The people who see the system up close know exactly what needs to change.

Behind every DFV statistic is someone doing their best in a broken system. These are the child protection workers, health staff, police officers, court support officers, and housing workers, the people who see the gaps, navigate the failures, and fight for women and children every day.

Their voices make the case clear: we need a publicly delivered, integrated system that works.

“Some days I feel like I’m holding the entire system together with my bare hands.”
“I’ve watched countless women fall through gaps that shouldn’t exist: missed referrals, delays between agencies, no safe housing available. When the system fails, the risk falls on the victim. A public, integrated model would change everything.”

Caseworker – Department of Communities and Justice

“We often have nowhere safe to send women after we finish the paperwork. It breaks you.”
 “The lack of public housing means women are forced into unsafe options or have no other option but to return home. A whole-of-government housing strategy is urgently needed.”

Housing Officer – Temporary Accommodation Unit

“The difference when everyone works together is night and day.”
“Mount Druitt shows what good looks like. When Police, Housing, Health and DCJ sit at the same table, cases move faster and families are safer

Police DFV Liaison Officer

“Victims deserve a process that protects them, not one that retraumatises them.”
“A DFV Court would allow early intervention, faster case handling, and better protection.”

Court Support Worker

A model that is working:

Mount Druitt

A fully integrated, government-led DFV Service where Police, Courts, Housing, Child Protection, Health and community services operate together.

RESULT: Faster responses, clearer accountability, safer outcomes.