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Northern Integrated Family
Violence Services Partnership
For professionals supporting the
safety of victim survivors in Melbourne's
northern metropolitan region

The Northern Integrated Family Violence Services (NIFVS) are hosting the second annual Building Bridges Forum on Thursday 24 July 2025 at the Aborigines Advancement League (2 Watt Street, Thornbury, VIC 3071).

The event will be in-person, running from 10:00 am to 2:45 pm.

The focus of this year’s forum will be strengthening collaboration across services that engage with children and young people experiencing and/or using family violence.

We are inviting services and programs across the sector to host a stall as part of the afternoon networking activity (2:00 pm – 2:45 pm). Each stall will be provided with a table and chairs.

If you are interested, please complete the form below or contact us at nifvs@whin.org.au.

Submit your EOI here

NIFVS will be briefly pausing the delivery of MARAM Collaborative Practice Training.  
We recommence delivering the training in July, stay tuned for the new training calendar!

DPV Health has released the Exploring Masculinity and Relationships Report.

“The purpose of this project has been to engage men from the local community in conversations around masculinity, gender roles, relationships, and the prevention of violence against women […]. The intended audience for this report is the primary prevention sector and those seeking to engage with men and boys in the prevention of gender-based violence”.

This report focuses on Melbourne’s Northern Metro Region.

Download the Report here

NMR Groupwork Calendar Term 2, 2025 (PDF)

Each school term, the Northern Integrated Family Violence Services (NIFVS) partnership produces a calendar of family violence support groups run by organisations in the Northern Metropolitan Region.

Support groups include therapeutic groups for victim survivors, supported playgroups, parenting groups and perpetrator intervention programs, including in-language groups.

You can view and download the Term 2 Groupwork Calendar here.

If you would like to include your group on the calendar or would like further information please contact Valentina, Communications and Program Support Officer at Northern Integrated Family Violence Services at valentina.b@whin.org.au.

Join us for the official launch of the Abuse of Older People Response Toolkit, developed by Northern Integrated Family Violence Services, Western Integrated Family Violence Committee, and Holstep Health. 

This practical resource is designed to equip professionals with the knowledge and tools to recognise and respond to the abuse of older people, fostering a community where people of all ages are safe, valued, and respected.

Who should attend?

  • Members of the North and West Metro Elder Abuse Prevention Network (EAPN)
  • Specialist and non-specialist family violence practitioners working under MARAM
  • Aged care sector professionals
  • Clinicians and organisational leaders who may encounter potential cases of elder abuse

What to expect?

  • Presentation on how the toolkit will empower professionals to support older people experiencing abuse. Gain insights into:
    • Recognising different forms of abuse
    • Using a simple, easy-to-remember framework to respond with empathy and prioritise safety
    • Navigating available services for referrals and ongoing support
  • Afternoon tea and networking, with the opportunity to meet the toolkit creators and connect with professionals from across the sector
  • Complimentary hard copy of the toolkit for all attendees
Register here

The second iteration of the NIFVS Building Bridges Forum is coming up on Thursday 24 July 2025. The Forum will be delivered in person from 10am to 2.45pm.

This year’s edition will focus on strengthening service visibility and sector connectivity amongst services working with children and young people at the intersection of family violence.

More information, including program and registration process, will be shared soon. Stay tuned!

The next Lunch & Learn is coming up on Tuesday 29 April 2025, from 12 – 1 pm.

This session will be delivered by Bernadette Jones, Multicultural Services Officer with Services Australia, speaking to their programs in the Northern Metro Region. 

Following a presentation, participants will have the opportunity engage in a Q&A to unpack how this applies to practice.

Who should attend?

Designed for both specialist and non-specialist family violence practitioners under MARAM, with particular focus on professionals who may want to learn more about navigating family violence risk in their roles.

Please register by Monday 28 April to attend. We look forward to seeing you there!

Register here

This report, developed in partnership between Djirra and Safe and Equal, summarises research, policy frameworks, and Aboriginal women’s lived experiences, alongside insights from both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal family violence service providers. It examines the strengths, weaknesses, and gaps in non-Aboriginal family violence services support for Aboriginal people.

These findings will guide the development of actions to ensure non-Aboriginal family violence services uphold Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people’s rights to self-determination, choice and safety.

Read more and download the report here

The second Lunch & Learn session of 2025 is coming up on Tuesday 25 March 2025.

This session will be delivered by a specialist family violence advisor with Uniting, speaking to their practice across Alcohol & Other Drugs (AOD) and Family Violence.

Please register by Monday 24 March to attend. We look forward to seeing you online!

Register here

Sisters Day Out® is Djirra’s long-standing wellbeing workshop, where Aboriginal women come together to support each other, enjoy some pampering, learn about their rights and options, and engage with available support services. These workshops are held regularly within the community, and everyone is welcome to attend.

The upcoming Sister Day Out will be held on Tuesday 4 March 2025, from 9.30 am to 3 pm at the Meadows Conference Centre – 80 Northcorp Blvd, Broadmeadows. Morning tea and lunch will be provided.

Participants can register here! Registrations close on Thursday, 27th February.

Djirra also invites local service providers to join by hosting a stall on the day. This is a great opportunity to meet and network with Djirra and other local organizations. There will be plenty of opportunities to engage with women, share information about the support services and programs your team offers, and build connections within the community. 

To express your interest in a stall, send an email at sistersdayout@djirra.org.au.

