• 13 Mar 2015 1:02 PM | Louise Stokes
    The Association of Australian Convention Bureaux (AACB) has provided input to the 2015 review of the Export Market Development Grants (EMDG) scheme.

    The EMDG scheme is a key Australian Government financial assistance program facilitated through Austrade that supports the export of a wide range of industry sectors and products, including inbound tourism and the export of intellectual property and know-how outside of Australia. The objectives of the review examine the effectiveness of the scheme and options for improved performance and funding scheme administration costs.

    “Around the world, international business events are being used as strategic tools for attracting trade, investment and global talent,” said AACB executive director Andrew Hiebl (pictured). “The EMDG scheme recognises the business events industry and helps Australian convention bureaux continue to drive the high yielding and long term benefits accruing in the sector.”

    The grant provides financial assistance to approved bodies within the scheme, including many Australian convention bureaux and regional tourism and economic development bodies, to attract business to Australia and encourage export opportunities for Australian businesses.

    “International marketing is a fundamental role that convention bureaux play to attract new business events to their destinations,” Hiebl added. “Improvements in grant funding for international marketing activity directly benefits more than 1600 convention bureaux stakeholders across the country and the broader business events industry.”


    Article sourced directly from: http://www.cimmagazine.com/cim-magazine-latest-news/aacb-input-to-bolster-business-event-case


  • 13 Mar 2015 8:45 AM | Louise Stokes

    Russell Kennedy Lawyers and Pitcher Partners present an inaugural benchmark report for the not-for-profit sector. The report draws together insights from over 100 survey respondents on topics such as governance, strategy, fundraising, risk management and the use of volunteer and professional resources.


    The Survey highlights that many not-for-profit (NFP) organisations rely strongly on Government assistance. There is a need for these organisations to develop alternate means of financing and social enterprise. Organisations need to ensure that they can maintain solvency in the event of a change in policy or funding by setting aside monies for existing commitments, and a fund for short term operations, together with managing their cost base to be flexible enough to respond appropriately to changes in funding streams.

    It is also necessary for NFPs to consider the management of various tax status benefits to ensure no compliance issues arise. Recent ACNC and ATO activity evidences a willingness to revoke tax benefits of NFP entities when non-compliance occurs, which is a risk that most NFPs cannot afford to expose themselves to.

    It has also been identified that there is an opportunity for NFP organisations to move toward more sustainable funding models by adopting commercial funding streams, rather than relying on fundraising as an ancillary source of monies.

    Most respondents indicated that there is value to be derived from external regulatory requirements. This supports findings last year that almost 80% of submissions to the Senate Economics Legislation committee inquiry into the possible repeal of the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC) do not support the government’s plans to repeal the ACNC Act and disband the ACNC. 


    To download the full report please click here.

    The complete data results can be accessed here.

  • 12 Mar 2015 10:40 AM | Louise Stokes
    Sourced directly from the AICD Feature Magazine available online. This article first appeared in Listed@ASX magazine, from the Australian Securities Exchange.

    Is the traditional annual general meeting nearing extinction? Domini Stuart considers whether it is time to evolve, scrap or replace this longstanding tradition.

    In 2013, Australia’s top 300 companies drew just 0.13 per cent of their security holders to their annual general meetings (AGMs). The top 50 companies attracted a tiny 0.08 per cent. Attendance has been in decline for many years and there are very good reasons for staying away.

    “The most obvious disincentive is that you are unlikely to hear anything new,” says Bill Koeck MAICD, a partner in the corporate group of law firm Ashurst Australia. “Web traffic statistics compiled by Google in the United States show that the material sent out ahead of the AGM is of little interest to investors since it is typically stale by the time it is published. These days, a well-managed company is defined as one which continuously discloses material information.”

    “AGMs are backward-looking in their agendas when the attendees want forward information,” agrees Fiona Harris FAICD, company director and chairman of Barrington Consulting Group. “But the law prevents meaningful forward information being provided unless it is carefully caveated.”

    These days, four or five months is a very long time to wait for a report on end-of-year financials. Many chairs and CEOs are adding what is effectively a first quarter update by including more recent information in their presentation. Sending a copy of the presentation to the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) just prior to the meeting addresses the risks associated with disclosure.

