Chapter 1 - Introduction
In some ways I feel like wasted potential, I
feel that because I was full of potential as a child and if I'd had a different
childhood I could have done anything and been anyone I wanted but instead I was
lumbered with a childhood where I had no rights and the government
"carers" did whatever they felt like doing to me, so instead of being
anything I wanted I've had to deal and cope with the horror of my childhood.
This is something that I will keep doing for the rest of my life. I also ask, "what
if what happened to me, happened to one of your children"? That's how you
need to view me, as a child as valued as your own because I am someone's
daughter, my parents just aren't here. (Sub 246)
Terms of reference
1.1
On 4 March 2003,
the Senate, on the motion of Senator Andrew
Murray, referred the following matters to
the Committee:
1. (a) in relation to any government or non-government institutions, and
fostering practices, established or licensed under relevant legislation to
provide care and/or education for children:
(i)whether any unsafe, improper or unlawful care or treatment of
children occurred in these institutions or places,
(ii)whether any serious breach of any relevant statutory obligation
occurred at any time when children were in care or under protection, and
(iii)an estimate of the scale of any unsafe,
improper or unlawful care or treatment of children in such institutions or
places;
(b) the
extent and impact of the long-term social and economic consequences of child
abuse and neglect on individuals, families and Australian society as a whole,
and the adequacy of existing remedies and support mechanisms;
(c) the
nature and cause of major changes to professional practices employed in the
administration and delivery of care compared with past practice;
(d) whether
there is a need for a formal acknowledgement by Australian governments of the
human anguish arising from any abuse and neglect suffered by children while in
care;
(e) in
cases where unsafe, improper or unlawful care or treatment of children has
occurred, what measures of reparation are required;
(f) whether
statutory or administrative limitations or barriers adversely affect those who
wish to pursue claims against perpetrators of abuse previously involved in the
care of children; and
(g) the need for public, social and legal policy
to be reviewed to ensure an effective and responsive framework to deal with
child abuse matters in relation to:
(i)any systemic factors contributing to the occurrences of abuse
and/or neglect,
(ii)any failure to detect or prevent these occurrences in
government and non-government institutions and fostering practices, and
(iii)any necessary changes required in current
policies, practices and reporting mechanisms.
2. In undertaking this reference, the
committee is to direct its inquiries primarily to those affected children who
were not covered by the 2001 report Lost
Innocents: Righting the Record,[1] inquiring into
child migrants, and the 1997 report, Bringing
them Home,[2]
inquiring into Aboriginal children.
3. In undertaking this reference, the
committee is not to consider particular cases under the current adjudication of
a court, tribunal or administrative body.
4. In undertaking this reference, the
committee is to make witnesses and those who provide submissions aware of the
scope of the inquiry, namely:
(a) explain the respective responsibilities of
the Commonwealth and the states and territories in relation to child protection
matters; and
(b) explain the scope of the committee’s
powers to make recommendations binding upon other jurisdictions in relation to
the matters contained in these terms of reference.
1.2
In its report Lost
Innocents on child migration the Committee referred to comments that that
inquiry was the second part of a trilogy, the first being the HREOC report Bringing them home on indigenous
children. A third report was needed about the plight of the many thousands of mainly
non-indigenous Australian-born children who suffered under institutional care.
This report is the third part of the trilogy.
1.3
The attention focussed on the Stolen Generations of indigenous
children that resulted from the HREOC inquiry and the more recent coverage
provided to child migrant issues was commented upon in evidence. It was not so
much that these two groups were receiving the recognition and services they
deserved, rather that there were many thousands of other Australians who were
subjected to similar treatment in care and removal from families and that they
also deserved equal recognition and access to services as a result of their
childhood experiences. Some refer to themselves as the 'white stolen
generation'.
Conduct of Senate Inquiry into Children in Institutional Care
1.4
The inquiry was advertised in The Australian, Daily
Telegraph and Herald Sun, and
publicised through other print and electronic media, through newsletters
circulated by support groups and service providers, and on the Internet. The
Committee invited submissions from Commonwealth and State Government
departments and other interested organisations and individuals. While an
initial deadline of 31 July 2003
was extended to 1 September 2003,
due to the highly personalised nature of this inquiry and the time taken for
many care leavers to gain knowledge of the inquiry, the Committee continued to
accept submissions throughout the course of the inquiry.
