Wednesday, 20 August, 2008 - 22:00
Removing barriers the Decimal point
Jan Kolbusz is the kind of technology professional manager who admits he would most likely have seen out his days in senior management if he didn't live in Perth.
Fiona Kalaf is an experienced chief executive and board chair.
She was the chief executive of Lifeline WA for four years before taking up the helm as chief executive of Youth Focus in February 2016. Ms Kalaf held senior executive positions at Wesfarmers, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Asgard Wealth Solutions and HBF. In October 2018, Ms Kalaf joined APM in a newly-created role as general manager of markets & innovation.
She was a finalist at the prestigious Telstra WA Business Women’s Awards in 2015.
Ms Kalaf holds a Bachelor of Arts, a Bachelor of Architecture, a Master of Business Administration, and has completed the Strategic Perspectives in Non-Profit Management course at Harvard Business School.
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NEW ROLE: Chief Executive, Employable Me, APM Human Services International | 24 Aug 2021 |
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NEW ROLE: General Councillor, HBF | 04 Feb 2021 |
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NEW ROLE: Board Member, Celebrate WA | 13 Jan 2021 |
Jan Kolbusz is the kind of technology professional manager who admits he would most likely have seen out his days in senior management if he didn't live in Perth.
Management consultant, Fiona Kalaf has been appointed the the new chairperson for the board of the Art Gallery of Western Australia and treasury official Brian Roche has also been appointed to the board.
THE harmonisation of occupational health and safety laws across Australia will offer more opportunities than burdensome compliance requirements for community organisations, according to some of the state’s volunteer-based not for profits.
THE Western Australian branch of suicide prevention organisation Lifeline will take its fight to the internet with the development of a chat crisis service to support members of the community.
Overcoming the stigma of depression and suicide is a challenge faced by all organisations in the mental health sector, and one that Lifeline WA is tackling head on
Lifeline WA chief executive Fiona Kalaf has joined the board of the Australian Institute of Management WA.Ms Kalaf is also currently on the board of the Metropolitan Redevelopment Authority.
Nicholas Hasluck will be the next chair of the Art Gallery of WA board.
Fortescue Metals Group chairman Andrew Forrest has been appointed to the Art Gallery of Western Australia’s board.
Christmas appeals have received a mixed response in their calls for donations, however all charities report a significant increase in requests for their services.
More than 60 CEOs from WA provided Business News with detailed views on the year past, the next 12 months, their vision for the state, and what they expect from political leaders.
More than 60 CEOs from WA provided Business News with detailed views on the year past, the next 12 months, their vision for the state, and what they expect from political leaders.
A 95 per cent increase in calls to Lifeline WA over the past five years has prompted the crisis support service to raise funds for volunteer training.
Lorna MacGregor has been appointed as the new chief executive officer of Lifeline WA. Ms MacGregor is highly regarded in the mental health sector.She was a chief operations officer with Perth North Medicare Local.
Two of WA’s most successful charity events raised a total of $4.6 million this month, but not all fundraisers are achieving similar results
Bryant Stokes, Fiona Kalaf and Steve Harris are among new directors of health promotion agency Healthway, which has been revamped under new legislation after the previous board was forced to step down last year.
SPECIAL REPORT: Charities are diversifying their approach to building revenue streams as a soft economy challenges their business-as-usual fundraising models.
The 2018 Hawaiian Ride for Youth continues to be one of the state's most successful fundraisers, raising $2.2 million for mental health prevention with 170 riders.
New APM chief executive Michael Anghie has bolstered his team by recruiting Youth Focus chief executive Fiona Kalaf to take a newly created role with the human services company.
Former Youth Focus chief executive Fiona Kalaf has been appointed to the board of arts organisation Perth Festival.
Hawaiian Ride for Youth is still turning a wheel, celebrating its 20th year while other charity bike rides drop out.
Euroz Hartleys Group has announced a suite of appointments, with Fiona Kalaf joining its board of directors and Amanda Boyce and Ben Crossing taking senior executive roles.
Our board moves wrap includes Francisco Bellon, Trevor Benson, Alex Passmore, Fiona Kalaf, Amanda Boyce, Ben Crossing, Liz Wall, Naomi Scott, Adam Ritchie, Jessamyn Lyons, and Valerie Hodgins.
Growing employment services provider APM has launched a campaign for people with disability to voice their expectations for the future of the Australian workforce.
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Fiona Kalaf is linked to 20 organisations which are included in 8 lists - Stockbrokers & Financial Advisers, Aged Care Providers, Not For Profit Businesses, Retirement & Lifestyle Village Operators, Public Companies - Industrial WA, Business News 30, Corporate Finance and Charitable Organisations.
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