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Webinar: Preparing for Queensland’s Reportable Conduct Scheme

Feb 12, 2026

Online

Date: Thursday 12 February, 2026
Time: 10am AEST / 11am AEDT

Queensland’s Reportable Conduct Scheme (RCS), commencing on 1 July 2026, is one of the most significant child-safety and governance reforms the state has introduced in decades. For the first time, thousands of organisations will be legally required to identify, report, investigate, and document serious allegations involving children — within strict statutory timeframes and under independent regulatory oversight.

Join this practical webinar, hosted by both Comtrac and RTO Investigation Compliance & Enforcement Systems. The webinar will cover initiatives to help organisations prepare for the RCS, including skills uplift within your teams, an upcoming workshop, and the investigation and reporting tool Comtrac, which can support readiness and compliance ahead of the 1 July 2026 commencement date.

Speakers

Craig Doran, CEO and Founder, Comtrac

Craig Doran is the Founder and CEO of Comtrac and a former Queensland Police officer with more than two decades of frontline and investigative experience. After leaving policing, he focused on reducing the growing administrative burden that pulled investigators away from operational work.

Today, Craig contributes to law enforcement from the private sector by leading AI-enabled investigation and evidence management technology used across Australia. Comtrac recently won the Telstra Best of Business National Award for Embracing Innovation for leadership in responsible, tightly governed AI.

Craig is known for championing strong guardrails, human oversight, and safe, auditable AI aligned with real-world investigative practice.

Nadine Seifert, Director, Investigation Compliance & Enforcement Systems (RTO 31398)

Nadine began her career in criminal law, working as a prosecutor both in Australia and overseas.

But after years in “the system”, she grew frustrated by its limits — the same people cycling through courts, victims left without real closure, and change feeling just out of reach.

That’s what drew her to ICETS. She took the chance to make a difference from the ground up: by educating the public servants responsible for compliance, inspections, and investigations before problems arise.

For Nadine, it’s not just about the law. It’s about prevention, empowerment, and real community impact.


Webinar: Preparing for Queensland’s Reportable Conduct Scheme