Another busy year for the Rapid Response Circle

Looking back on the 2022-23 Financial Year, Rapid Response Circle (110) has had another busy year,  directly assisting 28 individuals and 16 families and triaging 18 enquiries for help.  Unaddressed trauma was evident in  many people we helped. Sadly we have noticed an increase in referrals of women, often with children, escaping violent situations., with refugees from Syria we noted severe trauma manifested in health and behavioural issues.  Visa situations for many remained very complex and single men with no visa or income continued to appear.  Calls for help with utility costs increased and  it became significantly harder for those relying on $20 per day plus shopping cards to manage.  There are certainly no luxuries there with one smoker resorting to butts out of the bin.

The help we provide has included both direct financial assistance  and provision of household goods and the general support needed when settling into a new country. We have contributed towards living expenses for 27 individuals and 15 families. Of these, nine individuals and four families have needed ongoing support and five men occasional assistance to cover rent.  Thankfully most of the people we assist are also helped by other Circles with rent, bills, car, and phone expenses and four individuals have access to Foodbank.

On the practical side we assisted two women (one with only a sofa and  quilt), and one family, to set their homes up from scratch and a further three individuals needed significant financial and practical help over a short period.   Again we were thankful for the support provided in this by  other Circles and Adelaide Refugee Support volunteers.

We believe that the Government Settlement packages that are supposed to equip recipients with the basics needed for a household to function smoothly need review. To fill in the gaps from these settlement packages we provided warm bedding and clothes to a newly arrived Syrian family of nine.  They also needed large cooking pots and utensils and a second mobile phone so older children out learning English could communicate with a parent.  A second Syrian family of seven, here about 15 months, were in a similar position, but compounded by health problems  which necessitated the  father taking on the role of carer.  In  each instance new and  donated items and shopping cards to buy additional clothing were combined.

In the provision of household items we try where possible to source second hand items and this year these  included  a near new fridge, microwave, electric bed and bedding and walking frame.  While around 90 blankets and warm quilts, all with new or clean, donated covers, were delivered to help people stay warm over winter. Similarly, packages of good recycled and new warm clothing were distributed. We are grateful to Carol Collin from the Willunga Circle who collected more than half of these items.

Significant grants from the Suzanne Elliot Trust Fund and support from Burnside Uniting Church Cares as well as continual contributions from other Circles, individuals and small group donations have kept the Circle in a position to respond to  new and ongoing calls for help while adhering to its principle of “filling gaps” in services available. Thank you to all the donors for your generosity.  It really would not happen without you.

Tricia Dundon, Rapid Response Circle Convenor

UPDATE  Since this Report was written on Friday 8 September, a number of new referrals have been made including three families from Afghanistan in dire circumstances and desperate need.  Our Circle is down to our last $1,700 and all Circles are under financial  pressure.  Whether you can make a one off donation or commit to a regular amount, your contribution is urgently needed.  Thank you in advance for your help.

Donate via our secure Give Now account.

Support COFA’s newest Circle: Family MF Circle

Man from Manus

The Family MF Circle (Circle 129) was formed in February of this year (2023) to support the family of a man who is a refugee. He arrived at Christmas Island over 10 years ago. But as with many who have sought safety in Australia his family are yet to join him and are currently enduring extreme deprivation. The major complication is that MF (name withheld for security reasons) had an accident several years ago and now is seriously incapacitated and unable to work.

MF’s family left their homeland having experienced a suicide bombing and targeted violence, both at school and in their home. They took a perilous journey across a border, but their lives are still full of danger. They have no documentation and whenever they leave their cramped accommodation, they risk being arrested by authorities. So they remain indoors unable to work or go to school. They have difficulty affording the basics of food and rent and to pay for necessary medication for chronic illness (diabetes) as well as for treating injuries (burns) resulting from bomb blasts.

In Australia MF worked hard and was managing to help his extended family on his own until his accident. COFA is working with other agencies and a pro bono lawyer to address MF’s situation and we believe he will eventually become independent of our efforts as his children will be able to study and work in Australia.

