JULIE
PARSONS, Acting Manager Community
Relations, Redfern-Waterloo Authority, and
BERYL
VAN-OPLOO, Manager/Teacher, Redfern-Waterloo Authority Hospitality
Training School, sworn
and examined:
ROBERT
PETER DOMM, Chief Executive Officer,
Redfern-Waterloo Authority, and
DENNY
HALL, Principal Project Manager, Training, Enterprise and Employment, Redfern-Waterloo
Authority, sworn and affirmed:
CHAIR:
Thank you for being with us on Gadigal land. We pay our respects to Elders past and
present. Perhaps you have had a chat amongst yourselves as to how you wish to
proceed with your opening comments about the Redfern-Waterloo Authority and its
role et cetera.
Mr
DOMM: With your leave I would like
to do two things. Firstly I would like to hand up a newsletter which has been
distributed throughout the Redfern Waterloo area this week, which is an update
on activities and it does contain specific reference to indigenous job
opportunities and so on. I would refer that newsletter to the attention of the
Committee as an update on some of the material that is contained within the
submission that we put in by 30 November. Secondly, I would ask the leave to
allow Auntie Beryl Van-Oploo to make
the opening statement and give some of her own personal experiences about the
situation of Aboriginal people in Redfern-Waterloo and the importance of
training and employment in improving addressing the issue of social
disadvantage.
Ms
VAN-OPLOO: Thank you for having me
here this afternoon. It is a great privilege to be here and to be heard for the
first time. I personally myself have been out there for 50-odd years in the
workforce with limited education. I have come from a background where I
self-educated. I have always wanted to take my education back to the
community—that was the goal in life. From a very early age I worked whatever
job I could. I have always worked in communities whether it be in the Sydney region or whether
it be in country areas. We have never really had an opportunity that we can
have a voice to voice our own opinions. This is the first time I have ever sat
before a committee and voiced my opinion. The thing is I have seen over the 50
years that I have been out there in the workforce that nothing has really
happened with building these bridges. Believe you me I have been around Australia to
remote areas. I have travelled Australia
to every major city and every major town. To me personally it is appalling.
I
have done a lot of work in Redfern. I have worked for TAFE for 20-odd years as
a teacher/trainer in hospitality. It was hard for me there. At the time—and I
am being truthful—there was a lot of racism because I had an education and I
was not allowed to have an education. There was a lot of good people there that
helped me through the way and I stuck in there but the goal was to take it back
to the community. I achieved that. I argued to take the education back to the
community. The community will not come here. If you do not educate the parents
then you have got no way of educating the children. I fortunately had oldies
that always told me to go and get an education and I instilled that in my own
children—now they are all academic people out there in the workforce—and my
grandchildren will have a choice. I think everybody has the right to have a
choice in life.
This
is what I am giving these people now that are disadvantaged through the
Redfern-Waterloo Authority. I was retired and they made me offer. I did not
take the offer straight away because I thought this was going to be another one
of those things that they build you up and then they let you down. But I
thought about it and I thought I will give it a go for 12 months and with all
the support from Robert and the team it has worked. We have only been there 12
months. I have got people out in the workforce that would have no idea of how
to go out and get a job. To me that is so great. This morning one of the girls
got a job and she had a smile from ear to ear.
The
other thing is that we have started off another course and I have got eight
people from The Block—I have to tell you this. To me that is a major
achievement. They are not only young people; they are parents. If you educate
the parents then you educate the young people. I think that is what we need. I
do a lot of hard yards as well but my being there as a support person has given
them confidence. They have come down there by themselves. The word is out
there, that what we are doing with the Redfern-Waterloo Authority is working.
Just to see those young people go out and get the job or they will ring me up
from juvenile justice and say, “Aunt, can you take one of the boys or one
of the girls. We really
don’t want to put them out there.” So I have taken them on and now I can
gladly say that one of the girls who did something really horrendous is back at
TAFE doing a course that she wants to do. She is getting her life back on track
by coming to us—it was like a stepping-stone. If I can keep one of those kids
off the street and give them some sort of life or education then so be it.
