Recently I saw a dear colleague of mine decry the lack of
support for the volunteering infrastructure in their state budget here in
Australia for volunteering. My colleague was brave enough to state this on
LinkedIn. I know how passionate she is about the volunteering sector and I had
great empathy with her statement. I’ve been blogging about this for many years
now so I wasn’t surprised. I nearly replied that in my 26 years as a volunteer
manager and advocate for our profession and volunteering that the story simply
has not changed. Our sector get peanuts. Most volunteer managers get paid
peanuts. I continue to look at salaries of volunteer managers when the
positions are advertised. Firstly, many are advertised as part time roles and
secondly even the rate of volunteer manager seems to be on the lower band of
wages compared to other specialist roles such as HR Management.
So the viscous cycle continues. There are a few exceptions.
There are organisations that do understand the value of volunteer management
because they understand the value of volunteering, not only in monetary terms
but they know that resourcing volunteer management is a great investment with a
great return on investment.
With volunteering and volunteer management the macro has
much to do with the micro. By this I mean, if Governments do not invest in the
volunteering infrastructure, then volunteer management at a micro level suffers.
Sub - standard wages for a sector of professionals that are not even unionised
mostly.
I believe it comes down to hubris. Politicians think that
people will always volunteer. And naturally, I have never seen any strikes in
the volunteering sector. Because volunteers always turn up. That is the mindset
of Government. They see volunteering as nice and good but not critically
important. Oh they will tell you different during volunteer weeks and
International Volunteer Day and other times when they can get an opportunity to
make a speech telling us that “Volunteering is the backbone of our society” Or “volunteering
is the heart of our community”.
In Australia in particular when we budget for 300 billion in
Nuclear Subs but give a few pennies to the volunteering ecosystem you have to wonder
where their priorities are.
I have seen organisations where the volunteer management
budgets have been pulverized and volunteer numbers drop dramatically. I
personally have been approached by organisations asking if I would be National
Manager of their volunteer programs with the type of remuneration that are
insulting to our profession.
As we prepare for another International Volunteer Managers
Day in November I struggle with their new slogan “Helping Others Help”. I
bemoan the fact that in some ways that we celebrate volunteer Managers “paid
and unpaid” because I know the HR industry would never celebrate HR Managers “paid
and unpaid”. I’ve become so tired of hearing that volunteering runs on the
smell of an oily rag. I have become tired of the myth that Volunteer management
is simple and easy. I have become tired of the dumbing down of our profession.
In todays’ world, after a pandemic, with natural disasters
to become more common due to inaction on climate change, in a world where wars
continue to feed the military industrial complex and volunteer activists are
locked up for protesting I know, and you know that volunteering is more
important today than it ever is. Maybe the powers that be don’t want it to be
managed and supported. After all, citizens who volunteer may need to know their
place.
The solution? Our sectors voice is no longer enough. We need
to join with movements that want a better and more peaceful world for our
citizens. We need to come together with the whole community that want a better
world for us and our children and their children. We need to get out of our
volunteer management silo and form alliances with businesses who really care
about corporate social responsibility, with political parties who are
interested in citizen assemblies, with philanthropists who can give us
resources and with the vast majority of our population who are tired of the old
status quo. We can no longer advocate for ourselves because it is simply not
working. We need to get tired of going to Governments and organisations with
our hats begging for a few pennies.
Because if we don’t. Volunteering itself will die a slow
death. They will eventually see the corporation of our charities and NGOs whose
“profit for purpose” mottos will seem hollow as they take on more leaders from
the corporate world who bring with them their corporate methodology.
Heed this warning. A better world will only become a reality
with volunteering. And if it is not supported, formal volunteering will decline,
and volunteer activism will be criminalised! It’s already begun.
About time someone said this. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThank you. The more things change the more they same to same in our sector!
DeleteSad but true. Glad to see you back to form though!
ReplyDeleteThanks! We will never give up though!
ReplyDeleteThanks for articulating what many of us are feeling. -Martin J
ReplyDeleteThanks Martin.
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