Adoption fix for child safety needs ‘robust safeguards’, service says
Queensland’s major forced adoption service provider has warned the government it must consider lifelong consequences as it forms its response to a major inquiry.
Queensland’s major forced adoption service provider has warned the government it must consider the lifelong consequences of adoption as it forms its response to a major inquiry.
The Child Safety Commission of Inquiry’s almost 1400-page report was tabled by Attorney-General Deb Frecklington on Wednesday, describing the number of kids in care as a “measure of failure”.
While many major stakeholders were still digesting the inquiry’s findings and 52 recommendations, Jigsaw Queensland has raised concern about the focus on adoption as a solution.
In a statement, president Dr Jo-Ann Sparrow said the organisation – which helps those impacted by the state’s historical forced adoption practices – noted the significance of the moment.
“The Commission has recommended measures designed to increase adoption as a permanency option,” Sparrow said.
“Yet many people affected by past adoption policies and practices remain deeply concerned about the re-emergence of adoption as a preferred solution for vulnerable children.
“Importantly, while the Commission heard extensive evidence from people affected by the child protection system, it did not hear equivalent evidence from those living with the lifelong consequences of adoption.
“Adoption was discussed largely as a policy mechanism rather than as a lived experience that continues across an entire lifespan.”
Sparrow said that while adoption may give stability and permanence for some, it did not automatically create belonging or erase the impact of family separations.
“If adoption is to play a greater role within Queensland’s child protection framework, robust safeguards must accompany any expansion,” Sparrow said.
She said Jigsaw also welcomed a recommendation to investigate new adoption models that preserve legal and family connections, and hoped to engage with the government on its response.
Other recommendations include for the state to consider becoming a residential care provider, and removing the need for adoption to be a last resort for First Nations children.
Asked at a Thursday morning media conference if the new cabinet subcommittee shaping the government response to the report would consult stakeholders, Frecklington did not give a direct response.
She also suggested the recent departed Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children’s Commissioner Natalie Lewis, whose tenure was not renewed by the government, would not be replaced.
A policy position statement issued by Lewis before her departure last month noted adoption was “one of the most serious legal interventions the state can authorise in rel
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