

Early childhood services are meant to be a place of safety, trust, and nurturing. Yet recent cases in Sydney — including a daycare worker charged with over 120 offences allegedly involving more than 120 children, and an OOSH employee jailed for producing child abuse material across six services, show that children remain vulnerable.
Here’s a clear and practical guide for ECEC Services in NSW based on the compliance and quality history display requirements outlined on the NSW Education website.
The New South Wales Government has unveiled a comprehensive legislative proposal aimed at overhauling the state’s childcare system. The reforms, announced in response to growing concerns over safety and regulatory oversight, are designed to strengthen protections for children and enhance accountability across early childhood education services.
Today, 1 September 2025, marks a pivotal shift in Australia’s early childhood education landscape, with strengthened child safety regulations now officially in force under the National Quality Framework (NQF). These reforms—fast-tracked following the national review of child safety arrangements—aim to close regulatory gaps, improve incident response, and safeguard children in increasingly digital environments.
In the wake of devastating safeguarding failures, the Albanese Government has introduced legislation granting federal authorities new powers to respond to serious breaches in early childhood settings. Centres that pose harm to children or flout standards may face public exposure, funding loss, and closure—all within a 30-day compliance window.
***Distressing Content*** Sydney, NSW — A male childcare worker has been charged with more than 190 offences allegedly involving over 120 children, in what police describe… Read More
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