NIFVS February 2025 eNews

NIFVS March 2025 eNews

NIFVS April 2025 eNews

Lunch & Learn is back in 2025!

The first session of the year will be delivered by Ellie, Coordinator of Gender Equity and Prevention of Gender-based Violence at Women’s Health In the North, speaking to Allyship in Action – building bystander action for trans and gender diversity inclusion. 

Please register by Monday 24 February to attend. We look forward to seeing you online!

Register here

The Exit Pathways Pilot Program by Haven Home Safe will be refunded in a 2nd round through to June 2026, and referrals are now open.

The purpose of this program is to improve access to safe accommodation for adult & child victim family violence survivors; to prevent further trauma resulting from extended periods in refuge, crisis accommodation or family violence transitional housing management due to being unable to transition into independently owned or rented accommodation

The program aims to reduce barriers to exit, through the provision of medium-term accommodation; to help to address system blockages and facilitating refuge and crisis accommodation flow through and to free up much needed refuge vacancies, creating opportunities for more victim survivors in need of a timely, life saving intervention.

For more information about the program and if you have any questions, please contact Have Home Safe at exitpathways@hhs.org.au.

You can download the Exit Pathways here.

MARAM Collaborative Practice Training – 2025 Calendar

NIFVS are delivering MARAM Collaborative Practice Training in 2025. You can find the training Calendar here.

NMR Groupwork Calendar Term 1, 2025 (PDF)

Each school term, the Northern Integrated Family Violence Services (NIFVS) partnership produces a calendar of family violence support groups run by organisations in the Northern Metropolitan Region.

Support groups include therapeutic groups for victim survivors, supported playgroups, parenting groups and perpetrator intervention programs, including in-language groups.

You can view and download the Term 1 Groupwork Calendar here.

If you would like to include your group on the calendar or would like further information please contact Valentina, Communications and Program Support Officer at Northern Integrated Family Violence Services at valentina.b@whin.org.au.

The last session for the year of the Lunch & Learn is coming up on Wednesday 27 November from 12pm – 1pm.

This session will be delivered by Ginette, Project Lead and Mandy, Senior Manager from OPEN: Outcomes, Practice and Evidence Network, a project by the Centre for Excellence in Child and Family Welfare, speaking to the Family Violence Sexual Violence Knowledge Hub

Following a presentation, participants will have the opportunity engage in a Q&A to unpack how this applies to practice.

Registrations close on COB Tuesday 26 November.

Register here

In occasion of the 2024 MARAM and Information Sharing Week, NIFVS in partnership with inTouch are offering an online, 1-hour event on Monday 28 October from 11am to 12pm.

The session will be delivered by Asha, Lead Practitioner – Therapeutic Programs and Manjula Coordinator – Motivation for Change Program from inTouch who will speak to Using a cultural lens to strengthen the family violence response system.

Following a presentation, participants will have the opportunity engage in a Q&A.

Register here


Framing the Future, the second three-year rolling action plan under Building from strength: 10-Year Industry Plan for Family Violence Prevention and Response is now available online.  
Framing the Future will continue to develop the specialisation of the family violence, primary prevention and sexual assault workforces through providing clearer education and training pathways, improving support for early career workers, creating more varied specialisation pathways as workers progress in their careers and improving options for experienced practitioners to move between service types.   

The plan reflects strong collaboration with family violence and sexual assault peak bodies and employers as well as opportunities to connect shared workforce development opportunities and challenges across community services – this includes children and families, disability and housing and homelessness.   

It addresses critical vacancies and building better career pathways, with a focus on retaining the workforce.  

Framing the Future includes actions that apply to all parts of the specialist family violence and sexual assault workforce. Work under this plan will be delivered to meet the needs of different workforces in primary prevention, victim survivor response services and perpetrator services.   

It covers four focus areas:   

  • growing the workforce – attracting and recruiting skilled workers when and where they are needed  
  • supporting strong organisations and workforce culture – making work in family violence and sexual assault services a career of choice  
  • building capability – ensuring workers understand how their roles support family violence and sexual assault prevention and response, and that they are equipped to perform these roles effectively   
  • building a system that works together – ensuring all workforces work together.  

Framing the Future supports the implementation of our overarching strategy for the reform, Ending Family Violence: Victoria’s 10-year plan for change, and its third rolling action plan, which is due for release in 2024.   

Download Framing the Future

The Department of Families, Fairness and Housing has developed Best Practice Supervision Guidelines for the family violence, sexual assault and child wellbeing workforces.

Supervision is central to developing and sustaining the sectors’ workforces.

The Guidelines were developed in collaboration with the sectors and incorporate information from the Best Practice Supervision Information Sheets, published in 2023.  

The Guidelines provide information on:

  • Best practice approaches to supervision
  • Recommended standards
  • Roles and responsibilities
  • The department is also producing a series of videos to support the Guidelines, which will be available in the coming months.

The Guidelines and videos are for use during individual, group or peer supervision sessions, staff induction, policy development and supervision training.  

To get in touch with the Centre for Workforce Excellence, email: cwe@dffh.vic.gov.au.  

Download Best Practice Supervision Guidelines

The Northern Integrated Family Violence Services, in collaboration with the local Family Violence Network Conveners, have developed a digital toolkit to support the Week Without Violence 2024 campaign.

