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2001
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2000
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Privacy
Statement
For
further information contact:
Edwina
Clowes,
RIRDC
Rural Women's Award National Coordinator.
Phone:
07 5445 7282
Mobile:
0417 727 544
clowesedwina@bigpond.com
©
2010 RIRDC
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2001 New South Wales Winner -
Jon-Maree Baker
Jon-Maree
has held the position of Executive Officer of Cotton Consultants Australia
since 1997 and is the youngest Director of the Australian Cotton Industry
Council. She also owns and operates, in partnership with her husband, Baker
Ag Services, and runs a farm specialising in Santa Gertrudis beef cattle
and Australian stock horses.
Jon-Maree
recently facilitated the first meeting of the Women's Industry Network
Cotton, which resulted in the formation of a working group to progress
the establishment of a network for the sharing of information and ideas.
Her
vision for the cotton industry is one where all members, both male and
female are qualified and equipped to meet the changing demands of government,
community and regulators. She is committed to ensuring women have access
to the necessary skills and training to enable them to play a greater role
and in turn ensure the cotton industry's future sustainability. Jon-Maree
is committed to establishing a pilot course, that offers technical, business
and leadership training to women across her industry.
She
believes there is a real demand for such a course and belives it will be
the catalyst to fostering a strong network among cotton women, to ensuring
women's future involvement and contribution to their industry and to a
strategy for women within the industry's overall strategic plan. She also
believes the pilot course once developed will have widespread application
across other rural industries for the benefit of women across agriculture. |
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2001 Queensland Winner - Dianne
Gresham “Web Ahead”
Di
Gresham is a dairy farmer, who in partnership with her husband and family
operates a 400 cow dairy farm, outside Gympie, on Queensland’s Sunshine
Coast. She is also very active within the industry off farm, and is currently
Queensland Dairy Farmers Wide Bay Burnett branch Vice-Chair and the Subtropical
Dairy Group Regional Vice-Chair and a member of the Queensland Rural Women’s
Network BridgIT Project Management Committee and Australian Women in Agriculture
National Conference Organising Committee.
Di’s
vision is for a producer targeted dairy specific website that caters to
the needs of dairy farmers, providing a complete source of extension and
research content, coupled with a regularly changing user interface.
The
Internet, Di believes will markedly enhance the operation of rural businesses,
through access to information and products that otherwise may have been
non-existent or difficult to obtain.
And
while the number of websites catering to agriculture and to the dairy industry,
has in recent times increased markedly, she believes farmers are left somewhat
daunted at the volume of information, with many sites often lacking in
regular content updates, consistency of content, ease of usability and
poor maintenance. The
major objectives of her proposed activity included:
- To complete web
program technical skills training
- To partner the
development of a targeted Internet gateway for the dairy industry
- To develop relationships and networks with industry groups to impart IT
skills and knowledge, to help producers conduct their businesses and to
help rural organisations’ and communities conduct their affairs.
Di’s
technical skills training was done through Spherion Corporate Education
and involved 20 days training, attended at the company’s Brisbane office.
The training undertaken involved:
- Dreamweaver,
Project Management and Photoshop to complement the Internet and design
modules.
- Internet, Web
Page Authoring and Networking Fundamentals for networking concepts and
practices.
- Site Design
Methodology and Technology focused on the website development process and
included creation tools and design technologies, plug-ins and multimedia.
- E-commerce
Strategies and Practices taught the basics of conducting business online and
overcoming the technological issues of constructing a electronic commerce
site.
At
the conclusion of 2001 Di, with the support of the northern dairy region’s
research organisation, Subtropical Dairy, began conceptual work on a website
called dairyinfo.biz. The site is designed as a user friendly interface
that incorporates a number of features including current news and industry
issues, downloadable decision making tools to use within a farming business,
an industry events calendar and database and an extensive digital technical
information library that is partnered with a powerful search engine capable
of drilling for specific information within the entire database.
Di
has
also become heavily involved in providing technical and content support
to a number of rural community groups. She is Chair of the Queensland Rural
Women’s Network Technical Working Party, where she is currently completely
rebuilding the Network’s website. She also sits on the Network’s BridgIT
project, an email and Internet training project and is also redeveloping
the BridgIT website. She has also provided Internet advice to Australian
Women in Agriculture and looks to become involved in the maintenance of
their website in the future.