Without people like Robert and Denny and Julie and, like I say, my other team
back there—there is only Matthew and I, he is the chef—to see how we have grown
in 12 months is just amazing and to see that the word is out there now in the
community. I have already been out to Mt Druitt and we are doing a day on 6 or
8 May so they can get the people to come in from out there.
I am training younger people to take over from where I am
leaving off when I do eventually step back, which is in the cards within a few
years. But for now it is absolutely working in Redfern and I can see the
changes. Not only that, the community is so proud of what we are doing. The
Elders come down and believe it or not they sit outside and have a
cappuccino—they have never had a cappuccino in their life. They come down and
have parties and meals. We run a catering service as well, so we have in-house
functions where the students get hands-on training. We had 60 people there last
Wednesday night and the people that came did not stop complementing us on the
service. I was so proud because that is what it is all about.
We do work in conjunction with the Alexandria Park
Community School.
I work with all the schools within the area so that if there is a dropout I
will take that person on board and then eventually I would rather them go back
to school and finish school—it is just not in the cards for some of them but a
lot of them to go back to school when they are at an early age. We are in the
heart of the community—we are on Wilson
Street. It is not only the Redfern community that
supports everything; it is the communities within the Sydney region and country areas. I can see
this program that we run would work in remote areas, it would work in a small
country town on a smaller scale but it is a matter of getting out there. I
always talk to my niece—a teacher at Walgett
High School where I come
from—and she said the kids are starting to change a little bit.
They all know about me. If I can just get it out there it
would make one hell of a difference for everybody. I would like to take it to
the Kimberley’s and I would love to take it to
Kakadu and Western Australia
because they are people that really need something. At the end of the day what
we are doing down there is training people to get real jobs. When they get real
jobs it makes one hell of a difference in their lives. That is what it is all
about with us and me and working as a team and getting them to work as a team themselves.
Believe you me for those people to come from The Block under their own
self-esteem is just amazing. I hope it does continue.
CHAIR: Thank
you very much for your opening comments.
Dr JOHN KAYE: Mr Domm, I wanted to ask you some questions about some
specific aspects of the development and the impact that will have on the
Aboriginal community. I do that in the context that this is obviously one model
that is being tried and therefore it is relevant to us. The issue with your
particular strategies, as I understand it, is that in any of the developments
that you propose there will be no new schools? Is that correct? You are not
providing any schools? For example, you are selling off Redfern Public and
Rachel Foster but there is no new education institutions being provided at the
primary or secondary level?
Mr DOMM: The decision to close the Redfern school was taken some time
before the Redfern-Waterloo Authority was established. I understand that was
concomitant with a significant upgrading of the Alexandria Park
school to cater for—I think the Redfern school was down to about 50 students.
There was a decision made, based on the demographics of the area, that that
school was surplus to requirements and Alexandria Park school from all I have
seen seems to be quite a strong success story. In terms of increases in
population, stage one of the Redfern-Waterloo Authority Built Environment Plan
is premised mainly on commercial development and jobs. We only envisage 2,000
dwellings under stage one of that plan, which probably translates to 3,000 or
so new residents in the area. So it is not seen that will have a significant
impact in terms of demands for new schools.
Dr JOHN KAYE: Are you presuming that the 3,000 new residents will be
infertile?
Mr DOMM: No.
Dr JOHN KAYE: They will have children.
Mr DOMM: And the existing schools are able to cater for whatever
children may be there.
Dr JOHN KAYE: If you are going to increase the population by 3,000, will
that not put additional stress on existing services, in particular, education
services? There is no new provision for educational capacity?
Mr DOMM: That is a matter for the Department of Education. They
believe that the existing school facilities are capable of meeting expected
growth. I agree with that position.
Dr JOHN KAYE: You agree with the position of the Department of Education?
Mr DOMM: Yes.
Dr JOHN KAYE: One of the issues the Redfern-Waterloo Authority has spoken
about is jobs creation by this development. Is it your position that the jobs
created will benefit the Aboriginal community in Redfern and Waterloo?