1.5
The reporting date was extended from December 2003 to
August 2004 due to the wide-ranging and complex issues that arose during the
inquiry, the sheer volume of evidence that required processing and the workload
imposed on the Committee by competing priorities of other inquiries being
conducted concurrently. The Committee was also mindful of the need to produce an
authoritative and compelling report which respected the life experiences of
care leavers.
1.6
The Committee received 440 public submissions and 174
confidential submissions. A list of individuals and organisations who made a
public submission or provided other information that was authorised for
publication by the Committee is at Appendix 1. The extensive nature of
this inquiry can be recognised from the submissions received by the Committee.
Submissions were received from care leavers who had been in government and
non-government institutions or foster homes across all States in Australia
and spanning the period from the 1920s to the 1990s. Appendix 6 provides a
summary listing from submissions of all the
institutions the care leavers who provided those submissions had been placed
in. The span of years they were in those homes as described in submissions is
summarised in Appendix 7.
1.7
The Committee heard evidence in public at Melbourne
on 11-12 November 2003; Adelaide on
13 November 2003; Perth
on 8-9 December 2003; Sydney on
3-4 February 2004 and Brisbane
on 12 March 2004. The
Committee also held four in camera hearings. 171 people who had lived in a
broad range of institutional settings and those representing many organisations
gave evidence at these hearings.
Submissions
1.8
Without doubt this inquiry has generated the largest
volume of highly personal, emotive and significant evidence of any Senate
inquiry.
1.9
Many hundreds of people opened their lives and the
memories of traumatic childhood events for the Committee in their public
submissions and at the hearings. Some people were actually telling their story
to another person, including family, for the first ever time. For some these
memories and their life story remain so distressing that they asked for their
name to be withheld or to be identified only by their first name. Many others
who for a range of reasons preferred that their identity remain undisclosed
provided confidential submissions. All these people desperately wanted the
Committee to read and hear what they had experienced in childhood and the
impact that those events have had throughout their life. They wanted their
voice to be heard.
1.10
The power of these submissions in conveying a life
needlessly haunted by potent feelings of guilt and shame is overwhelming and
must be acknowledged and addressed in a decisive and resolute fashion; that these
events happened, that the care leavers were not to blame, that theirs is not a
background of shame, that they should be recognised and understood as having
had a childhood full of emotional and social deprivation.
1.11
For the Committee members and parliamentary staff
involved with this inquiry the scale and magnitude of the events described in
evidence was overwhelming. To think that a human could treat another in such a
psychologically and physically abusive manner is unthinkable; to treat a child
in such a manner is simply incomprehensible. Yet it happened. Comments were
made during evidence that it is impossible for others to fully comprehend what
was happening unless they had actually experienced this life, and that a
certain desensitisation could occur. These feelings were well expressed in one
submission:
it occurred to me that Senators and other government staff
involved in reading and assessing submissions, could easily become hardened to
their content. It appears there were many, many incidents that are
questionable, which took place in government institutions like Parramatta
Girls' Home. I only hope that Senators give their utmost attention to the
details of submissions, and try to imagine the effect on a person's character
as a result of abuse and ill-treatment. Empathy must be difficult to achieve
when your own life has been sweet. (Sub 284)
1.12
To fully understand the roller-coaster of emotions
generated by this inquiry is indeed very difficult. We as Committee members have
read the submissions and sat through deeply emotional and disturbing hearings. One
Committee member has described the inquiry 'as the most emotionally wrenching
period I have spent in politics in 15 years', a view shared by all members. The
Committee understands the courage of those care leavers who wrote submissions
and the complex emotional problems faced by many in completing their
submissions. The Committee is aware of many cases where the writing of a
submission took many months of agonising over and reliving painful past events.
