Grant opportunities for employers are now available
The Government is changing the way it delivers remote employment programs and services through replacing the Community Development Program (CDP).
The first stage of replacing the CDP is the Remote Jobs and Economic Development (RJED) program, creating 3,000 new jobs over three years.
The second stage of replacing CDP is the design and delivery of a new remote employment service. This will support people who are currently looking for work, or may need help to become job-ready, with the skills and resources they need to take up job opportunities – including those created through the RJED program.
The design of this program and service build on the success of job trials and reflect feedback from consultation.
Together, they will improve job opportunities and employment services for people living or working in remote employment service (RES) regions (currently known as CDP regions).
Creating jobs in remote communities
The RJED program is about creating new jobs that communities want and need which can be flexible around personal, family and community obligations. Jobs can be part-time, full-time or casual.
It works by eligible employers applying for funding to pay for wages and equipment so they can create new jobs and hire local people.
Grants for employers can pay for:
- an employee’s wages with fair conditions (like superannuation and leave) and,
- equipment, infrastructure, capacity building, on-costs and overheads (like uniforms, sheds, on-the-job training, insurance or operating expenses)
Working with communities
The replacement of CDP has been informed by consultation with remote community members, job seekers, peak bodies, First Nations people, CDP providers, CDP participants and other key stakeholders with an interest in remote employment.
Over the past few years, the Government has talked to thousands of people in more than 200 remote communities about the best way to replace the CDP. This is so we could create a jobs program that communities want, supported by employment services that help young people and job seekers get ready for work.
In 2024, the NIAA engaged with more than 200 remote communities and 3,100 people.
We heard that a new jobs program and employment service should provide:
- Skills and support to complete paperwork for employment
- Continuous on-the job training
- Ongoing tailored mentoring and coaching
- Long-term sustainability of jobs
- Employment that supports local cultural needs
You can read more in the Replacing the Community Development Program – second phase of community consultations report, the consultation summary on a page or watch the short video that follows.
In 2023, the NIAA engaged with more than 100 remote communities and 2,250 people about ways to design and deliver a program to replace the CDP.
We heard that a new program and service to replace CDP should:
- be planned and led by communities
- recognise roles carried out in the communities
- take a new approach for young people
- support local jobs for local people
- include a form of reciprocity
- be flexible to invest in local priorities
- assist people unable to work right now.
You can read more in the Replacing the Community Development Program consultation report, the consultation summary on a page or watch the short video that follows.
First Nations Reference Group
A First Nations Reference Group has been advising on the design of the RJED program since March 2024.
Context
- As a first step to deliver the commitment to replace the Community Development Program (CDP), the Federal Government has announced the establishment of a Remote Jobs and Economic Development Program (RJED) in the second half of 2024 to provide people in remote communities with real jobs, proper wages and decent conditions.
- The National Agreement on Closing the Gap and its four priority reforms will provide the foundation for the co-design of the Remote Jobs and Economic Development Program. Shared decision-making is fundamental to the co-design of the new Program which is specifically for First Nations people and has its origins in the CDEP initiated by First Nations people in the 1970s. The four Priority Reforms are:
- Formal partnership and shared decision making
- Building the community-controlled sector
- Transforming government organisations
- Shared access to data and information at a regional level
- The RJED aims to:
- Create 3,000 new jobs in remote communities for CDP participants
- Include a complementary Community Jobs and Business Fund for projects, capital and equipment in support of the creation of jobs under the program
- Connect with opportunities in the private and public sectors to bring the economy to remote communities and generate long term permanent jobs
- Include a focus on young people to improve their employment opportunities once they have finished school.
- As not everyone will be ready to go into a job, a remote employment service will still be needed. CDP services will continue through an extension of CDP provider arrangements until 30 June 2025.
Scope and Purpose
- The FNRG will provide advice to Government on the design and implementation of the RJED. Matters to be considered are:
- Policy design and implementation for the RJED and a new remote employment service, including the development of program guidelines;
- Generate ideas on new approaches to reflect the difference in employment opportunities between remote and non-remote regions;
- Advice on best practice approaches to consultation and engagement for the RJED and a new remote employment service that reflect the commitments in the National Agreement on Closing the Gap;
- A monitoring and reporting system which promotes improvements that are cognisant of the myriad of different and diverse demographics within Indigenous Australian, especially concerning the RJED and a new remote employment service; and
- Progress and outcomes of existing community trials and the learnings for policy reform.
- Relevant Commonwealth reforms and initiatives, such as Workforce Australia reforms, Remote Australia Working Group recommendations, and others could inform remote employment design. FNRG will receive relevant updates.
Term
- The FNRG will be effective from March 2024, and operate until the group considers that the scope and purpose have been fulfilled.
Membership
- A group of member organisations will be invited to nominate First Nations representatives to participate in the FNRG. Organisations will include, but not be limited to, the following criteria: being an Indigenous business, community controlled organisation, a training organisation, or a CDP provider, and the geographical locations that current CDP participants live in.
