Tag Archives: mental-health

Victoria Multicultural Commission’s North West Regional Advisory Committee Q2 review.

The Black Caucus is proud to have a representative on the Victorian Multicultural Commission’s North West Regional Advisory Committee (RAC).

In this second quarter, the RAC took on the topics Racial Discrimination, Healthcare, Education, and our expectations of the VMC and our interactions and expectations of the organization.

Racial Discrimination – 01.08.24

Culturally appropriate meals on wheels.

Loosing hours on SBS.

Racism in the workplace.

Language differences.

Talking about food.

Racial discrimination in the work place.

Exploitation.

Pacific workers are heavy lifters – more than 30kg.

No safety net for casual workers not from here.

Interpreters and translators in the workplace.

Employer assisted programmes to include English language lessons.

Racial discrimination in the sporting space.

Racial discrimination during employment.

System in place where value is the driver rather than network.

Transparency on tender processes.

English as a discrimination tool in interviews

People from abroad may not have local business knowledge

Discrimination through references.

Equal opportunities.

Contracts that they are being signed to.

Shortlist.

EBAs that adjust for a migrant wok force.

Diversity up to the middle ranks, but none at the senior and upper management

Blind employment process.

Racial discrimination through names on a CV.

Gain access into the country based on skills, but then skilled opportunities are not available.

Economic hardship tends to exacerbate racial discrimination in the workplace.

Overqualified as skilled migrants.

Teaching standards

Commit to the campaign

Seniors in home and cultural food.

Age discrimination.

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Bring the community together – With help from the government with resources.

Interpretation and translation upskilling – Utilise our languages.

Interpreter and translators on site.

Material in the language of the employees

VMC to raise awareness of racial discrimination and influence

Intercultural relevance in sporting bodies.

VMC to influence the Age department and DHSS from a racial lens.

Overseeing body to monitor racial mix of organisations.

Strengthening anti discrimination laws.

Racial discrimination of the police – Highlight the gangs.

 State government could “shadow shop” the employment market to see whether

Healthcare – 02.09.24

Tasks

1. Census ethnic representation reinstated. VMC to lobby on our behalf

2. Mandatory healthcare representation at festivals as a criteria for government funding.

3. Funding at local levels in schools, clubs, community organisations. Bottom up approach to needs.

4. Employment pathways. VMC to lead advocacy.

5. Funding bias beyond festivals into community programmes

6. Consular support advertised as a mental health option

7. Celebrating good mental health programmes and success stories through mental health awards. Funded through VMC et al.

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Health literacy – Language service – Targeted assistance – Including multicultural experience in healthcare – Stigma – Racism in health structures  = Health services responding to changing communities – Funding ad focus  – Improvement to language services – increase awareness of language service – multicultural communities represented in the workforce – Health work force – Training pathways – Invites a speaker from Refugee Health and Community health – Existing structures/partnerships

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Hospital access to interpreters, Stigma, Health seeking behaviours, Action accessing healthcares = Skilled worker who can not work in Australia act as health translators – Intersections of work – Adverts translated into other languages – Cultural understanding. – Funding to community networks.

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Increase in chronic healthcare, Rising cost – Waiting periods = Government intervention on these serves, giving proper direction, wait times to be reduced

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Hard to get what you need – waiting times – Interpreter – language barriers – You have to know the system – Stigma = Open a big facility multicultural assistance Navigators – Teach you how to use the system

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Decisions are not being made by the people in the waiting rooms

Representation in the decision making process = More POC representative, proactive recruitment – proactive training – VMC resources being depleted,

Education – 01.10.24

International students

Qualified teachers in the community

Looking in the wrong places\

Visa situation

International students to teach

Visa teaching pathway

Retires as teachers

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Women are late to education

Defined by their parents

Priorities shift in 40s

Short courses – Pathway to a job

Access

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Supporting of international students – teaching as a pathway to residency

Recognition of overseas learning

Removal of red tape

Short courses

Concession learning without a concession card – eligibility for courses

Process after education – Support in the communities

Promotion and distribution

Access to English education – Review of existing programmes are required

List of employers that have links into the POC communities

Safe work places list

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Educating a woman is educating a family and a nation

Basic understanding of English

Sliding scale of English requirement

The hidden cost of education

CV making

Support and guidance

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Mentors are a very important point. AIM, one of the organisations I’m part of, has a mentoring program that I’ve been part of as a mentor to international students in my community helping with course topics and especially on CV, interviews and ‘how to get a job’ post course completion. Although individual communities are working on this.