These types of things have never been released from my mind
before. Writing my life experience for this submission has really broken me
emotionally as I am reliving all these issues and events. (Sub 341)
Telling this story is one of the hardest things I have had to
do. I'm telling you things I've never told anyone before, not even my brother
and sister. We never discuss being in that place, the shame and damage it has
caused is just too powerful. (Conf Sub 44)
Writing my memoirs has been a frightening experience because all
the painful memories swamped me like a tidal wave. The emotion in my heart did
become too great and many tears flowed from my eyes. These intense emotions
from the chemistry of pain, humiliation, anxiety and fear, often wake me up many
mornings of my life feeling afraid but not understanding why. (Conf Sub 143)
1.13
The Committee understands that for the hundreds of care
leavers who provided submissions there are many hundreds more, probably
thousands, who for various reasons could not bring themselves to relive their
experiences and produce a submission, or simply were unaware of the inquiry.
I have cried even writing this letter to you, I guess I just can't
understand why I must go on with it as I have hoped all my life that someone
would hear me... This letter was written for all of those who were unable to
write their own. (Sub 371)
By proxy, may [my submission] also convey the feelings and
sentiments of the many who through death, ill health, damaged psyche, painful
shame or a denial of education are unable to have their say in regards to how
they were treated while in these institutions. (Sub 365)
My brother Barry was also a state
ward and never got any support or counselling and died at the age of 32. By
writing this submission, I also want to give him a voice...I hope that my story
gives other people hope. If this inquiry does not learn from past mistakes, it
is doomed to repeat them. No child should have experienced this in the past and
no child should have to experience it in the future. (Sub 318)
1.14
The Committee also understands that for some people
drafting a submission was a cathartic experience and a small step along the
healing path.
I [aged 71] decided to write about my past in the hope that it
will help me to understand myself and to help take away the guilt which has
spoilt not only my own life but that of just about everyone else I got close
to. (Sub 320)
This is not just a submission to me, these are the memories that
make up my childhood. A childhood I have fought with all my might to conquer so
I can lead a normal life. (Sub 246)
I was so pleased to find out about this inquiry I hope my story
will help me and others like me. (Sub 279)
I thought I had healed myself of my memories till I started to
hear about this inquiry and other peoples stories and realised I needed to also
lay my own ghosts of the past. It also helps me to know that perhaps my story
can be of help to others and help them to heal as well. (Sub 322)
For many years I have wanted to write about those years and the
lasting effect on my life. (Sub 364)
At first I wanted to keep this submission private, but...I gave
permission for this submission to be public. It has certainly lifted a load
from me emotionally and physically; I feel I’ve let go of my story. I now feel
free. I’ve lived with this all my years and I have felt stunted in lots of
ways. Now at 77 years my story has been told. (Sub 425)
1.15
The Committee members are most grateful and offer their
heartfelt thanks to all those who provided submissions describing their life
experiences. The Committee considers that these submissions by so many people do
not just represent their own individual stories, but they are also provided on
behalf of their thousands of brothers and sisters who experienced life in an
institution or out-of-home care. In addition, all those who provided
submissions deserve the thanks of the Australian people for whom these
submissions can open their eyes to a sad, painful, often tragic and not
understood chapter in Australian history.
1.16
As this report describes, children were for many
reasons hidden in institutions and forgotten by society when they were placed
in care and again when they were released into the 'outside' world. One person referred
to 'the carpet children' - as in swept under. These people who spent part or
all of their childhood in an institution, children's home or out-of-home care
background have been the forgotten Australians. Until now. It is now time for
all Australians to recognise and acknowledge the painful and haunting
experiences and memories of this vast number of fellow Australians.
The report
1.17
Due to the broad scope of the terms of reference and sheer
magnitude of the evidence and information received, the Committee has decided
to produce two reports on this inquiry.
1.18
This first report focuses on children who were in
institutional and out-of-home care, mainly from the 1920s until the 1970s when deinstitutionalisation
began to see large institutions replaced by smaller residential homes, foster
care or other options such as placements with families for accommodating
children in need of out-of-home care. This report includes background information
on institutions and the governments' and churches' roles in placing children in
care, the treatment of children in care and the long-term effects of experiences
while in care. The issues of responsibility, acknowledgement and reparation are
also canvassed, as are issues relating to accessing records and information and
the provision of wide ranging services for care leavers which are critical in
ensuring that they can improve their quality of life.
