do more earlier, then
you prevent, but where do you start the do more earlier?[16]
5.18
'Early intervention' may be used to refer to any service provided to
families prior to child removal. This may refer to both universal and secondary
interventions. According to the Australian Institute of Family Studies (AIFS),
universal services target 'whole communities in order to build public resources
and attend to the social factors that contribute to child maltreatment'. Secondary
interventions target families of children who are at-risk of abuse or neglect
and generally involve 'early screening to identify children who are most at risk
or targeting vulnerable families, followed by a combination of interventions.[17]
5.19
As discussed in Chapter 2, under a public health model of out-of-home
care services, the National Framework for Protecting Australia's Children
2009–2020 (National Framework) aspires to a pyramid model of
out-of-home care services, with emphasis on universal interventions for
children and families, followed by secondary interventions, with tertiary
interventions as a last resort.[18]
During the development of the National Framework, the Council of Australian
Governments (COAG) acknowledged that Australia's child welfare service systems
'more closely resemble an hourglass than a pyramid', with a focus on universal
and tertiary services, with few secondary interventions targeted at vulnerable
families.[19]
5.20
Evidence to the committee suggested that despite the aspirations of the
National Framework and the work undertaken so far, there remains a significant
disparity between resourcing for tertiary interventions and secondary and
universal interventions.[20]
Funding for secondary child
protection interventions
5.21
The Productivity Commission reports on state and territory expenditure
for some secondary child protection interventions, known as intensive family
support services and family support services (see Box 5.1 for definitions).
Box 5.1 – Child protection services
The Productivity Commission measures real expenditure by states and territories on the following categories of child protection services:
Intensive family support services — specialist services that aim to prevent the imminent
separation of children from their primary caregivers as a result of child protection concerns and
to reunify families where separation has already occurred.
Family support services — activities associated with the provision of lower level (that is, nonintensive)
services to families in need, including identification and assessment of family needs,
provision of support and diversionary services, some counselling and active linking and referrals
to support networks. These services are typically delivered via voluntary arrangements (as
distinct from court orders) between the relevant agency and family.
Out-of-home care services – care for children placed away from their primary caregivers for
protective or other family welfare reasons.
Child protection services – functions of government that receive and assess allegations of child
abuse and neglect, and/or harm to children and young people, provide and refer clients to family
support and other relevant services, and intervene to protect children.
These do not include all early intervention programs in all jurisdictions, and do not include
services funded by the Commonwealth.
Source: Productivity
Commission, Report on Government Services 2015, pp 15.1–15.2.
5.22
In 2013–14, combined real expenditure on intensive family support and
family support programs was $6.7 million, compared to $2.1 billion for
out-of-home care services. Figure 5.1 shows the real expenditure nationally on secondary
interventions compared with out-of-home care and child protection services.
Figure 5.1 – Real expenditure on child protection services, by type of
service, 2013-14
Source: Productivity
Commission, Report on Government Services 2015, Table 15A.1
5.23
Across jurisdictions (where data is available), the proportion of
funding for out-of-home care far exceeds the proportion of spending on
secondary intervention services. Figure 5.2 shows the proportion of spending
across jurisdictions on early intervention services, compared with out-of-home
care and child protection services.
Figure 5.2 – Proportion of real expenditure on child protection services by
jurisdiction, 2013/14
Source: Productivity
Commission, Report on Government Services 2015, Table 15A.1.
5.24
The Productivity Commission noted that while development work is
currently underway to report on performance data for family support services
and intensive family support services, this data is not yet available.[21]
In 2013–14, 21 903 children commenced intensive family support services.
Reporting for family support services is limited to expenditure data only.[22]
The committee notes that this data does not show the proportion of spending on
universal services by state, territory and Commonwealth governments accessed by
families who may be at risk of entering the child protection system.
5.25
The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) reported that in 2013‑14
there were 296 intensive family support service providers nationally, delivering
services across 320 locations. Of these, 80 per cent were in capital cities or
other urban centres.[23]
Of the 21 903 children commencing services (excluding SA and the NT), 88.3 per
cent were living with parents, and 7.6 per cent were in out-of-home care. This
proportion differed across jurisdictions. For example, in Queensland, over 25
per cent of children in out-of-home care were receiving intensive family
support services.[24]
5.26
In addition, the Commonwealth provides some funding for secondary
interventions. Through the National Framework, the Commonwealth has committed
to provide funding for early intervention and prevention services in parallel
with those services provided by state and territories.[25] Specific
programs either funded or delivered by the Department of Social Services (DSS),
including expenditure, are outlined below:
-
Communities for Children Facilitating Partners (CfC FPs) – a
whole of community approach to support and enhance early childhood development
of children up to 12 years old, including funding other organisations to
provide parenting support, group peer support, case management and other
support services ($250 million over five years from 2014-15);
-
Children and Parenting Support (CPS) activity – funds
early intervention and prevention services and resources aimed at improving
children's development and wellbeing and supporting parents (up to $140 million
from 1 January 2015 to 30 June 2018);
-
Child Aware Local Initiative (CALI) – a capacity building
initiative which supports communities to work collaboratively and focus on
early intervention and prevention approaches in eight sites across Australia
($800 000); and
-
Intensive Family Support Service – provides practical
parenting education and support to parents and caregivers for approximately 12
months to help improve the health, safety and wellbeing of the child.[26]
5.27
Responsibility for funding and delivering early intervention services is
shared across the Commonwealth and states and territories; however, the
proportion of spending differs across jurisdictions. For example, in the
Northern Territory, Mr David Pugh from Anglicare told the committee that
most early intervention services are funded by the Commonwealth, rather than by
the Northern Territory Government:
...the Northern Territory government will clearly say, 'That
early intervention is a federal responsibility. We won't do it. We're running a
department of child protection.' Effectively, that is what they will say, and
all the other stuff is federal responsibility. So what is only a small
contribution in other states is the major component of early intervention in
the Northern Territory.[27]
5.28
The committee heard particular concerns in the Northern Territory that funding
for early intervention was contingent on the funding available for out‑of‑home
care services. As the cost of these services has increased commensurate with
the increased numbers of children remaining in the system, funding for early
intervention has declined. NTOCSS noted:
This should not have to be a discussion about taking money
out of the statutory end of the system to fund early intervention programs.
However, that has been the reality of the discussion in the Northern Territory
in the last few years.[28]
5.29
The available data suggest that across most jurisdictions, secondary
intervention services are targeted at families whose children have not yet
entered out‑of-home care, with limited services available for families
whose children have already entered care. Witnesses suggested that secondary
interventions are not generally available to families with children in
out-of-home care. Ms Teegan Bain, whose children were removed from her care,
told the committee:
...when your child is removed, there is no support services
that will assist you to liaise with FACS [Department of Family and Community
Services] and their services. And there are no intensive family support
programs available for people who do not have children in their care. I think
if there were more of those available—or if there were some available—there
would be a better success rate, as well as putting those things in place when
children are restored and making sure that people have support outside of what
they used to have.[29]
5.30
Overall, spending on secondary interventions is disproportionately lower
than spending on out-of-home care services. Noting this disparity, a number of
submissions highlighted the need for equity in funding and resources for
families at risk to keep their children at home.[30]
Ms Susan Heylar from the ACT Council of Social Service highlighted the
importance of equity in funding across the continuum of care:
It is a really fundamental equity issue that we should invest
the same level of support and resources in a family trying to maintain a
healthy and safe environment for their children as we do in taking a child away
from their family, which costs thousands of dollars in court processes and then
we have to fund another family to have access to resources to support those
children. It is really important that we think about the equity of that.[31]
Secondary intervention models
5.31
The committee heard that due to resourcing constraints, there are
limited examples of secondary interventions across jurisdictions. Most of the
examples discussed below are in the initial pilot stage and are often localised
to certain areas and regions.
5.32
The Victorian Government, in partnership with a range of non-government
agencies, delivers a long-term intervention, Cradle to Kinder. The program offers
tailored support to young women and their families from pregnancy until the
child commences pre-school and promotes the health, safety and wellbeing of
children and assists parents to make positive changes to their lives (see Box
5.2).[32]
Box 5.2 – Best practice – Cradle to Kinder
The Cradle to Kinder program is an ante and post-natal support service in Victoria that provides
intensive family and early parenting support to vulnerable young mothers and their children. The
service commences during pregnancy and continues until the child is four years old. The target
group for the service is young pregnant women under 25 years of age.
The Victorian Government noted in its submission that ten Cradle to Kinder programs, including
two Aboriginal Cradle to Kinder programs, are currently being delivered across Victoria. The
program aims to build the capacity of parents to provide for their children’s health, safety and
development and to build and maintain their self-reliance through access to education, vocational
training and employment.