This toolkit includes:

  • Social media tile for the WWV 2024.
  • Posters containing information in English, Arabic, Assyrian, Chinese, Hindi,
    Punjabi and Vietnamese for:
    o adult victim survivors
    o adult using family violence
Download the Week Without Violence 2024 media toolkit

The Building Bridges Forum was an all-day online event held on 5th June 2024 and brought together more than 120 leaders and practitioners from across the family violence sector.

The Forum was delivered in two parts:

  • A morning ‘expert’ panel session that discussed Service Mapping with Adults Using Violence Services. This session was focused on enhancing visibility and connectivity across the system.
  • Afternoon workshops that were designed as more interactive sessions that were lead by sector experts. The workshops utilized a shared case study to explore three core areas:
    a. Deep dive: Information Sharing Schemes
    b. Embedding cultural safety and respect with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities
    c. Culturally informed care when working with migrant and refugee women.

The NIFVS team have produced an Evaluation Report – which includes key findings and recommendations – that can be downloaded utilising the buttons below.
If you have queries about the Evaluation Report, do not hesitate to contact the NIFVS team at nifvs@whin.org.au.

Download the Evaluation Report (PDF)
Download the Evaluation Report (Word)


The next Lunch & Learn session is coming up on Tuesday 29 October from 12-1 pm!
Sharon, Senior Independent Family Advocate from Victoria Legal Aid will speak to Independent Family Advocacy and Support.

“Independent Family Advocacy and Support is a service that provides non-legal advocacy and support to parents and primary carers who are involved in the child protection system at the early stages”.

Who should attend?
Designed for both specialist and non-specialist family violence practitioners under MARAM, with particular focus on professionals who may want to learn more about navigating family violence risk in their roles.

Please register by Monday 28 October to attend. We look forward to seeing you there!

Register now

In October 2023, NIFVS have conducted a MARAM Alignment Survey across the Northern Metropolitan Region.
We are excited to be sharing our key findings and recommendations, which highlight:
– strengthen and support a culture of system-wide collaboration, including strengthening of information sharing processes and policies
– improve workforce capacity building activities to reflect the current service system
-increase workforce capacity and confidence to work safely with people who choose to use violence
strengthen the skills and confidence of practitioners in mainstream organisations to provide inclusive, safe responses to people experiencing violence

“The 2023 NIFVS MARAM Alignment Survey is the first of an annual surveying process designed to establish a baseline for the collection of regional workforce data. Analysis of this data will support systems that monitor how the implementation of these reforms is progressing in the Northern Metropolitan Region (NMR) and whether they are improving family violence practice”.
NIFVS will launch the next survey in March 2025. Stay tuned!

Download the MARAM Alignment Survey here

The Northern Integrated Family Violence Services (NIFVS) are seeking an Expert by Experience representative to join the NIFVS Family Violence Regional Integration Committee (FVRIC) Leadership Group.

This role will be part of new governance arrangements and will represent victim survivors at a regional level to inform policy, planning, action, and advocacy across the Northern Metropolitan Region’s family violence sector. The position will hold voting rights, influencing decision-making processes.

The position is a hybrid role, with the representative required to be able to attend meetings in Thornbury, located in the Northern Metropolitan Region (NMR) of Melbourne.

Download the Position Description (PDF) here
Download the Position Description (Word Accessible doc) here

Who we are:

  • The Northern Integrated Family Violence Services (NIFVS) Family Violence Regional Integration Committee (FVRIC) provides family violence system leadership across the NMR of Melbourne.
  • FVRICs are local governance structures that were established in 2006 to improve the integration of services that respond to family violence.
  • The Leadership Group is constituted by 12 representatives: 4 elected representatives from the General Membership Committee, the NIFVS Principal Strategic Advisor, 2 DFFH representatives from the Hume Moreland Area (HMA) and the North East Melbourne Area (NEMA), 2 Hub Managers of The Orange Door from the HMA and NEMA, 2 representatives from a Specialist Family Violence Service organisation, an Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisation (ACCO) representative and an Expert by Experience representative.

What you will do:

  • Attend FVRIC Leadership Group meetings.
  • Support the functions of the FVRIC Leadership Group.
  • Act as an advocate on behalf of victim survivors of family who live and work in Melbourne’s northern suburbs.
  • Ensure the activities, including Strategic Planning and Annual Action Planning and Review processes, are culturally informed and safe.
  • Participate in FVRIC Working Groups as is appropriate.

What we’re looking for:

  • A representative who has an understanding of the Family Violence sector in Victoria.
  • Current participation in a peer-support program is preferred for this position.
  • Desirable that the representative lives or works in the NMR.

How to apply:

Please send EOIs to Veronica Hunt at veronica.h@whin.org.au with the subject line: ‘EOI FVRIC Expert by Experience Representative – Confidential’ or apply via Ethical Jobs.

EOIs close COB Monday 14 October 2024.

Appointment: Will be subject to an open General FVRIC Membership election process.

If you have specific queries about this position, please contact Veronica Hunt, Principal Strategic Advisor, NIFVS FVRIC via email veronica.h@whin.org.au or telephone 03 9968 1125.

Banner with geometrical elements illustration and text Working with infants and young children experiencing family violence Community of Practice.

The Northern Integrated Family Violence Services and Berry Street have partnered to deliver the Working with infants and young children experiencing family violence Community of Practice.

Membership:
Practitioners in the NMR working in roles that engage with young children as a core part of their work and regularly respond to past and current experiences of family violence.
Roles of members may include:

  • Maternal and Child Health (including Enhanced)
  • Child and Family Services
  • Early Childhood Care, Education and Intervention Services

*Practitioners will be prescribed under the MARAM Framework, generally sitting across tiers 2 – 3.

