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WLA History

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Establishment of Women's Legal Aid

Women's Legal Aid (WLA) commenced in 1995 and was officially launched on International Women's Day, 1996 by the then Attorney-General and Minister for Justice, the Honourable Denver Beanland, MLA.

In 1994 a Legal Aid Queensland Working Party was set up to examine issues raised in the "Equality Before the Law" discussion paper. The working party consulted with several commissioners, members of staff and representatives from a number of government and community organisations with the final paper being delivered to the commission in late 1994.

The working party found that Legal Aid Queensland policy changes had seriously eroded women's access to services. Budget constraints experienced by the Legal Aid Commission made it impossible to reinstate the range of grants of legal aid services in civil and family law matters which had been withdrawn over the last three years. Withdrawal of these services had sharply reduced the level of grants of aid available to women.

The need to develop and promote services which met women's needs was apparent. In early 1995, the Department of Justice and Attorney-General's Legal Aid Services Program approved Women's Legal Aid as a new initiative funded from a grant specifically provided by the Queensland Government.

In 2005, WLA celebrated its 10th anniversary with guests and staff members past and present.


Evaluation

In 1999, WLA was evaluated by an external project officer. Several recommendations were made about the ongoing service delivery and evaluation of WLA services. In 2002, WLA completed the implementation of those recommendations.

Full details are in the Women's Legal Aid Adobe PDF iconEvaluation Report 1999 (PDF - 378k) and Adobe PDF iconImplementation Report 2002 (PDF - 174k).

In 2004, an internal evaluation of WLA was completed and all recommendations were implemented.


Women and Legal Aid Reference Group

The Women and Legal Aid Reference Group provided a panel of expert opinion and a voice for key stakeholders in the community, including client groups, regarding issues for women and their access to Legal Aid Queensland (LAQ). Convened by WLA, the group met quarterly to discuss WLA and LAQ projects and any matters of concern to the group.

Membership of the group included LAQ stakeholders, external government and non-government organisations and individuals with an interest and expertise in women's access to legal aid.

The group ceased to exist in 2003.

Members included:

LAQ stakeholders

  • Family law conferencing program coordinator
  • Grants Division representative
  • Integrated Indigenous Strategy Unit coordinator
  • Rural and Regional Strategy Unit coordinator

Government organisations

  • Office for Women

Non-government organisations

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Women's Legal and Advocacy Service
  • Immigrant Women's Support Service
  • Women's Legal Service
  • Sisters Inside
  • North Queensland Women's Legal Service
  • Gold Coast Domestic Violence Service
  • Working Against Violence Support Service

Terms of reference were:

  1. To provide a panel of expert opinion to Legal Aid Queensland on issues related to women and their access to the legal system and Legal Aid Queensland.
  2. To provide advice and recommendations to Legal Aid Queensland regarding the delivery of services to women.
  3. To monitor and review Legal Aid Queensland services to women.
  4. To provide a voice for stakeholders and client groups with regards to issues of women and their access to the legal system and Legal Aid Queensland.
  5. To provide input into the broad strategic direction of Legal Aid Queensland around issues which impact on women and their access to Legal Aid Queensland.

Rural Women's Awareness Project

The Rural Women's Awareness Project was funded by the Legal Aid Queensland Board in January 2001. The project was developed by Women's Legal Aid and the Women's Justice Network.

Broadly the project's aim was to increase and improve the access of rural women through the pathway of legal service delivery within Legal Aid Queensland.

Project objectives were:

  1. To raise awareness of Legal Aid Queensland in rural and regional areas
  2. To increase numbers of women accessing Legal Aid Queensland
  3. To ensure more appropriate referrals to Legal Aid Queensland
  4. To explore the viability of delivering legal community education to remote locations using video-conferencing technology.

The project proposal was comprised of five parts:

  1. Development of information packages for Filipino women living in rural communities
  2. Monthly media releases to rural and regional media outlets
  3. Training Package for intermediaries (responsibility for this was with WJN and a consultant)
  4. International Women's Day Family Law Update for rural and regional community agencies.
  5. Training of preferred suppliers in four regional areas around the Legal Aid Queensland Best Practice Guidelines for working with clients affected by violence
  6. Identifying the most effective role for Legal Aid Queensland in the provision of services for women affected by domestic violence in rural and regional areas.
  7. Other activities that the project worker assisted with during the course of the project, but not included in the proposal, were the establishment of Women's Legal Aid Rural and Regional Reference Group and Community Access Points training in Mt Isa.

Over the four months and across all sub-projects, contact was made with 48 regional and rural towns and 132 different community based agencies.

The positive response to the project in all areas of the state communicated the isolation felt and the limited resources available to community agencies accessed by women in regional and rural Queensland. Community agencies demonstrated motivation to work collaboratively towards meeting the legal needs of women, and were able to identify strategic opportunities for this to occur. They expressed the importance and value of Legal Aid Queensland's leadership as key in the ongoing progress and improvement of legal situations of women living in rural and regional Queensland.

Download the Adobe PDF iconRural and Regional Women's Legal Awareness Project report (PDF - 358k).


