There has got to be a better way.
By Rosemaria Flaherty, University of South Australia and Fiona Arney, University of South Australia
South Australia will be the first Australian state to introduce legislation to remove children born to parents convicted of manslaughter or murder and place them under the custody of the relevant minister, the SA government announced recently.
SA Coroner Mark Johns made the initial recommendation after investigating the many years of abuse and eventual death of four-year-old Chloe Valentine. Chloe was injured and died in 2012 after her mother and mother’s partner repeatedly put the girl on a 50-kilogram bike and filmed her crashing into objects.
Across Australia, 34 children were the victims of filicide – the killing of a child by a parent – in the two years leading up to 2012.
In a well-coordinated and well-resourced child protection system, health staff, child protection workers and forensic specialists should already be collaborating to share information about children and families at risk of harm.
Chloe Valentine inquest: SA child protection system broken, massive overhaul needed, coroner says.
These teams should be responding to the warnings some parents give prior to committing these crimes, then deciding whether parents convicted of murdering their children should have subsequent offspring removed.
Top Comments
In NSW you can let the government know how you feel. 1200 signatures.
https://www.change.org/p/pr...
What you need to remember is that the kids will go to a foster family. It is highly likely that the birth family, with Legal Aid support, will start court proceedings against the foster family/Government, trying to reclaim the child/ren (in some cases for more abuse). And the court cases can roll on for years, be adversarial, and drain the foster family emotionally and financially. They will sap any trust the child had. A judge may insist on high volume contact schedules, or even worse overnight unprotected stays, or even hand them back. Sometimes after years of a child believing its home, he or she has to face leaving their home and going back. Be aware in the legislation the child is first, birth parents second, the foster family is last. Permanent care has nothing permanent about it. Please don't believe it when pro-restoration authorities use that word. Complete smokescreen. Adoption is the only way for safety and permanence for these kids.
I work as a solicitor-advocate in child protection matters and while much of you statement is correct, foster families are not parties to the court proceedings. The matters are between the biological parents and the, in Victoria, DHHS. It is only very occasionally, and only with the leave of the court, that foster parents become parties in proceedings.
Exactly! and how ridiculous is that! You spend years with your foster child, no one knows (or possibly loves) your child better, and you are removed from any decision making or evidence related role. Permanent carers are treated like mushrooms. Should you wish to advocate - you need a spare $50K. Thats why I said financially draining. However the matters are not just between bio parents and government. Re June 2013 NSW Supreme Court concluded foster families have legal right now to be joined.