Queensland Govt Admits Vulnerable Children Slept on Floor of Offices
Queensland Govt Admits Children Slept on Office Floor

The Queensland government has confirmed that vulnerable children were made to sleep on the floor of public service offices, but rejected claims that its policies have further strained an under-pressure child protection system.

Premier Confirms Practice Under LNP Government

Premier David Crisafulli stated on Monday that the approach had been used under his Liberal National Party (LNP) government, but typically only in the early morning when other options were unavailable. “These kids otherwise might be on the street,” Crisafulli said.

His comments followed a Courier Mail report over the weekend that children were removed from homes without alternative places being organised. The outlet reported children in state care sleeping on mattresses in government offices. Shadow Treasurer Shannon Fentiman called for an investigation into whether the Department of Child Safety breached its duty of care.

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Frequency of Office Stays Unclear

It remains unclear how often children have slept at child safety service centres. Child Safety Minister Amanda Camm did not answer a series of questions from Guardian Australia about the rates both before and after the October 2024 election, when the LNP government was elected.

The Together union, representing many Queensland public sector workers, told media on Monday that the practice was becoming more common. The union reported that children in the child safety system had slept overnight on air mattresses at the Toowoomba and Ipswich West child safety service centres this month and last month. Assistant Secretary Dee Spink said children being forced to sleep at offices “because there are no alternate options available reflect a system that has been stretched for too long.” The union had raised concerns with the state government on 10 June.

Queensland's Out-of-Home Care Statistics

Queensland has the largest number of children in out-of-home care in Australia, at 12,500, despite state rules that removal should not be the preferred option. The state also has the country’s largest residential care industry, housing about 2,258 children, including 78 under the age of five.

The practice of housing children in public service offices has been used in emergencies since 2019, when no short-term placement option, such as a hotel, could be found. Youth Advocacy Centre CEO Katherine Hayes said children sleeping in public service offices was completely inappropriate and would exacerbate feelings of uncertainty, instability, and lack of trust in the system. “The kids that are in these kind of placements are the most vulnerable and high needs kids in Queensland, and are also often in a situation of acute need, so the holding of them in an office environment is really traumatising and damaging,” Hayes said.

Recent Policy Changes and Impact

Since the conclusion of a commission of inquiry into the sector last month, the state government has stopped housing children under five in hotel accommodation and cracked down on unlicensed residential care providers, cancelling contracts with two weeks’ notice. Guardian Australia understands many of the contracts were due to expire on 30 June. Camm did not respond to questions about how many would.

Spink said the changes were the “driving force” for the increase in the use of office space. “This is not what a child safety officer is supposed to be doing. They are not there to be that overnight supervisor for young people,” Spink said.

Minister Denies Link to Reforms

In response to Guardian Australia’s questions, Camm denied that the practice had occurred since the commission of inquiry concluded. “We have been clear about the fact that no child has been moved from residential care to a Child Safety Service Centre, therefore any suggestion there is a link between the Crisafulli Government’s reforms and children seeking emergency overnight refuge is wrong,” she said.

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In an earlier statement, she said: “Only in extreme and emergent circumstances, where children are taken into child safety custody after hours, has the department provided supervised refuge in a child safety service centre, while stable and permanent accommodation is sourced within hours. While these situations are rare, there are examples dating back to 2019 and there have been no instances of this occurring since the Commission of Inquiry concluded.”

Camm has not fronted a media conference since 17 June. Asked on Tuesday why his minister would not answer questions, Crisafulli said she was “trying to fix 10 years of a broken system.” The government must respond to 52 recommendations of the inquiry within two months.