Diversity Counts Project

Following the release of the report "Rural Women's Legal Awareness project" Legal Aid Queensland committed to implementing recommendations from the report.

Women's Legal Aid was responsible for the implementation of two specific recommendations relating to Filipino women's access to legal services, particularly in the areas of Mount Isa and Mackay.

The Rural Women's Legal Awareness project found that Filipino women in particular were at risk of being over represented as victims of domestic homicide due to "the lack of information and awareness about their legal rights, and the services and legal options to them, due to unfamiliarity with the legal system lack of multilingual legal information strategies which target them".

The final report recommended the development of resources with basic legal information about the Queensland legal system and about issues related to domestic violence. It also recommended the development and implementation of cross cultural training, concentrating on specific issues for Filipino women, for Legal Aid Queensland regional offices, including staff and preferred suppliers.

Women's Legal Aid developed a set of resources including a pocket pack and leaflet with specific information about women's legal rights and aspects of the legal system that maybe relevant to Filipino women and women in general. This followed on from targeted consultations with Filipino women in the Toowoomba, Mackay, Mount Isa and Brisbane regions prior to the development of these resources.

These resources are available to download from the Publications area.

Women's Legal Aid conducted cross cultural training with staff at the Mackay and Mount Isa regional offices. These sessions were well attended by Legal Aid Queensland staff and received positive feedback.

The resources were also translated and published in Tagalog, English, Vietnamese and Mandarin. During 2004, the Integrated Indigenous Strategy Unit at Legal Aid Queensland adapted the information in the pocket pack and leaflet to suit the needs of that community and translated it into Aboriginal English.

In 2005, Women's Legal Aid won a Domestic Violence Prevention Award at the for the resources during Domestic and Family violence Prevention Month.


International Women's Day Family Law Broadcast

The Rural Women's Awareness Project identified that community agencies in rural and remote areas lacked training and updates about issues that affect women in family law and domestic violence. Three broadcasts were trialled in 2001 via videoconference. These broadcasts were delivered by family law solicitors in regional offices and were delivered to a broad range of agencies. The broadcasts received very positive feedback and a recommendation of the Rural Women's Awareness Project report was that the broadcasts should be continued.

Women's Legal Aid was greatly assisted by Women's Justice Network in the organisation of the broadcasts and Women's Legal Service provided two sessions of the training.

The content of the broadcasts covered issues for clients in terms of property settlement and the issues the Family Court takes into account in spousal maintenance and property applications, as well as changes to the superannuation provisions of the Family Law Act 1975, the changes to the domestic violence legislation and the Legal Aid Queensland Arbitration Scheme.

For information contact Women's Legal Aid on 1300 65 11 88. Specific information on International Women's Day activities and resources is available from the Office for Women's websiteThis link will open a new window.


Beaudesert Domestic Violence Court Support Program

Beaudesert shire, located south and slightly west of Brisbane, includes a number of communities where there are predominantly rural based populations engaged in primary production. This shire encompasses areas where there has been a huge population increase around Jimboomba and Logan Village. Support services are in many instances delivered on an outreach basis from other centres. General isolation together with issues such as the lack of and cost of transport, lack of information and lack of childcare impact on women's access to support services in this area, particularly those who experience domestic violence.

Women's Legal Aid assisted in the coordination of this court support program that provides support for women experiencing domestic violence and negotiating the court system. The program was auspiced by the regional domestic violence service (WAVSS) and staffed jointly by WAVSS and Women's Legal Aid, until 2004 when WAVSS secured funding for a permanent worker to service the Beaudesert Magistrates Court.

For more information on the Beaudesert Domestic Violence Court Support Program please contact WAVSS on (07) 3808 5566 or Women's Legal Aid on 1300 65 11 88.


Logan River Valley Integrated Community Response

Women's Legal Aid has been a central partner in the Logan River Valley Integrated Community Response (LRVICR) and was involved in the trial of the Fax-Back project in Logan which was funded under the Community Renewal funding available through the Department of Housing. The Fax-Back project is now funded by the Department of Communities.

Logan City has extremely high rates of domestic violence, with the court in the region receiving the highest numbers of applications for domestic violence orders in the state. The Integrated Community Response to Domestic Violence is a result of the various services that work with domestic violence in the region coordinating their response to domestic violence.

The Fax-Back Project was launched at the Browns Plains Police Station in December 1999 by the Honourable Anna Bligh MLA (then the Minister for Families, Youth and Community Care). The project is a joint initiative with the Logan Central and Browns Plains Police Stations in Logan. When police attend a domestic violence incident as part of their procedure they will offer the aggrieved support from a support worker. If the woman agrees she will sign a consent form which the police will 'fax back' the next day to the support worker located at WAVSS, the regional domestic violence service. The support worker will then contact the woman at a safe time identified by her and connect her with support and legal services, including Legal Aid Queensland.

The Fax-Back Project is just one of several initiatives and strategies the Integrated Response has initiated. For more information contact WAVSS (Working Against Violence Support Service) on (07) 3808 5566.

 

Last updated 20 May 2008