A year into its existence, GaLTaS was registered on 17 September 1992 as an Australian
Incorporated Society that was managed by a committee elected at each
AGM, headed by two
co-convenors. Parents were invited to all meetings, both individually and through the working association with PFLAG and the P&C. Previous attempts to set up
support organisations such as the similarly named
'GAYTAS' in 1978 had not survived, with same-sex relationships at that stage still a
criminal offence in New South Wales until law repeal in 1984, and in West Australia, Queensland and Tasmania until 1989, 1990 and 1997 respectively. However, GaLTaS prevailed after LGBT+ students themselves spoke openly to both
LGBT+ media and
mainstream media.
Background Incipient moves to establish support networks for LGBT+ students and teachers included the Gay Teachers and Students Group (originally called the 'Gay Teachers Group'), established in Melbourne in 1975. This group spearheaded efforts to reform attitudes in relation to schooling and homosexuality by working with and seeking to influence, politicians and the broader community. In 1978, the group published
Young, Gay and Proud, a book written for adolescents exploring a gay identity. An Americanised version of the same name was published in 1980. The Lesbian Teachers Group based in Sydney formed in June 1978, with the NSW Gay Teachers and Students (GAYTAS) group forming in 1979. The two groups worked both separately and collaboratively to agitate for change. Despite students being part of GAYTAS's name, the group did not have any student members. Nevertheless, they were attacked in Parliament by
Mick Clough, who called for an inquiry to ensure that students were "protected from homosexual pressure". Clough also opposed
decriminalisation of homosexuality in 1984.
Gay Gang Murders The impetus to set up the new association for LGBT+ teachers and students had reached a crucial point following the murder convictions and 18-year prison sentences handed down in 1990 to
8 students (the "Alexandria Eight") from Sydney's
Cleveland Street High School and a North Shore Catholic School for the
gay-related killing of 33-year-old New Zealander Richard Johnson. Another group of 30 youths aged 12–18 (the "Bondi Boys") were active in throwing gay men to their deaths off the cliffs of Marks Park,
Tamarama (colloquially
euphemised as "cliff jumping"). As many as 88 men were killed, including
Scott Johnson,
Ross Warren, Gilles Mataini and John Russell, with their deaths initially dismissed as "suicide", "accident" or otherwise "not suspicious". Amid a
spate of such attacks, gay Social Science teacher Wayne Tonks was also brutally murdered by two 16-year-old students from Cleveland Street High School after he had received threats at the school and had his
Artarmon flat ransacked. Aside from the two who killed him, Tonks had previously taught three of the boys eventually convicted of Richard Johnson's murder. By 2023, there were still "50 to 100 persons of interest at least known" to
NSW Police.
Political response In February 1993,
Education Minister Virginia Chadwick agreed to a meeting with GaLTaS at the
New South Wales Parliament led by Derek Williams with former Gay and Lesbian Rights Lobby Co-Convenor, Carole Ruthchild and
some of the students being subjected to
homophobic victimisation and
violence at their school. Following an interview with Chadwick and Williams by
Quentin Dempster on the
7:30 Report, Chadwick announced a draft
Procedures For Resolving Complaints About Discrimination Against Students, that would provide a means for LGBT+ students to achieve redress and complete their education. Following the publication of the
SchoolWatch Report, this was eventually promulgated in 1996 and the
New South Wales Education Department also published a revised
Resources for Teaching Against Violence kit, which included a substantial section devoted to 'Violence and Homophobia'. These measures were primarily intended to reverse the escalation of ubiquitous homophobic student invective into serious crime such as assault and homicide that were having life-changing consequences not only for their victims, but also for their juvenile perpetrators.
The SchoolWatch Report and LGBT+ Youth Hotline In March 1993, GaLTaS was awarded a Federal National Youth Grant of $30,000 (=c.$72,947.57 equivalent in 2026) by the
Department of Employment, Education and Training to establish a toll-free
telephone hotline for gay and lesbian student victims of homophobic harassment and violence in schools. A team of 18 counsellors was trained by GaLTaS parent convenor Kay Humphreys and counsellor Karen Paroissien during May 1993. More than 500 calls were taken after the hotline was launched on 17 July 1993. Research from surveys conducted by Jacqui Griffin was compiled for inclusion in
The SchoolWatch Report : A Study into Anti-Lesbian and Anti-Gay Harassment and Violence in Australian Schools, with foreword by
Paul O'Grady MLC and Epilogue by Derek Williams.
SchoolWatch was modelled on the Gay and Lesbian Rights Lobby's
Streetwatch Report on anti-LGBT+ violence, launched in 1990 by Police Minister
Ted Pickering. Chadwick subsequently launched the
SchoolWatch Report on 6 March 1995 at
Randwick Boys High School in a ceremony attended by teachers, students, Griffin, Williams, the headmaster Geoff McNeill who had invited Chadwick, and the school's
P&C. Following the launch, the SchoolWatch Committee was formed in June 1995 by Williams (with Griffin later becoming Secretary) to bring together representatives from the
New South Wales Department of Education, the
Board of Studies, the
New South Wales Parents and Citizens Association, the
New South Wales Teachers Federation, the
Independent Education Union of Australia, the
Catholic Education Office (CEO), the
New South Wales Anti-Discrimination Board, independent MP
Clover Moore and the
NSW Police Gay Liaison Officer to address ongoing issues of school bullying,
suicidal ideation,
suicide among LGBT youth and homicide by students, via
workshops, teacher training and books in schools programmes. In September 1995, the
New South Wales Legislative Council Standing Committee on Social Issues referenced the
SchoolWatch Report data in
A Report into Youth Violence in New South Wales, noting significant
under-reporting: After the defeat of the
NSW Liberal Party by
Labor at the
1995 New South Wales state election, Chadwick was succeeded as Education Minister by
John Aquilina, who later abruptly
shelved implementation of her reforms. In February 1997, as GaLTaS delegate, Williams addressed a
Parliament of Australia forum on youth suicide convened by then Prime Minister,
John Howard, working with
Heather Horntvedt who represented
PFLAG in her address to the forum.
Northern Territory Attempts to set up regional branches of GaLTaS sometimes met stiff political opposition. In February 1993, upon hearing Jacqui Griffin was setting up a GaLTaS office in her home town of
Darwin in collaboration with the parent group
PFLAG, NT Education Minister
Mike Reed expressed concerns in an
ABC radio broadcast that GaLTaS would "recruit impressionable children". He called GaLTaS "discriminating and bigoted" and said it was "about time they recognised they are a minority group." Nevertheless, 30 years later, the
Northern Territory Government under
Labor would
revoke entirely all anti-LGBT religious exemptions from its anti-discrimination legislation, with Griffin in attendance.
Wood Royal Commission During the Justice
James Roland Wood Royal Commission into the New South Wales Police Service, Derek Williams represented GaLTaS in submissions on behalf of LGBT+ teachers and students. In an interview on the
7:30 Report by
Quentin Dempster, Williams outlined the GaLTaS Code of Ethics and student welfare policy that had been revised the year before by Jacqui Griffin and adopted at a
SGM in December 1995. == Workshops and Conferences ==