AIFS noted in its submission it is currently undertaking a comprehensive evaluation of the
program in partnership with the Centre for Community and Child Health and funded by the
Department of Human Services. AIFS noted this evaluation includes:
… six-monthly interviews with a group of the mums who are experiencing that
program across a number of the sites. We will have four waves of data over two
years to be able to track their progress over that time, as well as drawing on
administrative data and information about the service-delivery aspects,
particularly around the professional development and learning opportunities
provided to those case workers who are working very closely with the mums.
Source: AIFS, Submission 41,
p. [3]; Dr Daryl Higgins, Committee Hansard, Melbourne, 20 March 2015, p. 5;
AIFS, 'Cradle to Kinder program evaluation', https://aifs.gov.au/projects/cradle-kinder-program-evaluation
(accessed 1 July 2015).
5.33
Another Victorian example of secondary interventions aimed at older
children is the Finding Solutions Plus program delivered by Melbourne City
Mission, a mediation service for children aged 10–15 years (see Box 5.3).[33]
Box 5.3 – Best practice – Finding Solutions Plus
Finding Solutions Plus, funded by the Victorian Government and delivered by Melbourne City
Mission, provides young people aged 10–15 years old and/or family with timely and intensive
support to contain the family conflict issues being experienced, and to reduce the likelihood of
placement in out-of-home care.
The program provides the following services:
- Family Support – intensive family-focused support for up to 12 months for young
people and their families to nurture, strengthen and promote family relationships;
strengthen broader community connections and link with education or training
opportunities.
- Individual Support – for young people to help meet their safety, stability and
developmental needs through identifying/resolving underlying issues and behaviours
impacting on their relationship with their parents and other family members.
- Family Mediation – providing mediation to address underlying issues and provide
strategies for resolution of conflict.
- Parental support – working with parents to assist them to identify and explore
underlying issues and behaviours that are impacting on their parenting and relationship
with their child.
All referrals to the program come from the Department of Human Services.
Source: MCM, Submission 76,
p. 35; Finding Solutions Plus, Melbourne City Mission, http://www.melbournecitymission.org.au/services/program-detail/finding-solutions-plus
(accessed 7 July 2015).
5.34
In Western Australia, the Department for Child Protection and Family
Support provided the committee with details of its Family Support Network (FSN)
program that provides secondary intervention services to vulnerable families
(see Box 5.4). A 2014 review of the model by KPMG found that it 'significantly
improved wrap-around services for families' and calculated a cost benefit ratio
of $3.65 for each dollar invested in the FSN program.[34]
Box 5.4 – Best practice –Western Australian Family Support Networks
Western Australian Family Support Networks (FSNs) provide a common entry point to deliver
targeted support to vulnerable children and families. FSNs are delivered by the Department for
Child Protection and Family Support (DCPFS) in partnership with the community services sector
(Parkerville Children and Youth Care and MercyCare). DCPFS noted FSN services 'can prevent a
family situation deteriorating to the point where children enter the child protection system'.
Three FSN services have been implemented in WA since 2012 in Armadale, the Midwest and
Mirrabooka. A fourth service is currently subject to a tender process and is expected to be
operating in Fremantle from August 2015.
A 2014 review of the model by KPMG found FSNs had 'positively influenced improvements in
circumstances for vulnerable children and their families'.
Source: WA Department for
Child Protection and Family Support, answer to question on notice,
16 February 2015 (received 12 April 2015), pp [1 – 2].
Identifying vulnerable families
5.35
One of the most significant challenges for child protection authorities
in delivering effective secondary interventions is the limited capacity to identify
vulnerable families prior to concerns reaching the threshold for an
investigation or substantiation. Mr Matthew Lupi, Executive Director of the
Queensland Department of Communities, Child Safety and Disability Services
told the committee:
[T]he most significant drivers for Queensland in the growth
of out-of-home care in the last 10 years, like many other states, include
limited capacity to respond to vulnerable families through mechanisms of early
intervention.[35]
5.36
As noted in Chapter 2, child protection notifications are assessed by
child protection authorities for a response which may include an investigation,
referral to support services or not acted upon.[36]
AIHW reports in 2013-14, of the 304 097 child protection notifications, only 45
per cent (137 585) were investigated. The remaining 55 per cent were 'dealt
with by other means', which may mean referral to support services.[37]
The committee notes that it is not clear how these notifications are dealt with
across jurisdictions.
5.37
Evidence provided to the committee by families with children in care
indicated that in some cases, children at risk are known to authorities, but
that no support is offered prior to child removal. Ms Felicity Kime from Family
Inclusion Strategies Hunter (FISH) told the committee that her situation was
well known to authorities in New South Wales:
I had lots of different issues around the removal and my
parenting. I could not parent, and I did not know how to parent; at this time,
I did not realise this. I just thought, 'Yes, I have given birth; I know how to
be a mother.' I gave birth at 16, nearly 17 years old, with no mother around,
no father around, and an abusive partner—which the department was quite aware
of ...as soon as somebody comes to light to the department, I believe they need
to go and investigate straightaway, not leave it until they get multiple,
multiple reports.[38]
5.38
Similarly, Ms Teegan Bain, also from FISH, told the committee that although
authorities were aware of her situation, no support was offered prior to
removal:
The department was aware of what my situation was for several
months—for nearly nine months of my pregnancy—and I did not have contact, and
my son was removed at birth. I think it would be better if the department had
come in earlier, rather than not allocating things that are high risk; they
could work with parents rather than just coming in at the very last second when
there are absolutely catastrophic things happening, and with a long history of
that stuff happening. If the department came in earlier and wanted to work with
families it would be better. In my situation, that would have been better.[39]
5.39
In particular, there is a lack of support to address the underlying
social issues that place the family and child at risk, including family
violence. Ms Bain told the committee she was not offered any assistance in
dealing with family violence:
I was in a domestic violent [DV] relationship. At no point
did they confront him or help me escape that. They were just saying, 'You can
leave.' When someone is in a DV relationship, it is not as simple as just
getting up and leaving.[40]
5.40
The committee also heard that in some jurisdictions, mandatory reporting
requirements result in child protection authorities being overwhelmed with
notifications, hindering their ability to provide each with an appropriate
response.[41]
In June 2015, the South Australian Attorney-General announced that the high
number of notifications were 'clogging' the investigative process in South
Australia with only 6 500 out of 44 000 notifications being investigated.[42]
5.41
The high numbers of reports received by child protection authorities
means that many cases are not investigated, and families are referred away with
limited support. In Queensland, only 19 per cent of the 128 534 child
protection notifications in 2012-13 reached the statutory threshold for
investigation. Cases that did not meet the statutory threshold for a child
protection notification were recorded as Child Concern Reports, with the result
that families were directed away from the child protection system with little
or no support.[43]
5.42
As noted in Chapter 2, most jurisdictions have a single pathway for
reporting child protection concerns, which produces a high number of child
concern reports. These reports cover a wide spectrum of concerns, from those
requiring an immediate response to serious allegations of abuse, to less
serious cases where family support services could be provided.[44]
5.43
To better identify those families that would benefit from family support
services, and reduce the number of child concern notifications received, the
Queensland government has recently introduced changes to allow for differential
pathways to report child protection concerns (see Box 5.5). The committee notes
that although it is too soon to evaluate the effectiveness of this model in
referring families to appropriate services, this approach may provide an
innovative example for those jurisdictions that have a single reporting
pathway.
Box 5.5 – Best practice – Queensland – differential response pathways
The 2013 Queensland Child Protection Commission of Inquiry recommended the Queensland
Government establish a differential response that provided alternatives for responding to child
protection notifications including:
- an investigation response by government of the most serious cases of child maltreatment;
- a family service assessment response by a non-government organisation where there is a
low to moderate risk; and
- a family violence response by a non-government organisation where a child has been
exposed to violence.
In its submission, the Queensland Government noted it has recently introduced legislative changes
to allow for dual pathways to report child protection concerns, and differentiated responses to how
concerns are responded to, with a greater capacity to refer to support services, including a family
service assessment or family violence response.
Source: Queensland Government,
Submission 69, pp 14–17.