In addition, as with many refugees, MF tries to support his war-widowed sisters-in-law and their children who remain in a rural village in his homeland. He has stoically provided all the support he could.

MF struggles with the inability to help his family. The shame and anxiety are crushing and he is currently accepting support from counselling agencies.

A small number of local Aussies, having met MF, hold him in awe for his commitment to his family, education for his daughters as well as his integrity and graciousness. They have committed to helping him, to lift his spirits and ease his worries.

Will you help? Please join us in supporting MF and his family by making a donation via our secure GiveNow account. Please indicate that you want your donation to go towards Family MF Circle (129). To find out more about how your donation will help please contact Lesley Walker, Family MF Circle Convenor, on 0418 829 941 or by email.

A busy winter for the Rapid Response Circle

Dear friends and supporters

Our little Rapid Response Circle Team has been busy, especially as winter chills began to bite.   Thanks to your contributions, support from other Circles, a further generous Grant from the Suzanne Elliot Trust Fund and support from the Burnside Uniting Church Cares Group for specific  requests, it has been possible to respond positively and quickly to all requests for help.

Primarily these have been to help cover costs of water, gas, electricity, mobile phones, food (via FoodBank where possible) and medications.  Warm clothes and bedding were in high demand, especially for refugees recently arrived from Syria, Afghanistan  and Venezuela amongst other countries. Settlement Packages, while providing the basics, didn’t cover everything needed, especially for large families with 7 and 5 children.   Blankets, warm quilts and sheets, towels, thermal and other warm jackets, jumpers, track pants and socks were asked for and bought new or, whenever possible, good quality, clean items were sourced from donations.

Carol Collin from the Willunga Circle and her friends, McLaren Vale Hair & Beauty at Sellicks, Chistian Care & Support at Aldinga Beach and down-sizing members of the Willunga Catholic Parish deserve a special mention.

Mindful of keeping heating costs down, warm floor rugs were bought cheaply on Marketplace from cash donations. Big cooking pots (new and recycled), large sandwich makers and bench ovens were other popular items with Syrian families. Additional volunteers helped make an old, cold, Housing SA Unit into a functional and cosy home for a  young woman from Afghanistan, here alone while she waits for her husband to be granted a Visa.

Looking back over the past financial year reminded me how groups of ordinary people persisting with support and encouragement can achieve positive outcomes.  We are glad to be be able to do this for, and with, refugees and asylum-seekers who have been deprived of liberty, life needs and hope.

With thanks, as always,
Tricia Dundon (Hart) and the Rapid Response Team

Happy Birthday Circle of Friends Australia

This year marks the 21st year of Circle of Friends Australia. It was in May 2002 that this organisation was founded, and amazingly some of the original Circles including Willunga and Blackwood/Hills (merger of two pioneer Circles) have been operating continuously since that time.

Each of the original Circles began by providing help to one of the families to be released from the “Immigration and Processing Centre” (detention centre) at Woomera or the Baxter Centre near Port Augusta.  All members agreed to provide $5 -$10 each week to ensure that their ‘adopted’ family had the essentials of life.  Prior to the first family’s release, members of Circle One (Belair/Human Services) were required to provide sworn affidavits they would follow through with this undertaking.

Ultimately everyone released had access to Medicare, Centrelink and the then SA Housing Trust services and additional practical and financial support was provided from non-government organisations such as CentaCare Catholic Family Services, Red Cross, and St Vincent de Paul, along with financial and in-kind assistance from community groups and churches (especially Uniting Churches and the Anglicans at Glen Osmond and Hawthorn). This enabled a greater number of individuals or families to be helped, once they were released from detention or arrived from offshore.

In the beginning each Circle committed to an action plan according to its budget and priorities. Most focussed on family or individual support, a few on education or on some other specific objective.

Now, 21 years later, there is minimal Federal government support for people seeking asylum who are living in the community. Some have recently been informed that they are eligible to apply for permanent protection visas, which means they will have full Centrelink access, be able to apply for Australian citizenship and apply to bring their family members to Australia.

