Former Australian Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman Kate Carnell.
Former Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman Kate Carnell has joined the board of Mable, an Aussie startup connecting small business aged care and disability service providers with the users who need them.
Headed up by co-founder and chief Peter Scutt, Mable is intended to offer service users a range of alternatives to the big players, while also providing more flexibility for the SMEs, fostering more personal connections.
It’s also designed to be more cost effective and free from the bureaucracy associated with this sector.
For Carnell, who came to the end of her five-year tenure as small business ombudsman in March, this new board role plays into her passions.
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Former Australian Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman Kate Carnell.
Australia desperately needs to lift the rate of vaccination to stop the lockdowns that are killing small businesses. So why are governments ignoring the capacity of local pharmacies to help speed up the COVID vaccine roll out?
Australia has approximately 6000 pharmacies spread across the country in rural and regional areas and local shopping centres in all towns and cities. Pharmacies provide a range of health services and advice in addition to prescriptions and other medication.
In recent years, pharmacies have played an important role in the delivery of immunisations, particularly the flu vaccine. In 2020, 3 million Australians had their flu vaccine at their pharmacy.
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NSW Finance and Small Business Minister Damien Tudehope. Source: AAP Image/Paul Braven.
Big businesses with government contracts in New South Wales will be required to pay their subcontractors within 20 days, under a policy to be included in next week’s state budget.
The 2021-22 NSW budget, to be handed down on Tuesday, June 22, will also include significant changes to the state government’s procurement policy, in a bid to help more small businesses win government tenders and contracts.
The subcontractor payments proposal extends a pilot program that began in January, which required a number of large businesses with government contracts to pay their own suppliers and subcontractors within a shorter period of time.