Respite services and 'shared care'
Respite services
5.44
A number of submitters and witnesses noted the importance of respite
services for families to provide short term care while families resolve issues.[45]
This includes 'respite from placement, where a child spends regular, short and
agreed periods of time with another carer other than their primary carer'.[46]
5.45
The committee heard that due to current demand for long-term care
placements, existing models of care have limited capacity to provide respite
services. Mr John Avent from the Salvation Army told the committee:
Because our foster care services are so overwhelmed by
demands for protective placements, we do not have the capacity to work with
family support agencies and provide respite placements. This is something that
I think is a real shortfall, and if we were able to provide respite we would be
better able to work with family support agencies to keep children at home.[47]
5.46
Most jurisdictions do not have a framework or model for respite care which
provides short-term assistance to families. The Commission for Children and
Young People noted in Victoria:
...there is no formalised model of respite care. A few agencies
have developed respite accommodation models through philanthropic funding, as
an early intervention option before situations reach crisis. Agencies report
that the respite trials have been successful, but cannot be sustained without
ongoing funding.[48]
5.47
One agency that provides a model of respite care is Kennerley Children's
Homes in Tasmania. Mrs Carleene O'Brien from Kennerley Children's Homes told
the committee of the benefits of the respite model:
That is a fantastic program because it is really proactive.
Many of the children go into that program. We set it up as a holiday sort of
thing. We always send the children back to the same carer and they have that
for a block of time—up to about 28 days a year they can use it. It is about
supporting families in the community who really need something to get them over
the hurdle. Often, we are not the answer; we are part of the puzzle. We have
agencies working with those families and then we just do that. Sometimes it is
about having the child come out to give them a break from it—they need a break
while the parents are trying to interact together, I suppose—or it is getting
the resources and the supports that they need.[49]
5.48
However, in some jurisdictions, emergency respite programs do not fall
within existing funding frameworks. Mr Barry Titmus from Kennerley Children's
Homes told the committee that under Tasmania's funding strucutres, the
emergency respite program:
...is not under the continuum of care, so the tendering that is
coming up will not include emergency respite; we are hoping that that will be
picked up somewhere.[50]
5.49
The committee heard that emergency respite programs have been trialled
and discontinued in other jurisdictions. Life Without Barriers drew the
committee's attention to the 'Aunts and Uncles' planned respite program that
operated on the NSW north coast in the 1990s by Centracare. The monthly respite-mentoring
program aimed to relieve the pressure on families by providing opportunities
for regular time out and new experiences for children, as well as support for
care givers through positive mentoring relationships.[51]
Ms Jessica Cocks from FISH told the committee that:
...essentially, it provided a fostering families service, where
families and foster families remained in close contact throughout the
children's lives—or, throughout their childhoods.[52]
Shared care
5.50
Witnesses suggested models of shared care that would 'foster the family'
and not just the child. One example was the 'mirror families' model proposed by
Professor Judy Cashmore from the University of Sydney, which, according to Ms
Cocks, could 'happen quite easily' and have a positive impact on at risk
families (see Box 5.6).[53]
Box 5.6 – Best practice – Shared family care or 'mirror families'
Shared family care involves fostering of whole families by community members who act as
mentors and work with a team of professionals.
Professor Judy Cashmore, Professor of Socio-Legal Research and Policy at the University of
Sydney notes shared family care:
…may be useful in providing another pool of carers, using the time and skills
of older parents and professional carers, without requiring them to take over
the full-time care of the child. This provides another option when there is a
shortage of foster carers and adoption is unlikely to be an option. These 'shared
care' or 'mirror family' arrangements may be suitable in some cases, especially
for teenage and young mothers who do not have the skills or means to care for
their child and need longer term supportive relationships themselves. It could
also be used to support parents when children are returned home.
Shared family care has been explored in the US, UK and also previously by Barnados in NSW
under their Temporary Family Care model. There has been limited evaluation and trialling of this
approach. Evidence from some US states indicate the shared family care approach is 'very good' at
locating housing and assisting families with making the transition to independent living as well as
assisting families to 'budget and save money, become more stable and independent, get their
children back, find employment, become better parents, maintain their recovery, get back on their
feet, and start a new life'.
Professor Cashmore suggests there may be some value in trialling such approaches in Australia. If
successful, it could diffuse some of the tension between 'protecting' children and providing for
'permanent' relationships that maintain their identity and family ties.
Source: Judy Cashmore,
'Children in the out-of-home care system', in Families, Policy and the Law:
Selected essays on contemporary issues for Australia, Australian Institute of
Families Studies, May 2014, pp 148–149.
5.51
Ms Cocks told the committee that while shared care 'has never been
adequately funded', FISH are aware of examples of informal shared care
arrangements in New South Wales where:
...the outcomes for those kids would have been far worse than
what has been able to be achieved, because there was a foster family that
fostered the whole family, not just the children.[54]
5.52
Ms Cocks gave the following example:
I know of a family where there are four children, who now
range in age from about seven to about 15. They have been working with a foster
family for about the last five years and have a relationship. The foster family
have a very close relationship with the mother. They regularly care for those
children—I think it is one weekend a month, and then at other times if needed.
So they have a very flexible arrangement with this family. It has reached the
point where the relationships between the parties are very close, very informal
and very flexible, which has only happened because of the initial support
provided by an out-of-home care agency to support voluntary respite care for
that family.[55]
Integrated universal services
5.53
A number of submissions suggested that 'early intervention' should focus
on universal, rather than secondary, interventions to address the broader
social issues that lead to neglect and abuse.[56]
Mr Andrew McCallum, CEO of the Association of Children's Welfare Agencies, emphasised
that early intervention should address issues before they become child
protection issues and need to have a 'non-welfare colour to it'.[57]
5.54
It was put to the committee that where families reach the point of
accessing secondary interventions, it is often too late to have a positive
impact as these services are provided as 'last chance' option for families with
complex and entrenched issues. Referring to the DSS funded intensive family
support services offered in the Northern Territory, Ms Melissa Kean from the
NPY Women's Council noted that for families in remote communities:
We do not always see positive outcomes in the work that we
do, and that has been seen pretty much across the Territory in the rollout of
intensive family support services. I think that once you start working right at
the pointy end, at the tertiary end of the child protection spectrum, you
cannot always effect change or work with families to overcome problems, and
certainly not in a short time.[58]
5.55
The committee heard that at-risk families need support to address a
range of social issues associated with disadvantage that are beyond the
capacity of child welfare authorities to address. Mr Tony Kemp, Deputy
Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services in Tasmania, noted the
effects of a lack of support:
What we do find is that, in the absence of those supporting
architectures to help families get back on their feet or at least resolve the
risks that they have got, children stay longer in care, because families are
not getting the level of intervention that they need and they are specialist
supports. They are not things that child protection services offer; they are
things that need to be resolved at a clinical, therapeutic, medical, housing,
education level.[59]
5.56
A number of witnesses supported the development of universal services
targeted at the wellbeing of the child. Ms Kelly Stanton from Wesley Mission
Victoria told the committee:
I think universal services in the Australian community need
to be more firmly focused on the safety and wellbeing of children, no matter
the service. I think universal systems need to support our carers. For example,
the Medicare and health systems, where there are many things that can be done
in that space to support carers. I think our employment and education systems
again need to have a particular focus on children in care and children leaving
care.[60]
5.57
For at-risk parents, the opportunity to identify and address issues
early increases the likelihood of maintaining custody of their children. Ms
Teegan Bain from FISH told the committee she wasn't offered any support until
shortly before the birth of her child:
I guess I would have liked someone to come in and let us know
that they were aware of our situation, that they would be monitoring it and
that they would give us support services to go to or rehab—like give me a
support plan to ensure that my baby would be safe and that I would be able to
keep him in my care rather than place him in care straightaway. They left it
until three or four days before he was born before they came and saw me.[61]
5.58
However, the committee heard there are significant challenges in
developing targeted universal services. These services cover a broad range of
state, territory and Commonwealth portfolios including health, employment,
education and community services and are not generally integrated or targeted
at particular groups, including children and families at risk of entering the
statutory out-of-home care system. Dr Daryl Higgins from AIFS told the
committee that 'we have both jurisdictional and siloed responsibilities for
many of these other service delivery systems':
If you are really going to be dealing with prevention as well
as early intervention, it means that you need to have engagement from those
people who are responsible for running what you would call the universal
services systems, be it schools, early childhood care and education or
housing—any of those kind of broad platforms—so you can start to address
problems as early as possible that provide supports for all families, so that
all parents can improve their parenting so there is less chance of them needing
to have the intense secondary services, less chance of needing the statutory
system and therefore less chance of children coming into care.[62]
5.59
Dr Higgins told the committee that the significant challenge was in
integrating these services to 'break down the silos':
How do we get all those different parts of the broad
service-delivery systems on board—not just grudgingly doing a few little things
on the side, but actually seeing it as central to their work to say: 'I am an
important part of the child safety and wellbeing system in Australia'—by
providing better housing or care and education for vulnerable young people.[63]
5.60
Mr Chris Twomey from the Western Australian Council of Social Service (WACOSS)
suggested the introduction of 'proportionate universality' through mechanisms
of identifying vulnerable families:
across your community you have universal services but, for
those areas where you have got particular children, families and cohorts who
are most at risk, you ensure those services are flexible enough to put more
resources in where they are most needed. There is a greater opportunity where
you have universal services if you build into those assessments, that early
intervention, the signals around who is most at risk. You then ensure that you
have an integrated service system so that there is that supported referral to
actually help people who are identified within your universal services most at
risk get the kind of follow-up supports that they need to prevent problems
developing or to intervene early where those problems are.[64]
5.61
It was put to the committee that the Child Aware Local Initiative (CALI)
program, which is one of the key action items of the second action plan of the
National Framework, provides an example of a community-based initiative to
integrate universal services at the community level. Families Australia submitted
that CALI is 'ground-breaking prevention and early intervention work of child
aware approaches' which addresses 'parental risk factors that are associated
with child abuse and neglect' (see Box 5.7).[65]
The committee notes that the third annual CALI conference was held in Melbourne
in May 2015.[66]
Box 5.7 – Best practice – Child Aware Local Initiative (CALI)
Families Australia, in partnership with the Australian Centre for Child Protection (ACCP) at the
University of South Australia, provide national leadership for the Child Aware Local Initiative
(CALI). CALI is a central priority under the National Framework and receives $800 000 from the
Commonwealth government.
