Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Eden Gillespie

One child a month left on a bus across Australia over the past five years

Three-year-old Nevaeh Austin
Three-year-old Nevaeh Austin was treated in intensive care after being found unconscious on a bus outside her Queensland childcare centre. Photograph: supplied

At least 68 children have been left on buses in Australia in the past five years – a rate of more than one a month.

Earlier this month, three-year-old Nevaeh Austin was treated in intensive care after being found unconscious on a bus outside her Queensland childcare centre. She had been left on the bus alone for six hours in temperatures over 30C .

While the case generated headlines around Australia, a lawyer acting for the families of children found on buses said it was “happening more than people would believe or understand”.

On Thursday, a Perth childcare provider was fined $27,000 after a five-year-old boy was left upset, hot and sweaty on a locked bus for more than two hours.

Kids Active Southern River was found by the state administrative tribunal to have breached education and care services laws in relation to the incident, which happened on the way back from an excursion in September 2021.

Staff members did not check the bus after the children got off. A head count was conducted, but it was not recognised at that point that a child was unaccounted for.

Elaine Penno is suing her son’s childcare centre after a driver allegedly locked him inside a bus in Coffs Harbour last January when he was eight years old.

Penno alleges the bus driver switched off and departed the vehicle after forgetting to drop her son Rowan home from vacation care in the afternoon.

A schoolboy boards the bus.
Queensland has reported 41 occasions of children left on buses over the past five years – the highest in the country, but it has happened in every state and territory. Photograph: Louise Beaumont/Getty Images

The eight-year-old walked home alongside a busy main road after setting himself free by pressing the emergency release button, she said.

“People say why didn’t your child speak up? But why should he have to speak up when they’re supposed to protect him and get him where he’s supposed to go?” Penno said.

“[When the bus stopped] he actually thought they must have been picking up [someone]. He wasn’t aware.”

Shine Lawyers is representing Penno and three other families who say their children have been left on buses by childcare services in NSW and Queensland.

“It’s a real issue that is … happening more than people would believe or understand,” Lisa Flynn, chief legal officer at Shine Lawyers, said.

“The fact that we’re one law firm and there’s at least four current cases involving these instances, I think is very concerning.”

Flynn said more needs to be done to keep children safe. “In some states there’s policies and there’s been campaigns … but we need to ensure organisations are attracting the right people that are properly trained,” she said.

“There needs to be tighter regulation so the very important job of ensuring the safety of children is given the prominence and importance that desperately needs.”

After Nevaeh Austin was admitted to hospital, the then acting federal education minister, Stuart Robert, wrote to state and territory counterparts to request they immediately change rules to ensure a second educator, other than the bus driver, is present when children are getting on and off vehicles used by childcare centres.

“This incident is unacceptable and unfortunately not the first of its kind. It can never happen again,” he wrote.

“Your urgent consideration of arrangements ... in relation to transport safety is appreciated given these tragic circumstances.”

In February 2020, three-year-old Maliq (“Meeky”) Nicholas Floyd Namok-Malamoo died after he was left in a parked bus outside a school in Cairns. Driver Michael Glenn Lewis pleaded guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to six years’ jail in 2021, while Goodstart Early Learning was fined $71,000 over the incident.

In the aftermath, Queensland launched a Look Before You Lock campaign in a bid to halt the state’s relatively high number of incidents.

Queensland has reported 41 occasions of children being left on buses over the past five years – the highest number in the country. Numbers fell from 17 in 2019 to three last year, although there has already been three this year.

Meanwhile, Western Australia has reported nine cases since 2017, NSW six, Tasmania four, Victoria four, South Australia two, while both the Northern Territory and the Australian Capital Territory reported one case each over the past five years.

Maaike Stolte said her son Liam was forgotten on a van in Ipswich outside his after school care centre three years ago. She said when staff at the centre realised her seven-year-old was missing, they returned to the van to find him fast asleep.

“It was only 10 minutes so he was fine, just a bit hot and sweaty,” Stolte said. “But it makes me sick thinking about what could have happened.”

Stolte said the centre was apologetic and brought in changes, such as extra staff and double checks. “But with the recent incident [of Neveah Austin], it’s brought back memories and made me think maybe I was too laidback,” she said.

Anne Freeman, a former school and childcare bus driver of 15 years, said it was quite common for young children to fall asleep.

“When I drove, I’d always make sure I’d walk up and down the bus, collect rubbish and make sure there’s no one left on,” Freeman said.

“For daycare, we would mark children off the roll when they got on and off the bus.”

Freeman said further driver training and signage could help keep children safe.

“You lock up the bus at 9am and come back at 3pm, so if you’re unaware it could be six hours that they’re stuck on the bus … It’s pretty disturbing,” she said.

Flynn says many of her clients have suffered psychological distress as a result of learning about what happened to their child.

“It’s extremely traumatic for many of the parents … where if their child had been left [on the bus] any longer, the consequence could have been the death of their child,” she said.

“It is an extremely important safety issue and it needs to be highlighted to ensure that there is the proper level of accountability for organisations entrusted with the care of children.”

Guardian Australia has contacted all daycare centres involved but has not receive a response.

Australian Associated Press contributed to this report.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.