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The Supply Chain Sustainability School Limited (the School), a registered charity, welcomes five new Fellows, for the end of 2022.

BIC Services, Circular Australia, Informed 365, Investa, and Mornington Peninsula Shire have joined the School’s Fellow community to help continue to create free resources for sustainable business.

Hayley Jarick, CEO of the School, said with the increase focus on sustainability of supply chains and businesses moving towards a more sustainable future, the School is seeing new businesses and government keen to be part of the change in business.

“The School continues to grow with new businesses and local government becoming Fellows as sustainability comes to the forefront of business strategy and how their business can make a difference,” Hayley said.

“Businesses and Government at all levels, are seeing the benefits of delivery a sustainable business offering.

“However, many businesses, local Councils and State Governments are still grappling with how they achieve this up and down their supply chains.

“This is becoming very evident with the approach of the Olympics in 2032 being hosted in Brisbane and the greater South-East Queensland region, the School is seeing a huge interest in our growing list of free resources and our expert knowledge base.” Hayley said.

The old trend was to train internal staff using a self-developed learning management system. Then the challenges emerge that those learnings need to be duplicated with supply chain partners, and there are data security risks with opening internal systems up for external use. The School was created to resolve these challenges years ago and also enables Fellows to use their limited resources more efficiently by not duplicating training materials that already exist and are open to everyone, and we need everyone to work collaboratively in a sustainable system to stop ongoing damage and repair historical harm.

Hayley said the School is thrilled to welcome our latest Fellows BIC Services, Circular Australia, Informed 365, Investa, and Mornington Peninsula Shire to the School. Each of these five organisations brings a wealth of unique expertise and knowledge to the School and members.

“The School provides each of these new Fellows a tangible sustainability commitment, plus access to an extensive network and collaboration opportunities,” Hayley said.

“The School also provides these organisations with free access to a credible and secure industry platform to merge their resources with other industry resources for colleagues, staff, customers, suppliers, shareholders, projects and community groups,” Hayley said.

BIC Services, Circular Australia, Informed 365, Investa and Mornington Peninsula Shire join an accomplished list of School Fellows, collaboratively driving a better sustainable business future for Australia.

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Interested in learning more about becoming a School Fellow? Visit our Fellow Page or contact Hayley. 

The Supply Chain Sustainability School Limited (the School) welcomes three new Fellows. Deicorp, Planet Ark and Wumara Group have joined the newly registered charity’s Fellow community to help achieve the vision of collaborative accessible education for a sustainable future.

Hayley Jarick, CEO of the School, said with the pandemic and especially within the supply chain sector, we have seen an increase of emphasis and criticalness of sustainability and resilience in business. As a result, organisations seek ways to train their staff and implement new sustainability practices within their company.

“The School is growing as the thirst for access to sustainability training resources surges. Businesses are becoming more aware of our world’s changes, including the need for reduced greenhouse gas emissions. Organisations understand the value of sustainability and the need for change for their longevity. Our resources are continually growing and evolving to meet the market’s needs with our Fellow’s invaluable input.

We are thrilled to welcome our latest Fellows Deicorp, Planet Ark and Wumara Group to the School. Each of these three organisations brings unique expertise and knowledge that they can provide to our members. The School provides them with a tangible sustainability commitment, access to an extensive network and collaboration opportunities. The School also provides them with free access to a credible and secure industry platform to merge their resources with other industry resources for colleagues, staff, customers, suppliers, shareholders and community groups,” Hayley said.

Deicorp is an award-winning Australian owned and operated developer-builder specialising in residential development within the North-West corridor of Sydney. They are developing multiple Green Star projects focusing on integrated sustainability, from site works to interior finishes.

Established in 1992, Planet Ark is one of Australia’s most respected and trusted environmental organisations. They are focussed on solutions and making positive environmental actions accessible to everyone. Planet Ark Environmental Foundation is an Australian not-for-profit organisation that helps individuals, communities, governments, and businesses reduce their impact on the environment. They are one of Australia’s leading environmental behaviour change organisations, focusing on working collaboratively and positively.

Wumara Group is the School’s first Indigenous Fellow. Wumara Group delivers unique and professional land surveying services and career pathways for First Nation people into the surveying industry. The School is excited about the fantastic opportunities this partnership will bring to the School and provide to Members.

