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The premier event for the Community Sector in greater Western Sydney returns in 2024.

We are thrilled to be returning for a fourteenth year in 2024, with 2024 ZEST Awards Ceremony to be held on Thursday 30 May.

Showcasing the vital work of the Community Sector across greater Western Sydney, the ZEST Awards have become a signature event on the calendar for the region and return in 2024 to recognise and acknowledge the work of more dedicated and passionate community groups and leaders.

 

Covering the region of Blacktown, Blue Mountains, Camden, Campbelltown, Canterbury Bankstown, Cumberland, Fairfield, Hawkesbury, Liverpool, Parramatta, Penrith, the Hills, and Wollondilly, the ZEST Awards are renowned for highlighting our assets, our diversity and our creative and innovative work.

The ZEST Awards, led by Western Sydney Community Forum, have celebrated nearly 1,500 outstanding projects and individuals from the community across the past fourteen years.

 

 

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All nominees and their families, friends and colleagues are invited to attend the ZEST Awards Ceremony, which will be held at Accor Stadium in Olympic Park on Thursday 30 May 2024.

We look forward to a wonderful celebration of our local Community Sector, with an evening full of great food, entertainers from across greater Western Sydney and plenty of memorable moments.

Since 2011, the ZEST Awards have celebrated and promoted life in Western Sydney and the significant work undertaken by community service sector organisations and volunteers.

The impetus came for the awards came from a growing awareness in the community sector that it was the image of Western Sydney itself that was holding back the region. This was highlighted in a forum in 2010, Stronger Voice for Western Sydney, a partnership between the Western Sydney Community Forum, WESTIR and TRI Community Exchange. A key aim that emerged from this was to challenge the negative media focus on the region and instead work to promote the innovative, creative work being done.

With previous experience running a community awards program for local government Nancy Nicholson, Operations Manager at the Western Sydney Community Forum initiated the idea of an annual awards presentation that could showcase the positive work being done by the community sector. With some early supporting and funding from individuals like David Borger, then MP for Granville and Minister for Western Sydney, and a big dose of our partners time, the awards were launched the following year.


In 2011, this first awards night attracted nearly 250 attendees. From the start we noticed the positive impact being nominated for an award had on individuals and organisations. The awards also changed how organisers have seen the community service sector and how it works at its best, with a high number of nominees being partnerships between collaborating organisations. Also notable is the number of innovative projects being initiated by indigenous and ethnic communities.

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Now years down the track the awards themselves are promoting new projects each year. A tangible measure of what is working, the awards are also being used to as a promotional tool by government departments to highlight the meeting of performance indicators and by organisations themselves able to promote their own ‘best practice’.

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