1.19
The second report will cover foster care, including information
from earlier times but with its main focus on contemporary foster care issues, children
in care with disabilities and the contemporary government and legal framework
in which child welfare and protection issues operate. Many care leavers
expressed their concern over the fate of children currently in foster or out of
home care to ensure that the experiences they suffered as children are not
being repeated in the contemporary situation. These issues will also be
addressed in the second report.
1.20
A number of chapters in the report quote extensively from
the submissions, particularly the chapters dealing with institutions, treatment
in care and the long-term effects. This is a deliberate effort to give as many
care leavers as possible a direct voice in the report by using their actual
words. In doing so, submission numbers are sourced after each direct quote
rather than by using footnotes as is the case in other parts of the report. By
drafting these sections of the report to enable care leavers to tell their
stories and describe their experiences in their own words has meant that the
use and choice of quotes is necessarily selective and highly subjective and at
best can only give a snapshot or a sense of events, experiences and emotions.
Reading extracts from submissions does not give the full picture; they need to
be read in the context of the whole submission - to understand the individual's
complete story - a story possibly of a struggling family life before
separation, of poverty and deprivation, of parental problems, breakdown or
loss, of the trauma of removal from family, for a complete contextual
understanding of the treatment experienced while in care, and for a realisation
of the devastation inflicted on many individuals for a lifetime.
1.21
To read these submissions as a body of evidence is
emotionally devastating. Each submission is different. For those who were in
the same institution and who suffered from similar treatment and abuse, the
memories, the impact are different because they are all individuals with their
own backgrounds, histories and personal circumstances that found them thrown
together in a particular place and that colours their experience. As
vulnerable, impressionable children grasping to understand what was occurring,
their reactions and responses differed dramatically from individual to
individual.
1.22
The Committee acknowledges that many carers in many Australian
homes for children were concerned for the children's best interests and that
treatment and practices obviously varied according to management regimes and
staff at certain times in institutions. The Committee did receive evidence from
some people who reported benefiting from being in care and provided positive or
at least neutral stories about their experiences of institutional life and
various homes, though people of this view generally do not see a need to come
forward and tell their story. However, the stories and anecdotes cited in the
report typify the overwhelming majority of evidence received by the Committee.
1.23
The Committee has made many recommendations and
acknowledges that some are beyond the Commonwealth's jurisdiction. The
Committee considers that the Commonwealth should encourage the States and
Territories to adopt recommendations through the Council of Australian
Governments and Ministerial Council discussions. The Committee expects that the
Churches and agencies would also acknowledge and accept responsibility for
their involvement and adopt the recommendations that have been directed towards
them.
Perspectives of institutional care
1.24
A number of terms have been used in evidence to
describe children who were in care including ex or former residents, Homies,
Wardies, orphans and foster kids. The Committee has used the term 'care leaver'
in the report to describe all those people who have experienced life in some
form of institutional or out-of-home care. The term ‘institutional care’ is
used in the report to refer generally to care and experiences in establishments
run by government or non-government organisations that can vary in size and
configuration and include orphanages, large children's homes, training schools,
dormitory or group cottage homes, juvenile detention centres or other forms of
out-of-home care such as foster care.
1.25
Institutional care involves a variety of living
arrangements. Residential care for children includes placing children in a
residential building where children are cared for by paid staff, who may or may
not live on the premises. Home-based or out-of-home care may include foster care
(where the child is placed in a family setting), or community care or
relative/kinship care where the caregiver is a family member or a person with a
pre-existing relationship to the child.[3] The orphanage
system was initially based on large residential institutions housing hundreds
of children in a communal environment. Children's institutions and their
history in Australia
are discussed in chapter 2.
1.26
The inquiry has examined care and experiences in residential
and out-of-home care (foster and kinship care), juvenile detention centres and homes
for people with disabilities. The committee also received a number of
submissions relating to children in migrant detention centres and boarding
schools, as well as adoption issues.