Mr DOMM: It already has.
Dr JOHN KAYE: The additional development is commercial and light
industrial, is it?
Mr DOMM: We have set up the Yaama
Dhiyaan Indigenous
Training College,
which has a hospitality training function and downstairs runs Koori job courses
in construction. Obviously in the early stages of the urban renewal project
construction jobs are the jobs that are coming online. Therefore, we are
training people to become job ready. Already under the indigenous employment
model, which we developed, we have created 240 Aboriginal jobs. At the back
page of that update I have given you, you will see a recent explanation of how
that model is starting to be applied in areas outside of Redfern and Waterloo, but even inside Redfern and Waterloo with private sector developments and
other government agencies, the council, the Commonwealth Government for example
and other State government agencies. So the applicability of that model is
starting to spread and that is an indication that it is working and is being
successful.
So we have already achieved a significant amount in terms of
job creation in the construction industry. In fact, every person we put through
a Koori job-ready course in construction, we guarantee them a job at the end of
it in urban renewal in Redfern and Waterloo.
In terms of hospitality training, obviously we are not running hotels but we
have formed partnerships with major hotel groups and other employers of
hospitality graduates and we are able to feed people into those jobs. My team,
headed up by Denny Hall—and she can comment further—is also expanding into
other areas and industries where we see there are labour shortages and the
capacity for people to be trained and go into employment. The transport
industry is one such industry. It needs to be borne in mind that the Aboriginal
community of Redfern-Waterloo in terms of the census statistics is about 4 per cent
of the community. In other words, on the 2001 census I believe it is less than
800 people. So when you are creating 240 jobs in construction, hospitality and
other areas, you are starting to have quite a major impact, even if numerically
it does not seem a huge amount to you today.
In the leaflet I have given you we say over the next 5 to 10
years we can create 8,000 construction jobs in the Eveleigh precinct alone, and
about 800 of those construction jobs will be for Aboriginal people. Of course,
the critical thing is you can create the training and the construction jobs
because they are the jobs that are coming online in that area in the early
phases of an urban renewal project. The next stage has to be getting people
into permanent jobs that are created after those new employment centres have
been established. That is the big challenge for us in moving forward.
Dr JOHN
KAYE: That was my
next question. Given that most of the Aboriginal community from which you would
be recruiting for these jobs already has ready access to the central business
district [CBD] which has a number of these types of jobs, what are you going to
do that is different to create jobs for Aboriginal people in this urban renewal
project?
Mr DOMM: What we do is where there are
construction projects on government-owned land or where the Government has an
influence, we use that influence to ensure that targets are locked into the
construction project before it starts.
Dr JOHN KAYE: That is fine for construction, but I am talking about
post-construction.
Mr DOMM: Part of our contract, for example, for the Channel 7
development at the Australian
Technology Park
is that we have locked in 60 construction jobs for Aboriginal people. But we
also have a commitment from Channel 7 that they will sit down with us in two
years’ time when it is finished and the employees are coming online to talk
about how we can get Aboriginal people working in the television industry. We
are creating those linkages as we go through. There is not much point talking
about how many jobs will be at Channel 7 when they will not be there until
2010. You have to build the production studios first before the jobs are
actually there.
Dr JOHN KAYE: If we are to accept that the redevelopment is good news for
the Aboriginal community, it needs to be bringing jobs and economic development
to the Aboriginal community. You have not explained to me why this particular
set of developments will do what the CBD has failed to do in providing ready
access to jobs.
Mr DOMM: Ms Hall is chomping at the bit, but before I throw to her I
will say that I think I have already answered that question. We are creating
the essential linkages with culturally appropriate training and mentoring to
address the failures of the past, and it is proving successful. The figures
speak for themselves. You do not have to believe me; just look at the jobs that
are being created. It is because we have got proper training in place, we have
got Aboriginal elders like Aunty Beryl who are widely respected within the
community and are able to get people to attend training courses and keep them
there. When they go out to the workforce we employ Aboriginal mentors to work
with them in the workforce to ensure that if they are having a problem or they
are missing from work we go after them and try to find out what the problem is.
