Civic Intelligence · v1 · NT + QLD

Three chapters on the access gap.

What governments said. Where the money went. What oversight bodies recommended. Every claim on this page is anchored to a record you can audit.

Read the full methodology →

Chapter 01

Access

Where the money goes when government talks about fixing youth justice.

Headline · ROGS 2024-25

Community supervision serves nearly four times as many young people for less than half the spend. The cost gap is not subtle. The numbers are pulled live from the Productivity Commission's Report on Government Services, table 17A.20 (detention) and 17A.21 (community-based supervision).

Tier 1QLDTriangulated · 3
For every $1 of QLD government youth justice funding that reached a Tier 1 frontline org, the government spent $0.02 on consulting and advisory firms doing YJ work

Confirmed funding records, 2026-05-15 snapshot.

Secondary claim · meeting register

The ministerial diary register contains near-zero direct consultancy meetings. That is not a sign that consultancies don't shape policy. It is a sign that procurement, not meetings, is where the access happens. The funding ratio above is the honest proxy. This number complements but does not replace it.

The confirmed Tier 1 universe

12 primary frontline organisations make up the v1 Tier 1 universe across QLD and NT. Each classification starts as a machine proposal scored for confidence, then passes a review step against the Tier 1 definition before it counts here. Lower-confidence proposals remain in the curation queue.

Chapter 02

Promises

What governments said they would do. What state of completion those promises are in.

Made

0

In progress

15

No public evidence

0

Rhetoric over time

Ministerial statements naming detention vs naming alternatives. The shape of the curve says more than any single quote.

Tracked commitments

  • in_progress·youth_justice

    Maintain a strong focus on early intervention and rehabilitation measures for juveniles across the portfolio

    Laura Gerber, Minister for Youth Justice and Victim Support and Minister for Corrective Services

  • in_progress·education

    Introduce a zero-tolerance policy for violence, vapes and drugs in our schools

    John-Paul Langbroek, Minister for Education and the Arts

  • delivered·youth_justice

    Strengthen restorative justice options for young offenders, including expanding Youth Justice Conferencing

    Michael Daley, Attorney General and Minister for Justice

  • delivered·child_safety

    Deliver the 'Safer Children, Safer Communities' Plan to protect our State's most vulnerable children and prevent them falling into crime

    Amanda Camm, Minister for Families, Seniors and Disability Services and Minister for Child Safety and the Prevention of Domestic and Family Violence

  • in_progress·corrective_services

    Create an environment where correctional facilities are a place where reform can occur for the perpetrators of crime

    Laura Gerber, Minister for Youth Justice and Victim Support and Minister for Corrective Services

  • in_progress·youth

    Investigate and activate opportunities to better allow for young Queenslanders to be consulted and informed on work undertaken by the Queensland Government

    Sam O'Connor, Minister for Housing and Public Works and Minister for Youth

  • in_progress·corrective_services

    Ensure the efficient and effective operation of the Parole Board Queensland

    Laura Gerber, Minister for Youth Justice and Victim Support and Minister for Corrective Services

  • delivered·youth_justice

    Work with the Minister for Youth Justice and Minister for Corrective Services to reduce the number of young people in care interacting with the criminal justice system

    Amanda Camm, Minister for Families, Seniors and Disability Services and Minister for Child Safety and the Prevention of Domestic and Family Violence

Chapter 03

Oversight

What independent reviewers recommended. What happened next.

Accepted

1

Accepted in principle

0

Rejected

3

Deferred / silent

0

Tier 1NationalTriangulated · 3
107 recommendations tracked across Sentencing Advisory Councils (QLD/VIC/TAS/NSW/NT), state Auditors-General, and the Royal Commission into the Protection and Detention of Children in the NT
Tier 1NationalTriangulated · 3
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander young people are 20× more likely to be under any youth justice supervision (community + detention combined) than non-Indigenous young people (2024-25, national, AIHW rate per 10,000 ATSI ÷ rate per 10,000 non-Indigenous)

Lived experience vs policy rhetoric

The Political Rhetoric

"I rise to speak to the Expanding Adult Crime, Adult Time and Taking a Strong Stance on Drugs and Anti-Social Behaviour Amendment Bill 2026. Put quite simply, this bill is going to introduce a range of..."
Kirkland|LNP|2026
"In accordance with standing order 131, the bill is now referred to the Justice, Integrity and Community Safety Committee. # EXPANDING ADULT CRIME, ADULT TIME AND TAKING A STRONG STANCE ON DRUGS AND..."
Deputy Speaker|2026
"I rise to speak in support of the Expanding Adult Crime, Adult Time and Taking a Strong Stance on Drugs and Anti-Social Behaviour Amendment Bill. For 10 years, Labor weakened Queensland’s youth crime..."
Molhoek|LNP|2026
"Today it is a pleasure to rise to support the Expanding Adult Crime, Adult Time and Taking a Strong Stance on Drugs and Anti-Social Behaviour Amendment Bill, which is delivering on a key election comm..."
Krause|LNP|2026

Where the people inside the system describe the system differently than the people setting policy.

