Skip to content
Industrial Relations, Youth

Great Ocean Road Co-operative charged with alleged child employment breaches

Wage Inspectorate Victoria 2 mins read

A fishing co-operative on the Great Ocean Road has been accused of multiple child employment breaches.

Wage Inspectorate Victoria (WIV) has filed charges in the Magistrates’ Court of Victoria against Apollo Bay Fishermen’s Co-Operative alleging the business contravened the Child Employment Act 2003.

The co-operative allegedly employed multiple children under the age of 15 without a licence, failed to ensure the children were supervised by an adult with a current Working with Children Clearance, breached various conditions attached to their employment, including performing work beyond the maximum hours permitted during and outside the school term, and failed to keep records of each child employed under a licence.

The maximum penalties for these offences are in excess of:

  • $230,000 for employing a child without a valid licence and failing to ensure a child is supervised by an adult with a current Working with Children Clearance.
  • $47,000 for breaching the general conditions of employment including the hours worked.
  • Just under $10,000 for keeping records.

The matter has been listed for mention at the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on 12 November 2025.

WIV will make no further comment while the matter is before the court.

Background

Victoria’s child employment laws require employers of children under 15 to have a child employment licence before any work takes place, and to comply with Child Safe Standards.

Workers under 15 must be supervised by someone who holds a valid Victorian Working with Children Clearance (unless exempt).

Child employment laws restrict when businesses can employ children and how long they can work:

  • during a school term, children can be employed for a maximum of 3 hours a day and 12 hours per week and cannot work during school hours
  • during school holidays, children can be employed up to 6 hours a day and 30 hours a week
  • children can only work between 6am and 9pm.

Children must also receive a 30-minute rest break after every 3 hours work and have at least 12 hours break between shifts.

For more information Victoria’s child employment laws visit WIV’s website at wageinspectorate.vic.gov.au or call 1800 287 287.

More from this category

  • General News, Youth
  • 06/03/2026
  • 09:27
Speaker of the House of Representatives

Speaker takes Parliament to Riverina

Today, the Speaker of the House of Representatives,the Honourable Milton Dick MPis in regional New South Wales with the Member for Riverina,the Honourable Michael McCormack MP, as part of his schools program to encourage civic engagement. Through the Parliament in Schools Program, students will learn about federation, democracy and theAustralian Parliament, as well as hear first-hand from the Speaker and their local member on what a typical day looks like in their electorate and when they are in Parliament House for sitting weeks. The students will then participate in the Australian Parliament House (APH) Flag Roadshow, where they will learn…

  • Government NSW, Youth
  • 01/03/2026
  • 10:00
PSA

PSA backs foster care overhaul restoring accountability to child protection system

The Public Service Association of NSW (PSA) says the Minns Government’s announcement of sweeping foster care reforms, designed to rebuild accountability and transparency across a system supporting more than 13,500 vulnerable children, is a long overdue reset after years of outsourcing failures under the Permanency Support Program. The union, which represents child protection caseworkers in the Department of Communities and Justice, said the changes recognise what frontline staff have been warning for years: when responsibility is fragmented, children fall through the cracks. For nearly a decade, caseworkers have operated inside a system where legal responsibility remained with government while service…

  • Indigenous, Industrial Relations
  • 26/02/2026
  • 10:39
Centre for Indigenous People and Work (CIPW)

Indigenous Business Australia, Centre for Indigenous People and Work Partner to Quantify the Indigenous Pay Gap

Indigenous Business Australia (IBA) and the University of Technology Sydney’s Centre for Indigenous People and Work (CIPW) have announced a new research partnership to calculate and analyse the pay gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in Australia. This Indigenous‑led initiative seeks to shape national dialogue around economic equality and the Indigenous economy and build the evidence base required for systemic reform in employment, economic policy and Indigenous wages. At its core, the research recognises that Indigenous wages are a critical driver of both the Indigenous economy and Australia’s broader economy, supporting household incomes, community wellbeing, and national productivity. The partnership…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

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