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Published by:
Family Safety Victoria
Date:
24 Feb 2023

Acknowledgements

Aboriginal acknowledgement

The Victorian Government acknowledges Victorian Aboriginal people as the First Peoples and Traditional Owners and Custodians of the land and water on which we rely. We acknowledge and respect that Aboriginal communities are steeped in traditions and customs built on a disciplined social and cultural order that has sustained 60,000 years of existence. We acknowledge the significant disruptions to social and cultural order and the ongoing hurt caused by colonisation.

We acknowledge the ongoing leadership role of Aboriginal communities in addressing and preventing family violence and will continue to work in collaboration with First Peoples to eliminate family violence from all communities.

Victim survivor acknowledgement

The Victorian Government acknowledges victim survivors. We keep at the forefront in our minds all those who have experienced family violence or other forms of abuse, and for whom we undertake this work.

Family violence support

If you have experienced violence or sexual assault and require immediate or ongoing assistance, contact 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) to talk to a counsellor from the National Sexual Assault and Domestic Violence hotline.

For confidential support and information, contact the Safe Steps 24/7 family violence response line on 1800 015 188.

If you are concerned for your safety or that of someone else, please contact the police in your state or territory, or call Triple Zero (000) for emergency assistance.

Message from the Minister for Prevention of Family Violence

I am proud to present the annual report on the implementation of the Family Violence Multi-Agency Risk Assessment and Management Framework (MARAM) 2021–22.

This report outlines the key activities and achievements of Victorian Government departments, sector peak bodies and prescribed organisations to align their policies, procedures, practice guidance and tools to MARAM.

MARAM is a critical part of Victoria’s family violence reform, enabling workforces across a range of sectors to identify and respond to family violence more effectively.

Ending family violence remains a government priority. The Victorian Government has invested more than $3.7 billion since the Royal Commission into Family Violence to prevent and respond to family violence. This includes $97 million of investment in the Victorian State Budget 2021–22 to support changes to keep people safer, including implementing MARAM, alongside critical information-sharing reforms.

The effective rollout of MARAM and information sharing requires training for over 370,000 workers across a range of workforces. Since the commencement of the reforms in 2018, I am pleased to highlight that:

  • more than 107,000 professionals have undertaken training in MARAM and the related information-sharing schemes
  • more than 82,000 risk assessments and safety plans have been undertaken (using MARAM online tools)
  • more than 15,000 Central Information Point reports have been delivered.

In this fourth annual report into the operation of the MARAM Framework, it is clear that confidence in undertaking risk assessments and information
sharing under MARAM continues to grow, as we build a system that keeps people safer.

I would like to thank all former and current ministers with framework organisations withintheir portfolios for the continued work undertaken
to implement this critical reform. This report is consolidated from my own portfolio report and those provided to me by:

  • the Hon. Melissa Horne MP, (former) Minister forConsumer Affairs, Gaming and Liquor Regulation
  • the Hon. Jaclyn Symes MP, Attorney-General
  • the Hon. Mary-Anne Thomas MP, Minister for Health, (former) Minister for Ambulance Services
  • the Hon. Lizzie Blandthorn MP, Minister for Child Protection and Family Services, Minister for Disability, Ageing and Carers
  • the Hon. Gabrielle Williams MP, Minister for Mental Health
  • the Hon. Anthony Carbines MP, Minister for Police, Minister for Crime Prevention
  • the Hon. Ingrid Stitt MP, Minister for Early Childhood and Pre-Prep
  • the Hon. Natalie Hutchins MP, Minister for Education
  • the Hon. Danny Pearson MP, (former) Minister for Housing
  • the Hon. Sonya Kilkenny MP, (former) Minister for Corrections, (former) Minister for Youth Justice, (former) Minister for Victim Support.

I would also like to acknowledge the work across government, the sector and community services for their continued dedication to improving our response to family violence. This includes Family Violence Regional Integration Committees, peak bodies, Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations, the Strengthening Hospital Responses to Family Violence resource centre, and many other organisations and services who are ensuring MARAM practice is a reality.

I particularly wish to acknowledge the work of Specialist Family Violence Services (including sexual assault services) and The Orange Door Network who are crucial partners in our efforts to effectively respond to family violence.

I would also like to thank all those with lived experience, in particular, past and present members of the Victim Survivors’ Advisory Council,
for their ongoing contribution and influence in the delivery of MARAM practice guidance.

Finally, as we progress these important reforms, I acknowledge all those across government and the services sector who have contributed to this report, and those who dedicate their time, passion and effort to improving the safety of all Victorians.

The Hon. Ros Spence MP
Minister for Prevention of Family Violence

Whole of government snapshot 2021–22

Whole of government snapshot 2021-22

  • Download 'Whole of government snapshot 2021-22'
  • 107,456 workers have undertaken training in MARAM and the related information-sharing schemes from inception until 30 June 2022.
  • 43,191 workers received MARAM training in 2021–22.
  • over 15,150 Central Information Point reports have been delivered from commencement in April 2018 until 30 June 2022.
  • over 82,000 risk assessments and safety plans have been undertaken using The Orange Door online systems (Tools For Risk Assessment.
    and Management and Client Relationship Management System) since inception.
  • 4530 Central Information Point reports delivered during 2021–22.
  • The MARAM website has averaged month (Sept 21 to Sept 22) 60,000 page views per month (Sept 21 to Sept 22).
  • 243 organisations responded to the MARAM Annual Survey, representing over 376 workforces.

Introduction

The Royal Commission into Family Violence (the Royal Commission) was established in 2015 after a number of family violence-related deaths in Victoria – most notably, the death of Luke Batty.

The role of the Royal Commission was to find ways to prevent family violence, improve support for victim survivors and to hold perpetrators to account.

The Royal Commission found existing programs were not able to:

  • reduce the frequency and impact of violence
  • prevent violence through early intervention
  • support victim survivors
  • hold perpetrators to account for their actions
  • coordinate community and government services.

The Royal Commission identified 227 recommendations for the family violence system. Recommendation 1 was for the Victorian Government to review and begin implementing a revised family violence risk assessment and risk management framework, in order to deliver a comprehensive framework that sets minimum standards, roles and responsibilities for screening, risk assessment, risk management, information sharing and referral throughout Victorian agencies. The Family Violence Multi-Agency Risk Assessment and Management Framework (MARAM) is the response to Recommendation 1.

Section 193 of the Family Violence Protection Act 2008 (Vic) requires a report to be tabled in Parliament annually on the progress of MARAM implementation[1]. This is the fourth report to be tabled.

Implementation of the reforms is structured with Family Safety Victoria as the lead. This requires Family Safety Victoria to design and develop the policies, resources and training for the reforms. Family Safety Victoria also oversees implementation across the Whole of Victorian Government (WoVG), through governance, reporting and annual surveys.

Departments are responsible for tailoring the policies, resources and training to their specific workforce needs, communicating about the reforms and responding to barriers in the workforces[2]. Sector peak bodies and leading organisations are funded to support implementation more directly with practitioners. Family Safety Victoria has funded 16 organisations in 2021–22 through ‘sector capacity-building grants’.

Those organisations are:

  • Adult Multicultural Education Services (AMES)
  • Centre for Excellence in Child and Family Welfare (CFECFW)
  • Council to Homeless Persons
  • Dardi Munwurro
  • Djirra
  • Elizabeth Morgan House
  • Jewish Care
  • No to Violence (NTV)
  • Safe and Equal
  • Sexual Assault Services Victoria
  • Victorian Aboriginal Child Care Agency (VACCA)
  • Victorian Aboriginal Community Services Association Limited (VACSAL)
  • Victorian Alcohol and Drug Association (VAADA)
  • Victorian Health Association (VHA)
  • Whittlesea Community Connections
  • Youth Justice.

Chapter 1 lists the portfolios providing reports. Chapter 2 is a note on the language used throughout the report, which aligns to MARAM. Chapter 3 summarises the legislative provisions, regulations and policies developed to create MARAM. Chapter 4 summarises the MARAM structure on a page, with further details available in Appendices 2 and 3.

Chapters 6 to 9 cover the 4 strategic priorities identified to support the changes necessary to implement MARAM. A chapter is dedicated to each strategic priority:

  • Clear and consistent leadership (Chapter 6)
  • Supporting consistent and collaborative practice (Chapter 7)
  • Building workforce capability (Chapter 8)
  • Reinforcing good practice and commitment to continuous improvement (Chapter 9)

Each chapter is then subdivided into the work undertaken by Family Safety Victoria as lead in the reforms, departments as lead to their workforces and sector (peak bodies and organisations) to support practitioners.

From 2021–22, Family Safety Victoria is no longer a separate administrative body, but is a division of the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing, where work to support Specialist Family Violence Services can now be found.


[1] Further information on legislative MARAM reporting requirements is detailed at Appendix 2.

[2] A full list of program areas with MARAM responsibilities is detailed at Appendix 6.

Chapter 1: List of portfolios reporting

This table sets out the departments, ministers, portfolios and program areas that are referenced in this report.

See Appendix 1 and Appendix 2 for portfolios prescribed in Phase 1 and 2 respectively, and Appendix 6 for a more detailed description of each program area's work profile.

Table 1: Ministers, portfolios and responsibilities for the 2021–22 reporting period

Minister Portfolio Responsibilities

The Hon. Ros Spence MP

Minister for Prevention of Family Violence

specialist family violence services

sexual assault services

the Orange Door Network

Risk Assessment and Management Panels

The Hon. Ros Spence MP

Minister for Multicultural
Affairs

Organisations that provide settlement or targeted
casework services specifically for migrants,
refugees or asylum seekers

The Hon. Jaclyn Symes MLC

Attorney-General

Magistrates’ Court of Victoria

Children’s Court of Victoria

Court Network

Dispute Settlement Centre of Victoria

Aboriginal Justice Group funded programs:

  • Koori Women’s Place
  • Ngarra Jarranounith Place

The Hon. Gabrielle Williams MP

Minister for Mental
Health

Mental health

Community-managed mental health

The Hon. Anthony Carbines MP

Minister for Police

Victoria Police

The Hon. Anthony Carbines MP

Minister for Crime
Prevention

Organisations that provide settlement or targeted
casework services specifically for migrants,
refugees or asylum seekers, including crime
prevention

The Hon. Colin Brooks MP

Minister for Child
Protection and Family
Services

Child Protection

Community-based child and family services

(including Child FIRST)

Registered out-of-home care services (including

Secure Welfare Services, care services and

Hurstbridge Farm)

Refugee Minor program

Supported playgroups

The Hon. Colin Brooks MP

Minister for Disability,
Ageing and Carers

Forensic Disability Services

Multiple Complex Needs Initiative

State-funded aged care services

The Hon. Mary-Anne Thomas MP

Minister for Health

Hospitals

Community Health Services

Early Parenting Centres

Bush Nursing Centres

General practitioners

General practice nurses

Maternal and child health

Alcohol and other drugs

The Hon. Mary-Anne Thomas MP Minister for Ambulance
Services
Ambulance Victoria
The Hon. Melissa Horne MP Minister for Consumer
Affairs, Gaming and
Liquor Regulation
Consumer Affairs Victoria-funded programs:
  • Financial Counselling Program
  • Tenancy Assistance and Advocacy Program
The Hon. Sonya Kilkenny MP Minister for Corrections

Adult Parole Board

Community Correctional Services (CCS)

Corrections Victoria

Justice Health

Post Sentence Authority

The Hon. Sonya Kilkenny MP Minister for Youth
Justice

Youth Justice

Youth Justice Funded Services

Youth Parole Board

The Hon. Sonya Kilkenny MP Minister for Victim
Support

Victims of Crime Helpline

Victims Assistance Program

The Hon. Danny Pearson MP Minister for Housing

Public housing

Community housing

Homelessness services

The Hon. Ingrid Stitt MLC Minister for Early
Childhood and Pre-Prep

Department of Education

Centre-based early childhood education and

care services

The Hon. Natalie Hutchins MP Minister for Education

Department of Education

Schools

Education services

Chapter 2: Use of language within this report

Adults, children and young people who have experienced family violence are referred to as victim survivors, noting that some prefer the term
people who experience violence.

The word family has many different meanings. This report uses the definition from the Family Violence Protection Act (the Act), which acknowledges the variety of relationships and structures that can make up a family unit, and the range of ways family violence can be experienced, including through family-like or carer relationships (in non-institutional paid carer environments).

The term family violence reflects the FVPA and includes the wider understanding of the term across all communities. Dhelk Dja: Safe Our Way – Strong Culture, Strong Peoples, Strong Families defines family violence as an issue focused on a wide range of physical, emotional, sexual, social, spiritual, cultural, psychological and economic abuses that occur within families, intimate relationships, extended families, kinship networks and communities. It extends to one-on-one fighting, abuse of Indigenous community workers as well as self-harm, injury and suicide.

Throughout this document, the term Aboriginal is used to refer to both Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

Intersectionality describes how systems and structures interact on multiple levels to oppress, create barriers and overlapping forms of discrimination, stigma and power imbalances based on characteristics such as Aboriginality, gender, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, ethnicity, colour, nationality, refugee or asylum seeker background, migration or visa status, language, religion, ability, age, mental health, socioeconomic status, housing status, geographic location, medical record or criminal record. This compounds the risk of experiencing family violence and creates additional barriers for a person to access the help they need.

The term perpetrator describes adults who choose to use family violence, acknowledging the preferred term for some Aboriginal people and communities, as well as in practice, is a person who uses violence.

Adolescents who use family violence require a different response to family violence used by adults, because of their age and the possibility that they are also victim survivors of family violence. The term perpetrator does not refer to adolescents who use family violence.

The Family Violence Multi-Agency Risk Assessment and Management Framework is referred to in this report as MARAM.

Chapter 3: Legislation and regulations

The legislative structure around MARAM is shown in Figure 2.

Figure 2: Overview of legislation, policy and frameworks that support Victoria’s response to family violence

The top line contains the legislative provisions in the Family Violence Protection Act. Part 11 enables the Minister to approve a framework for family violence response and require framework organisations to align with it. It also establishes formal review and reporting mechanisms. Part 5A of the Act enables the Family Violence Information Sharing Scheme (FVISS).

The second line references the regulations and legislative instruments that operationalise Part 11 and Part 5A of the Act. These name the prescribed workforces and services, and define the core components of the framework and report requirements.

The third line contains the policy documents, namely MARAM and the FVISS Ministerial Guidelines.

The fourth and last line has the supporting resources that put the policy into practice. This includes the MARAM Practice Guides for practitioners, as well as embedding guidance for organisational leaders. This image only highlights the resources produced centrally by Family Safety Victoria as lead agency, and not the many tailored and updated resources applicable to various workforces.

The left side of the image refers to the legislated 5-year evaluations, the first of which will take place in 2022–23. The two-year evaluations were initiated by Family Safety Victoria to guide the implementation activities.

Chapter 4: MARAM structure

The 3 core components of MARAM are illustrated in Figure 3. The MARAM Pillars are set at an organisational level. They each contain a requirement to which organisations must align. Alignment is defined as actions taken by organisations to effectively incorporate the 4 pillars into existing policies, procedures, practice guidance and tools, as appropriate to the roles and functions of the entity and its place in the service system. The MARAM Pillars can be found at Appendix 3.

The MARAM Principles guide a shared understanding of family violence response across the service system to guide consistent practice. The full text of the principles can be found at Appendix 4.

The MARAM Responsibilities set out the practice expectations for workers in relation to family violence risk identification, assessment and management. Organisations determine how the MARAM Responsibilities are met within their workforce. The full details of the responsibilities can be found at Appendix 5.

The responsibilities can be broadly summarised into 3 levels of practice:

  • Identification – this role incorporates all MARAM Responsibilities, except those related to assessment and management of risk (3–4 and 7–8). It would apply to people who interact with Victorians in the course of their work, where they could identify family violence is taking place. They may be able to observe family violence narratives or behaviours, and/or ask sensitive questions of victim survivors (for example, at schools and early childhood centres).
  • Intermediate – this role incorporates all MARAM Responsibilities, except specialist risk assessment and management (7–8). It would apply to people who interact with Victorians in the course of their work, where they can assess or manage a presenting ‘need’ (for example, alcohol or drug use, mental health or housing crisis).
  • Comprehensive – this role incorporates all 10 MARAM Responsibilities. It would apply to people who interact with Victorians in a specialist capacity to directly respond to family violence (for example, Specialist Family Violence Services and refuges).

Figure 3: MARAM Pillars, Principles and Responsibilities

Chapter 5: MARAM Annual Framework Survey

Family Safety Victoria has committed to undertaking an annual survey of framework organisations to understand:

  • the progress of implementation across different sectors
  • how sectors can be more effectively supported to implement MARAM and enable continuous improvement.

