Fri. Nov 22nd, 2024
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A major Australian community service organisation has announced it will transfer its responsibility for the foster care services of hundreds of Aboriginal children to Indigenous-led services, hoping to ensure decision-making about foster care for Aboriginal children is more often made by Indigenous people.

Life Without Barriers, which has more than 1,000 Aboriginal children in its care around Australia, says it will start phasing out all foster care services for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children.

Chief executive Claire Robbs said the move was an acknowledgement of the over-representation of Indigenous children in foster care, and a step toward reconciliation.

“What we’re doing for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children in the care system is not working — it is not OK,” Ms Robbs said.

“Far too many are coming into care and not being cared for in culture.

“We need to stop. We need to completely rethink how we’re doing that.”

Indigenous children over-represented

Indigenous children make up just 5 per cent of Australia’s child population but 42 per cent of children in out-of-home care, according to the Family Matters Report 2022 by the National Voice for Our Children.

But less than half of Indigenous children in the child protection system are living with Indigenous carers.

Jenny Bempasciuto, Leslee Skuse and Keiran Dent pictured talking around a desk at the Wungening office
Jenny Bempasciuto, Leslee Skuse and Keiran Dent discuss their family support work at Wungening in Perth. (ABC Radio Perth: Alicia Bridges)

Keiran Dent, a general manager at Wungening Aboriginal Corporation in Perth, runs a program that helps keep Aboriginal children either in the care of their parents or with a foster carer in the same family.

Since the West Australian program started in 2018, it has been able to ensure more than 90 per cent of children, from about 300 families a year, can remain in the care of a family member.

“A strong cultural identity is central to wellbeing and that can only occur to its fullest extent within an Aboriginal family unit,” Mr Dent said.

“We see strong cultural identity as being necessary for all areas of a child’s wellbeing — physical health, mental health, emotional health, spiritual health.”

‘Historically, we have been denied’

Mr Dent says the program is an example of a “changing of the tide” that is reversing a power imbalance.

“We would say that these are spaces where we should have always had a role in providing care and protection for our children,” he said.

“But, historically, we have been denied that right.”

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