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Is this the turning point for women's sport in Victoria?

Is this the turning point for women's sport in Victoria?

The Age3 days ago

On Friday night, the Matildas are set to dazzle a massive Marvel Stadium crowd with their football talent. And across Victoria this weekend, thousands of other women and girls will play in one of the many community sporting leagues scattered across the state.
But only last week, the Victorian government quietly cut funding from a prominent statewide program, designed to increase gender equality in sport. On Thursday, interim Matildas coach Tom Sermanni reignited demands for better funding, sponsorship and support for professional female soccer players.
The calls for more financial support - from professional leagues to community programs - underline the stark reality of women's sport in Australia, which is struggling to attract the necessary funding at all levels.
Victoria's latest budget revealed that funding for the Office for Women in Sport and Recreation (OWSR) would be cut. The program was created specifically to bolster the number of women and girls participating in sport by providing Change Our Game community grants as well as encouraging equal access to sporting facilities.
Another program, designed to support clubs that developed sporting programs which helped to address the issue of gender-based and domestic violence, was also cut.
Budget documents from 2021 prominently announce the creation of the OWSR, with a Labor government press release at the time saying that the funding boost will 'level the playing field for women and girls' and support dozens of projects.
The office received $3 million from the 2021-22 budget, and was allocated $2.9 million annually over the next three years.
The decision to cut the dedicated program is unnerving for community sporting organisations like the Darebin Falcons. Based in Melbourne's northern suburbs, the women's club fields more than 40 teams across AFL, soccer and cricket.

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