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As Melbourne goes into another extended lockdown, ACD and Amaze are gravely concerned about the lack of provision for students with disability.
There is strong evidence that school closures have a severe and disproportionate impact on many students with disability (including autistic students) and their families. Over the last year ACD and Amaze have heard from over a thousand families about how their child’s learning, well-being and mental health have deteriorated during lock downs and remote learning. We have also heard about damaging impacts on families.
These issues have been well documented by Amaze and ACD, by the Victorian Parliament (PAEC), and in reports commissioned by the Victorian Government – all of which acknowledged the need for special measures for students with disability.
Yet despite this, the restrictions currently applying to students with disability are tighter than they were during the toughest lock downs in 2020.
While appreciating the need to limit community circulation to arrest the spread of Covid-19, we note that hundreds of thousands of children are currently able to attend childcare and kindergarten. In contrast, the needs of students with disability – who comprise a much smaller group – appear to have been disregarded.
This is having devastating consequences. Over the last week, we are hearing of children becoming destructive and damaging things; children who are regressing (e.g., child stopped talking); parents who cannot work, shop or care for others because of their child’s very high supervision needs; and families – often with multiple children or parents with disability – that are not coping.
We call on the Victorian Government to: