CLP’s DFSV Plan Falls Short of What Territorians Deserve
STATEMENT
CLP’s DFSV Plan Falls Short of What Territorians Deserve
25/11/2025
Today, at the very start of the 16 Days of Action, the CLP Government has released a “roadmap” that falls well short of strengthening the sector or protecting women and children.
The Northern Territory’s domestic, family and sexual violence sector is in real crisis. Frontline services are doing everything they can, but they are being forced to turn away women and children seeking help. That should never happen in the Northern Territory.
We have only two men’s behaviour-change programs in the whole NT. We have some of the worst FDV rates in the world. And yet the best this Government can offer is a Canva plan on a page. That’s not a strategy it’s a slogan.
The Coroner’s recommendations have been de-identified to the point of being invisible. Primary prevention funding is being wound back. It makes no sense when we know real change starts with prevention, with community, and with properly looking after one another.
The community was clear: government programs should receive funding only after independent monitoring and evaluation. That has not occurred. Instead, the majority of money has flowed back into government programs, while community-led initiatives the ones closest to the ground have missed out.
The strategy also fails to deliver meaningful prevention and accountability measures. It overlooks intergenerational trauma, child abuse recovery, the socioeconomic drivers of DFSV, coercive control, and the commercial determinants such as alcohol. It contains no robust, independent monitoring and evaluation.
Eighteen per cent of the $36 million has been directed to Circuit Breaker a program with no child-specialist DFSV components, no public data on outcomes, and no documented theory of change.
No new remote locations have been identified for specialist co-responder services. And the strategy fails to embed cultural and therapeutic specialist DFSV advice in our courts — work currently reliant on Commonwealth NPA funding for 500 workers, which ends in June 2025.
Territorians deserve a DFSV strategy built on evidence, transparency and genuine community partnership not a glossy page. Our women, our children, our families and our frontline workers deserve better. It’s time for a serious, properly funded, community-driven response that reflects the scale of this crisis
What we need is to elevate, support and fund our frontline services – needs based funding is needed now.










