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News & Announcements

Palms for peace and justice

The Palm Sunday Walk for Justice for Refugees was held in locations all over the country by people wanting a better approach to Australia’s response to asylum seekers and refugees. In Perth, the event began at St George’s Cathedral with speakers, poetry and engaging testimonials. The walk was led by faith groups, holding palms as a symbol of peace, who sang and chanted through the streets of Perth.

A Palm Sunday Walk was also held in Margaret River at Prevelly Beach, well attended by Margaret River Uniting Church. Attendees laid white flowers in the ocean, in remembrance of people who had lost their lives at sea while searching for a safe place to call home.

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News & Announcements

UnitingCare Australia welcomes retention of Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission

UnitingCare Australia has welcomed today’s announcement by the Australian Government that the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC) will be retained.

National director, Lin Hatfield Dodds, says the ACNC plays a vital role in supporting the work of the not-for-profit sector.

“The ACNC works to improve the regulatory environment for our sector by reducing administrative duplication and cutting unnecessary red tape whilst preserving the independence and diversity of the sector,” she said.

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Social Impact

Together in solidarity to protect peaceful protest

A large and passionate crowd, including a varied range of community groups, gathered at WA’s State Parliament House yesterday to stand together to defend their right to peaceful protest.

The State Government’s proposed Criminal Code Amendment (Prevention of Lawful Activity) Bill 2015 proposes to criminalise the possession of a ‘thing’ at a protest and introduces fines of up to $24 000 or 24 months imprisonment.

Many community groups fear the bill will prevent people from raising their voices in peaceful protest. They also claim the bill reverses the onus of proof, meaning protesters can be presumed to have criminal intent, rather than being innocent until proven guilty. The Uniting Church WA and a number of other community groups have signed a statement supporting the Protect Peaceful Protest campaign and has been engaged as a prominent member of the coalition for more than 12 months.

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News & Announcements

Providing Sanctuary

President of the Uniting Church in Australia, Stuart McMillan, has issued a pastoral statement to the church about the Let Them Stay campaign, which is concerned with the High Court ruling to send asylum seekers and refugees, including children and babies, to offshore detention. Read on for his statement, including information on how your Uniting Church congregation can offer sanctuary to these vulnerable people.

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Social Impact

MYEFO: Human services funding must focus first on those most vulnerable

UnitingCare Australia has reported that the Mid-year Economic and Fiscal Outlook has adjusted spending in essential human services, particularly aged care.

“UnitingCare Australia supports the reduction of childcare subsidies for high income families. Our focus is to ensure that vulnerable and low income parents are provided with adequate support and access to quality childcare; as the results of regular access to early learning and education are well documented,” said Lin Hatfield Dodds, National Director of UnitingCare Australia.

“Social and aged care services require adequate funding to meet the needs of those who rely on them. Sustainable public funding is critical, as are increased private contributions from those with the capacity to do so.

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Stories & Feature Articles

Coral Richards on life and service

For Coral Richards education is more than a job; it’s a vocation. Born into a family of teachers, and as a high school teacher herself, Coral said that, while growing up, every moment was an opportunity to learn. “Teaching for my parents was a vocation,” she said. “Every opportunity was an opportunity to teach in our family when we were growing up. Everything was a learning experience.”

This year, due to budget cuts, Coral has moved from tutoring into a full teaching load, teaching English, careers and art at Coodanup College in Mandurah. For the past eight years she has worked as an Aboriginal tutor and family liaison officer at the school, which has 20% Indigenous population. She will, in part, return to this role in the new year. Coral has also worked for 15 years as a Primary Extension and Challenge (PEAC) teacher, supporting academically gifted children in years five and six.

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News & Announcements

World Vision urges churches to take stock to end human trafficking and child labour

World Vision Australia has launched a practical guide to ethical purchasing to help Australian churches make better choices about the everyday   products they purchase to reduce the demand for human trafficking.