While this is very welcome news and long overdue, there are still approximately 15,000 asylum seekers in Australia who remain on temporary bridging visas. Recent Federal governments have allocated $37 million of support for people seeking asylum, down from $300 million in 2015-16. Labor allocated the same amount last year but spent only $15 million because of overly restrictive eligibility criteria (CAPSA Team Newsletter May 2023). This means that most of these 15,000 asylum-seekers have no access to any form of social security.

While some state governments have established dedicated programs to help with living costs, the South Australian government has not done so to date.  This is despite extensive pleas from front-line service providers which are struggling to maintain the level of support required to avert chronic destitution.  The most recent newsletter from the Refugee Council of Australia confirms that up to 15,000 people seeking asylum are living in deep poverty in Australia.

Since the start of Covid in 2020, the Rapid Response Circle (Circle 110) and SOS For Asylum Seekers Circle (Circle 121) have dedicated much of their attention and resources towards providing direct financial and mentoring support for those asylum seekers living in these dire situations.  In fact, almost every Circle has at one stage supported, or continues to support, asylum seekers in situations where they have little or no income, are not permitted to work or even to study and sometimes do not have access to Medicare.

For younger men from Iran and Afghanistan who have no current visa or income, the situation is particularly dramatic and confronting, especially when they are forced to sleep on the streets. These men are essentially beggars and, at present, completely reliant on charity.

Such an assault on their dignity and self-confidence is disturbing to witness. Circle volunteers try hard to counterbalance it by doing their best to relate as equals.  But money is power, and it is clear volunteers hold that, despite their best efforts. It is crucial Circles of Friends continue contributing to their survival, giving at least a modicum of hope and the knowledge that some citizens do care what is happening to them.

Only 2% (maximum) of funds raised by Circles is used to cover administration costs such as insurance and banking fees. The remainder is spent as a priority by Circles to help with rental, utility and living costs for those who either arrived by boat in Australia prior to the start of 2014 or tried to arrive by boat after that date, were sent to either Manus Island or Nauru and have now been relocated to Australia. Helping people facing challenges with rent is crucial given the current 1% rental vacancy rate in South Australia.

These asylum seekers are required to apply for rolling six-month temporary bridging visas. This means that they also must renew their Medicare cards, which has proved to be very problematic and time-consuming. Living a life in limbo for such an extended period has led to serious depression and feelings of hopelessness, further adding to the effects of previous trauma and language comprehension difficulties. It is difficult to find and keep work for a range of reasons, including temporary, short-term visa status, low level language skills, racial prejudice, precarious accommodation, and the difficulties of accessing public transport in the very late and very early hours.

Rapid Response Circle works in tandem with SOS For Asylum Seekers Circle. Currently the Rapid Response Circle is assisting 6 families (one with weekly living expenses) and eleven single men – one monthly, one weekly with rent and living costs and the others weekly, fortnightly, or as bills they can’t pay come in.  The SOS For Asylum Seekers Circle supports 4 single men and two families with rent and/or living expenses. It also contributes to utility payments where necessary. Both, especially the Rapid Response Circle, respond to new calls for aid as they come in. The number of calls and levels of assistance required are unpredictable and make it difficult to budget and to apply for grants where a firm budget is required.  In addition, grants are usually provided for projects that involve ‘empowering’ people to take charge of their lives and work towards self-sufficiency. That providing the basic necessities of food and shelter is the necessary first step in empowering people is overlooked by these grant funding bodies.

Circle of Friends provides financial support only where there is no Government or non-government agency and no other charity group mandated and able to help.  Groceries, Supermarket Gift Cards, Foodbank vouchers and other items are sourced elsewhere, if possible, e.g., Hope’s Café, The Welcome Center, Birthline pregnancy support, the Sophia Centre, Blackwood Lions, Op Shops, Vinnies Refugee and Asylum Seeker Service and shops, Anglicare,

This year marks the 21st year of Circle of Friends Australia. It was in May 2002 that this organisation was founded, and amazingly some of the original Circles including Willunga and Blackwood/Hills (merger of two pioneer Circles) have been operating continuously since that time.

