The Koori Mail is an Australian newspaper written and owned by Indigenous Australians since 1991. It is published fortnightly in printed form and electronic copies are available. Owned by five community-based Aboriginal organisations based in Lismore, in northern New South Wales, its profits are spent on community projects and needs. "Koori" is a demonym for the Aboriginal peoples of parts of New South Wales and Victoria.
The fledging venture suffered from both lack of funding and a lack of experienced journalists at first, and was assisted by non-Indigenous freelance journalists such as Liz Tynan. The Lismore newspaper The Northern Star then provided printing and editorial assistance to Carriage, and Janine Wilson, a Northern Star journalist, was appointed the first non-Indigenous editor of Koori Mail.[6]
The headline story in the first issue on 23 May 1991, which comprised 24 pages and had a print run of 10,000,[6] was about a recent report into violent racism in Australia and the high levels of abuse suffered by Aboriginal people in police custody.[3]
In 1992, The Northern Star, while seeing the potential of the paper, could not afford to support it financially while it built its readership, and there was a large debt to be paid off. The local Bundjalung Aboriginal corporation was able to obtain an ATSIC loan of A$226,000, and ownership was assumed by a group of local Aboriginal communities[6] representing the Bundjalung nation: the Bundjalung Tribal Society (based at Lismore), Bunjum Co-operative (Cabbage Tree Island), Buyinbin Co-operative (Casino), Kurrachee Cooperative (Coraki), and Nungera Co-operative Maclean).[7] The Bygal Weahunir Holding Company (BWHC), an amalgamation of the five bodies, acquired an 80 percent holding, while 20 percent was retained by The Northern Star. At first it was only circulated only in northern News South Wales and Queensland, but within a few years it had built up a network of Indigenous and non-Indigenous stringers across the country and was distributed nationally.[6]
Janine Wilson was later replaced by another non-Indigenous journalist, Dona Graham, who was subsequently replaced by Aboriginal journalist Todd Condie as editor in 1998. Condie left to work on Land Rights News in 2002.[6]
As of May 2021[update], as the newspaper celebrated its 30th birthday, Rudi Maxwell was the editor of the newspaper, with the staff numbering a total of 12 people.[7]
In March 2022 Lismore was hit by record-breaking flooding, and in the immediate aftermath and for months afterwards, Koori Mail coordinated relief for flood victims. Staff and volunteers coordinated by the paper distributed food (including up to 2,000 free meals per day, served from the adjacent Koori Kitchen), clothes, and other essential items for thousands of victims, as well as supporting them with counselling. All of this came from donations; financial support from the New South Wales Government only came months later, in June.[10]
The Koori Mail team and volunteers received the national NAIDOC Innovation Award, which recognised their "coordination and leadership" after the flood.[10]
It is a source of news and information on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, communities and events throughout Australia.[2] It covers general news as well as health, education, employment, culture, the arts, and sport,[11] and has correspondents and contributors in every state and territory.[7]
As of 2021[update] its circulation is around 10,000, but it is estimated that it is read by ten times that number.[3] According to McNair Ingenuity Research, readership is around 100,000. It is sold at newsagents in all mainland states and territories of Australia, and Tasmania.[12]
All profits are distributed to the community through the five owner organisations and spent on uses such as scholarships for Aboriginal students, housing and mental health programmes.[3][12] The organisation offers entry-level jobs as well as traineeships based in schools, to help young Indigenous writers to gain experience.[7]
The Lismore office established a studio for broadcasting radio and podcasts, from 2021, initially focusing on Bundjalung issues,[7] but the printed copy is still the most important component.[3]
Staff
As of October 2022[update], Darren Coyne is acting editor and the total staff number seven people.[12]
As of 2016[update] Russell Kapeen was chair of the board.[14]
Online
Apart from the full set of issues being available on the AIATSIS website,[9] there is also an index. The Australian Indigenous Index, or INFOKOORI, is an index to Koori Mail, covering from May 1991 to July 2016. Hosted by SLNSW also covers biographical information from various other magazines, including Identity; Our Aim; and Dawn / New Dawn.[15]
Awards
2011: Newspaper of the Year award at the PANPA Awards (non-dailies with a circulation of up to 10,000)[12]
Aboriginal journalist Todd Condie graduated from Griffith University with a Bachelor of Humanities majoring in film, media studies and politics. He started at the Koori Mail as a cadet 1992, then worked as journalist and was appointed editor in 1998, taking over from (non-Indigenous) Dona Graham. In 2002, Condie left the Koori Mail to work on Land Rights News in the Northern Territory.[6]