The Aurora Case: When Culture and Compliance Collide
What Went Wrong at Aurora
Aurora Community Care was found to have committed serious and systemic failures as an NDIS provider, resulting in the tragic death of a participant. The Federal Court determined that Aurora breached its obligations under the National Disability Insurance Scheme Act 2013 on 131 occasions, reflecting both cultural and operational breakdowns.
Supervision and Safety Failures
- Aurora failed to provide the required 24/7 two-on-one supervision for a participant known to be at high risk of absconding.
- On the night of the incident, one support worker was asleep and the other was in a separate room, allowing the participant to leave unsupervised and enter a motorway, where they were fatally struck by a vehicle.
Breaches in Reporting and Participant Rights
Aurora’s leadership did not ensure staff followed safety protocols or complied with reporting obligations. They failed to report the use of restrictive practices, such as chemical restraints, and did not implement a long-term behaviour support plan to address the participant’s needs and risks. Media reports also noted a delay of around 11 days before Aurora notified the NDIS Commission of the participant’s death — a further breach of critical-incident reporting requirements. The Federal Court found that Aurora’s leaders ignored their legal obligations under the NDIS Act. Even after the company entered liquidation, the $2.2 million penalty sent a clear message that leadership accountability cannot be outsourced or ignored.
Turning Values into Safe Practice
True leadership in disability services is not measured by policies or compliance checklists. It is measured by the lived experience of employees and participants, and by the everyday choices that shape safety, dignity, and trust. The NDIS Practice Standards and Code of Conduct are more than regulatory requirements; they are a call to embed rights, responsibilities, and risk management into the very DNA of provider culture.
When leaders are committed, they put values into action. Every roster, handover, and incident response should reflect person-centred care, transparency, and accountability. However, Aurora’s culture allowed unsafe practices to become routine. Staff slept on duty, supervision gaps appeared, and safeguards eroded. These failures exposed people to harm.
Dignity was not centered. Trauma-informed support was missing. Staff overlooked participants’ fundamental rights. Instead of fostering safety and respect, operational shortcuts and complacency put people at risk. This failure to embed person-centred, trauma-informed principles at every level of service delivery not only breached regulatory standards, but also betrayed the trust placed in providers.
Operational Failures and the Need for Active Governance
Leaders and employees must understand: governance requires action. It must turn values into systems that are visible, measurable, and responsive. Embedding the ethics and values of the NDIS Code of Conduct, Rights and Responsibilities, Provider Governance and Operational Management, and Risk Management is not just about compliance. It is about creating a culture where safety is a habit, dignity is foundational, and every person’s experience is valued. Only then can providers move beyond compliance to true optimisation, where leadership and employee experience converge to deliver safer, more resilient disability services.
Why Quality Onboarding Protects Participants and Staff
The Importance of Quality Onboarding
Quality onboarding sets the foundation for safe, effective disability services. When providers approach onboarding as a process focused only on numbers or compliance, they risk missing the unique needs, strengths, and vulnerabilities of each participant. This can lead to misunderstandings, unprepared staff, and gaps in risk management.
Consequences of Poor Onboarding
When onboarding is rushed or generic, critical information about participants may be overlooked. Staff may not receive the training or context they need to support individuals safely and confidently. As a result, risk controls can be unclear, and early warning signs of issues may go unnoticed. Ultimately, this exposes both participants and staff to preventable harm and undermines trust in the service.
Leadership’s Role in Onboarding
Leaders are responsible for setting the tone and expectations for onboarding. By prioritising thorough, person-centred onboarding, leaders ensure that every participant’s needs and risks are understood from the outset. This includes investing in resources and systems, providing staff with specific training, and establishing clear communication channels for raising concerns or escalating issues.
Transforming Onboarding into a Safeguard
Effective onboarding is not just about meeting regulatory requirements—it is about embedding a culture of safety, respect, and accountability from day one. Leaders should regularly review onboarding practices, seek feedback from staff and participants, and update processes to reflect lessons learned. When onboarding is intentional and dynamic, it becomes the first and most important safeguard for everyone involved.
Elevate Your Disability Service by Investing in Quality Onboarding
Quality onboarding is the foundation for safer, more person-centred disability services. When leaders invest in thoughtful onboarding processes, they set the tone for safety, dignity, and excellence at every level of their organisation. By prioritising best-practice onboarding, you move beyond compliance and foster a culture where every participant and staff member feels valued and protected. If you are seeking to reflect on and strengthen your onboarding practices, exploring our Quality Onboarding Checklist for Disability Service Providers can help you identify areas for improvement and guide practical steps toward embedding a culture of safety, dignity, and excellence throughout your organisation.