This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost Australia, which closed in 2021.

Change.Org Celebrates Five Years Since Its First Petition

For the Tippetts, a petition changed their lives
Six-year-old Sienna Tippett will be allowed stay in Australia after a successful petition.
Supplied
Six-year-old Sienna Tippett will be allowed stay in Australia after a successful petition.

The father of a little girl with an illness who had to fight to be granted Australian residency has said he is overwhelmed after Immigration Minister Peter Dutton intervened to allow the family to stay.

His is the latest success story from Change.org, the petition organisation which marks five years of campaigning this week.

Kai Tippett told The Huffington Post Australia he believes a 30,000-strong petition helped influencePeter Dutton to change his mind after his six-year-old daughter Sienna was denied permanent residency because she was suffering from a "mystery illness" affecting her balance and speech.

A doctor consulting on behalf of the government had deemed she would be a "a burden to the Australian community".

Late last week they received word the decision had been reversed.

It was overwhelmingKai Tippett

"Initially when we started the whole process we weren't too sure if it was going to get any support and it was very negative -- then it was just overwhelming, the amount of support we got from everyone," Tippett told HuffPost Australia.

"It went up to 15,000 signatures within the first 18 hours. It was unbelievable."

Change.org is this week celebrating five years since its first victorious petition. Change.org counts it as a victory when the decision maker agrees to the change asked for by the petition starter. A victory is declared on a petition every 48 hours in Australia, the organisation said.

Major Change.org petitions in the past five years

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

Nathan Elvery, head of Change.org Australia, believes politicians are starting to take petitions seriously and issuing official responses to them and agreeing to people's call for change.

"Over the last five years, millions of Australians have signed a petition that has resulted in a victory and a tangible change being made," he told the HuffPost Australia in an email.

The scale and impact of people's petition victories have increased year on year, he said.

"In the past 12 months, thanks to petitions started by everyday Australians, the federal law has been changed, deaths have been prevented and companies have been held to account."

ALSO ON HUFFPOST AUSTRALIA

Close
This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost Australia. Certain site features have been disabled. If you have questions or concerns, please check our FAQ or contact support@huffpost.com.