Innovation, inspiration, impact
Recognising exceptional design and delivery across the public sector.
Recognising exceptional design and delivery across the public sector
IPAA Victoria’s Leadership in the Public Sector Awards honour the excellence and innovation of teams and organisations of all three levels of government in Victoria – Commonwealth, State and Local.
The theme of the awards this year is ‘Innovation, inspiration, impact. Recognising exceptional design and delivery across the Public Sector’. We are looking to celebrate the broad work of the sector that has a significant impact on the community, both now and into the future.
IPAA Victoria is delighted to announce 40 finalists across nine diverse award categories, and one special commendation for this year’s awards.
Watch the Leadership in the Public Sector Awards ceremony highlights reel and re-live the hype, excitement and buzz of the night.
The following essay has been adapted from a speech given by Brigid Monagle, Victorian Public Sector Commissioner.
View IPAA Victoria’s Leadership in the Public Sector Award winners media release.
Delivering public value through communication and engagement excellence
Strategic communications and engagement can achieve real and measurable outcomes and is essential to delivering meaningful change across government policies, programs and projects. This award recognises excellence in communication and engagement, both internal and external, that delivers innovative and creative campaigns that drive public value for the communities they serve.
This category is proudly partnered by Australia Post.
Small Business Victoria, Department of Jobs, Skills, Industry and Region
Magistrates’ Court of Victoria
The FVT automates processing of PCI forms, and referrals to legal services, interpreters and family violence practitioners, streamlines engagement with VicPol, and automates the coordination of the court list for registry. The FVT has transformed how the court communicates with professional court users from a paper-based, handwritten system into an online portal and helps to link court users with services and ensures they do not have to repeat their whole story, improving their court experience and engagement with the family violence justice system. Between October 2022 and May 2023, the FVT will roll out to 16 courts (12 courts to date).
Coliban Water
Victoria Police
Department of Families, Fairness and Housing
Excellence in complex policymaking
Policymaking is the backbone of everything the public sector does, with good policymaking helping to address long-term and complex problems. This award recognises excellence in public policymaking, with respect to the approaches taken to develop proposals for government that are informed by meaningful engagement and collaboration.
This category is proudly partnered by the Department of Premier and Cabinet.
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Department of Families, Fairness and Housing
Department of Health
The Modelling and Analytical Epidemiology Unit at the Department of Health is unique within government, providing an entirely bespoke intelligence service to support public health policy, producing scenario modelling, insight into epidemiological activity and helping to predict the length, severity and impact of COVID-19 waves.
The team investigates and analyses complex epidemiological data and has guided government policy in addressing issues such as vaccine distribution, COVID-19 treatment among priority populations, intelligence on health system capacity and vulnerability amongst many other topics. It provides the Victorian Government with scientific evidence and awareness of the inter-jurisdictional and international outlook of COVID-19’s evolution, allowing for the benchmark and adaption of policy settings in-line with best and emerging practice.
The team’s success is underpinned by exemplary skills in analytical epidemiology, research methods, data linkage, and a strong desire to collaborate, share practice and innovate. The team works in partnership with the Burnet Institute, using COVASIM model technology.
Department of Jobs, Skills, Industry and Regions
The Place-based Agenda was formed to strengthen how government partners with place-based approaches (PBAs) to tackle long-term, complex issues in their local communities.
The initiative was initially led by the Department of Premier and Cabinet and the Department of Jobs, Skills, Industry and Regions, and implemented by an innovative cross-government team. The team worked closely with partner place-based approaches across Victoria and a range of external organisations with deep expertise in working collaboratively across sectors.
With this collaborative approach, the Place-based Agenda delivered a range of resources for the Victorian Public Sector, which can also be of benefit to others working in place, including a framework creating a common definition of Place-based Agendas, a first for Victoria; new guidance and tools strengthening how the VPS works in place; independent research providing Victorian-specific evidence; and pilot new ways of working with Place-based Agendas, including more flexible funding and improved access to government-held data.
