CFA

Victorian Taxpayers Paying 93 Times More for Race-Based Burn-Offs

10 March 2026

2.3 MINS

The Allan government spent $22.5 million on just 80 cultural burns. CFA volunteers treated six times more land last year — essentially for free.

Victorian taxpayers are funding cultural burns — a program restricted to Aboriginal Australians — at $28,000 per hectare, 93 times the cost of comparable fuel reduction work performed by Country Fire Authority volunteers.

An investigation by Peter Hunt in The Weekly Times found the Allan government spent $22.5 million over four years on just 80 cultural burns covering roughly 800 hectares.

Hunt’s analysis of departmental and bushfire management reports found the $28,000-per-hectare cost dwarfs the $300 per hectare CFA volunteers spend on comparable planned burns.

CFA’s 2024–25 Annual Report shows volunteers completed 202 planned burns treating 4,774 hectares last year — work performed largely without labour costs.

The disparity has drawn sharp criticism from the opposition and fire management advocates, who say the spending is both wasteful and symbolic.

The Numbers

Forest Fire Management Victoria, the state’s paid workforce, manages burns at approximately $1,500 per hectare — a figure that covers all administrative, planning and on-ground costs.

Even that figure is nearly 19 times cheaper than what the government is paying Aboriginal groups through its cultural burns program.

The $22.5 million commitment was made in the 2021–22 state budget. Then-environment minister Lily D’Ambrosio said at the time the funding was about “empowering traditional owners to deliver cultural burning.”

The Allan government has since committed to 211 further cultural burns, with no timeline attached.

One senior Department of Energy, Environment and Climate Action officer defended the costs, saying the grants were helping traditional owners re-learn “how to use fire in the landscape” and navigate bureaucratic and legal hurdles.

The officer acknowledged the burns are not always for fuel reduction: “They may use burns for simply putting a bit of smoke through country for spiritual purposes.”

‘Just Symbolic’

Howitt Society president Peter Flinn said the results to date showed cultural burning “is just symbolic and hasn’t achieved much,” given the legal and bureaucratic obstacles facing traditional owner groups in a densely populated state.

Opposition public land management spokeswoman Melina Bath said the costs were plainly unjustifiable. “Clearly, cultural burns should not cost anywhere near that level,” she said.

Bath questioned whether government bureaucracy was actively constraining what the burns could achieve: “It begs the question: What level of interference by the department is taking place to constrain and inhibit cultural fire practices?”

Environment Minister Steve Dimopoulos declined to address the cost question directly. His office issued a statement saying the government was “supporting Victorian traditional owners to implement the Victorian Traditional Owner Cultural Fire Strategy while strengthening cultural fire capability,” and that grants fund “planning, training, organisational capability and delivery.”

Volunteers Carry the Load

The CFA’s 2024–25 Annual Report documents the scale of volunteer-driven fire management. More than 51,000 unpaid members completed 202 planned burns last year, treating 4,774 hectares — exceeding the annual target. Volunteers contributed 438,875 hours to incident response across 41,925 incidents statewide.

None of that labour appears on the government’s expenditure ledger.

This is the context in which the Allan government is directing taxpayer funds toward identity-based programs at boutique prices.

As The Daily Declaration has reported on Victoria’s spending priorities, the state’s debt trajectory has long outpaced its service delivery.

Victoria’s gross debt is forecast to reach 213 per cent of operating revenue by 2027 — among the worst of any comparable jurisdiction in the world, according to S&P Global. The state’s interest bill is projected to climb to $10.5 billion by 2029.

The pattern extends beyond fire management. Premier Jacinta Allan has made identity-based programs a signature of her government, from pride marches to race-based grants — while volunteer Victorians continue to do the hard work of protecting their communities for free.

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Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

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6 Comments

  1. c05a9d2a9865fd00acfdc50085008756afc1c4aad6cc42a4249e3cc78b0cf01b?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Christine Crawford 10 March 2026 at 11:09 am - Reply

    Maybe we should do a few cold burns in unstated places, then foot the bill to the Vic Govt and see how long it takes for reimbursement?? :)

  2. c3dd36302a02a4017775e3fb721ced1e4c751456c86cb1013d7f49912b3f3ec8?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Roger Bowen 10 March 2026 at 11:49 am - Reply

    I’ve recently resigned from the RFS as I have witnessed its transformation , over the past 35 years from a predominantly local volunteer controlled organization into a multi billion dollar bureaucracy, and used as a political arm of left leaning woke ideology.

  3. e8bb2e62d2c730e997dece78954b123bc9765acb72ef0bf9d6c1df64bf9b6810?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    James 10 March 2026 at 11:49 am - Reply

    And the state is as good as stoney, motherless broke! Wait until the Aboriginal voice to Parliament gets up and running in Victoria. This episode will be a drop in the bucket of money that we don’t have flowing in rivers to all sorts of scams carefully disguised as cultural sensitivity.

  4. 5088d005092eb79d788d2488fd329c398f9d4ca058f62ed38e136b35c84f504d?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Jon D 10 March 2026 at 12:15 pm - Reply

    Regardless of what title the burns have there is something rarely mentioned. The impact on wildlife. Having spent most of my recreational time going bush for walks and photography since I was a teen I have lost count of the ground dwelling native Wildlife I have seen in burn off areas dead. Particularly lizards and echidnas.
    Many areas will be no go zones for people to take dead fall timber, not cutting down trees but fallen limbs and fallen trees. They’re homes for wildlife they shreik. Then they’ll do a burn in the area and it burns every limb and log destroying it all, the so called homes, and because the fuel, limbs etc, have built up the burn will be more hotter and ferocious than it could have been if they had allowed the removal of the dead timber. I have seen numerous dead echidna and stumpys where I have been that was burnt. Now, many of these places its becoming rare to see these slow moving native ground dwelling animals. I used to go out say 20 yrs ago and every time I went I would see something to photograph. Now it’s around once in every ten trips. There are places now I have given up on going with my camera.

  5. DAY 31 Warwick Author CD MAY 2023 OPT
    Warwick Marsh 10 March 2026 at 3:07 pm - Reply

    Sadly. The Victorian government is utterly incompetent!!!!

  6. f910f8648b50864a0a4fa9cff6838335a9df65757870ba46526d3fd0fd4d5768?s=54&d=mm&r=g
    Ian Moncrieff 10 March 2026 at 3:24 pm - Reply

    An unbelievable waste of taxpayer’s money, the cost of which is accumulating to overtaxed Victorians by the associated interest bill.
    Q -When will Victorian Labor politicians learn how to be wise and frugal with finances?
    A – When common sense trumps ideology!

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