Community Sector Taskforce Supports Call for Sector-Led Review of All Funding Relationships
Members of Tangata Whenua, Community and Voluntary Sector organisations
and groups want a Sector-led review of all funding relationships with
the Sector.
The call was made at a two-day forum (20-21 June) of 150 leading Sector
organisation representatives who came together to discuss pressing
issues that face nearly 100,000 not-for-profit organisations and groups
across the country.
There was strong representation from across the Sector, including local,
regional and national level, and from Maori, Pacific, Asian and ethnic
groups, arts and culture, sport and recreation, social services,
philanthropy, education and faith communities.
Tony Spelman, Tangata Whenua Co-Chair of the Community Sector Taskforce
said Forum participants believe the review will help to ensure the
Sector’s scarce resources are used more effectively and in ways that
make sense to communities.
“There was a strong sense of ownership at the Forum around the solutions
to our problems and in asserting the value of our perspective, as
independent, competent and accountable to the community,” he said.
The Sector’s practical way to include tangata whenua alongside tangata
tiriti at all levels of its work for people in the community has been
adopted as the basis for future development. This process is outlined
in A New Way of Working for the Tangata Whenua, Community and
Voluntary Sector.
“It is a way of working that can do practical justice to our country’s
founding documents Te Tiriti/Treaty of Waitangi and provide a practical
way to include all parts of our very diverse sector as we work
together,” Mr Spelman said
The Forum has also been very useful in bringing Government and the
Sector together. The Forum included a session between 13 Government
Ministers and Sector representatives focused on finding ways to develop
ongoing relationships and to work together on significant issues facing
the sector.
Funding and sustainability of the Sector was one€ of the issues raised
at this session said Dave Henderson, Community Sector Taskforce member:
“With the full support of the Taskforce, representatives articulated the
benefits to the government when the Sector’s accountability to local and
regional communities, rather then government requirements, are seen to
drive the management of funding.”
The Forum also agreed there is a need for the continuation of an
independent-from-government, Sector-led, government-funded group tasked
with facilitating the voices of the Sector, and for this to be based on
the sector’s Tiriti/Treaty of Waitangi Relationships Framework.
For some time now, the Community Sector Taskforce, an independent
Sector-led body has been promoting better ways of working and developing
relationships at local, regional and national level in the interests of
our people, tangata whenua and tangata tiriti together.
“We have promoted the establishment of ComVOiceS, a network of Sector
organisations, which promotes the value of the Sector in our
communities, and the Research Centre of Excellence, to promote
sector-led research,” said Dave Henderson. “Together with the sector we
are now ready to move forward.”
ENDS
For further information:
Tony Spelman
Tangata Whenua Co-Chair
Community Sector Taskforce
Phone: (09) 636-2107
Cell: (021) 233-6309
Dave Henderson
Community Sector Taskforce Member
Phone: (04) 972-7706