Minister Targets Childcare Centres in Territory Crackdown

NT Government

1 December 2025

The Finocchiaro CLP government has today announced the 'Safe Start, Strong Futures' plan, the strongest strategic plan yet to boost child safety, outlining the approach and activity to support national reforms and strengthen child safety in the Northern Territory's regulated early childhood education and care services.

Key features of the plan include a new compliance team with additional staff, accountability for government funding, new professional learning practices and continued national advocacy for fencing and barriers that reflect contemporary safety benchmarks.

Announcing the plan at Goodstart Early Learning Centre in Stuart Park, Minister for Early Education Jo Hersey said: "Let me be clear - breaches of safety and quality will not be tolerated anywhere in the Northern Territory."

"Child safety is no accident. It requires constant vigilance, strong laws, and a shared commitment from all of us - government, educators, and communities alike.

"As a government, we hold a profound responsibility to Territory children and their families."

One of the most heartbreaking examples of childcare failure in the Northern Territory is the tragic passing of Ebony Thompson, a 22-month-old toddler who was dropped at childcare in Humpty Doo as a happy and healthy toddler and hours later her parents receiving tragic news. A parent's worst nightmare.

Minister Hersey recently announced the Humpty Doo Community and Childcare Centre, a director and 2 staff from the centre have been charged for the failure to supervise Ebony Thompson before her death.

"Childcare centres need to be held accountable, and I will not hesitate to take action against providers who do not meet National Quality Standards," she said.

"Centres who are not meeting National Quality Standards need to fix their act fast."

Minister Hersey has recently met Ebony's parents, Jade and Floyd Thompson. Their pain is unimaginable.

"After reading the coronial report, I immediately wrote to the Federal Education Minister, Jason Clare, and to Senator Jess Walsh, calling for a review of national laws around suitable fencing in early childhood services," she said.

"I have since received a letter from Senator Walsh confirming this issue will be on the agenda for the National Education Ministers' Meeting in February 2026."

"At present, there are no national standards for fencing height or type and that must change."

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