Queensland will remove children under five from state residential care following a landmark inquiry that found the child protection system was broken. The inquiry shocked officials with findings including that more than two-thirds of child sexual abuse victims were in residential care when the crimes occurred. The number of children in residential care had more than tripled in a decade, with Queensland having almost as many children in care as all other states and territories combined.
Children under five to be removed from residential care after Queensland child safety report unveiledBy Aaron Bunch and Laine Clark Children under the age of five will be removed from a state’s residential care following a major inquiry’s “shocking” findings.government has revealed the significant policy change in response to the final report of a landmark inquiry into the state’s “broken” child protection system .
Know the news with the 7NEWS app: “I have made a policy decision no children under the age of five are to remain in residential care,” Child Safety Minister Amanda Camm told state parliament on Wednesday. Camm told parliament Queensland had 2258 children in residential care, including 78 under the age of five. The number of children and young people in state residential care more than tripled in a decade, the Child Safety Commission of Inquiry final report revealed.
Queensland had almost as many children in residential care as every other state and territory combined, it said. Minister for Families, Seniors and Disability Services and Minister for Child Safety and the Prevention of Domestic and Family Violence, Amanda Camm is seen during Question Time at Queensland Parliament House in Brisbane, Wednesday, June 3, 2026. NO ARCHIVINGMore than two-thirds of child sexual abuse victims were in state residential care when the crimes happened, the inquiry found.
“Our child safety system is meant to protect vulnerable kids, but during a decade of decline, the child safety system was neglected,” Premier David Crisafulli told parliament before the report was tabled on Wednesday. “The evidence has been shocking, and it’s been deeply concerning. “Frontline staff didn’t get the support or the resources they need, and vulnerable kids with complex needs and traumatic experiences were not properly cared for.
” The state’s Liberal National government, which was elected in 2024, pinned most of the blame on the former Labor government.
“The findings lay bare the scale of the crisis we inherited, with vulnerable children failed by a system that became increasingly reliant on residential care instead of supporting families and carers. ”The state’s residential care population surged by 229 per cent from March 2015 to March 2025, the commission found. The annual cost of residential care in Queensland increased from about $300,000 per child in 2019/20 to about $500,000 a child in 2024/25.
Attorney-General Deb Frecklington said the report exposed the shocking consequences of a decade of neglect and failure under the former Labor government.
“Queensland’s child safety system was failing the very children it was supposed to protect,” she said. However, Opposition Leader Steven Miles responded by calling for Camm to be sacked, saying she could not be trusted to lead child safety reforms. The inquiry - the third of its kind since 2003 - heard harrowing testimony from witnesses who suffered abuse in state care as children over almost 50 hearings in 10 months across the state.
It also chronicled “rapacious” growth in spending, and substantial growth in children in out-of-home care and the residential care sector, and the intersection between the child safety and justice systems. The number of children in out-of-home care increased from 7999 in 2011/12 to 10,092 in 2023/24, while the number in residential care rose from 653 to 1994 over the same period, the inquiry found.
Data also showed 72.9 per cent of children under youth justice supervision in 2022/23 had interacted with the child safety system in the preceding 10 years. A cabinet subcommittee will consider and implement the report’s recommendations and to prepare the government’s response. If you need help in a crisis, call Lifeline on 131114. For further information about depression contact beyondblue on 1300224636 or talk to your GP, local health professional or someone you trust.
Government Social Issues Queensland Child Safety Residential Care Inquiry Protection System Policy Change
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Regional Queensland voters consider abandoning major parties as One Nation surges aheadRegional Queensland voters are considering abandoning major political parties in future federal elections, with Pauline Hanson's One Nation party surging ahead of Labor in an opinion poll.
Read more »
Queensland parliament live: E-bike laws to be introduced; Katter wants abortion back on agendaState parliament returns with a three-day sitting set to feature the newly elected MP for Stafford.
Read more »
Queensland parliament live: Inquiry’s report into child safety releasedAnother day of state parliament begins with the tabling of a report of the inquiry into Queensland’s child safety system.
Read more »
Queensland Child Safety Inquiry Demands Sweeping Overhaul of 'Failing' SystemA landmark Queensland inquiry has branded the state's child protection system a failure, issuing 52 recommendations for radical change including overhauling residential care and adoption laws for Indigenous children. The political response has been swift and confrontational.
Read more »




