What we do

Disasters have hyper-local impacts and recovery needs. Communities, who are at the forefront of disaster impacts and response, require hyper-local solutions. Fire to Flourish supports communities to lead their own recovery and resilience-building. We take a collaborative hands-on approach, tailored to each community and the local Indigenous and broader community context and priorities of locals.

F2F Heartlines artwork

Our purpose
To enable communities to strengthen their resilience to disaster.

Our mission
To trial and scale innovative solutions that enable community-led resilience
while addressing systemic disadvantage.

With bushfires, floods and other disasters
happening more often in Australia, and with more
intensity, we need new and better ways to deal with disaster - to protect people and property and support community recovery and longer-term resilience building.

Our approach is not one-size-fits-all; instead, we support communities in co-creating solutions that enable them to thrive. We believe that a tailored, community-led response, by those who have been directly impacted, is a critical part of disaster resilience. Up until now, very little has been known about how to achieve this in practice.

Fire to Flourish is pioneering a new way to support communities as the best first and long-term
responders to disasters, bridging the gap between hyper-local realities and government
responses to create tailored, effective solutions.

Support to identify and address capability, skills and training needs within communities

Small and medium grants to develop and implement community-led projects that support resilience ($2.5M per community)

Information, tools and processes to help communities connect with each other and develop localised plans for a resilient future

Support for communities to connect and work with government, agencies and stakeholders to align and coordinate action

We work directly with four partner communities that have been recently affected by disaster. Each of our partner communities run their own stream of work aimed at engaging the people living in that area. We provide funding and long-term support through participatory grantmaking, capacity building, tools and processes. Learn more about our partner communities here.

Our experimentation and deep work in our partner communities is accompanied by robust research from the best minds in the country, dedicated to researching and systematising our findings to develop solutions at both local and national levels. This much-needed knowledge provides practical tools, guidance and frameworks that enable community-led action while supporting broader systems change.

What are our guiding Program Principles?

What is Participatory Grantmaking?

Participatory grantmaking is central to our approach. It vests decision-making power about community funding in community members with local knowledge and deep understanding of their disaster recovery needs and resilience priorities.

Participatory grantmaking encourages wide community engagement, participation and empowerment, including among groups that have had little access to funding from other sources. It gives the community the power to set project eligibility and selection criteria, and ultimately decide which projects are funded.

“It’s really good to be part of something where the focus was on us as community members instead of just people standing in the room dictating and giving information that may not be as relevant to us.” Community Staff Member, Eurobodalla

Participatory processes are designed from end-to-end, with focus on supporting the long-term uplift in the disaster resilience of communities through shared understanding, strengthened connections and increased agency.

Grant round designs and funding allocation decisions are informed by workshops that bring a group of community members together to develop a shared vision and priorities for disaster resilience.

Participatory grantmaking lifecycle

These processes are tailored across different grant rounds, with each community planning and designing their own journey for strengthening resilience. While some rounds have been broadly framed around disaster resilience, others have been more focused. For example, shaping built environment priorities through placemaking methods, engaging deeply with Caring for Country themes through Indigenous-led co-design, and addressing priorities that emerged from community reflections and lessons following a disaster event.

In 2024 alone, through our participatory grantmaking processes, we supported eight rounds of funding in our four partner communities, resulting in 83 community projects and $4.9 million disbursed.

“It’s been really beautiful to watch the kind of thinking that comes from getting to the root of the problem, through the different participatory activities. It just helps people to think a bit in those different ways.” Community Staff Member, East Gippsland

For updates about what’s happening at Fire to Flourish, including our community initiatives and research updates, subscribe to our mailing list.