- A select number of CDP providers to nominate representatives with lived experience of engaging with remote employment services.
Meetings and Working Methods
- The FNRG will be co-chaired by the Minister for Indigenous Australians, Ms Josephine Douglas and Mr Matthew Clarke.
- Co-chairs will conduct meetings, lead on the forward workplan, and agree meeting agendas.
- The quorum for FNRG will be fifty per cent of the membership, plus one.
- Decision making will be by consensus with respect to the advice provided to the Government.
- Standards of conduct including conflicts of interest declarations will be detailed in the Member Organisation Agreements.
- Some member organisations may be current funding recipients under the CDP or upcoming grant rounds for the RJED and/or a new remote employment service. If there is a declared conflict of interest, the NIAA Secretariat for the FNRG will record the details in a register and manage in compliance with the ‘FNRG Conflicts of Interest Policy’ to ensure any competitive advantage is minimised.
- Representatives of member organisations must declare any private interests or relationships that could influence or could be perceived to influence advice provided by the FNRG, or advice provided to the NIAA, in the conflict of interest declaration form at any time for the duration of the Term.
- The declaration or updating of conflicts of interest will be a standing item at FNRG meetings. Conflicts of interest declared during a FNRG meeting will also be recorded in the meeting minutes and added to the conflicts of interest register managed by the NIAA Secretariat for the FNRG.
- The FNRG can request through the co-chairs to invite individuals with specialist expertise or representatives from Commonwealth Agencies to participate in or present information on specific policy issues at meetings.
- The NIAA will provide a Secretariat for the FNRG which will aim to circulate relevant papers at least five days prior to meetings.
- Information provided to representatives and meeting discussions should remain confidential.
- The FNRG may choose to issue a communique following a meeting.
- Member Organisations will be supported with travel and other arrangements (including sitting fees) for representatives’ attendance at meetings as outlined in the Member Organisation Agreements.
- These Terms of Reference will be reviewed by the FNRG every six months.
Finalised and agreed by the First Nations Reference Group on 10 April 2024.
The group has economic development experts from across remote Australia and representatives from a range of organisations including:
- Coalition of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peak Organisations
- National Indigenous Employment and Training Alliance
- Aboriginal Peak Organisations of the Northern Territory
- Arnhem Land Progress Aboriginal Corporation
- Supply Nation
- First Nations Workers Alliance
- Cape York Partnership
- Empowered Communities
- Torres Strait Regional Authority
- Ngaanyatjarra Council
- Regional Anangu Services Aboriginal Corporation
- Kimberley Aboriginal Regional Governance Group
- Australian National University.
Media centre
- Remote Australia's untapped potential – Wednesday 16 October 2024
- Have your say on remote jobs – Tuesday 18 June 2024
- First Nations Reference Group for Remote Jobs and Economic Development program – Thursday 7 March 2024
- Next steps on Closing the Gap: delivering remote jobs – Tuesday 13 February 2024
- Putting remote employment issues on the table – Wednesday 31 August 2022
Resources
You can download these resources to learn more about the Remote Jobs and Economic Development Program and share in your community.
- Factsheet: What is the Remote Jobs and Economic Development program
- Factsheet: Bringing back the best parts of the Community Development Employment Projects
- Factsheet: Remote Jobs and Economic Development program and your Centrelink payments
- Poster: What is the Remote Jobs and Economic Development program
- Poster: Apply for a grant under the Remote Jobs and Economic Development program
- Social media tiles: Promote the Remote Jobs and Economic Development program on your social media
- Conversation guide: A conversation about creating jobs in your community
- Infographics: New jobs program in remote communities
Subscribe
Are you interested in this remote employment reform?
Add your details below if you would like to get updates by email.
If you can't receive emails, you can call your local NIAA Regional Office on 1800 079 098 for updates.
If you need more information, you can email remote.jobs@niaa.gov.au
You can read previous issues of our newsletters below:
For more information about how the NIAA protects your personal information, read our Privacy Policy or contact privacy@niaa.gov.au.
The NIAA will use your personal information in this form to provide you with email updates about remote employment.
Providing the requested information is your choice. If you choose not to provide us with your email address, we will not be able to a send you updates.
If you choose to receive our updates:
- NIAA will provide your personal information to the third party service provider, Campaign Monitor, for the purposes of sending emails and other related communications to you.
- Campaign Monitor is an overseas multinational entity. They will send and store your information on overseas servers. Australia’s Privacy Act 1988 may not protect your information. You may not be able to seek redress under it.
- You can find out more about how personal information is handled by Campaign Monitor in their Privacy Notice and Terms of Use.
You can unsubscribe from our updates at any time by replying Unsubscribe to our updates.
By selecting “I agree to be emailed” below you agree to your information being recorded in the Campaign Monitor system.