    “The problem with this is that anyone who cannot physically attend a meeting must use an outdated proxy appointment process, so they could be voting without the benefit of this new information,” says Harris. “This introduces a potential inequality in the information you have available when you are making your decision.”

    Getting to a meeting can involve a lengthy journey and, as they are held on a working day, they have always attracted a disproportionately high percentage of retirees. AGMs can also be extremely boring.

    “Just the formality of going through the director re-election process can be enough to kill a meeting,” says Greg Dooley GAICD, managing director of Computershare Investor Services. “You see people leaving in droves.”

    Interacting face-to-face
    However, aside from legal and contractual obligations, AGMs do play one vital role. “It is the only opportunity retail shareholders have to eyeball the board and ask questions they feel are important,” says Amanda Wilson MAICD, managing director of governance advisory firm Regnan Australia. “From Regnan’s perspective, one of the many factors we consider in environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) research and engagement is a company’s relationship with stakeholders and its social licence to operate.

    “It is arguable that AGMs provide the one means by which boards can receive unfiltered messages about such matters.”

    Not all questions will be astute or even relevant but, for a shareholder with a genuine grievance or concern, the AGM provides a public forum.

    “I have been at numerous meetings where a particularly aggrieved shareholder has challenged the board,” says Dooley. “Doing this face-to-face in front of other shareholders and the media makes this a very powerful experience.”

    The AGM may also be the only time the board and senior management see and interact with the company’s owners. “The people they meet out in the foyer may not be entirely representative but they are often supportive and complimentary, and they can give an insight into anything of particular interest to the group as a whole,” says Kirsten Mander FAICD, chair of the Victorian Assisted Reproductive Treatment Authority and an experienced general counsel and company secretary.

    Catching up
    The AGM has its roots in an era of horse-drawn carriages, and it has a long way to go to catch up with 21st century technology. In the meantime, organisations are doing the best they can.

    “Big companies in particular are being very proactive for example, by distributing materials electronically, capturing shareholders’ questions before the meeting and engaging with the institutions,” says Koeck.

    Live webcasts have proved less than successful, with too few viewers to justify the cost. Many of the companies that pioneered use of the technology have reverted to the much cheaper option of uploading a recording of the meeting. However, across the companies whose share registries are managed by Computershare, around 30 per cent of proxies are now coming through online. There has also been a significant take-up of technology which allows votes to be cast and counted instantaneously at the meeting.

    “I think this has been driven, at least in part, by the introduction of the two strikes rule,” says Mander. “Since then, many company secretaries have decided that they really need to count the votes rather than rely on a show of hands. If people are not voting electronically this really slows the whole process down.”

    But even the positive changes may be no more than tinkering around the edges when a total overhaul is needed.

    “I believe it is time to step back and give careful thought to what today’s AGM really needs to achieve, and it seems to me there are two things,” says Harris. “First there is accountability for the year that was. I think this part, including consideration of the financial report and the more generic voting items, should be dealt with very soon after the accounts are released. A webcast meeting and direct voting on all items should then be possible.”

    She adds: “The second aspect relates to engagement, communication, and providing people with the opportunity to ask questions. This could be held at a later date, perhaps around the half year. Again it should be a meeting that people can attend electronically.

    “Questions could be submitted and would be responded to and forward plans could be communicated. If we really wanted to make it meaningful, we would have some protections in place to allow the board to speak more freely without risking prosecution.”

    Legal uncertainty
    There is nothing to stop a company from running a relatively short, formal AGM and then a separate meeting for shareholders.

    “This could rotate from state to state and focus on genuinely interesting and informative aspects of the business as well as giving shareholders a chance to ask questions,” says Mander.

    Technically, there is also nothing to stop organisations from running a virtual AGM.

    “In the US, some companies have combined webcasting with voting,” says Dooley. “This allows virtual attendees to listen to the debate online then cast their vote rather than having either to vote by proxy two days before the meeting or turn up in person.”

    Some spectacular failures in technology have blighted this progress overseas but, in Australia, there is an even bigger deterrent.

