Follow on Google News News By Tag Industry News News By Location Country(s) Industry News
Follow on Google News | ![]() EHA Calls for Urgent Investment in Environmental Health Scholarships as part of $234.3M SubmissionBy investing in environmental health scholarships, Australia can build a stronger Environmental Health Officer (EHO) workforce.
Environmental Health Officers (EHOs) play a critical role in protecting communities from foodborne illness outbreaks, water contamination, air pollution, and climate-driven health threats. However, with a 30% workforce shortage, an ageing profession, and declining university enrolments, urgent action is needed to attract and retain the next generation of EHOs. EHA is calling for targeted funding to support students and early-career professionals through scholarships, grants, and cadetship programs. This investment will ensure that talented individuals have access to accredited environmental health education pathways and can gain practical experience in the field. "Without investment in the environmental health workforce today, communities will remain vulnerable to preventable public health crises tomorrow," said Melissa Burn, EHA National President. "We need to attract new talent to the profession, and financial support through scholarships and endowments is a key solution." The Case for Investment - Workforce Shortages: Environmental health has been identified as one of the top three skill shortages in local government (ALGA 2022 Workforce Survey). - Declining University Pathways: The closure of accredited environmental health courses has limited opportunities for new students to enter the profession. - High Cost of Study: Financial barriers prevent many potential students from pursuing environmental health qualifications. - Essential Public Health Protection: EHOs are frontline public health professionals ensuring food safety, clean water, and safe environments— EHA's Proposal: $56.3 Million Investment in the Future of Environmental Health The funding would support:
"Investing in environmental health education today will strengthen our public health workforce for generations to come," said Ms Burn. "This is not just an investment in students—it's an investment in community safety and public health resilience." EHA is urging the Australian Government to commit to this funding in the upcoming federal budget to ensure every community has access to skilled EHOs who can respond to current and future public health challenges. The submission document can be seen here: https://www.eh.org.au/ "We protect people from hazards in their environment!" - Ends - End
|
|