Submit your Expression of Interest here or contact nifvs@whin.org.au if you want more information.

Submit your EOI

The next Lunch & Learn on Tech-facilitated abuse in the contexts of domestic, family and sexual violence is coming up!
This session will be delivered online via MS Teams by eSafety, Australia’s independent regulator for online safety.
All specialist and non-specialist family violence practitioners that are prescribed under MARAM (Tier 1 – 4) are encouraged to participate.

Register here

The Western Integrated Family Violence Committee (WIFVC) and the Northern Integrated Family Violence Services Partnership (NIFVS) have released a new resource: the MARAM Summary Guide.

The MARAM Summary Guide provides practitioner in the Western and Northern Metropolitan Regions a summary of the key elements of the Multi-Agency Risk Assessment and Management Framework.

The WIFVC and the NIFVS acknowledge and thank the Barwon Area Integrated Family Violence Committee for their work designing this MARAM Framework Summary Guide and for allowing it to be tailored for the Western and Northern Metropolitan Regions.

You can download the MARAM Summary Guide here.

The Lunch & Learn: Secondary consultation with The Orange Door is coming up on Tuesday 10 September from 12 – 1 pm. 

This session will be delivered by Gail Kilmister, Advanced Family Violence Practice Lead at The Orange Door who will speak to best practice in secondary consultation. 

You can register now via this link. 

In 2023, NIFVS has published the Victim Survivor Experience Mapping Report, highlighting victim survivor’s experiences of the service system in the northern metropolitan region.

As an outcome of the Report, NIFVS in partnership with VACCA have developed a new resource for practitioners, a tip sheet speaking to Working with Aboriginal community members experiencing family violence.

The advice in this tip sheet has been generously shared by VACCA workers.

You can view and download the PDF version of the Tip Sheet here or download the accessible Word document here.

NMR Groupwork Calendar, Term 3 2024.

Each school term, the Northern Integrated Family Violence Services (NIFVS) partnership produces a calendar of family violence support groups run by organisations in the Northern Metropolitan Region.

Support groups include therapeutic groups for victim survivors, supported playgroups, parenting groups and perpetrator intervention programs, including in-language groups.

You can view and download the Term 3 Groupwork Calendar here.

If you would like to include your group on the calendar or would like further information please contact Valentina, Communications and Program Support Officer at Northern Integrated Family Violence Services at valentina.b@whin.org.au.

The fifth Lunch & Learn session is coming up!

On Wednesday 24 July from 12 – 1 pm, Annabel, Disability Family Violence Practice Development Advisor from Berry Street will speak to Disability inclusive practice.

Registrations close on Monday 22 July EOD.

Register now via this link.

Starting from July 2024, NIFVS will be delivering MARAM Collaborative Practice training in a full-day model. The next available date will be Tuesday 16 July 2024.

Book a spot now on Eventbrite.

What is MARAM Collaborative Practice?

MARAM Collaborative Practice is a foundational course in the suite of MARAM trainings. It is an important opportunity to build cross-sector relationships, learn from other professionals and network.

What will you learn?

  • Secondary consultation to collaboratively support victim survivors
  • Information Sharing Schemes – FVISS and CISS and how to use them
  • Risk Assessment and Risk Management Plan
  • Use collaborative practice to keep people using violence accountable

You can see upcoming Collaborative Practice training dates here.

The recording of the Building Bridges Forum ‘Expert’ Panel discussion on Service Mapping with Adults Using Violence Services is now available on Youtube via this link.

The Panel was moderated by Pauline Wright, Senior Manager of the Northern Specialist Family Violence Service at Berry Street. Panel members featured:

  • Manjula Karunathilake (she/her), Operational Team Leader and Coordinator Motivation for Change Program at inTouch.
  • Dr Paula Fernandez Arias (she/her), General Manager Queerspace at Drummond Street Services.
  • Julie Gasparini (she/her), Acting Senior Sergeant at Victoria Police.
  • Gail Kilmister (she/her), Advanced Family Violence Practice Lead at The North East Orange Door.
  • Melisa Monea (she/her), Senior Practitioner of the Men’s Behaviour Change Program at DPV Health.
  • Lizette Twisleton (she/her), Head of Engagement at No to Violence.

If you have missed the Building Bridges Forum panel or if you would like to watch it again, you can simply access it here.

On behalf of the NIFVS Team, thank you to all participating to the Building Bridges Forum on Wednesday 5 June.

With over a hundred attending the morning ‘expert’ panel and many staying for the afternoon workshops, we are very pleased to have seen a high-level interest and engagement from all-level sector workforces in the Northern Metro Region.

First of many more to come, the Building Bridges Forum affirms itself to be a valuable opportunity for practitioners in the North to unpack challenges and improve understanding of the family violence response service system.

For those who attended, we encourage you to complete this 5-minute survey to inform future NIFVS events.

Thank you again and we hope to see you at future events!

The Lunch & Learn: Culturally safe practice with VACCA is coming up on Tuesday 2 July.

This fourth session will be delivered by Isabelle Walsh, Senior Therapeutic Practitioner at VACCA who will speak to Culturally safe practice and unpack a new resource: “Tip Sheet for Practitioners – Working with Aboriginal community members“.

Don’t miss out, register now via this link.

The NIFVS team are announcing the third session of the Lunch & Learn!