    “In 2000, the law was changed to permit companies incorporated in Delaware, which is over half of America’s publicly traded corporations, to hold virtual-only and hybrid shareholder meetings,” says Koeck. “In Australia the position is much less clear. Corporations law says you can have a meeting where people are in more than one place but this would not extend to individuals participating in a listed company AGM from their home or office.”

    In a 2012 discussion paper, the Corporations and Markets Advisory Committee (CAMAC) raised the question of whether legislative amendment is needed to allow shareholders to participate and vote online. CAMAC was dismantled by the Abbott government and, while its responsibilities were handed over to Treasury, as yet there has been no report. Until the issue is resolved, it is unlikely that any organisations will be prepared to put the legislation to the test.

    “The last thing anyone wants is for a contentious issue to be decided by virtual attendees only to have someone mount a legal challenge on the basis that those votes do not count,” says Dooley.

    Koeck also flags challenges in terms of procedure. “Proper procedure is fundamental to a well-run meeting, and I think this would be even more important in a virtual environment.

    “For example, if you do have much higher levels of engagement there might be thousands of questions, including who knows how many from people who would feel too intimidated to speak out in front of a live audience. So how do you decide which questions to take? And would follow-up questions be allowed, as they generally are now?” he says.

    “There really is potential for chaos and a lot that needs to be thought through to formulate a new set of rules to ensure that an electronic meeting is conducted fairly and efficiently.”

    Before submitting a response to CAMAC’s discussion paper, Ashurst Australia canvassed the opinions of directors, company secretaries and general counsel from over 25 leading ASX-listed companies. A recurring concern was the role of proxy advisers.

    “I think there is still quite a widespread belief that proxy advisers do not know enough about the issues, or the companies’ views on those issues, and that they are effectively disenfranchising the institutional shareholders who appoint them,” says Koeck.

    “The proxy advisers say, quite rightly, that if companies engaged with them throughout the year rather than only in the busiest two months, they would have more time to develop a deeper relationship. But there might still be room for something like the Stewardship Code that was recently introduced in the UK. Many of our participants did say they would like to see some kind of regulation or policy to provide transparency and restore the balance between the proxy adviser’s role and the responsibility of the shareholders to exercise their own judgement,” he says.

    Some superannuation funds might take the matter into their own hands. “There is a sense that they want their voices to be more widely heard,” says Dooley. “Some are already taking steps towards making their votes more transparent and, in discussions, we have even heard talk of their attending meetings in person. That would really shake things up.

    “At the moment, there are usually so few votes on the floor that the outcomes are known before the meeting starts. If large shareholders shifted that dynamic, the meetings would be far more strategically important as well as a lot more interesting, although that is one significant change to the AGM that not all companies would want to see.”


  • 09 Mar 2015 1:37 PM | Louise Stokes

    From now the long awaited changes to 2000’s Employment Relations Act will be effective.


    Lawyers at Chapman Tripp outlined the key changes to legislation that employers need to be aware of:

    • Increased flexibility for rest breaks and meal breaks, requiring employers to provide employees with a "reasonable opportunity" for rest and meal times
    • Flexible working arrangements extended to all employees rather than only those with caring responsibilities.
    • Employers able to opt out of bargaining for a multi-employer collective agreement.
    • Employers able to initiate bargaining at the same time as unions.
    • "30 day rule" will be repealed, allowing more scope for employers to negotiate individual terms and conditions at the outset. Employers must still advise employees of the existence of the collective agreement and provide contact details for the union.
    • Most strikes and lockouts to require advance written notice.
    • Employers able to make partial pay deductions where employees take partial strike action (say work to rule).
    • Good faith provisions amended to enable an employer to withhold confidential information where disclosing it will result in the unwarranted disclosure of a non-affected person's affairs.
    • Continuity of employment provisions under allows employers to negotiate the apportionment of service related entitlements.
    • Employment Relations Authority required to give an oral decision or indication at the end of an investigation meeting and written determinations within three months.
  • 09 Mar 2015 1:17 PM | Louise Stokes

    For the first time in New Zealand, the Above Ground Geothermal and Allied Technologies (AGGAT) programme will be presented on an international scale. The date and venue for this conference will be on the 30th April at the Sky City Convention Centre in Auckland.

