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Budget 2016: tax cuts at the expense of health, aged care and disability

UnitingCare Australia Associate National Director Martin Cowling has said that the 2016 Budget paints a selective picture of living within our means, with cuts to health, aged care and disability payments outweighing new spending in these areas by at least $1 billion over four years.

Martin said it was pleasing that the Budget contains three positive measures for which UnitingCare has been advocating for some time.

“We particularly welcome the Youth Jobs PaTH program and will work with the Government through its Try, Test and Learn Fund.

“It is also pleasing that the Government is committing to programs designed to help those most at risk of long term welfare dependency and that the PaTH program contains a strong focus on equipping young people with essential work skills.

“UnitingCare strongly welcomes the reforms to superannuation tax concessions which will deliver a critical $6 billion revenue stream. We have been calling for these for almost a decade” said Martin.

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Gather your voices for justice

Micah Australia’s Voices for Justice National Gathering is an opportunity to raise your voice and influence our nation’s leaders on behalf of the world’s poorest people in the lead up to the 2016 election.

Join together with like-minded Christians from around the country to pray and worship, be equipped and trained for advocacy, and speak out for a world of justice and compassion as you meet with federal politicians in Parliament House.

The program includes a day spent at Parliament House; as well as a dedicated prayer room, a market place and workshops. There’ll also be programs for primary and high school age people.

Cherry Johnson, from NSW, attended Voices for Justice in 2014.

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Respect PNG law, close the camps, bring them here

National Director of UnitingJustice Australia, Rev Elenie Poulos, has called for the immediate transfer of all asylum seekers on Manus Island to Australia.

Papua New Guinea’s Supreme Court yesterday ruled that the detention of 850 asylum seekers on Manus Island breaches the detainees’ right to personal liberty under the PNG Constitution.

Elenie is urging the Australian Government to take the opportunity to end its “brutal and immoral” policy of offshore detention.

“Barely a week goes by without new evidence of the damage we are doing to people.”

“The tragic and unnecessary death of Hamid Khazaei, highlighted on ABC TV’s Four Corners program this week; desperate detainees on Nauru attempting suicide; riots, physical and sexual assaults – report after report reinforces the devastating effect of these policies on people’s lives.”

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Heaven and Earth moves for Northam heritage hall project

A rare and important piece of Northam’s history has been preserved to serve the local community in new and different ways.

Weakened over the decades from earthquakes and threatened by the elements, the 124-year-old Uniting Church Hall on Duke Street survives thanks to Juniper’s extensive renovation to repurpose the building as a modern centre with resulting benefits for the whole community.

At the opening of the restored building today, on 15 April, Juniper’s Chief Executive Vaughan Harding said the Hall now provides a contemporary training facility for his organisation which, with more than 100 local staff, is the among largest employers in town.

The Northam Uniting Church Hall was built in 1892 as a place of worship responding to the needs of a growing community and Juniper acknowledges this past legacy by ensuring the vitality of the place and extending its utility and purpose for many years to come.

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World faith leaders urge governments to ratify Paris Climate Change Agreement

The president of the Uniting Church in Australia, Stuart McMillan, has united with world religious leaders to call on governments to take urgent action on climate change.

Twenty senior Australian religious leaders have joined the Dalai Lama, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Pakistani grand imam Maulana Khabir Azad and more than 250 of their international counterparts to sign the Interfaith Climate Change Statement.

Other Australian signatories include the presidents of the Australian Hindu and Imams councils, the Federation of Australian Buddhist Councils and the National Council of Churches in Australia.

The interfaith statement says governments must urgently ratify the landmark Paris Climate Change Agreement and reduce emissions to stop global temperature rise. It urges the swift phase-out of fossil fuel subsidies and the acceleration of renewable energy investment to limit global temperature rise to no more than 1.5C above industrial levels.

The statement was handed to the UN General Assembly President Mogens Lykketoft in New York on 19 April, as government representatives, including Australia’s Environment Minister Greg Hunt, prepare to officially sign up to the Paris Climate Agreement.

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A new church for Old Mapoon

The Uniting Church in Australia and the Uniting Aboriginal and Islander Christian Congress (UAICC) are asking members to give generously to an appeal for a new church in Mapoon on Queensland’s Cape York Peninsula.

“The 14th Assembly committed to help build a new church in the former Presbyterian mission where local Aboriginal people were forcibly removed between 1963 and 1964”, said Uniting Church president, Stuart McMillan.

“Building a new church is an important act of reconciliation in the spirit of our covenanting relationship with the UAICC.

“Today in 2016 we have the opportunity to help heal a historic wrong and give witness to the sincerity of our commitment to reconciliation.

“I encourage Uniting Church members to get behind the Mapoon Church Appeal.”