This reporting period is the second year the survey has been undertaken. It is a voluntary survey targeted to those who have a substantial role in supporting MARAM alignment. For this reason, some workforces may have a limited number of responses as a result of the stage or process applied for implementation.

This chapter summarises the results of the survey. It will be referred to at other points in the report where it relates to specific matters, such as training in Chapter 8.

Demographics

The annual survey captured a total of 243 responses. Most responses (162) were from those employed in large organisations across the health and human services sectors. ‘Other’, with 39 responses, was the third-largest group. This group also mostly represents workers in the broader health and human services sectors. However, these respondents preferred to free text, and one explanation for some could be that they belong to not-for-profit and nongovernment organisations, which did not feel represented in the options provided by the survey.

There was a good spread of responses across metropolitan, regional and statewide services. A further breakdown of data suggests there was a very good representation in the results of public hospitals, community health services, Specialist Family Violence Services, alcohol and other drug services, maternal and child health services, child and family services, and aged care. There was a broad range of responses from other human services, along with some schools, courts and justice areas.

Figure 4: MARAM Annual Survey – Workforce representation

  • Download 'Figure 4: MARAM Annual Survey – Workforce representation '

Figure 5: MARAM Annual Survey – Geographical representation of workforce

  • Download 'Figure 5: MARAM Annual Survey – Geographical representation of workforce '

MARAM alignment

In 2020–21, 81 per cent of respondents understood what organisational alignment to MARAM means, 18 per cent understood some aspects, and one per cent did not understand what organisational alignment means.

The results for 2021–22 show that 76 per cent of respondents now understand MARAM alignment, 22 per cent understand some aspects, and 2 per cent (4 respondents) do not understand what organisational alignment means[1]. While this is a slight drop in understanding, it may reflect that the survey was sent to services newly prescribed to MARAM in April 2021 (noting 2 of the 4 respondents were a health service and ‘other’).

Figure 6: MARAM Annual Survey – Organisational understanding of alignment responsibilities

  • Download 'Figure 6: MARAM Annual Survey – Organisational understanding of alignment responsibilities'

In the 2020–21 survey, 85 per cent of respondents identified MARAM alignment as a high priority, and 15 per cent identified it as a medium priority.

In the 2021–22 survey, 77 per cent identify alignment as a high priority, 17 per cent as a medium priority and 5 per cent as a low priority, not a current priority or unsure. The responses in the 5 per cent were primarily made up of health services. This may be indicative of reform fatigue, and the ongoing pressures resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic and the continuing impact in health settings.

Figure 7: MARAM Annual Survey – Importance of organisational MARAM alignment

In the 2020–21 survey, 77 per cent of respondents had a detailed understanding of MARAM Responsibilities for their workforce, 22 per cent had some understanding, and the remaining one per cent had no or limited understanding.

In the 2021–22 survey, 67 per cent of respondents had a detailed understanding of MARAM Responsibilities for their workforce, 32 per cent had some understanding, and one per cent had no understanding. Health services make up the significant portion with some understanding. This, again, may be because health services were only prescribed in 2021, and have been responding to the COVID-19 pandemic as a priority.

Figure 8: MARAM Annual Survey – Understanding of MARAM Responsibilities

Challenges

In 2020–21, 70 per cent of respondents identified lack of staff time and prohibitive current workload of staff as top challenges to MARAM alignment. For 47 per cent of respondents, lack of organisational funding for MARAM implementation was a challenge.

In 2021–22, the top 3 reasons identified as an implementation challenge continue to be:

  • lack of staff time (50 per cent total, 24 per cent as the greatest challenge)
  • prohibitive current workload of staff (41 per cent total, 13 per cent as the greatest challenge)
  • lack of organisational funding for MARAM implementation (24 per cent total, 12 per cent as the greatest challenge).

It is notable that 23 per cent total recorded that responding to COVID-19 remained a challenge, with 9 per cent rating this as their greatest challenge.

MARAM Annual Survey – Challenges to implementation

  • Download 'MARAM Annual Survey – Challenges to implementation'

[3] Percentages 0.5 and below are rounded down, 0.6 and above are rounded up.

Chapter 6: Clear and consistent leadership

Any reform that requires a change to practice and ways of working relies on strong leadership. Leadership in these reforms requires:

  • strategic plans for change management[4]
  • governance to monitor and support implementation efforts
  • consistent and accurate messaging
  • ensuring sector readiness through implementation supports.

Section A: Family Safety Victoria as WoVG lead

Family Safety Victoria demonstrates leadership through coordinating and supporting the work taking place across the government.

MARAM governance for implementation

The Family Violence Reform Board, chaired by Family Safety Victoria, is the strategic leadership body for all family violence reforms, providing oversight and engagement across WoVG reform level issues.

The MARAM and Workforce Directors’ Group oversees the implementation of MARAM and the FVISS scheme. The Directors Group has oversight of budget expenditure, risks and issues of multi-lateral importance, and achievement of milestones and deliverables against agreed project plans.

Supporting these formal governance structures are:

  • bilateral meetings between Family Safety Victoria and departments to promote proactive joint management of identified bilateral implementation issues
  • manager workshops to discuss any multilateral developments or issues of WoVG relevance at policy level.

This approach provides a platform for strong and effective oversight of MARAM implementation.

MARAM Maturity Model

The development of a MARAM Maturity Model was initially identified in MARAM as a core product to be developed. Subsequent reviews and evaluations strongly recommended the Maturity Model as a priority piece for implementation[5] [6].

The purpose of the Maturity Model is to provide a common language for organisational improvement through clear alignment milestones. This is achieved by describing the milestones in terms of outcomes, with measurement across a continuum from foundational to advanced.

The continuum will contain examples of each level to help an organisation assess its own progress against an objective scale. There will also be a suite of products to help organisations self-audit and progress in maturity along the continuum.

Figure 10: An example of the MARAM Maturity Matrix being tested in the development phase

  • Download 'Figure 10: An example of the MARAM Maturity Matrix being tested in the development phase'

In progressing the Maturity Model project, Family Safety Victoria is demonstrating a clear commitment to leading reform outcomes. The Maturity Model will set clear standards and expectations for alignment, and large and small organisations will use this to improve their family violence response over time.

Given the complexities that apply to multiple services, it is anticipated that policy development and design for the Maturity Model will continue over 2022–23, with implementation not anticipated to start until 2023–24.

MARAM sets responsibilities for responding to family violence, but also touches on many other government priorities and aspects of practice.

This includes embedding an intersectional approach in practice, workforce supply and retention, sexual violence and harm, Aboriginal cultural safety and perpetrator accountability. Key policies and government commitments that support and intersectwith MARAM implementation include:

  • The Everybody Matters: Inclusion and Equity Statement articulates the Victorian Government’s 10-year vision for an inclusive, safe, responsive and accountable family violence system. Everybody Matters identifies and addresses the barriers that people from a diverse range of communities face when reporting family violence, and seeking and obtaining help. Everybody Matters emphasises the need to address systemic barriers to equitable service delivery and access that is underpinned by the theory of intersectionality.
  • A forthcoming 10-year Sexual Violence and Harm Strategy is led by the Department of Justice and Community Safety, in partnership with the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing, to improve responses to sexual violence. MARAM will support risk identification and management across all key initiatives in the strategy that intersect with family violence.
  • The Building from Strength: 10-year Industry Plan for Family Violence Prevention and Response outlines the Victorian Government’s long-term vision for workforces to prevent and respond to family violence. The building and retention of capable workforces are integral to supporting multi-agency collaborative practice and secondary consultations.
  • The Dhelk Dja – Safe Our Way: Strong Culture, Strong Peoples, Strong Families (Dhelk Dja) agreement is the key Aboriginal-led Victorian agreement. It commits the signatories – Aboriginal communities, Aboriginal services and government – to work together and be accountable for ensuring that Aboriginal women, men, children, young people, Elders, families and communities are stronger, safer, thriving and living free from family violence. It requires the voices of the Aboriginal people across Victoria to be reflected in policy. The three-year action plans are delivered in partnership with the agreement’s signatories.
  • The development of the Aboriginal Family Violence Industry Strategy under Dhelk Dja will provide a culturally informed framework to continue to build the capacity of Aboriginal services and its people in the family violence sector. Building on the strong foundations of experience in the sector, it will increase the number of Aboriginal people engaging in further education, prioritise Aboriginal-led family violence programs and prevention initiatives, and highlight the importance of Aboriginal culture in the sector.

[4] The Strategic Priorities of the MARAM Change Management Strategy are outlined at Appendix 7.

[5] The Cube report relates to the ‘Process evaluation of the MARAM reforms’ June 2020 evaluation by the Cube Group, which is not a publicly accessibly report.

[6] Monitoring Victoria’s family violence reforms: Early identification of family violence within universal services, May 2022, Report of the Family Violence Reform Implementation Monitor.


Section B: Departments as portfolio leads

Departments demonstrate leadership through the tailored approaches they apply to their workforces, ensuring that the change management process is able to support them.

Department of Education and Training

The Department of Education[7] (formerly the Department of Education and Training) provide leadership and oversight of reform implementation through the Child Safety and Family Violence Project Control Board. The Project Control Board is governed by the Department of Education’s Executive Board as a decision-making body responsible for major project lifecycles (from design to evaluation).

It also manages the strategic direction, coordination and integration of child safety frameworks that include:

  • the Child Safe Standards
  • the Reportable Conduct Scheme
  • information sharing and risk frameworks – the Child Information Sharing Scheme (CISS), FVISS and MARAM
  • mandatory reporting in early childhood education and care settings, and schools
  • criminal offences – a failure to disclose offence and failure to protect offence.

In the reporting period, the Child Safety and Family Violence Project Control Board has approved further targeted MARAM training, tools and reviewed guidance, and the approach to operating MARAM in education and care services.

The MARAM Annual Framework Survey noted that all Department of Education workforces who responded understood what organisational alignment to MARAM means, either in full or some aspects. It also highlighted that all Department of Education workforces who responded identified MARAM alignment as either a high or medium priority.

Department of Families, Fairness and Housing

In 2021–2022, the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing demonstrated clear and consistent leadership through their work on the practice change strategy and in The Orange Door. The inaugural MARAM and Information Sharing week was held from 26 to 29 April 2022. The event was officially opened by the Secretary to the department, Ms Brigid Sunderland and closed by The Hon Gabrielle Williams MP the then Minister for Prevention of Family Violence.

The week comprised 4 webinars of 2 hours each, with a keynote speaker and a panel discussion with experts and people with lived experience of family violence.

The topics were:

  • Collaborative practice — sharing information to identify, assess and manage risk to children and families
  • Child-centred practice — working with children and young people
  • Intersectionality in practice
  • Coercive and controlling behaviours and working with people who use violence.

Over 2,000 people registered for the event, with more than 300 people at each session. Attendees were from across the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing workforces, including public housing, community housing, homelessness services, multicultural and settlement services, Child Protection, child and family services, and aged care services.

A highlight was the presentation led by honoured guests, Sue and Lloyd Clarke, founders of the Small Steps for Hannah Foundation and recipients of the 2022 Queensland Australian of the Year award, for their advocacy in raising awareness of coercive control as a form of family violence.

In 2020–21, the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing reported it was developing a MARAM Enabling Practice Change Strategy. This is an internal document to complement formal learning opportunities to apply MARAM practice on a daily basis. The strategy includes a series of behaviour statements to build practitioner confidence and competence in recognising and responding to family violence within the context of their work.

The strategy has now been completed and is used by Department of Families, Fairness and Housing program areas as a resource to retain MARAM consistency when tailoring resources.

The Orange Door network has also demonstrated clear and consistent leadership, as new sites continue to be opened across the state. This includes operationalising the Inclusion Action Plan for The Orange Door, which outlines the baseline and key measures to ensure all users of The Orange Door feel safe, welcomed and respected. There are 18 Aboriginal Cultural Safety Advisors across The Orange Door network, who have been funded to embed the Strengthening Cultural Safety in The Orange Door project. All sites will undertake a Cultural Safety Assessment, and create and implement rolling action plans.

The MARAM Annual Framework Survey notes that all but one human services respondent indicated they understand what organisational alignment to MARAM means, either in full or some aspects. It also highlighted that most human services workforces who responded identified MARAM alignment as either a high or medium priority. However, 12 services identified MARAM alignment as a low priority or were ‘not sure’ of priority, suggesting there is further work required to reach all organisations.

Department of Health

The Department of Health has worked closely with respected health services to provide clear and consistent leadership. In 2021–22, leadership activities have been undertaken with Ambulance Victoria and health services, through the Strengthening Hospital Responses to Family Violence (SHRFV) initiative.

Ambulance Victoria has undertaken a MARAM organisational audit and made key recommendations to drive alignment. It has led briefings on MARAM alignment to Ambulance Victoria leaders, and presented at organisational governance committees, such as the Best Care Committee and the Consumer Advisory Council.

The SHRFV initiative has led alignment across multiple health services through the development of guidance that supports mapping
of MARAM Responsibilities, and aligning policies and procedures.

For community health services, early parenting centres, hospitals and bush nursing centres, the Department of Health has initially focused on delivery of consistent and accurate messaging, to support sector readiness and long-term culture change.

The Department of Health has also demonstrated leadership in response to family violence by prioritising the development of resources to support healthcare workers who are experiencing family violence.

The MARAM Annual Framework Survey notes that health workforces primarily agreed that they understand what organisational alignment to MARAM means, either in full or some aspects. Most health workforces also identified MARAM alignment as a high or medium priority for their organisation. Only 2 health services who responded did not understand what MARAM alignment means.

Out of 102 responses, 9 health services rated MARAM as a low priority, not a current priority or ‘not sure’. As noted above, these results should be interpreted in the context of health services only being prescribed in 2021, and the ongoing impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on health services. It is clearly evident that despite the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, the training numbers achieved, and successful embedding of training and establishing collaborative practice and referral pathways, are significant and are a testament to the effectiveness of the SHRFV initiative. These achievements reflect the commitment from Victorian hospitals and health services to embed systems, structures and processes that will identify and respond to family violence.

Department of Justice and Community Safety

The Department of Justice and Community Safety convenes the MARAM and Information Sharing (MARAMIS) Working Group, chaired by the Director of the Family Violence and Mental Health Branch. This working group includes members from across the Department of Justice and Community Safety, including Victim Services, Support and Reform (VSSR), consumer affairs, liquor, gaming and Annual report on the implementation of the Family Violence Multi-Agency Risk Assessment and Management Framework 2021–22 25 dispute services, Corrections and Justice Services (CJS), and Youth Justice. The group works collaboratively to support the ongoing reforms and implementation across the department.

CJS has expanded its established family violence governance arrangements by introducing a CJS MARAM Group, in addition to the CJS
Family violence Steering Committee, which holds responsibility of CJS’s MARAM alignment. The CJS MARAM Group provides a platform for information sharing, collaboration and awareness of the work being undertaken on family violence.

The Department of Justice and Community Safety has funded roles across the portfolios to directly support change management. These
include:

  • MARAM Sector Support Officers in consumer affairs, liquor, gaming and dispute services, Justice Health, VSSR, the Koori Justice Unit and Youth Justice (which receives extra funding from Family Safety Victoria)
  • 2 CJS Family Violence Practice Leads, who have commenced mapping current processes to identify suitable solutions to align to MARAM
  • a MARAM Change Manager in CJS.

Three Family Violence Practice Lead roles in the Victims of Crime Helpline play a critical role in building family violence capability and embedding MARAM into practice. The Family Violence Practice Leads also provide subject matter expertise in working with male victims of family violence. The roles provide opportunities to upskill other workforces on how to work safely and effectively with male victims, which include supporting increased capability in predominant aggressor identification.

The MARAM Annual Framework Survey notes that all Department of Justice and Community Safety workforces who responded understand what organisational alignment to MARAM means, either in full or some aspects. It also highlighted that all justice workforces who responded identified MARAM alignment as either a high or medium priority.

The courts

An internal working group was established by the Magistrates’ Court of Victoria (MCV) in 2021, bringing together expertise to plan for the implementation of adults using family violence MARAM responsibilities, practise guidance and tools. This includes mapping of court roles to
each responsibility, tailoring and embedding of tools, and assessing changes to systems, tools, policies and procedures.

MCV has also shown leadership in ensuring that MARAM-aligned practice is embedded within the 7 new Specialist Family Violence Courts. This will support strengthening family violence capability within the MCV. MARAM Annual Framework Survey results are not available for the courts as an entity within the Justice portfolio.

