04 Apr Housing crisis will linger without grant change
The Palaszczuk Government’s deficient response to North Queensland’s relentless youth crime
crisis is being predicated on misleading facts and data about the severity of the situation, Katter’s
Australian Party MPs have warned.
KAP Leader and Traeger MP Robbie Katter said since 2015 the cherry-picking of data had been
Labor’s go-to response to any criticism levelled on the issue, demonstrating the huge disconnect
between the Government and the communities affected.
As recently as last month Labor MPs were in Cairns spruiking a reduction in local youth crime of 13
per cent in the 12-month period to November, 2020.
In a Ministerial statement, Barron River MP Craig Crawford said the reduction was the result of
Labor’s 24/7 co-responder teams, which had been rolled out in Cairns in May, 2020.
“What’s great about this $5.2 million initiative, though, is that it’s not only Cairns that’s benefited
but other areas, including Townsville, Brisbane, Rockhampton and Logan and I understand it will be
expanded to even more areas this year,” Mr Crawford said at the time.
“It’s also just one part of the Palaszczuk Government’s five-point plan announced last year to tackle
hardcore repeat offenders, and follows a record investment of more than half a billion dollars in
youth justice reform.”
Minister for Youth Justice Leanne Linard also claimed, when queried by Mr Katter, that there was
“evidence (Labor’s) reforms and investment are working”.
“Between 2018 and 2019, there was a 13 per cent reduction in the number of youth offenders –
down from 5,868 in 2018 to 5,099 in 2019 (769 fewer youth offenders),” the Minister wrote in her
reply to the Traeger MP’s Question on Notice.
“Between 2019 and 2020, there was a further 16 per cent reduction in the number of youth
offenders – down from 5,099 in 2019 to 4,304 in 2020 (795 fewer youth offenders).
Mr Katter said the 2019-20 year was a write-off with regards to analysing normal social data due to
the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent state-wide lockdowns.
However Minister Linard said concerns raised about COVID-19’s impact on the data were irrelevant
as “COVID-19 lockdowns occurred in only a portion of the 2019-20 reporting period”.
Even the Australian Bureau of Statistics, when detailing statistics from 2019-20 that showed youth
crime rates across Australia were at their lowest recorded levels, warned that the data was
compromised by COVID-19.
Mr Katter said the news that Labor was “solving” youth crime in North Queensland was a surprise
to him, and the majority of people in the region.
He said Labor was essentially playing “silly-buggers” with the facts, and that it was offensive the
Government thought people wouldn’t catch on.
“Another day, and another statistic gets rolled out by our Labor MPs up here in the North or by the
Ministers on George Street in Brisbane”, he said.
“I feel like the whole of North Queensland is getting ‘gaslighted’ by Labor – we tell them there’s a
serious issue and we need help, and they tell us we’re wrong and find some obscure set of data to
show us why.
“It’s outrageous, and we are all sick of the propaganda.”
According to official Offence Data (related to 10-17 year old child offenders), as published by the
Queensland Police Service in their annual Statistical Reviews (2014-15, 2015-16 and 2016-17) and
by the Queensland Government Statistician’s Office in their Crime Report, Queensland (2017-18
and 2018-19), the realities of the youth crime crisis in Queensland are as follows:
▪ 2014-15: 43,621 total charges were laid against child offenders (10-17 years old)
▪ 2015-16: 45,329 total charges were laid against child offenders (10-17 years old)
▪ 2016-17: 49,741 total charges were laid against child offenders (10-17 years old)
▪ 2017-18: 51,050 total charges were laid against child offenders (10-17 years old)
▪ 2018-19: 48,786 total charges were laid against child offenders (10-17 years old).
▪ No data has been made publicly available for 2019-20.
Further concerning figures, from the same data sources previously referred, show there have been
the following youth-related offence increases in Queensland:
1. Unlawful use of a motor vehicle offences have risen by about 59.9%, when comparing
the 2,133 offences reported in 2014-15 to the 3,411 reported in 2018-19
2. Unlawful entry offences have risen by about 27%, when comparing the 5,056 offences
reported in 2014-15 to the 6,424 reported in 2018-19
3. Other theft offences have risen by about 23.4%, when comparing the 8,581 offences
reported in 2014-15 to the 10,588 reported in 2018-19.
Mr Katter said North Queensland had been left uninspired by Labor’s Youth Justice and Other
Legislation Amendment Bill 2021, and that he feared crime would continue to erode quality of life
for all communities without drastic action.
—ENDS—
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