With recent bad behaviours on Hastings Street during a visitor spike on school holidays in Noosa, operation November Kilo was launched where police dealt with several offenses including four assaults occasioning bodily harm, three wilful damage, three possessions of dangerous drugs and two stealing instances. In addition, one common assault, public nuisance, dangerous operation of a vehicle and enter with intent instances. Noosa police were supported by the Sunshine Coast Tactical Crime Squad, Child Protection Investigation Unit, Dog Squad, Road Policing Command, Criminal Investigation Branch, Polair and the new Youth Co-Responder Team. Noosa Heads Officer in Charge Acting Senior Sergeant Nick Paterson said in a Queensland Police media release that an increase in people warrants an increase in police presence. He said the following in that release on 17 October 2024:

“The proactive high visibility and saturation of Hastings Street saw great success in providing valuable support and education to the Noosa community and visitors. We worked as a team with individuals, local businesses, local and state government stakeholders and the Hasting Street Association to reduce antisocial and alcohol fuelled violence to ensure people not only were safe, but also felt safe. Noosa is renowned for its beautiful beaches and through Operation November Kilo we’re working to ensure it’s equally known for being a welcoming and safe place too.”

Sandy appreciates the additional resources provided during these peak periods. Our local police are to be commended for their efforts in ongoing difficult times where domestic violence and mental health call outs continue to dominate. It is good to see the new Youth Co-Responder Team for the Sunshine Coast being utilised, which was one of the recommendations from the Youth Justice Reform Committee (YJRC)’s report, with an independent evaluation finding that young people were less likely to commit serious crimes after engaging with these teams. However, it is never acceptable to see either locals, or visitors, presenting danger to our community. At what point do we say enough is enough and hold those responsible to account.

As mentioned in our April 2024 Noosa 360 update, Sandy chaired the former YJRC, which included three members from each of the two major political parties. She travelled across Queensland producing a detailed report in April this year with sixty recommendations to create greater community safety. It has been positive that the Government supported these either fully or in principle, with over half of them in some form of progress. However, there has not been any response from the Opposition to those recommendations, with slogans such as ‘Adult Crime, Adult Time’, disregarding the calls for evidence-based responses.

This should be concerning for all as it goes against what Queenslanders asked for in efforts to decrease crime. Sandy believes it is imperative that political parties move beyond grabs and slogans to get votes, to what will work to create safer communities now and into the future.

Nowhere during the inquiry were calls for ‘adult time’, as without the appropriate rehabilitation during detention including for their siblings and families, communities will continue to see the intergenerational cycle grow, with increased criminalisation, instead of decreased. The unacceptable statistics of reoffending after incarceration demonstrates clearly that detention for youth without long term rehabilitation of both the offender and the environment which fostered the criminality increases crime, not decreases.

Regardless of the age of the offender, we need consequences for actions and interventions to reduce reoffending. Communities need to feel safe and those who threaten that safety need to be removed from where they do harm. However, the responses to deep and often complex issues involving perpetrators who were often victims themselves are not resolved by quick fixes, media grabs and slogans. It takes multiple responses including to the offender and their families—hence why all sixty recommendations from Sandy’s seven-month inquiry must all be actioned.

Ken Cunliffe, who established the Voice of Victims, a Toowoomba Advocacy organisation after being a victim of crime, and was a force behind a crime forum held in Toowoomba, said in a recent media statement he was disappointed that the final report of the committee was not adopted by the LNP and praised Sandy for her work as Chair and for her fight to make the report public. He said the following in that statement:

“Good policy development takes a great deal of time and thought. It does not follow any particular political agenda. Ideally it should be enthusiastically supported by all sides. That is what the YJRC set out to do. It came up with sixty (60) recommendations that would stand Queensland’s youth justice legislation in good stead, providing safety and security for the community, but also dealing with young offenders appropriately. No government can claim to have a mandate to deal with youth crime if they abandon these recommendations.”

“The YJRC chaired by Independent MP Sandy Bolton was an excellent piece of work involving all sides of politics as the panel and a broad cross-section of Queensland’s population as contributors.”

Sandy has raised again the need for the Opposition to respond to what they will or will not commit from the sixty recommendations as part of respecting victims, their families and the many frontliners who must live every day with the policies and decisions made by any Government.

We need to end this danger now and adopt the YJRC recommendations to lower the threshold and expand the criteria for serious repeat offender declarations, as well provide interventions in line with what was evidenced as successful, including schooling through the MOB Academy as an example which is for one (1) or two years – not short-term interventions which has shown limited success.

Even though according to reports, there have been some appropriate changes to youth justice, more needs to be done and Sandy is tracking every aspect of those recommendations, and the new modelling we mentioned in our July 2024 Noosa 360 update, that is being developed for police allocations following her inquiries during 2023 Estimates Hearings.

As included in our April 2024 Noosa 360 update, the full sixty recommendations from the YJRC’s report can be viewed in full at https://documents.parliament.qld.gov.au/tp/2024/5724T612-1B7E.pdf Sandy’s Chair’s Foreword for that report is available at https://documents.parliament.qld.gov.au/tp/2024/5724T736-BBBD.pdf

Questions on Notice

Sandy has asked two Question on Notice (QONs) recently regarding specific recommendations with the links to the responses from the Queensland Minister for Education and Youth Justice below:

Recommendation 53: https://documents.parliament.qld.gov.au/tableOffice/questionsAnswers/2024/601-2024.pdf

Recommendation 36: https://documents.parliament.qld.gov.au/tableOffice/questionsAnswers/2024/895-2024.pdf

Queensland Community Safety Bill 2024

The Queensland Community Safety Bill 2024 mentioned our May 2024 Noosa 360 update has now passed. Please read Sandy’s full debate speech in Parliament regarding at https://documents.parliament.qld.gov.au/speeches/spk2024/Sandy_Bolton-Noosa-20240822-051660449830.pdf

Further information

For our previous Noosa 360 updates on Crime/ Youth Recidivism, please visit www.sandybolton.com/?s=Crime.

Updates on many local matters are available on Noosa 360 at www.sandybolton.com/noosa360. To receive information straight to your email inbox, please subscribe to our monthly newsletter via www.sandybolton.com/newsletters. This also ensures you receive any future Noosa related surveys or polls.