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Tony George farewells St Stephen’s School

St Stephen’s School principal, Tony George, has been officially appointed as headmaster of The King’s School in Sydney.

As Principal of Western Australia’s largest independent school, he will continue with St Stephen’s School until the end of term 2, 2017, when he will take-up his new position.

The King’s School is Australia’s oldest independent school and one of only eight Australian schools in the G20 association of secondary schools – schools that have a commitment to excellence and innovation.

“I am both honoured and looking forward to joining an innovative school like The King’s School,” Tony said.

“Just like St Stephen’s School, The King’s School has an outstanding reputation for academic success, whilst focusing on the character development of each and every student. I am truly looking forward to the opportunity of working with the school and community, to inspire each and every student to reach their full potential.”

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Juniper responds to care needs in the Kimberley

Juniper, a Uniting Church WA agency providing community and residential aged care, is continuing a long tradition of the Uniting Church and its predecessors, by providing much needed services to remote Australia.

This tradition has been celebrated through the work of Rev John Flynn who set out to establish a network of support to sustain communities in the outback. His work led to the formation of the Australian Inland Mission and its successor, Frontier Services and the world’s first aerial services to remote communities, the Royal Flying Doctor Service.

Juniper’s history commenced in 1949 when it welcomed its first residents to a converted Edwardian house in Mt Lawley bequeathed by the pioneering Sarah Hardey.

In the subsequent 67 years, and after an emotional decision for Frontier Services to change direction, Juniper has grown its services to meet the needs of an ageing society.

Its services now extend from Wyndham in the Kimberley, to Albany in the Great Southern.

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Swimming in an ocean of grace – the induction of Rev Ruth Vertigan

On Sunday 17 April at York Uniting Church Rev Ruth Vertigan was inducted into the role of rural ministries co-ordinator in the Uniting Church Western Australia. With the noise of roaring motorbikes in the background (there was a motorbike show on in the centre of town) people from all over regional WA gathered at the historic York Uniting Church to join in celebrating Ruth’s induction. There were people present for Kondinin, Goomalling, Narrogin and Quairading, as well as locals from York, the building was packed.

Rev Alistair Melville, UCWA’s rural ministry associate in Narrogin, opened the induction service with a call to worship and the beautiful church building was filled with voices raised in worship. The moderator, Rev Steve Francis acknowledged the traditional owners of the land and payed respects to their elders past and present. Steve also thanked the York congregation for their hospitality and he acknowledged the many people who had traveled to be there, he also acknowledged associate general secretary (justice and mission) Rosemary Hudson Miller, attending as the representative for the general secretary Rev David De Kock.

Rev Geoffrey Lilburne preached a sermon on Psalm 103 and Jesus’ prayer for believers in John 17. He expressed that while it is a hard task to serve rural communities, as many rural towns are diminishing in size, Ruth is ideally suited for the role. Geoffrey said of her ‘Ruth is not a fair-weather minister’ and recounted the many times in her life when Ruth has shown determination and faithfulness. Geoffrey noted that the promise in Psalm 103:17 “But from everlasting to everlasting the Lord’s love is with those who fear him…” speaks to the generational hope of rural communities, that they exist from generation to generation, and that the hope of those communities is in the constant love of God.

The service of induction followed and afterward Ruth gave her response saying she approached her new placement with gratitude and said she felt a great deal of peacefulness in this new placement that “it feels like the right place”. She also acknowledged the service of Rev Loraine Stokes who filled the position previously. Ruth expressed that she wanted those worshiping in rural communities to know that they are not alone or abandoned. She used the analogy of God, being an ocean of grace and mercy, and that sometimes it feels (in rural communities particularly) that you are swimming alone in the ocean, but Ruth wants to remind those swimmers that they are not alone, there are other swimmers in the ocean, and it is the ocean of God’s grace and mercy that connects us.

Following the induction ceremony an afternoon tea was held in the church hall, there was much conversation and fellowship.

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Celebrating five years of Marhaba

In April 2011, the Multicultural Ministry Network of the Uniting Church WA established the Marhaba Multicultural Community Centre with their first meeting at Uniting Church in the City, Wesley Perth.

Rev Dr Emanuel Audisho, Multicultural Ministry co-ordinator, describes Marhaba as his dream, a dream he carried with him from his home country of Iraq. Emanuel established a Marhaba community in Jordan with the goal of giving young people opportunities to engage with the refugee church in Jordan. The aims of the Marhaba community in Perth has similar, but broader goals.

Marhaba in Perth was established to connect people from diverse multicultural backgrounds with the church. The name Marhaba is the amalgamation of two Aramaic words. The first ‘Mar’ meaning God and the second ‘haba’ meaning love; Marhaba literally translates to ‘God is love’.

Emanuel says that the key message of Marhaba is in its name, he wants “people from all cultures and backgrounds to know that God is love”.