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GHLEE needs your support

GHLEE is a grassroots not-for-profit run by volunteers with DGR (tax deductability) status.

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We are in a David and Goliath battle against the gambling industry and we need your support.

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You can donate to GHLEE using the following bank details:

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Account name: GAMBLING HARM LIVED EXPERIENCE

BSB: 633000

Account number: 238621023

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We can issue you with a receipt by contacting info.ghlee@gmail.com.

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Every little bit helps and we appreciate your interest and generosity.

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If you are from a philanthropic organisation or would like to make a larger donation we would love to speak with you about projects you would like to support. Currently donations are used to cover our basic overheads such as this website and paying for travel (as cheaply as we can) to important meetings. No one takes a salary at GHLEE. We would love to be in a position to pay for some part-time staff eventually to further our cause even more effectively. Our ultimate goal is that we put ourselves out of operation! We genuinely don't wish to exist as an organisation but recognise that currently we must. We will keep fighting for reform until gambling is no longer the dangerous and even deadly business it currently is in Australia.

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ABOUT US >

Gambling harm is damaging and avoidable. As people who have experienced gambling harm personally we know the solutions and need to be consulted on any reforms to gambling regulation in Australia.

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CONTACT >

Email: info.ghlee@gmail.com

Mobile: 0478 363 455

GHLEE operates on the unceded, sovereign lands of the First Peoples of the land now known as Australia. We acknowledge their generosity in sharing their land with us. We pay our respects to their Elders past and present.

Their hurt and that of their peoples endured since colonisation has been unfathomable.

Gambling harm is just another way Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have been affected by colonisation. Some studies suggest gambling harm rates of between 10 to 20 times higher among the Indigenous population. Much like tobacco and alcohol’s health impacts, this disproportionate harm is inexorably linked to intergenerational trauma, poverty, unemployment, and factors such as the easy accessibility of gambling venues in certain communities.  

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