Tasmania's health department ignored grants warnings for 15 years: inquiry
Posted on 07 May 2026
A Tasmanian parliamentary inquiry has heard new evidence that the state's Department of Health has…
Posted on 01 Sep 2025
By Matthew Schulz, journalist
The competition to be crowned Australia’s best social impact practitioners is expected to be the fiercest for 10 years, amid a growing push by governments, funders and philanthropists to prove what works.
Social Impact Measurement Network Australia (SIMNA) this month opened entries for the 2025 awards, to be announced in November.
There are four entry categories:
Last year’s winners came from a family dispute resolution service, a foundation supporting rural and regional areas, a data-based collaboration helping community college students, and a Salvos family violence project.
Each set the standard for social impact excellence through effective and strategic use of data, analysis, case studies, rigorous frameworks and demonstrated outcomes.
The competition comes amid a renewed national drive for better measurement championed by federal Charities Minister Andrew Leigh, who has backed the Australian Centre for Evaluation – based in Treasury – with a $10 million funding boost, established a triennial Measuring What Matters statement, and launched the Institute of Grants Management’s recent white paper on outcomes.
In a recent commentary about productivity in the public sector, Leigh argued: “Public sector productivity isn’t about profit margins. It’s about outcomes that matter: fewer people stuck in long-term unemployment, shorter hospital wait times, better school completion rates. And improving those outcomes begins with one key question: what works?”

SIMNA co-chair Sarah Barker – who is also the chief technology officer at SmartyGrants – said the awards, now in their 11th year, “advance our mission to celebrate achievement and build practice across the social impact measurement community”.
Entries close on Friday, October 10.
Posted on 07 May 2026
A Tasmanian parliamentary inquiry has heard new evidence that the state's Department of Health has…
Posted on 07 May 2026
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Posted on 07 May 2026
Organisers of Blak Loungeroom, a historic Indigenous-led philanthropy conference held in Melbourne…
Posted on 07 May 2026
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Posted on 07 May 2026
The NSW government failed to effectively administer a $58.6 million grant program to upgrade…
Posted on 07 May 2026
A report showing how much the federal government spends on grants – originally due to be published…
Posted on 07 May 2026
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Posted on 07 May 2026
Communication is everything. That was the key takeout from a webinar that examined “lessons from…
Posted on 07 May 2026
The NSW government's administration of a flood recovery grants program has largely met requirements…
Posted on 25 Mar 2026
The federal government has released the findings of its consultation on changes to key human…
Posted on 24 Mar 2026
If you spend long enough around government grants programs, a pattern emerges.
Posted on 24 Mar 2026
Grantmakers in Australia and New Zealand are closely tracking the rapid uptake of the use of…