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Overview of the School Community Safety Order Scheme

An overview of the Scheme including the types of orders, who it affects and other essential information.

The School Community Safety Order Scheme

Schools are positive places of learning and work where everyone has a right to a safe and healthy environment. Everyone in the school community plays a shared role in being respectful. Sometimes parents, carers or other adults behave aggressively towards staff, students or others in the school community. When this happens, it can affect the physical and mental health, safety and wellbeing of others.

The Education and Training Reform Act 2006 was amended by the Education and Training Reform Amendment (Protection of School Communities) Act 2021 to set up the School Community Safety Order Scheme (Scheme). The Scheme will allow principals and other authorised persons in Victorian schools to make School Community Safety Orders (Orders). Orders can stop or limit parents, carers and other adults who behave in harmful, threatening, or abusive ways towards people in the school community.

Watch the video for a short overview of the Scheme:

https://player.vimeo.com/video/723185699?autoplay=0

View transcript

Orders can set limits on how a person can behave around certain people, at certain times, at the school or other places where school activities happen. The Order may also include special exceptions like times when, or areas where, the Order does not apply.

Orders are intended to be a last resort option where there are no other less restrictive options available. If an Order is made to a person who has a child at the school, the school must make sure that the child can continue to go to school and allow the parent or carer to remain involved with their education.

Types of Orders

There are two types of Orders that principals and other authorised persons can make to stop or limit different types of behaviours – Ongoing and Immediate Orders.

Ongoing School Community Safety Orders

Ongoing Orders may be in place for up to 12 months and can limit:

Ongoing Orders can be made if an authorised person reasonably believes that a person:

Immediate School Community Safety Orders

Immediate Orders stop a person from entering or remaining on any school-related place of the relevant school. They can be in place for up to 14 days.

Immediate Orders can be made orally or in writing where an adult who is not a staff member or a student at the school presents an unacceptable and immediate risk of:

Who can an Order be issued to?

Orders can be made to adults (18 years old or over) who are not staff members or students of the school where an Order is proposed to be made. This may include:

Consequences for breaching a School Community Safety Order

The Secretary (for government schools) or a person appointed by a non-government school may apply to the Magistrates’ Court for one of the following orders:

A person who breaches an Order will not be jailed, receive a criminal record or a criminal penalty. This is if that behaviour itself does not amount to a criminal offence.

Appealing an Order

A person subject to an ongoing order can apply to the school that made the Order for an internal review. The internal review may review the authorised person’s decision to:

If the subject of an ongoing order disagrees with the outcome of an internal review, they can apply to the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal for an external review.

More information

The Scheme is part of a suite of measures to create and support a safe and respectful learning environment within Victorian schools.

Education & training

Updated 26 March 2026



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