Victoria Police

Victoria Police is a critical workforce to support initiatives that develop and embed practice. This is particularly the case with working with persons who use family violence.

In consultation with the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing, and Family Safety Victoria, Victoria Police led the development of a strategic intelligence assessment to examine the incidence and numbers of youth issued with a Family
Violence Intervention Order.

The assessment was delivered in August 2021 to assist the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing understand the number of youths that may require crisis accommodation. Key findings from the intelligence assessment and stakeholder engagement indicated that police would also benefit from the development of specific practice guidance.

As a result, the internal practice guidance, Responding to Adolescent Family Violence, was published in January 2022. The guidance promotes consideration of early childhood experiences of trauma, confirmation of emergency accommodation, and the support of cautions and diversions, to avoid further contact with the justice system for young people.

A project has also been established in Family Violence Command to refine Victoria Police policy and progress activity regarding predominant aggressor identification, to reduce the occurrence and impact of misidentification by police.

This work will be completed in conjunction with the outcomes of the Misidentification Predominant Aggressor Working Group. This Working Group, led by the Department of Justice and Community Safety, brings together Victoria Police, MCV and legal services, Child Protection and support services.

The Working Group addresses issues such as:

  • supporting and providing training to police officers to identify the predominant aggressor before commencing a risk assessment, and before it is committed to the Law Enforcement Assistance Program crime database
  • reviewing how family violence records are captured in the Law Enforcement Assistance Program crime database to ensure that when misidentification has occurred, remedial action is taken to resolve the issue
  • developing a clear process for an urgent return to court in matters where misidentification has occurred
  • working with other services, such as Child Protection and The Orange Door, to deliver greater clarity on reporting concerns and providing support, and to ensure that when they do address protective concerns, perpetrators are also held to account.
  • MARAM Annual Framework Survey results are not available for the Victoria Police as an entity within the Justice portfolio.

[7] The Department of Education and Training was renamed The Department of Education in January 2023 following Machinery of Government change.


Section C: Sectors as lead

Funded sector capacity-building participants have consistently demonstrated leadership in embedding the reforms within their workforces.

Some highlights include:

  • The Council to Homeless Persons has developed a Specialist Homelessness Sector Learning Hub to demonstrate an evidence based, shared understanding of family violence risk and impact. The Learning Hub is a central place to host useful MARAMIS learning products and resources that are relevant to the homelessness services sector.
  • The CFECFW developed and released an Emerging Themes video series that explores common themes across MARAM, FVISS and CISS for all workforces. The videos support MARAM learning across the sector and can be embedded into an organisation’s own learning and development system. They also provide clear and consistent leadership on recognising children as victim survivors of family violence, and safe and effective engagement with young people.
  • Court Network is a community organisation providing non-legal information, referral and support to court users via telephone, online and in court. Court Network provides trained volunteers in all Victorian court jurisdictions and at 28 courts. Court Network empowers and increases the confidence of court users to manage their court matters through before, during and post-court options for engagement. It developed the Court Network Volunteer Family Violence Practice Guide to provide consistent messaging and leadership to volunteers.
  • VAADA produces a monthly newsletter as part of its communications strategy. This is sent to alcohol and other drug workforces and includes items that are specifically related to MARAM. It also promotes the availability of MARAM training and Family Safety Victoria updates, as well as news from the broader family violence sector. The first newsletter received close to a 40 per cent click-to-open rate, which is far above the industry standard of around 26 per cent.
  • Jewish Care delivered a series of E-bulletins consisting of 27 resources to prescribed organisations. The E-bulletins included resources to clarify the requirements of phase 2 organisations to align to MARAM, support organisational leaders to align to the MARAM Pillars, and to support workers who are new to family violence to embed MARAM tools into their practice.
  • Dardi Munwurro completed a workforce mapping exercise across all programs and services, to determine the MARAM Responsibilities that are applicable to its staff. There are 95 per cent of Dardi Munwurro staff who now understand the requirements needed to align their practice to the MARAM framework.

The Orange Door

The Orange Door network was established in response to Recommendation 37 of the Royal Commission for ‘a single, area-based and highly visible intake point’ to be available in each Department of Families, Fairness and Housing region.

The Orange Door is a free service for adults, children and young people who are experiencing or have experienced family violence, and families needing support with their wellbeing and development of their children. It assesses and responds to a person’s immediate needs and risk, and connects people to family violence services, ACCOs, family services and services for people using violence.

The Orange Door network provides coordinated support, including crisis assistance and support, risk and need assessments, and safety planning, as well as supporting people to connect to other services for longer-term support.

In 2021–22, The Orange Door network finalised the statewide rollout, so that no matter where people experiencing family violence live, they can now access support through The Orange Door network.

Operational guidance for The Orange Door is developed in consultation with key stakeholders, including MARAM and Practice Development teams in Family Safety Victoria, to ensure the guidance is aligned to MARAM.

Since its inception in 2018, The Orange Door network has assisted more than 238,000 people, including 95,000 children statewide. It has also completed 82,051 risk assessments and safety plans. This is a clear example of the outcomes that can be achieved with clear leadership.

Figure 11: The Orange Door sites

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Case Study: The Orange Door

The Bandara family attended The Orange Door seeking financial assistance to buy food and other items. Dayani* and Fernando* were unable to access income support as they were seeking asylum in Australia. The family was being supported by a number of agencies, including health and culturally specific organisations. Dayani shared a recent family violence incident resulting in Fernando being served with a limited intervention order, with conditions.

Dayani wished to remain in the relationship and the family home, and was concerned for Fernando’s wellbeing. The Orange Door practitioner undertook a MARAM risk assessment and went through a MARAM safety plan with Dayani, which included advising her of support options, as well as strategies in the event of family violence continuing. Dayani declined family violence support, as she was satisfied with the therapeutic support she was receiving from her culturally specific organisation. With Dayani’s consent, The Orange Door contacted the organisation and shared Dayani’s MARAM safety plan and The Orange Door’s MARAM family violence assessment.

During Fernando’s assessment, he discussed his use of violence, lack of employment, depression and substance misuse. He acknowledged his values and belief systems had shaped his choice to use violence. The practitioner referred Fernando to a culturally specific Men’s Behaviour Change Program specialising in cultural values and issues relating to migration that may be contributing factors to family violence risk. Fernando also agreed to engage in a drug and alcohol service. The Orange Door practitioner and Fernando contacted the service together, and completed a preliminary assessment and arranged a follow-up appointment in 2 days.

The Family Services worker undertook to coordinate a case conference with the professionals involved after their home visit, and continued to monitor and assess the family violence risk.

Note: Risk assessments and safety plans would also be undertaken on the children’s experience of family violence.

*Not their real names.

Case Study: Safe Steps

Tanya* called Safe Steps on a Sunday afternoon while her partner and her children were away from home. She was not sure why she called Safe Steps, describing herself as in an ‘ok’ marriage with fights time to time like ‘most normal relationships’.

The crisis response worker identified some common indicators of trauma based on using her professional judgement. Minimising risk to safety is a common response of victim survivors.

Tanya agreed to participate in a discussion to inform a MARAM risk assessment. The assessment identified a range of serious risk factors and determined Tanya’s risk level at ‘serious risk’. This included physical harm, sexual assault, controlling behaviours and financial abuse. Tanya was being prevented from training to return to the workforce, as well as access to the doctor.

Tanya decided to stay in her relationship for the time being. Using the MARAM risk assessment tool helped Tanya understand that what she was experiencing was family violence and enabled her to take steps to engage in safety planning. Tanya was supported to understand that help is available if she needs to leave the relationship or if risk escalates and she needs support for her safety.

Note: Risk assessments and safety plans would also be undertaken on the children’s experience of family violence. Information would be sought about the perpetrator to understand other risk factors present. Referral to therapeutic supports for Tanya and children would be supported.

*Not their real names.

The Safe Steps case study demonstrates the use of:

  • a MARAM Risk Assessment
  • MARAM Safety Plans
  • respect for the victim survivor’s agency
  • trauma-informed practice
  • the use of structured professional judgement.

Summary of progress

Family Safety Victoria, government departments and the sector are working hard to communicate the intent and impact of the reforms to workforces, and to create systems for feedback and continuous improvement.

The MARAM Annual Framework Survey results confirm that:

  • 74 per cent found Family Safety Victoria communications and information highly or somewhat useful
  • 81 per cent found department communications and information highly or somewhat useful
  • 82 per cent found peak body communications and information highly or somewhat useful
  • 73 per cent found management communications and information highly or somewhat useful.

This suggests that there is some room for improvement in how messaging is reaching workforces, and to determine what communications and information are the most effective. There are limited mechanisms for drilling down further into this feedback, but opportunities to engage with workforces will be considered.

Figure 12: MARAM Annual Survey – Communications and information received from Family Safety Victoria

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Figure 13: MARAM Annual Survey – Communications and information received from the government department or agency funding your organisation

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Figure 14: MARAM Annual Survey – Communications and information received from peak bodies for your organisation

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Chapter 7: Supporting consistent and collaborative practice

One objective of MARAM is to ensure its consistent use across prescribed organisations[8] and services. Pillar 2 expands on this to require organisations to have a ‘shared approach to identification, screening, assessment and management of family violence risk’. This is achieved using tools consistent with the MARAM evidence-based risk factors.

Consistent practice does not require using the MARAM practice guidance and tools in their original form. This would not allow for the nuance across multiple services and practices. Instead, it requires services in education, health, justice and community to base their practice on MARAM practice guidance and tools. The purpose is so that family violence risk is assessed and managed on the same understanding and evidence base, no matter the service engaged with.

Consistency also improves collaboration, as services are able to use the same language and understanding of family violence risk to work together to keep victim survivors safe and perpetrators accountable.

Family Safety Victoria creates centralised, evidence-based resources that are shared with departments and sectors to tailor and embed into their workforces.

This chapter summarises the work of:

  • Family Safety Victoria to continue to develop centralised resources required to support MARAM
  • departments to interpret and tailor the centralised resources into workforce operational contexts
  • sector peak bodies to bring the practice to life directly with practitioners.

[8] A full list of MARAM prescribed organisations is provided at Appendix 1.


Section A: Family Safety Victoria as WoVG lead

MARAM Practice Guides and Tools

The adult perpetrator-focused MARAM Practice Guides and tools were developed throughout 2020 to 2022, in partnership with NTV. The guides and tools were released in July 2021 for non-specialist workforces, and in February 2022 for specialist workforces.

The guides draw on a range of evidence and best-practice models available across Australia and internationally. Over 1,000 professionals were extensively consulted to develop the guides.

The perpetrator-focused MARAM Practice Guides and tools include guidance on broad-ranging areas of practice. They promote victim-centred practice, an intersectional and a trauma-and-violence-informed lens, and an understanding and assessment for coercive control, across types of relationships, identities and community groups[9].

Guidance and a tool are also included to support the accurate identification of the predominant aggressor/perpetrator. This is the first misidentification tool developed for statewide use in Australia. Accurate identification of the perpetrator of family violence is a critical component of risk assessment and risk management.

The MARAM Practice Guides highlight the use of systems abuse and provide professionals with guidance on identifying and mitigating any immediate and long-term impacts caused by misidentification or system errors.

The misidentification guidance and tool were developed in consultation with Victoria Police, the Magistrates’ Court, Victims of Crime Helpline, Child Protection, NTV, Safe and Equal, the Victim Survivor Advisory Council[10]. Professionals working with Aboriginal and diverse communities also contributed to the tool and guidance development.

Increased use of MARAM online tools in specialist services

Tools For Risk Assessment and Management (TRAM)[11], The Orange Door Client Relationship Management System (CRM)[12] and the Specialist Homelessness Information Platform (SHIP)[13] are the online data systems that provide access to MARAM tools for use by practitioners to conduct risk assessments and safety plans. They are primarily used by Specialist Family Violence Services and homelessness services. Their availability is being extended to new organisations to support consistent use of MARAM tools across these services.

Figure 15: Key data highlights for MARAM online tools in 2021–22

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The continued year-on-year increases suggest numerous contributing factors, such as:

  • the increasing number of The Orange Door sites opening across Victoria
  • caseloads
  • the number of on-ground practitioners
  • greater risk assessment and management confidence
  • an increase in the number of services conducting the assessments.

[9] As outlined in the MARAM Foundation Knowledge Guide, coercive control is a pattern of behaviours, including emotional, financial, controlling, sexual and physical violence. The behaviour is intended to harm, punish, frighten, dominate, isolate, degrade, monitor or stalk, regulate or subordinate the victim survivor.

[10] The Victim Survivor Advisory Council was formed in July 2016 to give people with lived experience of family violence a voice, and to ensure they are consulted in the family violence reform program. Members are appointed by the Minister for Prevention of Family Violence.

[11] TRAM: Tools for Risk Assessment and Management are used by practitioners in The Orange Door for risk assessment, and a select number of specialist family violence agencies for risk assessment and safety planning.

[12] CRM: Client Relationship Management system is used by practitioners in The Orange Door for safety planning.

[13] SHIP: Specialist Homelessness Information Platform is used by specialist family violence and homelessness services for risk assessment and safety planning.


Section B: Departments as portfolio leads

Department of Education

To support the development of consistent practice, the Department of Education developed an information-sharing and family violence reforms toolkit and guidance. The toolkit sits alongside and complements training and eLearning modules (see Chapter 8) provided to centre-based early childhood education and care services, schools, system and statutory bodies, education health, wellbeing and inclusion workforces, and Department of Education corporate workforces.

The toolkit contains templates, checklists and materials that can be adapted to meet the needs of the school, service or organisation. The guidance has been developed to provide general information and support for education and care workforces that are authorised to use the reforms. The toolkit and guidance support the legally binding Ministerial Guidelines for CISS and FVISS. Hard-copy versions of the toolkit were mailed out to all centre-based early childhood education and care services, and schools in Terms 3 and 4, 2021.

Family Safety Victoria and the Department of Education also provided Early Childhood Australia (ECA) with funding to scope the family violence identification and response needs of the centre-based early childhood sector to align with MARAM and capability frameworks. ECA also developed a MARAM toolkit, including tools, resources, policies, procedures and guidance to support MARAM alignment and workforce capacity building, and to complement the Department of Education’s information-sharing and family violence reforms guidance.

The ECA toolkit was piloted in 5 early childhood services. Before piloting commenced, the 5 pilot services were surveyed in 2021 to understand how confident staff were to identify and respond to family violence, what policies, procedures and training were being used, and what support staff had to identify and respond to family violence.

The Department of Education continues to support all Victorian Respectful Relationships schools to implement and embed Respectful Relationships, which is a primary prevention of family violence initiative. It supports schools to promote and model respect, positive attitudes and behaviours, and teaches students how to build healthy relationships, resilience and confidence. As at 30 June 2022, a total of 1,951 Victorian government, Catholic and independent schools are signed on to the Respectful Relationships initiative.

The Department of Education’s Respectful Relationships area staff provide on-the-ground support to schools, including Project Leads to guide implementation and Liaison Officers to support schools to identify and respond to disclosures of family violence, and to implement FVISS and MARAM. The Department of Education engaged Safe and Equal to update the Identifying and Responding to Disclosures of Family Violence training for the Department of Education’s Respectful Relationships workforce, to align with CISS, FVISS and MARAM (see Chapter 8).

Department of Families, Fairness and Housing

With responsibility for multiple workforces prescribed under MARAM, the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing has continued to review the frameworks, guidelines and tools that are required to be updated, to align to MARAM to support consistent and collaborative practice.

The progress made in 2021–22 included:

  • The Service Provision Framework: Complex Needs sets out the service model, operational processes and decision-making points for the development and implementation of 2 complex needs services – the Multiple and Complex Needs Initiative (MACNI) and Support for High-Risk Tenancies. These services are delivered collaboratively by government, ACCOs, and health and community service organisations. This workforce holds identification of MARAM Responsibilities, and the updates made to the Service Provision Framework supports MARAM-aligned practice.
  • The SAFER children framework is a risk assessment and management framework to support the work of child protection practitioners. Work was undertaken to align the SAFER children framework to MARAM, and it was launched in November 2021. As part of the alignment, MARAM risk assessment tools have been built into the Client Relationship Information System used by practitioners as part of the overall SAFER risk assessment. The outcome is that the combined tools deliver greater visibility of the intersecting risks of family violence, and support a consistent response when family violence is identified.

Figure 16: SAFER children framework: A guided professional judgement approach

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  • MARAM Operational Guidelines for Public Housing Staff provide for the application of victim-survivor-focused MARAM practice across public housing operations. The finalisation of the guidelines was highlighted as a Department of Families, Fairness and Housing priority in the 2020–21 annual report. The guidelines set out key principles and pillars that should be embedded into procedures, service delivery and practice. They describe a shared responsibility between prescribed services and sectors to identify and respond to family violence. The aim is to build a consistent and collaborative practice by outlining MARAM practice requirements, including:
    • MARAM Responsibilities
    • a process for when family violence is suspected or disclosed
    • basic safety planning
    • information sharing
    • tools to support identification and safety planning.
  • The Homelessness Services Guidelines and Conditions of Funding 2014 document sets out the requirements for delivering state-funded homelessness services, particularly the essential pre-requisites that must be delivered to meet service agreement obligations. An initial MARAM updated has been included in the COVID-19 amendment to require organisational leaders to determine which MARAM Responsibilities apply to their organisations. Revised Homelessness Services Guidelines are intended to be published in 2023, which will include further content to support MARAM alignment.
  • Family Safety Victoria completed significant work in 2021–22 to update the Risk Assessment and Management Panel (RAMP) Operational Requirements to ensure MARAM alignment. The requirements outline the responsibilities of RAMP Core Members under MARAM and the FVISS and CISS Schemes, and ensure consistent application across the network. The updated requirements situate RAMP’s approach to risk assessment and management to align to the MARAM framework, and extensively reference the MARAM Practice Guides, templates and tools.
  • The expansion of the Central Information Point (CIP) to RAMPs was undertaken as a phased rollout from 2020, which was completed within the 2021–22 financial year. RAMP access to the CIP is part of the Royal Commission’s recommendation to establish the CIP[14]. RAMP coordinators who have completed CIP training have provided consistent feedback on the positive impact of the CIP expansion, and that it supports a consistent and collaborative approach to responding to high-risk cases.

Department of Health

A dedicated team within the Department of Health is responsible for supporting program areas and peak bodies to identify and update policies and guidelines. In 2021–22, achievements to support consistent and collaborative practice included:

  • Mental Health and Alcohol and Other Drugs – Approximately 40 Specialist family violence advisors are established in each of the 17 department areas to support alcohol and other drug and mental health services. The Department of Health led the revision of the Specialist Family Violence Advisor guidelines, which outline specific responsibilities on MARAM implementation.
  • Hospitals – In May 2022, SHRFV released a new resource to support hospitals to undertake workforce mapping for working with adults who use family violence.
  • Ambulance services – Ambulance Victoria has developed a range of tailored family violence resources, and taken actions to support consistent and collaborative practice, including:
    • contextualisation of the MARAM Brief Assessment Tool for use by paramedics in home and community settings
    • working closely with The Orange Door to support effective statewide referrals and information sharing, as well as supporting paramedics to make consistent referrals to patients when not transported
    • development and implementation of systems and day-to-day operations to support the FVISS and CISS
    • audit of electronic patient record software capabilities against MARAM requirements with recommendations for technical changes required.
  • Health workforces – the Department of Health has developed resources for all health services to support healthcare workers who are experiencing family violence. This includes a guide to developing a family violence and workforce policy, and a guide to managers on how to support staff.

Department of Justice and Community Safety

Throughout 2021–22, the Department of Justice and Community Safety continued to update policies, procedures, and practice guidance to support a broad range of workforces, including:

  • CJS has been able to progress several actions to build consistent and collaborative practice, such as:
    • content from the Managing Family Violence in Community Corrections Services Practice Guideline that has been merged into other existing practice guidelines, which reflects a move to family violence being ‘business as usual’. There are now family violence processes embedded across 17 practice guidelines in addition to a standalone document
    • the Managing Family Violence Incidents in Prisons Guideline has been amended to include The Orange Door as a resource option and updated references to specific family violence offences.
    • the CJS Family Violence Flag Project aims to improve the identification of victim survivors and persons using family violence in the CJS information management systems. In this reporting period, the information technology (IT) solution has been designed and approved, and work has progressed towards commencement of the build of the IT solution.
    • the Women’s Prison System is assessing all operational policies and procedures to embed a trauma-informed approach. To date, 24 Local Operation Procedures have been reviewed using the Trauma Impact Assessment.
    • Justice Health has developed a new resource to support FVISS and CISS awareness within its Information Sharing Entities and Risk Assessment Entities, which includes health information-sharing processes and how to access Justice Health services. This has resulted in a 61 per cent increase in requests for information under FVISS this reporting year, demonstrating a significant increase in collaborative practice.
  • There is ongoing development of the Family Violence Practice Manual and the Helpline Standard Operating Procedures that provide guidance and direction to the Victims of Crime Helpline staff. They ensure staff understand MARAM and their responsibilities in supporting male victims of family violence. The helpline also undertook updates to the Helpline Client Relationship Management database for increased functionality to enhance triage practices currently in place to ensure L17s are prioritised, based on victim status and risk.

  • Consumer Affairs Victoria has developed a Family Violence Information Sharing Practice Toolkit, building on resources and training. The toolkit addresses gaps in practice knowledge, particularly knowing what to share, when and with whom, to support a consistent approach to information sharing for financial counsellors and Tenancy Assistance and Advocacy Program (TAAP) workers.

  • The Dispute Settlement Centre of Victoria is in the process of drafting new procedures that will assist staff with identifying clients who may be experiencing family violence.

  • Youth Justice worked collaboratively with Victoria Police and the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing towards improved, systematic information-sharing processes to inform family violence risk assessment, planning and management of young people under Youth Justice supervision. During this reporting period, Youth Justice was granted access to the L17 (police) portal to allow timely access to referral information, to inform family violence risk assessment and management.

TAAP reflection

‘Due to our external partnerships with Specialist Family Violence Services, our TAAP team regularly receives direct warm referrals. These are received directly by our TAAP workers and are always given our highest priority. Clients are contacted almost immediately upon receipt of referral.

Due to our professional relationships with family violence organisations and VCAT, where there are impending VCAT hearings these matters are expedited. Often these matters entail complex family violence and assistance with removal from leases and apportionment of debts and damage caused to properties because of family violence.’

Financial counsellor reflection

‘A client answered ‘no’ when asked at intake if she was experiencing family violence. Going over the MARAM questions in the first appointment revealed she was fearful of her daughter when she stayed over and took drugs with her friends. Some clients do not like to open up too much during the intake, so these questions are an important opportunity to explore any concerns. She did not see herself as experiencing family violence until we went through the assessment. I was able to develop a safety plan, apply for a Flexible Support Package and negotiate debts due to the family violence. The MARAM FV Risk Assessment itself is easy to navigate and I find it flows well. It is extremely vital in not only identifying the presence of FV but also the assessment of risk and development of a safety plan.’

Mallee Family Care

The courts

With all MCV staff trained in affected family member MARAM practice guidance and tools completed, focus has shifted to additional activities to strengthen consistent and collaborative practice. Work undertaken in 2021–22 included:

  • The Pre-Court Engagement Initiative was introduced by MCV in the 2020–21 financial year to support court users through early engagement and referrals to legal and support services. The initiative has strong engagement and currently supports 7 courts. This has resulted in over 2,500 referrals to MCV’s family violence practitioners.
  • Dedicated practitioners – MCV has Umalek Balit (a dedicated Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander family violence support program) and an LGBTIQA+ family violence practitioner service. Since October 2021, the Pre-Court Engagement Initiative facilitated 187 referrals to Umalek Balit practitioners and 268 referrals to LGBTIQA+ practitioners.

Victoria Police

Victoria Police has undertaken further updates to the Victoria Police Manual and Family Violence Practice Guides by way of continuous improvement in consistent and collaborative practice. The changes include:

  • a new Police Manual addressing family violence involving Victoria Police employees. This covers incident response through to prosecution, application of discipline procedures, and management responsibilities for victim survivors and persons using family violence
  • updated Family Violence Practice Guides, including:
    • personal property conditions for Family Violence Intervention Orders that direct the return of essential property, noting exclusion conditions that enable a return to the residence to collect personal belongings in the presence of police
    • taking reports of family violence by telephone, which allows prompt recording of family violence incidents where it is determined that there is no risk of harm to any party. This guide assists members to make evidence-based decisions to provide a more accurate assessment of a current family violence episode, with consideration to historical episodes
    • standalone Practice Guides for priority community and diverse community responses, which are now comprehensive, standalone documents to ensure increased understanding, rather than a previous consolidated version.

[14] Recommendation 7 of the Royal Commission into family violence recommended that the Victorian Government establish a secure Central Information Point, with a summary of the information being available to RAMPS.


Information sharing

Information sharing is an indicator of consistent and collaborative practice. Where instances of information sharing are increasing, it suggests an increase in family violence being identified and practitioner confidence in the benefits of multi-agency collaboration.

As the MARAM reforms have progressed in maturity, information-sharing demand has increased considerably across the sector, when compared to the 2020–21 period. It also reflects the prescription of additional workforces in April 2021, and the impact of continued training and capability-building activities.

It should be noted that there is no legal requirement to collect FVISS and CISS data. Data that is available is from departments with the ability to collect central information. For those that do, this section outlines information-sharing demand and activity in the 2021–22 reporting period.

The courts

In 2021–22, the courts experienced significant growth in demand and received 34,326 requests for information, which is a 20 per cent increase from the previous financial year.

The Department of Families, Fairness and Housing’s Child Protection continues to be the primary source of information-sharing requests, with a total of 12,744 requests made, accounting for 37 per cent of all requests to the courts.

The number of requests received from The Orange Door network has more than doubled, with 11,938 requests received, compared to 5,475 requests in 2020–21. The Orange Door network accounted for 35 per cent of the total number of requests received by the courts.

A further 9,644 or 28 per cent of requests were received from specialist family violence service providers, including Safe Steps and other community-based organisations.

Table 2: The courts’ information-sharing activity 2021–22

Type of activity Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Total financial year Total since February 2018
Requests 8,007 7,897 8,575 9,847 34,326 91,295

Victoria Police

In 2021, Victoria Police introduced a new record-keeping solution for the FVISS and CISS to improve data capture, workflow processes and the output shared with other Information Sharing Entities. This is indicated in Table 3, with an increase in the number of categories now available, which has allowed for more precise data to be available for business and reporting needs.

The number of requests in this reporting period have increased significantly with 1,119 additional requests received, compared to the previous year, an increase of 20 per cent over the previous year.

Table 3: Victoria Police’s information-sharing activity 2021–22

Type of activity Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Total financial year
Requests received 1,611 1,533 1,682 1,794 6,620
Shared 1,576 1,508 1,489 1,688 6,241
Not shared 35 25 193 126 379
Voluntary 113 105 79 62 359

Department of Justice and Community Safety – Corrections Victoria

Corrections Victoria saw its FVISS requests double in 2021–22 compared to 2020-21. The increase is likely due to the addition of health and education services to the reforms in April 2021, and additional information requests directly to CV from The Orange Door.

To meet the increased demand, Corrections Victoria has provided additional staffing resources.

Table 4: Corrections Victoria’s information-sharing activity 2021–22

Type of activity Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Total financial year
Number of requests responded to 1,012 1,413 1,518 2,086 6,029
Number of requests not yet released* 74 87 112 186 459

*Common reasons why information was declined in some instances: where the identity of the perpetrator could not be confirmed based on the initial information provided; further information was required for protection purposes; exclusion; no consent; or the entity requesting the information was not an information-sharing entity.

Department of Families, Fairness and Housing – Child Protection

In the 2021–22 financial year, the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing received a total of 3,652 requests for information (noting this relates to closed Child Protection cases only). The most frequent requesting Information Sharing Entities were Victoria Police, Specialist Family Violence Services and hospitals. Information-sharing requests consistently increased quarter on quarter in the financial year, with requests made under the FVISS increasing over 50 per cent between quarter one and quarter 4.

Table 6: Information-sharing requests not shared 2021–22

Authorising scheme Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Total
FVISS only 113 136 235 231 715
CISS only 159 250 355 235 999
FVISS and CISS 519 336 220 353 1,428
Other 19 5 216 270 510
Total 810 727 1,026 1,089 3,652

Table 6: Information-sharing requests declined 2021–22

Authorising scheme

Q3 Q4 Total year
FVISS only 9 24 33
CISS only 12 12 24
FVISS and CISS 5 28 43
Other 90 138 228
Total 116 212 328

Table 7: Department of Families, Fairness and Housing proactive information sharing 2021–22

Authorising scheme Q3 Q4 Total year
FVISS only 36 6 42
CISS only 25 0 25
FVISS and CISS N/A 0 0
Other 0 0 0
Total 61 6 67

Data for requests that were declined and for information that was proactively shared was not captured as independent values until the third and fourth quarter (January to June 2022). Requests were declined because they did not meet the FVISS or CISS thresholds, or the request lacked sufficient detail to enable the request to be assessed.

Table 7 shows that the team proactively shared risk-relevant information 67 times in the last 6 months of the financial year.

Section C: Sectors as lead

In 2021–22, there has been an increase in funded sector capacity-building participants delivering Communities of Practice webinars and workshops. These have included:

  • The Council to Homeless Persons and Elizabeth Morgan House partnered to develop an animated case study about sharing risk-relevant information in a culturally safe way.
  • The CFECFW, NTV, and Safe and Equal co-facilitated a quarterly Collaborative Sectors Network. This brings together organisations across the sectors to share lessons learned. It promotes consistent and collaborative practice, and enables continuous improvement.
  • VACCA consulted and supported several smaller ACCOs to strengthen networking relationships and share resources to support their alignment to MARAM and information-sharing operations. This consultative approach led to the establishment of a Housing Working Group to support collaboration between VACCA, Aboriginal Housing Victoria and Council to Homeless Persons.
  • SHRFV statewide leads at Bendigo Health and The Royal Women’s Hospital facilitate Communities of Practice every 6 to 8 weeks. The Communities of Practice enable SHRFV staff members to provide formal and informal feedback about lessons learned in implementation, to support consistent and collaborative practice across the state. In addition to the Communities of Practice, SHRFV members have access to an online platform where they regularly share learnings, knowledge and support.
  • The TAAP team has established ongoing working relationships with the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT) Family Violence Coordinator. The VCAT now regularly refers matters to TAAP.
  • The Financial Counselling Program co-delivered workshops with Gamblers Help to a service with a Men’s Behaviour Change Program. This has promoted collaboration, service awareness and cross referrals. The workshops will be delivered annually.
  • ECA developed a MARAM toolkit with tools, resources, policies, procedures and guidance to further contextualise the reforms for this sector. The toolkit was piloted in 5 early childhood services.
Elizabeth Morgan House case study

Sharee, an Aboriginal woman, has been in a two-year relationship with Mark, a non-Aboriginal man, who has been violent to her on numerous occasions. Although Sharee left Mark a few times, she returned as she had nowhere else to live.

Sharee agreed to a MARAM risk assessment and to information-sharing requests about Mark. The FVISS request came back from police with the following information:

Mark has been violent against 3 previous partners and has a history of breaching Family Violence Intervention Orders.

Mark has been charged with several violent assaults to strangers and been convicted of aggravated assaults with weapons such a knife and a bottle.

Mark also has a recent charge for possession of amphetamine.

Further information-sharing requests reveal Mark is on a six-month Community Corrections Order, is linked into a Behaviour Change Group, and sees an alcohol and other drug worker.

Adele arranges a PIVA (Person using violence in view and accountable) meeting of the professionals supporting Mark and shares the relevant parts of the risk assessment to enhance safety planning. The alcohol and other drug worker advises that Mark has increased his substance use in recent weeks, uses ice regularly and is self-medicating with downers to sleep and is often angry – blaming Sharee for making him angry. The Men’s Behaviour Change worker shares that Mark has stated that he would kill himself if Sharee left him, and that they have created a plan with Mark for when he feels this way. Mark has breached his Community Corrections Order by failing to submit urine screens and has returned a positive result for methamphetamines for the screens he has submitted. There is also a future hearing where he may get a custodial sentence.

The information supports Adele to update Sharee’s MARAM risk assessment and informs her determination of the level of risk and safety planning.

*Not their real names

The Elizabeth Morgan House case study demonstrates the use of:

  • the MARAM Risk Assessment
  • FVISS
  • MARAM Multi-Agency Practice
  • information sharing
  • an intersectional approach
  • keeping the perpetrator in view and accountable
  • respecting the victim survivor’s agency
  • trauma-informed practice.

Summary of progress

Consistent practice, where services all safely identify and respond to family violence in their contexts, is fundamental to ensuring no wrong door for victim survivors. Continued progress in updating workforce-specific practice guidance is a key step towards consistent practice. The increased use of MARAM online tools also demonstrates a consistent practice approach.

Collaborative practice builds on consistent practice, as workforces from different disciplines can communicate, based on a shared understanding of family violence. Information-sharing data illustrates an increased connection between workforces, and a willingness to request and share information using the available schemes.