Department of Education
The creation of the new Schools Mental Health Fund and Menu implemented a key recommendation of the Royal Commission into Victoria’s Mental Health System, expanding student mental health support with a focus on evidence-based interventions.
All government schools receive an allocation from the new Fund, which they spend on programs, training or staff listed on the new Menu. The Mental Health Fund and Menu Unit at the Department of Education led the design of the Fund, including a successful business case of $200 million for four years and $87 million ongoing. The team also led the design of the Menu, and ran a large-scale competitive process for providers to be on the Menu, assessing applications on strength of evidence, usability by schools, capacity to reach across Victoria and value for money. The process involved wide consultation with schools, students, program providers, academia and others across the education and mental health sectors.
Placing people at the centre of public services
Public services are the interface between the public and government; people care about public services and depend on their delivery. This award recognises new and successful approaches to service delivery, adopting a citizen-centred approach to better engage citizens and achieve better public outcomes. It is about recognising those who put the ‘public’ into the public service.
This category is proudly partnered by Department of Health.
Magistrates’ Court of Victoria
Due to population movements, and social, technology and legal changes, the Magistrates’ Court of Victoria (MCV) has faced a range of challenges as to how it delivers public services, only increasing in magnitude with the global pandemic. In response, the MCV embarked on a whole-of-organisation digital and service transformation program to modernise how public services are delivered across the state. A significant part of this was the establishment of the MCV Service Centre.
The Service Centre is a central contact (phone, email, web chat, SMS) and state-wide administrative service provider to MCV’s 51 courts, removing digital contact and transactional work thereby allowing more time for in-person public servicing and matter readiness. Since March 2022, the Service Centre has responded to over 110,000 public enquiries, with an average 13-second call wait time and a first-time call resolution rate of 90%. The web chat service has a 92% public service ‘Great or Good’ rating.
Victoria Police
The establishment of Victoria Police’s Sexual Offences and Family Violence Unit (SOFVU) in November 2021 is a standalone unit that investigates sexual assault, sexual harassment, predatory behaviours and family violence matters perpetrated by Victoria Police personnel. The project undertook a review of the existing sexual offences and predatory behaviour taskforce operating model, embed an Employee Related Family Violence stream and implemented a contemporary victim-centric framework and operating model incorporating both crime themes.
The SOFVU mission is to provide a victim-centric response in the investigation of family violence, sexual offences and sexual harassment (including predatory behaviour) committed by employees of Victoria Police. Specialist investigative, intelligence and welfare support practices contribute to holding employees to account for criminal family violence and sexual offending. SOFVU personnel are committed to reducing workplace harm and contributing to culture change across the organisation to ensure Victoria Police employees are supported and confident to call out unacceptable behaviour and criminal offending to achieve a safe, respectful and inclusive workplace.
Environment Protection Authority Victoria
The GardenSafe program is the Environment Protection Authority’s (EPA) low-cost, community science participation program that allows residents to supply samples of their soil for testing of trace metals and metalloids. The program is EPA’s tool to educate and empower Victorians to meet their General Environmental Duty (GED). To date, 1,117 Victorians have registered for GardenSafe, and 296 households have provided over 800 soil samples. The program has evaluated 580 samples, with 194 reports sent to participating households. GardenSafe has been able to identify 141 trace metal exceedances in the 580 samples. The reports include information to enable the resident to make an informed decision about how to manage this potential risk. GardenSafe is a citizen-centric program empowering the community to better understand the soil health of their garden. It is simplistically designed, and accessible, to ensure it can reach a broad spectrum of the community.
Department of Families, Fairness and Housing
The North Richmond Precinct Initiative is a unique place-based partnership between residents, businesses, local government, service providers and government departments – the goal is to build on strengths and solve local issues, while operating in a complex environment with contested community views. North Richmond is a diverse and creative community, with Victoria’s first medically supervised injecting room located in the area.
