Bendigo Bank cuts ties with community fundraising groups

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Bendigo Bank has pulled out of fundraising partnerships with community groups that have been drumming up business for corporate branches since 2004.

Richard Fennell
Richard Fennell, a strategist who took over the consumer banking division in 2018.

Community Enterprise groups were left floundering at the end of 2024 when they received โ€œnotices of terminationโ€ of agreements telling them the โ€œconnected communitiesโ€ program would end the following month.

Final payments were made in February and groups that have not found alternative funding sources have since folded.

According to Bendigo Bank, the program returned more than $18 million to community groups since inception.

Commissions were paid for any new accounts linked to โ€œconnected communitiesโ€, which were invested back into local projects.

The bank told community groups however, that it had reviewed this part of its business and determined the contributions were โ€œnot sustainableโ€.

The number of community enterprises affected by the cancellation is not known but the program was national.

Bendigo Bank today announced a $514.6 million profit.

It follows recent news that 10 branches and 28 agencies will be closed in coming months, leaving 22 regional towns without banking services.

Since now-chief Executive Richard Fennell took over the consumer banking division that controls corporate and community banking in 2018, Bendigo Bank has closed 95 branches and 70 agencies.

In doing so it has left 56 towns with no banking services.

This figure even higher (better?) than the National Australia Bank, which at 44 is the worst of the big four banks for leaving towns bankless.

This article appeared on The Regional on 25 August 2025.


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