Wiradjuri elder Aunty Isabel Reid has backed a proposed NSW law that aims to reduce the numbers of Aboriginal children being removed from their families.
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The Children and Young Persons (Care and Protection) Amendment (Family is Culture Review) Bill would, if passed into law, require NSW Family and Community services to presume "that removing an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander child or young person from his or her family causes harm".
The bill was introduced by departing Greens MLC David Shoebridge to Parliament's upper house in November as a response to Aboriginal children in NSW being 10 times more likely to be taken from their families than non-Indigenous children.
The bill's extra provisions for family services and the Children's Court were designed to lift the threshold for circumstances where Aboriginal children would be removed from their families.
Aunty Isabel, aged 89, is a member of the Stolen Generation having been taken from her family at the age of 7.
"I think the government should be looking at it more closely. Do we want another Stolen Generation? Because it's out there, it's poking its head up high," she said.
"I don't want that to ever happen again. It's too devastating for the children and the mothers. Mothers still love their children no matter who or where they are. Why don't they close their eyes and think of a white child and how that would feel?"
Aunty Isabel said children should still be removed from a family if that option was the least harmful.
Wagga MP Joe McGirr has co-sponsored the bill for its consideration by NSW Parliament's lower house.
"Currently, 43 per cent of children in out-of-home care are from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and when you think about it, that is extraordinary," Dr McGirr said.
"Given that we have had the apology for the Stolen Generation, we have got a National Sorry Day back in 2007 and now 15 years later we have still got those extraordinary statistics.
"The NSW government commissioned an academic, Megan Davis, to produce a comprehensive report with a series of recommendations on how to address this issue. I understand she is quite a conservative Aboriginal advocate; that report has been available for four or five years and frankly not much has happened."
Dr McGirr said he and his fellow independent MPs saw the amended legislation as a way to implement those recommendations and do everything possible to keep Aboriginal children with their families, or at least within a kinship group to maintain a connection to their culture.
"Even in our local community, this issue is a significant one for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. It gets raised with me frequently," Dr McGirr said.
Family and Community Services recorded that 12 children from all cultural backgrounds were taken into out-of-home care for every 1000 residents in the Murrumbidgee Local Health District during the 2019-20 financial year.
The Murrumbidgee rate was higher than the NSW average of nine children for every 1000 residents.
Liberal MLC Catherine Cusack told Parliament it was important to show respect to First Nations people and to recognise the mistakes of the past, but she could not support the bill as "every child who is in a situation where they are suffering actual abuse" came first.