The Australia Post Community Grants program supports projects that create meaningful connections and boost mental wellbeing in local communities, with grants of up to $10,000.
“Australia Post is connected to every community in Australia,” says Nicky Tracey, General Manager Community and Stakeholder Engagement at Australia Post. “We provide essential products and services to help connect people to each other and the world, and our Post Offices and Posties are the hub of many of our regional and rural communities. That’s why it’s so important that we invest in the great work community organisations do every day to connect people and support mental health in local areas.”
If you volunteer with or work for a local not-for-profit, you might be wondering if you could apply for a Community Grant. Will your project fit the bill?
Over the last decade, we’ve funded 750 Community Grants projects that have created positive change in countless people’s lives. To celebrate, let’s take a look at how 10 of those recipients have maximised the benefits of a grant.
1. A project that connects refugees with others in the community
It’s the members of a community who are best placed to understand local issues and what will work to help address them – like the New Links Visiting Program by Diversitat, which was funded by a Community Grant to connect refugees with others in the local community.
“Here in Geelong, we resettle 200-300 refugees each year,” says Melissa Bird, Community Wellbeing Worker at Diversitat. “From some feedback, they feel like they've resettled in Australia, but they don't necessarily get to be involved themselves in the wider community.”
To help address this need, Diversitat connected participants with volunteer mentors who share similar interests, and who visit with them regularly. These regular catch-ups help them to gain more confidence to create new connections.
“When I arrived, I didn’t have any connections with anyone. When I met Gyan, I found a part of family. This is now my home,” says Selma, a New Links Visiting Program participant.
2. Regional Community Grants to encourage regular connection
The North Midlands Project, located in regional Western Australia, works hard to create happy, healthy and connected communities.
“We're in small, regional, geographically dispersed communities, so it's really important to bring people together and create social opportunities,” says Andrew Bowman-Bright, Community Program Manager at the North Midlands Project. “Community connectedness is really important for the general health and wellbeing of the people in our community.”
This level of connection in a regional area takes effort, so the volunteers of the North Midlands Project submitted a Community Grants application.
With this support, they ran a targeted community connection initiative, engaging over 6,000 community members across the towns of the North Midlands area.