    The Conference focuses on above ground geothermal engineering, with an emphasis on research activities being undertaken in these areas within New Zealand and abroad. Speakers will be focusing on the themes of:

    Technology Concepts - Processes or technology concepts to deliver energy outputs in smarter, faster or more cost effective ways

    Control Systems - Control strategies moving beyond business as usual

    Heat Transfer and Design - Heat exchanger systems and data analysis to optimise power generation systems

    Turbine Design and Performance - Turbine designs and selection for processes and performance in different operating situations

    Materials and Fluids - The right materials and fluids for the right operating conditions

    More information is available here: http://www.hera.org.nz/Story?Action=View&Story_id=2180

  • 06 Mar 2015 3:22 PM | Louise Stokes
    We are pleased to announce that in October 2014 the AuSAE Board bestowed Fellowship to the following AuSAE members. The AuSAE Fellows Programme is intended to honour persons who have rendered appreciable and outstanding service to the Not for Profit and Charitable sectors. We congratulate each and every one of the Fellows for their outstanding contribution to the not-for-profit sector.
    • Charles Hardy, Executive Officer, Community Management Solutions.
    • John Collyns, Executive Director, Retirement Villages Association NZ
    • Noela L’Estrange, Chief Executive Officer, Queensland Law Society.
    • Alison Carmichael, Chief Executive Officer, Institute of Foresters.
    • Michelle Blicavs, Chief Executive Officer, IAP2 Australia
    • Michelle Trute, Chief Executive Officer, Diabetes Australia (Qld)
    • Tony Steven, Chief Executive Officer, Australian Medical Association TAS
    • Jon Bisset, General Manager, Community Broadcasting Association of Australia

    For more information about the AuSAE Fellowship program please visit Fellows or to Apply to join please visit Career


  • 06 Mar 2015 10:33 AM | Louise Stokes

    Community and Voluntary Sector Minister Jo Goodhew is calling for more sponsors to develop New Zealand’s future leaders by partnering with the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust.

    “Over the past fifty years, nearly 850 Fellowships have been awarded to New Zealanders with strong research projects that will develop the knowledge of their particular industry,” Mrs Goodhew says.

    “Churchill Fellows return to New Zealand with new perspectives and ideas for their profession, overseas networks and leadership abilities.”

    “The impact of their work touches on all professions and industries, which has led to an increased interest in profession specific partnered Fellowships.”

    Since 2013 the Winston Churchill McNeish Fellowship has allowed writers to immerse themselves in another culture. This year a partnership with the Hawke’s Bay Design Trust will award a fellowship for the advancement of New Zealand product and industrial design.

    “Partnered Fellowships are a new direction for the Trust, and these two sponsorships show how well the Trust works in partnership for an industry specific Fellowship,” Mrs Goodhew says.

    “I encourage any industries that wish to sponsor a Fellowship to get in touch with the Trust. A sponsorship costs just $5000- $7000 per year, and yet returns significant research results for industry as well as supporting talented New Zealanders.”

    The Trust, via a secretariat at the Department of Internal Affairs, handles the paperwork, applications, knowledge co-ordination, and other administration.
    For further information about the Trust, and partnered Fellowships, visitwww.communitymatters.govt.nzor call 0800 824 824.

  • 06 Mar 2015 10:19 AM | Louise Stokes
    United Nations Association of Australia
    WORLD ENVIRONMENT DAY AWARDS 2015
    CALL FOR NOMINATIONS

    Nominations for the 2015 United Nations Association of Australia World Environment Day Awards are now open nationally. Businesses, local governments, community organisations, individuals, schools and the media are invited to nominate in the following Award categories:
    • NSW Office of Environment and Heritage Sustainability Leadership Awards
    • Swinburne University of Technology Excellence in Sustainable Product Design Award
    • Hanson’s Green Building Award
    • Virgin Australia Community Award
    • *NEW* Clean Energy Award
    • Biodiversity Award
    • Business Awards
    • Environmental School Award
    • Excellence in Sustainable Water Management Award
    • Individual Award
    • Local Government Awards
    • Media Award for Environmental Reporting
    • Sustainability Education Award
    The World Environment Day Awards are held annually in support of UN World Environment Day (5 June). Over the last 15 years, these national awards have recognised those across all Australian sectors who have demonstrated innovation and dedication in their work to protect, manage and restore the environment. The World Environment Day Awards continue to encourage environmental leadership, and promote awareness of environmental issues on a global scale. The 15th Anniversary of the awards program will showcase some of the most important and exciting environmental projects in Australia.


