Victoria Police has been criticised by the state's peak body for community legal services for not agreeing to all the coroner's recommendations following the death of schoolboy Luke Batty.

Luke, 11, was murdered by his father in 2014 in a high-profile case that sparked the establishment of Victoria's Royal Commission into Family Violence.

In a decision handed down last year, the coroner found that no-one could have foreseen Luke's death, despite years of exposure to family violence and a number of "gaps" in the family violence system.

Victorian coroner Ian Gray made 29 recommendations to the state of Victoria, the Victorian Attorney-General, the Family Law Council, the Victoria Police chief commissioner, the Magistrates Court and the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS).

Premier Daniel Andrews yesterday published a response, agreeing to implement all the coroner's recommendations relevant to the Government.

"As Premier of Victoria, I am committed to improving Victoria's response to family violence," Mr Andrews wrote to Judge Gray.

"My government will implement all of the recommendations you have made."

In Victoria Police's response to the inquiry, the force said the recommendations came at a "significant time of change in the way family violence in responded to" in the state.

"These recommendations, together with the upcoming finding for the Royal Commission into Family Violence, will further inform future policy development and assist all agencies, including Victoria Police, to do everything possible to prevent tragedies like the death of Luke Batty from occurring again," Victoria Police said.

However, police said a number of the coroner's recommendations were not feasible, due to time and resources constraints.

Police said they would review the quality and depth of family violence risk assessment reports (known as L17's), however could not agree to the recommendation that police filling an L17 should consult with the authors of all previous reports on the family in question.

"Victoria Police considers the recommendation to require police completing an L17 to contact all previous [L17] authors as unfeasible, adversely impacting response time and capacity," the response said.

Victoria Police said another recommendation that police informants attend court was not practical.

"The role of the Family Violence Court Liaison Officer was created so that members were not expected to attend court, as this will often not be practicable," Victoria Police said.

Police also said a recommendation that the service of family violence intervention orders [FVIO] by expedited to within a 24-hour time frame was not feasible.

Victoria Police response 'disappointing'

The executive officer of the Federation Community of Legal Centres, Liana Buchanan, told 774 ABC Melbourne she was disappointed by the response from Victoria Police.

"Out of about 13 specific recommendations that have been directed to police, there's been an commitment to act or a support for probably only just over half of those," she said.

"Just under half are the subject of ongoing consideration or the police have said they're not feasible."

The Royal Commission into Family Violence is due to report to the Government in the coming months.

Mr Andrews said he was confident recommendations made to police were still under consideration and would be further examined in the context of the commission's findings.