The Initiative has worked with many agencies to generate revitalisation (with a total investment exceeding $206million) resulting in improved spaces (playgrounds, lighting, walking paths, community rooms and a youth hub), increased security and coordinated outreach services. Importantly, resident voice, skills and governance are core components. The approach has been rich in learning and generated positive outcomes all built on relationships with community and agencies.
Department of Jobs, Skills, Industry and Regions
Led by the Department of Jobs, Skills, Industry and Regions, The Get Active Kids (GAK) program supports children from low-income families and disadvantaged circumstances to participate in organised sport and recreation by helping fund their registration/membership, uniforms and equipment costs up to $200.
Responding to a clear community need for support amplified by the COVID-19 pandemic, the GAK runs two parallel models: reimbursement – where families pay for activities then submit a receipt and receive payment – and voucher – where families receive a unique voucher and use it with activity providers to receive a discount. GAK also makes special provisions for applicants who are children in out-of-home care and temporary visa holders.
Launched in 2022, GAK has made over 85,000 voucher payments totalling almost $16 million, supporting low-income families and the community sports sector. Around half of the voucher recipients (40,000 children) reported they would not have been able to participate in their activity without the voucher.
Smart approaches to regulating; for a better community and stronger economy
Regulation is essential for the proper functioning of our society and the economy, and has a flow-on to productivity and general community wellbeing. This award recognises innovation and excellence in approaches achieving better outcomes through projects or programmes that led to improvements in regulatory design and practice, including stakeholder consultation. It is open to Victorian-based teams from national regulators, local government regulatory teams, and Victorian government regulators.
Australian Communications and Media Authority
Since 2020, the Combating Scams Team at Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) has worked tirelessly to understand how scammers are using Australia’s telecommunications networks to perpetrate fraud and identity theft against Australians and to develop effective responses. Through a combination of consumer awareness activities, working in conjunction with the telco and financial services industries and other stakeholders, and implementing a range of targeted regulatory interventions that respond to the evolving sophistication and agility of scammers, this team has delivered positive outcomes for consumers including through driving activity which has stopped over a billion scam calls and over a hundred million scam SMS from reaching Australians. Their actions have also significantly reduced mobile phone fraud, which had been dramatically impacting a large number of victims before the work.
Service Victoria
Service Victoria worked with the Department of Treasury and Finance, MAV and local government organisations to develop automatic approvals, saving customers, businesses and council staff time, effort and money. These new online transactions can be quickly and easily accessed through Service Victoria. It enables local businesses to get immediate approval for permits for low-risk activities, including skip bins, fitness training and footpath trading.
Customers can apply, pay for and instantly get these permits at their own convenience, thus reducing waiting time for customers and significantly reducing processing time for council staff. Automatic approvals also support improvement in productivity for councils and reduce pressure on council budgets and resources by removing labour costs associated with permit administration.
Available since September 2022, five local councils currently offer automatic approvals for specific permits, with work underway to make more transactions available and include more councils in the future.
Wage Inspectorate Victoria
In April 2022, the Wage Inspectorate and its Legal and Communications Teams, began a proactive compliance and education campaign to ensure the safety and compliance of children under 15 employed in fast food outlets, restaurants and cafes in regional Victoria. The campaign aimed to: increase awareness of the Wage Inspectorate’s role in regulating child employment; educate employers about child employment laws; detect and prevent non-compliance among businesses employing minors; and investigate offences and take proportionate compliance action.
The campaign was directed at businesses in the Bass Coast, La Trobe City and Baw Baw Shires in the lead-up to the Easter holiday period when child employment typically increases. Tactics included focusing on popular holiday destinations where businesses employ young staff during peak periods and areas of a growing population where there may be an increased prevalence of young jobseekers.
