Access keys | Skip to primary navigation | Skip to secondary navigation | Skip to content | Skip to footer

Problems viewing this site

One Chance at Childhood

The $12 million 'One Chance at Childhood' initiative will employ specialist staff to boost the protection of babies and toddlers in the child protection system.

Premier Peter Beattie said the aim was to try to ensure that all children got a stable start in life as early as possible.

"Recent scientific research has identified that chronic neglect and abuse over the early years of childhood can have permanent and debilitating long term physical and emotional effects," Mr Beattie said.

"The message to neglectful parents must be absolutely clear.

"The government will give you intensive help but if you don't get your act together then your children will get their chance at a happy, stable home in permanent home elsewhere," he said.

"Too many kids wait in a kind of limbo, as the system waits for their parents to get their act together.

"We want to avoid situations where children 'drift' from foster care to their parents and back to foster care.

"This funding will be for a new program that will focus on intensive family assistance for parents where young children have had to be removed," Mr Beattie said.

Child Safety Minister Desley Boyle said that early childhood officers would provide specialist support in cases involving the most vulnerable babies and toddlers.

"They will make sure parents are linked in to the right support from other government departments and non-government agencies.

"And they will also advise on expectant mothers who have come to our attention because there are risks to the health of the unborn baby," Ms Boyle said.

"Specialist reunification officers will focus on parents in situations where we have had to remove the baby or toddler.

"These parents will receive intensive assistance. They will be clearly told what measures must be in place before their child can be returned. This will only happen after careful assessment and planning.

"If however, despite best efforts, a child cannot be safely returned home then specialist permanent placement officers will step in," she said.

"In those situations these officers will secure a permanent home for the children including long term guardianship orders or adoption.

"Nonetheless we will tread very carefully as these are important decisions.

"The aim is to put the needs of the children first and to give babies and toddlers some stability in their young lives. After all they only get one chance at childhood," Ms Boyle said.

The targeted program will work by funding specialist staff to intervene at three critical stages:

Top of page

Last updated
13 July 2007

Related links

Features - Budget 2007-08