Even without COVID-19 and its aftermath, there’s an argument to be made that Western Australia’s not-for-profit sector would have been under pressure to adapt and change.
Buffeted by lockdowns, border restrictions and staff shortages over the past few years, not-for-profit groups are planning to embrace lessons learned during the pandemic and its flow-on effects.
Since January 2020 when the first cases of COVID began to spread across Australia, the corporate community has looked nervously for signs of a return to ‘normal’.
In late December 2019, a mysterious cluster of pneumonia-like cases centred around a wet market in China was about to detonate a global crisis unlike any that recent generations had witnessed.
With the jobless rate remaining historically low, employers across the state have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to help break the cycle of entrenched unemployment, according to Anglicare WA’s
With vast distances and increasing costs to deliver essential services to those most in need far from Perth, not-for-profit groups are turning to innovative solutions to keep their clients housed,
Filling staff shortages in Perth is one thing but achieving the same result for a not-for-profit group in a remote outpost hoping to deliver crucial services to those most in need is entirely anoth
The vastness of Western Australia poses many challenges for not-for-profit organisations attempting to deliver essential services to regional and remote communities.
One of RSPCA WA’s aims is to achieve regional equity in our service delivery. This is particularly important for the community outreach and enforcement aspects of our work.
As the United Nations annual campaign to raise awareness around domestic violence and gender-based violence – 16 Days of Activism – it is more important than ever for the community-at-large to step
With the women of Iran’s fight for basic rights throwing a spotlight on one of the world’s most oppressive regimes, it’s timely that this year’s 16 Days of Activism campaign by the UN is focusing s
As hardship hits across WA communities, it’s time for corporate organisations to step up and join forces with not for profits – and the benefits are far-reaching beyond putting food on the table an
When a Not For Profit forges a successful relationship with a corporate entity – and is able to build strategies long-term thanks to investment - the ROI for the supporting organisation can be so m
Data collection is at the heart of all Not For Profits – and informs decisions from how to feed the weekly cohort of hungry who arrive at the door of Foodbank WA to how to plan for those needing cr