The campaign generated significant media coverage and an increase in social media engagement through Wage Inspectorate’s channels. In total, 225 compliance checks and 86 unannounced site visits were conducted, and 19 investigations and one prosecution were undertaken. Overall, the campaign shone a light on significant invisible harm.
Conservation Regulator
Operation River Gum was a joint operation between the Conservation Regulator (CR) and Parks Victoria from 2021–22, targeting illegal commercial-scale removal of firewood from Victorian public land along the Murray River corridor and its southern tributaries.
To effectively reduce harm, areas of concern – with overlapping high Aboriginal cultural and biodiversity values – were identified through GIS analysis, CR intelligence holdings and active ground-truthing. This work then defined the focus area for operational effort.
The operation resulted successful prosecutions in the Magistrates Court, with a majority for offences within the Lower Goulburn National Park. The operation aimed to inform the community on how to legally source firewood and was implemented through targeted advertising on Facebook and Gumtree, and through traditional media channels in print, online and radio.
The operation leveraged a community engagement approach through targeted advertising on Facebook and Gumtree in conjunction with targeted media in print, online and radio channels. Intelligence from 2022 indicates there has been a reduction in the frequency of illegal firewood removal from the target area.
Creating the public sector workforces and workplaces of the future
In an ever-changing world, the public sector employer has an eye to the future; cultivating and attracting a highly capable workforce to respond effectively to new challenges. This award recognises that the leading public sector employer takes an innovative and holistic approach to its people: creating a positive culture; strong leadership; smart recruitment practices; actively growing employee capabilities; rewarding and recognising success; encouraging innovation and making it safe to fail; creating robust and flexible systems and embracing new and digital technologies; creating safe, inclusive workplaces for all.
Cenitex
Over two years, Cenitex has transformed its approach to customers and employees by getting back to basics and treating people as humans first. Working with the business to understand the human experience of stakeholders, Cenitex implemented a mix of initiatives to uplift the employee lifecycle from attraction and onboarding, through development and inclusion, talent pipelines and graduates, and retention and succession. This was underpinned by the use of technology across recruitment and onboarding, talent mapping and succession planning. These impacts have flowed to customer experience outcomes. The success of the project was measured through metrics including improved engagement figures, cost savings, time efficiencies, improved customer experiences, and positive engagement feedback.
Wage Inspectorate
A regulator of the Wage Inspectorate’s size can typically expect to experience a higher rate of churn than larger agencies with more extensive career pathways. To retain staff, Wage Inspectorate have a strong focus on creating a positive, engaged culture and clearly outlines to all staff how they can positively contribute to the Victorian community to assist retention and attract good, talented people.
Environment Protection Authority Victoria
The Environment Protection Agency’s (EPA) Process Improvement Program has used innovative approaches to deliver over $4.5m of savings and significantly improve ways of working, allowing staff to focus on higher-value work. The solutions also reduce staff frustration with processes and make EPA a better place to work, not only because systems and processes are continuously improving, but because we empower staff with great ideas to make them a reality.
Bendigo Kangan Institute
Bendigo Kangan Institute’s Digital Teacher Capability Program provides foundational- to advanced-level teacher training. The program is unique due to its holistic and integrated plan, centrally supported to provide a sustainable and strategic operating model for teacher capability uplift. With a key focus on learning and development of educators, the model has gone from ad-hoc, local and inconsistent with a lack of overarching governance in 2018 to a high-level of maturity and end-to-end capability cycle with full governance aligned to ASQAs requirements and student needs.
The Institute’s Teacher Incentive Program is offered to industry professionals interested in pursuing a teaching career in TAFE. It provides mentorship opportunities and financial incentives to undertake and complete the required qualifications to become qualified teachers in vocational training and be employed in the TAFE sector by Bendigo Kangan Institute.