As MARAM continues to be embedded, it is anticipated that consistent and collaborative practice will strengthen the systemic response to family violence.

Chapter 8: Building workforce capability

Successful implementation of the reforms requires practitioners to be appropriately trained in MARAM and information-sharing responsibilities. Training and other capability-building activities have been a priority from the outset of the reforms.

Core MARAM training in victim survivor practice for identification, intermediate and comprehensive practice has been available since 2020. This is delivered by Safe and Equal, on behalf of Family Safety Victoria, with departments also making their own arrangements for delivery of workforce tailored versions. Collaborative practice MARAM training is available regionally and delivered through the Family Violence Regional Integration Committees.

This report identifies the expansive training and capability-building activities available in multiple formats, along with available data and feedback on training.

Facilitated learning is the preferred method of delivery, but it is resource intensive. With the number of participants to be trained and available trainers, it would take a significant number of years to complete. Facilitated learning also achieves higher learner satisfaction rates, compared to self-paced eLearns. However, eLearns are readily accessible for participants.

Across the WoVG, departments are using facilitated and eLearn training, which have been tailored to workforces. This ensures:

  • a greater number of participants can be reached
  • eLearns are a sustainable resource that can be embedded into induction programs
  • increased accessibility.

Section A: Family Safety Victoria as WoVG lead

Non-accredited training (outside of the technical and further education (TAFE) and university sector) allows for upskilling workforces within a short timeframe to meet demand. There has been an increase of 205 per cent on 2020–21 figures, with 43,191 professionals having now received MARAM training.

Figure 17: Total MARAM and MARAM-aligned training numbers for 2018–19 to 2021–22

Accredited training is designed to reach pre-service and in-service workers and communities across the state. In June 2022, work was completed on new training and assessment resources for the Identifying and Responding to Family Violence Risk course, which has been available for delivery since 2019.[17]

Work has also commenced to refresh the Course in Intermediate Risk Assessment and Management of Family Violence Risk[18]. The new Centre for Workforce Excellence in the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing will continue to work with family violence peak bodies and industry experts on the course refresh to achieve successful re-accreditation.

The range of Family Safety Victoria capability-building activities and funding is not limited to MARAM and FVISS exclusively. Other funded capability-building activities are also funded, and are MARAM aligned. These activities are included in Figure 18.


[17] 22510VIC: Identifying and Responding to Family Violence Risk course.

[18] 22561VIC: Intermediate Risk Assessment and Management of Family Violence Risk course.

Figure 18: Funded capability-building projects in 2021–22

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Section B: Departments as portfolio leads

Department of Education

Building on the training that commenced in 2020–21, the Department of Education continues to deliver information-sharing and family violence reform leaders’ briefings and practical workshops for professionals.

The leaders’ briefing online sessions include a 1.5-hour briefing for leaders to prepare for and implement the schemes in their workplaces. The professionals’ workshop online sessions include 3 x 1.5-hour workshops for teachers and other school and regional support staff to build workforce confidence in how to share information safely using the schemes, and to meet the relevant record-keeping requirements of the schemes.

The Department of Education has established a minimum readiness requirement that all schools have at least one leader attend the leaders’ briefings and at least 2 school staff attend relevant professionals’ workshops. From 1 July 2021 to 30 June 2022, over 4,650 leaders and professionals from early childhood centre-based education and care services, and schools have participated in training. Casual relief teacher funding was available to early childhood services to support attendance at the workshops.

To enhance understanding of MARAM and the information-sharing reforms, the Department of Education continued to deliver a modular eLearning package with courses for leaders and professionals. The modules include content covered in the leaders’ briefings and professionals’ workshops, allowing for more flexibility in self-paced learning, and to support leaders and staff who are unable to attend the online sessions.

The leaders’ course consists of 4 modules, and the professionals’ course consists of 6 modules, all of which are hosted on the MARAMIS Learning Management System.

The Department of Education engaged Safe and Equal to update the Identifying and Responding to Disclosures of Family Violence training for the department’s Respectful Relationships workforce to align with CISS, FVISS and MARAM. The training includes content to promote a shared understanding of family violence, with a key focus on MARAM Responsibilities 1, 2, 5 and 6.

The Department of Education commissioned Monash University to develop and deliver the Respectful Relationships professional learning for early childhood educators. The professional learning aims to strengthen the capacity of early childhood educators to promote respectful relationships, positive attitudes and behaviours within their teaching approach, to enable children to build healthy relationships, resilience and confidence. It also aims to increase educator knowledge about the role of gender equality in the prevention of family violence, and to strengthen educators’ capabilities to respond to disclosures of family violence, including making referrals to Specialist Family Violence Services.

The topics in the training are:

  • Understanding and developing respectful relationships in early childhood dynamics of gender equality and family violence
  • Supporting children to understand and manage their emotions through social competence and promoting inclusive learning environments in early childhood
  • Understanding family violence and the practical strategies for building support networks.

Department of Families, Fairness and Housing

The Department of Families, Fairness and Housing has delivered identification and intermediate training to workforces through webinars and facilitated learning. Some training is delivered internally, with other services receiving training through the CFECFW. eLearns are used to reinforce the learning of facilitated sessions or commence building capacity where a learner has not had an opportunity to attend a facilitated session.

The Department of Families, Fairness and Housing is using opportunities to make the eLearn completion mandatory in induction processes for new staff members. For example, child protection practitioners are now required to complete the intermediate eLearn through induction.

Facilitated training and eLearns are further supplemented through capability-building activities including:

  • a webinar series tailored to the day-to-day practices of public housing and complex care coordinator staff who are supporting public housing renters
  • that the department requires its public housing staff to complete 3 MARAM learning products to support their use of the victim-survivor-focused MARAM tools. These are:
  • Recognising and Responding to Family Violence in Housing eLearn
  • Child and Family Violence Information Sharing Schemes eLearn
  • MARAM Screening and Identification for Public Housing staff webinar
  • child protection practice discussions (whole-of-workforce half-hour online webinars), focused on MARAM and its intersection with child protection practice
  • the MARAM and Information Sharing Week with 4 webinars of 2 hours each
  • tailored training for staff working in The Orange Door. This includes cultural responsiveness training delivered to 291 staff members, and information sharing and MARAM in The Orange Door delivered to 464 staff.

Department of Health

The Department of Health has delivered identification and intermediate training to workforces through webinars and facilitated learning. Training has been obtained for delivery through the CFECFW, as well as using the SHRFV model for hospitals.

The Department of Health has also worked with the Victorian Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation to tailor facilitated MARAM training for ACCOs, to ensure that it is culturally safe and has a self-determination focus. The CFECFW was funded by the department to deliver this training to the Victorian Aboriginal Health Service, with 70 staff at Victorian Aboriginal Health Service and Victorian Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation completing the intermediate module.

Tailored eLearns are also available. These are essential for health services that are still actively responding to the COVID-19 pandemic and working in shifts, making attending facilitated training in the daytime more challenging.

The MARAM Practice Guides and tools focused on adults who use violence have been mapped to ensure they can be used in health services and hospitals, including public sector residential aged care services. They will begin the process of mapping their staff to the responsibilities, and consider how the tools and guidance can be integrated into organisational policies and procedures.

Facilitated training and eLearns are further supplemented through capability-building activities including:

  • delivery of 4 family violence MARAM webinars to Ambulance Victoria first responder staff.
  • co-design of video resources with victim survivors from the Victorian Victim Survivor Advisory Council on the role of paramedics in responding to family violence, key barriers and practical insights.

Department of Justice and Community Safety

The Department of Justice and Community Safety continues to deliver Foundational Family Violence Training, which provides a thorough introduction to family violence foundational topics. This has been identified as an essential starting point for department workforces on which to build MARAM Responsibilities training.

One particular highlight for the department is that all Victorian Public Service Dispute Settlement Centre Victoria staff completed this foundational training in the reporting period.

An introduction to MARAM eLearn was developed and released in April 2022 for all Department of Justice and Community Safety workforces. This introduces the core concepts that underpin MARAM and how it relates to staff responsibilities. It builds on from the Foundational Family Violence Training.

Some department workforces have progressed to the development and delivery of further tailored facilitated training and eLearns. For example:

  • CCS has released 5 out of 11 learning products to its practitioners on engaging safely and proficiently with victim survivors and perpetrators, as a part of case management.
  • Good Shepherd delivered facilitated training at both women’s prisons on how to recognise family violence in a prison context, managing disclosures and highlighting available supports.
  • Youth Justice is training community-based staff to build skills and readiness in responding to young people who use violence. Additionally, Youth Justice delivered MARAM and family-violence-specific training modules to community-based staff. Community-based staff were also trained in the facilitation of MARAM risk screening and assessments, with 24 staff completing this training during the reporting period.
  • Youth Justice commenced a MARAM Youth Justice Sector Support project that seeks to strengthen Youth Justice MARAM capability. Youth Justice engaged with 30 of their funded programs to assess their current practices and MARAM alignment. These consultations have identified gaps and opportunities to strengthen Youth Justice MARAM alignment, which have informed the future development of supports and resources to upskill the funded programs.
  • Funding has been extended for the Women’s Legal Service Victoria to continue to deliver a suite of family violence training to all Victorian financial counsellors and TAAP workers. This funding includes ongoing training in MARAM and FVISS, and is designed to change over time, tailoring to the current workforce needs. This ensures family violence capability is constantly increasing as workforces mature.
  • Various training sessions that align with key MARAM principles were delivered by Financial Counselling Victoria for the Financial Counselling Program and included:
    • Trauma-informed care
    • Working with LGBTIQA+ community members
    • Identifying financial elder abuse
    • Working with refugee and asylum seeker clients
    • Strategic empathy
    • Working productively with clients experiencing challenging emotions and behaviours.
  • VSSR’s new Workforce Capability Framework identifies the core knowledge and skills required by staff working in VSSR and funded agencies. One of the framework’s 7 capabilities focuses on the abilities that victim service employees need to provide effective services to victims of family violence. These abilities include:
    • an understanding of theory, policy and practice issues
    • an understanding of best-practice models
    • capacity to identify, assess and manage family violence risk
    • capacity to adopt a rigorous approach to case management, including ongoing management of risk.

The courts

The majority of specialist and non-specialist court staff across the courts completed MARAM training in 2020–21. To continue to support learning, the MCV has also developed tailored eLearns for the multi-disciplinary engagement team, the Specialist Family Violence Courts, and trainee court registrars.

Activities to further uplift workforce capability in 2021–22 include:

  • A comprehensive capability development program has been delivered to approximately 245 operational staff to support the establishment of 7 new Specialist Family Violence Courts. The core components of the training included:
    • Family Violence Capability Uplift, a program that integrates risk assessment and management activities within existing court operations, and focuses on safe and effective engagement with affected family members
    • the Multi-Disciplinary Engagement Program, which brings local family violence services together to build a shared understanding of a specialist family violence response associated with the court process
    • the Yarning Circle, a program delivered by the Koori Family Violence Unit, which explores the prevalence and impacts of family violence in First Nations communities.
  • MARAM content has been embedded within the Trainee Court Registrar Program, which is the 18-month pre-requisite program for new registrars.
  • In late 2021, a series of MARAM information sessions were held to continue to build judicial officers’ knowledge of MARAM and its use. The two-part information sessions were attended by approximately 90 judicial officers, and will continue to be a pre-requisite for magistrates in the Specialist Family Violence Court Division.

Victoria Police

Family violence risk assessment and management is a core component of Victoria Police’s Family Violence Training Curriculum, from recruit training through to frontline general duties, to family-violence-specific roles and senior management programs. Victoria Police has continued to undertake a significant education and training program that includes:

  • Victoria Police delivery of the Family Violence Specialist Operative Module continues for Family Violence Investigation Unit detectives. As it includes training on the Case Prioritisation Response Model, the course aligns with MARAM and currently, 44 Family Violence Investigation Unit detectives have completed this training and an extra 360 are enrolled.
  • To enhance police responses to family violence experienced by First Nations people, and to assist in the reduction of the over-representation of Aboriginal people within the criminal justice system, Victoria Police held a forum ‘Approaching Family Violence Together’ in May 2022. The intent was to listen to community about how this challenge can be tackled together in a manner that is safe, respectful and community led. The forum included senior stakeholders from Victoria Police, Family Safety Victoria, the Victorian Aboriginal Justice Advisory Committee, the Aboriginal Justice Caucus, Dhelk Dja Partnership Forum and frontline workers from various ACCOs.
  • Aboriginal cultural awareness training was rolled out across all 4 regions. To compliment this training in 2021–22, locally delivered cultural awareness training was delivered in Warrnambool and Dandenong.

Section C: Sectors as leads

Funded sector capacity-building participants have delivered capability-building activities to support the accredited and non-accredited MARAM training. Some highlights include:

  • VAADA facilitated 5 community of practice events in 2021–22. There was a very high satisfaction rate from participants, and their continual engagement shows the keen interest and willingness for the alcohol and other drug sector to build its capacity in family violence. VAADA has also aligned the alcohol and other drug intake and assessment tools, and clinician guide to MARAM. The 5 community of practice events included:
    • Working with adults who use family violence
    • Working with First Nations clients
    • Technology-facilitated abuse
    • High-risk indicators of family violence
    • Working with the eSafety Commission.
  • The VHA has established Communities of Practice, targeted forums and secure online discussion groups for community health service leaders to share knowledge and resources. This is helping build capability to lead the required culture and practice change.
  • Justice Health is supporting prescribed entities to access suitable training for staff, based on their MARAM Responsibilities. This supports access to the most appropriate training solutions that meet learning outcomes required, with minimal impact on service provision.
  • Court Network has made updates to 5 eLearns, embedding MARAM content to support ongoing capability development of Court Network volunteers.
  • Safe and Equal delivered 10 sessions of the Practice Lead community of practice to support the organisational, cultural and practice change required to embed MARAM and FVISS within Specialist Family Violence Services. Safe and Equal also delivered a further 5 sessions of the Implementation Champions Group to individuals in Specialised Family Violence Services responsible for the implementation of key frameworks and for quality assurance processes.
  • Safe and Equal delivered 14 online RAMP Induction training sessions to a total of 120 attendees. These comprised 4 sessions for Chairs, 3 sessions for coordinators and 7 sessions for core members. The continual focus on building workforce capability benefits practitioners, and enables them to put best practice into action.

RAMP case study

This case study relates to Aboriginal intimate partners living together, while the victim survivor and perpetrator have full condition Family Violence Intervention Orders against each other. The case study was a RAMP case for 6 months, and then re-referred for an emergency meeting a year later. Neither party knew of RAMP involvement for safety reasons.

This case study demonstrates the use of

  • a MARAM Risk Assessment
  • MARAM Safety Plans
  • respecting the victim survivor’s agency
  • an intersectional lens and practice
  • trauma-informed practice
  • cultural safety
  • keeping the perpetrator in view and accountable.
RAMP Case Study

The person using violence, James, had an extensive history of cannabis use and potentially other drugs, and was on a Community Corrections Order for supervision and alcohol and other drug treatment (which he did not attend), prior to and during RAMP involvement. He also had a history of physical and sexual abuse towards others, property damage, Family Violence Intervention Order breaches and failure to answer bail. He had one child with Yindi, the victim survivor, with only very limited supervised access. He misrepresented Yindi as the perpetrator/predominant aggressor in the relationship.

Yindi is an Aboriginal woman connected with country and culture, with an intellectual disability. Yindi had been detained through the Mental Health Act 2014 (sectioned) multiple times to mental health inpatient units, and discharged to the perpetrator who claimed to be her ‘carer’ on each occasion. Mental health assessments deemed Yindi’s behaviour erratic and that she was at risk of suicide.

The MARAM risk assessment identified several evidence-based serious risk factors. James controlled every aspect of Yindi’s life and manipulated her to benefit from her service access (housing, taxi services, etc.) and his pattern of control often escalated upon service intervention. James controlled and intentionally withheld Yindi’s medication, which was likely the reason she appeared to be aggressive and erratic to services. James’s violence included emotional abuse, financial abuse, physical assaults, sexual abuse and exploitation, Family Violence Intervention Order breaches, sabotage, interference with and avoidance of service interventions and monitoring, evasion of accountability, and service and justice manipulation.

Risk resolution depended largely on the management of James, which proved very difficult when he had no engagement with the law or interventions offered to and required of him.

RAMP facilitated MARAM assessments and safety planning, and proactively shared information. This identified:

  • intersecting structural barriers for Yindi, creating a risk of judicial and medical misidentification as the perpetrator/predominant aggressor
  • Aboriginal culture as a safety and support mechanism for Yindi
  • disability support as a key service needed in safety planning.
*Not their real names

Summary of progress

Throughout 2021–22, Family Safety Victoria, departments and sector organisations continued to develop and deliver MARAM and MARAM-aligned training to prescribed workforces.