In other words, we have created a model that is fairly simple and fairly
straightforward but culturally appropriate, and it is working.
Ms HALL: Going back to your point about why it is different than the
mass of jobs that are available in the CBD for Aboriginal people, the jobs in
the CBD are not for Aboriginal people and there are no programs in place for
many of that employment in the CBD that produces a product that Aboriginal
people can relate to. We spend quite a lot of time working in the community
talking to Aboriginal people and being guided by two major elders about what
makes a successful program. I think Aunty Beryl has articulated that fairly
clearly about it being community based. It has to be culturally appropriate and
it has to be professionally run at a really high standard. More importantly,
you do not train unless you have a job because the Aboriginal population is
over-trained. There are so many training programs that do not lead to
employment.
What Aboriginal people need to go through—and I think Aunty
Beryl has expressed it—is a change of self-confidence, a change of skill
levels. It is being in an environment where they can feel confident and secure
and safe to make mistakes. Because in the wider community when they make a
mistake they are not accepted. So it is being able to be a student, being able
to learn in a culturally appropriate environment and being ready to go to work.
That is why in the training we do we are very particular. It has to be
full-time and it cannot be for any less than eight weeks. Because it is not
just training people in vocational skills; we are actually training people to
work. As you know, in many of these families nobody has worked for three
generations. There is not a culture of work. There are no examples of anybody
they know who has been to work. The family does not get up in the morning
because it stays up all night. It does not have food on the table for
breakfast.
All these
things, you think might be insurmountable. I suppose the thing I want to say is
that it has been quite amazing at how quickly the community has responded. I do
not know if you understand when Aunty Beryl says that she has got eight people
from The Block. These people have not got out of their pyjamas in two years;
they are ex-junkies. They really believe that there is a future for them. What
we found in the Aboriginal community is that if you can assist one person in
that family, then it has a ripple effect. If we get 16-year-old Dylan into a
job on a construction site, his mother is interested in what is going to happen
to her and Dylan’s brothers and sisters start going to school. It is a funny
thing, we do not understand it; we have never lived that life. We do not really
understand it. From an outsider’s perspective it is if they can believe that
change is possible, that people really care enough to put something together
for them, then they take advantage of it.
We have got graduates from hospitality in the major hotel in Sydney at Shangri-La. We
are placing them with companies all over the place. We like to place them in
companies so they get a very big career choice. They might enter on a
particular level but in a major company there is no reason for them once they
have started that they could not go up to senior management. If you are talking
about and want to focus on the commercial jobs that are available, we are
putting together at the moment a package around that because we need to be
ready for when the doors open. We want to have those arrangements in place so
that the administrative people are trained, they are ready to go and we can try
to get them into some work before the doors open. So their confidence is built
and they can take advantage of those opportunities.
There is a major opportunity right in their community. We
have said also that if you have a look at where the skills shortages are in Australia at
the moment, the logistics, transport and warehousing industries have been
highlighted. We are developing partnerships in those industries so that we can
link up, provide the appropriate training and match it with the demands of the
industry so that there is that seamlessness to employment. When we achieve
that, that is when we have success. If we do not do that right we do not have
success. If you are asking why other people have not been able to achieve it,
it is because they have not done it right. The big issue that we have been able
to show is that we have a model and we have developed it and refined it. That
model can be duplicated. It is based on those really simple principles that you
must do. You must have the mentors, you must have the follow-up, you must have
Aboriginal leaders, you must have Aboriginal faces in the classroom. When you
do that the success rate is unbelievable. We are running at somewhere between
75 per cent to 80 per cent success rate in getting people into employment. I do
not think there is another model around that is currently doing that.
CHAIR: Do
you have any links with Alexandria
Park Public
School in terms of mentoring?
Ms HALL: Definitely.
