8 June 2015

Page 12

NEWS DESK Couple leads the way HUSBAND and wife team Joe and Janine Hart have been elected president and vice-president of the Mornington Peninsula branch of the Disabled Surfers’ Association. The couple was instrumental in forming the branch in 2010 and has been involved in planning and holding a series of surfing “events” for disabled surfers at Point Leo. The branch’s first Let’s Go Surfing “experience” was at Point Leo Beach on Saturday 17 March 17 2012. Also elected to the branch’s committee at the Tuesday 26 May annual meeting were treasurer, Rebecca Lipsett; assistant treasurer, Jade Lipsett; secretary, Bill Hallett; and assistant secretary, Jenny Angliss-Goodall. Angus Tendall is honourary vice-president. The DSA is a non for profit and recognised benevolent organisation that has been operating for more than 25 years throughout Australia. While planning two more surf days for the disabled next year, the Mornington Peninsula branch is working on building a boardwalk for easier access to Point Leo beach, making its wide-wheeled wheelchairs available to the public and holding two surf contests. Details: disabledsurfers.org/vic/morning-peninsula-branch/

Beach duty: Blue rash vests are worn by the hundreds of volunteers who turned up to help at the Disablked Surfers Association’s Mornington Peninsula branch’sbeach day at Point Leo in March. With about 100 disabled surfers to look after, the teams are colour-coded to ensure all goes to plan. Picture: Keith Platt

Hospice moves into new $5m home PENINSULA Home Hospice (PHH) has launched a $5m campaign to pay for its new Mornington headquarters. The building will provide the first permanent home for the 30-year-old organisation that supports people suffering from a terminal illness. The service offers free palliative care, counselling and therapies to patients and their families in the municipalities of Mornington Peninsula, Frankston and Kingston (south of Mordialloc Creek). Small charges may apply to care by the Royal District Nursing Service (RDNS) and the use of specialist equipment. Directors of PHH bought 327 Main St, Mornington, in April after research and “years of coping with leases ending, moving, changes of address, operating out of crowded, separated premises and moving some of their team into commercially rented offices”, CEO Rachel Bovenizer said. The money came from a community bank loan and PHH’s own cash reserves. The $5 million raised through the appeal will pay for the building and modifications. “Continued operation from multiple sites is not cost efficient, it causes

Raising funds: Sue McCarthy, left, and Helen Fairlie, chair of the Peninsula Home Hospice board of directors, are helping run an appeal to raise $5 million to pay for the service’s new headquarters at 327 Main Street, Mornington. Pictures: Yanni

an unavoidable level of professional disconnect between management, administration, clinical staff and volunteers who work in an emotional and complex field that requires optimal teamwork and cohesion,” Ms Bovenizer said. “Finding a permanent home for the hospice will not only give the security that the organisation requires to take us comfortably into the future, but will allow for the forecast growth in client numbers and the increase in

staff to meet that need.” The PHH care team includes specialist palliative care nurses, RDNS nurses, a palliative medical consultant, counsellors and therapists, a spiritual care worker and client care volunteers. The aim of the care team is to enable the terminally ill and their families to live as actively and independently as possible and to spend their last days in the familiarity and comfort of home.

Support to the families continues for up to 18 months after the death of their relative. Statistics show that on any single day PHH helps more than 190 people and their families. The hospice foundation, established this year as a capital fundraising committee of PHH, will begin approaching potential donors and seeking public help in the next few months. “We must be careful not to undermine the extraordinary work done by

our hard working fund raising committees,” board director and foundation committee member Rosemary Redston said. “While we receive some generous recurrent state government funding, it is our auxiliaries who raise the necessary additional funds required to maintain our services each year.” Board Director, Tony Vaughan said the new building will enable PHH “to not only secure its future tenancy and accommodate the demand on its services, which will increase with the predicted future population growth, but also to embrace the latest best practice in palliative care and create a facility that will be considered a centre of excellence in its field”. PHH Foundation ambassador Sue McCarthy said contributions would be sought from “philanthropic members of our community who value the wonderful work done by Peninsula Home Hospice”. To make a donation call the Peninsula Home Hospice Foundation on 9783 6177 or contact members of the fundraising committee call Tony Vaughan, 0423 784 218, Rosemary Redston, 0418 597 198 or Sue McCarthy, 0416 055 995. Keith Platt

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BLAIRGOWRIE • DROMANA • MORNINGTON • ROSEBUD • SEAFORD • TOORAK PAGE 12 Frankston Times 8 June 2015


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