Skip to main content
PretaGovPretaGov

PretaGov

  • About
  • Insights
  • Work
  • Services
info@email.com
00 (123) 456 78 90
Contact

Working with Kids Register: NSW CCYP

About the Client

The NSW Commission for Children and Young People is an independent statutory organisation within the state government that advocates for the children and young people of New South Wales.

The Challenges

Self employed persons working with children must have any criminal history verified before they are permitted to do so. The problem posed is one of issuing certificates efficiently which employers or parents can use to verify that a potential employee is not prohibited from engaging in child-related employment. Prior to the online register Police checks and certification were a manual, time consuming process resulting in frustration for all stakeholders including parents.

The whole certificate business system must be such that it:

Provides a convenient way for applicants to apply and pay for their certificates (at their local police station) and receive those certificates. 

One of the primary challenges encountered at the outset of the project was the absence of a clearly defined workflow or user experience (UX) determined by the client. This posed a significant risk, as the success of the entire project hinged on establishing a robust foundation for both the workflow and UX aspects.

The Solution - Online Certificate and Register for self employed people working with children.

PretaGov undertook an extensive discovery phase to meticulously outline more than 20 scenarios covering a broad spectrum of use cases. This comprehensive process carefully documented all relevant actors, such as applicants, Police records systems, and employers, along with the intricate workflows essential for the successful implementation of the legislation.

Drawing from this initial requirements document, PretaGov engaged in collaborative codesign sessions with key stakeholders to ensure the seamless development of the system.

The development phase resulted in a public facing website that allowed the submission of certificate applications and online verfication of valid certificates. This interfaced with an internal web application that verifies the criminal records of self-employed persons which is workflowed via 12 states managed by various internal CCYP staff.

The system subsequently issues certificates or rejection notices. The solution interfaces with NSW Police records to verify relevant criminal history. Extensive "sunny" and "rainy" day (exceptions) use cases were indentified to ensure workflow was implemented to move the application through the system without delays or issues.

Quality assurance was assured with inbuilt unit testing and doc testing framework to identify and rectify bugs.

The technology stack and methodologies used during development covers:...Dylan to fill in.

On-going support and maintenance is carried out for their dedicated server.

Technically the solution covered:

  • integration with Police criminal records database
  • eforms workflow for public certification applications
  • UX design processes to understand the workflow
  • Watertight security dealing with senstitive personal data such as ID documents and police check information.

Major Outcomes

Provided online verification that the self employed person has Police clearance to work with children.

Digitised and streamlined the manual process for police clearance applications and the issuing of certificates.

In summary, PretaGov developed a secure web application that allowed:

Police to register applicants wishing to work with children.

Please contact us if you are interested in learning more.

PretaGov

© 2026 PretaGov.
All rights reserved.

PretaGov UK

Suite 2A, Blackthorn House
St Pauls Square
Birmingham, B3 1RL
+44 (0) 208 819 3887
contact@pretagov.co.uk

PretaGov Australia

Suite 97, Level 3
515 Kent Street
Sydney NSW 2000
+61 (2) 9955 2830
contact@pretagov.com.au

Legal

  • Blog
  • Privacy Statement
  • Anti-slavery Statement
  • Accessibility Statement