Use this as an active operating surface or current narrative. Keep this as one of the main working surfaces and use it to direct people to the next action.
Promise → Provider → Process → Award → Local Alternative
This is the live CivicGraph chain for Queensland crime prevention schools. It combines official public sources, the local justice funding mirror, the local state tender mirror, and the already-visible provider field in the target regions.
What the Rockhampton provider field looks like right now
This turns the site filter into an operator view: who is most visible on the ground, who already has contract-linked exposure in the Queensland system, and where the community-controlled alternatives sit relative to that stack.
Highest local mirrored presence in the selected site field.
Providers in the site field that already have visible QLD contract-disclosure exposure.
Community-controlled organisations already visible in the same catchment.
What is strong, what is weak, what is still hidden
Promise layer
Hansard + statements + budget framing are explicit.
Named providers
Men of Business and Ohana are both visible in the public record.
Tender process
Public EOI trace exists, but CivicGraph does not yet mirror that tender row.
Award / payment
Ohana has a mirrored awarded row; Men of Business does not yet.
Local alternatives
Target regions already contain community-controlled and non-aggregate providers.
Queensland has a visible promise chain and a visible provider market, but not yet a fully visible tender-to-award chain.
That means the right accountability question is no longer “was this promised?” It is “who actually got selected, under what process, and compared to which local alternatives?”
The largest current gap is the missing local mirror row for the Crime Prevention Schools EOI / tender process, even though the public QTenders / VendorPanel trace is visible.
Official Source Chain
These are the official or official-adjacent public sources that form the current chain.
Hansard promise names Ohana and Men of Business
Parliamentary debate records two Youth Justice Schools via Ohana for Youth and four early intervention schools, including Men of Business on the Gold Coast.
and, along with $40 million for four early intervention schools. One will be delivered on the Gold Coast by Marco Renai—the 2024 Australian of the Year from Queensland—through his Men of Business school aimed at re-engaging 900 students who have fallen out of mainstream schooling and are assessed as at risk of falling into crime throughout Queensland. Youth crime is not just about statistics; it is about people. It is about the small business owner who is repeatedly targeted. It is about the family whose sense of security has been shattered by a home invasion. It is about every victim who dese
Government singles out Men of Business and says tenders will follow
Official statement says $50M over five years for four Crime Prevention Schools, with Men of Business first and tenders later for Townsville, Rockhampton, and Ipswich.
A Fresh Start For Queensland: Crime Prevention Schools underway with Budget funding - Ministerial Media Statements search menu Search Queensland Government The Queensland Cabinet and Ministerial Directory About Cabinet Cabinet documents Ministers and Portfolios Media Statements Home Media Statements Media Statements Subscribe Help and Support Published Monday, 23 June, 2025 at 10:21 AM JOINT STATEMENT Premier and Minister for Veterans The Honoura
Budget envelope confirms the early intervention spend
Budget statement places Crime Prevention Schools inside the broader early intervention youth justice funding package.
rdcore repeat offenders. The Budget delivers $215 million new early intervention programs to divert at-risk youth from a life of crime, including Gold Standard Early Intervention, Crime Prevention Schools and Regional Reset programs. The Budget also includes $225 million to deliver the new Staying On Track rehabilitation program, with intensive rehabilitation for 12 months after detention, to reverse Labor’s 94% reoffending rate for youths leaving detention. Other key initiatives include: $40 million for two Youth Justice Schools for children on youth justice orders, to help divert youth
Question on Notice 769 confirms procurement process for the remaining three sites
Official answer says Men of Business is first and the department will undertake a procurement process and call for tenders for Townsville, Rockhampton, and Ipswich.
emy is the first of the Crime Prevention Schools to receive funds of $10 million to expand their existing capability to include Years 7 to 10. The department will be undertaking a procurement process and calling for tenders to operate the other three Crime Prevention Schools in the Townsville, Rockhampton, and Ipswich regions. If successful applicants are not already accredited, they may then be required to apply for accreditation with the Non-State Schools Accreditation Board in accordance with the Education (Accreditation of Non-State Schools) Act 2017. The service provider for the Crisafull
Committee hearing restates Ohana delivery pathway
Estimates hearing records Ohana as the Youth Justice School service provider and places the schools inside the committee-answered funding narrative.
justice orders. Whilst the crime prevention schools might take youth on youth justice orders, the youth justice schools are specifically targeted at youth on youth justice orders. Ohana for Youth runs the successful Arcadia College on the Gold Coast. It is the service provider for the schools in Logan and in Cairns. They deliver highly specialised behavioural reform with individualised and dedicated case management, one-on-one mentoring, family support and parental coaching to provide wrap-around supports that lead to long-term change. We know that the previous 82 Estimates—Youth Justice and V
QTenders / VendorPanel trace appears for Crime Prevention Schools
Public EOI trace for VP476087 shows an open provider process signal, even though that row is not yet mirrored in CivicGraph state tenders.
QTenders serves this record through a client-rendered shell, so the tracker uses the structured public trace fields and the existing CivicGraph mirror-gap check rather than a server-rendered tender detail page.
Named Providers In The Mirror
Direct rows already visible in the CivicGraph youth justice mirror for the organisations at the centre of the current story.
Tender / Process Gap
This is the critical break in the chain between public promise and structured procurement evidence.
Award / Payment Trace That Is Visible
These rows exist now in the local QLD state tender mirror and are the current best structured procurement evidence around the named provider field.
Youth Justice Buyer Departments
The underlying youth justice procurement field is large. That makes the missing structured Crime Prevention Schools row even more significant.
Existing Provider Field In The Target Regions
Non-aggregate youth-justice-linked providers already visible across Logan, Gold Coast, Ipswich, Rockhampton, Townsville, and Cairns/Yarrabah, now joined to the repaired QLD contract-disclosure mirror.
Community-Controlled Alternatives Already Visible
These are community-controlled organisations already visible in the same catchments through the local mirror.
This should now become a true process tracker, not just a source chain.
The next engineering move is to ingest the Crime Prevention Schools EOI metadata itself, then add QON and estimates rows into a structured evidence table so the chain can be filtered by site, provider, process step, and evidence depth.