1.27
A central theme of the report relates to abuse of
children in institutions, including emotional, physical and sexual abuse and
neglect, much of which constituted criminal physical and sexual assault. Contemporary
definitions of 'child abuse' vary across Australian jurisdictions, according to
particular State and Territory Acts for the care and protection of children. Such
terms are not clearly identified in legislation covering the earlier eras applicable
to this report. Legislation from earlier times relating to children in
institutions tends to focus on issues such as punishments, standards of care, nutritional
requirements and educational standards. These matters are discussed in a number
of chapters through out the report and extracts from some relevant Acts are in
Appendix 4.
Recent reports on children's institutions and institutional life
1.28
Since the mid-1990s, various inquiries into children's institutions
such as orphanages, and institutional practices for the care and protection of
children and young people, have been undertaken in a number of Australian
jurisdictions. The following discussion highlights some of these reports that
illustrate the background against which the Inquiry into Children in Institutional
Care was established.
1.29
More recent inquiries have or are being conducted into
the activities of some State and Territory government agencies which have
responsibility for the care and protection of children. These reports,
including their recommendations and outcomes, are discussed in the Committee's
second report.
Bringing them home
1.30
In May 1995, Sir
Ronald Wilson
chaired a Commonwealth Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC) investigation
into the history and circumstances of indigenous[4] children's
removal from their families and communities.
1.31
The report, Bringing
them home, released in May 1997, focused on children who had been in institutions
and church missions, or those who had been adopted or fostered and described
how indigenous children had been forcibly separated from their families and
communities since the European settlement of Australia. The report revealed
many shocking stories of abuse and deprivation, including in foster care and provided
information about the history and consequences of the removal of children from
their families, and contemporary separations. It described stages of
legislation in each Australian jurisdiction and policies regarding the removal
of Aboriginal children including those related to segregation, biological
absorption and assimilation of indigenous people.
1.32
While some stories of kindness did emerge, the report
contains many others that reveal that: indigenous babies were often given away
like commodities to suit white adoptive parents’ needs; authorities ignored
indigenous kinship roles for child rearing; and children were locked up in
squalid, unhygienic rooms and left crying from hunger or scrounging for food in
rubbish dumps.
1.33
Many indigenous children in the homes received only a very
limited education and were given no proper opportunities, but were merely trained
as domestics. Witnesses spoke of being sexually abused, including by members of
churches, having their names changed and being punished for speaking their own
language. Not surprisingly many subsequently did not know anything about their
families or indigenous heritage, and experienced identity crises, even to the
point of being unsure if they were black or white.
1.34
Key findings from Bringing
them home included:
-
nationally, between one in three and one in ten indigenous
children were forcibly removed from their families and communities between 1910
and 1970;
-
indigenous children who had been removed were
often physically and sexually abused and not paid wages for their labour; and
-
under international law, from approximately 1946
the policies of forcible removal amount to genocide; and from 1950 the
continuation of distinct laws for indigenous children was racially
discriminatory.
1.35
Among the report's 54 recommendations are those relating
to reparations; acknowledgements and apologies from entities such as Australian
Parliaments, police forces and churches; monetary compensation; rehabilitation and
restitution measures; counselling, and principles to allow indigenous
communities control over their own children.[5]
1.36
The Federal Government’s formal response to Bringing them home encompassed $63
million in assistance including funds for programs directed to assist with
indexing and preserving files, providing indigenous family support and parenting
programs and establishing projects for culture and language maintenance and oral
histories.
