Recovery in small regional communities extends far beyond the immediate aftermath of disasters, even as the early days are often marked by remarkable generosity and local solidarity. While emergency response and short-term assistance are critical, the true recovery process is slow, deeply rooted in relationships, and often invisible from the outside. Rebuilding homes, businesses, and infrastructure is only one part of the journey; restoring the rhythm of everyday community life and addressing long-term recovery fatigue are equally important.
Local people, particularly volunteers and community organisations, carry much of this burden over months and years. These groups quietly sustain social connections, provide support, and adapt to changing needs as communities move through recovery and begin shaping a new future. Sustained assistance is therefore essential, not only to meet urgent needs but also to support the long tail of recovery and prepare communities for what lies ahead.
FRRR’s Bushfire Recovery Appeal was established to respond to this reality by providing flexible, medium- to long-term funding that evolves as community needs change. Drawing on more than two decades of experience supporting communities after major disasters, FRRR recognises that priorities shortly after a fire differ greatly from those that emerge years later. Its approach focuses on backing locally led initiatives and grassroots organisations that are best placed to understand and respond to their communities over time.
Examples from communities affected by the 2009 fires demonstrate how lasting recovery unfolds on the ground. Initiatives have ranged from programs that help children manage lingering anxiety during fire seasons, to the renewal of shared community spaces that foster reconnection, youth-focused mental health and wellbeing projects, and organisational strengthening efforts that rebuild the capacity of local groups. Together, these efforts highlight the importance of both physical infrastructure and the social systems that underpin resilience.
The experience of long-term recovery shows that reconnection builds trust and confidence, skill development strengthens resilience across generations, and locally led solutions are more effective and enduring. Rather than one-off interventions, sustained, flexible support allows communities to recover at their own pace and in ways that reflect local priorities. It is this long-term, community-centred approach that continues to shape FRRR’s work and underpins ongoing support from partners and donors who understand that recovery is a marathon, not a sprint.







