The conversation

Over four weeks in April and May 2024, Council asked for feedback from the community to help shape the development of our new Stretch Reconciliation Action Plan.

A discussion paper that outlined key information was provided via Participate Melbourne. The community were invited to share their thoughts on the paper, including the five key themes that make up the RAP – truth-telling, relationships, respect, opportunities and governance.

Gathering insights

Engagement on the Stretch RAP ran between 13 March and 16 April 2024.

During this time an online survey was available via Participate Melbourne.

Key stakeholders were invited to participate in interviews.

Who we heard from

Seven face-to-face meetings were conducted with primary stakeholders including:

  • Interviews with Traditional Owner groups, Aboriginal peak bodies and Aboriginal organisations.
  • A round table discussion with Aboriginal businesses.

118 people completed the online survey. Below is a summary of the demographic data.

  • Gender - 50% of the respondents were female, 35% were male, 7% were non-binary/gender diverse people and 8% of respondents preferred not to say.
  • Age groups - The largest age group of respondents was those aged 35-39 years, at 21%; this was closely followed by the 30-34 years age group, at 18%.
  • Personal characteristics - Aboriginal people made up 12% of respondents, and Torres Strait Islanders 2%. 24% of respondents identified as LGBTQIA+.
  • Connection to project - 44% of respondents were residents. Over a quarter of respondents (27%) were workers.
  • Where respondents live - Almost a third of respondents (29%) lived in the CBD.

What we heard

Key opinions:

Key themes:

  • The most discussed topic across the engagement was agreement that a First Nations Committee should be established. This was considered key to authentically expressing First Nations views.

  • Markers, physical objects, and information in significant places provide constant reminders, enabling incidental engagement with issues and topics.

  • NAIDOC in the City at Federation Square was the most commented on activity. Those who attended were positive about their experience.

Out of scope feedback:

  • 20% of respondents expressed sentiments that were dismissive of the RAP.
  • These comments were noted but were not included in the analysis of the data as they did not respond to the survey questions.

Examples of what we heard:

Read the engagement report

Impact

  • Feedback was reviewed and considered during the development of the draft RAP.
  • The dismissive responses reinforced the importance of progressing work on reconciliation, specifically community education.

Next steps

The Stretch RAP was unanimously endorsed by the Future Melbourne Committee on Tuesday 6 August, 2024. We are now implementing the plan.

Stretch Reconciliation Action Plan 2024-2027