Lunch & Learn – Elder Abuse will be delivered on Tuesday 11 June from 12-1 pm by Mandy Strange, Clinical and Program Lead Elder Services at Better Place.

Following a 30-minute presentation, participants will have the opportunity to engage in a Q&A to unpack how this applies to practice.

The Lunch & Learn session are free, 1-hour sessions aiming to strengthen the practice skills and confidence of professionals to safely and effectively respond to family violence.

Register now for the session.

Registrations are now open to attend the Building Bridges Forum on Wednesday 5 June, an online event featuring a panel discussion in the morning and three case study workshops in the afternoon. The forum will open up conversations around collaboration and the practicalities of how the Information Sharing Schemes can strengthen service responses across the sector in the Northern Metropolitan Region of Melbourne.

The morning panel will explore service mapping with adults using violence services and the afternoon workshops will cover three core area of interest:

  • Deep dive: Information Sharing Schemes
  • Embedding cultural safety and respect with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities
  • Culturally-informed care for migrant and refugee women

All levels of the workforce in prescribed settings who engage with victim survivors of family violence and/or people using violence are encouraged to attend.

Visit the Building Bridges Forum website for more information, and register now via this link: https://www.eventbrite.com/cc/building-bridges-forum-3285189

The NIFVS team are excited to announce the second session of the Lunch & Learn.

Lunch & Learn – Working with Young People Using Family Violence will be delivered on Tuesday 7 May from 12-1 pm by Youth Junction.

Following a 30-minute presentation, participants will have the opportunity to engage in a Q&A to unpack how this applies to practice.

The Lunch & Learn are free, 1-hour sessions aiming to strengthen the practice skills and confidence of professionals to safely and effectively respond to family violence.

The sessions will feature sector experts speaking to vital learning areas. Designed for both specialist and non-specialist family violence practitioners, Lunch & Learn particularly focuses on professionals who may want to learn more about navigating specialized areas of family violence in their roles.

Following sessions will address key learning areas including Elder Abuse, Complex Mental Health & Family Violence and Inclusive practice when working with people with disabilities. 

Register on Eventbrite here.

NMR Group Work Calendar, Term 2 2024.

Each school term, the Northern Integrated Family Violence Services (NIFVS) partnership produces a calendar of family violence support groups run by organisations in the northern metropolitan region. Support groups include therapeutic groups for victim survivors, supported playgroups, parenting groups and perpetrator intervention programs. Some groups are ongoing and some are shorter term.

This calendar includes groups being run in Term 2, 2024.

NIFVS are planning a full-day forum to strengthen connection and collaboration between victim-survivors and people who use violence services in Melbourne’s North under the MARAM Framework and Information Sharing Schemes.

Stay tuned for more details!

NIFVS have partnered with Jackson Fairchild (they/them) a leading, national voice in LGBTIQA+ inclusion in family violence primary prevention and response to deliver Make it mainstream: Building safer, inclusive services for LGBTIQA+ people experiencing family violence.

Make it Mainstream is a Community of Practice for family violence practitioners who want to build expertise and confidence in delivering and championing safe, inclusive support to people experiencing family violence within the LGBTIQA+ community. 
Sessions will be delivered online via Zoom. Members will be required to commit to at least 4 out of the 6 scheduled sessions.

Outcomes: 

  • Members will have an increased understanding of the systemic barriers and considerations required when working with people from LGBTIQA+ communities.
  • Members will have improved practical skills and knowledge to work inclusively with people experiencing violence in the LGBTIQA+ community. 
  • Members will have improved confidence to apply and embed learnings into the culture and daily practices of their service setting.
  • Members will be a part of a support-base of allies, providing peer-support, resource sharing and motivation to continue to engage in gender-transformative work in the family violence space.  

Membership:
This CoP is seeking specialist family violence practitioners in mainstream services across the Northern Metropolitan Region. If you are not a specialist worker, but your work regularly engages with people experiencing family violence, please submit an Expression of Interest. 
The CoP will be a closed group, with a capped number of participants. 

Please complete this form to express your interest.
If you have any question regarding this CoP or the completion of this form you can contact NIFVS MARAMIS & Workforce Development Coordinator, Katrina on katrina.d@whin.org.au. 

NIFVS welcome EOIs from people of all backgrounds and identities. 
Expressions of Interest will close on EOD 4 April 2024.

The NIFVS team are excited to launch the Lunch & Learn pilot project.

Lunch & Learn will be delivered as free, 1-hour sessions throughout 2024, to strengthen the practice skills and confidence of professionals to safely and effectively respond to family violence.

The sessions will feature sector experts speaking to vital learning areas. Designed for both specialist and non-specialist family violence practitioners, Lunch & Learn particularly focuses on professionals who may want to learn more about navigating specialized areas of family violence in their roles.

The first session is on Wednesday 13 March from 12-1pm and will be led by Jackson Fairchild who will speak to LGBTIQA+ Safe and Inclusive Practice within the family violence context. Following a 30-minute presentation, participants will have the opportunity engage in a Q&A to unpack how this applies to practice.

Following sessions will address key learning areas including Elder Abuse, Working with Young People Using Violence, Complex Mental Health & Family Violence and Inclusive practice when working with people with disabilities. 

Register on Eventbrite here.

About Jackson:
Jackson Fairchild (they/them) is one of Australia’s leading voices in LGBTIQA+ inclusion in family violence primary prevention and response. They are a qualified counsellor and clinical supervisor with a background in facilitation, research translation, policy advocacy, governance and organisational change. Jackson has held senior roles at Rainbow Health Australia, No To Violence and Thorne Harbour Health, and they are currently working with the Zoe Belle Gender Collective on the prevention of cis men’s violence against trans women. 

