The ACNC Advisory Board supports and advises the ACNC Commissioner.
The Board is appointed by the Minister and consists of up to eight 'general members' with expertise in the not-for-profit sector, law, taxation or accounting, and office holders. The Board can also include ‘ex officio’ members appointed to the Board because they hold a specified office.
General members are appointed for a term of up to three years. Ex officio members remain on the Board for as long as they hold the specified office.
The Board meets quarterly. See summaries of previous Advisory Board meetings.
Sarah has had a wide-ranging career from executive roles in tertiary education to private sector consulting in Australia and overseas. For the last 18 years she has held leadership and executive positions in the charity and for-purpose sector.
In 2021 Sarah joined the Alannah & Madeline Foundation as the CEO. The Foundation works to make sure children can grow up happy, safe and strong – in both their online and offline worlds – free from violence, and with the support and strategies they need to thrive.
Sarah also serves on a range of boards and committees. Her current community board roles include Chair of the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission (ACNC) Advisory Board, and non-executive director of Teach for Australia, and Social Ventures Australia.
Sara is a seasoned governance leader with a career in steering organisations through complex transitions and growth, particularly within the not-for-profit sector.
She has played a pivotal role in enhancing board composition, risk management, and strategic governance across various organisations, including charities in the transport and logistics, community and health space.
Sara is also an independent member of the ACNC’s Performance, Audit and Risk Committee.
Emeritus Professor Myles McGregor-Lowndes OAM is the former Director of The Australian Centre of Philanthropy and Nonprofit Studies (ACPNS) at the Queensland University of Technology.
He has written extensively about nonprofit tax and regulation, nonprofit legal entities, government grants and standard charts of accounts as a means of reducing the compliance burden. He is a practising lawyer in Queensland. Myles was a founding member of the ATO Charities Consultative Committee and the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission Advisory Board.
In June 2003, Myles was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) "For service to the community by providing education and support in legal, financial and administrative matters to nonprofit organisations."
A Yorta Yorta man, Ian has extensive government and community sector experience, particularly at executive and governance levels. Ian has overseen major policy and strategic reforms for government and community organisations. He works with people from a vast array of backgrounds, managing complex and sensitive relationships to achieve mutually beneficial outcomes. Ian was CEO of a major Aboriginal community organisation from January to August 2018.
Ian chairs and is a member of a number of boards, including the Indigenous Land & Sea Corporation, the Community Broadcast Foundation, Connecting Home, the Koorie Heritage Trust, Holmesglen TAFE and the Australian Institute of Company Directors.
He is also devoting himself to improving the representation of Aboriginal people on boards and other high level governance, through strategic action, advocacy and mentoring.
For over 40 years, Rosa and the Sydney Multicultural Community Services' team have helped culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) communities, including seniors, newly arrived migrants, refugees, people with a disability and other community members. Rosa always strives her best to assist those who are in crisis, struggling with language barriers, domestic violence, isolation, poverty and disadvantage.
Rosa has been providing outstanding service to local South Eastern Sydney community members from multicultural backgrounds for more than four decades. She advocates for disadvantaged refugees and residents from multicultural backgrounds at a policy level.
A community innovator, she has helped establish many organizations and services including Sydney Multicultural Community Services, Youth Employment Support Scheme, Skill Share, Killara Women’s Refuge, Settlement Services International, The Settlement Engagement and Transition Support (SETS) Program in Northern Sydney.
She has also provided employment opportunities to hundred members of the community over the years.
Anna has held leadership and senior roles in not-for-profits and state government agencies and membership on a range of committees and advisory boards throughout her career.
Her experience includes developing and implementing policy and programs in health, community services, sector development and regulation.
She has had the privilege to work with and for communities and people from diverse backgrounds, identities and lived experiences.
David is CEO of the Community Council for Australia, a role he has held for 10 years.
He has spent more than 25 years as CEO of significant not-for-profit organisations, including the Mental Health Council of Australia, the Alcohol and other Drugs Council of Australia, and Odyssey House Victoria.
He has served on many national advisory groups and boards including the first Advisory Board for the ACNC, the Not-for-Profit Sector Reform Council, Chair of the National Compact Expert Advisory Group, and an inaugural member (now a judge) of the Pro Bono Australia ‘Impact 25’ listing of the most influential leaders in Australian charities and not-for-profit sector.
Nick is the Founder and CEO of Befriend, a vibrant community building non-profit established in Western Australia in 2010 to address isolation and loneliness through community-led connecting efforts.
Through Befriend’s community building projects, Nick connects with many new and emerging grassroots community groups and next-generation charities. Nick brings experiences in social entrepreneurship, innovation, social justice, inclusion and resilience.