Stepping Up

著者: Bega Valley Shire Library
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  • Celebrating Community Leadership. This four-episode series speaks to thirteen community leaders about how they each harnessed and developed new skills in the face of disruption — featuring the voices of some of the Bega Valley's most active and creative emerging leaders. They share insights about how the Far South Coast NSW not-for-profit sector is now planning collaboratively for the future, through a place-based capacity building partnership program. From the regions to the cities, this series teaches us all how we can become better and more influential leaders in our homes, workplaces and communities. Series Image by Vidar Nordli-Mathisen on Unsplash Series Music “As We Make, We Mend”, by Dean Gray & Anna Martin-Scrase (Wolumla School of Music)
    © 2024
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あらすじ・解説

Celebrating Community Leadership. This four-episode series speaks to thirteen community leaders about how they each harnessed and developed new skills in the face of disruption — featuring the voices of some of the Bega Valley's most active and creative emerging leaders. They share insights about how the Far South Coast NSW not-for-profit sector is now planning collaboratively for the future, through a place-based capacity building partnership program. From the regions to the cities, this series teaches us all how we can become better and more influential leaders in our homes, workplaces and communities. Series Image by Vidar Nordli-Mathisen on Unsplash Series Music “As We Make, We Mend”, by Dean Gray & Anna Martin-Scrase (Wolumla School of Music)
© 2024
エピソード
  • Regenerate
    2025/02/06

    In this episode we cover everything from the big plans and ambitions of community groups, to how we think about the building blocks of what leadership is, and how we support and foster a strong community sector.

    Allowing the community to excel and thrive has been evident in this program, where we’ve worked with people that they felt heard and listened to, and then trusted to go and do what they considered was the right solution, or the solution for this place; and it is the people of a place that will make that place better or stronger or more engaging...” — Carolyn Ardler.

    You’ll hear from Carolyn Ardler from the Foundation for Rural and Regional Renewal, Nicole Weber from Quality Matters Consulting, Alex Boulgakov from Renewable Cobargo, and Vanessa Spinelli from Grow the Future. Each has been connected to the IRCF Program (Investing in Rural Community Futures Program). The IRCF’s aim is to support and strengthen the capacity of grassroots NfPs, enabling them to have a positive impact on overall community well-being. In less than two years, the program engaged about 150 organisations and trained 45 community leaders in the Bega Valley Shire.

    We're excited that The Bega Valley Investing in Rural Community Futures Program was a finalist at the NSW Resilient Australia Awards (2024), and was “Highly Commended” in the Resilient Australia Local Government Award category.

    A critical aspect of regeneration is the way in which it illuminates what a community needs.

    The Bega Valley was hit hard by the Black Summer bushfires, so the idea of regeneration is both literal and figurative. A crisis is a turning point for any community — a time when local people face overwhelming challenges, placing community leaders at risk of burnout. In the wake of significant disaster, when day-to-day life has been so utterly disrupted, communities galvanise in unprecedented ways, and are often inspired to reimagine the future. This can result in the initiation of hugely ambitious projects, as people are reinvigorated by seeing the power community collaboration and connection have to ensure the sustainability of community groups and not-for-profits (NfPs), and the leaders who help drive them.

    Series links:

    • Bega Valley Shire Council

    • Foundation for Rural & Regional Renewal

    • Investing in Rural Community Futures Program

    • Australian Rural Leadership Foundation

    Interviewees:

    • Ep 1:

      • Eden Visitor Centre

      • Palliative Care Australia

      • Bega Valley Business Forum

    • Ep 2:

      • Eden Killer Whale Museum

      • Potoroo Palace

      • Police Citizens and Youth Club (Far South Coast)<...

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    46 分
  • Many People Many Hands
    2025/01/23

    In this episode we focus less on what not-for-profits and community organisations are doing in the Bega Valley, and more on how they’re doing it.

