INVERELL HACC TO SERVE UP A COURTYARD MOVE WITH FUNDING WIN

INVERELL HACC TO SERVE UP A COURTYARD MOVE WITH FUNDING WIN

Northern Tablelands MP Adam Marshall, centre, with Sandy Jeffrey, left, and Margaret Lenord, right, from the Inverell Home and Community Care service have welcomed grant funding to allow them to enclose a courtyard area for extended services.

Wednesday, 8 February 2017

 

A $30,000 windfall will help an Inverell service agency upgrade its building assets to offer more all-weather access for clients, according to Northern Tablelands MP Adam Marshall.

 

The Inverell Home and Community Care service will be able to move out into an old exposed courtyard space with the help of a State Government grant that will fund the rebuild so it can be used all year round.

 

Mr Marshall said the Community Building Partnership funds will help HACC make the courtyard more user-friendly and expand their programs and activities to a huge clientele.

 

“Inverell HACC has over 1,000 people it helps with its home assistance, social support, transport and dementia and carer support programs,” Mr Marshall said.

 

“In the last quarter it had some 700 people accessing those services, so you can appreciate the wonderful job it does and the financial help it gets from government is value-adding to that. This government program is partnering HACC to continue to offer that exceptional level of support in its community.”

 

The co-ordinator for dementia and carer support with HACC, Sandy Jeffrey, said the funding would allow them to build a Queenslander-style space with windows in the courtyard area and expand a range of activities for clients.

 

“The courtyard really can only be used for less than four months a year; it’s so hot in summer and so cold in winter, that we can’t utilise it more often. And neighbouring businesses close to it mean it’s often too dusty and noisy because it’s not protected or enclosed,” Ms Jeffrey said.

 

“Enclosing the space will provide a protected area, not just for our dementia clients, but also a quieter room.”

 

The chair of the agency’s management committee Margaret Lenord said the new addition would give them vital extra space for meetings, volunteer training and extended program activities, not just for HACC clients but also for other community groups.

 

Mr Marshall said HACC operated with some seven staff and over 40 volunteers and was the only provider of dementia-specific day respite facility in Inverell.

 

“It delivers innovative and strength-based programs to assist people with low to moderate dementia and there’s a waiting list right now for access from locals for those types of activities, so this new space will cater for that growing demand,” he said.

 

 

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