Mr DOMM: We have very strong links with the school. In fact, we run
programs within the school. I might ask Ms Parsons to say a few words about
some of the human services aspects as they relate to the school.
Ms PARSONS: Since the Human Services Plan phase one was developed in
2005, obviously the Department of Education is very strongly involved. The
Human Services Plan phase one directly looks at linking with children and young
families. So a lot of the actions contained in it are directly linked to Alexandria Park Community
School—things like a
mentoring program for young Aboriginal men by old Aboriginal gentlemen. There
is the NASCAR Sporting Chance program that we are involved with where we are
using sport as a link to keep young Aboriginal children in school. Once again
we are very heavily involved in that. There is the Nation Project, which Mr
Parks spoke about just before, which we convene and provide secretarial support
for. We support the school with young people at risk. There is dialogue and
discussion every day. It is a growing process. There is also the Connect Redfern program, which looks at the very
young children with playgroups and those sorts of activities that the
Redfern-Waterloo Authority is actively involved with. There are a range of
those sorts of things.
CHAIR: Auntie
Beryl, did you say you have been out there to the school?
Ms
VAN-OPLOO: Yes. I
have had long links with it before it was Alexandria
Park school and it was Cleveland Street High School.
That is how long the link is. It has changed over the years, of course. We take
students for work experience because they have got nowhere else to go or they
go into the city and come back. I have had one come back to me from Darling Harbour because they did not like it in
there, they did not feel comfortable. So we take the students for work
experience at our premises. Then they go into a career because they can talk it
through with me. I am there as their mentor. I am everything there. I am the
psychologist, psychiatrist—name it, I’m it. Then I speak to them like their nan
or their aunt. I can also talk to their parents. It all seems to work out for
the best. As I said, I have had very strong ties with the school since the Cleveland Street
days. They then moved it to Alexandria
Park. Even when I was
teaching at TAFE I went off campus and taught the students there. I fought with
TAFE to take the education to them. Somehow I managed it, but do not ask me
how. It was a big success. If we all work together these things can happen.
People are forgetting that there are not many Aboriginal
families left in the area. There are 13 families left on The Block. There are
young mothers who go to Campbelltown and then come back to Redfern because they
are not happy out there. Redfern has always been our home and it always will
be. We are providing the missing link; that is, education. We are getting out
into the community. This morning a lad came in and asked when the construction
course would start. I told him that it had already started. He said that they
are offering jobs on the new Channel 7 site and on the construction of the sports
facilities at the school. I told him that it was out in the community already.
It is word of mouth in our community. They would not pick up a newspaper and
read it because 80 per cent of people my age are illiterate. People forget
that. It is word of mouth, and then people will know.
Our children are illiterate. I have to scribe for them. That
is why I have set up the program at the school where I am teaching now to suit
the community. All modules are in a folder because I developed them. I was a
TAFE teacher. They are core modules, so when they go out they have a
certificate II and then they have other certificates that we get them to do off
campus. Without my support and the support of the teachers they would not be
able to do those things.
The Hon. GREG DONNELLY: You have been provided with some questions on notice. I
will refer to a couple of them and seek your response. The second question asks
you to explain the Redfern-Waterloo Authority’s proposed share equity model of
home ownership. Can you provide some detail about that proposal?
Mr DOMM: I got into trouble a year our so ago at the budget estimates
hearings when I answered that question by saying that that forms part of stage
two of the built environment plan and that we had not started working on that.
I tried to be helpful and answer some questions and dug myself a hole. Stage
two of the built environment plan has commenced and we are working actively
with the Department of Housing on revitalisation of the public housing estates
and trying to see what potential that creates for new and better public housing
and also an element of affordable housing, including the potential for some
sort of shared equity home ownership scheme.
