NSW Labor鈥檚 new bail laws for children 'ignores evidence'

May 29, 2024
Issue 
young people jailed
NSW Labor's new bail laws will lead to more children being imprisoned. Image: Justice Reform Initiative

Despite widespread opposition from First Nations, legal and community groups dealing with youth crime, New South Wales Labor enacted harsh new bail laws in March.

The will make it harder for children between 14鈥18 years old to get bail.

A , including the Sydney Institute of Criminology, the University of Technology Sydney Law Faculty (Criminal Justice), the University of New South Wales Centre for Criminology Law and Justice and the Aboriginal Legal Service (ALS), urged Premier Chris Minns not to ignore 鈥測ears of evidence鈥 about how to reduce youth crime and said the bail changes will 鈥渕ake crime worse in regional communities, not better鈥.

鈥淭hrowing more children in jail will lead to horrific outcomes for communities, families and those children, compounding abuse and trauma,鈥 the letter said.聽

It said more children in jail 鈥渨ill cause unspeakable damage to Closing The Gap鈥 and attempts to stop intergenerational trauma for First Nations children.

The signatories said a better strategy would be to provide resources for local communities to support after-school, evening and weekend activities that engage at-risk young people. They also suggested targeted programs for at-risk children and 鈥渃ommunity partnerships鈥 between police and Aboriginal-controlled services.

There was dissent expressed as well. NSW Society of Labor Lawyers said on March 21 the amendments are 鈥渁 band-aid solution鈥, which will likely lead to the 鈥渕ost vulnerable groups鈥 being jailed.

It warned the bill would 鈥渇urther entrench criminality in regional communities and strain our criminal justice and prison system鈥.

The NSW Council for Civil Liberties (NSWCLL) said the state鈥檚 juvenile bail laws were 鈥渦nprecedented in Australia鈥.

NSWCCL said 鈥減unitive approaches simply don鈥檛 work鈥 and urged Minns to look at the evidence. 鈥淲hen children this young are forced through a criminal legal process, their health, wellbeing and future are put at risk.鈥

Sue Higginson, NSW Greens justice spokesperson, said 鈥渨hen bail is denied to children, they are more likely to be enmeshed in the criminal justice system鈥. The bail changes and new offences 鈥渄o not address concerns for improved community safety鈥 and undermine 鈥渢he real solutions that will work鈥 which are 鈥渢herapeutic and non-punitive鈥.

Higginson said the cost of jailing young people is well beyond $985,500 each person each year.

She predicted the changes will lead to more children being imprisoned, most of whom will be First Nations children. 鈥淚t is difficult to see how this is anything other than a colonial and racist intervention by the Premier.鈥

A new report by the (JRI) found that 61.5% of young people in custody are First Nations young people. On any given night in June 2023, 106 Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander young people were in detention.

Alternatives to Incarceration in New South Wales gives details of how community-led organisations are reducing reoffending through restorative means.

the new bail laws, saying on March 22 that they 鈥渨ill increase crime and make communities more dangerous鈥.

Arthur Moses SC, national patron of JRI and former President of the Law Council of Australia, also warned against them.

In an opinion piece for the Sunday Telegraph on March 17, Moses and ALS CEO Karly Warner said the evidence shows that 鈥渋ncarceration of children increases crime by compounding the trauma vulnerable children have already been through, and giving them an apprenticeship in the criminal world that leads to more serious offending later in life鈥.

They said 鈥渢ougher鈥 bail laws have been tried and failed.

Rather than chasing a 鈥渢ough on crime鈥 headline, they said the government should 鈥渟ecure services for their constituents, which include these children so we don鈥檛 have offending in the first place鈥.

Queensland has demonstrably shown that tightening bail laws to keep children locked up does not work.

Mindy Sotiri said organisations with a good record of helping young people are hampered by the lack of funding. JRI is calling on Labor to establish a special $300 million fund over four years for community-led organisations which are successfully breaking the cycle of incarceration and recidivism.

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