CALI is a is a capacity-building initiative that supports communities to undertake early
intervention and prevention activities that contribute to keeping children safe and well. Families
Australia and the ACCP aim to deliver CALI across 8 sites.
Families Australia noted communities will be supported to develop and implement sustainable
local plans of action by bringing together existing resources and networks within communities. In
each community a lead organisation will be identified to partner with a range of agencies, groups
and individuals such as national, state and local government agencies, community leaders,
community sector organisations and groups, corporate and small business, health and education
institutions, child protection services and children, parents and families.
Source: DSS, Submission 78,
pp 12–13; Australian Centre for Child Protection, Child Aware Local Initiative,
http://www.unisa.edu.au/Research/Australian-Centre-for-Child-Protection/Training-and-Coaching/Child-Aware-Local-Initiative/
(accessed 6 May 2015).
Early intervention framework
5.62
The committee notes that the CALI program is only in its early stages,
but may provide a model for integration of universal services at the community
level. The committee heard there is a need to address this integration at a
broader, national level.
5.63
Witnesses noted the need for a nationally coordinated framework for
'early intervention'.[67]
The National Children's Commissioner told the committee that a 'coordinated and
strategic national investment in early intervention and prevention' should be
the focus of third action plan of the National Framework.[68]
Ms Mitchell summarised this view:
There are lots of good models around the country. But it is
very patchy. There is no systematic evidence based investment. I think we need
to do the research on what works for families in what kinds of different
situations. What are the good drug and rehab programs, or substance abuse
programs? What are the good domestic violence programs? What are the things
that we know will work in a reasonable period of time that will support the
child to gain a permanent and stable arrangement.[69]
5.64
Similarly, Families Australia proposed a new joint commitment by the
Australian, state and territory governments to a national early intervention
and prevention framework that would:
...focus effort, avoid duplication, coordinate planning and
implementation and ensure sharing of information and innovation to reduce child
abuse and neglect.[70]
Committee view
5.65
The committee recognises that for some children, placement in
out-of-home care, at least temporarily, may be the safest option to prevent
abuse and neglect. The committee acknowledges that parents have a
responsibility to provide a safe and nurturing home for their children.
5.66
However, evidence to the committee suggested many parents would benefit
from additional assistance and support to help build safe and resilient
families for their children. The committee recognises that governments of all
levels have an obligation to assist parents in caring for their children.
5.67
The committee recognises that 'early intervention' is a broad term used
to describe a range of different universal and secondary interventions to
assist families and children. The committee suggests the term 'family support'
provides a clearer definition of the range of services available to families
prior to interventions by child protection authorities, and more fully
encapsulates the intention of these services.
5.68
The committee acknowledges the difficulties faced by child protection
authorities in identifying vulnerable families before they reach the threshold
of a child concern notification. The committee notes that the way these child
concern notifications are handled differs across jurisdictions and that a large
proportion of families are referred away with limited support. The committee
notes the introduction of a differential response pathway in Queensland, which may
provide a good example for ensuring that families receive the support they
require.
5.69
The committee recognises that there is a need for increased family
support services across all jurisdictions prior to intervention by child
protection authorities, including the use of integrated universal services,
secondary interventions, respite services and shared care models. In
particular, the committee sees the potential benefits of 'proportionate
universality' in developing targeted universal services that can help to
identify vulnerable families and children.
5.70
Noting the lack of national coordination and consistency on how family
support services are developed, funded and evaluated, and on how universal
services are integrated to focus on the needs of children, the committee
suggests the development of a family support framework as part of the National
Framework. This framework should develop equitable funding models for all forms
of family support, and evidence‑based evaluations to determine the best
and most effective family support models.
Support for families with children in care
5.71
While many submitters focussed on early intervention, the committee also
heard that there is significant need for support for parents with children in
care, particularly those parents who wish to maintain contact or regain
parental responsibility for their children.
Building relationships with child
protection authorities
5.72
The committee heard that one of the key challenges for families with
children in care was establishing positive and constructive relationships with
child protection authorities. Across jurisdictions, the relationship between
parents and child protection authorities is largely adversarial, with a
significant level of distrust on both sides.[71]
5.73
The committee heard that parents with children in care feel a strong
sense of powerlessness in dealing with child protection authorities. A 2008
study commissioned by Anglicare WA and undertaken by the Centre for Vulnerable
Children and Families at the University of WA, 'The Experiences of Parents and
Families' found parents experience:
...deep sense of grief, loss, despair and isolation following
the removal of their children, and a significant amount of helplessness, powerlessness
and hopelessness held toward statutory authorities.[72]
5.74
Based on interviews with 42 participants affected by child removal, the
study summarised that:
...parents and families of children who have been taken into
the care system by statutory authorities constitute a population of people
whose ongoing stress is palpable and often chronic. Most of them live with
unresolved anger, guilt, shame and despair — and their experiences have left
them feeling powerless and fearful of seeking assistance. They represent a
group of people who have been judged as failing their children or grandchildren
and they all spoke poignantly of what that ‘sentence’ means to them and their
families.[73]
5.75
A recent project by Family Inclusion Network WA (Fin WA), called the
'Parent Voice Project', found 'parents identified being shut out and not
listened to' in dealing with child protection authorities.[74]
Mrs Denise Smith from FINV noted while much attention is paid to 'care drift' for
children churning through multiple placements:
...parents are often caught in a similar 'system drift':
dealing with constantly shifting goalposts or a lack of monitoring of their
progress, and constant changes of caseworker.[75]
5.76
Similarly, research by the Australian National University's Regulatory
Institutions Network examined community workers' views of the needs of families
who are involved with the ACT child protection system. The research found that
parents feel a deep sense of 'powerlessness and despair' when working with
child protection authorities:
...parents and families in contact with community workers are
dealing with complex needs, are socially marginalised and stigmatised. They are
observed by community workers to have little to no trust that they will be
treated equitably by child protection workers ... For both families and community
workers engaged with child protection authorities there was a sense of
powerlessness and despair: stigma was so great that parents were fighting
against the odds to win respect from child protection workers for the steps
they took to be better parents, and to convince the child protection
authorities that their lives had changed and they were able to care for their
children.[76]
5.77
These research findings were strongly supported in evidence provided to
the committee. Ms Karen Crossley, whose children were removed from her care in
Western Australia, expressed the view that there is a power imbalance between
parents and child protection authorities:
There is a lot of inequity of power in the current child
protection process. Every time any child is taken away from their immediate
family environment the parents feel totally powerless and hopeless and despair.
They are robbed of the capacity to be a parent, and heaps of times the case
workers will not involve them in trying to sort out a care plan that actually
allows them to have meaningful relationships, regardless of whether they live
at home or not. We, as parents, get totally jealous of the way in which foster
carers are funded for resources to manage our kids when those resources were
not chucked at us in the first place to keep our kids in our home environment.
The inequity that we as parents have to deal with is considerable.[77]
5.78
The Australian Legislative Ethics Commission (Alecomm), a volunteer
organisation that 'provides help and support to children and parents involved
with the child protection industry', provided the committee with collated data
from 151 submissions by parents and families affected by child removal.[78]
The submissions highlighted the significant emotional, physical and
psychological effect of child protection interventions, with around 90 per cent
of respondents reporting feelings stress, grief and frustration caused by child
removal and subsequent court proceedings. A further 73 per cent of respondents
reported family separation or breakdown, with some even reporting family
suicides and deaths attributed to the removal process.[79]
One submission stated:
I was told immediately after my [child's] removal that a
person’s past represents their future and that my baby would never be coming
home. Never ever was I offered any hope, encouragement, options or support.[80]
5.79
Significantly, these submissions highlighted a high level of distrust felt
by parents towards child protection authorities, reportedly compounded by a lack
of participation in decision-making processes, and a lack of available support.
