Australia has once again been confronted by shocking childcare cases that expose systemic failures in safeguarding.
One recent case involved David William James, a former OSHC worker, sentenced to up to 12 years’ imprisonment after pleading guilty to creating and possessing child abuse material involving children in his care. The court found he abused his position of trust while working across multiple centres.
In another Sydney case, a childcare worker has been charged with over 130 offences after investigators uncovered millions of images. Allegations include producing child abuse material, filming children without consent, and sexually touching children under 10. These matters remain before the courts, with suppression orders in place to protect victims.
These are not isolated incidents. They are reminders that predators deliberately seek positions of trust where access to children is unrestricted.
Systemic Failures and Enablers
Whenever cases like these emerge, history shows there are enablers more concerned about protecting reputations, businesses, and profits than protecting children. Victims and whistleblowers are pressured into silence, evidence is suppressed, and accountability is avoided. That culture must end.
Device Bans Already in Place
Australia’s childcare regulations already prohibit staff from using personal mobile phones while supervising children. This is a critical safeguard, recognising that every smartphone is a high‑definition recording device connected to the internet. But bans alone are not enough — predators exploit other gaps in oversight and culture.
CCTV Rollout Across Centres
CCTV cameras are now being introduced across childcare centres nationwide. They provide deterrence, transparency, and evidence in safeguarding cases. Yet cameras are not a silver bullet:
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Children’s rights must be respected.
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Staff privacy concerns must be balanced.
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Data security is essential to prevent misuse.
CCTV should be seen as one layer of protection, not a substitute for vigilance and strong safeguarding culture.
Strengthening Working With Children Checks
Australia is reforming WWCCs through nationally consistent laws:
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Mutual recognition of bans — barred in one state means barred everywhere.
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Continuous monitoring — real‑time checks of criminal histories.
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Consistent exclusion criteria — closing loopholes across jurisdictions.
These reforms are vital, but WWCCs are only one safeguard. Centres must still enforce strong recruitment, supervision, and whistleblower protections.
Ratios: The Missing Safeguard
Even with bans, cameras, and checks, abuse is still happening. Why? Because ratios remain dangerously high.
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One educator for four infants.
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One educator for 11 preschoolers.
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Even higher ratios in OSHC settings.
These ratios were designed decades ago for cost efficiency, not child safety. When educators are stretched too thin, blind spots are inevitable. Lower ratios are not just about education quality — they are about child protection.
Justice Beyond Arrests
Justice for children means more than prosecuting offenders. It requires:
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Exposing systemic failures.
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Protecting whistleblowers.
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Demanding transparency.
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Legislating safer ratios.
Just as seatbelt laws save lives and workplace safety laws prevent harm, childcare must adopt nationally consistent safeguarding laws that reduce opportunities for abuse.
Trust in childcare is earned through honesty, transparency, and relentless commitment to child safety. Phone bans, CCTV, and WWCC reforms are important steps — but without safer ratios and a culture that prioritises children over reputation, risks remain. Silence protects predators; vigilance protects children.
Further Reading
Safe Use of Digital Technologies & CCTV Policy Example
National CCTV Trial to Roll Out Across Hundreds of Childcare Centres
Verifying WWCC Numbers: A Critical Step in Child-Safe Practice
A New Era for Child Safety: Specialist Unit Mobilized to Support National WWCC Reform





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