Victorian government to apologise to victims of sexual abuse at state schools later this year

Daniel Andrews will meet with campaigner Glen Fearnett on Monday ahead of a formal apology

The Andrews government has committed to formally apologising to victim-survivors of child sexual abuse in Victorian public schools.

After the death of cardinal George Pell, former students who suffered abuse at the hands of paedophile teachers in state schools in the 1970s renewed their push for formal recognition by the Victorian government.

The government on Friday said an apology for children abused in institutional care will take place later this year, and will include recognition of the harm suffered in state schools.

Glen Fearnett, who says he was abused by teacher Gary Mitchell while a student in Beaumaris primary school in Melbourne’s south-eastern suburbs in 1972, said he was “thrilled” an apology would be made.

“I hope we can open a positive dialogue to get to a full understanding of the scale of what has taken place in state institutions,” he said.

“It [the apology] means we’ve been believed. It’s a form of closure, that we can put a full stop to this because we’ve been heard.”

Fearnett will meet Daniel Andrews on Monday. Guardian Australia understands the premier has extended the invite to other survivors from Beaumaris primary school.

Since the late 1990s, Mitchell has been sentenced five times for child sex offences stretching from 1967 to 2001.

Fearnett is just one of several former Beaumaris primary school students who have alleged abuse and are currently pursuing legal action against the Department of Education. Police investigations are ongoing.

John Rule, a lawyer with Maurice Blackburn, is handling several of the cases against the Department of Education and said the apology was “just the first step” in creating necessary reform.

“The education department is falling behind the rest of the Victorian government, which has been very good at issues of historical abuse,” he said.

“I hope this apology is the first step in the government trying to get the education department to catch up with the reforms that it has made. The education department needs a cultural change in the way it deals with the litigation process and redress process.”

Rule previously told Guardian Australia the department had developed a reputation for being “aggressive” in defending claims.

In September 2022, the justice party MP Stuart Grimley called for the premier to publicly apologise to victim-survivors of child sexual abuse within government schools between the 1960s and 1990s.

Before November’s election, the government unveiled a long-awaited redress scheme for children who suffered physiological and psychological harm under state care in institutions like orphanages and missions.

The state redress scheme will build on the national redress scheme available for abuse survivors. Andrews has also committed to delivering a formal apology to those abused in institutional care.

On Friday, a spokesperson for the Victorian government confirmed the premier’s apology would include those abused in state government schools.

“When survivors of sexual abuse come forward, we respond compassionately and sensitively to their circumstances – with personal apologies and acknowledgments, direct personal responses when survivors access the National Redress Scheme, and written personal apologies when a formal claim is resolved,” the spokesperson said.

Guardian Australia has revealed that almost 400 civil claims have been filed against the state government relating to historical sexual abuse in government schools in the past 12 years. The 381 claims related to abuse that occurred in state schools between 1960 and 2018 and more than half have been settled out of court.

In 2006, the former Labor premier Steve Bracks apologised to Victorians who had been placed in out-of-home care. The former prime minister Scott Morrison, in 2018, delivered a national apology that recognised victims of institutional child sexual abuse.

• In Australia, children, young adults, parents and teachers can contact the Kids Helpline on 1800 55 1800, or Bravehearts on 1800 272 831, and adult survivors can contact Blue Knot Foundation on 1300 657 380. In the UK, the NSPCC offers support to children on 0800 1111, and adults concerned about a child on 0808 800 5000. The National Association for People Abused in Childhood (Napac) offers support for adult survivors on 0808 801 0331. In the US, call or text the Childhelp abuse hotline on 800-422-4453. Other sources of help can be found at Child Helplines International

Contributors

Adeshola Ore and Benita Kolovos

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
‘Tip of the iceberg’: hundreds of victims allege sexual abuse at Victorian state schools
Exclusive: Pressure builds on government to apologise, as lawyer likens ‘trail of destruction’ to that wreaked by Catholic church

Benita Kolovos

29, Jan, 2023 @2:00 PM

Article image
‘No one wants to talk to us’: victims of child sexual abuse from Victoria state schools fight for justice
‘We believe you, we support you,’ Daniel Andrews said after George Pell’s death, but those abused in the state’s government schools are still waiting for an apology

Benita Kolovos

20, Jan, 2023 @2:00 PM

Article image
‘Barbaric’ practices still used in Victorian prisons, human rights advocates say
Andrews government urged to establish independent watchdog to comply with anti-torture obligations ratified by Australia in 2017

Adeshola Ore

10, Oct, 2022 @4:30 PM

Article image
Victorian schools could lose billions as state-federal negotiations break down
Victoria’s education minister says commonwealth rejects compromise and he ‘won’t be bullied’ into signing a ‘dud’ funding deal

Michael McGowan

13, Dec, 2018 @7:06 AM

Article image
What the new year of preschool education means for parents and children
Explainer: Children in Victoria and NSW will have access to a year of play-based learning before they start school

Benita Kolovos and Tamsin Rose

16, Jun, 2022 @7:11 AM

Article image
John Herron to run for Justice party in Victoria state election to ‘fight for’ daughter killed in Royal Park in 2019
Navy veteran and lawyer joins Derryn Hinch’s party but expert warns against calls for harsher bail laws

Adeshola Ore

17, Oct, 2022 @1:56 AM

Article image
Victorian election: what the parties are promising
Many of the major parties’ policies are about how to manage Melbourne’s record population growth of more 125,000 people a year

Gay Alcorn, Calla Wahlquist and Luke Henriques-Gomes

19, Nov, 2018 @5:00 PM

Article image
Victorian public schools face $20bn funding shortfall, analysis shows
Private schools will be overfunded by almost $400m, but public schools will fall short of national standards

Adeshola Ore

13, Mar, 2022 @7:48 PM

Article image
‘Political’ government ads should be probed by integrity agencies, Victorian opposition says
Ibac and ombudsman urged to investigate after auditor general found campaigns breached state law

Benita Kolovos

07, Apr, 2022 @7:43 AM

Article image
What will the teal wave mean for Victorian and NSW state elections?
Swings at federal election hint at shifts that could be replicated in state polls due in November and March

Ben Raue

11, Jun, 2022 @8:00 PM