Smart approaches to regulating; for a better community and stronger economy
Good public sector governance not only ensures that a public entity achieves its objectives but that the community can have faith in the public sector to act with integrity. This award celebrates new and innovative approaches to public sector governance; the processes and structures by which public entities are directed, controlled and held to account.
Land Use Victoria
As the presiding Victorian Government Land Monitor (VGLM) since 2016, this initiative reflects the revolutionisation of the independent body responsible for providing assurance that Victorian government agencies act in accordance with the highest standards of behaviour when undertaking land transactions. The VGLM is responsible for administering the Victorian Government Land Transactions Policy, which ensures agencies conduct land transactions with accountability and transparency.
In a landmark 2022 event, the VGLM launched the most significant update to both this policy and its operating processes to date. The team undertook the comprehensive update reframing the policy as a practical guide for agencies seeking to transact land, in addition a VGLM Online Portal was built. The result includes a 99% compliance rate in addition to providing the highest standard of advice, approvals and education.
Bendigo Kangan Institute
In 2017, IBAC handed down its findings into allegations of serious corruption in the education and training sector. Bendigo Kangan Institute (BKI) set out to become an organisation that embodies integrity in all it does and to build a strong ethical culture based on integrity, transparency and accountability. This resulted in the introduction of BKI’s Integrity Program in 2020.
Five years on from the finding, BKI’s Integrity Program has delivered a significant uplift in leadership capability, increased employee understanding of what integrity looks like, enabled mechanisms for reporting suspected improper conduct and activated controls to manage fraud and corruption risks. The People Matters Survey results and case stories demonstrate BKI’s leadership and improvement, engendering a commitment to continuously improve and spearhead integrity across the sector.
Department of Transport and Planning
On 1 July 2019, the Department of Transport (DoT) formally integrated three former public sector organisations: the former Department of Transport, Public Transport Victoria, and VicRoads. Several challenges DoT faced included multiple disconnected processes, a lack of process transparency, and gaps in process improvement capabilities across its employees, all of which were critical to support achieving a truly integrated Department.
The Business Integration and Improvement (BII) function within DoT was tasked with driving process integration and improvement and establishing a culture of continuous improvement. The BII team developed a three-tiered framework to execute continuous process improvement projects, but also to build a sustainable continuous improvement culture based on cross-organisational continuous improvement capabilities and a mindset of continuous improvement. Senior leadership sponsored this very important work and acknowledged that continuous improvement is the responsibility of every public sector employee.
Taking action to protect the environment and deliver solutions that mitigate climate change now
Mitigating climate change and creating sustainable environments has positive outcomes not only for our shared natural environment, but for the community at large. This award recognises the actions that are being taken now protect the environment from further global warming, including activities to reduce emissions and initiatives to adapt to the consequences of climate change.
This category is proudly partnered by Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action.
Barwon Water, Barwon Health, G21 Councils, Port of Geelong
The nomination incorporates several partners that have collaborated to address climate change issues in the region through three key initiatives.
Barwon Water, GeelongPort and Barwon Health partnered on the Barwon Renewable Energy Partnership, accessing 68-gigawatt hours of renewable energy annually.
Barwon Water also partnered with five local councils on the Regional Renewable Organics Network, which will take local commercial, industrial and household organic waste and converts it safely into nutrient-rich agricultural products that capture carbon and create renewable energy and diverts waste from landfill.
The Colac Renewable Organics Network partnership, supported by Colac Otway Shire, sees the Colac water reclamation plant run on green energy by taking organic waste from the Australian Lamb Company and Bulla Dairy Foods and converting it to renewable electricity.
G21 Geelong Region Alliance has provided a forum for government, business and community leaders in the region to collaborate, creating the environment for these partnerships.
Brimbank City Council
The Brimbank Aquatic and Wellness Centre (BAWC) is a brave, new and exemplar leisure centre that challenges the status quo of building and operating gas-fuelled aquatic centres that are traditionally Australian Council’s biggest energy consuming and greenhouse gas emitting facilities.