This should be readily available in our communities in Victoria.

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Part qualified

How short courses are perceived in the market

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*My support/comments for short courses (are things like Forklift Licence, Traffic Management, White Card, HR/MR licencing*

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Placement of students – Government assistance to place students

Retirees pension consideration – Imparting knowledge

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Skilled educators not being given licence to teach.

Partnership arrangements with universities and education departments

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Mentorship course (4-6 weeks) – Job skills milestones

Women’s Family cost of education – Baby sitting, Food preparation. – Subsidies

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VMC support on how to activate our communities to be empowered to make real changes to law

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International student concessions – Transport, ID cards, Children on international students fees -Special needs funds are unavailable – parents afraid of diagnosing their children for fear of visa rejection.

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Educational administrator with PoC backgrounds Principles and Vic Principles

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Parents who may not have confident English

Industry sponsoring bright minds

VMC advocating to Industry

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We arrange interpreters to join Parent/Teacher meetings. There is free interpretation and translation service from Language Loop for state schools.

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VMC advocating Mentoring around how industry works in Australia.

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Paid placements, Travel costs, subsidies lunch.

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NDIS provider numbers in education

RAC expectations of the VMC

SLA – Expected turn around and response times for RAC queries, submitted documentation, requests and progress.

VMC supposed to be the “conduit between the community and the minister and their office.” Vivianne Nguyen.

RAC does not see the results of its contribution.

Community Priorities missed – Census ethnic representation reinstated. VMC to lobby on our behalf

Paul’s Employment paper was unacknowledged and  unanswered

VMC should make data and statistics available to the RAC members so they may better inform their communities, as well as better focusing our RAC discussions.

At the End of Year presentation the VMC shared their objectives for 2025. We not that the advocacy mentions data collection and trust that the RAC priorities are included.

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International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (Harmony Day)

On 21 March 1960, police in South Africa gunned down 69 unarmed Black South African people protesting against the pass laws in an event that became knows as the Sharpeville massacre.

Six years later, the United Nations created the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination on that date.

In 1998, Australian Prime Minister commissioned the Eureka Research to begin an anti-racism study to “explore and understand the subtleties and nature of racism in the Australia of the late 1990s, with a view to mounting an effective mass media and/or education anti-racism campaign”.

Among the conclusions of the study were that there was a need for an anti-racism campaign and a promotion of “living in harmony”. According to multiple media reports, the outcomes of the research were not aligned with the government’s views that Australians were not racist. Commenting on the racially-motivated 2005 Cronulla riots, he stated: “I do not accept that there is underlying racism in this country”.

The Eureka report was suppressed from public access until 2011.

In 2003, the Government of Western Australia renamed the event Harmony Week in that state, always celebrated in the same week: “celebrations from 15 to 20 March, followed by a day of reflection on 21 March”.

The event was renamed as Harmony Week by the government for its 20th anniversary in 2019, “to recognise diversity and inclusion activities that take place during the entire week.

When we compare the UNs web page and the Australian government page, we see how issues on racial discrimination and People of Colour (PoC) experiences are “white washed” into a more palatable narrative.

But they are not alone.

This white washing occurs in companies and offices across Australia and here, in Victoria.

The PoC experience is one that is ignored by most companies because it is considered “Too hard.”

Too hard to ensure that PoC feel included in their work environment.

Too hard to learn about the cultural differences that would streamline your working environment.

Too hard for the dominant culture to learn the fundamentals of the cultures that we wear to work on our faces, in our language and in our food, every day.

How is your management team represent the 49% of people born abroad? How does your board represent 7.5 million migrants since 1945? How does the management team represent the POC public or clients is serves?

