Create a Central Body for Disability Discrimination in Schools


Create a Central Body for Disability Discrimination in Schools
The issue
I’ve lived the struggle of advocating for my child in an education system that outwardly champions inclusivity but, in private, often marginalizes children with disabilities. My child, like too many others, was repeatedly denied the support she was rightfully entitled to. In my efforts to secure fair treatment, I was labelled “difficult.” Filing complaints led us down a labyrinthine path involving multiple agencies—and still, achieving any substantial resolution seemed like a faint hope.
In Australia, when a child with a disability faces discrimination at school, their parents must undertake an exhausting journey through various bureaucratic layers: reporting to the school principal, escalating matters to the Department of Education, involving Human Rights Commissions, and sometimes engaging with ombudsmen or legal avenues. All of this is frequently done without legal support or financial assistance.
🚫 What Currently Exists (and Why It’s Failing):
🏫 Step 1: School-Level Complaints
Parents are expected to raise issues with the principal. Most are dismissed informally—without oversight or resolution.
🏢 Step 2: State Education Departments
Each state or territory has its own complaints process, but:
There's no national consistency
Patterns of discrimination are rarely tracked
Systemic issues are siloed, not solved
⚖️ Step 3: Human Rights Commissions
Parents must initiate formal complaints with federal or state commissions—legalistic, slow, often ineffective without court action.
🧑⚖️ Step 4: Ombudsman or Tribunal
Many families are forced into complex tribunal processes without support or representation.
This system is not designed to solve problems. It’s designed to dissolve responsibility—one fragmented complaint at a time.
🌍 A Global Failure of Rights
This isn’t just a domestic policy failure. It places Australia in violation of multiple international obligations, including:
Article 24 of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD)
UNESCO’s Education 2030 Framework (SDG 4.5: Inclusive and equitable education)
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Article 26: Right to education without discrimination)
There is currently no national body and no single mechanism that families can turn to for justice. And globally, other countries are watching.
We are calling on not only Australian leaders, but also international bodies—including UNESCO, the UN CRPD Committee, and global education rights organisations—to intervene, advise, and pressure the Australian government to comply with its international obligations.
🧭 What We’re Calling For:
We demand the creation of a Central Body for Disability Discrimination in Schools—an independent, national mechanism to:
Handle all complaints consistently
Track patterns of discrimination
Relieve families of the emotional and financial toll
Ensure that disabled children are protected and respected
📊 The Data Is Clear:
Children with disabilities are four times more likely to be bullied than their peers (AIHW, 2020).
They are disproportionately suspended, excluded, or informally told to stay home.
But the most damaging injustice is this: when families seek help, the system exhausts them into silence.
🖊 What You Can Do:
Your signature is not symbolic. It becomes part of a growing body of evidence we will present to:
The Australian Federal Government
State Education Ministers
The UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
UNESCO’s Global Education Monitoring Division
Global child rights organisations and watchdogs
Help us show that families are not alone—and that the world is watching.
97
The issue
I’ve lived the struggle of advocating for my child in an education system that outwardly champions inclusivity but, in private, often marginalizes children with disabilities. My child, like too many others, was repeatedly denied the support she was rightfully entitled to. In my efforts to secure fair treatment, I was labelled “difficult.” Filing complaints led us down a labyrinthine path involving multiple agencies—and still, achieving any substantial resolution seemed like a faint hope.
In Australia, when a child with a disability faces discrimination at school, their parents must undertake an exhausting journey through various bureaucratic layers: reporting to the school principal, escalating matters to the Department of Education, involving Human Rights Commissions, and sometimes engaging with ombudsmen or legal avenues. All of this is frequently done without legal support or financial assistance.
🚫 What Currently Exists (and Why It’s Failing):
🏫 Step 1: School-Level Complaints
Parents are expected to raise issues with the principal. Most are dismissed informally—without oversight or resolution.
🏢 Step 2: State Education Departments
Each state or territory has its own complaints process, but:
There's no national consistency
Patterns of discrimination are rarely tracked
Systemic issues are siloed, not solved
⚖️ Step 3: Human Rights Commissions
Parents must initiate formal complaints with federal or state commissions—legalistic, slow, often ineffective without court action.
🧑⚖️ Step 4: Ombudsman or Tribunal
Many families are forced into complex tribunal processes without support or representation.
This system is not designed to solve problems. It’s designed to dissolve responsibility—one fragmented complaint at a time.
🌍 A Global Failure of Rights
This isn’t just a domestic policy failure. It places Australia in violation of multiple international obligations, including:
Article 24 of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD)
UNESCO’s Education 2030 Framework (SDG 4.5: Inclusive and equitable education)
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Article 26: Right to education without discrimination)
There is currently no national body and no single mechanism that families can turn to for justice. And globally, other countries are watching.
We are calling on not only Australian leaders, but also international bodies—including UNESCO, the UN CRPD Committee, and global education rights organisations—to intervene, advise, and pressure the Australian government to comply with its international obligations.
🧭 What We’re Calling For:
We demand the creation of a Central Body for Disability Discrimination in Schools—an independent, national mechanism to:
Handle all complaints consistently
Track patterns of discrimination
Relieve families of the emotional and financial toll
Ensure that disabled children are protected and respected
📊 The Data Is Clear:
Children with disabilities are four times more likely to be bullied than their peers (AIHW, 2020).
They are disproportionately suspended, excluded, or informally told to stay home.
But the most damaging injustice is this: when families seek help, the system exhausts them into silence.
🖊 What You Can Do:
Your signature is not symbolic. It becomes part of a growing body of evidence we will present to:
The Australian Federal Government
State Education Ministers
The UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
UNESCO’s Global Education Monitoring Division
Global child rights organisations and watchdogs
Help us show that families are not alone—and that the world is watching.
97
The Decision Makers
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Petition created on 19 June 2025