The MARAM Framework Annual Survey asks respondents what training types they and others in their organisation have received.

The results show that very few respondents had not participated in any training. The training with the highest engagement during 2021–22 were:

  • MARAM eLearns
  • accredited training
  • MARAM non-accredited training (either not specified or in identification and intermediate levels).

Figure 19: MARAM Annual Survey – Training undertaken by respondents and their colleagues

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The continued growth of capability-building activities in addition to training is positive. The MARAM Annual Survey suggests that practitioners and organisations are participating in these additional capability-building activities, whether run through government or sector-funded positions.

Figure 20: MARAM Annual Survey – Additional training and support received

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When considering the impact of these capability-building activities, the MARAM Annual Framework Survey shows that 88 per cent of leaders agree that workers in their organisation are aware of MARAM, and 79.4 per cent can respond to family violence.

Figure 21: MARAM Annual Survey – Respondents’ awareness and understanding of MARAM and the related information-sharing schemes

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The MARAM Annual Framework Survey also identifies those organisations that are using the supports from the sector.

Figure 22: MARAM Annual Survey – Organisations that provided support to align to MARAM

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Chapter 9: Reinforce good practice and commitment to continuous improvement

A successful element of any reform is that the change it brings is reinforced.

MARAM is a complex reform, which is still in development, with new practice guidance recently released and more to come. Regardless, work is underway to assess progress.

Section A: Family Safety Victoria as WoVG lead

Legislated reviews

The Family Violence Protection Act requires 2 reviews to be undertaken in the 5 years after initiation of the reforms.

Five-year legislative review of FVISS, CIP and MARAM

The Family Violence Reform Implementation Monitor was appointed on 12 April 2022 to independently review Parts 5A[19] and 11[20] of the Act. The review will consider how effective the legal provisions have been in meeting their objectives to:

  • provide a framework for achieving consistency in family violence risk identification, assessment and management
  • promote service coordination to maximise the safety of individuals who have experienced family violence, prevent and reduce family violence, and promote perpetrator accountability
  • facilitate information sharing and enable organisations to obtain consolidated and up-to-date information from the CIP, to establish, assess and manage family violence risk

It will also consider whether there have been any inadvertent or adverse impacts associated with the provisions, and whether any changes are required to improve the operation of the legislation. The review will be tabled in Parliament by August 2023.

Legislative best-practice evidence review of MARAM

Under Section 194 of the Act, the Minister for Prevention of Family Violence must cause a review of the evidence underpinning MARAM up to every 5 years. The first review is scheduled to commence by September 2022. The review aims to assess whether MARAM reflects the current evidence of best practice for family violence risk assessment and family violence risk management, and to recommend changes to ensure it is consistent with best practice.

Key elements in scope will include:

  • the MARAM legislative instrument and accompanying framework policy documents
  • key aspects of MARAM Practice Guides for working with adults in the 2019 victim survivor-focused MARAM Practice Guides, assessment tools and supporting resources.
  • Child and young person-focused risk and perpetrator assessment, and risk management practices are out of scope for the current review. More time is required to embed them through implementation, before they are reviewed. MARAM is required to be reviewed every 5 years, so these matters will be the subject of future reviews.

Non-legislated reviews

Family Violence Prevention and Response Capability Frameworks

The Family Violence Prevention and Response Capability Frameworks set out the required skills and knowledge for family violence prevention and response. As these frameworks were completed in 2017, prior to the development of MARAM, the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing is undertaking a review as part of continuous improvement, to ensure they are MARAM aligned[21]. The review will be undertaken in collaboration with Safe and Equal, and in consultation with industry stakeholders.


[19] Part 5A of the Act refers to information sharing.

[20] Part 11 of the Act refers to the Family Violence Risk Assessment and Risk Management Framework.

[21] Reviewing the Capability Frameworks was a commitment under Strengthening the Foundations: First Rolling Action Plan 2019–22.


Section B: Departments as portfolio leads

Department of Education

Department of Education workforces were prescribed to the reforms in April 2021, while still experiencing the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. Surveys and feedback from education workforces are an important part of this phase of the reform rollout, to further inform and refine implementation activities.

Some of the responses include:

Post-training survey results from the first half of 2022 demonstrated that over 90 per cent of survey participants knew how to share information using the schemes and felt confident in applying them at work. Over 90 per cent of participants rated the training course as high or very high.

The Family Safety Victoria MARAM Framework Annual Survey reflected that MARAM tools, guidance and training need to be tailored to the education and care context.

The Term 3 2021 Principal Survey, which received 600 responses, identified that principals are more familiar with the PROTECT Four Critical Actions and guidance (93 per cent of respondents) than the information-sharing and family violence reforms’ guidance and toolkit (64 per cent of respondents). Schools are using a variety of external services for advice on family violence issues and risks: 60 per cent have used The Orange Door, 34 per cent have used a family violence service and 50 per cent have used a family service. Schools would like a variety of extra resources and supports to assist them in better identifying and supporting students affected by family violence.

Anecdotal stakeholder feedback suggests schools and centre-based early childhood education and care services are becoming increasingly capable and confident in using the information-sharing and family violence reforms. Positive examples of how the reforms are being used include an early childhood service that is proactively sharing information with a primary school to ensure the school is aware of services a family is interacting with. This enables the school to understand more about the circumstances of the child, and encourages continued service engagement to support school transition.

Department of Families, Fairness and Housing

The Department of Families, Fairness and Housing acknowledges and values the important role held by peak bodies and funded sector grants organisations to advise on barriers and opportunities for continuous improvement in implementation.

Through working in partnership with the Council to Homeless Persons, the CFECFW, VACCA, AMES, Whittlesea Community Connections and Jewish Care, the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing can improve implementation activities and support the reinforcement of good practice.

Internal Department of Families, Fairness and Housing governance helps provide policy and program-level oversight, and support clear and consistent communication and leadership, in relation to the ongoing implementation of MARAM and the information-sharing schemes.

More formal evaluations have also taken place, including a statewide evaluation of RAMP which concluded in August 2022. The RAMP Evaluation Report includes recommendations and proposed next steps to lift workforce confidence in MARAM practice and promote better-informed decision-making in RAMP meetings. The key evaluation findings and recommendations will be considered and translated into an action plan, which will be jointly developed over 2022–23.

Department of Health

The Department of Health has also established internal governance through a working group to provide reform oversight. The working group ensures that good practice is shared and continuous improvement in MARAM takes place through identifying alignment opportunities, planning to support alignment and monitoring progress.

More formal evaluations have taken place of the Maternal and Child Health family violence initiatives from 2018 to 2021. The initiatives funded additional family violence consultations and capacity building. The evaluation assessed the impact of the funding investment on maternal and child health nursing practice; alignment of maternal and child health with the broader family violence sector; and for families experiencing or at risk of family violence. The findings from the evaluation will be reported in the 2022-23 annual report.

To recognise good practice, the 2022 Victorian Public Healthcare Awards have included an award category of the ‘whole of hospital model for responding to family violence’. The award category is open to services that are currently implementing the SHRFV initiative, which is to support services to meet the requirements of the FVISS, CISS and MARAM.

Department of Justice and Community Safety

The Department of Justice and Community Safety MARAMIS Working Group brings the MARAM business units together, and provides an opportunity for the recognition of best practice and the exploration of continuous improvement through collaboration across the department.

Department of Justice and Community Safety business areas are collecting data through business-as-usual activities and surveys to help inform continuous improvement opportunities.

Examples include:

  • surveys by Consumer Affairs to identify which agencies are leading the way in collaboration and promotion of their services to other sectors. This helps identify champions to be used as models of best practice and sharing lessons to others
  • Corrections Victoria analysing family violence incidents in prisons using internal systems and databases that record family violence events.

CJS has dedicated a new resource in Forensic Intervention Services to contribute to the Department of Justice and Community Safety priority area of perpetrator interventions. A review has commenced of MARAM against current family violence pathway and services.

The courts

The courts are looking for opportunities to maintain alignment progress and continually improve practice. This currently includes a focus on streamlining the process of making information-sharing requests to improve efficiency, which is particularly important given the increase in demand.

The Family Violence Intervention Order online application is also being reviewed for continuous improvement opportunities, particularly in strengthening the questions to reflect MARAM evidence-based risk factors and intersectional factors relevant to risk.

Victoria Police

In 2021, Victoria Police engaged Swinburne University to identify opportunities to improve the predictability of Victoria Police’s Case Prioritisation Tool (CPT). The CPT forms part of Victoria Police’s Case Prioritisation and Response Model (CPRM) and is used by Family Violence Investigation Units (FVIUs) to determine investigation primacy. An improved tool was piloted at four Family Violence Investigation Units in July/August 2022.

Work has also commenced to improve the way the police gather child risk information and conduct assessments. Several changes are to be made in the next reporting period that include:

  • changes to police terminology to better reflect children impacted by family violence as distinct victims and not as a subset of adult victim survivors
  • the development of training, evidence-based tools and approaches that assist police to assess risk to children in family violence incidents as victims, and enable them to effectively engage and interview children
  • workforce capability uplifts to assist police to identify how harm to an individual can be used to perpetrate harm against another, to increase the likelihood of family-violence-related child abuse being detected, including during routine policing activities.

Section C: Sectors as lead

Funded sector capacity-building participants and Family Violence Regional Integration Committees have undertaken activities intended to reinforce and continuously improve practice:

  • The Council for Homeless Persons is supporting state-funded homelessness services to establish appropriate governance to oversee their organisation’s alignment, and to promote continuous improvement, information sharing and collaboration.
  • Community Housing Industry Associate Victoria (with funding from the Department of Education, and support from the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing), surveyed 39 community housing organisations to gather baseline data on the current state of knowledge about the information-sharing schemes. Baseline data will inform the development of learning resources and information sessions about sharing information to promote the safety and wellbeing of children, and how MARAM informs information sharing under both FVISS and CISS whenever family violence is present.
  • VACCA and the CFECFW are supporting child and families’ services sectors to establish appropriate governance to oversee their alignment, and promote continuous improvement, information sharing and collaboration.
  • VACSAL developed a staff survey to measure the engagement and feedback from staff about the success, challenges and progress of the implementation of the MARAM reforms. Respondents indicated the need for further training in MARAM and information-sharing responsibilities. This resulted in the human resources team supporting upskilling workers in areas identified in the survey.
  • Djirra conducted monthly reflective practice session among their information-sharing team. The sessions focused on MARAM alignment, and identifying areas and issues requiring further capability building, as well as the development of operational procedures and processes.
  • Beyond Housing has developed a full implementation review to ensure continual improvement. This will include organisational self-audit, case file review and checking staff understanding of MARAM and their responsibilities. Family Violence Regional Integration Committees conducted the MARAM alignment and systems integration survey to assess the progress of alignment to MARAM and information-sharing reforms in key areas. The survey monitors reforms at a regional level to ensure cohesive implementation across the service system, and to identify areas to strengthen. The survey will be conducted annually and is aimed at frontline workers to determine whether policy and framework changes are translating to outcomes at a practice level.

Summary of progress

It is currently challenging to benchmark continuous improvement in aligning the reforms. Each workforce, and organisations within workforces, commenced aligning to MARAM from a unique starting point.

Once developed, the MARAM Maturity Model (see Chapter 10) will provide an important source of data on activities undertaken to reinforce good practice and continuous improvement.

In the interim, departments, funded sector peaks and organisations do suggest reinforcement activities are taking place. The MARAM Annual Framework Survey highlights that an average of 78 per cent of respondents across all portfolios either had or are creating a change management plan for implementation, which will also support continuous improvement, where those plans include an assessment of outcomes.

Figure 23: MARAM Annual Survey – Respondent organisations with a Change Management Plan

  • Download 'Figure 23: MARAM Annual Survey – Respondent organisations with a Change Management Plan'

Chapter 10: Next steps

This section identifies work that is planned as the reforms continue to roll out over the next few years.

Family Safety Victoria

Key WoVG priorities for 2022–23 for Family Safety Victoria:

  • Development of the MARAM Maturity Model. The projected outputs over the next 12 months include the design and testing of the maturity matrix, and self-audit tool. The project is expected to move to a pilot phase in 2023-24.
  • Two 5-year reviews (see Chapter 9), both of which are scheduled for completion in 2023.
  • Development of child and young person-focused MARAM practice guidance to strengthen workforce capacity to respond directly to risk and wellbeing for children and young people experiencing family violence and young people using family violence. The project is anticipated for completion in 2023.
  • Development and delivery of the MARAM Adults Using family violence non-accredited training. Family Safety Victoria anticipates the 3 training packages will be finalised in late-2022, with delivery commencing from 2023.
  • MARAM online tools to see the Adults Using Family Violence tools and Predominant Aggressor Identification Tool being built into TRAM. This will provide rich data sources about perpetrators of family violence.

Department of Education

Key priorities for the Department of Education in 2022–23 include:

  • The Regional Action Plan, which supports professionals in the Department of Education’s regional offices, who work collaboratively with schools to support student health, wellbeing and safety, to understand their roles, responsibilities and obligations for implementation of the reforms. It works to further enable proactive behaviours and collaboration between regional and education workforces, and other prescribed Information Sharing Entities to achieve better outcomes for children and young people, by enhancing early identification and intervention.
  • Continued development of tools to support education and care workforces to understand and undertake their MARAM Responsibilities, including a MARAM Toolkit to be finalised in 2023 by ECA, which was piloted in 5 early childhood services.
  • Development of further guidance on sharing information safely at school transitions in the updated information-sharing and family violence reforms toolkit and guidance.
  • Development of guidance, tools and templates to support primary school nurses to identify and respond to family violence through the School Entrant Health Questionnaire process training, which will include:
    • an extra 1,120 places for Respectful Relationships professional learning for early childhood educators
    • further MARAM training for ‘nominated staff’ (staff identified by their organisational leader as having additional MARAM Responsibilities of screening, referral and safety planning)
    • a series of 20 ‘microlessons’ (short eLearning modules) that cover foundational family violence knowledge and will be suitable for all staff in centre-based early childhood education and care services, schools and TAFEs.
  • Continuous reviews and updates of relevant resources on PROTECT and the Department of Education and Training Policy and Advisory Library to implement the new Child Safe Standards and MARAM. Extensive sector consultation will be undertaken throughout this process, and family violence and child safety stakeholders will be included in the development of additional guidance and resources.
  • An independent evaluation of MARAM implementation. It is expected that the findings from the evaluation will be used to inform future program policy and budget direction, including further activities that may enhance MARAM implementation and strengthen intended outcomes.
  • The Department of Education continuing to review and update operational policies as necessary, to align with MARAM. This work will build on the review of operational policies in 2020–21 to align with the information-sharing schemes, and the development of guidance and tools for education and care workforces.

Department of Families, Fairness and Housing

Key priorities for the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing in 2022–23:

  • Develop the child and young person victim-survivor-focused MARAM practice guidance (supplementing the 2019 victim survivor and 2021–22 adult perpetrator-focused guides).
  • Develop and deliver tailored learning opportunities for working with people who use family violence. This will include working closely with the Council to Homeless Persons and Community Housing Industry Association Victoria to explore options and ensure learning opportunities meet the needs of the community housing and homelessness services sectors.
  • Release a MARAM eLearn for practitioners across the service system who work with older people. A joint production with the Department of Health, the eLearn explored the role professionals play in responding to family violence experienced by older people (elder abuse).
  • Re-establish and confirm the ongoing governance overseeing the implementation of the MARAM Enabling Change Strategy across the department’s internal workforces.
  • Update existing MARAM Operational Guidelines for Public Housing to align with the adult perpetrator-focused MARAM practice guides and organisational structural changes.
  • Deliver training in working with adults using family violence, appropriately tailored to Department of Families, Fairness and Housing workforces.
  • Expand use of the CIP to Safe Steps and the Men’s Referral Service, in line with Recommendation 7 of the Royal Commission[22].
  • Tailor and localise the Strengthening Cultural Safety in The Orange Door training by the 18 Aboriginal Cultural Safety Advisors in The Orange Door.

Department of Health

Key priorities for the Department of Health in 2022–23:

  • Update internal policies and guidance. Roll out MARAM-aligned training for department staff and develop workplace support resources for staff who are experiencing family violence.
  • Deliver training in working with adults using family violence, appropriately tailored to health workforces.
  • Continue work to integrate MARAM and information sharing into Ambulance Victoria’s clinical governance structure to ensure appropriate and ongoing leadership, project and clinical governance, and a focus on continuous improvement.
  • Fund the SHRFV initiative to continue supporting MARAM alignment across hospitals statewide.