Deicorp, Planet Ark and Wumara Group join a cohort of Fellows collaboratively acting to raise the collective sustainability competency for the betterment of us all.

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Interested in learning more about becoming a School Fellow? Visit our Fellow Page or contact Hayley. 

Australia’s Supply Chain Sustainability School (the School) welcomes Hume City Council as a fellow, indicating the continued interest in broadening the accessibility of sustainability knowledge and competency within Australia’s local councils.

“We are excited to see more local council’s understanding the value of partnering with the School to provide ongoing beneficial education and resources in supply chain sustainability to their business and local region” said the School’s Chief Executive Officer, Hayley Jarick. “Sustainability means different things to different people, however at its core is a common understanding that the social, economic and environmental resources will be utilised in a fair, responsible, transparent and efficient way.”

Hume City Council is one of Australia’s fastest growing and culturally diverse communities and is home to more than 241,000 residents. Spanning a total area of 504 square kilometres, the city is located in Melbourne’s northern fringe, just 15 kilometres from the centre of Melbourne. Hume City Council seeks to be recognised as a leader in achieving social, environmental and economic outcomes with a common goal of connecting our proud community and celebrating the diversity of Hume.

Hume City Council has become a fellow of the Supply Chain Sustainability School to promote sustainable procurement to its staff, suppliers, and business and developers within Hume. The resources provided by the School will strengthen Hume’s support for the circular economy.

Their commitment to sustainability will ensure that they are aiming to live within the limits of the systems on which they depend so that future generations can also enjoy a good quality of life and fulfil their potential and that other species of animals and plants can also survive and flourish.

Growling grass frog
Martin Dillon Reserve

Partnering with the School, extends Hume City Council commitment to their strategies and plans including the adoption of their Greenhouse Action Plan, Land and Biodiversity Plan and voluntary pledge to tackling climate change within their own business operations and supporting community climate change adaption.

Other Local Government Fellows of the School include City of Whittlesea, Wyndham City, City of Port Phillip all in Victoria. The School has a custom Fellowship offer for Local Government that discounts the annual fee from $15,990 to under $2,975, so watch this space for more Local Government Fellows joining soon.

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Hume City Council 

For more information visit www.hume.vic.gov.au

Supply Chain Sustainability School

If you are interested in learning more about becoming a School Fellow, visit our Fellow Page or contact Hayley. 

The School is proud to announce new partnerships with WWF-Australia, Wyndham City Council, Whittlesea City Council and Port Phillip City Council. 

Maintaining our commitments to environmental sustainability by establishing new industry collaborations with old friends 

WWF has been a leading voice for nature for more than half a century, working in 100 countries across six continents with the help of over five million supporters. WWF-Australia firmly believes that our planet, landscapes, animals, and even our health is increasingly vulnerable. Relying only on others, like governments, to act is no longer an option and we have to step up and act together. WWF-Australia works with businesses, governments and communities to accelerate the solutions and speed up Australia’s transition to ecologically sustainable and socially just future.

When asked about why WWF Australia decided to become a School Partner, Monica Richter, Senior Manager-Low Carbon Futures says “As the world rapidly decarbonises we believe it is important to collaborate with industry partners where our values are aligned to build capacity, educate and support one another along this journey. WWF has a commitment to support companies to set science-based Paris Aligned targets across all three scopes and are keen to support organisations that are a part of the Supply Chain School to create more sustainable supply chains for property, construction and infrastructure industries.”

School CEO, Hayley Jarick, is thrilled to have WWF join the School, “The growth of social sustainability awareness certainly hasn’t come at the expense of environmental sustainability.  Our Partnership with WWF demonstrates our ongoing commitment to bettering our environmental and to collaboration with industry as the path to success.”

Our award-winning collaboration has paved the way for three local governments to become official School Partners

To assist local governments to meet their sustainability objectives, the School collaborated with Wyndham City Council, Whittlesea City Council, Port Phillip City Council and ECO-Buy to establish the Local Government Sustainable Supply Initiative, an online portal pilot project which was awarded the LGPro 2020 Award for Excellence – Sustainability Initiative.

The online portal helps Councils and their suppliers improve their supply chain by providing free learning pathways and resources on sustainable procurement and general sustainability topics. The portal improves suppliers’ sustainability understanding, skills and capacity, leading to improved environmental, social and economic outcomes through procurement. 