BAWC is Australia’s first 6 Star Green Star, 100% renewable energy powered, zero greenhouse gas emissions aquatic centre and home to one of the largest rooftop solar PV system on an Australian aquatic centre.
The sustainable redevelopment of BAWC has far exceeded environmental objectives within both Council’s Climate Emergency Plan which includes a target of zero net emissions for Council operations by 2030, and an action to ‘assess the feasibility of electric alternatives to building new, or upgrading old, gas infrastructure in Council buildings’, and Environmentally Sustainable Design Framework, which contains a mandate to reach an accredited 5 Star Green Star Rating from the Green Building Council of Australia.
Sustainability Victoria
The Victorian Healthy Homes Program (VHHP) has changed the lives of more than 1,000 at-risk Victorians, making them healthier, happier, and more comfortable. Analysis from this randomised controlled trial indicated that a relatively minor home upgrade, at an average cost of $2,809, had wide-ranging benefits over the winter period. The upgrade resulted in a significant increase in indoor temperatures, which was also reported by the householders’ subjective experience; and health benefits, including reduced reporting of breathlessness and improved quality of life, particularly in mental health and social care. Health benefits translated to cost savings, with $887 per person saved in the healthcare system over winter. These outweighed energy savings: for every $1 saved in energy costs, more than $10 saved in healthcare costs. Cost-benefit analysis indicated that the upgrade is cost-saving within three years.
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
The Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action’s Water Cycle Adaptation Action Plan (WCAAP) is one of seven plans prepared under the Climate Change Act 2017 by the Victorian Government. The WCAAP will guide statewide adaptation action over the next five years, based on our current scientific understanding, risk-informed needs and emerging opportunities. The WCAAP 2022-26 is the first system-wide adaptation plan to be prepared for the water cycle under the Climate Change Act 2017 and was the first of the seven legislated systems to complete the plan.
Celebrating the commitment, excellence and innovation the public purpose sector in emergency management
The public sector has a unique, central and broad role in working with the community to prepare for, respond to and recover from all emergencies ranging from natural to manmade disasters. Emergency management engages the full range of functions of government from policy and planning to service delivery, and requires high levels of interdependency and collaboration across and with sectors including all levels of government, business and communities.
This category is proudly partnered by Emergency Recovery Victoria.
Coliban Water
Coliban Water’s ‘Caring for Customers in Extreme Events: Coliban Water’s 2022 Flood Response’ encompassed the preparation, response and recovery for widespread flooding across its service region, with a particular focus on customer and community support and resilience. The mission was to prepare and respond to ensure the safety of customers and employees, prioritising the protection of assets and the environment to achieve the best community outcomes, until the consequences of the rainfall and flood event passed.
Coliban Water’s evaluation, incident planning, decision making and response was data-driven to provide increased situational awareness. Technology complemented human decision-making and the focus on a personal connection from door-knocking customers in affected communities to maintaining a psychologically safe and inclusive workplace. Setting up safe drinking water and sanitation for a long-term relief centre for displaced residents and delivering bill relief to approximately 10,000 customers were further examples of ongoing recovery efforts to support community resilience after the floods and headlines receded.
Emergency Services Telecommunications Authority (ESTA)
The Emergency Services Telecommunications Authority (ESTA) Field Dispatcher Deployment Initiative reflects an emergency-management mindset in which frontline services reflect the characteristics of a responsive, scalable and agile emergency response agency. This includes all aspects, from planning, exercising and being response-ready, to delivering services within agreed benchmarks regardless of the operating environment.
This initiative considered the value of ESTA Emergency Communications Officers (ECO) being deployed to an incident control centre, which managed incidents and emergencies at a local level. A crucial element of success included the ability to provide real-time intelligence, and even dispatch resources, to respond to incidents at this local level, which undoubtedly saved lives. Other elements include the improvement of situational awareness among incident controllers and the enhancement of timeliness and quality and incident response.