Some items commonly used in Australia like tea, coffee, chocolate, and cleaning products are produced using exploited labour from vulnerable men, women and children who endure working long hours in poor conditions for little or no pay. Human trafficking is a multi-billion dollar business and occurs when men, women and children are exploited for profit including forced labour, sexual exploitation and domestic servitude.

Children are particularly vulnerable, with approximately 168 million children globally forced to work, which affects their health, development and  education.

World Vision Australia’s chief executive, Rev Tim Costello, said while human trafficking and child labour was abhorrent to the values and morals of  Australians, inadvertently many daily purchases were actually encouraging it.

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News & Announcements

Australian churches unite for justice

Hundreds of Christians from churches across the country have gathered in prayer vigils this week to pray for our nation’s leaders and Australia’s contribution to a world without extreme poverty.

Almost 200 participants of Micah Australia’s annual Voices for Justice event (10-13 October) joined with Federal politicians and local Canberra Christians in a public candlelit prayer vigil on the lawns of Parliament House last night.

Leading the vigil prayers were Gregor Henderson, former general secretary and president of the National Assembly of the Uniting Church in Australia; Bishop Stephen Pickard, executive director of the Australian Centre for Christianity and Culture, Lt. Col. Kelvin Alley, national secretary of the Salvation Army; and Dr Graham Hill, vice principal of Morling College.

They were joined by over 40 local churches and Christian groups across Australia from all major denominations who simultaneously cried out for God’s work of peace, mercy, and justice in Australia and the wider community of nations.

“If we define advocacy as speaking to the powerful on behalf of the powerless, then prayer itself is a form of advocacy as we cry out from the depths of our hearts to the God of grace and justice,” said Ben Thurley, national co-ordinator of Micah Australia.

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Stories & Feature Articles

Family violence: change the conversation

When Rosie Batty bravely spoke to news cameras outside her home on 13 February 2014, the day after her son, Luke, was murdered by his father, she spoke up for women and children all over  Australia.

Filled with grief from losing her 11-year-old son, her moving address to the nation shone light on family violence across Australia.

“No one loved Luke more than Greg, his father. No one loved Luke more than me. Family violence happens to everybody, no matter how nice your house is, how intelligent you are. It happens to  anyone and everyone,” she said.

From that moment on, Rosie has dedicated her life to changing conversations around family violence, giving the issue the recognition it needs. It was for this reason she was awarded the  Australian of the Year accolade in 2015. Her campaigning has paid off, as on 24 September, the Federal Government announced a $100m package to tackle domestic violence. Rosie welcomed this announcement, while acknowledging there is still a long way to go.

Speaking to the WA Department of Health this year, Rosie highlighted some of Australia’s grave statistics.

“It’s a huge issue because its two women a week on average being murdered right now, one in three women affected by violence, one in four children,” she said. “It means that you know somebody who has family violence in their lives, or has experienced family violence.”

Dr Deidre Palmer, moderator of the Uniting Church in South Australia and president-elect of the Uniting Church in Australia, has also been involved in speaking up on the issue. Last year she  launched the Beyond Violence campaign, a Christian response to dealing with domestic violence in our communities. With a background in social work, Deidre knows all too well that abuse comes  in many forms. While physical abuse often leaves visible marks, emotional, financial and spiritual abuse are also debilitating.

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News & Announcements

A welcome response on redress

The President of the Uniting Church in Australia, Stuart McMillan, has welcomed the Redress and Civil Litigation Report released by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

“We are pleased that the Royal Commission’s Report recommends that a process for redress must provide equal access and equal treatment for survivors,” said Stuart.

“We strongly support the Report’s recommendation for a single national scheme to meet the needs of survivors.

“Equality of access and a single national scheme are elements we raised in our own submissions to the Royal Commission and we hope that Federal and State Governments take these recommendations on board in their consideration of the Report.”

The Redress and Civil Litigation Report outlines key recommendations for institutions and governments to address and alleviate the impact of past and future child sexual abuse.