1.37
In August 1999, the Prime Minister, the Hon John Howard
MP, delivered a statement of regret in Parliament to Aboriginal people
acknowledging that the mistreatment of many indigenous Australians over a
significant period represented the most blemished chapter in our international
history.[6] The
Government was criticised for not making an official apology and an acknowledgement
of human rights violations, and for not paying compensation. Critics stated that
international law clearly and explicitly imposes an obligation to pay
compensation as a measure of reparation for any acts which constitute a
violation of human rights.[7]
Abuse of Children in Queensland Institutions
(Forde Report)
1.38
In 1998, the Queensland Government established a
Commission of Inquiry chaired by Ms Leneen Forde AC to examine, inter alia, if there had been any abuse,
mistreatment or neglect of children in Queensland
institutions and breaches of any relevant statutory obligations during the
course of the care, protection and detention of children in such institutions.[8] The report, Abuse of Children in Queensland Institutions
(Forde Report), released in May 1999,
covered the period from 1911 and examined the situation of more than 150
institutions. Investigations were restricted to the period from 1935 to the present
given that residents and staff from institutions prior to the 1930s were
unlikely to present at the Inquiry.
1.39
The Forde Report included information about Queensland's
institutional care for children and contemporary child welfare, juvenile and indigenous
justice systems and legislative and departmental practices, profiles of
children in care, and staffing arrangements. The inquiry found that many
children in State care had suffered varying degrees of abuse, and heard stories
of being denied opportunities and of adult lives filled with unsuccessful
personal relationships, suicide attempts and insecurity. Evidence included
stories of children being inadequately clothed and so desperately hungry as to
eat scraps from bins; only being permitted to have a bath once a week (in
shared water); being locked in small dark places and enduring severe
punishments and beltings that would draw blood.
1.40
Complaints of sexual abuse, perpetrated by clergy,
officers and staff, other residents, or visitors to the institution, emerged about
almost all of the institutions. Poor departmental record keeping meant that
children often did not even know their correct birth dates and were not
informed about their families.
1.41
The inquiry noted that in many large institutions there
were relatively few staff, leading to regimentation and depersonalisation, and
often staff were untrained and unable to care for the healthy development of
children. Departmental staff described an absence of standards prior to 1970, a
lack of guidelines for institutional performance, and of a prevailing departmental
attitude of not getting ‘the churches too offside’ because they did not want to
lose facilities.
1.42
The report cited many examples of sadistic treatment of
young people in Queensland's juvenile detention centres, and concluded that problems
still exist which are contrary to legislative principles of juvenile justice.
The inquiry reported high levels of abuse towards indigenous youth in
detention, such as deprival of family visits, sexual abuse and extreme physical
punishments. While finding less abuse and breaches of regulations nowadays in
comparison to previous decades, the Inquiry noted shortcomings in contemporary residential
care facilities including inadequacies of staff to deal with detainees with intellectual
disabilities.
1.43
The Forde Inquiry recommended initiatives that included
those to assist with information retrieval for State wards and access to
material for individuals and families; legislative requirements for regular
departmental inspections and monitoring of residential care facilities and
juvenile detention centres; standardised record-keeping among stakeholders and
principles of compensation from the Queensland Government and responsible
religious authorities.
1.44
The Queensland
Government accepted 41 of the 42 recommendations of the Forde Inquiry and
committed $100 million over four years from 1999-2000 to implement responses to
the recommendations. Initiatives included an apology, in conjunction with heads
of churches, to former residents of Queensland
institutions, a review of existing legislation focused on young people and
development of new legislation, and new child protection and youth justice
service delivery responses. The Government also contributed $1 million to the
Ford Foundation Trust Fund.[9]
1.45
The Forde Foundation was established to assist former
residents of Queensland
institutions with education, health, family reunion and basic necessities for
former residents. The Government also contributes funding to the Esther
Centre, the Aftercare Resource Centre (ARC) and
the Historical Abuse Network (HAN).[10] Along with
the Forde Foundation, these groups provide services for former residents which
are discussed in the chapter on the provision of services.
Lost Innocents: Righting the Record
1.46
During 2000-01 the Senate Community Affairs References
Committee, chaired by Senator the Hon Rosemary
Crowley, conducted an inquiry into the history
and treatment of unaccompanied children generally under the age of 16 years who
were brought to Australia from the United Kingdom, Ireland and Malta under
approved child migrant schemes during the 20th century. The
inquiry's report, Lost Innocents:
Righting the Record,[11] (Lost Innocents), was released in August 2001.