At
a personal level the Award has provided Di with the opportunity to develop
her technical skills, which along side her expertise in content management,
has made her a valuable asset in providing a farmer’s perspective and hands
on support in the development and maintenance of numerous rural websites
nationally.
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2001 Victorian Winner - Sharyn
Munnerley
“The
Development of the Australian Calf Rearing Research Centre”
Sharyn
is recognised as one of the country’s leading consultant’s in calf rearing,
having spent close to the past decade researching its best practice.
Her
vision is to turn calf rearing into a viable and sustainable industry in
its own right. She believes there are huge opportunities for the dairy
and beef industries to turn what has traditionally been regarded as a by-product
into an economically valuable resource.
It
is estimated that calf mortality is as high as 465,000 head per annum,
representing a 10% loss in productivity to the Australian cattle industry.
Her
proposed activity centred around the establishment of the Australian Calf
Rearing Research Centre, to educate and facilitate the correct management
of calves to producers and the broader community. The Centre would provide
farmers with access to theoretical knowledge and practical skills and the
opportunity to form valuable networks. Information would be available through
the Centre by way of lectures and courses, field days, publications and
videos and a dedicated website.
Despite
a number of major setbacks, including a major rezoning resulting in the
relocation of the Centre and a failure to secure funding for new infrastructure,
much of the information and technology is now available to producers.
The
Centre’s website was launched in January 2002: www.acrrc.com and has already
generated over 1,700 hits and has been positively received by rearers and
industry groups throughout Australia. .
The
publication “ The ABC of Calf Rearing” was launched at the Lardner Park
Field Days in March 2002, and has to date sold over 5,000 copies and is
currently in its third print.
In
addition numerous courses and seminars have been delivered and well received
with negotiations currently underway to incorporate structured calf rearing
educational packages into TAFE and agricultural colleges and schools.
Eleven
specifically designed calf rearing short courses have been implemented
covering various competencies, including buying and selecting calves, the
importance of colostrum, feeding and weaning, digestion and nutrition,
general management, disease prevention and management, targeted weight
gains and growth rates, body scoring and muscle assessment and standards
and legislation.
In
addition Centre staff have attended numerous field days, including Lardner
Park, Stanhope and Acme, where an average of 700 people a day and at Denison,
where 200 people visited the stand and sought out information on calf rearing.
The
Centre is now involved in the development of new products designed to aid
in calf health and welfare and has been commissioned to support the development
of other major cattle management projects.
While
the project is still in its early stages the Centre has already had a significant
impact on calf rearing practices and has already gained much credibility
from rural organisations and educational institutions alike. In specific
terms it has enhanced employment outcomes and business opportunities for
new and existing calf rearers while providing regional economic benefits.
A potential $5,000 in life-span production per animal has now been realised,
and mortality and morbidity rates have been reduced.
At
a personal level Sharyn believes the Award and the skills and recognition
she has gained from it, to be one of the pivotal and turning points in
her life, and has enabled her to achieve her driving ambition and long
term vision, for the Australian Calf Rearing Centre.
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2001 Western Australian Winner -
Rhonda Tonkin “Developing Value
Added Wildflower Products Nationally & Internationally”
Rhonda
is one of the leading wildflower growers and exporters nationally, with
close to three decades experience in the industry.
She
is the only person in the Western Australian industry to have vertically
integrated her business on a large commercial scale, from production to
wholesaling, retailing, value -adding and exporting.
Her
business produces and markets some 400 species of flora, which she wholesales
to every state in Australia and overseas. Her value-added products are
exported to Holland, Germany, Italy and USA along with Japan, China and
Israel.
Rhonda’s
vision is to enhance the wildflower industry’s sustainable production through
better value-adding and growing exports, while at the same time dramatically
increasing opportunities for rural women and for regional tourism.
The
main objective of her proposed activity was to strengthen the dried flower
section of the industry through improved value-adding of the product range.
While exports of fresh flowers continue to increase, the dried flower market,
which represents 20% of the total industry internationally, has remained
static.
Rhonda’s
proposed activity involved a major promotional and networking tour of the
major value-adding markets, including Italy, Germany, Holland and USA and
to report back her findings to industry. Prior to the tour she forward
samples of value-added products from nine existing companies and a further
30 of her own designs. Products included wildflowers under resin, framed
flower pictures, wildflower stationary, cards and perfume, gum nut and
flower jewellery and handcrafts and wildflowers books and publications.