“The geographical spread of local governments has long been a barrier to gathering economies of scale for initiatives but as we are an online platform, we have been able to collectively provide an efficient training platform for local government suppliers, staff and residents. This truly is an exemplary demonstration of innovation and ingenuity at the local level,” said School CEO, Hayley Jarick

Director of City Design and Liveability, Ludo Campbell-Reid said, “Wyndham City is committed to achieving sustainable outcomes and ensuring Council’s operations and procurement activities have a positive impact to the City in which we live.”

“Council understands that every purchase has an impact on the environment, society and economy.”

“Wyndham Council will continue to work with the Supply Chain Sustainability School and partnering Councils and organisations to further develop learning resources and strengthen Councils supply chains.” 

City of Whittlesea views sustainable procurement as integral to achieving organisational sustainability goals, whilst also tackling broader social, economic and environmental problems. Whittlesea believes that the School’s relevant, free resources help support the growth of sustainability knowledge of their staff and suppliers, thereby driving more sustainable choices and innovation in the procurement of goods and services.  

Whittlesea Council recognises that we must protect and enhance our natural and built environments if we want a sustainable, productive and liveable future and is working towards becoming a sustainable city. Whittlesea 2040: A place for all is the long-term vision for the City of Whittlesea, guiding all of Council’s work and future partnerships. 

City of Port Phillip is committed to working collaboratively with their suppliers to embed sustainability into their procurement policy and practices. “We know that meeting corporate social responsibility requirements isn’t always easy, particularly for small to medium enterprises. Becoming a School Partner allows us to provide support to our suppliers through the development of tools and resources that make it easy for them to improve their own sustainability outcomes” said Lachlan Johnson GM at City of Port Phillip. “We are looking forward to working with the School and representatives from industry and other local governments to increase the suite of resources that are specific to our suppliers and support their sustainability journeys.”

Learn more about becoming a School Partner here.

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About WWF-Australia

WWF has been a leading voice for nature for more than half a century, working in 100 countries across six continents with the help of over five million supporters. WWF partners with government, businesses, communities and individuals to address a range of pressing environmental issues. Our work is founded on science, our reach is international and our mission exact – to create a world where people live and prosper in harmony with nature.  

www.wwf.org.au

 

About Wyndham City

Located between Melbourne and Geelong, Wyndham is currently home to more than 288,000 people. Wyndham is a diverse City, almost half of Wyndham residents are born overseas and they are from 162 different countries. 

Wyndham is home to many open space areas including the Werribee River and the Point Cooke Marine Sanctuary. 

The local economy is diverse with 20,000 businesses and there is a major industrial area at Laverton North and Truganina. 

Wyndham is home to a significant medical, food research, educational and technology precinct in East Werribee. This includes three major universities, major technical trade institutions, and a Biotechnology precinct. 

Wyndham features major tourism attractions including the Werribee Open range Zoo, Werribee Mansion and the State Rose Garden.

www.wyndham.vic.gov.au

 

About the City of Port Phillip

The City of Port Phillip is an inner-city council in Melbourne covering the area from Port Melbourne to Elwood. Delivering more than 100 programs and services to our residents, businesses and visitors, community is at the heart of everything we do. One of the smallest yet most densely populated municipalities in Victoria, Port Phillip is defined by an extensive 11 kilometres of foreshore, heritage buildings, strip shopping precincts and tree-lined streets. Our neighbourhoods, each with its own character, are known and treasured by many for their urban village feel and artistic expression.

www.portphillip.vic.gov.au

 

About the City of Whittlesea

The City of Whittlesea is located in Melbourne’s north, about 20km from the city centre. It is one of the largest municipalities in metropolitan Melbourne, covering an area of approximately 490 square kilometres. The population of the City of Whittlesea is 229,791 (2019).  About 70 per cent of the City is rural, characterised by farming, forested areas and historic township communities including Whittlesea. The other 30 per cent of the municipality is urban. The majority of the population live in the urban areas which comprise both established areas, such as Epping, Lalor and Thomastown, and growth areas, such as Mernda, Doreen and Epping North.

www.whittlesea.vic.gov.au

The School is proud to announce new partnerships with Glad Group, the Chartered Institute of Procurement and Supply (CIPS) and ResponsibleSteel. School CEO, Hayley Jarick, ithrilled to have another triple Partnership announcement, I’m genuinely excited that the Glad Group, CIPS and ResponsibleSteel cohort of Partners have joined the School! Not only are they great businesses to work with but each marks a significant milestone for the School. More supply chain professionals are trying to upskill their suppliers on sustainability and can use our free resources to get there. More sustainability tool providers are working as a collective to raise sustainability competency. And, we now have a leader in the property services industry stepping up to drive to uptake of sustainability in cleaning, concierge, security and maintenance services.  