No To Violence (NTV) has announced that MARAM training is now available for practitioners who need to have an applied understanding of MARAM and Information Sharing in their roles when working with adults using family violence.

NTV works with Family Safety Victoria (FSV) to deliver the training in 2024. There are three levels of training available:

  • Identification: focussed on working with adults using family violence, this training is suitable for all professionals who may identify family violence is occurring and who engage with people in a one-off, episodic or ongoing service. You can find available dates and link to register here.
  • Intermediate: suitable for all professionals who have an intermediate role when working with adults using family violence in both non-specialist and specialist services. You can find available dates and link to register here.
  • Comprehensive: suitable for professionals requiring a specialist level of skill, knowledge and expertise in family violence practice with adults using family violence. Professionals who should attend this training include those providing specialist adult using family violence intervention services and programs. Examples include adult using family violence case management, behaviour change programs, crisis response services, specialist targeted programs, The Orange Door, or any other response that works with adults using family violence in a specialist capacity. You can find available dates and link to register here.

People are encouraged to attend the MARAM Victim Survivor training first. All training is currently offered online, but you can contact NTV at MARAM@ntv.org.au if you require in-person sessions.

(Source: No To Violence website)

This year NIFVS will be running Lunch & Learn sessions throughout 2024.

Delivered online from 12:30– 1:30pm, the sessions will tap into key areas of expressed needs by the prescribed workforce.

Session details and dates will be shared soon. Stay tuned!

Welcome to the NIFVS newsletter – the first for 2024.

Happy New Year to you all. May the year ahead provide opportunities for achievement and change.

Women and gender diverse people are still experiencing violence perpetrated against them. They are still battling financial crises with cost-of-living challenges and a lack of affordable housing. And, they experience multiple barriers to accessing the services they require.

As a sector, we embark upon many challenges in 2024, including to our service delivery, our funding and within our workforces.

We are lucky to work within a highly capable, experienced and dedicated sector here in the northern metro Melbourne.

Following the development and final approval of the NIFVS Strategic Plan for 2023- 26 last year, the Regional Integration Family Violence Services Committee will meet in early 2024 to confirm a new governance structure for the year ahead.

I am excited about the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead and look forward to working with our dedicated Family Violence service sector to address family violence and it impacts on victim survivors.

I wish you all the best for the coming year.

Kind regards,

Helen Riseborough
Chairperson
Northern Integrated Family Violence Committee

The Northern Integrated Family Violence Service (NIFVS), though the Regional Integration Committee, provides family violence system leadership across Melbourne’s NMR (Northern Metropolitan Region) to increase the safety of victim survivors, accountability of people who use violence, and strengthen Victoria’s family violence reforms.”

Dear All

What a huge year 2023 has been and we now find ourselves at that time of year where we sit back and reflect on the time that has passed: the successes, the achievements, the lessons learned.

2023 has been a fruitful year for the Northern Integrated Family Violence Services (NIFVS) partnership, starting from the formation of a new team; we welcomed a new MARAMIS and Workforce Development Coordinator and Communications and Program Support Officer.

As a new team we have worked hard to achieve many of the priorities identified across both the 2022.23 and 2023.24 NIFVS Annual Action Plans in 2023.

Some highlights from this year include:

  • Development of the new 2023.26 3-year NIFVS Strategic Plan (to be launched in 2024) that aligns with the latest Family Violence Regional Integration Committee guidelines and five statewide strategic family violence priorities.
  • Launch of the Regional Victim Survivor Experience Mapping Report and the ‘Turning Input into Action’ Forum held on 30 March 2023 and attended by 60 organisational leaders from across the NMR. The report ensures that victim survivor’s voices are heard and has informed all key decision making undertaken across the region by NIFVS in 2023.
  • Continued roll out and delivery of NIFVS training, including MARAM Collaborative Practice and delivery of ‘Introduction to Family Violence Sector’ sessions to a wide range of prescribed Tier 3 and 4 workforces and non-prescribed organisations who regularly work with and support victim survivors (including children) experiencing or recovering from family violence.
  • Delivery of the 2023 Family Violence and Sexual Assault Graduate Program in partnership with Kids First Australia.
  • Implementation of system responsive changes to NMR Counselling Support Alliance enhancing referral pathways, therapeutic recovery responses and outcomes for victim survivors of family violence across the region.
  • Bringing together the Family Violence Networks across the NMR to better understand common themes and issues across the region at a local area level.
  • Supporting system changes to adopt practices that align with the new Family Violence Crisis Response Model that ensures that crisis responses are consistent, clearly communicated, and jointly managed by regional family violence services.
  • Supporting system changes and adopting the ‘no wrong door’ approach opening referral pathways for victim survivors of family violence.
  • Recently undertaking the first NMR MARAMIS Survey for prescribed practitioners. Report and findings will be launched in early 2024.

We would like to acknowledge the incredible work that is undertaken by all our family violence and sexual assault partners and workforces across the NMR. Without your dedication to the work the system would not be as agile and responsive to the needs of victim survivors of family violence.

