Victoria: New Family Violence Violence Help in Gippsland

Victoria: New Family Violence Violence Help in Gippsland

Wednesday, 06 August 2008
Victims of family violence in Gippsland now have dedicated legal assistance as a result of a new family violence program at the community legal centre, Deputy Premier and Attorney-General Rob Hulls said today.

Gippsland Community Legal Service (CLS) is one of a network of centres across the State to share in $3.8 million Brumby Government funding through Victoria Legal Aid for 7.5 dedicated family violence lawyers.

“This funding has allowed the Gippsland Community Legal Service to establish a family violence program to support people who are applying for family violence intervention orders at the Latrobe Valley Court,” Mr Hulls said. “Lawyers who are working in the program provide legal advice, court representation and other assistance including an outreach service and casework representation.

“For many, going to court to apply for an intervention order is one of the bravest things they’ll ever do. Victims of family violence now have a dedicated service they can call for legal assistance. It’s crucial that victims get the help they need to navigate the court system.”

Launching the Gippsland program at Morwell’s Latrobe Valley Court complex, Mr Hulls said the Brumby Government was committed to improving the way the justice system responded to family violence.

He said the new Family Violence Protection Bill, introduced into Parliament in June, would better protect victims of family violence and hold perpetrators to account for their actions.

Key elements of the new Act would include making it easier for victims of family violence to remain in the family home with their children while the perpetrator may be required to leave, and ensuring that self-represented perpetrators cannot personally cross-examine their victims in court.

Mr Hulls said the new Act would also broaden the definition of family violence to include economic and emotional abuse, as well as other types of threatening and controlling behaviour, for the purpose of seeking intervention orders.

“These changes will help ensure that victims of violence are not further distressed by being forced from their homes, often uprooting children from their friends and schools,” Mr Hulls said.

“In the past family violence has been seen as a domestic matter. It’s not – it’s a blight on our community, which has a devastating impact on victims and families.”

Mr Hulls also confirmed the pilot of Victoria’s first County Koori Court, to be held at the Latrobe Valley Court complex, was on track to begin in December.

“While the Koori County Court will be based at Latrobe Valley Court, it will service all of Gippsland,” he said. “This is an important development for Gippsland’s Indigenous community because it is designed to break down the disengagement Indigenous people have had with the court system.”

Source: Ministerial Media Release

Request an Appointment
Fill in the form below to find out if you have a claim.
Request an Appointment - Stephen Page
Things to Read, Watch & Listen

Surrogacy in Kyrgyzstan: The New Frontier or a Legal Minefield?

Surrogacy in Kyrgyzstan is suddenly attracting attention, particularly among intended parents looking for countries that appear more open than the usual destinations. On paper, the change is striking. In 2024, Kyrgyzstan introduced laws allowing surrogacy and, unlike some neighbouring former Soviet states, it appears to permit a much broader group of intended parents to access… Read More »Surrogacy in Kyrgyzstan: The New Frontier or a Legal Minefield?

The End of International Surrogacy in Kenya? What Australians Need to Know

Surrogacy in Kenya has long sat in an uneasy space. It has been available, it has been used by some foreign intended parents, and yet it has operated in a legal environment that is largely unregulated. For Australians, that combination should always have rung alarm bells. The numbers alone tell part of the story. Very… Read More »The End of International Surrogacy in Kenya? What Australians Need to Know

Parental Child Abduction: What to Do if Your Child is Not Returned

International child abduction is one of the most distressing situations a parent can face. It often begins suddenly. A child is taken overseas without permission, or a parent agrees to overseas travel and then discovers the child is not being brought back. What sounds like a private family dispute can quickly become a complicated international… Read More »Parental Child Abduction: What to Do if Your Child is Not Returned

Family Law Section Law Council of Australia Award
Member of Queensland law society
Family law Practitioners Association
International Academy of Family Lawyers - IAFL
Mediator Standards Board