    Nominations for the World Environment Day Awards will close at 5.00pm AEST Friday 17 April, 2015.


    Winners will be announced at the Awards Presentation Dinner to be held on Friday 5 June 2015.
    For entry forms and further details, please visit www.unaavictoria.org.au
    Please contact UNAA Victoria with any queries:
    Phone: (03) 9670 7878 || Fax: (03) 9670 9993 || Email:awards@unaavictoria.org.au


    Please find full Media Release here and Call for Nominations Flyer here.


  • 03 Mar 2015 2:06 PM | Louise Stokes

    Sourced from: http://www.probonoaustralia.com.au/news/2015/03/overhaul-definition-volunteering-australia


    Volunteering Australia is reviewing the definition of volunteering in Australia and has proposed three alternatives for discussion in a new document.


    According to the national volunteering peak’s Issues Paper, National Review of the Definition of Volunteering in Australia, is “the start of a national engagement on the definition of volunteering,” which will see stakeholders consulted Australia-wide.


    Volunteering Australia CEO Brett Williamson said the definition of volunteering in Australia was developed almost 20 years ago in 1996 and did not reflect the extent of volunteering today, given it only recognised formal volunteering undertaken for Not for Profit organisations.


    “A lot of volunteering that is common today simply didn’t exist 20 years ago,” Williamson said.


    “The spirit of volunteering hasn’t changed, but it’s important we refine what volunteering means in Australia to make sure we better recognise, measure and support it.


    “The rise of internships, work for the dole programs, and community service orders has created grey areas for organisations. They want to know if these activities overlap with volunteering, particularly around roles, rights and responsibilities.”


    Proposed alternative definitions put forward by Volunteering Australia include:


    Option 1


    Volunteering is an activity undertaken as an individual or in a group, for the benefit of the community, without expectation of financial reward. Volunteering is a choice freely made by each individual and can include formal or informal community participation.


    Option 2


    Volunteering is doing something willingly, for no financial gain, that aims to benefit the environment or someone (individuals or groups) other than, or in addition to, close relatives or the individual.


    Option 3


    We define volunteering as any activity that involves spending time, unpaid, doing something that aims to benefit the environment or someone (individuals or groups) other than, or in addition to, close relatives. Volunteering must be a choice freely made by each individual. This can include formal activity undertaken through public, private and voluntary organisations as well as informal community participation


    The peak body said the development of the Issues Paper is the first phase of the review process, to be followed by a program of “national engagement,” which will result in a final recommendation on a definition of volunteering to be made to the Volunteering Australia Board.


    Volunteering Australia said that one of its proposed definitions may be adopted or modified for use, the current definition could be reaffirmed, or an alternative definition may emerge as a result of the Australia-wide engagement process.


    “ABS figures show one in three Australians – 6.1 million people – volunteered in 2010. If we don’t accurately recognise the types of volunteering people do, we risk undervaluing it,” Williamson said.


    “In reviewing what volunteering is, we also need to be clearer about what volunteering isn’t.”


    The existing definition fails to recognise aspects of virtual volunteering, social entrepreneurship, corporate volunteering, volunteering for government organisations such as museums or informal volunteering in the community.


    It states that formal volunteering is an activity that takes place in Not for Profit organisations or projects and:


    is of benefit to the community


    is undertaken of the volunteer’s own free will and without coercion


    is undertaken for no financial payment


    occurs in designated volunteer positions only.


    VA will hold stakeholder information sessions and that an online survey for all Australians to submit their views will be open from 16 March to 17 April 2015 on its website.


    Review of the Definition of Volunteering in Australia can be viewed at www.volunteeringaustralia.org

  • 03 Mar 2015 12:54 PM | Louise Stokes


    BY MEG SMITH

    Recently released earnings data from the Workplace Gender Equality Agency (WGEA) indicated a gender pay gap as high as 45% among managers. Yet basic myths continue to obstruct informed debate about why the gap exists.