Are People of Colour only good on the ground, but not good enough to manage?

Why is it that PoC must work twice as hard to be considered half as good?

Yet PoC continue to give our all and contribute to this land that we call home, despite suffering the daily microaggressions that eat away at us, but seemingly go unnoticed or unregarded.

For the non PoCs reading this article, microaggressions are the seemingly small, seemingly harmless mistakes, jokes, and inconsiderations that are directed at PoCs every day. They are perceived by us as one would receive small cuts with a knife. They happen multiple times a day and by the end of each day leave us exhausted and emotionally battered.

A few examples:

Often I get into a lift at work wearing my usual three piece suit only to see women clutch their handbags a little tighter or have men clench their fist in anticipation of trouble.

How many times as a Black man have I been subjected to the salutations “man” when others are greeted with their name or as “mate. This forced familiarity undermines our position in a group setting, and sets us apart as non equal. Even in a social setting, this term implies an informality that often does not exist upon first meeting, and invites others when listening to our opinions to take them less seriously or even worse, in jest.

“Where are you really from?” is a phrase I hear both in and out of working environments. It is as if people have difficulty believing their own ears as I tell them that I am from London, with a thick Eastend accent. Or perhaps it is their eyes that they can not believe, as they try to comprehend the juxtaposition of a Black man being from London, and not some “exotic” Caribbean island or the “wild and fearsome” Africas.

“Your English is really good, I am surprised”. Why are you surprised, I am English, what language were you expecting from my mouth. I also have people make assumptions about my language, as the slow down their sentences and speak very slowly, supposedly for my benefit.

Stereotypes both in and out of working environments slowly chip away at our resilience “ you must be good at maths” , “You must be good at dancing, come show us how it is done”, “Can you eat your food somewhere else? Staff are complaining that it smells spicy” etc.

“N” word in songs is not acceptable at the best of times, let alone at work as background music, xmas party music, or in the gym.

There is a perception that Black/POC not allowed to be angry within a work environment. When white people do it, they are “letting off some steam”, or “having a moment”, however when black people do it we are “overly aggressive”, “an angry black man/woman” and the next steps normally involve unrequired HR involvement and anger management programmes.

As a Person of Colour how often have you heard “Be patient”, “change takes time”, Change does not happen overnight”, “Political correctness gone mad” etc. All these phrases imply that we should sit and wait patiently as the oppressor continues to apply racially motivated pressure within the work environment. You have your foot on my neck, yet you want me to be patient, and say please.

“I do not see colour” really, then that is the problem. As by not seeing colour, you do not see the generations of inequity that have now put us in the same room. You are ignoring conscious and unconscious bias that that People of Colour wade through every day. We are encouraged to “bring our whole selves to work” but any PoC that says that they are is lying. We are expected to bring our ‘received’ selves to work, anything else is considered overpowering, overbearing or even threatening.

I worked with an organisation that set up a Anti Racism group. However the People of Colour who joined the group were expected to teach the white people, and to share their traumas and microaggressions so that the white members of the group could learn.

A People of Colour Committee (PoCC )was quickly developed as a safe place for PoCs to exist in a safe space, to share their race based issues from the organisation, and act as a support group to each other.

As expected, the Anti Racism group quickly withered and died, but the PoCC carried on strong and grew with more PoC members, who were now able to advocate for the PoCs in the organisation and advice on any relevant external advocacy.

The PoCC set up a strategy, Vision, Mission, and member rules. Before long it was advocating for policy changes within the organisation that would protect its members and the People of Colour that it served within the community.

One of the objectives of the PoCC became the engine that drove inward and outward facing policies and advocacy that effected People of Colour. After all, how can an organisation have policies that effect People of Colour, without consulting People of Colour.

May companies, particularly in Australia claim to be diverse. But diversity of thought of not enough, actual diversity is required, and this applies at ALL levels of an organisation.

Diversity does not mean different types of white.

With the working environment, as it is within social settings, it is not enough to be Not Racist, being Anti Racist is the benchmark.

So, on this International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, what can we all do.

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