The majority of submissions reported that child protection authorities 'did not
work with them for a better outcome for their children and family'.[81]
The Alecomm submissions strongly argued for alternatives to child removal:
...the family should have been offered support to remain
together, the allegations should have been investigated for validity prior to
removal, and the department should have communicated with the family first as
there was no consultation and families felt they were never given a chance or
opportunity to know what was required of them to get their children back or
given enough time, support or opportunity to make the required changes.[82]
5.80
This evidence suggests that child protection authorities need to engage more
effectively with the parents of children in care to provide services that meet
their specific needs. Professor Valerie Braithwaite from the Regulatory
Institutions Network told the committee that the relationship between at risk
families and their children is often interpreted 'swinging pendulum and just
have to settle on some level that is optimal'. However, Professor Braithwaite
challenged this assumption and suggested that:
...in fact there is no one optimal level. We need many
different options. Sometimes we need to be tough; sometimes we need to be soft.
We need an approach to child protection which allows us to choose the right
option for the right child, the right family and the right situation. Our work
suggests that we would do better if we seriously included those people and
organisations most affected by child protection decisions in our processes and
deliberations. This is not happening at the moment by and large; neither has it
happened in the past.[83]
Community-based advocacy
5.81
The committee heard a number of community organisations have implemented
strategies to improve the channels of communication between parents and child
protection authorities. Specific advocacy groups for Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander families are discussed in detail in Chapter 8.
5.82
In New South Wales, Family Inclusion Strategies Hunter (FISH) was formed
in 2014 as 'a group of practitioners and family members who are concerned with
trying to improve and increase family inclusion in out-of-home care and child
protection practice' in the Hunter Valley region of NSW.[84]
The necessity of organisations such as FISH to assist in improving
relationships between parents and authorities was put to the committee by
parents with first-hand experience of the removal of a child from their care.
Ms Teegan Bain told the committee the importance of accessing services for
parents:
...when your child is removed, there is no support services
that will assist you to liaise with FACS and their services. And there are no
intensive family support programs available for people who do not have children
in their care. I think if there were more of those available—or if there were
some available—there would be a better success rate, as well as putting those
things in place when children are restored and making sure that people have
support outside of what they used to have.[85]
5.83
Ms Jessica Cocks, convenor of FISH, noted one of the key outcomes of the
first family inclusion practice forum held in July 2014 was the need for better
partnerships between carers, families and child protection authorities.[86]
Ms Felicity Kime, whose children were removed from her care, told the committee
that while the relevant department was aware of her situation, she was offered
no assistance or advice to address her issues with alcohol abuse:
I never had the department come and speak to me constantly or
really let me know that there was a problem. I grew up in a family of alcohol
abuse and drug abuse, and when my children were getting removed I did not even
realise that I had a problem with alcohol.[87]
5.84
Another important part of relationship building is assisting child
protection authorities to assist parents to overcome their issues, rather than
pass judgement. Ms Teegan Bain noted:
I admitted to using while I was pregnant and, basically, as
soon as I said that they were not willing to help me. They were not willing to
look at restoration or having my son returned to me. They were not giving me
any clear guidelines as to what I needed to do to have him returned.[88]
5.85
Another example of community based initiatives is being led by the
Family Inclusion Network Australia (FINA), established in 2010. Throughout the
inquiry, the committee heard from FINA branches in Western Australia,
Townsville and Victoria.[89]
FINA is one of the few community groups made up of parents with children in
care that focuses on building relationships with child protection authorities. Family
Inclusion Networks have been described by Ms Mary Ivec, a researcher at the
ANU's Regulatory Institutions Network, as part of an international 'geography
of hope' for improving child protection systems.[90]
5.86
Evidence suggested that the impact of Family Inclusion Networks across jurisdictions
was generally positive and assisted developing better relationships with child
protection authorities, with WA raised as a potentially best practice model. Family
Inclusion Network WA (Fin WA) told the committee that it is the only
organisation in Australia funded by state or territory governments to advocate
for parents whose children are in care or are at risk of entering care (see Box
5.8).[91]
Fin WA recommended establishing similar government funded advocacy services in all
other states and territories to:
...help address the experience of imbalance of power between
families and statutory authorities which by its very nature is adversarial and
does not allow for a collegial working relationship.[92]
Box 5.8 – Best practice – Family Inclusion Network WA
Family Inclusion Network WA (Fin WA) was formally established in 2008 as an advocacy
service for parents involved with the child protection system. Fin WA is funded by the WA
Department of Child Protection and Family Services (DCPFS) to provide 'services to parents and
family members who are in crisis following the removal and placement of their children', as well
as working with families who have been identified at risk of having their children removed.
Fin WA began as an informal support group established by a community development worker
from Anglicare WA in response to a number of parents who were expressing a lot of distress and
seeking additional help and support because their children had been removed from their care.
Fin WA's mission is 'to have a child protection system that is respectful and inclusive of parents,
family and community as key stakeholders'. Fin WA services include advocacy and information in
a model of case management and crisis intervention. The strategic objectives of Fin WA are to:
- empower parents and families to participate meaningfully in the child protection system;
- foster a collaborative and inclusive child protection system;
- enhance the valuable role and intrinsic value of parents and families within the child
protection system; and
- develop and sustain a viable, effective organisation based on best practice.
Fin WA noted in its submission that it also works systemically to promote a child protection
system that is fair and equitable and works collaboratively and respectfully with the DCPFS to
advise and advocate for the delivery of 'more inclusive and respectful' policies and practices.
Source: Family Inclusion
Network WA, Submission 82; Ms Debbie Henderson, Executive Officer, Fin WA,
Committee Hansard, 16 February 2015, pp 30–35.
5.87
Ms Debbie Henderson, Executive Officer of Fin WA, told the committee of
the benefits of Fin WA's work for families:
I absolutely believe that the work we are doing has been at
least somewhat helpful, if not very helpful, for a lot of families. That might
be from assisting in ensuring the family has participated really rigorously in
assessment and decision making and in the process around reunification or it
might be around assisting a family to be able to sit at the table—come into a
room and participate in a meeting—with the department. Sometimes there is so
much hostility and anger that we will be a mediator and then eventually a
negotiator. We work to assist families to develop their own skills and strength
to manage alone. It is a really skilled and delicate piece of work.[93]
5.88
The committee also heard from parents who were assisted by Family
Inclusion Networks across jurisdictions. Sarah, a member of FINV, told the
committee that prior to seeking assistance from FINV:
I did not get listened to. My workers do not listen to what I
have to say concerning my children and kinship care. Now that I have actually
got help of my own, they are starting to realise the points I am trying to get
across in regards to my children.[94]
5.89
Sarah highlighted the assistance FINV was able to provide regarding
reunification:
...working to help me reunite with my children so I can get
them to know them better and work on giving them a life that they deserve. They
are just trying to help me get a better life for my children.[95]
5.90
Ms Karen Crossley, a member of Fin WA whose child was removed from her
care, told the committee of the positive impact of Fin WA's advocacy work:
Having someone come in and bat for you, especially when you
are on the receiving end of being assessed by psychologists who wrote lots of
damning reports about you in the beginning in pretrial conferences, means the
world. It gives you the courage to speak and deal civilly with people who
slammed you and criticised you to the hilt. You have to show that you have
changed. Sometimes parents have a really tall order to go through all of the
hoops the department expects of them in a constructive way.[96]
Participation in decision making
5.91
In addition to improving relationships with child protection authorities,
the committee heard strong support for greater involvement of parents in the
decision‑making processes once children are subject to child protection
notifications.