Rhonda
met with seven leading importers who had expressed an interest in ‘value-added’
Australian product, including Florient in Italy, which owns and operates
a number of small outlets through the country, Schleef in Germany, where
meetings with principal Claus Weiman with 30 years experience in flowers
and giftware, proved extremely valuable and the American company Universal
Sunray, which catalogues and sells throughout the world.
The
most obvious result of her trip was a commitment from Universal Sunray
to feature in their catalogue and to sell larger numbers of Australian
value-added wildflower products, volumes which will first be reached through
Australian sales and then on to America.
However
the knowledge gained and networks forged from the tour have also been extremely
valuable in understanding the demands and constraints of the market.
Tourist
numbers continue to increase through Rhonda’s own farm and the region’s
other flower tourist venues, more staff are being trained to extend the
range of floral designs and a five year plan to build and market the product
has now been drawn up. The other four exporters are following a similar
path and value-added product is now recognised as an integral part of the
wildflower industry.
Rhonda
firmly believes that while the Australian industry is disadvantaged by
its distance from markets, it has a unique product in its wildflowers that
can be promoted through tourism worldwide.
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2001 Tasmanian Winner = Frances
Bender “Study of Market
Conditions, Buyer Behaviour and Demand Factors in the Japanese Market for
Fresh and Processed Atlantic Salmon” Frances
and her husband Peter have owned and operated Huon Aquaculture Company
Pty Ltd, for the past 8 years. Today HAC is the second largest producer
of Atlantic salmon in Australia, employing 76 people and generating gross
annual sales of $22 million.
Frances
has played an integral role in the development of Huon Aquaculture and
is presently Director og Administration, Occupational Health and Safety
and Human Resources Manager.
Her
vision is to see aquaculture, particularly in Tasmania, continue to prosper
and expand as a source of sustainable future employment for rural communities.
Frances’
proposed activity was to study first hand the markets for salmon product
into Japan and to articulate their customer needs, including product, packaging
and presentation specifications.
An
early maturing of the domestic market, combined with HAC’s reliance on
the wholesale sector of the market and limited marketing experience, led
Frances to investigate exporting. The fact that Tasmanian exports commanded
a premium of up to 30% in the Japanese market, made Japan the obvious first
choice in export markets for HAC to pursue a more direct relationship.
The
major objective of the study tour was to facilitate Huon Aquaculture Company’s
transition into exports, through a better understanding of the Japanese
market, and as a result improve the viability of the HAC and employment
and training opportunities for its staff.
The
study tour was intense and included attending the Foodex Trade Show and
visitations to a number of potential customers and importers of seafood
including Global Eight, Daitio Gyorui and AIC, along with a tour of the
Tsukiji fish markets, a Ginzi salmon deli and numerous department stores
including the Takashimaya store.
Frances
received such a good reception for her first visit to Japan that HAC has
proceeded in developing their own brand-Huon Tasmanian Salmon-specifically
for the Japanese market and has begun exporting product into Japan, with
Tassal Japan as a distribution channel, for the past two months.
At
a more personal level Frances understanding of the Japanese market and
its requirements has dramatically increased, knowledge that she has been
able to translate to HAC management and staff. That understanding has enabled
HAC to devise market entry strategies for their brand, in particular in
the export market and into Japan.
Frances
sees the study tour as a strategic first step in developing direct relationships
with a
customer base in Japan and a strategic first step to HAC’s expansion into
export, that in turn, will expand the training and employment opportunities
HAC can offer within their community.
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2001 South Australian
Winner - Jeanette Gellard “Harvest Your
Potential-Careers in Agriculture” Jeanette
is from Kangaroo Island and has been involved in promotion and development
of agriculture and natural resource management for close to fifteen years.
Previous
positions held by Jeanette include Board Member of Agriculture Kangaroo
Island and Chair of the 2000 SA Women on Farms Gathering Organising Committee.
Jeanette’s
vision is to raise awareness amongst young people of the employment and
business opportunities available in the agricultural sector and to raise
the profile of agriculture in the wider community.
She
believes there is little promotion of the sophistication and technical
innovation of agricultural industries, and little appreciation of the variety
and depth of career choices available within the agricultural sector.
