New licensing criteria allow digital-only records from April 2026, creating a perfect environment for undetectable backdating. Without forensic-grade audit trails, your service is one funding audit away from a clawback and a tampering allegation.
Digital-only records are “easy to alter or update following an incident.” The Office of Early Childhood Education (OECE) states this plainly. Your service’s financial and legal integrity now depends entirely on metadata you cannot see. A clean digital overwrite leaves no trace. An auditor’s job is to find it.
The Audit Trigger
Auditors run a simple extraction. They cross-reference your digital attendance logs against parent-signed verification sheets and enrolment agreements. The trigger is a discrepancy. A child marked present with no corresponding parent signature for that week. A pattern of attendance that perfectly matches contracted hours, suggesting auto-fill. A record altered after the date of a reported incident. Their software flags systems that lack immutable change logs. Your explanation—”a technical glitch” or “staff error”—is irrelevant. The evidence shows a record was changed. The Ministry assumes the motive: to falsely claim funding.
The Regulatory Hook
Your obligation is not just to keep records, but to maintain them “without any loss of integrity” for seven years (GMA109). You must make them “readily accessible” to officials with a right of entry under section 626 of the Education and Training Act 2020 (GMA110). An electronic system without a compliant audit trail fails the integrity test on arrival. The enforcement is mathematical and automatic. Every hour of unverified or phantom attendance identified in an audit results in a direct financial recovery. The Ministry simply reverses the payment. Your board must then explain the loss.
Director Action Point
“Show me the immutable audit log for our digital attendance system. Who can alter a record, and does the log prove conclusively they could not have done so after a funding audit was announced?”