Department of Justice and Community Safety

Key priorities for the Department of Justice and Community Safety in 2022–23:

  • Delivering customised victim-survivor-focused MARAM training packages to the department’s prescribed business units and funded agencies.
  • Tailoring MARAM victim survivor and perpetrator practice guidance into a summary practice guide for the department’s workforce.
  • Embedding MARAM perpetrator practice guidance and tools into operational practice.
  • For Consumers Affairs Victoria to provide post-training support to all funded agencies to discuss how the MARAM training is applied to their day-to-day work and to answer questions and address issues. This support will be in the form of online information sessions and practical resources like tip sheets and videos.
  • For the Women’s Legal Service Victoria to begin its suite of ongoing family violence training to tenancy workers.
  • Embedding a MARAM implementation plan for Dispute Settlement Centre Victoria to create operational readiness to use MARAM.
  • For CJS to continue the rollout of Foundational Family Violence Training, explore feasible options to rolling out of MARAM training to the custodial workforce, and role-mapping of the custodial workforce to inform configuration of practice guidance, risk assessment tools and policies.
  • For CJS to continue to progress the Family Violence Flag Project, with the aim of building and implementing an IT solution.

The courts

Key priorities for the courts in 2022–23:

  • Aligning the eligibility assessment process for court-mandated counselling orders with the MARAM respondents risk assessment tools.
  • Establishing a new role within the MARAMIS team to build capability and support continuous quality improvement.
  • Delivery of training in working with respondents across relevant court roles.
  • Tailored guidance to be developed for the practitioner workforce on the use of the respondent risk assessment tool in the court context.
  • The development of reference material, including quick-reference guides to determining risk levels, to assist court staff with their decision-making around risk levels and risk management strategies.

Victoria Police

Key priorities for Victoria Police in 2022–23:

  • Refining Victoria Police policy and progressing activity regarding predominant aggressors to reduce the impact of misidentification by police, including:
    • supporting and providing training to police officers to identify the predominant aggressor before commencing a risk assessment, and before it is committed to the Law Enforcement Assistance Program crime database
    • reviewing how family violence records are captured in the Law Enforcement Assistance Program crime database to ensure that when misidentification has occurred, remedial action can be taken to resolve the issue
    • developing a clear process for an urgent return to court in matters where misidentification has occurred
    • working with other services, such as Child Protection and The Orange Door, to provide greater clarity on reporting concerns and providing support, and to ensure that when they do address protective concerns, perpetrators are also held to account.
  • The release of an updated Code of Practice for the Investigation of Family Violence to include contemporary information around police practice and the family violence system reforms that have occurred since 2019.

[22] Recommendation 7 of the Royal Commission into Family Violence recommended that the Victorian Government establish a secure Central Information Point, with a summary of the information being available to RAMPs.

Appendix 1: Prescribed organisations

Organisations prescribed in Phase 1 of MARAM: 18 August 2018

CISS, FVISS and MARAM — all reforms FVISS and/or MARAM only (not CISS) CISS or FVISS only CISS only
  • alcohol and other drugs services
  • child protection
  • public housing
  • designated mental health services
  • homelessness services (providing access point,
  • outreach or accommodation services)
  • Justice Health
  • Justice Health’s funded or contracted services for young people
  • Maternal and Child Health services
  • multi-agency panels to prevent youth offending
  • care services (formerly out-of-home care services)
  • perpetrator interventions, including trials under the Family Violence Perpetrator Intervention grants
  • registered community-based child and family services (including Child FIRST)
  • risk assessment and management panels
  • sexual assault support services
  • Sexually Abusive Behaviour Treatment Services (SABTS)
  • specialist family violence services (including family violence counselling and therapeutic programs)
  • The Orange Door (support and safety hubs)
  • Victims Assistance Program services
  • Victims of Crime Helpline
  • Victoria Police
  • Youth Justice
  • Youth Justice funded community support services or programs4
  • Youth Parole Board (Secretariat)
  • Adult Parole Board
  • Children’s Court
  • Corrections Victoria funded or contracted rehabilitation and reintegration services or programs, prisoner services or programs and clinical services or programs for offender rehabilitation
  • Corrections Victoria, Community Correctional Services and privately operated prisons
  • Court-ordered family violence counselling
  • Family Violence Restorative Justice Service
  • Justice Health’s funded or contracted services for adults
  • Magistrates’ Court
  • State Funded Financial Counselling Program
  • Tenancy Advice and Advocacy Program
  • Commission for Children and Young People
  • Disability Services Commissioner
  • Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages

Organisations prescribed in Phase 2: 19 April 2021

CISS, FVISS and MARAM — all reforms FVISS and/or MARAM only (not CISS) CISS or FVISS only CISS only
  • Government and non-government schools
  • Kindergartens
  • Long day care
  • Relevant non-government school system bodies
  • Out-of-school-hours care
  • Student disengagement and wellbeing services and programs funded by the Department of Education
  • The Department of Education, to the extent it delivers Child Health and Wellbeing Services
  • Doctors in schools
  • Ambulance Victoria (including contracted services)
  • Community Health Services
  • Community housing organisations, including Tenancy Plus Programs
  • Community-managed mental health services
  • Forensic Disability
  • Complex Needs Coordinators (MACNI)
  • Family Records and Intercountry Services
  • Refugee Minor Program
  • Homelessness support providers (other than those already prescribed under Phase 1)
  • Publicly funded metropolitan, regional and rural health services
  • Public health services
  • Denominational hospitals
  • Public hospitals
  • Publicly funded Early Parenting Centres
  • State-funded aged care services
  • Supported Playgroups
  • Multicultural and settlement support services
  • Children’s Court
  • Magistrates’ Court
  • Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority
  • Victorian Institute of Teaching
  • Victorian Registration and Qualifications Authority
  • General practitioners
  • General practice nurses
  • Parentline (MARAM only)
  • Dispute Settlement Centre of Victoria
  • N/A
  • Government and non-government schools
  • Kindergartens
  • Long day care
  • Relevant non-government school system bodies
  • Out-of-school-hours care
  • Student disengagement and wellbeing services and programs funded by the Department of Education
  • The Department of Education, to the extent it delivers Child Health and Wellbeing Services
  • Doctors in schools
  • Ambulance Victoria (including contracted services)
  • Community Health Services
  • Community housing organisations, including Tenancy Plus Programs
  • Community-managed mental health services
  • Forensic Disability
  • Complex Needs Coordinators (MACNI)
  • Family Records and Intercountry Services
  • Refugee Minor Program
  • Homelessness support providers (other than those already prescribed under Phase 1)
  • Publicly funded metropolitan, regional and rural health services
  • Public health services
  • Denominational hospitals
  • Public hospitals
  • Publicly funded Early Parenting Centres
  • State-funded aged care services
  • Supported Playgroups
  • Multicultural and settlement support services
  • Children’s Court
  • Magistrates’ Court

Appendix 2: Legislation and regulations

Family Violence Protection Act 2008

The Multi-Agency Risk Assessment and Management Framework (MARAM) reporting process, legislated in the Act, has 2 stages:

  1. Under s 192 of the Act, portfolio ministers prepare an annual report for the Minister for the Prevention of Family Violence on the prescribed matters relating to the implementation and operation of MARAM by 30 September (MARAM portfolio reports).
  2. Under s 193 of the Act, the Minister for the Prevention of Family Violence must prepare a consolidated annual report of the prescribed matters to be tabled within 6 sitting dates after 1 January, in the financial year immediately following the financial year to which the report relates (MARAM consolidated report).

It should be noted that portfolio reports are not tabled but are subject to Freedom of Information requests.

Family Violence Protection (Information Sharing and Risk Management) Regulations 2018

The prescribed matters are:

  • actions taken by a public entity or a public service body to support framework organisations and section 191 agencies, in relation to the implementation and operation of the approved framework
  • a summary of the progress of implementation of the approved framework by framework organisations and section 191 agencies
  • proposed future actions to be undertaken by public entities or public service bodies, to support ongoing implementation and operation by framework organisations and section 191 agencies with the approved framework.

Appendix 3: MARAM Pillars

Pillar Description

Pillar 1

Shared understanding of family violence

Framework organisations demonstrate an evidence-based, shared understanding of family violence risk and impact

Pillar 2

Consistent and collaborative practice

Framework organisations use a shared approach to identification, screening, assessment and management of family violence risk. Framework organisations use tools that are consistent with the evidence-based risk factors, and share information relevant to family violence risk assessment and management practice

Pillar 3

Responsibilities for risk assessment and management

Framework organisations understand their responsibilities in risk assessment and management practice

Pillar 4

Systems, outcomes and continuous improvement

Framework organisations establish and use structures to implement the framework, collect consistent information about the evidence-based risk factors, and undertake activities to change organisational culture and practice

Appendix 4: MARAM Principles

Principle Description

Principle 1

Family violence is unacceptable

Family violence involves a spectrum of seriousness of risk and presentations, and is unacceptable in any form, across any community or culture

Principle 2

Services collaborate and share information

Professionals should work collaboratively to provide coordinated and effective risk assessment and management responses, including early intervention when family violence first occurs to avoid escalation into crisis and additional harm

Principle 3

Gender inequality is a driver for family violence

Professionals should be aware, in their risk assessment and management practice, of the drivers of family violence, predominantly gender inequality, which also intersect with other forms of structural inequality and discrimination

Principle 4

Victim survivor agency is respected

The agency, dignity and intrinsic empowerment of victim survivors must be respected by partnering with them as active decision-making participants in risk assessment and management, including being supported to access and participate in justice processes that enable fair and just outcomes

Principle 5

Children are victim survivors in their own right

Family violence may have serious impacts on the current and future physical, spiritual, psychological, developmental and emotional safety and wellbeing of children, who are directly or indirectly exposed to its effects, and should be recognised as victim survivors in their own right

Principle 6

Children's vulnerabilities and needs are unique

Services provided to child victim survivors should acknowledge their unique experiences, vulnerabilities and needs, including the effects of trauma and cumulative harm arising from family violence

Principle 7

Culturally safe and non-discriminatory services for Aboriginal people

Services and responses provided to people from Aboriginal communities should be culturally responsive and safe, recognising Aboriginal understanding of family violence and rights to self-determination and self-management, and take account of their experiences of colonisation, systemic violence and discrimination and recognise the ongoing and present day impacts of historical events, policies and practices

Principle 8

Accessible non-discriminatory services for diverse groups

Services and responses provided to diverse communities and older people should be accessible, culturally responsive and safe, client-centred, inclusive and non-discriminatory

Principle 9

System wide view for perpetrator accountability

Perpetrators should be encouraged to acknowledge and take responsibility to end their violent, controlling and coercive behaviour, and service responses to perpetrators should be collaborative and coordinated through a system-wide approach that collectively and systematically creates opportunities for perpetrator accountability

Principle 10

A different approach for young people who use violence

Family violence used by adolescents is a distinct form of family violence and requires a different response to family violence used by adults, because of their age and the possibility that they are also victim survivors of family violence.

Appendix 5: MARAM Responsibilities

Responsibility Description

Responsibility 1

Respectful, sensitive and safe engagement

Ensure staff understand the nature and dynamics of family violence, facilitate an appropriate, accessible, culturally responsive environment for safe disclosure of information by service users, and respond to disclosures sensitively.
Ensure staff recognise that any engagement of service users who may

be a perpetrator must occur safely and not collude or respond to coercive behaviours.

Responsibility 2

Identification of family violence

Ensure staff use information gained through engagement with service users and other providers (and in some cases, through use of screening tools to aid identification/ or routine screening of all clients) to identify indicators of family violence risk and potentially affected family members.

Ensure staff understand when it might be safe to ask questions of clients who may be a perpetrator, to assist with identification.

Responsibility 3

Intermediate risk assessment

Ensure staff can competently and confidently conduct an intermediate risk assessment of adult and child victim survivors using structured professional judgement and appropriate tools, including the Brief and Intermediate Assessment tools.

Where appropriate to the role and mandate of the organisation or service, and when safe to do so, ensure staff can competently and confidently contribute to behaviour assessment through engagement with a perpetrator, including use of the Perpetrator Behaviour Assessment, and contribute to keeping them in view and accountable for their actions and behaviours.

Responsibility 4

Intermediate risk management

Ensure staff actively address immediate risk and safety concerns relating to adult and child victim survivors, and undertake intermediate risk management, including safety planning.

Those working directly with perpetrators attempt intermediate risk management when safe to do so, including safety planning.

Responsibility 5

Seek consultation for comprehensive risk assessment, risk management and referrals

Ensure staff seek internal supervision and further consult with family violence specialists to collaborate on risk assessment and risk management for adult and child victim survivors and perpetrators, and make active referrals for comprehensive specialist responses, if appropriate.

Responsibility 6

Contribute to information sharing with other services (as authorised by legislation)

Ensure staff proactively share information relevant to the assessment and management of family violence risk and respond to requests to share information from other information sharing entities under the Family Violence Information Sharing Scheme, privacy law or other legislative authorisation.

Responsibility 7

Comprehensive risk assessment

Ensure staff in specialist family violence positions are trained to comprehensively assess the risks, needs and protective factors for Family Violence Multi-Agency Risk Assessment and Management Framework adult and child victim survivors.

Ensure staff who specialise in working with perpetrators are trained and equipped to undertake comprehensive risk and needs assessment to determine seriousness of risk of the perpetrator, tailored intervention and support options, and contribute to keeping them in view and accountable for their actions and behaviours. This includes an understanding of situating their own roles and responsibilities in the broader system to enable mutually reinforcing interventions over time.

Responsibility 8

Comprehensive risk management and safety planning

Ensure staff in specialist family violence positions are trained to undertake comprehensive risk management through development, monitoring and actioning of safety plans (including ongoing risk assessment), in partnership with the adult or child victim survivor and support agencies.

Ensure staff who specialise in working with perpetrators are trained to undertake comprehensive risk management through development, monitoring and actioning of risk management plans (including information sharing); monitoring across the service system (including justice systems); and actions to hold perpetrators accountable for their actions. This can be through formal and informal system accountability mechanisms that support perpetrators’ personal accountability, to accept responsibility for their actions, and work at the behaviour change process.

Responsibility 9

Contribute to coordinated risk management

Ensure staff contribute to coordinated risk management, as part of integrated, multi-disciplinary and multiagency approaches, including information sharing, referrals, action planning, coordination of responses and collaborative action acquittal.

Responsibility 10

Collaborate for ongoing risk assessment and risk management

Ensure staff are equipped to play an ongoing role in collaboratively monitoring, assessing and managing risk over time to identify changes in assessed level of risk and ensure risk management and safety plans are responsive to changed circumstances, including escalation. Ensure safety plans are enacted.

Appendix 6: Program area descriptions

Program area Description

Adult and Youth Parole Boards

The Boards make decisions concerning the granting of parole, variation or cancellation of parole, and transfers between jurisdictions, and provides prisoners with a structured, supported and supervised transition, so that they can adjust from prison back into the community, rather than returning straight to the community at the end of their sentence without supervision or support. The paramount consideration of the Adult Parole Board is the safety and protection of the community. The Youth Parole Board is committed to the rehabilitation and best outcomes for young people under their jurisdiction. The board makes decisions within a framework that balances the needs of the young person with community safety considerations.

Alcohol and Other Drugs Services (AOD)

The Department of Health funds a variety of AOD services. These services typically employ a wide range of professionals, including counsellors, youth workers, medical staff, and residential withdrawal and rehabilitation staff. Approximately 40,000 Victorians access AOD services each year, many of whom have experienced or used family violence. AOD services can be accessed in community-based, hospital or residential settings. Specialist family violence advisors are funded by the Department of Health to provide advice to AOD services, with the goal of enhancing the quality and consistency of an AOD service’s response to clients who have experienced or used family violence.

Ambulance Victoria

Ambulance Victoria is a statutory authority that operates under the Ambulance Services Act 1986 and is part of the Ambulance Services portfolio, which reports to the Minister for Ambulance Services through the Department of Health. Ambulance Victoria’s Strategic Plan provides a promise to deliver a caring, safe, effective and connected experience. Ambulance Victoria provides pre-hospital treatment and transport across Victoria for people in urgent medical emergencies, as well as applying clinical expertise and experience to help resolve less-urgent medical issues. Ambulance Victoria provides emergency medical response to close to 6.6 million people in an area of more than 227,000 square kilometres. Ambulance Victoria paramedics and health practitioners also undertake a range of advocacy and referral activities, through partnerships with Victoria Police, health services and other agencies. On average, an Ambulance Victoria paramedic will attend 4 family violence incidents a year.

