The state government is backing sporting clubs across Victoria to get more women and girls in the game, celebrating their huge contribution to Victorian sport.
Minister for Community Sport, Ros Spence, recently announced that 104 community sporting organisations have been awarded grants through the Change Our Game Community Activation Grants Program.
Grant recipients will share in more than $500,000 for events and initiatives that aim to increase participation and enhance gender equality in sport.
A variety of activities and initiatives have been funded, from the Soccer Mums program offering weekly social, non-competitive soccer to their culturally and linguistically diverse community, to a monthly women-focused coaching development program to build confidence, technical skills and leadership for women volleyball coaches in Victoria.
Broadmeadows Basketball Association will deliver the ‘No Hoopla’ program, an initiative to provide basketball for women. It aims to engage 400 women in one of Victoria’s most socially disadvantaged and culturally diverse areas in three free, weekly and flexible basketball programs for all ages and abilities.
Since the program’s inception in 2018, the Community Activation Grants has invested more than $2.4 million in community sports organisations across Victoria.
The grants are part of the state government’s $18.8 million investment in the Office for Women in Sport and Recreation – the first of its kind in Australia – and the Change Our Game initiative, which is dedicated to levelling the playing field in sport.
Established in 2017, the office delivers nation-leading policy, advocacy, research, and education in pursuit of gender equality, including the Fair Access Policy Roadmap, Balance The Board initiative, Change Our Game Women in Sports Broadcasting program, Research Grants Program, and Professional Development Scholarships.
For more information, visit changeourgame.vic.gov.au