    It was very powerful and I think for myself, I can only speak for myself on this one, it helped my recovery because I was able to help others... As a community member I was seriously impacted as was everybody else, but I think because I was in the position of being able to help people, that really helped me.” — Chris Walters.

    You’ll hear from three community leaders: Chris Walters from Cobargo Community Access Centre; Carina Severs from Eden Community Access Centre; and Kate Liston-Mills, author and local advocate.

    Each of these women brings an approach to their work which is community led, pragmatic, and at heart driven by seeing a need and just getting stuck in and doing what’s necessary.

    What’s also striking is the deeply holistic nature of their approaches. You’ll hear how they’re motivated by a sense of both mission and purpose, and why they maintain a focus on how to get things done, rather than on who gets the credit.

    We explore how the day-to-day of community work is informed by deeper questions of “how”:

    • How do we think about community?
    • How do we consider who we are serving and in which ways?
    • How do we approach the future?
      (the one we are currently heading towards and the one we would ideally like to build).
    • And how do we support community leaders and not-for-profits to be more sustainable and resilient — especially for those most active in driving change?

    As the impacts of the Black Summer bushfires and COVID crises dissipate locally, Chris, Carina and Kate locate strategies to face and confront long-term challenges (such as intergenerational change, aging populations, or disenfranchised individuals), by building on a vision of an active and engaged community — where many people (and many hands) step up, collaborate, support, lead and work together.

    Series links:

    • Bega Valley Shire Council

    • Foundation for Rural & Regional Renewal

    • Investing in Rural Community Futures Program

    • Australian Rural Leadership Foundation

    Interviewees:

    • Ep 1:

      • Eden Visitor Centre

      • Palliative Care Australia

      • Bega Valley Business Forum

    • Ep 2:

      • Eden Killer Whale Museum

      • Potoroo Palace

      • Police Citizens and Youth Club (Far South Coast)

    • Ep 3:

      • Eden Community Access Centre

      • Kate Liston-Mills (author and community advocate)

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    40 分
  • Filling the Gaps
    2024/11/24

    In this episode, we’re going to take stock of some of the key challenges all Community Leaders face, and some of the unique ways rural Community Leaders respond to them.

    It’s about Filling the Gaps, and embracing the spirit of doing the best you can with what you have.

    One thing that the Council have done recently that is really good is sharing information and that has actually been amazing and also through different programs where organization gets to meet each other and network. Everyone's so busy, everyone works so hard, so it's hard to actually get together and organize things. But if there's an organization that organize stuff, it's amazing.” — Anna Lindstrand.

    You’ll meet three local Community Leaders: Anna Lindstrand from Potoroo Palace, Jacqui Filby who works with Police citizens Youth Clubs NSW, and Angela George from the Eden Killer Whale Museum.

    Anna, Jacqui and Angela outline short-term responses but also, at times, the need to look at the bigger picture. They detail the different types of organisational and community trouble-shooting they encounter, and how they grow, learn, harness the wisdom of others, and in the process build community and strengthen people's individual skills.

    Anna, Jacqui and Angela reflect on Leadership, what that word means to them; what leadership means to people in rural and regional areas; and of what community leadership in regional places like the Bega Valley can teach us all, no matter where we live, about community leadership as a whole.

    Series links:

    • Bega Valley Shire Council

    • Foundation for Rural & Regional Renewal

    • Investing in Rural Community Futures Program

    • Australian Rural Leadership Foundation

    Interviewees:

    • Ep 1:

      • Eden Visitor Centre

      • Palliative Care Australia

      • Bega Valley Business Forum

    • Ep 2:

      • Eden Killer Whale Museum

      • Potoroo Palace

      • Police Citizens and Youth Club (Far South Coast)

    • Ep 3:

      • Eden Community Access Centre

      • Kate Liston-Mills (author and community advocate)

      • Cobargo Community Access Centre (closed), redirect to Cobargo Community Development Corporation Limited

    • Ep 4:

      • Cobargo & District Energy Transition (Renewable Cobargo)

      • Grow the Future (Bega)

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    30 分

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