Where we've come from
As a 16-year-old mother SEED Futures CEO and Founder, Bernadette dreamed of a world that valued her and provided pathways enabling her family to thrive. This vision led her to share her own lived experience through Brave Little Bear in 2006 and establish Brave Foundation in 2009 to deliver meaningful change for other young parents and their children. Despite early scepticism, Brave Foundation has grown to be Australia’s largest organisation supporting young parents. Please see Bernadette’s Founders note and timeline from start up to national success on the Brave Foundation website here.
Supported by studies in international primary preventative strategies, Bernadette discovered that the experiences of young parents could guide efforts to help all families at risk of entrenched disadvantage, especially during the critical first 1,000 days. Without early intervention, these families often face generational poverty, becoming long-term welfare recipients. Between 2009 and 2022, Brave grew to more than 22 staff. Throughout this time, Bernadette was named Tasmanian Australian of the Year 2019, Barnardos Australian Mother of the Year and was made a Member of the Order of Australia in 2021.
SEED was launched by Tim Costello AC, as a systemic advocacy initiative, to re-envision how we tackle disadvantage and poverty in young people and families. Bernadette said at the May 2022 launch, “I have a bold exploratory ten-year end game, to establish a central primary prevention mechanism, where lived experience, sectors and governments advise each other, in the creation of policy and funding architecture that meets the need when it matters most,” Ms Black says. You can read more about the journey from Brave to SEED in this article, written by Philanthropy Australia in October 2023.
In SEED, Bernadette and her team have devised a four-stage, 10-year roadmap to overhaul the social service support system for families across the first 1000 days by 2032, creating a place to flourish rather than flounder. SEED aims to see everyone in the ‘system’ win, from lived experience to the authorisers of policy. The SEED team are well on target in meeting their goal, with transformation taking deep root in our systems.
Bernadette often says that her dream is to do herself out of a job, where one day our systems meet the needs of families in timely ways, before entering disadvantage, so that future generations can flourish. Bernadette says, “There is a lot of work to do in the next decade. I am now ‘Nana Bebe’ and when I see my 31-year-old son and his family, I return to my ambitious dream from so many years ago – that all families know what it’s like to flourish, to be nurtured and to nurture,” says Bernadette.
You can read Bernadette Blacks bio here
A Message from our Founder
I founded Brave as an outcome of my story as a 16-year-old mother to Damien. Brave was the organisation I looked for but couldn’t find.
Brave Little Bear (the meaning of Bernadette), my book (email to purchase Brave Little Bear) was published in 2006, which prompted national attention from communities wanting to support young parents. This was the precursor to creating a national directory of service and triage service, which grew to over 900 organisations in the following decade. I grew Brave while I was leading another Not for Profit and raising my family in Tasmania.
Brave was incorporated as a charity in 2009 and we have had four marvellous Chairs and skills-mixed Directors across this time to reach our vision at each stage, amongst an army of passionate volunteers and staff. I was officially appointed CEO in 2014 and we developed the inaugural Supporting Expecting and Parenting Teen pathway plan, with teen parents and a working group of 20 experts across organisations and government departments that could support young families. this was funded and delivered across Australia.
Across these 17 years my husband and children have remarked that Brave was more like a way of life for our family than a job. It certainly was, and their willing sacrifice (amongst countless others – you know who you are), across those years has contributed to the stunning impact we see Brave steward today, seeing more and more young parents flourish, just like the organisation that serves them.
Bernadette Black AM
Our Timeline
2006
‘Brave Little Bear (BLB): The inspirational story of a teenage mother,’ was published, which documents Bernadette’s teen parenthood story.
2007
Bernadette starts forming a directory of services after being contacted by young parents and support people all over the country looking for connection to education, health, and social supports.
2008
The directory of services goes online.
2009
Brave Foundation is incorporated as a not-for-profit.
Brave Foundation is launched in Hobart by Larissa Bartlett (Hon David Bartlett’s wife and Premier at the time), Brave’s Inaugural Ambassador. At this time, Bernadette was volunteering her time to Brave Foundation around part time work.
2014
A generous bequest from Anne Tomlinson Walsh.
The Hon David Bartlett was appointed the second Chair of Brave Foundation and Bernadette was appointed CEO. Brave moved into its first office in Kingston, Tasmania.
2015
Brave Foundation is launched nationally by The Hon Jeff Kennett at an event in Melbourne.
2018
Supporting Expecting and Parenting (SEPT) Program was created as a trial under funding the Department of Social Service’s ‘Try, Test, Learn’ initiative. It was implemented across eight sites nationally.
2019
Brave Foundation celebrates its 10-year anniversary with an event at Government House in Tasmania.
2020
University of Tasmania’s Peter Underwood Centre released independent evaluation of Brave’s SEPT Trial.
2021
Funding secured to continue and expand SEPT program and establish Social Economic Empowerment Department (SEED).
2022
Founder Bernadette Black is appointed as inaugural Social Economic Ambassador and Jill Roche is appointed Brave CEO.
Philanthropic funding from Paul Ramsay Foundation allows Brave to expand program support team with a focus on partnerships and evidence of impact.
2023
Young Dads pilot program launched in Newcastle and Melbourne, due to three philanthropic grants.
2024
Federal government funding secured for SEPT Program to continue nationally for a further two years.
SEED separates from Brave and establishes itself independently as SEED Futures.