Looking forward into 2024:

  • Launch of the MARAM Alignment Survey Report and the Strategic Plan 2023-2026.
  • Launch of the 2024 annual MARAMIS Alignment survey which will be open for 6 weeks as of March 2024. All family violence and sexual assault workers are encouraged to participate in the survey as the outcomes will allow the building of an evidence base for practice, advocacy, and regional service system reform.
  • Commencement of planning for ‘Phase 2’ of the Victim Survivor Experience Mapping for the NMR.
  • Innovative and exciting changes to the approach in which the NIFVS Team records and disseminates information to enhance the accessibility of information to all workforces working with victim-survivors and people who use violence.

The NIFVS Partnership and team would like to wish you and your loved ones a very Happy Christmas and safe New Year and we look forward to working with you all in 2024.

Warm regards,

Veronica Hunt

Principal Strategic Advisor
Northern Integrated Family Violence Services

The MARAM Collaborative Practice training is for all professionals who respond to family violence in the northern metropolitan region. The training builds on the foundations of MARAM to explore how practitioners can work collaboratively across the service system and apply the MARAM Framework and Information Sharing Schemes.  This training is delivered online across two half days. Check out our website for upcoming dates and to register via Eventbrite.  
If you have any enquiries, or would like to request an internal training session, please contact the NIFVS team at info@whin.org.au.

Safe and Equal are recommencing the Practice Lead Community of Practice (CoP). This CoP is intended for practice leaders, or anyone undertaking similar duties, who are responsible for supporting MARAM best practice. The renewed focus of the CoP will be implementing recent or upcoming MARAM work.

Please see the flyer which includes further information and a member registration link. Contact the facilitator with any further questions.

Download the flyer here Facilitator and contact: Liz Yared, Practice Development Advisor (MARAMIS), elizabethyared@safeandequal.org.au.

The Northern Integrated Family Violence Services partnership is undertaking survey as an assessment to determine how organisations and practitioners are aligning practice to the MARAM and Information Sharing Schemes.

If you work directly with clients/consumers and are prescribed under MARAM from Tiers 1-4, we are seeking your participation. Your input will directly help inform the design of future regional priorities and will progress the implementation of the MARAM and Information Sharing Schemes across the Northern Metropolitan Region.

Survey respondents will go into the draw to win one of three $50 Prezzee Gift Cards! Follow the link here to participate. The survey will take approximately 20 minutes to complete.

Safe and Equal are supporting businesses and workplaces to meet their OH&S and Fair Work obligations in relation to domestic and family violence.

Under the Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004, employers must provide and maintain a working environment that is safe and without risks to the health of employees. This includes putting in measures to eliminate or control the risk associated with family violence in the workplace.

Organisations can work with Safe and Equal to meet their OH&S and Fair Work obligations by, for example:

  • Helping staff understand why family violence is a workplace issue
  • Developing appropriate workplace policies and procedures
  • Providing staff with training to raise their awareness, understand effects in the workplace and how to manage risks
  • Ensuring information is handled correctly
  • Consulting workers about work arrangements and managing risks to health and safety
  • Ensuring staff supporting those who are experiencing family violence are aware of the support options available to them
  • Providing a safe, secure and accessible reporting mechanism within the workplace.

To find out more about how Safe and Equal can assist, contact Robyn Stone, Business Partnerships & Engagement Advisor, at robynstone@safeandequal.org.au.

(Source: Safe and Equal Members Update, 31.5.23)

The NIFVS team have developed a new webpage, Criminalised Victim Survivors, with resources to assist practitioners respond to victim survivors who have been criminalised. Victim survivors who have experienced criminalisation, may encounter discrimination in the family violence service system, which can impact on their risk and access to safety and support.

Recently, Flat Out and Safe & Equal developed a resource, Providing safety and support for criminalised victim survivors about what to take into consideration when supporting a criminalised victim survivor.

Flat Out launched the resource with a recorded panel discussion: Resisting Systemic Collusion with Criminalised Victim Survivors.

Building on the work of program lead healthAbility, Baby Makes 3 has received $1.2 million from the state government for this innovative, evidence-based program for new parents, delivered across more than 40 health services in Victoria.

Funded by the state government since 2017, Baby Makes 3 has been adapted to support diverse families including those from culturally and linguistically diverse communities, rainbow families and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island families.

The program builds mutual understanding, appreciation and respect among first-time parents and supports the capacity of local governments, maternal and child health and maternity services to promote gender equality and challenge traditional gender stereotypes. Baby Makes 3 works to build equal and respectful relationships for families who are becoming parents for the first time, and highlights its focus on challenging the rigid gender stereotypes and social norms associated with parenting.

In 2022, the program won VicHealth’s prestigious Outstanding Health Promotion Award for making a tangible difference in improving Victorians’ health and quality of life.

(Source: Premiers’ Media Release, 13.5.23)

The Escaping Violence Program (EVP) has recently introduced an agency fast-track application process that aims to streamline and expedite the financial support clients can receive. A worker can apply on behalf of an eligible client. EVP works directly with agency workers and has no contact with the client.

Support workers will need to:

  • Fully complete and submit the EVP application on behalf of the client with their consent.
  • Commit to continuing to work with the client while EVP process the payments (five business days).
  • Support the client to identify their goals, the path toward them, and how the EVP package can assist with the achievement of these goals.
  • Inform EVP within 24 hours if the client disengages with the referring agency or if the agency closes the engagement episode.  

The EVP program offers financial assistance and support to help eligible people move forward and establish a home that’s free from violence with individualised packages of up to $5,000 that are tailored to enable choice and autonomy. 

