COTA Victoria celebrates 75 years of service to seniors

COTA Victoria will celebrate 75 years of service to ageing Victorians at a special event held at the Melbourne Town Hall’s Portico Balcony on the afternoon of 11 June.

Doors open for the event at 1pm, with short, formal proceedings led by COTA Victoria President Robert Caulfield taking place from 1.30 pm. A small number of free tickets to the celebration are available to the public, exclusively through the Humanitix ticketing platform.

COTA Victoria began as the Old People’s Welfare Council of Victoria back in 1951, then evolving into Victorian Council on the Ageing in 1968. The organisation renamed itself one final time in 1991, becoming part of the larger, national Council on the Ageing alliance.

“We’re very pleased to gather and celebrate such an important milestone: 75 years of service, advocacy, and leadership working for, and with, older Victorians,” said Mr Caulfield.

“While our name has changed over the course of our efforts, our core purpose has not.

“For three-quarters of a century, we’re proud to stand for a simple, yet powerful purpose.

“Older people deserve to be heard, respected, protected, and empowered.”

“COTA Victoria has helped redefine ageing through its long-standing work,” added COTA Victoria CEO, Ben Rogers.

“Not as decline, but as a time of contribution, growth, and opportunity,” he said.

“We’re proud to act as the voice for older Victorians, and with constantly evolving initiatives, services, and programs including Seniors Rights Victoria.

“Since 2008, it has been the only statewide community legal centre dedicated to protecting older people from elder abuse, and vital for the wellbeing of older Victorians.”

The celebration follows another event held at the Melbourne Town Hall that same day. Between 10am and 12pm on 11 June, COTA Victoria and Seniors Rights Victoria will host its World Elder Abuse Awareness Day 2026 showcase, which continues the successful Beyond Age anti-ageism campaign.

“None of our work would be possible without older Victorians,” Mr Rogers said.

“As we celebrate seventy-five years of service, we implore Victorians to stand with us and amplify the voice of people as they age – with free membership available to all, there’s never been a better time to do so.”

COTA Victoria and Seniors Rights Victoria will continue 75th anniversary celebrations through a year-long social media campaign that reflects upon its history.

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