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NAWIC’s Bright Ideas Grants, CEO award highlight culture change

It’s been an exciting start to the New Year and as a representative of NAWIC, I am truly grateful to have been named Best Construction Industry Advocacy CEO 2025 (Australia)… writes NAWIC CEO Cathryn Greville

This recognition from the CEO Monthly’s prestigious Female CEO of the Year Awards 2025 reflects the passion, generosity, and commitment of our growing NAWIC community — our inspiring volunteers, members, sponsors, supporters, and dedicated staff — who show up every day to advocate for positive change and to strengthen our industry.

Advocating for more

Advocacy remains central to our work.

Strong, informed, and courageous advocacy is essential to ensuring the voices of women and underrepresented groups are heard, and to driving lasting, systemic change across the built environment.

Cathryn Greville, CEO of NAWIC

The recipients of our 2026 NAWIC Bright Ideas Grants also reflect our commitment to driving positive change.

This year, I’m delighted that the seed funding is going to a pilot program offering supported pathways for women in construction navigating parental leave, and an innovative project to provide hygiene facilities for women onsite.

Big idea

Samantha Grant from New South Wales was awarded the $30,000 Bright Ideas Individual Grant for her Crib Shift: Building a Better Way Back pilot program designed to address the urgent need for structured, supported pathways for women in construction navigating parental leave and returning to work.

Crib Shift is a research-informed, industry-specific, and community-powered program responding to a gap identified in NAWIC’s Boosting Retention of Women in Construction parental leave research project, which highlighted the absence of cohesive, consistent frameworks to retain and support women during this transformative life and career stage.

Samantha says the program is also inspired by her lived experience and at its core, Crib Shift is primary prevention, creating the conditions where women can thrive in the construction workforce through supported leave transitions, employer capability uplift, and peer-driven community care.

Crib Shift is beyond a wellbeing initiative, it’s a primary prevention workforce solution.

This program doesn’t exist anywhere else. It’s informed by lived experience, guided by research, and grounded
in reality.”

The program will include:

  • Mothers on Leave Stream: accessible peer circles and reflective tools support women to stay connected to their identity, ambitions and industry during leave, without pressure to perform or plan.
  • Returning Mothers Stream: For women in their first two years back at work, this stream offers facilitated sessions and access to shared stories, frameworks, strategies and community; supporting a sustainable, confident return.
  • Employer Stream: This stream offers targeted, practical tools to build confidence among employers and managers.
  • Dedicated resources for dads and partners: Recognising that women are best supported through this transition when there is a broader ecosystem around them that understands and shares the load.
Samantha Grant. Image: NAWIC

Small kit, big issue

The $20,000 Bright Ideas Business Grant has been awarded to The GO Company in Tasmania for their Hygiene for Her Project.

The funding will be used to develop, produce, and distribute GO Sanitary Site Bundles, ensuring smaller and regional construction businesses have access to practical, affordable hygiene facilities for women on site.

Co-founded by electricians Jasmyn Smith and Logan Barnett, The GO Company is dedicated to supporting women in underserved industries by providing essential sanitary solutions.

Many smaller construction businesses and remote sites do not have access to basic hygiene amenities.

This leaves women without suitable facilities, impacting their comfort, health, and sense of belonging in the workplace.

The aim is to offer workplace solutions that make hygiene accessibility simple, affordable, and standard across all industries.

By delivering ready to install hygiene stations, the Hygiene for Her Project aims to:

  • Eliminate reliance on basic or unsuitable portable toilets and ensure consistent access across sites of all sizes.
  • Enable women to manage their hygiene needs safely and privately without needing to leave work which will reduce downtime, improve productivity, and demonstrate that the business values its female workers.
  • Encourage healthier, more sustainable work environment, supporting women’s long-term health, helping them maintain their careers without compromising wellbeing or family planning goals.

SEE MORE: Tradie Tough Tests

The Bright Ideas Grants provide an important opportunity to support innovative projects for women in construction that focus on retention, career progression, leadership pathways, and cultural change.

It was pleasing to attract a total of 36 applications across both categories this year. My thanks go to our judges who noted that the overall high quality of the applications made the assessment process quite difficult.

Congratulations to both of our grant recipients for their innovative projects to support women in construction and I look forward to sharing the positive outcomes of their projects in the year ahead.

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