( Source: EVP email, 4.5.23)

The NIFVS Team is excited to be welcoming Katrina Dickinson to the role of MARAMIS and Workforce Development Coordinator. Katrina will formally start her role in mid-May.

Katrina (she/her) brings a range of experiences across the family violence sector, trained as a Social Worker and having worked extensively across response and prevention. Katrina has worked for Doncare, The Orange Door, The Salvation Army and most recently at WHIN as Preventing Gender-Based Violence and Gender Equality Health Promotion Officer, with a focus on Workforce Capacity Building. Katrina also has worked in Graphic Design and in Communications at No to Violence.

Katrina is a passionate intersectional feminist who also happens to enjoy the world of art and design in her personal time.  

On 30 March 2023, organisational leaders across the northern metropolitan region progressed recommendations arising from the Victim Survivor Experience Mapping report, a qualitative piece of research which highlights victim survivor experiences of the service system.

Forum participants heard from those involved in the Mapping, gained insight into the Victoria Police Predominant Aggressor Project, and developed collaborative plans to contribute to the next NIFVS Regional Integration Committee’s Strategic Plan.

Read more information about the Turn Input into Action Forum, including a forum summary and view presentations from the day.

The Federal government has announced changes to ‘non-judicial’ evidence requirements for temporary visa holders, who seek assistance as victim-survivors of family and domestic violence.

From 31 March 2023, a new instrument under the Migration Regulations 1994—Specification of evidentiary requirements—family violence will be in place that reduces the burden placed on victims of family and domestic violence seeking a visa.

The new measures include adding midwives to the list of medical professionals who can provide evidence; adding risk assessments and reports as types of evidence in lieu of statutory declarations; adding additional advocacy and crisis service providers who can provide evidence and removing the statutory declaration requirement for some healthcare professionals.  

The new instrument improves accessibility to the family violence provisions in the Migration Act by increasing flexibility around the evidence that applicants must provide in order to make a non-judicially determined claim of family violence.

Read more in this Explanatory Statement.

(Source: Victorian Family Law Pathways Network Bulletin, April 2023)

The Victorian Government is providing 30-day Travel Passes free of charge to eligible Victorian school students, such as those experiencing homelessness or escaping family violence. The passes can be distributed through schools and can be used by eligible students on all public transport services across Victoria.

(Source: Family Safety Victoria eNews, April 2023)

The NIFVS multi-language Family Violence posters have been updated to reflect the change to Merri-bek City Council.

These posters inform community members, victim survivors and adults using family violence about support services that are available in the northern metropolitan region. The poster for adult victim survivors and the poster for adults using family violence contain information in English, Arabic, Assyrian, Chinese, Hindi, Punjabi and Vietnamese. They can be displayed in waiting rooms, on the back of toilet doors, or anywhere it might benefit community members.

The new Multi-Service Coordinated Family Violence Response Project (MCFVRP) aims to support Multicultural community at risk or experiencing family violence and/or sexual assault by reducing barriers to accessing the Family Violence and Sexual Assault service system. The project will target women and children from the South Asian community in the City of Whittlesea by outposting Bilingual Family Violence System Connectors at key locations and mainstream services across the local government area, who will support and provide guidance to the community member in navigating this service system.

The project also seeks to capacity build Family Violence and Sexual Assault practitioners in responding to the complex needs of Multicultural community and to improve service provision, so their service response is culturally safe. A Community of Practice between Bilingual FV System Connectors and Family Violence and Sexual Assault Specialist practitioners will be established to achieve this goal.

The MCFVRP has been funded as part of the ‘Working Together Grant’ by Family Safety Victoria.

Program eligibility criteria

  • Women and children
  • Residing in City of Whittlesea
  • From a South Asian and/or Multicultural background
  • Experiencing or at risk of family violence and/or sexual assault.

How to refer a client

(Source: Whittlesea Community Connections email, 20.3.23)

Berry Street’s therapeutic service, Take Two has received long-term funding to continue their work providing whole-of-family services for families with young people using violence in the home in the northern metropolitan region.

The Wattle Project offers support to young people (12-17 years) and their families, who are concerned about a young person’s use of unsafe behaviour at home.

The goal of the Wattle Project, in collaboration with the young people’s families, is to see improvements in safety, communication, and relationships for both the young person and their families. The service delivers a trauma-informed whole-of-family response to increase safety and improve relationships within the family home, while also meeting the young person’s developmental and therapeutic needs.

The program recognises the many overlapping intersections leading to a young person’s use of unsafe behaviour in the home including experiencing family violence themselves, intergenerational trauma, disability or developmental delays, and other factors related to the family’s circumstances.

Services including counselling, therapy, case management, creative arts groups, caregiving workshops, as well as financial assistance. To make a referral, please email: thewattleproject@berrystreet.org.au.

The role of Senior Clinician in the team is being advertised. Find out more.

Why is it called The Wattle Project?

Trees symbolise life, growth, change and transition. Wattle trees are known for their healing properties and represent strength, resilience and a fresh start. The Wattle Project recognises that like tree roots, our history and past experiences often go unseen. Experiencing hard times is like stormy weather, affecting how young people deal with overwhelming feelings and stress. It’s important to know that survival and even growth is always possible when facing these storms. At times a young person may need some extra support to cope, in the same way a tree may need extra care to protect it from a storm. Just like a tree that requires water, soil and sunlight to allow it to flourish, the Wattle Project works with young people to find new directions for growth.

(Source: Take Two email, 20.2.22)