Recommendations from named bodies

Address widening gap in Year 9 NAPLAN results between metropolitan and remote students

Productivity Commission|ROGS 2026 — Schools|National|education
pendinghigh

Recommendations on detention centre conditions, watch-house usage, and capacity management. Found 42-102 children in watch-houses daily. Youth detention at 99.6% capacity.

qld-ombudsman|Combined inspection report: youth detention centres|QLD|youth-justice
unknownhigh

Strengthen investment practices to ensure decisions are based on sound market analysis, with the rationale for decisions clearly documented

qld-audit-office|Reducing Serious Youth Crime|QLD|youth-justice
pendingmedium

Finalize monitoring and evaluation framework and commence evaluation of 2023 reforms with transparent reporting

qld-audit-office|Reducing Serious Youth Crime|QLD|youth-justice
partially_implementedmedium

Strengthen leadership and governance by ensuring appropriate delegates attend committees, identifying key challenges, and improving information sharing across entities

qld-audit-office|Reducing Serious Youth Crime|QLD|youth-justice
partially_implementedhigh

Review, update, and implement new youth justice strategy including success indicators, actions to reduce First Nations overrepresentation, and clear roles and responsibilities

qld-audit-office|Reducing Serious Youth Crime|QLD|youth-justice
partially_implementedhigh

Continue working with key system stakeholders to ensure more effective coordination, integration, and delivery of youth justice-related initiatives

qld-audit-office|Reducing Serious Youth Crime|QLD|youth-justice
partially_implementedhigh

Finalize QPS youth justice strategy ensuring it includes measurable objectives and aligns to the state strategy

qld-audit-office|Reducing Serious Youth Crime|QLD|youth-justice
pendinghigh

Agree on uniform, evidence-based approach to identifying young offenders with the highest risk of reoffending and ensure this information is shared

qld-audit-office|Reducing Serious Youth Crime|QLD|youth-justice
pendingmedium

Formalize and execute plan for measuring the effectiveness of programs using its outcomes framework

qld-audit-office|Reducing Serious Youth Crime|QLD|youth-justice
pendingmedium

Improve and standardize processes and systems for collecting and recording data about core rehabilitation programs

qld-audit-office|Reducing Serious Youth Crime|QLD|youth-justice
pendingmedium

Monitor bail checks for serious repeat offenders to ensure timely and appropriate action

qld-audit-office|Reducing Serious Youth Crime|QLD|youth-justice
unknownmedium

Continue implementing plans to address staff shortages, including considering alternative methods to rehabilitate young offenders while centres are in lockdown

qld-audit-office|Reducing Serious Youth Crime|QLD|youth-justice
partially_implementedmedium

Ensure effective and sustained support to young offenders transitioning from detention into the community through structured planning and timely communication

qld-audit-office|Reducing Serious Youth Crime|QLD|youth-justice
pendingmedium

That the Department of Youth Justice publish transparent, standardised cost data for youth detention per young person per day, enabling public comparison with community-based alternatives

Queensland Audit Office|Report 15: 2023-24 — Reducing Serious Youth Crime (follow-up)|QLD|youth-justice
pendinghigh

Deep dive · Hansard

Speeches and statements on youth justice

Untitled

I will take that interjection right at the start. Yes, I am a former police officer and I am very proud of my hometown of Townsville. I am joined by five other officers on this side of the House, one of whom is our police minister and, as we know, was a former detective himself. Mr McDonald: A tra...

Poole|LNP|22 Apr 2026

Untitled

My previous iterations around the introduction of the Adult Crime, Adult Time legislation in this place and the passing of that legislation have delved into a number of areas. One of those has been the speciality, skills, quality and expertise of those members of the government who have contributed ...

Dillon|LNP|22 Apr 2026

Untitled

I rise to speak to the Expanding Adult Crime, Adult Time and Taking a Strong Stance on Drugs and Anti-Social Behaviour Amendment Bill 2026. Put quite simply, this bill is going to introduce a range of amendments across a number of different actions. The goal is to expand police powers in public spac...

Kirkland|LNP|22 Apr 2026

Untitled

In accordance with standing order 131, the bill is now referred to the Justice, Integrity and Community Safety Committee. # EXPANDING ADULT CRIME, ADULT TIME AND TAKING A STRONG STANCE ON DRUGS AND ANTI-SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR AMENDMENT BILL ## Second Reading Resumed from 21 April (see p. 1028), on m...

Deputy Speaker|22 Apr 2026

Untitled

I rise to speak in support of the Expanding Adult Crime, Adult Time and Taking a Strong Stance on Drugs and Anti-Social Behaviour Amendment Bill. For 10 years, Labor weakened Queensland’s youth crime laws, prioritised the rights of offenders over the rights of victims and removed consequences for se...

Molhoek|LNP|22 Apr 2026

Untitled

Today it is a pleasure to rise to support the Expanding Adult Crime, Adult Time and Taking a Strong Stance on Drugs and Anti-Social Behaviour Amendment Bill, which is delivering on a key election commitment of the Crisafulli LNP government around making Queensland safer. The bill will achieve that i...

Krause|LNP|22 Apr 2026

Untitled

I rise to speak in support of the Expanding Adult Crime, Adult Time and Taking a Strong Stance on Drugs and Anti-Social Behaviour Amendment Bill 2026. This is an important bill. It goes to the heart of one of the most fundamental responsibilities we have in this place—that is, keeping Queenslanders ...

Chiesa|LNP|22 Apr 2026

Untitled

I rise today to support the Expanding Adult Crime, Adult Time and Taking a Strong Stance on Drugs and Anti-Social Behaviour Amendment Bill 2026, because at its core this bill is about restoring safety where people live. For me that means one thing: standing up for the people of Mackay. This debate...

Dalton|LNP|22 Apr 2026

Deep dive · Accountability loop

Section 6

Accountability Cross-Reference

Tracing the full loop: from what politicians say, to what they fund, to what happens on the ground, to what oversight finds, to what they promise next.

Topic: “youth justice

Source-grade transparency

Every claim on this page traces to a record you can audit.

Read the methodology