ALSTONVALE, NSW
Top Funded Entities
NDIS Supply & Service Pressure
NDIS money is not the same thing as healthy service coverage. This view shows whether ALSTONVALE, NSW sits inside a state market with thin provider supply, captured payment flows, and too few local disability-focused or community-controlled alternatives.
Social & Indigenous Enterprises (5)
Revenue model not publicly disclosed; likely relies on grants, community contributions, and possibly fee‑for‑service activities.
For more than 57 years, Aruma has operated a range of professional businesses serving corporates and small businesses. We create long term careers 500+ Australians with a disability and sub-contract to a further 20+ disability organisations to create further employment opportunities. We are specialists in our industries which range from Commercial-Laundry, Facility-Services, Manufacturing, Farming, Tourism, Food Products, Medical Packs and Packaging services.
The corporation likely earns revenue through a combination of government contracts, community service fees, and potentially social enterprises, with surpluses reinvested into Indigenous community initiatives.
The specific business model and how it generates revenue while delivering social value are not detailed.
The enterprise's revenue model is not publicly disclosed, but it may involve grants, donations, or commercial activities that support its social objectives.
Schools (8)
ACARA school profiles in postcode 2477. ICSEA measures educational advantage (national avg 1000).
NDIS Participants
All Entities (144)
Disadvantage Index
This area has relatively low socio-economic disadvantage.
Entity Types
- Company
- 94
- Charity
- 38
- Indigenous Corp
- 5
- Social Enterprise
- 4
- Foundation
- 1
- Govt
- 1
- person
- 1