Each of the original Circles began by providing help to one of the families to be released from the “Immigration and Processing Centre” (detention centre) at Woomera or the Baxter Centre near Port Augusta.  All members agreed to provide $5 -$10 each week to ensure that their ‘adopted’ family had the essentials of life.  Prior to the first family’s release, members of Circle One (Belair/Human Services) were required to provide sworn affidavits they would follow through with this undertaking.

Ultimately everyone released had access to Medicare, Centrelink and the then SA Housing Trust services and additional practical and financial support was provided from non-government organisations such as CentaCare Catholic Family Services, Red Cross, and St Vincent de Paul, along with financial and in-kind assistance from community groups and churches (especially Uniting Churches and the Anglicans at Glen Osmond and Hawthorn). This enabled a greater number of individuals or families to be helped, once they were released from detention or arrived from offshore.

In the beginning each Circle committed to an action plan according to its budget and priorities. Most focussed on family or individual support, a few on education or on some other specific objective.

Now, 21 years later, there is minimal Federal government support for people seeking asylum who are living in the community. Some have recently been informed that they are eligible to apply for permanent protection visas, which means they will have full Centrelink access, be able to apply for Australian citizenship and apply to bring their family members to Australia.

While this is very welcome news and long overdue, there are still approximately 15,000 asylum seekers in Australia who remain on temporary bridging visas. Recent Federal governments have allocated $37 million of support for people seeking asylum, down from $300 million in 2015-16. Labor allocated the same amount last year but spent only $15 million because of overly restrictive eligibility criteria (CAPSA Team Newsletter May 2023). This means that most of these 15,000 asylum-seekers have no access to any form of social security.

While some state governments have established dedicated programs to help with living costs, the South Australian government has not done so to date.  This is despite extensive pleas from front-line service providers which are struggling to maintain the level of support required to avert chronic destitution.  The most recent newsletter from the Refugee Council of Australia confirms that up to 15,000 people seeking asylum are living in deep poverty in Australia.

Since the start of Covid in 2020, the Rapid Response Circle (Circle 110) and SOS For Asylum Seekers Circle (Circle 121) have dedicated much of their attention and resources towards providing direct financial and mentoring support for those asylum seekers living in these dire situations.  In fact, almost every Circle has at one stage supported, or continues to support, asylum seekers in situations where they have little or no income, are not permitted to work or even to study and sometimes do not have access to Medicare.

For younger men from Iran and Afghanistan who have no current visa or income, the situation is particularly dramatic and confronting, especially when they are forced to sleep on the streets. These men are essentially beggars and, at present, completely reliant on charity.

Such an assault on their dignity and self-confidence is disturbing to witness. Circle volunteers try hard to counterbalance it by doing their best to relate as equals.  But money is power, and it is clear volunteers hold that, despite their best efforts. It is crucial Circles of Friends continue contributing to their survival, giving at least a modicum of hope and the knowledge that some citizens do care what is happening to them.

Only 2% (maximum) of funds raised by Circles is used to cover administration costs such as insurance and banking fees. The remainder is spent as a priority by Circles to help with rental, utility and living costs for those who either arrived by boat in Australia prior to the start of 2014 or tried to arrive by boat after that date, were sent to either Manus Island or Nauru and have now been relocated to Australia. Helping people facing challenges with rent is crucial given the current 1% rental vacancy rate in South Australia.

These asylum seekers are required to apply for rolling six-month temporary bridging visas. This means that they also must renew their Medicare cards, which has proved to be very problematic and time-consuming. Living a life in limbo for such an extended period has led to serious depression and feelings of hopelessness, further adding to the effects of previous trauma and language comprehension difficulties. It is difficult to find and keep work for a range of reasons, including temporary, short-term visa status, low level language skills, racial prejudice, precarious accommodation, and the difficulties of accessing public transport in the very late and very early hours.

