• 6 months ago
A major national childcare provider has been accused of discrimination for excluding a young boy from attending, after he was diagnosed with epilepsy. Advocates say his situation is not unique and it is vital all children are given the same early learning opportunities.

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00:00Alfie is four years old and a little pocket rocket. But his world was recently turned
00:12upside down when he was diagnosed with epilepsy and asked to leave his long-term kinder.
00:18I actually didn't believe it. I had a really big cry.
00:22The ABC has chosen not to show Alfie's face or use his surname. His old early learning
00:29centre was run by Guardian, which looks after 10,000 children every day across 170 locations
00:36nationwide. But after conducting a risk assessment, it told Alfie's family it couldn't safely
00:43care for him anymore.
00:45Our neurologist has described Alfie's epilepsy as boring. It's absolute discrimination.
00:51There is just no way around it.
00:53A recent survey by the Peak Body for Children with Disability found one in five members
00:58had kids who had been refused enrolment in childcare. Almost a quarter said their child's
01:04attendance hours were restricted and nearly 30 per cent said their child was excluded
01:09from activities.
01:11Consistency with education is crucial if we're going to achieve long-term positive outcomes
01:17for children with disability.
01:19Cassandra says the instability has seen Alfie regress. She wants to prevent other children
01:25from experiencing what he did.
01:28It's no longer about Alfie. It's about any kid with a disability.
01:32In a statement, Guardian has told the ABC it does not discriminate and decisions to
01:37stop caring for any child are taken seriously. It says it has a duty to look after everyone
01:43in its centres, both children and staff.

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