    Myth 1: Women are less qualified due to interrupted careers.

    This myth has been debunked by a wide range of labour market studies which investigate whether women receive the same labour market rewards as men with similar qualifications, experience and personal characteristics. Both in Australia and internationally, such studies consistently show that only a small proportion of the earnings differences between women and men can be explained by differences in education and work experience or other productivity related characteristics.

    While it has been assumed that women’s poorer earnings relate to their lower levels of education and qualifications, recent data demonstrates clearly that the earnings gap has persisted despite women’s increased entry into higher education. Today a higher proportion of women (26%) than men (22%) hold a Bachelor Degree or higher qualification, while a higher proportion of women (42%) than men (36%) are currently engaged in undergraduate education.
    Grading earnings data indicates also that the gender earnings gap cannot be simply equated to women choosing to have children. Relevant here is the evidence of a persistent gender pay gap among graduates in their 20s, a period that predates career interruptions due to childcare.

    Myth 2: The statistics are wrong. Organisations treat all employees equally and pay them fairly.


    The statistics are not wrong. The WGEA data is derived from the data organisations have provided to the Agency. The strong story to come out of this evidence is of ongoing gender pay inequity, and its cumulative impact on women’s current and lifelong earnings. Even allowing for the different labour economics paradigms used to investigate the gender pay gap, a significant proportion of the earnings gap remains unaccounted for by what economists term “measurable characteristics”.
    The determinants of the gender earnings gap cannot be easily reduced to a single factor.


    Contributing factors to the gap include the undervaluation of feminised work and skills, differences in the types of jobs held by men and women and the method of setting pay for those jobs, and structures and workplace practices which restrict the employment prospects of workers with family responsibilities.


    Looking at management and leadership positions within organisations, a number of key barriers to the earnings recognition of women in leadership positions and their progression within leadership structures have been identified. These include negative perceptions about competing work-life priorities and women’s ability to lead.


    These perceptions not only rest with individuals within an organisation but are embedded in organisational structure and practices. Within organisational settings, unconscious biases specifically related to or informed by expectations about what is appropriate behaviour for men and women, including masculinised models of leadership, do have a systematic and sustained negative impact on women.

    Myth 3: Women don’t ask for pay rises and don’t make their case well. Women lack competitive drive and this has an impact on their performance and their pay.


    These myths blame women, linking the gender pay gap to women’s capacity to bargain rather than to institutional and workplace practices that fail to organise and value work and performance fairly. These practices include the assessment of the value of a job and performance including recruitment processes and selection criteria, as well as benchmarks used to assess promotion.


    On the issue of negotiation, research has highlighted differences in negotiation styles, behaviour and outcomes between women and men. Such differences may contribute to gender differences in earnings, noting also that there is a larger gender pay gap among top income earners. Studies also suggest that these differences are not innate and can be shaped by the organisational environment, which includes cultural stereotypes about gender and negotiation styles.

    Myth 4: Women have broader personal goals and benchmarks for success so they don’t care as much about their income.


    This myth conflates a number of key factors. The disproportionately high burden of caring work that falls to women does shape the labour market choices made by women, including women in senior positions. Yet such choices are clearly constrained ones and are impacted by a range of factors including the impact of effectively high marginal tax rates (on the income of couple households), the availability of child care and gender norms about what constitutes good parenting.
    Within workplaces, opportunities for women, particularly those who have caring responsibilities can be enhanced or restricted by the availability and quality of flexible work practices that support rather than impede career progression. These factors are also linked with gendered constructions of what constitutes “leadership”. Hannah Piterman has noted that it is the fragility in the link between women and authority and between men and family responsibilities that continues to marginalise women’s position in the workforce.


    The inequities in the distribution of unpaid domestic work do not mean that women in leadership lack interest in their career or the conditions that attach to it. Rather than a lack of interest, much of what shapes women’s aspirations to leadership lies in factors such as insufficient career development, promotion pathways and mentoring provision and the cost of childcare.
    Progress to gender pay equity is not assisted by myth-making. What is required is support for effective and sustained institutional and cultural reform capable of addressing the factors that shape the earnings gap.


    This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.


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