The leaflet I handed out today indicates that on Saturday the
Minister for Redfern Waterloo, the Hon. Frank Sartor,
announced a major affordable housing initiative at North
Eveleigh. The concept plan for the redevelopment, which is going
on exhibition this week, will contain between 150 and 200 affordable rental
dwellings. That comprises about 12 per cent to 16 per cent of total dwellings
on that site. The total is estimated to be about 1,260. That is a very high
percentage of dwellings. However, I emphasise the word “rental”. In
other words, we made a strategic decision in respect of that site that
affordable rental dwellings would be a more enduring solution than a one-off,
lower-cost sale process. There are two ways to provide affordable housing: one
is to sell at an affordable rate and the other is to set affordable rental
rates. We have made the decision that the more enduring solution in North Eveleigh is for the Government to set aside the
land from the sale process and then to use developer levies to construct the
dwellings over the development horizon of the project and retain them in
ownership and use them for low-cost rental accommodation.
When it comes to stage two of the built environment plan and
looking at the public housing estates we are still not at the point at which we
have started to work out the detail of a shared equity home ownership scheme.
Therefore, I am not able to go into any detail in respect of that today.
However, the underlying philosophy of that proposal is whether we can find a
way whereby low-income, disadvantaged people living in public housing can in
some way gain a stake in that housing so that they can generate wealth through
capital growth. Having said that, there is no proposal to sell public housing
or anything like that. We need to look at what is happening interstate and
overseas to see whether there is some capacity to create wealth through a
shared equity scheme. We have not come to any conclusions about that and
ultimately it will go to Cabinet and a decision will be made. That is all I can
say about shared equity at this stage.
The Hon.
GREG DONNELLY: A
witness earlier today said that the indigenous community in Redfern feels
comfortable in Redfern; it is an environment they know and many have lived
there for a long time, or at least part of their life. They have some anxiety about
leaving the precinct to come into the CBD, for example, to take up employment
opportunities, or even more broadly outside the CBD and other parts of Sydney. Given that many
job opportunities are available around the greater Sydney metropolitan area, are there ways and
means over time of encouraging Aboriginals to leave and to work outside the
Redfern area and then come back in the evening? On the other hand, was the
earlier witness wrong in that observation? It was certainly stated that there
is some anxiety about leaving Redfern to work.
Mr DOMM: I have met Aboriginal people who will go anywhere to work in
the Sydney
metropolitan area, in the country or even interstate. I have also met the
people described who feel more comfortable within a certain zone. That is one
of the reasons we have emphasised mentoring in the employment projects we have
developed. Aboriginal people can feel alienated working in Redfern at a
particular work site if there are no other Aboriginal people there just as they
can feel alienated in an unfamiliar place outside Redfern. It comes back to the
culturally appropriate mechanisms in place. It must be recognised that this is
an issue for some people, but not all. Where it is an issue there should be
mechanisms to address it. Mentoring is a key to reassuring people that they are
okay where they are. It is always better if we can send Aboriginal people to a
work site where there are other Aboriginals. The Redfern-Waterloo Authority
employs a number of Aboriginal staff and we have staff at the Australian Technology
Park, which we own. We
encourage those people to communicate with each other and if they are having an
issue to talk to each other so that they do not feel isolated in any way in the
workplace.
Ms HALL: Entry-level training must be in the community, otherwise it
will not happen. After that it must be mainstreamed. With construction we run
an eight-week job ready course and give them a broad taste of construction so
that they understand what trade or profession they might want to pursue. Our
aim is to get them an apprenticeship or traineeship. All that training is done
by TAFE at an appropriate college. We want to mainstream Aboriginal people once
they have confidence. We are trying to explain with regard to hospitality that
we have no real leverage over jobs. However, we have very successfully
negotiated for our graduates to be placed in work outside Redfern. They are
everywhere across Sydney
in the top hotels, at cafes and restaurants and with catering companies. If
they have the confidence to work anywhere, they are on their way. That is our
aim.
We do have mentors who follow those people until they are
feeling relaxed and their confidence is high. However, we never let them go. We
find it beneficial to have someone keeping an eye on them and being there to
talk with them if they have trouble at work. When we first place them on a job,
our mentors are there once a week. That starts slipping out as the person is
more comfortable. We keep in contact with them and visit them on the job. There
is definitely an advantage in having Aboriginal people working throughout the
community wherever the jobs are. They do not oppose that once their confidence
is high enough.
