Opinion: Whānau Voice Grant doubles engagement as Te Arawa leads health change

Rawiri Bhana, of the Te Taura Ora o Waiariki Iwi Māori Partnership Board.

Rawiri Bhana, from the Te Taura Ora o Waiariki Iwi Māori Partnership Board, reflects on an extraordinary response to a health initiative.

Over the past two weeks, something remarkable has happened across Te Arawa.

Our new Whānau Voice Grant, a $50,000 fund that empowers local whānau to shape health and wellbeing, has sparked a level of engagement that has been overwhelming and inspiring.

And it proves one thing: when you listen to whānau, they respond with energy, insight and solutions.

I’ll be honest: we weren’t sure how the community would engage.

But after our first radio interview on The Heat, my phone lit up with calls from all corners of the rohe. Whānau were saying, “We saw you on the morning show, how can we apply?”

From hapū māmā and natural birthing advocates, to rangatahi, Takatāpui, and even local gang communities, all sorts wanted to step forward.

Whānau from the Block reached out, excited to activate their own initiatives. The response has been extraordinary.

Registrations have doubled.

Traffic to our registration page has increased by 87%, and visits to the application page are up 62%.

The highest-viewed page on our website is the Whānau Voice Grant Guidelines & Criteria.

On social media, our top posts to date include Applications Now Open (5132 views) and Pitch Your Best Idea (5849 views).

This grant is designed to be inclusive and accessible.

Rangatahi, for example, can submit a simple video, tell a story, or express their ideas in a medium that suits them, not a 20-page application form.

We want whānau to engage in their own language, style, and way. It’s not about fitting into the system; it’s about reshaping the system to reflect whānau realities.

For too long, our national health system has operated like a one-size-fits-all model.

Communities that don’t fit the usual parameters like remote or rural whānau, tāngata whaikaha, gang whānau, takatāpui, young parents, often go unheard. This grant flips that dynamic on its head.

Instead of asking whānau to conform, we are adapting the system to capture their expertise, creativity, and insight.

Already, stories are emerging that wouldn’t appear in standard reporting cycles.

Rangatahi sharing what wellbeing truly feels like, hapū māmā highlighting gaps in birthing and postpartum support, takatāpui whānau surfacing health challenges and solutions that are invisible in traditional data.

These are insights that decision-makers in our Te Manawa Taki region and in Wellington need to hear and they come directly from our people living the experiences.

Our Te Taura Board sees success not just as awarding the 10 $5000 grants available in this first round, but as receiving an abundance of applications.

Every story, every idea is valuable, and the more whānau contribute, the more we can support and scale solutions, not just this year, but in future tranches of funding.

This kaupapa is about making mokopuna decisions, those long-view choices whose benefits may only be seen by future generations.

It’s about ensuring the health system we build today is culturally grounded, relational, and responsive to the real needs of our people.

If the past two weeks are any indication, our whānau are rising. They are speaking. They are shaping their own future. Our job is simple: listen, honour their kōrero, and act.

Applications close at Thursday, November 27. Whānau can apply via our website tearawaimpb.co.nz/whanau-voice-grant-guidelines or through our social media channels.

It’s quick, simple, and your voice can make a real difference.

This is only the beginning. Whānau are leading the way and we are listening.

 

Original Article Source: https://www.teaonews.co.nz/2025/11/25/opinion-whanau-voice-grant-doubles-engagement-as-te-arawa-leads-health-change/


Listening to Whānau Is Changing the Future of Our Health System

Over the past two weeks, something remarkable has happened across Te Arawa. Our new Whānau Voice Grant, a $50,000 fund empowering local whānau to shape health and wellbeing, has sparked a level of engagement that has been overwhelming and inspiring. And it proves one thing: when you listen to whānau, they respond with energy, insight, and solutions.

I’ll be honest: we weren’t sure how the community would engage. But after our first radio interview on The Heat, my phone lit up with calls from all corners of the rohe. Whānau were saying, “We saw you on the morning show, how can we apply?”

From hapū māmā and natural birthing advocates, to rangatahi, Takatāpui, and even local gang communities, all sorts wanted to step forward. Whānau from the Block reached out, excited to activate their own initiatives. The response has been extraordinary.

Registrations have doubled. Traffic to our registration page has increased by 87%, and visits to the application page are up 62%. The highest-viewed page on our website is the Whānau Voice Grant Guidelines & Criteria. On social media, our top posts to date include ‘Applications Now Open’ (5,132 views) and ‘Pitch Your Best Idea’ (5,849 views).

This grant is designed to be inclusive and accessible. Rangatahi, for example, can submit a simple video, tell a story, or express their ideas in a medium that suits them, not a 20-page application form. We want whānau to engage in their own language, style, and way. It’s not about fitting into the system; it’s about reshaping the system to reflect whānau realities.

For too long, our national health system has operated like a one-size-fits-all model. Communities that don’t fit the usual parameters like remote or rural whānau, tāngata whaikaha, gang whānau, Takatāpui, young parents, often go unheard. This grant flips that dynamic. On its head. Instead of asking whānau to conform, we are adapting the system to capture their expertise, creativity, and insight.