Department of Government Services
The SynSurv Public Health Vigilance provides a world-first near real-time system to evaluate data from hospital emergency departments and provide early warning of possible public health events. Triage text collected during admission in emergency departments across Victoria provides the earliest evidence of emerging public health threats. Advanced analytical tools developed by this project, and now deployed, monitor this triage text to identify the emergence of targeted public health risks. Health and emergency management authorities are alerted early of patterns of emergence across the state’s health system that flag a potential need for the mobilisation of emergency and health services.
One example is thunderstorm asthma, where SynSurv detected a potential event on 9 November 2022 within an hour of the first cases appearing. When such an event escalates into an incident similar to the one that occurred on 21 November 2016, early mobilisation of Victorian Emergency Services will enable significantly improved response and improved outcomes. This initiative was the result of a partnership between the Victorian Centre for Data Insights and the Health Protection Branch at the Department of Health – SynSurv Public Health Vigilance.
Department of Jobs, Skills, Industry and Regions
The Victorian Pro-Bono Flood Assistance project was a collaboration between Jobs Victoria, Local Government Victoria, professional services firms and councils following the October 2022 Victorian floods. Recognising the scale of the recovery effort required, the project secured the pro-bono services of seven firms to support the councils most impacted by the floods between November 2022 and February 2023.
Delivered through an innovative model to leverage skills across a regional area, the project provided councils with swift access to a broad range of support and resources, such as project management, human resources and workforce management, planning and financial frameworks to support flood recovery efforts.
The model quickly met the common needs of councils and responded flexibly to emerging needs as the flood waters receded and priorities changed. The project was successful in achieving its goals to support councils and provided an innovative, scalable model that could be replicated for future emergencies.
Empowering Aboriginal communities to achieve long-term change and improved outcomes, through developing new relationships and new ways of working
Embedding the voice and agency of Aboriginal Victorians in decision making at all three levels of government and across agencies is critical to achieving long-term generational and improved outcomes for Aboriginal communities. This award celebrates Aboriginal self-determination as enshrined in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples through active partnerships that are transferring policy and program decision-making and resources to the Victorian Aboriginal community.
This category is proudly partnered by First Peoples – State Relations Group, Department of Premier & Cabinet.
Department of Transport and Planning
The Transport Portfolio Aboriginal Self Determination Plan (the Plan) launched in November 2020 represents a milestone for the portfolio as it is the first time a whole-of-portfolio approach was taken to advance Aboriginal self-determination. The Plan establishes the Department of Transport and Planning’s (DTP) commitment to self-determination through Aboriginal-led and informed work and celebration of Aboriginal culture, heritage and people. The Plan articulates the portfolio’s commitment to embedding self-determination, the 11 actions the portfolio has progressed towards in partnering with Victorian Traditional Owners and Aboriginal stakeholders to drive reform to deliver and enhance outcomes for Aboriginal Victorians. First Peoples Directions Circle, Creative Victoria
The First Peoples Directions Circle embeds Aboriginal Self-Determination and community voice in the development and delivery of Creative Victoria programs and initiatives. The Directions Circle leads on all First Peoples’ actions, strategic initiatives, policy development and delivery to ensure a thriving First Peoples Creative Industries now and into the future. Following state-wide expressions of interest process in 2019, the inaugural First Peoples Directions Circle was appointed by a publicly named Selection Panel of esteemed First Peoples peers to form a partnership group (renamed a “Directions Circle”) comprising 11 members to lead the development and implementation of all actions in Creative Victoria’s most recent ‘Creative State 2025′ strategy with a First Peoples’ focus and guide the delivery of Creative Victoria’s First Peoples commitments.