Glad Group is a national provider of cleaning, concierge, security, trades and maintenance services across a diverse client base which encompasses government, education, commercial, retail, office, multisite and logistics industries. Glad Group shares their clients’ commitment to service excellence, innovation and sustainability.  

Nina Collinson, Glad Group’s National Sustainability Manager, says that we know that material, environmental, social and governance factors will influence a company’s performance; as such we have a long-standing commitment to embedding these principles into our business and seeking to create value not only for our shareholders but our broader stakeholders at the same time. We want to be a force for good and are focused on continually improving our capability in tackling material sustainability issues. 

Glad Group’s suppliers are some of our key business partners and we want to work with them and help build their understanding and capability to manage key sustainability issues, to ensure we achieve the best sustainability outcomes for everyone. Partnering with the Sustainability Supply Chain School means that we have a great platform through which we can share knowledge and great practice to the benefit of not only our suppliers, but also the broader industry. 

The Chartered Institute of Procurement and Supply (CIPS) is the world’s largest professional body dedicated to procurement and supplyCIPS exists for the public good and is the voice of the profession, promoting and developing high standards of skill, ability and integrity among procurement and supply chain professionals. Sustainability is a core focus and is integral to their qualifications, training programmes and knowledge resources. CIPS certified practitioners have to undertake annual training and testing on ethics and sustainability to maintain their Chartered accreditation. CIPS works with businesses and governments of any size to drives awareness of the importance of procurement’s role in embedding sustainable practices in their organisations 

Collaborating with likeminded organisations on sustainable supply chains is essential to addressing the global environmental and societal challenges,” says Sharon Morris, CIPS General Manager – Australia & New Zealand. “A partnership with the Supply Chain Sustainability School allows CIPS to cooperate with leaders in this field, share knowledge, drive innovation, and ultimately equip procurement and supply chain professionals with additional resources to tackle these challenges. 

ResponsibleSteel is a not-for-profit organisation that is the industry’s first global, multi-stakeholder standard and certification initiative. Their members are from every stage of the steel supply chain their independent certification standard for steel sites will be launching in early 2021. 

Steel is the world’s most widely used material and those who use it in the transport, automotive, infrastructure, packaging, construction, energy and white goods sectors have a growing expectation that the materials they work with are responsibly sourced and produced. ResponsibleSteels’ aim is to improve sustainability within the steel supply chainensuring businesses and consumers can be confident that the steel they use has been sourced and produced responsibly at every stage of the supply chain. 

Ali Lucas, ResponsibleSteel said, We feel that the partnership between the Australian Supply Chain School and ResponsibleSteel will be a great benefit to both parties, it will allow us to provide support on steel related topics for the School and will give us a better understanding on key supply chain issues that the school specialises in. 

Jarick was excited about the new partnerships but was not surprised, “The COVID-19 pandemic has forced everyone to acknowledge the importance of social and environmental sustainability and the significant impacts on our everyday lives that can arise from these elements. It’s also fast tracked the evolution to online learning both live and on-demand. So, given we are an online sustainability school, I’m not surprised that more organisations are stepping up to become Partners of the School.”   

If you are interested in learning more about becoming a School Partner, visit our Partner Page or contact Hayley. 

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About Glad Group 

As a proudly Australian-owned and family run business, Glad Group has been dedicated to working in partnership with clients since 1989. Glad Group offers national capability with tailored property services to suit the individual needs of our clients. As a national provider of cleaning, concierge, security, trades and maintenance services, their partnerships extend across a diverse client base encompassing government, education, commercial, retail, office, multisite and logistics industries. Glad Group’s commitment to collaboration and partnership delivers quality solutions, ensuring high stakeholder satisfaction, a lower risk profile and cost efficiencies. 

gladgroup.com.au 

 

