Briefly -To be a midwife in Australia you have to have qualifications which enable you to be registered with AHPRA (Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency), which is a national body responsible for ensuring the quality of training midwives and registered nurses (including ongoing competency) They also regulate most other health professionals (doctors, dentists, physios etc) on behalf of the individual professions medical boards
Midwives registered with AHPRA, as long as maintaining registration guidelines, can practice across all states in Australia.
This was not the case prior to 2007 when each state required individual registration to their own state boards to practice.
Notably to comply with conditions of registration in the area of midwifery AHPRA requires all midwives to annually declare whether or not they are practicing home births (excluding hospital based home birth programs) and will not insure (and usually cancel the registrations) of those practicing outside these guideline.
However there continues to be "midwives" who practice without insurance ( deregistered midwives) and doulas who practice homebirth in South Australia.
Most are extremely competent and are simply offering an in demand service outside the health system for normal births. However South Australia also have midwifery practitioners who get into trouble...
Nursing & Midwifery Board of Australia v Barrett [2014] SAHPT 1
Not sure if any of this is relevant in this case. Would have totally agreed with this angle if she was near newborn
IMO "Angel" was not wearing the type of clothing typical of totally off the grid kids- too commercial.
I believe this child will have been registered at birth to get the baby bonus.