Already, stories are emerging that wouldn’t appear in standard reporting cycles. Rangatahi sharing what wellbeing truly feels like, hapū māmā highlighting gaps in birthing and postpartum support, Takatāpui whānau surfacing health challenges and solutions that are invisible in traditional data.

These are insights that decision-makers in our Te Manawa Taki region and in Wellington need to hear and they come directly from our people living the experiences.

Our Te Taura Board sees success not just as awarding the ten $5,000 grants available in this first round, but as receiving an abundance of applications. Every story, every idea is valuable, and the more whānau contribute, the more we can support and scale solutions, not just this year, but in future tranches of funding.

This kaupapa is about making mokopuna decisions, those long-view choices whose benefits may only be seen by future generations. It’s about ensuring the health system we build today is culturally grounded, relational, and responsive to the real needs of our people.

If the past two weeks are any indication, our whānau are rising. They are speaking. They are shaping their own future. Our job is simple: listen, honour their kōrero, and act.

Applications close at COB Thursday, 27 November. Whānau can apply via our website tearawaimpb.co.nz/whanau-voice-grant-guidelines or through our social media channels.

It’s quick, simple, and your voice can make a real difference.

This is only the beginning. Whānau are leading the way and we are listening.


Kōrero with Sheena Waerea part of Te Taura Ora o Waiariki - Te Arawa IMPB

Kōrero with Sheena Waerea part of Te Taura Ora o Waiariki - Te Arawa IMPB in to talk about Whānau Voice grants that close off this week.
Sheena covers Purpose of the grants, Reminder of Closing Date, How easy it is to apply, Encouraging Last-Minute Entries.

Applications are now open — click here to learn more. Applications close November 27.


REMINDER: Whānau Voice Grants Close This Thursday!

He wā tēnei kia rangona te reo o te whānau.
Now is the time for your voice to be heard.

If you’ve been thinking about applying for a Whānau Voice Grant, this is your gentle reminder - applications close this Thursday 27 November.

Watch the short video below to see how you and your whānau can share your stories, ideas, and experiences to help shape the future of health and wellbeing in our rohe.

Let your voice guide the way forward.
Kia kaha, kia māia, kia manawanui.


Quarterly Hapū Provider Hui - Update

On Wednesday 19 November, we gathered for our Te Taura Ora o Waiariki quarterly Stakeholder & Provider Hui – he wā kōrero, he wā whakarongo, he wā whakarite mahere mō āpōpō.

It was awesome to come together ā tinana, share whakaaro, and hear the latest updates on the kaupapa happening across our rohe. We talked through progress on our whānau voice initiatives, heard insights from current projects, and listened to reflections from those working on the front line of hauora and community wellbeing.

We also looked ahead to what’s coming up and started mapping out our collective priorities as we move toward 2026. A real sense of kotahitanga, collaboration, and commitment came through – all focused on strengthening hauora outcomes for our Te Arawa whānau.

Ngā mihi nui to everyone who showed up, contributed, and shared your mātauranga. Your voices help guide our direction and keep our mahi grounded in what matters most – our whānau.

Hei mahi tahi, hei painga mō te iwi.


Kōrero with Rawiri Bhana of Te Taura Ora o Waiariki - Te Arawa IMPB

Kōrero with Rawiri Bhana part of Te Taura Ora o Waiariki - Te Arawa IMPB in to talk about Whānau Voice Grants, 10 grants of $5,000 total pool $50,000.

Applications are now open — click here to learn more. Applications close November 27.


Quarterly Hapū Provider Hui

📣 Reminder: Quarterly Hapū Provider Hui – Tonight!

Our quarterly Hapū Provider Hui is happening tonight! We’re excited to share updates and hear your whakaaro ā tinana.

🗓 Wednesday 19 November 2025
⏰ 5.30pm – 7.30pm
📍 GHA, Rotorua

Thank you to everyone who RSVP’d – we look forward to seeing you there!

Rangatahi, It’s Your Time to Lead – Whānau Voice Grants Open

Hear from one of our own rangatahi about why your voice matters in shaping the future of hauora in our rohe. If you’ve got ideas, stories, or dreams for how we can strengthen whānau wellbeing, this is your time to lead.

Your whakaaro today can change the future for our tamariki and mokopuna.

Applications are open until 27 November, you can apply here – https://tearawaimpb.co.nz/whanau-voice-grant-guidelines/


Kōrero with Aroha Dorset the General Manager of Te Taura Ora o Waiariki - Te Arawa IMPB

Aroha Dorset, General Manager of Te Taura Ora o Waiariki – Te Arawa IMPB, recently joined the kōrero to discuss the newly launched Whānau Voice Grant. She shared valuable insights into how this kaupapa will empower whānau-led projects, uplift local voices, and enhance hauora throughout our Te Arawa communities.

Applications are now open — click here to learn more. Applications close November 27.


Whānau Voice Grants - Now Open!

He wā tēnei kia rangona te reo o te whānau.

 

Watch this short video to see how you and your whānau can share your stories and ideas to shape health and wellbeing in our rohe.

 

We have 10 grants of $5,000 available for whānau, hapū, iwi, and kaupapa Māori entities to lead projects that reflect your needs, values, and tikanga. Share your kōrero through hui, workshops, surveys, storytelling, film, or creative projects – the choice is yours!