About CIPS 

The Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply (CIPS) is the leading international body representing procurement and supply management professionals. It is the worldwide centre of excellence on procurement and supply management issues. CIPS has a global community of 200,000 in 150 different countries, including senior business people, high-ranking civil servants and leading academics. The activities of procurement and supply chain professionals have a major impact on the profitability and efficiency of all types of organisation and CIPS offers corporate solutions packages to improve business profitability.   

www.cips.org 

 

About ResponsibleSteel 

ResponsibleSteel is a not-for-profit organisationResponsibleSteel is the industry’s first global multi-stakeholder standard and certification initiative. Welcoming members from every stage of the steel supply chain, we have developed an independent certification standard which was launched in November 2019 and hope to have our first steel site certified in early 2021. 

www.responsiblesteel.org 

The School welcomes the Australian Passive House Associationthe Green Building Institute and the Australian Catholic Anti-Slavery Network as Partners.  

“The School is a world class collaboration to enable a sustainable built environment, and we emphasise collaboration! The School is led by our Partners. They direct and drive everything we do so, we place a lot of time and pride in connecting with industry leading organisations. The addition of Australian Passive House Association, the Green Building Institute and the Australian Catholic Anti-Slavery Network to our Partner cohort diversifies and deepens the School’s expertise and learning resources,” says School CEO, Hayley Jarick.

The Australian Passive House Association (APHA) is an independent, not-for-profit organisation which aims to promote passive-house principles as a way of providing superior indoor comfort and air quality while reducing energy use and carbon emissions from Australia’s buildings. 

APHA CEO Paul Wall says that as “demand for healthy comfortable and low energy homes increases in Australia we need to build capacity to support the burgeoning green economy. Partnering with like-minded organisations will help us build the right type of capacity amongst practitioners to meet the market demand, delivering superior indoor environments for all Australians.“ 

In 2019 Australian Catholic Anti-Slavery Network (ACAN) was established to support over 30 Catholic entities from education, health, social and aged care services, finance and investment to implement a comprehensive modern slavery risk management program. The School is delighted to be a consortium partner to deliver the Modern Slavery Building Links Project with ACAN member the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney, and looks forward to hosting project resources and materials to raise awareness of modern slavery and take steps towards the eradication of modern slavery in the construction industry in Australia. 

“Identifying and addressing the risk of modern slavery practices in the operations and supply chains of Catholic building projects is the highest priority for ACAN” says Executive Officer, Alison Rahill. “Therefore, partnering with the Supply Chain Sustainability School to achieve UN Sustainable Development Goal 8.7, the eradication of modern slavery, is essential.”

The Green Building Institute (GBI) is a leading education provider for green skills in the building and property industry. Promoting sustainable and efficient building technology and resources, the benefits of sustainable buildings, ways to reduce waste, reduce energy consumption, reduce carbon emissions, reduce water use and protect natural resources, with a focus on practical training at the ‘boots on the ground’ level. 

“We are pleased to be partnering with the School to provide expertise to the technical committees or advisory boards, and to make our award-winning training platform and content available to School partners and students” says GBI Managing Director, Daniel Wurm. “The transition to sustainability that our industry urgently needs can only be achieved by the sharing of knowledge by leaders.”

Working with Partners, the School is committed to building the sustainability skills of the industry, and so continuously welcome new Partners on board who come from all stages of the value chain and all areas of expertise 

“We keep the School’s resources top quality by ensuring we Partner with organisations that are leaders in their field and maintain a diverse group of collaborators. If that sounds like you, I’d love to hear from you,” says School CEO, Hayley Jarick. 

If you’d like to learn more about becoming a Parter visit here or contact Hayley Jarick. 

The spiky issue of making the supply chain more sustainable

Poppy Johnston | 22 October 2019

How is the built environment tracking towards more sustainable supply chains? 

The head of Supply Chain Sustainability School, Hayley Jarick, who took on the role after Robin Mellon left earlier this year, is optimistic that industry is stepping up on the key issues.

The not-for-profit offers free online sustainability training for the entire supply chain, with a focus on the built environment. It works across the triple bottom line of sustainability and is supported by around 30 partners that pay fees so that the rest of the industry can access these resources free-of-charge.

Circular economy and modern slavery are the issues attracting the most enquires, Jarick told The Fifth Estate. She says that modern slavery is one of a handful of social sustainability issues that have risen in prominence over the past few years.


Read the full article here: https://www.thefifthestate.com.au/business/public-community/the-spiky-issue-of-making-the-supply-chain-more-sustainable/