Author : fgolding@bigpond.net.au

Foster Care in Crisis

I wish we didn’t need so many kids to be placed in the care of foster families. But, with more than 40,000 Australian kids unable to be looked after by their parents because of poverty, family breakdown, drug and alcohol issues and violence – and lack of support in a crisis – things are in a very bad […]

10 Blunders in Child Welfare

 UPDATE The ten worst blunders in child welfare in  Australia  since 1788. COUNT DOWN TO NUMBER 1 It has been hard deciding which of all the many mistakes of the past – and those which continue to be made – warrants the title “the worst”. But here it is. BLUNDER # 1: Having inflicted significant damage on children […]

Indefinite Detention of Asylum Seekers Not Lawful

After a long period of ambivalent rulings, the Australian High Court on Thursday (11 December 2014) finally defined the limits of mandatory detention of asylum seekers. In  recent years, many of us in Australia have been disturbed by what seemed to be a routinised indefinite detention of thousands of refugees, including children. “Since September 2013, the average time spent in […]

The Papal Trucking Company Pty Unlimited

I highly recommend this opinion piece by Tony Webber in the Dubbo PhotoNews, 30/8/14. In a devastating critique of the church’s scandalous handling of child sex abuse, Tony drives Cardinal Pell’s truck to its illogical conclusions. A trucking company “would not try to gets itself categorised as an unstructured, non-commercial entity to avoid paying due compensation to its victims.” […]

War – is commemoration the same as glorification?

Australians commemorate Anzac Day  (25 April) or Remembrance Day (11 November) with mixed emotions. Some still see it as a time to venerate brave soldiers and remember ‘the fallen’.  Others take the opportunity to point again to the futility of war. Remembering wars brings out all sorts of emotions: mawkish sentimentality, strident nationalism, grief for young lives lost […]

Spin doctors and children in detention

The wheel turns on media spin.    In June this year, Fairfax media reported that the number of ‘spin doctors’ and communications staff employed by the Australian Immigration Department had risen to 95 – up from 13 under the previous government in 2011.  This in a time when the Government is telling us there’s a budget crisis […]

Church’s line is broken

“Is the line broken?” asked the Royal Commissioner, Peter McClellan, as the television hook-up to Rome failed. “The cardinal is unmoving on the screen which suggests it has,” replied counsel assisting Gail Furness SC, with Judge McClelland observing mournfully: “The line has failed in Rome.” It sure had, in more ways than one when Cardinal […]

Royal Commission on Child Sexual Abuse

Key points from my submission to the Royal Commission on Child Sexual Abuse:  A national redress scheme to which all governments, major churches and relevant non-government organisations contribute equitably is among the most important outcomes that this Royal Commission could give rise to. Written evidence should not be expected in every case; many cases were […]

Little battlers have a big win

The decision by the City Council of Ballarat to refuse a cashed-up developer permission to demolish the old school on the Ballarat Orphanage site is a victory for those former residents who fought a long and energy-sapping campaign against the odds. These old institutions have long-since closed – thankfully. These places shaped the lives of so many Australians. […]

Scroll to top