Entry into care
5.92
As noted in the previous section, a number of submitters and witnesses
expressed concern that parents are rarely involved in the decision-making
process prior to a child being placed in out-of-home care. A number of
submissions which were accepted in-confidence contained allegations that child
protection authorities and courts had acted improperly and the justification
removal was either inaccurate or misleading. These submitters alleged their
children were forcibly removed in circumstances that amount to 'kidnap'.[97]
5.93
As discussed in Chapter 2, each jurisdiction has its own legislated criteria
for child removal, ranging from risk of harm to evidence of abuse and neglect. Families
who had experienced child removal expressed concern that these criteria are not
adequately investigated or substantiated, particularly in jurisdictions in
which the risk of harm is taken into account.[98]
5.94
Distrust and animosity was allegedly further compounded by the limited
recourse to contribute to or challenge decisions by child protection
authorities made about child removal. A number of witnesses stated that they
felt there was little accountability for child protection authorities and few
avenues to make complaints or raise concerns.[99]
Ms Wightman from Grandmothers Against Removals told the committee at its Sydney
hearing:
Quite often what happens is, when you make a complaint
through the complaints line, it is referred back to the office where the case
is being handled, and quite often it is referred back to the person you are
making the complaint about. That is common. The organisation you are
complaining about is investigating itself, so there is no overarching body.[100]
5.95
Within and between jurisdictions, the level of involvement of parents in
the decision making process differs widely. Ms Meredith McLaine from the
Shoalcoast Community Legal Centre noted the differences:
we do see inconsistent practices between different
out-of-home-care agencies in terms of how inclusive they will be in involving
parents, and often there appears to be a lack of communication and parents
feeling frustration. I think, similarly to the early intervention phase, that
there is not really a culture amongst the out-of-home-care workers of actively
inviting or supporting advocacy, and particularly legal advocacy, for the
parents and families.[101]
5.96
A number of submitters recommended that parents and families be involved
in the decision-making process, with child protection authorities.[102]
Ms Crossley from Fin WA emphasised that:
if we are consulted and involved in respectful manner, we
will take ownership of the solutions to the problems a lot more keenly and with
a lot less stress and trauma than if we are excluded.[103]
5.97
One example that was raised as a best practice model by several
witnesses was the New Zealand model of Family Group Conferencing (FGC) that
involves families, children and child protection authorities (see Box 5.9).
Box 5.9 – Best practice – New Zealand Family Group Conferencing
Family Group Conferences (FCGs) were established in New Zealand in 1989 to 'provide families
with a greater say in the resolution of both child protection and juvenile justice matters'. FCGs are
mandatory for all children prior to entry into the out-of-home care system.
According to AIFS, conferences are arranged and facilitated by specialist 'Care and Protection
Co-ordinators', employed by the New Zealand child protection authority and usually involve the
child or young person, their advocate and/or legal representative; the parents, extended family
members and any other support person the family wishes; and the referring care and protection
worker. Other professionals may also provide information but are not involved in decision
making.
The purpose of the conference is for the family to hear the child protection concerns, to decide
whether the child is in need of care and protection, and to make plans that can address these
concerns. All participants must agree for a conference agreement to come into effect. According
to AIFS, conferences take place in the following three stages:
- sharing of information by child protection workers and other professionals with the
family;
- family having time on their own to deliberate and agree on possible solutions; and
- arrive at agreement on whether the child is in need of care and protection, and a plan that
will address these concerns.
An early evaluation of the program showed that approximately 2 000 conferences were convened
in the first year of its introduction, with only a very low percentage of conferences failing to
achieve agreement. Estimates in 2006 suggest that over 50 000 conferences have been convened
since 1989, reflecting the central role that conferences play in New Zealand's child protection
system.
Source: Nathan Harris,
'Family group conferencing in Australia 15 years on', National Child Protection
Clearinghouse Issues, no. 27, February 2008, https://aifs.gov.au/cfca/publications/family-group-conferencing-australia-15-years
(accessed 1 July 2015).
5.98
A 2008 review by AIFS on the use of FGC in Australia found that with the
exception of South Australia and Tasmania, the use of family group conferencing
was 'fairly limited' and concluded that 'while conferences have had an impact
on practice, they have not yet become part of mainstream practice in most of
Australia'.[104]
FGCs were piloted in NSW in 2011, and another pilot is planned for four test
sites. A 2012 evaluation by the Australian Institute of Criminology (AIC) of NSW's
2011 FGC pilot found that FGCs 'provided an important opportunity to resolve
child protection matters and build support networks for families outside of the
court process'.[105]
However, the AIC also noted the small scale of the pilot and the voluntary
basis for referrals.[106]
5.99
The North Australia Aboriginal Justice Agency (NAAJA) suggested that FGCs
could be particularly effective for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
families. A research report by NAAJA suggested the Northern Territory is
'fertile ground' for implementing FGCs and other alternative dispute resolution
mechanisms. The report proposed the development of a model of FGC 'specifically
tailored to the characteristics of the Northern Territory' should be adopted as
a matter of urgency.[107]
5.100
Similarly, a number of submitters suggested FGCs be used in decision-making
processes for parents with disability as an alternative to engagement with the
court system.[108]
5.101
Another alternative to the court system which was put to the committee
is the concept of restorative justice. Professor Valerie Braithwaite from the
Regulatory Institutions Network described restorative justice as:
...a process that acknowledges a harm has been done and works
to understand the causes, the consequences and what can be done to repair or
heal the harm that has occurred. All those affected have a voice and come
together to find a solution and commit to an action plan...[109]
5.102
A number of witnesses expressed support for the Practice First pilot in
NSW, a restorative justice approach to 'group supervision' (see Box 8.10).[110]
The Women's Legal Service of NSW (WLSNSW) welcomed the development of
approaches such as Practice First 'which seeks to engage and support families,
rather than be focused on what our clients have often experienced as
surveillance and a punitive response'. However, WLSNSW acknowledged that many
clients continued to experience difficulties in their engagement with the
department.[111]
Box 5.10 – Best practice – Practice First pilot
Ms Maree Walk from the NSW Department of Family and Community Services told the committee the Practice First approach is 'a relationship based way of working with children and
families'. The Practice First model encourages 'group supervision' as a way to avoid risk aversion,
and 'to enable a child protection worker to not feel that they are carrying the risk on their own'.
A 2014 report by the NSW Ombudsman noted that the Practice First pilot:
has a strong focus on enhancing practice culture through active engagement
with very vulnerable and high risk families, based on building respectful
relationships and preserving families where appropriate.
The pilot was first trialled in Bathurst and Mudgee in 2012, and was extended to 24 sites in 2013.
On 9 July 2014, the then NSW Minister for Family and Community Services announced an
expansion of the model to an additional 13 sites. The Minister noted early indicators from the
initial 24 sites suggest 'the program is having a positive impact on families, workplace culture and
service delivery'.
The NSW Ombudsman noted early results from a formal review of the program are positive,
suggesting the program has led to:
- an increase in the number of home visits in trial regions;
- a decrease in the number of 'risk of significant harm' reports for families whose case-plan
goals were achieved; and
- widespread support among front-line caseworkers and managers.
Source: Ms Maree Walk, Deputy
Secretary, Programs and Service Design, NSW Department of Family and Community
Services, Committee Hansard, 18 February 2015, p. 69; Minister for Family and
Community Services, the Hon Gabrielle Upton MP, 'Cutting edge child protection
– expanding practice first across NSW', 9 July 2014, https://members.nsw.liberal.org.au/news/state-news/cutting-edge-child-protection-%E2%80%93-expanding-practice-first-across-nsw
(accessed 1 July 2015); NSW Ombudsman, Review of the NSW Child Protection
System: Are things improving? April 2014, p. 15.
Legal assistance
5.103
As noted in Chapter 2, decisions about the placement of children in out‑of‑home
care is determined by the relevant court in each jurisdiction. A number of
submitters and witnesses expressed concern about the lack of support for
families prior to and during the court process, especially in cases where the
parents dispute the grounds for removal.[112]
5.104
The committee heard that for parents who attempt to challenge the
decision by child protection authorities to remove children, the process can be
lengthy and expensive. Mr Adam Fraser told the committee that is had taken four
months and significant legal expenses to have his children reunited, during
which time he alleges that his children were neglected in care:
They went through four different foster carers and kinship
carers over a period of four months. While in care, my children were neglected.
They were sent to school without shoes or a proper lunch. They had staph
infections on their arms after injuring themselves while in foster care. They
were never seen by a doctor. They were not given any medical assessment for
three months.[113]
5.105
As discussed in Chapter 3, most families who come into contact with the
child protection system do not have the resources to fund expensive legal
challenges in court. For these families, there is limited financial support
available. Ms Mary Moore, convenor of the Alliance for Family Preservation and
Restoration (AFPR), told the committee, that most child protection cases do not
qualify for legal assistance:
[W]ith the legal aid
solicitors, you have a situation where the vast majority say they are
underfunded. I have been told by some solicitors: 'Look, I only get $400 to
defend your matter, so don't call me. Don't email me. We haven't got time to do
an affidavit.' Realistically, what solicitor is going to do much for you for
$400? In addition to that, because there is no money in defending parents, and
also it is extremely hard to find, in the years that I have been involved in
support, I can count on my hand, probably, the number of solicitors that have
actually gone out and fought for parents. In the vast majority of cases, they
pressure parents into consenting to the orders of the department on the basis
that it is the department and you just cannot win. Unfortunately, that is the
way the system is.[114]
5.106
In addition, families experiencing the trauma of child removal are often
not equipped, either financially or practically, to find adequate legal
representation. Ms Crossley from Fin WA told the committee:
The moment we have
our kids taken away, we lose all of our parenting allowances from Centrelink,
we are in a state of shock, despair and grief, we cannot function properly at
work and our income goes down to very minimal. And you expect us to find
representation at a court hearing in a process that we are not familiar with?