Bush Nursing Centres

Rural and regional health services are provided across Victoria. Services include public health services and hospitals, Aboriginal health services, community health services, bush nursing centres and bush nursing hospitals. Bush nursing centres and bush nursing hospitals are funded by the Department of Health to provide medical care to remote communities.

Care Services (CSOs, ACCOs, Secure Care Services, Hurstbridge Farm)

The Department of Families, Fairness and Housing funds a range of community service organisations and ACCOs to provide various care services. These include home-based care (foster or kinship care), and lead tenant and residential care homes. Children may be placed in care services when the Children’s Court determines the child or young person is unable to live safely with their family.

Care services allocate a case manager, who supports the child or young person, and their carer if they are in home-based care, in relation to the child or young person’s health, emotional and behavioural development, education, family and social relationships, identity, social presentation and self-care skills. Case managers support the child or young person to participate in case planning activities.

Centre-based education and care services

Centre-based education and care services include kindergartens, long day care and out-of-school-hours care services. These services work closely with children and their families during key developmental years, placing them in a unique position to identify and respond to family violence risk, provide ongoing support and contribute to ongoing management.

Child Protection

The Department of Families, Fairness and Housing Child Protection workforce provides child-centred, family-focused services to protect children and young people from significant harm caused by abuse or neglect, where a parent has not protected or is unlikely to protect their child. Child Protection practitioners receive and assess reports about children, make referrals, investigate and intervene to protect children where necessary. Child Protection practitioners develop case plans for children in need of protection. They work closely with children and families to access services and supports to enable parents to safely care for their children by addressing identified protective concerns. Where necessary, Child Protection may take matters to the Children’s Court and, where required for their immediate safety, place children in alternative care.

Community Based Child and Family Services (CFS) (Including Child FIRST)

Child and family services promote the safety, wellbeing and development of vulnerable children and young people, through case work support and practical interventions. Early and preventative help is critically important to prevent abuse and cumulative harm.

Community Correctional Services (CCS)

CCS, a division of Justice Services within Corrections and Justice Services, has responsibility for the delivery of community correctional services in Victoria. CCS staff manage and supervise orders of the court and the Adult Parole Board, including Community Correction Orders. Order conditions may include participating in appropriate educational programs, community work, and assessment and treatment programs, including participation in AOD and Violence treatment programs and Men’s Behaviour Change Programs.

Community Health Services (CHS)

The Department of Health funds a wide network of CHS that deliver a range of primary health, human services and community-based supports to meet the needs of their local community. There are 24 registered community health services and 55 integrated health services across Victoria.

Community Housing

Community housing refers to housing that is owned or managed by not-for-profit agencies that are registered with and regulated by the Victorian Housing Registrar, in accordance with the Housing Act 1983. Registered community housing agencies provide secure, affordable, long-term rental housing for eligible Victorians. Specialist providers support certain cohorts and may have specific programs for their renters, such as the aged, homeless young people or people with disability. Some registered community housing agencies also deliver homelessness services. The department provides funding to the peak body representing community housing, the Community Housing Industry Association Victoria.

Complex Needs Coordinators (Multiple and Complex Needs Initiative) (MACNI)

The Multiple and Complex Needs Initiative (MACNI) is a time-limited service for people aged 16 years and older, who have multiple and complex needs resulting from a combination of mental illness, substance abuse, intellectual impairment and/or acquired brain injury. A person must pose a serious risk of harm to themselves or others to be eligible for the service.

Consumer Affairs Victoria (CAV)

Consumer Affairs Victoria funds 13 community organisations to deliver the Financial Counselling Program and 9 to deliver the Tenancy Assistance and Advocacy Program (TAAP) across the 17 Department of Families, Fairness and Housing areas in Victoria. The FCP includes 21 funded full-time equivalent specialist family violence financial counsellors, who deal with complex cases and provide extended casework to people experiencing family violence.

Corrections Victoria (CV)

Corrections Victoria, within the Corrections and Justice Services, is responsible for the state’s correctional facilities and post-sentence scheme. Corrections Victoria manages the state’s system of correctional facilities, and is responsible for the implementation of policies, programs and services, which ensure the safe and secure containment of prisoners, and seek to rehabilitate offenders by addressing the underlying causes of offending behaviour. From July 2021, Community Correctional Services transitioned to Justice Services, a division of the Department of Justice and Community Safety.

Dispute Settlement Centre of Victoria (DSCV)

There are approximately 60 Department of Justice and Community Safety employees at DSCV, comprising Dispute Assessment Officers, mediators, administration staff and managers, all of whom have been determined to have responsibilities at the Screening and Identification level under MARAM, within the context of their work.

Early Parenting Centres

Early parenting centres provide specialist support for Victorian families with children aged 0-4 years. They deliver flexible, targeted services that aim to enhance the parent-child relationship and support parents with strategies for achieving their parenting goals. These goals are often in areas such as sleep and settling, child behaviour, and parent and child health and wellbeing.

Education services

All Victorian schools are now prescribed under the MARAMIS reforms. A range of system bodies, and education health, wellbeing and inclusion workforces, are also prescribed.

Family Violence Regional Integration Committees (FVRICs) and Principal Strategic Advisors (PSAs)

Family Violence Regional Integration Committees bring together representatives from regional family violence services and other key sectors and services, including child and family services, Child Protection, mental health services, homelessness services, housing services, courts, police and Indigenous Family Violence Regional Action Groups. Each FVRIC is convened by a Family Violence Principal Strategic Advisor (PSA). The PSAs work to drive the local implementation of key family violence reforms in their area, build partnerships and collaborate across sectors, build workers’ capability, and provide insight into operations, issues, functions and opportunities in their region.

Financial Counselling Program

The Financial Counselling Program is intended to support financially disadvantaged and vulnerable Victorians. Financial counsellors can offer a range of support, depending on someone’s eligibility for the service. This support could include providing advice about rights and responsibilities, negotiating with a creditor or working out a realistic payment plan for debts. Section 5 of the Family Violence Protection Act includes ‘economic abuse’ in the definition of family violence, and persons accessing counselling through the program may disclose family violence as a cause of economic hardship.

Forensic Disability Program

The Forensic Disability Program is for people with cognitive disability who have contact with the criminal justice system. The program provides targeted forensic disability treatment and support to a person, based on their disability and its effect on their criminogenic needs. It aims to contribute to community safety by reducing the risk of offending in people with cognitive disability, and by facilitating their integration and participation in the community.

Homelessness services

Homelessness services are funded by the Department of Families, Fairness and Housing, and delivered by housing and homelessness service providers. Services include crisis, short-term and medium-term accommodation and support, outreach services, advocacy and case management for people experiencing homelessness, or at risk of homelessness, including people escaping family violence. The department provides funding to the peak body representing homelessness services, the Council to Homeless Persons, which also received a sector grant from Family Safety Victoria to support MARAM alignment and information-sharing implementation.

Hospitals

The Department of Health funds public hospitals in metropolitan and rural Victoria. The hospital system provides a wide variety of health services, including emergency care, surgical services, perinatal care and rehabilitation services. As such, the hospital workforce comprises a wide range of medical, para-medical, allied health and administrative professionals, who work closely and sometimes intensively with patients and their families.

Justice Health

Justice Health is a business unit of the Department of Justice and Community Safety, and is responsible for health, mental health, and alcohol and other drug services in Victoria’s prisons and Youth Justice centres. Justice Health is also responsible for the delivery of health-related rehabilitation services across the Youth Justice system. Justice Health sets the standards for the delivery of these services, monitors service delivery and manages contracts with service providers (except for the contracts that relate to service provision in Victoria’s 3 private prisons).

Maternal Child Health (MCH) Services

The Maternal and Child Health Service is a free universal primary health service for all Victorian families with children from birth to school age. The service provides a comprehensive and focused approach for the promotion, prevention and early identification of the physical, emotional and social factors affecting young children and their families. The service supports child and family health, wellbeing and safety, focusing on maternal health and father-inclusive practice as a key enabler to optimise child learning and development.

Mental Health Services

The Department of Health funds 18 designated mental health services. These services provide voluntary and compulsory assessment and treatment to people, in accordance with the Mental Health Act 2014. The assessment and treatment may be provided in inpatient or community settings. Specialist family violence advisors also provide specialist family violence expertise and advice to designated mental health services.

Multicultural and settlement support services

Multicultural and settlement support services refer to organisations that provide settlement or targeted casework services specifically for migrants, refugees or asylum seekers. There are currently 41 organisations that provide these services in Victoria.

Northern Community Support Group

The Northern Community Support Group is a community-led program funded by the Community Crime Prevention Unit in the Department of Justice and Community Safety. The program aims to provide young people and the broader Muslim community in the northern suburbs of Melbourne with the support and opportunities they need to achieve their full potential and develop a sense of belonging in Australia. Support Group case managers understand the unique challenges facing their community and, given the right skills and support to confidently assess and manage family violence, they can achieve better outcomes for their clients experiencing family violence.

Public Housing

Public housing refers to housing owned by the government and managed by the department on behalf of the Director of Housing. It provides long-term rental to eligible Victorians at affordable rates. Eligible Victorians may include those who are unemployed, on low incomes, living with disability or mental illness, at risk of homelessness, and victim survivors of family violence.

Refugee Minor Program

The Refugee Minor Program is responsible for providing case management, supervision and support to young refugees, who have come to Australia without a parent or guardian, and have been referred to the department by the Commonwealth. Many of these young people will be living in the care of relatives. The Refugee Minor Program exercises guardianship responsibilities for some of these young people under the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act 1946 (Commonwealth) by ensuring their care arrangements are safe, stable and meet the needs of the child.

Risk Assessment and Management Panels (RAMPs)

A RAMP is a formally convened meeting, held at a local level, of 9 key agencies and organisations that contribute to the safety of women and children experiencing serious and imminent threat from family violence. Across Victoria, there are 18 RAMPs that each meet once a month to share information and take action to keep women and children at the highest risk from family violence safe.

Sexual Assault Services

Sexual assault services provide support and intervention to women, children and men who are victim survivors of sexual assault. This includes crisis care responses, counselling, casework, group-work, advocacy and a statewide after-hours telephone crisis service.

Specialist Family Violence Services

Specialist Family Violence Services aim to promote early intervention strategies to prevent the occurrence or escalation of family violence, and prevent the recurrence of family violence by offering post-crisis support.

State Funded Residential Aged Care Services

There are 73 aged care organisations, including 4 incorporated associations and 2 publicly funded residential services. Most aged care services are operated by public health services in rural and regional Victoria. There are 15 metropolitan health services and 69 rural health services in Victoria, with an estimated workforce size of 76,000 practitioners.

Supported Playgroups

Supported Playgroups target socially and economically disadvantaged families with children from birth to school age. They are led by a qualified facilitator, who delivers an evidence-based program (‘smalltalk’) to parents. This program helps parents build their skills and confidence, and improve the quality of the early home learning environment to support their child’s wellbeing, learning and development. Supported Playgroups also assist parents to connect with local services and supports in their community, and with other parents.

Tenancy Assistance and Advocacy Program (TAAP)

The TAAP is funded to assist Victorians who are financially disadvantaged, or victims of family violence, who have a private tenancy and who are experiencing tenancy problems that, if not addressed, may lead to homelessness or otherwise put at risk their health, safety and wellbeing.

The Aboriginal Justice Group

The Aboriginal Justice Group within the Department of Justice and Community Safety funds 2 ACCOs that are prescribed MARAM organisations and Information Sharing Entities under the FVISS. They are:

  • Djirra, Aboriginal Family Violence Prevention to deliver the Koori Women’s Place
  • Dardi Munwurro, Men’s Healing and Behavioural Change to deliver Ngarra Jarranounith Place.

The group supports culture and practice change across Djirra and Dardi Munwurro, and their regionally based services and partners, including other ACCOs in training and communications. The group also has a dedicated senior project officer, whose role includes promoting the seventh MARAM principle among mainstream service providers at every stakeholder forum.

The courts

The Magistrates’ Court of Victoria and Children’s Court of Victoria are collectively referred to as the courts in this report.

Affected family member refers to a person who has experienced family violence, also known as a victim survivor. The term is predominantly used in police and court proceeding to refer to the person to be protected by a Family Violence Intervention Order.

Respondent – in both individual and police applications for Family Violence Intervention Orders, the ‘respondent’ describes the person against whom an order is sought.

The Orange Door

The Orange Door is a free service for adults, children and young people, who are experiencing or have experienced family violence, and families who need extra support with the care of children. The Orange Door makes it easier for people to be safer and supported, by being a gateway to connecting people with Specialist Family Violence Services, family services, Aboriginal services and services for men who use violence.

Victim Services, Support and Reform (VSSR)

VSSR, within the Department of Justice and Community Safety, is the official Victorian Government agency responsible for helping people in Victoria to manage the effects of violent crime. VSSR oversees both the Victims of Crime Helpline and the Victims Assistance Program, 2 distinct programs in Victoria that provide a service to victims of crime, including victims of family violence. VSSR is also responsible for the Family Violence Restorative Justice Service, which facilitates restorative conversations for victim survivors of family violence. VSSR is the main support pathway for male victims of family violence in Victoria, via L17 reports from Victoria Police.

Victoria Police

The role of Victoria Police is to serve the Victorian community and uphold the law to promote a safe, secure and orderly society. Victoria Police provides policing services to the Victorian community across 54 Police Service Areas, within 21 divisions and 4 regions. Responding to family violence incidents, and working to keep perpetrators in view and accountable, and victim survivors safe, is an essential aspect of serving the Victorian community.

Youth Justice

The Department of Justice and Community Safety is responsible for the statutory supervision of children and young people in the criminal justice system. The Department of Justice and Community Safety’s Youth Justice Service provides programs and resources to assist these children and young people to develop the knowledge, skills and attitudes to manage their lives effectively without further offending. Through supervision, offending-related programs and linkages to appropriate support services, the Youth Justice service promotes opportunities for rehabilitation and contributes to the reduction of crime in the community.

Appendix 7: MARAM Change Management Strategic Priorities

Strategic Priority 1: Demonstrate clear leadership that cultivates trust across service systems and organisations

The Victorian Government, departments and sector peak bodies will provide clear and consistent leadership that encourages a shared understanding of risk, respects sector expertise and cultivates trust across organisations.

Strategic Priority 2: Facilitate consistent and collaborative practice

The Victorian Government, departments and sector peak bodies ensure service systems have operational procedures that enable the timely identification of risk, information sharing, and consistent and collaborative practice.

Strategic Priority 3: Build workforce and staff capability

The Victorian Government, departments and sector peak bodies ensure staff across sectors will be supported to build their capacity, skills and practice knowledge to identify and manage risks, and share information effectively, in line with their roles and expertise.

Strategic Priority 4: Recognition of good practice and commitment to continuous improvement

The Victorian Government, departments and sector peak bodies ensure mechanisms for sharing lessons learned across sectors are in place to reinforce good practice.

Appendix 8: Abbreviations

  • ACCO - Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisation
  • AMES - Adult Multicultural Education Services
  • CFECFW - The Centre for Excellence in Child and Family Welfare
  • CIP - Central Information Point
  • CISS - Child Information Sharing Scheme
  • CJS - Corrections and Justice Services
  • CRM - Client Relationship Management System
  • CPT - Case Prioritisation Tool
  • CPRM - Case Prioritisation and Response Model
  • ECA - Early Childhood Australia
  • FVISS - Family Violence Information Sharing Scheme
  • FVIU - Family Violence Investigation Unit
  • LGBTIQA+ - Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer, asexual
  • MACNI - Multiple and Complex Needs Initiative
  • MARAM - the Family Violence Multi-Agency Risk Assessment and Management Framework
  • MARAMIS - MARAM and Information Sharing
  • MCV - Magistrates' Court of Victoria
  • NTV - No To Violence
  • RAMP - Risk Assessment and Management Panel
  • the Royal Commission - the Royal Commission into Family Violence
  • SHIP - Specialist Homelessness Information Platform
  • SHRFV - Strengthening Hospital Responses to Family Violence Initiative
  • TAAP - Tenancy Assistance and Advocacy Program
  • TAFE - Technical and Further Education
  • the Act - Family Violence Protection Act 2008 (Vic)
  • TRAM - Tools For Risk Assessment and Management
  • VAADA - Victorian Alcohol and Drug Association
  • VACCA - Victorian Aboriginal Child Care Agency
  • VACSAL - Victorian Aboriginal Community Services Association Limited
  • VCAT - Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal
  • VHA - Victorian Healthcare Association
  • VSSR - Victim Services, Support and Reform
  • WoVG - Whole of Victorian Government