1.47
The report included an outline and history of the
large-scale child migration program, government involvement and legislation of
the time, financial arrangements and information on the organisations and
churches which ran the institutions where the child migrants were placed. The
Committee estimated that 6 000-7 500 child migrants were sent to Australia
during the 20th century, with a total child and youth migration of
upwards of 10 000.
1.48
The Committee heard that some parents had only
consented for their children to migrate because of assurances that they would
be better off in Australia
and that many children were sent without parental consent, with evidence
indicating that parents were lied to about their children's fate. The inquiry
noted that many children were incorrectly told that they were orphans and
correspondence was often not passed on to children in institutions.
1.49
The child migrant inquiry revealed stories of child
exploitation, virtual slave labour, criminal physical and sexual assault and
profound emotional abuse and cruelty. Evidence was given of children being
terrified in bed at night as religious brothers stalked the dormitories to take
children to their rooms for sexual acts, and of children being severely beaten
with leather straps, belts, wood or other weapons.
1.50
Depersonalisation occurred through the crushing of
individual identity and changing of names and, often when children told of
their terrible experiences, they were either not believed or merely sent back
to the institution where the matter would be covered up. Maltese child migrants
were often made to stop speaking and using their own language in institutions. For
many former child migrants, their sense of dislocation and not belonging, loss
of family and of emptiness has profoundly affected their lives and that of
their partners and children, and many have discovered as adults that they were
not even recognised as Australian citizens - even though they served the
country at war.
1.51
The Committee made 33 recommendations including that
the Commonwealth and State Governments supplement the travel funding of the
Child Migrant Support Fund. Extensive recommendations were made to assist
former child migrants with access to services, including access to their
records through the development of uniform protocols for accessing records.
1.52
In May 2002, the Government responded to Lost Innocents with a package including
$125 000 per year for three years to the Child Migrants Trust to fund family
tracing and counselling services; $100 000 contribution to State-initiated
memorials to commemorate former child migrants; $1 million per year for three
years in travel funding to assist former child migrants of British and Maltese
origin to return to the UK or Malta to reunite with family members. The funding
criteria have been extended to include cousins, nephews and nieces and visits
to family graves and funding for an accompanying carer in exceptional
circumstances.[12]
Tasmanian Ombudsman's interim report
on abuse of children in State care
1.53
In July 2003, the Tasmanian Department of Health and
Human Services became aware of allegations by a person, who had been in foster
care approximately 40 years ago, that his foster carer had sexually abused him while
in care as a child. The Minister for Health and Human Services requested the
Tasmanian Ombudsman to set up a telephone hotline to establish the veracity of
such claims and to review them.[13]
1.54
The Ombudsman and the Secretary of the Department of
Health and Human Services subsequently commenced a review of claims of abuse of
children in State care that entailed an initial stage of telephone contact,
claims assessment and testing; analysis, reporting and recommendations, and a
subsequent review of applications by an independent assessor in the Department
where ex gratia payments could be
recommended, where appropriate. An Interim
Report on the Abuse of Children in State Care was released in January 2004.[14]
1.55
Thirty-four per cent of allegations were reported to
have been in foster homes while almost two-thirds occurred in some type of
church-run institution. Sexual abuse, physical abuse and emotional abuse/neglect
were said to have occurred in 25 per cent, 39 per cent and 36 per cent of
cases, respectively. More than two-thirds of claims related to incidents of
more than 30 years ago, with the largest number dating back to the 1960s while
35 matters were more than 50 years old.[15] At early
April 2004 the abuse hotline had received 352 calls; the Ombudsman's office had
interviewed and assessed about 200 claimants with 58 cases progressing to the
final stage.
1.56
Included in recommendations from the Ombudsman have
been those to provide ongoing counselling and medical fees for claimants, paid
by the Tasmanian Government. Further, the Tasmanian Minister for Human Services
has launched a new system to improve case management of the 350 young
Tasmanians in State care.[16]
Other reports
1.57
Inquiries into management practices and abuse occurring
in children's homes and institutions are not just a recent occurrence.
1.58
For over a century, many inquiries have condemned
children's institutions in Australia.