Department of Education
Lilydale District and Yarra Valley Education Plan schools have developed a Collaborative Indigenous Strategy, supporting needs of Koorie students, improving student knowledge, and targeting Aboriginal inclusion. The vision of the state-wide Marrung Aboriginal Education Plan 2016–2026 is at the centre. This commitment means students experience culturally inclusive education, in an environment where they feel safe to stand strong in their identity. Aboriginal cultures and histories are celebrated and learnt by school community. Students have opportunities to connect with their culture and communities, and pathways to achieve their aspirations. The strategy sees Aboriginal culture and history celebrated and embedded in the schools’ curriculums. Koorie students feel sense of connection, are strong in cultural identity and engaged in secondary education to reach their goals. Koorie student voices are heard, their learning needs tailored to. Partnerships with local Aboriginal communities have developed and strengthened relationships offer students greater pathways, development, and transition opportunities.
Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action
Water is Life – Traditional Owner Access to Water Roadmap is a nation-leading policy that establishes pathways to increase Traditional Owner roles, responsibilities and resourcing in water management in Victoria. Originally outlined in the Victorian Government’s Water for Victoria 2016 policy commitments, this project forms a key pillar of the Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action’s Aboriginal Water Program. Importantly, the project prioritised collaboration and partnership with Traditional Owners to facilitate the development of a Traditional Owner-led Aboriginal water policy. In addition to strengthened relationships between Traditional Owners and government, and an enhanced understanding of TO priorities, this approach resulted in the release of Water is Life – Traditional Owner Access to Water Roadmap, a groundbreaking, multi-lingual publication that places the government’s policy position and Traditional Owner voices side by side. Notably, Water is Life includes twenty-seven Nation Statements from Traditional Owners across Victoria, outlining their aspirations for the future of water and waterway management in Victoria.
Department of Jobs, Skills, Industry and Regions
The Department of Jobs, Skills, Industry and Regions’ Yuma Yirramboi Strategy is critical work that advocates self-determination. The contributions made are vital in ensuring endorsement and approval of the Strategy by both Cabinet and the Victorian Aboriginal Employment and Economic Council. Yuma Yirramboi will lead the way to support Aboriginal wealth creation and achieve economic parity within a generation.
Recognising exceptional innovation, inspiration and impact
For the first time, IPAA Victoria is running a People’s Choice Award and this is now open for voting. We are inviting all Victorians, including our public sector colleagues, to have their say and vote for their favourite project. This award seeks to recognise exceptional projects or initiatives as recognised by peers in the sector.
Victorian Public Sector (VPS) Women of Colour Network (WoCN)
The Victorian Public Sector (VPS) Women of Colour Network (WoCN) was established in January 2019 by a group of passionate leading women. It is a staff-led collective run by and for self-identifying Women of Colour within the VPS. Three pillars of Strategic Objectives are ‘Connect and Grow’,’ Amplify and Elevate’, and ‘Transform and Embed’. The Network has been an innovative leading team to strive in creating a safe and inclusive space for VPS WoC.
VPS WoCN launched the first ever VPS Diversity and Inclusion Survey in 2020. Its key recommendations emphasised the needs to capture intersectional data on cultural diversity and embed this in HR systems, and for systemic processes to create a safe and equitable workplace. This includes fair access to opportunities as career advancement, leadership positions, professional development and more. The Network provided a tailored Leadership Development and Mentoring Program for 95 participants in 2022.
The Emerging Aboriginal Leader Scholarship acknowledges and supports Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander public sector employees by offering a professional development program to a high performing Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander person who demonstrates significant leadership potential and dedication to the public sector. The award supports broad career pathways in the public sector for First Nations employees and is targeted at those with 7 years’ or less career experience. The scholarship consists of a 12-month professional development package tailored to the needs of the award recipient.
This scholarship is proudly partnered by the Koorie Outcomes Division at the Department of Education.
Senior Policy Officer, Department of Premier and Cabinet
6:00 pm–10:00 pm
Zinc at Federation Square
Cnr Princes Walk &, Russell St Exit
Melbourne VIC 3000
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