Skip to content
General News

New service to help keep First Nations families together

Legal Aid NSW 2 mins read
FamAC Aboriginal Field Officer Susan Phillips
Aboriginal families and children in care will have improved access to culturally-safe legal and social support following the launch of a new specialist service aimed at keeping families together.
 
The Family Law Service for Aboriginal Communities (FamAC) is an Aboriginal-led service of Legal Aid NSW comprising of lawyers and allied professionals, who can assist  Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander families and children in family law and care & protection matters.
 
Solicitor in Charge Bianca Dufty, a Ngemba and Gamilaraay woman, said the launch, which coincides with the National Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Children’s Day, was about self-determination and keeping children connected to kin and culture.
 
“We know from the Family Matters Report that Aboriginal children and families have better outcomes if we are together and are supported to make decisions about our families and our children,” she said. 
 
The Family Matters Report found Indigenous children in NSW are 10 times more likely to be placed in care, a figure that has increased 15 per cent to 9.7 entries per 1,000 children in  2020-21 compared to the year prior.i
 
The FamAC, which has been officially operating since the end of 2022, is available to Aboriginal people with family law disputes or who are at risk of or involved in the care and protection system. In the past six months alone, the service has already provided advice to 266 clients. 
 
In addition to legal representation, support and advice from specialist solicitors, FamAC provides non-legal support including access to a specialist mental health worker and support from Aboriginal Field Officers who can link Aboriginal people with housing and health supports.
 
FamAC Aboriginal Field Officer Susan Phillips, a proud Ngemba and Gamilaraay woman, travels thousands of kilometres across NSW doing outreach work in Aboriginal communities to ensure families get help early on, before removal is considered.
 
“Removal affected my family and community so it’s personal for me being able to help families stay together. The aim is to not have kids removed or at least put them in kinship placements,” she said. 
 
“It’s about kids knowing their culture, learning from their Elders and having that sense of belonging.”
 
Director, Aboriginal Services, Legal Aid NSW, Kimberley Wilson said the service was focused on early intervention to help keep families together and out of the care and protection system.
 
By ensuring families have early access to legal advice, we hope to reduce the number of children at risk and in the care and protection system, she said.
 
The service undertakes outreach to regional areas like Moree/New England, Northern Rivers, Western NSW and the Far South Coast including Moruya, Wallaja Lake and Batemans Bay to ensure that people in remote locations can access supports. 
 
The service also offers duty lawyer services in the Specialist Indigenous Lists at Lismore, Coffs Harbour and Sydney and recently received additional funding to expand with three field officers located in Parramatta, Tamworth and Lismore.
 
The FamAC team on (02) 9407 2941 or email FamAC@legalaid.nsw.gov.au.
 
Solicitor in Charge Bianca Dufty is available for interview. Aboriginal Field Office Susan Phillips is also available for interview.

Contact details:

Media contact | Georgia Clark | 0438 606 092 or media@legalaid.nsw.gov.au

Media

More from this category

  • Environment, General News
  • 01/12/2023
  • 17:20
NSW Environment Protection Authority

Extra Air Quality Monitoring for Lake Macquarie provides near Real Time Data

The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) is installing up to 20 new air quality monitors in west Lake Macquarie to assist the community to respond to local air quality issues including dust, as a warm dry summer approaches. EPA Director Operations David Gathercole said the monitors will complement the existing air quality monitoring network operated by the government and licensees to provide a better picture of outdoor air quality. This information can help both the EPA and the community identify areas of concern and may help inform future initiatives in the area. “We know the communities in west Lake Macquarie…

  • Environment, General News
  • 01/12/2023
  • 15:33
Return and Earn

Return and Earn celebrates six years of success

NSW’s wildly popular recycling scheme, Return and Earn, is today celebrating six years of success in which it has seen 8 out of 10…

  • Contains:
  • Disability, General News
  • 01/12/2023
  • 15:20
La Trobe University

International Day of Persons with a Disability – Sunday, December 3

On Sunday December 3, the WHO marks International Day of Persons with a Disability. This year’s theme is achieving sustainable development goals for health and well-being for, with, and by persons with disabilities. In Australia, 4.4 million people identify as having a disability. A La Trobe University expert is available to discuss the health inequities that impact persons with a disability in Australia. Dr Teresa Iacono Professor of Rural & Regional Allied Health Contact: T.Iacono@latrobe.edu.au About Professor Teresa Iacono Teresa's clinical and academic interests are in severe communication impairment in people with developmental disabilities, as well as health and mental…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time your distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.