And you expect equitable outcomes when we are not resourced to get legal
representation at such hearings?[115]
5.107
For disadvantaged families in particular, the court process can
be particularly daunting. Ms Crossley told the committee that:
...because it is about court orders, you are an adversary to
the department. You are opposing factions. They do not want to make friends
with you; they just want you to sign a consent order for wardship until 18 and
be done with it. They do not want to engage with you, apart from getting your
consent to get out of a trial. The affidavits that they come up with are
sometimes 500 pages long. They get access to reports and information that we
have never seen in our lives half the time. It can be hugely distressing to the
families to read through all this stuff and not be familiar with the court
processes and to have to behave in a sane, coherent manner while trying to deal
with magistrates, the departmental workers and with family and friends. What do
you say to friends when your kids have been taken away?[116]
5.108
A number of support organisations, such as FINA, Alecomm and AFPR
provide ad hoc legal advice to parents on a voluntary basis. Ms Moore gave the
example of a case where AFPR provided assistance, which resulted in
reunification:
...a couple of months ago we had a situation where four
Indigenous children were removed on a Friday night by police. It was extremely
traumatic, as is a common occurrence. In this case the parents actually had not
harmed their children; it was a possible future risk of harm not from the
parents but someone who lived nearby. They qualified for legal aid and the day
before they were to attend court, legal aid was dropped. They contacted me, and
I then worked on their case. I subpoenaed all the evidence; I wrote their
affidavits; I attended all the department meetings and attended court with
them. I cannot speak for the parents. I am not a solicitor and that is problematic
in itself: when you have no legal aid, you cannot even get an advocate to speak
for you. In that case we were successful in having those four children
returned. That case did have merit. You have someone in a legal aid office who
is judge, jury and decision maker on whether a case has merit or not, whether
you have a chance of winning. That case was an example of getting the children
home, because I assisted the family in doing that.[117]
5.109
Submitters noted that where legal assistance may be available, it is
often not provided to families until proceedings have commenced
in court. It was suggested that legal advice which is provided as early as
possible has the potential to assist families in settling matters before they
proceed to court, and where they do proceed, increase the likelihood of parents
continuing care of their children.[118]
Ms McLaine from the Shoalcoast Community Legal Centre expressed support for
early legal assistance:
...if parents were provided with legal advice when Community
Services is coming to see them and working with them about their options, their
rights and how serious their situation is, it might make a difference. I feel
there tends to be a lack of awareness in the families that this is a legal
issue—that there is a legal framework—or about the likelihood of their children
being removed in court proceedings starting.[119]
5.110
Without legal assistance or other financial supports, children may be
removed and placed in care more often than may be necessary. One submission
alleged that the financial status of a person may affect the outcome of a
placement decision:
I've had workers tell me that if I had the money that my son
would be home. It's so very sad to all involved that my son, myself, his
brothers and all family members are suffering due to a lack of finance. A child
is not a piece of property to own and control. I would like my son home.[120]
5.111
The committee heard that families that oppose child protection
authorities are not often successful. Dr Frank Ainsworth and Dr Patricia Hansen
provided the committee with a 2012 study into the characteristics and outcomes
of 117 completed applications for variation of care orders in NSW (known as
section 90 applications) in 2006-07.[121]
The study found that 'there is a significant association between DoCS
[Department of Community Services] being the applicant and the outcome being
orders in favour of DoCS', whereas parents were less likely to have their
applications approved.[122]
5.112
A number of submitters supported providing legal assistance to parents
prior to and during court proceedings.[123]
Ms McLaine from the Shoalcoast Community Legal Centre suggested that in those
cases where the best interests of the child could be met through remaining at
home:
...if parents were provided with legal advice when Community
Services is coming to see them and working with them about their options, their
rights and how serious their situation is, it might make a difference. I feel
there tends to be a lack of awareness in the families that this is a legal
issue—that there is a legal framework—or about the likelihood of their children
being removed in court proceedings starting.[124]
Building relationships with children
and carers
Contact services
5.113
As noted in Chapter 4, the National Standards recognise the significance
of maintaining links between children in care and their families, particularly
for children from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. This will
be examined in more detail in Chapter 8.
5.114
'Contact' refers to meetings arranged between families and children
while in care. These can involve carers and/or supervision by child protection
workers where required. The committee heard that these visits could be
difficult and traumatic for both children and parents, particularly around
family celebrations:
When you lose your kids, the whole scenario of family
celebration goes out the window. If you do not have a supportive caseworker and
you do not get to the stage of unsupervised access, you never get to see your
kids on their birthdays or at Christmas because of the lack of resources and
supervisors. Can you imagine the trauma for a kid not being able to celebrate
their birthday with their family? Yet some caseworkers, who will not be named,
reckon that it is in the best interests of kids for them to be with their
foster carers instead of their birth families on their birthdays.[125]
5.115
Submitters suggested that positive relationships established between
parents and carers could contribute to positive outcomes for the child:
One of the myths that I think social workers believe is that
the stability of a foster placement depends solely on the foster carer and how
we resource the foster carer. In my view, the stability of the placement is
also influenced strongly by whether that foster carers speaks respectfully
about the birth family of the child and whether or not they realise and
recognise the importance of maintaining and encouraging respectful contact and
communication channels between the birth family and the foster carer.[126]
5.116
Ms Crossley argued for greater support for parents during contact visits
with their children, in order to develop a stronger relationship:
Either we threw more resources into paying for supervisors or
we throw more resources at foster carers for fostering a family so that the
family and the foster carer do not need supervision at times of access. Special
days are very, very difficult for people who do not have their kids living with
them.[127]
5.117
UnitingCare Connections submitted a model for therapeutic contact
support in Victoria that, in their view, may provide advice to other
jurisdictions about how to better support parents and children during contact
visits (see Box 5.11).[128]
Box 5.11 – Best practice – Enhanced Therapeutic Contact Service
In June 2013, Connections UnitingCare implemented the Enhanced Therapeutic Contact Service
(ETCS) to deliver therapeutic contact and transportation services to children in out-of-home care
and their families in select locations in Victoria.
The program differs from traditional models of ‘supervision’ and ‘monitoring’ based contact,
where contact is observed with minimal support. Instead ETCS dynamically transforms the
contact environment into a physically and psychologically safe, child-centred environment for
children, young people and families to connect using a coaching and empowerment based
therapeutic approach. ETCS is staffed by a qualified and trained team of allied health
professionals and support staff. Contacts and contact environments are tailored around the
individual needs of children and families. The program is designed to complement other specialist
services servicing the child, young person and family including home based care, Child
Protection, reunification and other therapeutic services.
Connections Uniting Care reports the program has had a positive impact on children’s social,
emotional and psychological development, the quality of contact has supported reunification of
children to home care (along with input from other specialist supports), has empowered families
through goal setting and planning activities, and finally has involved the community to support
children, young people and families.
Source: Connections
UnitingCare, Submission 10, pp 3–7.
5.118
The committee heard that an important part of improving contact visits
for children and parents, is to build positive relationships with the child's
carer. Ms Mary Ivec from the Regulatory Institutions Network outlined a number
of programs used in the US, which are aimed at parents and carers in the US
(see Box 5.12). Ms Ivec told the committee:
All of these could be trialled and evaluated in Australia if
child protection authorities were committed to authentic community engagement
through participatory and inclusive processes and to share their power. Heavily
weighted formal systems of authority which utilise muscular regulatory activity
and responses without widespread engagement, commitment and trust are destined
for disaster and a never-ending cycle of crises.[129]
Box 5.12 – Best practice – Carer and parent contact
Ice-breaker meetings
Ice-breaker meetings are facilitated child focused meetings held shortly after a child is placed in
out-of-home care to provide an opportunity for birth parents and foster parents or other caregivers to
meet each other and share information about the child's needs. These meetings aim to promote
easier adjustments for children and help form relationships of mutual respect between carers and
foster parents.
Visit coaching
Visit coaches assist parents to prepare for contact visits and encourage communication to facilitate
co-parenting between birth parents and foster parents. US child welfare authorities report that
coached visits are more effective than supervised visits because 'coaching and support aims to
directly address the issues that brought the child into care, build on family strengths and guide
improved parenting' and 'can help families make significant changes within short time frames'.