Rapid Response Circle works in tandem with SOS For Asylum Seekers Circle. Currently the Rapid Response Circle is assisting 6 families (one with weekly living expenses) and eleven single men – one monthly, one weekly with rent and living costs and the others weekly, fortnightly, or as bills they can’t pay come in.  The SOS For Asylum Seekers Circle supports 4 single men and two families with rent and/or living expenses. It also contributes to utility payments where necessary. Both, especially the Rapid Response Circle, respond to new calls for aid as they come in. The number of calls and levels of assistance required are unpredictable and make it difficult to budget and to apply for grants where a firm budget is required.  In addition, grants are usually provided for projects that involve ‘empowering’ people to take charge of their lives and work towards self-sufficiency. That providing the basic necessities of food and shelter is the necessary first step in empowering people is overlooked by these grant funding bodies.

Circle of Friends provides financial support only where there is no Government or non-government agency and no other charity group mandated and able to help.  Groceries, Supermarket Gift Cards, Foodbank vouchers and other items are sourced elsewhere, if possible, e.g., Hope’s Café, The Welcome Center, Birthline pregnancy support, the Sophia Centre, Blackwood Lions, Op Shops, Vinnies Refugee and Asylum Seeker Service and shops, Anglicare, CentaCare Catholic Family Services and Uniting Church outlets.   Both the Rapid Response Circle and the SOS For Asylum Seekers Circle are members of GiveIt and Adelaide Refugee Support, which have goods available from time to time.

The Suzanne Elliott Trust has been incredibly generous as have all our donors. They have kept the Rapid Response Circle and the SOS For Asylum Seekers Circle afloat, and we thank every single one of them as, without them, our work could not continue.

Personally, I wish governments between them would ensure that asylum seekers in the dire circumstances described above, are provided with a basic, viable living allowance.  The visa system under which they are obliged to apply for refugee status should be replaced with one that is based on natural justice and procedural fairness with opportunity to reapply.

Having first volunteered as a 56-year-old, and now aged 77, it is unlikely I will continue at my current rate of volunteering – everything from collecting and delivering blankets and warm clothes in 200km round trips to record keeping – many years longer.  Even with new volunteers to carry on the work, and additional donors to cover the costs of support it is a big ask and a big responsibility that governments have placed on us.

May there soon be a time when Circles are no longer needed.  Then there can be a wholehearted celebration of what together, as a niche community of grassroots responders, we have achieved.  And gratitude and celebration that this period of cruelty and unfairness has ended.

Tricia Hart (Dundon)
Former Co-Convenor of Circle One.
Current Co-Convenor Rapid Response Circle
6th  August 2023

Make a Donation to support the work of Circle of Friends


Photo by Gaelle Marcel on Unsplash

Calling for Action in Support of Refugees held in Immigration Detention

When: Thursday 3 August 2023, 9am – 12 noon, assemble at 8:45am
Where: District Court, Sir Samuel Way Building, corner Victoria Square and Gouger Street

Join us to support the  55 people who have been seeking compensation due to being held in immigration detention, mostly at Baxter, usually for 5 years or more, having experienced mistreatment and humiliation and many experiencing forms of torture.

Grope Hamilton and Shine Lawyers state they can bring any carers, support people and/or relatives with them to the open court.

These people have been waiting for years and their cases languish in court.

5 people between the ages of 40 – 60 years have died waiting, and it is highly likely there are many more in the same situation across the country.

Danyal Shafiq, whom I knew personally and walked alongside him from the days of detention, died of a heart attack last July aged 48 years.He was still on a Removal Pending Bridging Visa despite the UNHCR stating he was a legitimate refugee,  and having been in Australia over 23 years, 7 of those in detention.

Such an indictment on our system that has so ignored adherence to human rights principles.

This is an opportunity to highlight that this is not a new phenomena but one of long-term systemic racism and human rights violation in Australia and a time to support the 55 people as they seek justice.

Please join the 55 people and us on Thursday 3rd August at 8:45am – some of us can go inside some can stay outside and bring banners of support if you can.

Mary Allstrom and Peyman Davishzadeh,  Neami National

For latest statistics on people held in immigration detention facilities in Australia see the Refugee Council’s latest report – ‘Statistics on People in Dentention’ published 31 May 2023