Talk to us

CathNews, the most frequently visited Catholic website in Australia, is your daily news service featuring Catholics and Catholicism from home and around the world, Mass on Demand and on line, prayer, meditation, reflections, opinion, and reviews. And, what's more - it's free!

Anne-Marie Mioche (CatholicCare Wilcannia-Forbes)

CatholicCare Wilcannia-Forbes will lose 41 per cent of its financial counselling and financial capability funding in the Far West and Orana region in New South Wales in what it describes as an “inexplicable decision by a federal Government department”.

CCWF chief executive officer Anne-Marie Mioche warns the funding cut will adversely affect vulnerable people in some of the most remote communities in NSW.

The organisation is seeking an urgent meeting with Social Services Minister Tanya Plibersek.

“The decision is a real shock especially given the feedback we’ve had is that our service, which we have been delivering since 2009, is outstanding,” Ms Mioche said.

“We have consistently been praised by funders and communities for our innovative model that ensures people receive timely, high-quality support, even in the most remote locations.”

The tender outcomes awarded CCWF an unchanged level of funding for the Central West region, but less than 40 per cent of the funding available for the Far West and Orana, despite the organisation being the predominant provider in that region.

The funding decision will lead to major disruption in the provision of vital financial counselling across more than 22 communities in the vast Far West and Orana.

A service in demand, in the past financial year alone, CCWF provided financial counselling to 710 clients, 36 per cent of whom identified as Aboriginal, a critical indicator of the organisation’s reach and trust in communities where support is often hard to access.

Having had its financial counselling service gutted in the core Far West and Orana location, CCWF has been awarded funding for the Murray region, requiring it to expand to a new location with a significantly reduced overall budget and foundation.

“The decision to give us a new region but defund us where we’re already well established defies logic,” Ms Mioche said.

“I’ve spoken with other services affected by this decision, and they are just as dismayed.

“It does not make any sense.”

The funding cut comes after a nine-month wait for the tender outcome, leaving just eight weeks for CCWF to work through the impact on jobs and service transition.

“We urge the Commonwealth Government to review this decision and engage with us to find a sustainable solution that protects frontline services and ensures vulnerable Australians are not left behind,” Ms Mioche said.

FULL STORY

 Financial counselling funding cut to cause service chaos in western NSW (CatholicCare Wilcannia-Forbes)