Her
proposed activity involved three stages. The first was a desktop study
of the information currently available relating to careers in agriculture,
through extensive research and networking with relevant organisations and
groups. The second stage was the design and development of a web page and
resource kit that provided comprehensive information relating to job opportunities,
including potential employers and education and training pathways. The
final stage involved the distribution and promotion of the resource kit
and web page to the target audience.
The
result has been the development of a webpage ‘portal’:www.careersinagriculture.info
which predominantly contains links to external sites that contain an immense
diversity and depth of information.
Over
70 different occupations from eight career streams have been identified
and researched for inclusion on the web page and linked to external sites
that provide comprehensive information covering the job. The career streams
range from finance and economics, to education and training, to management
and marketing, to legal and political, and media and information technology.
The
resource kits which include fact sheets, business cards and stickers, have
been distributed to a variety of target groups including rural and urban
schools, tertiary institutions and training organisations, industry groups
and associations and government agencies.
Jeanette’s
ambition was to bring attention to not only jobs available in agriculture,
but also the ways in which many ‘non traditional’ career paths are intrinsically
linked to agriculture and successful rural enterprises.
While
it’s too early to quantify the implications of Jeanette’s endeavours, the
project has already raised awareness amongst the target audience of the
diversity of careers agriculture offers, and has already generated significant
support from a range of sources, including educational and training organisations,
government agencies and industry groups.
At
a personal and professional level, Jeanette has developed new found web
page design and internet research skills and has developed and extended
her industry networks.
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2001 Northern Territory Winner -
Carmel Wagstaff “The Northern
Australian Pastoral Industry- A Great Career Opportunity” Carmel,
prior to her transfer to Brisbane this year, lived and worked on cattle
stations in the Barkley Tablelands of Northern Territory for some 27 years.
She
is founder and co-ordinator of the nationally accredited Australian Agricultural
Company Training Program, one of the country’s largest and most successful
competency based, on-station training programs.
The
program provides on-station training and assessment to over 60 young men
and women each year and has been accredited for significantly improving
the staff retention rate at AACo, while dramatically improving the image
of the pastoral industry and its employment opportunities.
Carmel’s
vision for agriculture is to lift the image of the rural worker and to
promote the professionalism of Australia’s agricultural industries, particularly
the Northern Territory beef cattle industry.
She
is deeply concerned about the negative image given to Australian agriculture,
which she believes has contributed, to what has become, a flood of young
people away from a career in rural Australia.
Her
proposed activity involved three succinct stages:
- Stage
One involved Carmel further developing her own leadership, human resource
and organisational skills. She has now successfully completed a Graduate
Certificate in Human Resource Management through the Northern Territory
University.
- Stage
Two involved investigation into the issue of rural employment and retention
rates in the Northern Australian pastoral industry, before brainstorming
the issue with a group of relevant and informed persons. 19 people representing
employers, trainers and recruiters of young people in Northern Australia,
convened for a two day workshop in Darwin in July last year.
Brainstorming
focused on issues extending from current methods the industry uses to attract
the services of new staff and reasons people leave their employment, to
the personal and professional development of staff, and the issues of lifestyle
and geographical isolation. The
workshop culminated in the formation of NARC, the Northern Australian Rural
Careers Network, with its aim of providing a network to promote the implementation
of professional business strategies, that address the issues of attracting,
developing and retaining staff in the extensive pastoral industry.
The
workshop also developed media material called ‘The Message’, a document
highlighting the positives, including the financial benefits of working
in the Northern Australian beef cattle industry.
Other
initiatives included the organization of a study tour for industry middle
management. The first tour took place in March this year and proved so
successful that a second tour is already well in the planning.
A second
forum was held in September this year, which focused on reviewing NARC’s
progress to date and setting the direction and targets for the 12 months
ahead. The network now boasts 50 members, bringing together experience
and expertise from all facets of the Northern Australian pastoral industry.
Stage
Three, yet to be implemented, will involve the development of materials
to promote the industry as a preferred and professional career choice.
Carmel’s
vision, has seen the beginnings of what a group of committed and like-minded
people can achieve. It is intended that NARC will continue to evolve into
a credible lobby group, that will develop sound strategies to address the
serious skill shortage currently facing the Northern Australian beef cattle
industry.
At
a personal level, the Award has given Carmel a platform on which to build
her knowledge and skills and in turn further develop her capacity to drive
the direction of NARC and to continue to passionately promote the professionalism
and unique career opportunities within the pastoral industry.
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