Birth parent mentors and peers
Birth parent mentors and peers are employed by foster care agencies to help engage parents whose
children are entering the foster care system. The US Foster Family-Based Treatment Association
has identified parent engagement and support as critical to successful child outcomes and
established seven programs that recognise positive connections between birth and foster families.
Source: Ms Mary Ivec, Researcher,
Regulatory Institutions Network, Australian National University, Committee
Hansard, Canberra, 16 April 2015, p. 23.
Reunification
5.119
Developing stronger relationships with children and carers is
significant for families seeking to have children return to their care. A
number of submitters noted there was no clearly defined pathway or support for
parents seeking to regain parental responsibility for their children. Ms Kime
from FISH told the committee that when her children were removed, she was not
offered any ongoing assistance or advice to assist her in reunification:
No-one told me what I needed to do to help change my life, to
better my children and to be able to parent my children. It was simply down to
a parenting program I had to find out from other mothers going through the
program, counsellors telling me what to do. I really believe these people
removing children need to explain to the parents what they can do to try to
better themselves, because until we better ourselves we cannot help our
children. That is what the kids need: parents and carers coming together as
one, being able to help the whole way around.[130]
5.120
Where there was a pathway, many parents raised concerns about constantly
'shifting goalposts' and 'hoops' they needed to jump through to satisfy the
requirements of child protection authorities. Ms Crossley from Fin WA told the
committee that these changing requirements have a corrosive effect on parents:
Parents do not lose hope when the kids still want to keep in
touch with them after they have been taken. You dare not lose hope of ever
being reunified if your kids let you know that they still love you and they
still think you are a central part of their lives. You would move heaven and
hell to do whatever you needed to do to get those kids back home. But if you
were working within a system that says, 'These are the goalposts we want you to
jump through. There's long waiting lists for them all. We understand that, but
we expect you to jump through them in two years or less.' And this is when you
cannot access mental health counselling because the services are overstretched
or you cannot afford it or whatever. And the goalposts keep changing. Every
changed goalpost destroys part of your hope as a parent. Caseworkers must not
be allowed to change goalposts. They must be taught that, if somebody dares to
show a change, and a constructive change, in the family unit, that needs to be
taken notice of. Do not stay in the old reports, of assessments saying, 'This
person is useless.' Acknowledge what change has been happening and move on from
there and move a lot closer to reunification.[131]
5.121
In some cases, parents who fulfil all the requirements are still not
able to regain custody. Ms Teegan Bain told the committee:
My son has been in care for 2½ years. I filed a section 90 12
months ago, which the department supported until January. A month ago the
department withdrew their support because my son's attachment to his carers was
quite strong. So now, even though the restoration is meant to be supported
where parents make the appropriate change, in my case it is not happening...Once
there are 18-year orders they will not look at it again until you file the
section 90, rather than people working together. It would [be] good if they
could work together when they can see appropriate change, rather than the
parent having to go through that section 90, getting legal aid and getting a
solicitor to take it on.[132]
5.122
Child protection authorities told the committee that it can be difficult
to judge when children should be returned. Mr Tony Kemp, Deputy Secretary of
the Tasmanian Department of Health and Human Services told the committee:
[W]hat I see both here and internationally is this
extraordinary dilemma between the reunification of children when it is patently
obvious that they should not be going home—we have a shifting environment in
the courts, whereby very often applications for long-term orders are turned
down and you end up going from multiple one-year orders. Yet we are trying to
get children home that should not be going home, and that is a significant
problem.[133]
5.123
The committee heard that some service providers have developed programs
specifically designed to assist parents with reunification, such as
UnitingCare's Newpin Restoration Model (see Box 5.13).
Box 5.13 – Best practice – Newpin Restoration Model
Newpin (New Parent and Infant Network) is an intensive child protection and parent education
program that works therapeutically with families under stress to break the cycle of destructive
family behaviour and enhance parent-child relationships.
Newpin was established in the United Kingdom in response to the needs of new mothers
experiencing issues such as isolation, mental illness, family violence, social disadvantage, low
self-esteem and for those who were at risk of physically or emotionally harming their child or
children.
Following the purchase of the Newpin licence from National Newpin UK, UnitingCare Burnside
established Australia’s first centre at Bidwill in Sydney’s outer western suburbs in April 1998,
focusing on the needs of parents or carers with children under five years of age. In addition to the
original Bidwill program, Burnside operates a Newpin Fathers program and programs at Doonside
and St Marys in Sydney. Other Newpin programs have since opened under licence in Victoria,
Western Australia, Tasmania, ACT and South Australia.
The Newpin program specialises in the development of emotional maturity and wellbeing and
promotes the skills that parents need to manage practical as well as emotional challenges. The
Newpin process refers to the stages of empowerment and support that all parents who enter the
program are encouraged to participate in. It reflects the core values of support, empathy, respect,
equality and self-determination and the key elements that underpin the Newpin program. UnitingCare notes this process has been developed with the understanding that the individual
needs and rate of engagement of each family is respected at all times.
The aim of the Newpin program is that parents attend for up to nine months prior to restoration and
then for a further nine months post restoration. The post restoration period in Newpin is critical to
facilitating the smooth transition of children from care. In addition parents are assisted as they
integrate the knowledge and skills developed at Newpin into their home environment. The pre and
post restoration periods involve the same commitment from families including the centre based
attendance, home visits and parenting groups.
Source: Additional
Information, UnitingCare, Newpin Restoration Model, received 2 March 2015, https://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Committees/Senate/Community_Affairs/Out_of_home_care/Additional_Documents
(accessed 14 August 2015). See also: Newpin Australia, http://www.newpin.org.au/
(accessed 1 July 2015).
5.124
The Salvation Army also runs a 15 week training program in Tasmania:
where parents are provided with the opportunity to explore
their own past and the issues that have emerged in their current situation,
where their children have been taken from their care.[134]
5.125
The Salvation Army notes that this program is based on the Empowering
Parents, Empowering Communities (EPEC) mode of parental support used in the
United Kingdom (see Box 5.14). Mr Leith Cowley from the Salvation Army noted
participation in the program had assisted parents in reuniting with their
children:
While I cannot give you figures for success rates, we are
aware of many families that have participated and have been able to regain
access to their children over a period of time.[135]
Box 5.14 – Best Practice – Empowering Parents, Empowering Communities (UK)
Empowering Parents, Empowering Communities (EPEC) is a peer-to-peer programme that trains
parents to deliver the ‘Being a Parent’ (BAP) course in their communities.
The BAP course aims to help parents develop positive communication and parenting skills,
emotional literacy, and to encourage parents to be mindful of how their words and actions can
impact on children’s wellbeing. The BAP program is aimed at parents or carers of children aged
between 2 and 12 years old from disadvantaged backgrounds.
The EPEC program was developed in the United Kingdom by the Centre for Parent Child Support.
A pilot of the EPEC was trialled in Tasmania by the Murdoch Children's Research Institute in
2012.
A 2013 evaluation of the EPEC model in Tasmania found the program improved 'confidence and
self-esteem' for parent facilitators and recommended expanding the program across the state.
Source: Australian Institute
of Family Studies, Child Family Community Australia, Communities for Children
Facilitating Partners Evidence-based programme profiles, 'Empowering Parents,
Empowering Communities', https://apps.aifs.gov.au/cfca/guidebook/programs/empowering-parents-empowering-communities-epec
(accessed 16 July 2015).
Committee view
5.126
The committee recognises the importance of providing a range of family
support services across a continuum of needs to assist children to remain with
their families, where it is safe for children to do so.
5.127
The committee strongly asserts that the safety and wellbeing of children
must be the primary consideration for child protection authorities, and any
support for families must not come at the expense of children's safety. The
committee recognises that in some cases, placement in out-of-home care and
removal from their family may be appropriate to protect children from abuse and
neglect.
5.128
The committee acknowledges that parents with children in out-of-home
care often feel overlooked and ignored by child protection authorities. The
committee acknowledges there is a power imbalance between families and child
protection authorities and that families feel powerless in dealing with these
authorities. The committee supports the introduction of services and advocacy
groups that aim to build relationships between parents and child protection
authorities to improve outcomes for children and young people. The committee
also supports greater integration of families into the decision making
processes about their children, and greater independent oversight of decisions
affecting children and young people.
5.129
In particular, the committee recognises the lack of practical support
and legal assistance available to families seeking to maintain parental
responsibility for their children. The committee is concerned that families are
unable to access legal assistance when challenging decisions by child
protection authorities.
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