Charities making the switch from tin rattling to phone-tap fundraising
Posted on 18 May 2026
This year, volunteers from hundreds of Returned and Services League (RSL) branches across Australia…
Posted on 19 Jun 2025
By Greg Thom, journalist, Institute of Community Directors Australia
A new partnership aims to give young refugees, migrants and asylum seekers who are trying to forge a new life in Australia a leg-up in the hospitality industry.
Restaurant booking platform OpenTable has announced a partnership with Melbourne-based social enterprise Scarf designed to help young people overcome barriers to employment.
Scarf provides hands-on training, mentoring and paid work experience for young people facing difficulty finding a job.
The organisation helps young people gain real-world experience working at dinners and events, allowing them to build confidence, skills and potential employment networks.
Much of Scarf's trainee base consists of young people seeking asylum, and those from refugee and migrant backgrounds who are experiencing long-term unemployment.
Under the new partnership, OpenTable will:
“We’re so excited to be working with OpenTable, which will allow our trainees to get the best possible training and work experience opportunities as they prepare to transition into ongoing hospitality jobs.”
OpenTable's senior director of sales and services for Australia and New Zealand, Drew Bowering, said the collaboration would help to increase visibility for Scarf’s pop-up dinners.
It would also give diners a unique opportunity to experience the Scarf program in action and watch trainees gain real world hospitality experience first-hand.
“We are proud to be partnering with the Scarf team to support the next generation of hospitality professionals and help create a more inclusive industry,” said Bowering.
Scarf co-founder and CEO Hannah Brennan said partnerships had always been integral to the not-for-profit's approach to pursuing its purpose.
“We’re so excited to be working with OpenTable, which will allow our trainees to get the best possible training and work experience opportunities as they prepare to transition into ongoing hospitality jobs,” she said.
Established in 2010, Scarf is on track to have trained more than 400 hospitality graduates by the end of this year.
Employment program makes life cycle easier for young unemployed
Posted on 18 May 2026
This year, volunteers from hundreds of Returned and Services League (RSL) branches across Australia…
Posted on 13 May 2026
There are few surprises in the federal Budget. The flagged reforms are welcome, although…
Posted on 13 May 2026
Is it possible that Australians are revelling in demented hysteria at the moment, imagining all…
Posted on 13 May 2026
Doug Taylor, the CEO of The Smith Family, a children’s education charity, and also a teacher of…
Posted on 13 May 2026
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed non risus. Suspendisse lectus tortor,…
Posted on 13 May 2026
Dr Susie O’Neill is the CEO of KIDS Foundation and the founder of Tour d’Horse, a six-day, 200…
Posted on 13 May 2026
Forty-two years after sexual harassment became illegal in Australian workplaces, and despite the Me…
Posted on 07 May 2026
A bold use of new technology to transform a contact centre phone line into a genuinely national…
Posted on 06 May 2026
$386 billion is quite a chunk of change. That's how much is earmarked for the AUKUS defence deal…
Posted on 06 May 2026
A landmark multimillion-dollar sector-led national initiative to build the digital capabilities of…
Posted on 06 May 2026
Institute of Community Directors Australia executive director Adele Stowe-Lindner has applauded the…
Posted on 06 May 2026
Communication is everything. That was the key takeout from a webinar held late last week that…