A Crisafulli govt bill under parliamentary processes would expand harsher youth sentencing a third time, unwind Qld’s three-strike drug diversion program, and extend police search and move-on powers

The Qld Human Rights Commission, under new boss Debbie Platz, has decided not to make a submission

The commission tells me it made submissions to the first stages of “adult crime, adult time”, still maintains those concerns, & cited finite resourcing. It was not drawn on the bill’s other elements

Peak health, housing, social service, youth justice & legal groups want the bill altered or dumped

But a high-profile youth justice org, civil libertarians and the state’s sole Greens MP Michael Berkman have raised concerns about the commission’s move, after Platz flagged a less “combative” approach in her first interview in the job with me last month.

Qld Council for Civil Liberties has described the commission’s decision not to weigh in as “unprecedented”.

Berkman said: “For the commission not to speak up against this government overreach is a total betrayal of its mandate.”

Read more here: Queensland’s human rights watchdog has chosen not to weigh in on parliamentary scrutiny of a controversial government bill, in a move that has raised concerns from civil society groups and the state’s sole Greens MP. https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/politics/queensland/watchdog-s-silence-on-controversial-government-bill-sparks-alarm-20260326-p5ziyg.html
Watchdog’s silence on controversial government bill sparks alarm

New human rights boss Debbie Platz declined to publicly weigh in on the LNP’s proposed drug crackdown and new police power expansion.

Brisbane Times