The New South Wales Royal Commission into Public Charities of 1874 attacked the
Randwick Asylum for destitute children for many reasons, including its
factory-like style, isolation from the community and lack of after care
supervision.[17]
A 1945 inquiry into Sydney's Parramatta Girls' Industrial School was scathing,
finding its staff, buildings and equipment to be inadequate and noting that problems
at Parramatta could be matched at institutions throughout the Commonwealth.[18]
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A major British Government investigation,
the 1956 Ross Report, criticised many facets of Australian children's
institutions including their lack of homely style, isolation from the
community, lack of trained staff and poor educational and employment
opportunities.[19]
In 1961 the Schwarten Inquiry into the Queensland
correctional centre for boys, Westbrook, drew attention to many issues
including the poor standard of food, inadequate hygiene and excessive drill.
However, the Inquiry focused particularly on the institution's punishment
regime noting that the strap was used excessively and too often, punishment for
disciplinary breaches was unduly harsh and excessive and inmates were
physically assaulted by certain members of staff in a vicious and brutal way.[20]
Commentary on the above reports
1.60
The above reports share stark similarities in their
findings about harm to children who were removed from their families and placed
in some form of institutional care. A common theme has centred on various
governments' failure to protect children in their care. The inquiry into child
migration noted that the British, Australian and Australian
State governments and relevant
agencies had failed in their duty of care towards former child migrants. Similarly,
the Forde Inquiry concluded that
the department had failed to protect children in residential care from abuse.[21]
1.61
Just as Bringing
them home noted legal impediments for indigenous people seeking compensation
for past actions, the child migrants' inquiry found that while some former
child migrants had suffered criminal assaults, various legal impediments imposed
by the statute of limitations prevented them from taking legal action.[22] Regarding
physical assaults, the Forde Inquiry said that the abuses went far beyond the
prevailing acceptable limits, while the child migrant inquiry found that some children
had clearly suffered physical and sexual abuse, similarly beyond anything that
could conceivably be argued as normal for the time.[23]
1.62
The child migrants' inquiry revealed instances of
humiliation, degradation, profound emotional abuse and criminal assault.[24] More
recently, the Tasmanian Ombudsman review had revealed that substantial sexual,
physical and emotional abuse, and neglect had occurred in various church-run
institutions and foster care placements.[25]
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A significant common outcome reported by care leavers
is their loss of identity, stemming from lost childhoods, irrespective of what
State or home they grew up in. As well, the hypocrisy surrounding the abuse
which often came from members of the clergy, and the dishonesty of people
responsible for placing children in homes, who often deceived, or at best, did
not support the children's parents, have left many care leavers with an
enormous basket of unresolved issues to deal with in life.
1.64
As the Forde Foundation noted, very few children who
experienced institutional care for long periods or at crucial stages of their
development have escaped detrimental effects in later life and this has often
damaged their ability to live as effective members of society. Their problems often
include low levels of literacy and numeracy; high incidences of alcoholism and
substance abuse; high levels of unemployment, homelessness and imprisonment and
poor health.[26]
Sadly, suicide rates are comparatively higher than for the general population.
1.65
As will be expressed during this report, the
descriptions of the treatment of children in care outlined in the Forde inquiry
findings and Lost Innocents were not
limited to Queensland or child
migrants but were repeated in institutions throughout Australia.
The Committee's present inquiry into children in institutional care has received
many stories which echo similar instances of appalling emotional, physical and
sexual abuse and assault. The Committee has also heard how the negative impact
of these experiences has flowed through to also affect the families and
children of care leavers. The impact that these issues have had for care
leavers and their families is substantial. In addition they also create a
significant impact for Australian society in general, including the costs of
providing the support necessary to help people deal with many broad-ranging
ongoing problems.
1.66
It is even more distressing that the Committee and
other contemporary inquiries have received many reports that abuse is still
occurring among Australia's out-of-home care children. As such, a need exists
for a national approach to further raise community awareness of child abuse and
garner support for an effective campaign against child abuse, irrespective of when
or where it has occurred. This issue will be developed further in the
Committee's second report.