Changing our future
David Crosbie
Does the charities sector needs to have stronger ownership of policy development groups, if government will not properly resource them?
?If you do not change direction, you may end up where you are heading.?
Lao Tzu, Taoist Chinese philosopher
On budget night I posed a question to the office of Assistant Minister for Charities Andrew Leigh. ?Where in the budget is the funding to support charity reform and capacity building?? The response was that any reform would need to be funded out of re-purposing existing allocations.
I don?t think anyone is surprised that funding support for charities sector reform did not make it into the government?s new spending category column. This was a reset budget, aside from fulfilling some major election commitments, finding savings was the order of the day, not new expenditure.
A key outcome of this cabinet decision is that without dedicated funding it will be more difficult to establish the proposed new, high-level government advisory groups:
- The Not-for-profit Sector Expert Reference Panel which has the primary task of ?charting out a more productive future for Australian charities?
- The Building Community ? Building Capacity Working Group, a group that is tasked with helping ?implement the Panel?s recommendations, and help steward the charity and community sector in its role as frontline responders in building a reconnected Australia?.
- Measurement, outcomes, and quality of services (our value)
- Governance, organisational structures and legal environment (our organisations)
- Leadership and staff development (our people)
- Policy and advocacy (our influence)
- Philanthropy and volunteers (our supporters)
- Government funding, contracting and tendering (our funding relationships)
- IT, communication and marketing (our capacity)
- Impact investing and leveraging our assets (our capital)