ARCH Magazine | Edition 28 2021

Page 30

HUMA NITY

The pursuit of nappyness HOW CARLY FRADGLEY TURNED DONATIONS ON HER DOORSTEP INTO A CHARITY HELPING THOUSANDS OF NEW FAMILIES by Andrew Bryan

C

arly Fradgley (Class of 2004) knew she was onto something big when she came home one day to find bags of clothes, prams and baby items piled high on her doorstep. “The garage got full really quickly,” says the Founder and CEO of Baby Give Back, a charity that helps vulnerable babies, children and families. ”There was a serious amount of need much greater than I ever realised right in our own backyard. From then, it was a matter of growing quickly so we could keep matching that need and keep accepting donations from amazing families in our community.” For 18 months, Mrs Fradgley’s home at Tallebudgera on the Gold Coast was packed full of donations, her rooms and garage overflowing with generosity. What started as a way to donate some of her son’s baby equipment had morphed into a full-time operation that needed more space, more volunteers and all her time. The rapid growth of Baby Give Back was matched only by the incredible need in the community. Mrs Fradgley realised she needed to give up her work as a lawyer and focus full-time on the new venture. The transition was stressful but guided by the skills she learned at Bond University.

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“I couldn’t do what I do and grow an organisation like this without the foundations I had from that legal experience at Bond,” she says. “Having a law degree accelerated through Bond enabled me to start working quite young. I was 20 when I started as a lawyer so I had 10 years of a law career before I started wrapping up and working for Baby Give Back.” For a long time she tried juggling her two roles but eventually, feeling burned-out, she decided to devote 100 per cent of her energy to the charity. “You can’t really work part-time as a lawyer,” she says. “I’m so thankful for everything Bond gave me and it has really helped me in my new path at Baby Give Back.” Meanwhile, the donations continued to pour in, also filling friends’ homes and garages. “It was a real community effort,” she says. “We knew we needed to get a warehouse and that was critical in being able to help more people. When we realised there were so many people wanting to donate their baby stuff, we had a meeting with a case worker who supports vulnerable families. She told us of families who had escaped domestic violence with nothing, families who had gone through really severe financial hardship and had to


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