Indigenous rangers get $102m in funding for critical role protecting environment

Traditional owners say deal will provide job security and support families in remote and regional Australia

The federal government has committed $102m over the seven years from 2021, to support Indigenous rangers who are playing a “critical role” in protecting our environment, the environment minister, Sussan Ley, says.

Indigenous protected areas (IPAs) make up about 45%, or 67m hectares, of Australia’s network of national parks and reserves, and hold some of the most culturally significant and biodiverse lands on the continent.

IPAs are cared for by traditional owners, who have an agreement with the federal government to protect biodiversity and to conserve their area’s cultural resources, like sacred sites and rock art.

Indigenous rangers are on the frontline of conservation, fire management and controlling invasive species and their work is “adding to the overall resilience of Australia’s environment”, Ley said.

Country Needs People, an alliance of more than 40 Indigenous land and sea management groups Australia-wide, has welcomed the announcement, which it said provides job security for rangers who have previously been managing on two-year contracts and short-term funding agreements.

“It will help to get better results for the environment and help support families by creating more secure jobs where they are needed most in remote and regional Australia,” a spokesperson for Country Needs People, Patrick O’Leary, said.

“We need them and we need their jobs and operational funding to be secure. This announcement is a major contribution to that,” O’Leary said.

The federal government currently supports around 840 full-time ranger positions, which provide work for thousands of people, spread across full-time, part-time and casual roles.

“We know that countries as far afield as Canada have taken inspiration from the work of Indigenous rangers in Australia.

“We are in this for the long haul. It’s not a temporary project or a passing commitment,” he said.

The Indigenous Australians minister, Ken Wyatt, said funding certainty would help retain rangers with high levels of land management skills.

“In recent times there has been increased interest in how Indigenous Australians have cared for this land for 65,000 years” Wyatt said.

“The rangers conduct all manner of conservation, fire management and biosecurity roles to support our natural resources being managed in a sustainable way.”

Contributor

Lorena Allam

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
‘Country needs people’: Indigenous rangers safeguarding Australia’s rich landscape receive a well-earned boost
With a seven-year investment from federal government, Aboriginal rangers can continue to employ, educate and empower their communities

Lorena Allam

31, Jul, 2021 @8:00 PM

Article image
'Bilby blitz': Indigenous rangers use bilingual tracking app to preserve species
Surveys across millions of hectares of central Australia will be used to inform threatened species recovery plan

Calla Wahlquist

20, Mar, 2018 @3:16 AM

Article image
Fire money: how Indigenous land management is transforming Arnhem Land
Strategic burning combines modern technology with traditional Aboriginal knowledge – and generates income through carbon credits

David Hancock

23, May, 2021 @8:00 PM

Article image
Unesco urged to oppose 'alarming' changes to Australian environment laws
Conservation groups warn Australia’s natural world heritage sites are ‘under more pressure than ever before’

Paul Karp

06, Sep, 2020 @5:30 PM

Article image
'Administrative error' listed ship restoration under threatened species funding
Estimates committee hears errors meant wrong name was listed in document listing projects to help threatened species

Adam Morton and Lisa Cox

26, Feb, 2018 @9:06 AM

Article image
Australia urged to overhaul environment laws and reverse 'decline of our iconic places'
Graeme Samuel makes 38 recommendations to transform the EPBC Act, including new independent oversight bodies

Lisa Cox

28, Jan, 2021 @6:55 AM

Article image
Environment groups ask government to delay review of Australia's conservation laws
Six organisations raise concerns with environment minister Sussan Ley about the impact of the bushfires and coronavirus

Lisa Cox

15, Apr, 2020 @5:30 PM

Article image
'Recipe for extinction': why Australia's rush to change environment laws is sparking widespread concern
Critics argue shifting approval powers to the states without an independent regulator will fail to protect the environment

Lisa Cox

05, Sep, 2020 @8:00 PM

Article image
‘Dead in the water’: key crossbenchers reject Coalition demand to back new environment standards
Environment minister Sussan Ley stares down Senate on conservation laws and says damage by Kosciuszko feral horses makes her ‘extremely angry’

Adam Morton Environment editor

16, Jun, 2021 @10:38 AM

Article image
Australia's register of threatened species critical habitat not updated in 15 years
Independent advice body says minister should be given emergency powers to protect habitat after natural disasters

Lisa Cox

03, Jul, 2020 @8:00 PM