Ms VAN-OPLOO: We trained a girl down here who went home to Lismore. She is
working there and keeps in contact with us. She was there for only two weeks
and found employment. Her husband, who was a junky—I am saying that freely
because that is how I speak to them and they know all the details—is now
working as well. I am very proud of that family getting it together. It does
happen for us. However, as I said, we have never really had the opportunity, it
has never been there. How I got this far, I do not know. The spirits must be
looking after me. It is happening and it is positive, and I want it to
continue. Eventually I would like to see our own indigenous enterprise in the
heart of the community. We can continue training young people and doing the
work that I have done over the years. My journey now is to turn it into an
indigenous enterprise. I can see that happening in a short time. We have been
there for only 12 months and it is excelling.
Some of our
students are managers at one work site. They have also set up their own
catering company. It is all happening. It is a steppingstone. I direct them to
TAFE if they want to do an apprenticeship. I will always been be there to
support them. If they have that support, it can happen for all of us. I can see
changes in education with Aboriginal people. They want education and a job.
Some of the boys and girls have gone for work experience at the Reserve Bank at
a couple of the compass sites. They say they cannot go up that far because they
have never been in a lift before and they are going up 40 floors. They were
asked whether they wanted employment. Some of the young lads are only 16 or 17
years old and they are taking up apprenticeships. It is a bonus for me and the
communities. I think I speak for the many of the Aboriginal people in Redfern
and Waterloo,
which is where I spend most of my time. I hope we can spend more time there to
see this up and running and create an indigenous enterprise to allow us to be
self-sufficient. That is my journey.
CHAIR: Without being intrusive,
bureaucratic or big brother-ish, do you have systems to monitor and to assess
the successes, to build on them and to make the story stronger and the outcomes
better? Do you have systems to track these kids?
Ms VAN-OPLOO: Yes. I never do anything unless I know I am going to get an
outcome. I have learnt over the years.
CHAIR: In
12 months will someone somewhere be able to go to either a file or a DVD and
look at some exit stories about each of the apprenticeships?
Ms VAN-OPLOO: Oh yes, that is happening now. We are putting all that
together. I would not want to lose that. What I do need to tell you is that a
lot of these people, they come to us. This morning in class I asked did any of
them eat kangaroo, because we specialises in indigenous cuisine. Not one
Aboriginal person put up their hand. Did you taste crocodile? Not one person.
So, I teach culture as well. I make them aware of their own culture and I also
bring everyone else’s culture into the classroom as well because they have to
learn to respect one another. That is my philosophy.
Mr DOMM: I think Aunty Beryl made a comment earlier about going back
when we started off, not that long ago, that there was a bit of distrust and
cynicism towards these sorts of programs. There were good reasons for that. Too
much in the past governments had concentrated in a well-intentioned way on
training scheme after training scheme as if that was an end in itself. We have
adopted the position from the very beginning that training is just the start of
the process, the start of the journey if you like. It enables people to
commence the journey, which is a journey into meaningful employment.
In answer to your question, I refer you to page 19 of our
submission. You will see statistics there that indicate that as at November
last year we are tracking where those students in the hospitality training are
going, for example. There are only 5 per cent of those students where we could
say there was no contact. You are always going to lose track of some people.
That is simply unavoidable because some people do not have the means to be
contacted. Even if they are around they do not have mobile phones or whatever,
emails. The point is that with only 5 per cent there has been a lack of contact
and the majority of those people have gone into employment or are doing further
training or whatever. It is critical for us, and we say to them when they
graduate, that we are here for them on that journey, and it is not just the
training course, that is just the start of that process.
CHAIR: Their
footprint is going to be there and their story is going to be told, good bad or
indifferent?
Mr DOMM: Exactly.
Ms VINE: That is right.
(The witnesses withdrew)
Link to Inquiry:
Overcoming
Indigenous disadvantage Link to Transcript
29/04/2008 (495 KB PDF)